December 15 was traditionally the day that I would roll out that year's Top Ten list(s). For the fifth consecutive year, that won't be happening. It's become just another day in the calendar. But this year, I do want to revisit some of my favourite music of the past thirty years -- with a twist.
Jim Barber and Rick Beato recently discussed age demographics on the latter's youtube channel. Their main point is that bands tend to be older than their fans and that this has been a constant throughout most of recorded music history. The reasons are straightforward. Music sales were typically marketed toward younger people (e.g. teenagers). Once they got older and stopped buying music, the next generation of teens would be sold on a new batch of stars. In this model, both fans and artists had short careers. People stopped buying music after getting married and finding jobs, and the next generation of young fans weren't interested in what their older brothers and sisters had liked, so the artists were often tossed aside by the industry as a whole.
This trend of disposability seemed to end with the boomer generation bands. Barber and Beato don't elaborate on exactly why this happened. I think that the boomer generation coming of age in the mid-late 60's happened to coincide with rise of the album format. The album became entrenched as the artistic standard for all serious musical acts, the cultural cache afforded to a great album ensured canonical longevity for the music. Bands could, and still do, coast off the reputations built by great albums for years of even decades. On the other hand, the singles market was more dominant pre-1960's singles market, and the songs were for and of the moment. Once those songs completed their chart run and fell off the radio playlists, the music and the artists would fade away too.
After I listened to their conversation, I realized that the truth had been staring me in the face for years. Maybe everything in the Barber/Beato video was obvious to many music lifers already. In those moments, my musical past came flooding back, and the common threads couldn't have been any clearer. With few exceptions, fans are younger than the acts they follow. It describes my entire fandom.
I was born in 1974. Here is a table of all my #1 albums, each year from 1993-2009, along with the birth year of the band's frontman or frontwoman. For duos, or for acts with multiple dominant creative forces, I listed the birth years of each band member.
Year | Artist, album | Birth year |
---|---|---|
1993 | Orbital, Orbital(Brown Album) | Paul Hartnoll '68, Phil Hartnoll '67 |
1994 | Blur, Parklife, | Albarn '68 |
1995 | Spiritualized, Pure Phase | Pierce '65 |
1996 | Orbital, Insides | Paul Hartnoll '68, Phil Hartnoll '67 |
1997 | Spiritualized, Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space | Pierce '65 |
1998 | V/A, Skampler; Mogwai, Kicking A Dead Pig | Braithwaite '76 |
1999 | Super Furry Animals, Guerrilla | Rhys '70 |
2000 | Primal Scream, XTRMNTR | Gillespie '61 |
2001 | Spiritualized, Let It Come Down | Pierce '65 |
2002 | GY!BE, Yanqui UXO | Menuck '70 |
2003 | Plastikman, Closer | Hawtin '70 |
2004 | Xiu Xiu, Fabulous Muscles | Stewart '78 |
2005 | Sigur Ros, Takk | Jonsi '75 |
2006 | Bardo Pond, Ticket Crystals | ages not known, but they started in '91, so late '60's |
2007 | Eluvium, Copia | Cooper '80 |
2008 | M83, Saturdays=Youth | Gonzalez '80 |
2009 | Yeah Yeah Yeahs, It's Blitz | Karen O '78 |
2010 | Third Eye Foundation, The Dark | Elliott, '71 |
2011 | M83, Hurry Up We're Dreaming | Gonzalez '80 |
2012 | Beach House, Bloom | Legrand '81, Scally '82 |
2013 | Eluvium, Nightmare Ending | Cooper '80 |
2014 | Fennesz, Becs | Fennesz '62 |
2015 | Beach House, Depression Cherry | Legrand '81, Scally '82 |
2016 | Moderat, III | Apparat '78, Modeselektor '75 |
2017 | The Caretaker, Everywhere at the End of Time, Stage II | Kirby '74 |
2018 | Low, Double Negative | Sparhawk '70, Parker '72 Parker |
2019 | King Midas Sound, Solitude | Martin '73, Robinson late '70's |