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1 new of 23 responses total.
I meant to paste in this NY Times link earlier; it'll go into the pay archive tonight. :/ Maybe somebody stuck it on Usenet or somewhere else where Google might find it. http://www.nytimes.com/2003/02/16/arts/16ROSE.html?pagewanted=print&positio n=top "Singing to the Grown-Ups, and Selling" by Jody Rosen The essay argues, in effect, that we boomers have become our parents, with our attitudes towards hip-hop recapitulating our parents' attitudes towards rock. The article charges that the aging boomers, who are rallying around an idea of "authenticity," are mostly listening to pretty boring music. Norah Jones is the artist most criticized in the piece. The author doesn't say it in these words, but the argument is essentially that we have recreated our version of the old boring Easy Listening/Adult Contemporary music which our parents listened to in their mature years, while all the artistic action is happening in hip hop.
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