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Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/books/action/view/entry_id/1096675
Rated: 18+ · Book · Opinion · #2336646

Items to fit into your overhead compartment

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#1096675 added September 5, 2025 at 1:32am
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WDC25, Day 5
I'm going to start by addressing the whole "needing to use a VPN to trick YouTube into thinking I'm in Europe" bit. With the VPN, that's mildly annoying. Without it, it would be rage-inducing. (I set it to Netherlands, just in case, and it worked.)

And if you don't know what I'm talking about, it's this video right here, which is today's Blog Week prompt:



Getting a "not available in your country" message? Yeah, fuck that.

Since not everyone has a VPN, though, all I'll say about the video is that music should stand on its own, not require lighting, effects, dancing, costumes, or other gimmicks.

But if there's one thing I've learned in life, it's that my relationship to music is not a popular one, and my opinion on the subject is definitely in the minority. Will I change my opinion to better fit in? Hell, no.

Part of it is that I've always been frustrated by my own lack of musical talent and ability, despite many years of lessons in piano, violin, voice, and guitar. There's something about making music that I Just Don't Get. You know how some people Just Don't Get math? That's me with music. The difference, I think, is that while arithmophobes recoil in abject terror at the very thought of having to add or subtract, I absolutely love music.

Well, most music. Well, some music, anyway. Opera, for example, can bite my ass. I understand the talent and work that goes into it, and if you like it, great; for me, it's like shoving an ice pick in my ear.

Another thing that makes me different is that while for most people, their musical taste ossifies around the onset of adulthood, there is newer music that I like. Not all of it, of course. But I didn't like all the music that was around in my childhood, either. The bad stuff didn't last: just look at any week's Top 40 chart from when you were a kid. In my own research along those lines, maybe one or two of them stood the test of time. I don't even remember most of the crap they played back then.

I also like some music that came before my time. While I don't subscribe to the idea that music can be divided into decades, it's useful to know when a particular song was produced, just like it's useful to know when a book was published or a movie was released. Technology changes, sometimes for the better, and sometimes for the worse.

Autotune, for example. You get some performer who looks good and can dance but can't really carry a tune, and boom, autotune fixes that. Except it doesn't, because autotune is clearly a misuse of technology, much like biological weapons or shining lasers at aircraft. Some of my favorite music, though, was made by people who weren't, or aren't, beautiful—but they had brilliant voices, or at least a knack for songwriting.

The very first song played on MTV when it started, back when they only played music videos, was "Video Killed the Radio Star."

Again, I recognize I'm in the minority here. When it comes to music, I'm a minority of one.

Perhaps we all are.


Notes:

© Copyright 2025 Robert Waltz (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
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