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Cameron Armstrong
@cameron
Whatcha think, music fans? x.com/abelowrob/status/1720446548243321313?s=46&t=kLxAT6M-ysp2m2lKjBOBxg
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Sam (crazy candle person) ✦
@samantha
Underestimating kpop stans LOL
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Adam
@adam-
A mixture of solid and wild predictions. I see old instituions loosing a lot of their strong holds and having it shift to control over access to the live experience Livenation already holds a monopoly in North America and with these trends in mind, they'll be more dependant on that monopoly to drive revenue from.
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wave
@lk
1. Extremely hard disagree 2. Agree, probably.. Assuming DSPs allow AI generated content. Sounds like lots of storage $$$ for a bunch of unlistened music though. 3. Eventually, but 5yr is aggressive 4. Maybe, but slowly. Blockchains will help here (see sound.xyz). 5. I think both can successfully exist at once.
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Sanch
@sanchitram.eth
I think all of this points to one trend, and its consequences: the death of pop. My playlists and listening are so curated, it's like I am living in a different universe compared to other people, when I talk about music. I don't know about 2, but I think 5 already happens on social platforms (Superfollow, Sponsor)
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jason
@jsn
I actually agree with #1 lol I don't think he's saying artists won't be internationally famous. But if I walk into the grocery store and ask 10 random people, 7+ are going to at least know who Taylor Swift is, even if they aren't fans. Music is becoming too fragmented for people to reach that level. Deep, not wide.
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Leo
@lsn
1 is silly Someone will always be famous
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