#CosoMusic
Have a think before you answer.
What albums released in the last ten years do you think people will refer to in the year 2050 as "True Classics", the way, for example, we talk about 1990s classic albums today?
Teenagers, who are historically the curators of music for their time as teens, aren't listening to most of what anyone here would list.
@Shelter That's where my mind was going.
I'm also considering that the "complete album" as an art form, isn't necessarily as interesting to today's teens. Streaming and playlists are more popular, I think.
@stueytheround
16 said to tell you that he and most people he knows don't really listen to albums, only individual songs, but your answer for 2050 is all of BTS. Not just an album, like Duran Duran.
@Shelter That's sort of why I asked. There are lots of artists out there who are trying to return to the idea of LPs thanks to the resurgence in the popularity of vinyl. New vinyl is *expensive* in comparison to digital so musicians need to give you good reason to part with your thirty bucks.
@stueytheround
It's super expensive.
I'd rather go back to CDs. Not kidding.
I'm not paying $40 for an album on vinyl when in the early 90s I refused to pay $24 for a CD.
@stueytheround
Households that have gaming systems or Blu-Ray DVD players can often play CDs as well without shelling out money for turntables.
@Shelter My JVC turntable is 30 years old.
I bought it second-hand for £15
@stueytheround
This part for sure.