When I started getting into head fi few years ago, it was on a thought that I will be able to enjoy music from the 80s, I was very naïve with my thought.
most of the 80s bands I adored when I was in my teen years, listening to them now is impossible to enjoy, but I remember in my teen years in the 80s I just had a cassette player and some unknown headphones or speakers, and I used to literally enjoy the sound recording of those bands.
Now its literally impossible for me to even think to listen to them. I wonder why?
examples
1- the cure
2- depeche mode
3- def leppard
4- new order
5- ultravox
and the list goes on
nowadays I ventured into different music, as listening to those bands and their albums released in the 80s is not giving me any joy, the recording quality is so anemic and kills the buzz to enjoy them.
Well, tastes change over time of course, but the first 5 are very mainstream, popular at the time, so @Sound Eq's experience doesn't surprise me.duration is too long maybe?
I rarely listen to mainstream, and I don't really have an issue with the recording quality of the 80's (or 70's & 90's) bands I do listen to; even back then they weren't great stand-out recordings. With the bands I listen to, for me their music somehow always transcends the considerations about recording quality; what matters most for me is composition and arrangement, instrumental and vocal phrasing, as well as creativity in mixing up genres. A good recording quality is a bonus.
If a particular music's appeal relies on (what is at the time considered to be) impressive production/technology, it is more likely to fail the test of time I think. But if the fundamentals of composition & arrangement (& performance) are strong, it will fare better.
One wild diversion is to look up live albums. Now this goes the opposite of what you may think. Meaning how could a live album sound better? It doesn't normally, but the songs are played a totally different way..........especially with this Paris album. To where the songs are somehow both remembered as correct, but the freedom of live means that they get played back way different, in almost sounding like a Cure garage band.
Not a surprise at all; with live albums the performance itself is a great contributor to the enjoyment of the music; recording quality becomes far less important. Again, this stands the test of time better.