The Rest Is Science

Is Music Getting Worse?

45 min
Dec 9, 20256 months ago
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Summary

Michael Stevens and Hannah Fry explore whether music has objectively gotten worse since the 1970s, examining scientific studies on musical complexity, lyrical negativity, and cultural factors. They conclude that perceived musical decline is largely driven by psychological biases, nostalgia, and the reminiscence bump rather than objective quality deterioration, while democratized music production has fundamentally changed what counts as 'music' in cultural analysis.

Insights
  • Studies claiming music has become simpler suffer from sampling bias—they analyze 12,000 songs across 40 years but miss the broader context of how technology democratized music production and distribution, making it impossible to compare like-with-like across eras
  • The 'best era for music' is primarily a psychological phenomenon driven by the reminiscence bump (peak memory formation ages 10-30), rosy retrospection, and the emotional imprinting of formative life experiences rather than objective musical quality
  • Social proof and cultural consensus, not inherent sonic qualities, determine what people perceive as 'good music'—a controlled experiment showed songs rose to prominence based on what others rated highly, not intrinsic merit
  • Pop music tracks societal mood (pessimistic during economic downturns, optimistic during booms), while country music operates inversely as emotional counterbalance, suggesting music functions as cultural homeostasis rather than reflection
  • The gatekeeping shift from record labels to algorithmic platforms means modern music analysis includes bedroom producers and non-commercial creators, fundamentally skewing comparisons to eras when only commercially viable songs were tracked
Trends
Algorithmic bias in music quality research—studies using large datasets inadvertently sample from democratized production, conflating technological accessibility with artistic declineNostalgia-driven consumer behavior—'golden age' narratives persist across industries (music, film, technology) driven by cognitive biases rather than measurable quality metricsGenerational gatekeeping in cultural criticism—older demographics' consensus bias leads them to overestimate agreement that past eras were superior, influencing media narrativesContext-dependent value assessment—music quality cannot be objectively measured independent of listening context, cultural training, and individual life experienceDemocratization of creative production—removal of institutional gatekeepers (record labels, radio stations) fundamentally changes what qualifies as 'music' in cultural analysisEmotional imprinting as brand loyalty—formative life experiences (ages 10-30) create lasting preferences that feel objective but are neurologically tied to developmental plasticitySocial proof over sonic quality—algorithmic ranking systems and cultural consensus drive preference more than measurable musical propertiesInverse relationship between national sentiment and genre—pop music mirrors societal mood while country music provides emotional counterbalance, suggesting genre-specific cultural functions
Topics
Music quality measurement and methodologyPsychological biases in nostalgia and memory (reminiscence bump, rosy retrospection)Democratization of music production and distributionSocial proof and cultural consensus in preference formationAlgorithmic ranking and music discovery systemsLyrical complexity and vocabulary analysis in pop musicSocioeconomic factors influencing musical genresContext-dependent aesthetic value assessmentGenerational differences in music perceptionMusic as cultural homeostasis and mood regulationAI-generated music and creative authenticityGatekeeping in creative industriesNeuroplasticity and formative experience imprintingGenre-specific cultural functions (pop vs. country)Historical music analysis and sampling bias
Companies
Cancer Research UK
Episode sponsor discussing cancer research funding, scientific methodology, and treatment development processes
IG (Interactive Brokers/IG Markets)
Sponsor offering flexible stocks and shares ISA with zero commission and tax-free allowance flexibility
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People
Joshua Bell
World-class violinist who performed as subway busker with $3.5M Stradivarius violin, earning only $32 in tips
Gottfried Leibniz
Philosopher who argued for objective measures of beauty and quality in art and music
Matt Salganik
Computational social scientist who conducted experiments on social proof's impact on music preference formation
Alanis Morissette
1990s artist whose song 'Ironic' sparked debate about whether lyrics actually describe ironic situations
Anton Decim
UK TV presenters formerly known as PJ and Duncan from children's show Byker Grove, later released rap album
Quotes
"You can warp the data to give you any answer you want."
Michael StevensEarly discussion on music quality studies
"It's like trying to map out an entire forest rather than following a single path."
Cancer Research UK ad readSponsor segment
"Most of what you're eating is the garbage or it's the songs that were just made for someone for their 10 friends."
Hannah FrySampling bias discussion
"What we like isn't about the noise itself. It's about what we think other people think is important."
Hannah FrySocial proof study discussion
"The only thing that really people are looking for universally is something that connects them with another human."
Michael StevensAI and music conclusion
Full Transcript
This episode is brought to you by Cancer Research UK. Imagine this. Inside all of us, billions of cells follow millions of instructions written in microscopic code. And when a new cell grows, it copies those instructions, but the smallest error can lead cancer to develop. Right. And this is the reason why there isn't a single cure for cancer, because, you know, there are more than 200 different types. Each of them have got different distinct characteristics, you know, different challenges, different mysteries. And that means that trying to cure cancer isn't like following a single path. It's like trying to map out an entire forest. That's right. And Cancer Research UK is the world's largest charitable funder of cancer research. I mean, their work spans more than 20 countries, with over 4,000 scientists, doctors, and nurses pushing knowledge forward to save and improve lives worldwide. You know, over the last 50 years, the work that this charity has done has helped to double cancer survival in the UK. And you have to think about that is that is more parents at the dinner table, right? That is more friends at their birthday parties. That is more people who are living longer, better lives. For more information about Cancer Research UK, their research breakthroughs and how you can support them, visit cancerresearchuk.org forward slash rest of science. This episode is brought to you by Project Hail Mary, the new spectacular space adventure coming to cinemas. Okay, hypothetically, imagine that there's this mission to save our world. Only you can do the job. As this expert in mathematics and science, how do you think you would do? Terribly, but not because I love teaching and learning because I'm a scaredy cat. But what about yourself, Hannah? I would back myself, Michael. I think I'd be good. I just I just be very slow. I think the point is that no one should rely on Hannah or I to save the world. But in Project Hail Mary, Ryan Gosling stars as science teacher, Rylan De Grace, who is sent unexpectedly on an impossible mission to space to discover why the sun and stars are dying. He teams up with an unimaginable ally to defy all odds and save the universe from extinction. See Project Hail Mary in cinemas and IMAX from Thursday, the 19th of March. You can also catch it early on Saturday, the 14th of March, Pi Day, and Sunday, the 15th of March. Hey, this is Michael and Hannah from Goal Hangers, the Rest is Science. This episode is brought to you by Project Hail Mary, the new spectacular space adventure coming to cinemas. Okay, hypothetically, imagine that there's this mission to save our world. Only you can do the job. As this expert in mathematics and science, how do you think you would do? Terribly, but not because I love teaching and learning because I'm a scaredy cat. But what about yourself, Hannah? I'd back myself, Michael. I think I'd be good. I just I just be very slow. I think the point is that no one should rely on Hannah or I to save the world. But in Project Hail Mary, Ryan Gosling stars as science teacher Ryland Grace, who is sent unexpectedly on an impossible mission to space to discover why the sun and stars are dying. He teams up with an unimaginable ally to defy all odds and save the universe from extinction. See Project Hail Mary in cinemas and IMAX from Thursday, the 19th of March. You can also catch it early on Saturday, the 14th of March, Pi Day, and Sunday, the 15th of March. Hi there. This is Alistair and Rory from the Restless Politics. And as a Gold Hanger listener, you're probably somebody who likes to be informed, which likely extends to your financial future. So here's something worth listening to. IG's flexible stocks and shares, ISE, that lets you withdraw and top up your money within the same tax year without losing your tax-free allowance. And with zero commission and zero account fees, it's no surprise that IG was also voted best low-cost ISE at the 2026 Boring Money Awards. That value is why IG has been trusted by British investors for over 50 years, and this ISE season, they're setting the bar again. How? By giving away up to £3,000 cash back when you transfer your existing ISE over to IG and use the code ISAGOAL. That's I-S-A-G-O-A-L. Search IG.com to find out more. IG. Trade. Invest. Progress. Your capital is at risk. ISE rules, tax rules and TNC supply. Cashback offers for new customers only cannot be used in conjunction with other promotions and offer ends. 5th of April, 2026. Other fees may apply. Hello and welcome to The Rest is Science. I'm Michael Stevens. And I'm Hannah Fry. Hannah, in your opinion, when was the best era for music? This can be completely subjective, right? I mean, you've given me complete free reign. I have, but I have not said that it's subjective. There may be an answer. Oh, well, now I feel like the pressure is on. You could be wrong. Of all the infinite world of possible answers that I could give, it feels like there's only one that you're looking for. Okay. Here's my opinion, right? The first album I ever bought, I got 10 pounds out of my bank. I was 11 years old. I was extremely excited. I went down to Woolworth's, something that was American you will not know about. And I bought a cassette of PJN Duncan. And I think that the album was called Psych. Now, Michael, let me just say no more. That's exactly the answer I was looking for. Just kidding. I've never heard of that. Okay. This is any international listeners will not have had the full unadulterated joy of Biker Grove, which was a kids TV program in around about the 1990s. There was some amazing characters in it. Anton Deck, who are now big hotshot TV presenters. Wait, are they Anton Deck? They are Anton Deck. They used to be known as PJN Duncan. I bet most international viewers, meaning not from the UK, won't even know who Anton Deck are. Do you think so? Are they not internationally renowned? I can't speak for the non-British humans on the planet, but I didn't know who they were until I lived here. And even then it was hard to find them because I didn't have television. I was streaming. And so I wasn't tuning into, you know, pops of the month or whatever they were doing. The pops of the month. You know, they're kind of a big deal. How can I describe them? They're from Newcastle. They're like cheeky, Jordy lads. They're just extremely likable, extremely funny. They've spent their entire lives next to each other to the point where they appear on screen in order and is always on the left hand side. Deck is always on the right. I didn't know that. So that you read them alphabetically. It's great to know because now I can see them and I can know who is who. Absolutely, which I think is something that people genuinely struggle with. But they started their career as actors in this kids TV show and their characters, PJN Duncan, went on to release a rap album. Oh, no. Okay. Now I want you to imagine the whitest rappers you've ever seen, right? Make them whiter, younger and with worse lyrics. That was the peak of music, in my opinion. So I would not give the same answer. Oh, you're saying my answer was wrong. I would say music peaked when the Spice Girls released Wanna Be. That's a similar era. You know what? I think you might be right. I might be right. And I think, I think jewel pieces of you. I think Alanis Morissette, ironic. Oh, no, I've never liked that song. Why? Because none of the things that she's describing are actually ironic. Let me tell you something. She never once in that song claims that any of the situations she sings about are ironic. Look at the lyrics. I am. She says, a black fly in your Chardonnay, it's rain on your wedding day and isn't it ironic. It depends on where you put that part of the sentence. If you're saying, yeah, okay, it's a free ride and when you've already paid and isn't it ironic, fine, I agree with you. But she doesn't. She says it the other way around. She says, isn't it ironic? It's like 10,000 spoons when all you need is a ride. You are one of those Alanis misunderstanders. She says it's like rain on your wedding day, 10,000 spoons when all you need is a knife, and isn't it ironic? What is it? It is the fact that life has a funny way of helping you out. I'm sorry. When things go wrong. Right. Our episode plan is canceled. We're going to do a solid 30 minutes on this topic and nothing else. As I say that, I'm starting to think everyone's going to have their own personal answer. This is all subjective. Okay. I mean, yeah, I would just counter-argument to your argument if I may, because during the 90s, the middle of the 90s, there were, I mean, of course, there was a major era for music, right? It's like so much money to be made. It was like a growth industry. And there were two British music producers who were fully aware of this fact who were like, is the stuff we're making actually good or are people just buying it because we tell them to? And so what they did is they had a bet between them to try and get the worst possible song into the British charts. The result of this supposedly was, this bet was a girl group called Vanilla. And their debut song was No Way, No Way, Manar Manar, sort of based on the Muppets. So we're talking same era as wannabe. Also, I should tell you that the music video was them standing next to a pool, which was, I think, Brockwell Lido just standing around. Okay. All right. Well, we've got to number 14 in the charts, I should say. Number 14. I mean, look, I don't hate that song. I see a time and place for it. For example, right now, right, they made something that is a conversation starter, which is one of the many things we ask music to help us do. So they succeeded there. That makes it... It's objectively bad, though. I mean, come on, Michael. No, that's what I'm proving wrong. It can't be objectively bad. It has value in that it's a great story. It's pretty funny, especially when you give it the context of they tried to make the worst song and that hit number 14 on the charts. I love hearing it. It's improved my life. You're welcome. Today, I want us to talk about this. I want us to talk about the science and the psychology of good music, about whether or not music has been getting worse since I was 10. What an absolute treat. I'm buckling up. Let's go. Let's go. All right. So obviously, the first thing I did is I looked to see if there had been any objective attempts to rank musical decades or moments in music history. And there have been a lot that claim to use data from the popularity of songs, from the words that are used, the complications in the melodies, but none of them agree with each other. If you Google, when was the best era for music? And you search like Google Scholar even, you get this study said it's the 80s. It was the 70s. It was 1992. It was 1847. And it's like, wow, you can warp the data to give you any answer you want. But I do sort of wonder though, I mean, without picking holes in your argument before you've even started, I sort of wonder what you mean by best here. That's the thing that like I'm really questioning. This is like something that philosophers have worried about, I mean, for centuries, right? I mean, and they don't agree. So there's people like Godfried Liebnitz who, like he argued that if there are things that we can all agree on that are very beautiful, like high quality, like, I don't know, Michelangelo's ceiling and Sistine Chapel or some Mozart, then surely there should be some like definable, measurable quality that we can latch on to that says like, this is the thing that makes one thing objectively better than the other. You sort of need that as a grounding before you can go in and decide what decade or what era was better. But any attempts that they've been to try and find that kind of measure, I mean, they sort of fail, right? There was a violinist, Joshua Bell. Do you remember this happening? He's like this incredible violinist. Is this the guy who played down in like the subway? Yes. As a busker, yeah. Exactly. So he had a three and a half million dollar violin, Stravarious, and he basically was at the top of an escalator on the metro. And he started playing and he's literally one of the finest classical musicians in the entire world. Like the night before he was playing as part of the Philharmonic, people were paying, you know, hundreds of pounds or hundreds of dollars in order to go and see him. And here he was just standing there in the subway and no one even stopped to look. Right. I think by the end of the day, he had managed like 32 dollars in his hat. That's how much he'd collected. So if there was this objective measure of like the best in the world playing the best instrument, then surely people would at least notice. Doesn't surprise me at all. Yeah. Because the contexts are so different that what I want to hear when I'm waiting for the subway is very different than what I expect when I've bought tickets to see the New York Philharmonic. And if you put the best violinist ever down in the subway, I'll be like, hey, I'm just trying to get to work. That's kind of annoying. If you put the worst busker on stage at the New York Philharmonic, I'll notice that too. But it doesn't mean that one's better than the other in my opinion. One's better for different contexts. A really bad violinist just being ridiculous on the subway. That's actually pretty cool. I would record that. I'd tell my friends, I'd say, you got to come and see this. I can't believe it. But if I bought $600 tickets to see a concert and that happened, it would actually be pretty amusing as well. But I might be more upset. Bad violinists are always good. Actually, that is kind of what I just said. Whereas good ones, they got to be careful. Don't be good in the wrong place or you'll be bad. You'll be forgettable. And so pinning down some objective that supplies all the time rubric to music is going to always leave people feeling disappointed or frustrated. But then if you don't have an objective measure of quality, if it's dependent on the context, then how do you measure what counts as better music? Well, you could agree that it's OK to choose certain properties of songs and measure from there. So for example, last year, there was a study published in Nature showing that songs, music, had indeed become more simple over time. Beginning from the 1970s to today, music had increasingly become more simple in terms of the lyrics and the vocabulary and the readability. It had become less complexly structured. So there were more repetitions of phrases. OK, for example, they found... Since the 1970s, I mean, I can think of a lot of repetitive songs in the 1970s. I know, but they looked at 12,000 songs over 40 years. They also found that the negativity of the lyrics increased and they found that the egotisticalness increased, meaning the usages of the word me, mine, I went up. So as you can imagine, a lot of grumpy old people loved that study. They knew it. They knew it. Music was better when I was a kid, which happens to be, you know, right when they started this. And it's all gotten worse since. I want to tell you about some other studies, though, before we discuss all of them. OK, deal. Another... There's been a lot of studies that have found that pop music very closely tracks with the socioeconomic status of a society at a time. So when times are tough, pop music gets sadder. When times are great, when people are happy with the direction of their lives and their country, pop music gets much more optimistic, not country music. Hold on, though. I've got some questions on that. Yeah. So are we saying here is the conclusion that I should draw that people are sort of upset about their jobs, upset about, you know, how the economy, how far their money goes, whatever it might be, and are writing more morose songs? Or is it because how much do people actually really pay attention to and recognize sort of macroeconomic conditions, which is effectively what these studies are comparing to? Or how much is it that, I don't know, like I sort of think that when you saw the emergence of laptops as ubiquitous, which was around the same time as the financial crisis, you just saw not just different types of songs, but you saw more people making music, right? People who didn't have access to generating whole entire tracks from their home before. I'm glad you're going there, because that's where I would go first. And I read the whole study about music getting simpler. My first thought was, okay, what songs did they analyze? And they analyzed 12,000 songs across 40 years. And I thought, okay, that's both not enough songs and too many. 40 years is not enough to really tell me how music connects with any kind of pattern, because that's like two generations tops. That's basically just a couple cohorts growing up. You need to at least analyze music for 100 years or more, in my opinion, to really track what's happening to it. To music specifically rather than technology around making music and who's making it. And especially if you're looking at these were songs in English, so you're looking specifically at the Western English speaking world, you're almost really just tracking how music changes at a time when boomers are going from middle age or younger up to being senior citizens, because they were the biggest part of the population. They were the main engine of what music was being made to sell to be sold to. So you're not really looking at humanity as a whole, but then also you're still looking at too much music because 12,000 songs, that's 300 songs a year. It's like almost a song, a brand new song every day. Can you name a brand new song every single day that was made that day? Can you name 12,000 songs? I think that by the time you analyze that many songs, you're looking at songs that do not represent the state of music in popular culture. They're not the zeitgeist. And as you mentioned with laptops and the democratization of not just music production, but music distribution, it's not even a laptop story. That happened back in 1977 when the New York Blackout meant that you could kind of just like go into a store and take a stereo and now you're a DJ and suddenly remixing being an MC is something that way more people can do. Wait, I don't know this story. What happened in 1977? There was a giant blackout in New York City. The power goes out. How long for? It was just one day, no power. And that means that it's dark. People can't see what you're doing. Suddenly all those instruments, all that stereo equipment that's in that store, it's a little easier. So was there mass looting on that day? Really? Yeah. But so the sort of oral history goes the next day, there were musicians everywhere. Wow. And that happened again with digital technologies, allowing people to open up GarageBand and throw in a drum loop. And then, well, there's a microphone built into my laptop. I'm doing all of this suddenly. And then I can upload it to YouTube. I can upload it to, I don't know, back then you'd be putting it up on ifilm.com or something. You know, like you could share your music. And when a study looks at a lot of songs, they're going to be dipping into songs made by all kinds of people, songs that were not made for mass consumption even. Well, that does feel like the biggest difference from the 1970s to now is that the gatekeepers of music have changed, right? Used to be that you had to have a record deal. You had to like persuade people that you were sellable. And now literally anyone can make stuff and put it online and find a route to an audience. Yeah. So to make an analogy, I'd say it's kind of like, okay, we used to just taste food at this great restaurant. Then we started sampling food from the great restaurant and all the restaurants nearby and even like the dump and all the trash cans. And we found that on average, food doesn't taste as good anymore. It's like, well, yeah, because like most of what you're eating is the garbage or it's the songs that were just made for someone for their 10 friends. Like, you know, but in 1970, you couldn't pick up a whole bunch of songs from every SoundCloud artist in their bedroom because that didn't exist. Well, hold on then a second, right? So I buy your argument. I like the sampling from the dump. I think that that really rings true, especially now where they are, I generate music. But anyway, but then why does everybody think that their era was the era when music was better? If the 1970s wasn't this objective peak in music for the entire history of humanity, then why does everyone sort of claim that it was? Yeah. No, it's a great question because we could talk forever about what studies have said and what their methodologies are. But at the end of the day, this is not an alien concept to us that music used to be better. This is particularly coincidentally better when I was a kid. Why does that happen? Well, it's a well-known piece of human behavior. And there are a lot of different names for what I think is involved in all of this. You've got, for example, Rosie Retrospection. That's a name used to describe our tendency to remember things better than we experienced them at the time. In fact, experience is kind of this little, let's see, the shape. The shape is kind of like a little dip. We anticipate things being really great. And then while we're experiencing them, we're kind of disappointed. But then later on, we remember it and we're like, it's pretty cool. My favorite example of that is the impact of having children on your life satisfaction. Because children make you much happier until they're born, at which point you suffer very greatly in terms of your happiness. And that continues until they leave home, at which point you're way happier. It's the most beautiful thing you ever did in your life. Yeah, exactly. And this happens with all kinds of things in the past. On top of that, our brains are wired to remember more from our 20s specifically. This is known as the reminiscence bump. If you interview people who are over 40 and you just ask them to list out memories, they will have an overwhelming glut of memories from between 10 and 30. That is called the reminiscence bump because it's this sudden, like I've got a lot of things to say from that era and then I don't know. Now I don't have much. Now I don't know if that's totally genetically wired into our brains, or if it's sort of a thing that our society's imposed on us. Well, I also wonder whether it's something that's like physically going on with your brain, right? You have the plasticity of your brain, which I mean, never goes away, but it decreases with age. I mean, when you're experiencing things and remember them, you are like quite literally rewiring your brain. Yeah, exactly. You are. And we know that the biology of a brain is still changing up until like 25. I mean, it's always changing, but it doesn't really reach a maturity or a kind of maturity until the 20s. Yeah. So I'm just not ready to say that I think that it's a genetic thing that you'll find in all human societies because we are particularly prejudiced against old people. We... Which isn't true around the world. Which isn't true around the world, but I think it's also possible that just once people are reach 40, they just think, I'm not supposed to live a life that creates all these memories and stories to tell because that's what you do when you're young. We need to be careful about exactly what conclusion we draw there. I also wonder though, I mean, I think there is another aspect to this too, which is about novelty and about how our brains are like constantly searching for differences, right? I mean, we're like change detectors effectively. And the thing is that when you've had... When your life experiences are limited and you sort of have a new memory, a new experience, it's like it feels very fresh. It feels valuable and important for your brain to remember it. But as you get a bit older, I mean, I've already been to this club a thousand times before. You've been around the block a few times. This is less surprising. You know what? Yeah, I like that too because that reminds me of consensus bias. And it is our tendency to think that other people think the way we do. It is most predominant with old people. It is the least predominant with young people. Like college students will say, here's what I believe. Do I think that's a common belief? Probably not. But once you were 60, you think this is how it is. Yeah, and that's what everyone thinks. Because you have experienced more of life. You've been young, you've been old, you've been in college, you've been a graduate, you've had a job, you've been fired. You know people who have lost their jobs. You just you feel like you can make a better estimation of what's common and what's not. You can't as it turns out, but you feel like you can. So all of these psychological things, I think, conspire to make us prefer the music that our brains matured to that happened while our brains were maturing and then makes us think that things in the past were better and that everyone should agree on it. But then also, I guess there's something here about those songs that you grew up to and had your most exciting experiences to because they were the new experiences. Your first kiss, your first car, your first time in a club, all of those things will have had a soundtrack to them that really is physically etched into your brain. That's right. So for me, I recently watched this little musical mashup of breakthrough artists from 1980 to today. And it was a really great history of what was the most popular thing. And when it hit that period of time, when I was nine to 10 years old, the way the songs made me feel shifted so dramatically. Instead of just being a really great song, it became a song that represented this feeling of my eyes getting wider, entering the world and listening to the radio and to popular music and being part of the world. Not an adult, but I felt like I was approaching adulthood. What is this? It was so different. So Alanis Morissette's ironic and I'm bringing her up a lot. I remember being in fifth grade and we had a talent show and a couple of girls saying ironic. And I was like, what is this song? And I went home and I turned on MTV, which I had never watched before. And the music video was playing and I'm like, I'm peeking through the crack of childhood into the real world. And that kind of experience, of course, it imprints onto my mind forever. And it's hard for me to ever communicate that feeling to someone who might not like the song. Because they didn't have the same experience with it. Or think that the lyrics of it are nonsense. This episode is brought to you by NordVPN. 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Sync your email and calendar and you're up and running in minutes. From there, teams simply ask Atio what they need to know. It's about deals, customers or what's moving across the pipeline. Powered by universal context, Atio's intelligence layer, it connects what's happening across your meetings, messages and data. It turns into answers you can actually act upon. With Atio, you are seeing what's gaining momentum, what's stalling, and what needs attention next. In an accelerating world, clarity is the real competitive edge. Try Atio for free at attio.com slash empire. Welcome back. We have been talking about whether music is getting worse. And I think that we can probably agree on a few things. We can agree on the fruitlessness of trying to find some kind of always applies in every context measure of objective worth of a song. I think we can also agree that there's more going on than just the talent of artists or their creativity, that we also have a tendency to have a lot more memories from when we were teenagers and when we were in our 20s. We remember things from the past being better than maybe they really were at the time. We mature and come of age in Western societies around that time and music imprints on us as part of that journey, a journey we will never have again. It's almost like the most important time in our lives because it's the first important time in our lives. I want to even add to that two other things. I think that specifically in the 20th and 21st century, we have come under this spell of progress in innovation and creativity as a thing. We think that, well, yeah, you start with an acoustic guitar and then someone invents an electric guitar and then Jimi Hendrix does the star spangled banner and it changes everything and that's going to keep happening. But I think that's a bit of a fiction as well. I think that we've become obsessed with defining the present as made out of the past. Today, this artist is influenced by this one and that one and this is what genre they're in and we're pulling everyone back into these defining categories from the past. That's where the value of the music comes from and if we can't see that the same pattern continues in the same direction that we used to feel, we think the music is getting worse. Does that make any sense? I think so. I think I recognize it in more subjects than music, to be honest. I think we had this obsession in the past of categorizing things like the sciences, this is biology, this is chemistry, whatever. This is these straight silos that don't... They were separate. Biology and chemistry were separate from one another and as time has gone on, actually, those boundaries don't really apply anymore. Right. And I think that you're right that it's like... But in music, the difference is that we are absolutely determined to hold onto them in a way that is actually perhaps quite destructive. I have a feeling that we look back at events and musical genres and songs and not just remember them as being better and better now, but also as more important. Where I'm coming from here is that when we look back at the Wright Brothers' first flight or the moon landing, we think, wow, imagine witnessing both of those in your life. What would that have been like? Well, we know what it was like because those people told us. When humans landed on the moon, there was this old woman in New York who was interviewed, like, what do you think? Like, you have memories from before airplanes and she said, I don't know, it's kind of cool, but it was a much bigger deal when they built the Brooklyn Bridge. And you could walk from Brooklyn to Manhattan. It was incredible. The moon. Not as impressive to me. But that was because of her worldview, right? Of like the things that were important to her life at that moment. It's because of everything we've discussed so far on this podcast. It's that she was giving us another version of back in my day, they built bridges. Now they just go to the moon. And that's how we feel today. We think, oh, man, today I can have a burrito delivered to me in a little taxi whenever I want. And that's nothing. But back in my day, we had cassette tapes, which were better. And it's like, things keep getting surprisingly advanced, but we just don't accept it. We keep thinking there's, we have a tendency to see the past as being more of a change and more important than what's happening now. So I also think that there's this, I mean, there's a very big cultural aspect to this, right? Because while she might have said, they built bridges, you could walk from Brooklyn to Manhattan, I imagined that actually that was specifically important to her because of where she was and where she lived. And I think that you see this in music too, right? So there was a, there was a recent study by some MIT people, they were circling around this idea that there are some sounds, some musical sounds that we prefer over others, even if they couldn't quite get to an objective measure of what makes them nice. But they took things like a chord of a C and a G, which I think to almost everybody who is listening to this will be like, yeah, that's a pleasant sound. And then they took a great in combination of like a C and an F sharp, which historically has been nicknamed as the devil in music. And so for Western ears, this is obviously one sounds much nicer than the other. And then what they did is they went to this very remote Amazonian tribe who had had very little exposure to Western music. They played them these chords, the ones that clashed and the ones that didn't. And we're like, which do you prefer? And they were basically like, don't mind, just noise. It's just noise. And what's intriguing about that is that like, it's not just about whether the past was better, it's about like, what you are accustomed to listening to. There's like this sweet spot of novelty, right? We are very put off by the banal, but we're also really put off by the radically unfamiliar. And actually, if you don't have experience of like, what culturally is considered to sound good, there is nothing objective about even those sounds clashing at all. It's just what we've kind of been trained on. There's this other study that I really love by Matt Salkonik, who's this like computational social scientist, right? And he had this genius idea when he was doing his PhD, which was to try and work out how much of an impact the sort of cultural perception of particular bits of music were to how much people liked it, right? Like how much does social proof it's called, right? How much does everybody saying that this is the thing that matters change you into thinking this is the thing that matters. So what he did is he set up this, I mean, you can sort of imagine it like Spotify, like a sort of a very simplified version of Spotify, where he put up a number of different songs and people could go on and they could listen to certain bits of music. And they could kind of like them. And there was a billboard effectively, like what the top songs were, which is very particularly clever. Right. And essentially, what he found was that lots of people would be sharing the same system, but he had like different universes where he would try out different experiments. So we're the same songs. But sometimes he would like start off the ranking in a slightly different way. Sometimes he would let the the the ranking evolve based on what people were really listening to. And then he would flip it upside down for new people. And essentially, what he discovered was that every now and then there would be a song that was so good, so inherently full of quality that it would always rise to the top. But beyond that, it was just junk. People would listen to over and over again, songs that other people thought were good. And that was it. That was sort of the end of it. That's the thing that we like. What we like isn't about the noise itself. It's about what we think other people think is important. Yeah. You know, and I think that in a lot of ways, if you think that music is getting worse, you think that everything's getting worse. You think that society is getting worse. For example, I think that in that study that found that like negativity in songs has gone up and personal first person pronouns have gone up. It's more egotistical. I think that in a way, it's true that it's just much more socially acceptable to be negative, to criticize and to speak how you feel. It's more acceptable to talk about yourself and your own journey. So in a way, music changes because we already did music is just following what we're all doing. I also think that that that point that you made earlier about how like you're now listening directly to the creator is important. And it's like, if I feel, if I'm having a rubbish time, I could just make a song about it. I don't have to convince a panel of executives that this is a song that will connect with other people. That's right. Yeah. So I wanted to talk about another study which found that pop music very closely matches the zeitgeist of the times. So when people in general feel like the economy and the government isn't working for them when they're not happy with the direction of their life or the direction of the country they live in, pop music tends to get pessimistic, darker, more minor chords. And you see the reverse when people are happy when there's an economic boom, pop music gets really optimistic. That's a pattern that's sort of possible to see, but we don't see it in country music. Right. We see the opposite effect. Go on. When national optimism is higher, country songs are sadder and vice versa. When everyone's really sad, that's when the country song is about, let's have a party. But when, when everyone is saying they're happy with the country, that's when the songs are all like, my dog died today. It's almost like a homeostasis between the world and country music. And it's trying to say, whoa, come back down. Hey, get back up. And I don't know how to explain it. I wish I could come on today and give you some great analysis of that. But I think the seed I want to plant is that pop music, to me, I think is more of a like, yeah, this is the socially acceptable way to feel right now. It's the trend. It's trendy. But country music is more of a like confirming this is how you should feel. The thing about music and science in particular, those two together, is that of course, there is an enormous amount of money involved in trying to like grip onto statistical definitions of what people like, of what counts as good, of what will sell. And so many people have tried to do this. And actually, it turns out that it is just, as you said right at the very beginning, so much more about context than it is about the actual sounds or the actual notes. So much more about the experience that you are having as an individual that, you know, there's like nice studies like the one you're describing. But, you know, ultimately, I think just listen to a Landless Morissette and be happy. Yeah. Yeah, it's too complicated. You can do studies and figure out what people want. For sure. But you know what decides what people want? Them. But also, what the artists tell them they want, right? This is that's my favorite thing about the show Mad Men. It was Don Draper being like, no, our job isn't to give people what they want. It's to tell them what they want. And so what I'm saying is that algorithms can never really predict what's going to happen. Ultimately, they run into a problem, which is that someone's going to make something that shouldn't work. But they do it so convincingly that it does. And now the algorithm has to learn that everything should be like that. And this, I think, is actually, I'm going to finish on a note of optimism about AI and music, because, okay, there's certain types of music, right? Where it's like wallpaper, you know, like elevator music, just stuff that's going on in the background. And I think that that can very easily be replicated by artificial intelligence algorithms. But the key point of what we're saying here is that you cannot grab on to what makes something good. And so the only thing that really people are looking for universally is something that connects them with another human. And that is something that cannot be replaced. That's right. Yeah. I think AI could help you connect to another person. But there'll always be another person there. It's a conversation. And sometimes conversations might be boring to one of the people listening, but it doesn't mean the conversation has gotten worse. It means that person has become irrelevant and old. And that's how I feel sometimes that I'm entering that era where it's like, Hey, dude, music is just not made for you. Movies aren't made for you anymore. And that's fine. I think I owe it to the young people of the world to just stop trying to fit in and be cool. Step aside, Michael. Step aside with my smash mouth CD. I'm okay with that. So given everything we've discussed, let me ask you the same question again. Maybe your answer has changed. When was the best era for music? There is absolutely no doubt in my mind now. I spent half an hour talking to you, listening to you. And I am, I've never been more sure about anything. PJ and Duncan, psych. Wow, it's just confirmed it. And I think that we have, we've given all the reasons people like the music that they do. And PJ, Duncan, and the biker balls, they fit the bill. I'm going to change my answer. I think the best era was 250 million BC. The birds songs happening then really achieved perfection sonically. Okay, well, on that note, I think we're going to leave things here for today. Thank you for watching. I had a great time. I hope you did too. Be sure to follow us wherever you get your podcasts. You can like and subscribe on YouTube, as ever. Or you can send us a good old fashioned email like the old days when everything was better. The rest is science at gohanger.com. See you next time.