Can listening to music be a philosophy?
Can listening be a philosophy?
I found out that most of the genre music blogs that was popular in the past in South Korea were closed now. (except for the electronic listener bloggers)
It's so minor that people seem to have escape from that.
Even if you listen hard,
1. Cannot earn money
2. No one knows your effort.
3. No one recognizes you.
That effort is hard to become an official social career, and you don't even get attention because you can't even have people's online sympathy and comments...(...)
If you write about book, a generation theory, or a daily article that mixes with philosophy appropriately, you will be able to get online sympathize with it and satisfy your taste of being concerned.
I think almost everyone gave up at number 3 (most people are not interested) even though number 1 and 2 are like that's right.
If you write about book, a generation theory, or a daily article that mixes with philosophy appropriately, you will be able to get online sympathize with it and satisfy your taste of being concerned.
I think almost everyone gave up at number 3 (most people are not interested) even though number 1 and 2 are like that's right.
Indifference is such a fatal factor.
Aidan Baker said, can't make music in a vacuum, listeners are important.
Aidan Baker said, can't make music in a vacuum, listeners are important.
I say that point.
While the genre music blogs of the past were falling apart one by one, a new trend was being created in the Korean genre music scene, with their own scenes called **** centered on a specific listener (maybe using soulseek) with listening, DJing, and mix making as their main activities.
They DJ, perform, invite foreign musicians, release albums, and do a lot of things.
Even if we don't communicate...Looking at them from afar, I think it's amazing. While most Korean genre music bloggers are tired of indifference and money, they are creating an ecosystem based on genre music.
While the genre music blogs of the past were falling apart one by one, a new trend was being created in the Korean genre music scene, with their own scenes called **** centered on a specific listener (maybe using soulseek) with listening, DJing, and mix making as their main activities.
They DJ, perform, invite foreign musicians, release albums, and do a lot of things.
Even if we don't communicate...Looking at them from afar, I think it's amazing. While most Korean genre music bloggers are tired of indifference and money, they are creating an ecosystem based on genre music.
They invited foreign musicians who felt so far away and collaborated with them a lot.
Rather than becoming like a blogger who gave up listening because he was tired of indifference,
Rather than becoming like a blogger who gave up listening because he was tired of indifference,
they seems to learn a foreign language beyond the constraints of his native Korean rather than giving up some of his inner world.
They don't write blog posts, but they still listen to music very hard.
The music that they listen to is very difficult. Of course, it would be better if you write criticisms, but you don't have to write criticisms...It seems great that he is protecting his own only world without becoming like bloggers in the past who have completely abandoned listening.
In fact, listening to new music itself is not easy, especially in the case of music that requires a lot of energy or strength. It's because I'm much more comfortable listening to music that I already know (which guarantees pleasure) than new music.
Listening to new music is not an easy task in itself. It's an act of expanding awareness, like reading a tough new book. Anything that goes beyond the framework of my current perception requires a lot of energy.
Rather, I think listening to music is more difficult than reading books these days, but there are at least many people who are interested in reading and talking. And you can go to a book club and brag about reading "Mwamwa" (famous philosopher).
But the music story is really because people aren't interested in it, so it's very hard to satisfy the attention. (Can't even brag about it anywhere, most people have no idea that there's such a writer or record...)
In addition, people think that reading books expands the scope of thought, but they don't seem to think that listening to music is something of that dimension.
But they seem to keep dicing, making endless new mixes.(Of course, there are many full-time artists among genre musicians, and there is a difference that I do as a hobby, so the amount of energy I can administer is different.)
So I hope that the Korean genre music scene doesn't fail (even if we don't communicate). When I see that they're listening to something, I feel a sense of homogeneity.
Even if they don't insist on any philosophy or write philosophical writings, I think they are already one philosopher.
Philosophers who are building a philosophy of experience, not a philosophy of language.
(Of course, everyone is so immersed in feminism at the same time as music that they don't communicate because they seem to have a strong sense of damage and justice...)
They don't write blog posts, but they still listen to music very hard.
The music that they listen to is very difficult. Of course, it would be better if you write criticisms, but you don't have to write criticisms...It seems great that he is protecting his own only world without becoming like bloggers in the past who have completely abandoned listening.
In fact, listening to new music itself is not easy, especially in the case of music that requires a lot of energy or strength. It's because I'm much more comfortable listening to music that I already know (which guarantees pleasure) than new music.
Listening to new music is not an easy task in itself. It's an act of expanding awareness, like reading a tough new book. Anything that goes beyond the framework of my current perception requires a lot of energy.
Rather, I think listening to music is more difficult than reading books these days, but there are at least many people who are interested in reading and talking. And you can go to a book club and brag about reading "Mwamwa" (famous philosopher).
But the music story is really because people aren't interested in it, so it's very hard to satisfy the attention. (Can't even brag about it anywhere, most people have no idea that there's such a writer or record...)
In addition, people think that reading books expands the scope of thought, but they don't seem to think that listening to music is something of that dimension.
But they seem to keep dicing, making endless new mixes.(Of course, there are many full-time artists among genre musicians, and there is a difference that I do as a hobby, so the amount of energy I can administer is different.)
So I hope that the Korean genre music scene doesn't fail (even if we don't communicate). When I see that they're listening to something, I feel a sense of homogeneity.
Even if they don't insist on any philosophy or write philosophical writings, I think they are already one philosopher.
Philosophers who are building a philosophy of experience, not a philosophy of language.
(Of course, everyone is so immersed in feminism at the same time as music that they don't communicate because they seem to have a strong sense of damage and justice...)
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