Pareto Pragmatic
Senior Member
I just wonder if we cannot regain some agency, assert a different kind of freedom beyond consumer choice, by prioritizing music's function in social practice as opposed to as a product.
That would be nice.
I ask my college students about music consumption, how they do things. Very few say they put live performance at the top of the list of what they like. Which makes me sad, just a bit. Reducing the scale might mean getting public jam sessions normalized. Coffee shops might be a place for this to happen. Or have bands put on "live karaoke" and let audience members take the mic. Make it fun, make it spontaneous, make it public.
I don't think we are going to get back to the days of the family gathering around the piano to sing together.
I do see young people value unknown or up and coming bands, since knowing the obscure does still carry some prestige in the music world. And they do seem to be aware that to support bands you should go to shows and buy their merch (directly, not at venues, since venues take a cut.) This is consumer choice, but those choices avoid the corporate structure, so "buy the album" is not something they feel is worth while to the band.
Sometimes I forget that I live in a place where a jazz trio might be playing at an asian restaurant on a week night, and that's not common. But I never forget that I live in a place that culturally is very against "disturbing others". Which means little street corner or spontaneous harmonizing in public spaces. I think a huge issue in the US is that over time we have moved from the front porch and interacting with people to the back yard deck where we are isolated. That's one example of a long term trend of disengagement with random others, and fighting against such cultural forces is very difficult.
I do consider the rise of hip hop to be a good example of music as social practice. Public music, growing out of an old urban social tradition (such as acapella singing on the stoop). Breaking combined with boom boxes, public performance. Freestyle rap battles, where crashing and burning is a possibility. Music woven into daily life with others, not just for personal consumption.
I can't think of a more modern example off the top of my head, but I think that fits with what you are talking about.