Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a teen in the 80's and back then, the music you listened to completely determined the social group you were a part of. For example at my HS the "punks" which also included the surfers/skaters listened to punk bands as well as new wave and dressed in a certain aesthetic The "grits" listened to Motley Crue, Bon Jovi, etc and had long hair and wore jean jackets. The "normal" people mainly listened to top 40. But the music you listened to also determined how you dressed, and who you hung out with. I really don't get the impression that music is such a social divider among teens anymore. Am I right about this?
1998 grad here. I think by my HS years it was less “the music you like determines your group” and more “your group determines your music.” The cool kids listened to top 40 with whatever rap, grunge or hip hop was currently making it big, and just because it was ubiquitous most people listened to those genres to some degree. FFA kids listened to country. Christian kids listened to CCM. Theater nerds listened to Broadway stuff. I think the only groups that were really defined by music were the true grunge and metal kids.
Anonymous wrote:I was a teen in the 80's and back then, the music you listened to completely determined the social group you were a part of. For example at my HS the "punks" which also included the surfers/skaters listened to punk bands as well as new wave and dressed in a certain aesthetic The "grits" listened to Motley Crue, Bon Jovi, etc and had long hair and wore jean jackets. The "normal" people mainly listened to top 40. But the music you listened to also determined how you dressed, and who you hung out with. I really don't get the impression that music is such a social divider among teens anymore. Am I right about this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a teen in the 80's and back then, the music you listened to completely determined the social group you were a part of. For example at my HS the "punks" which also included the surfers/skaters listened to punk bands as well as new wave and dressed in a certain aesthetic The "grits" listened to Motley Crue, Bon Jovi, etc and had long hair and wore jean jackets. The "normal" people mainly listened to top 40. But the music you listened to also determined how you dressed, and who you hung out with. I really don't get the impression that music is such a social divider among teens anymore. Am I right about this?
I’m of your vintage, and I think about this too. I think some of the difference is that there are less obvious distinctions in the music kids listen to now. It all seems to be a mash up of pop, hip hop, boy bands. I’m also not sure that music really grips kids the way it did for some of us. Music was a huge part of my teenage years, and so many memories are tied to it. I’m not sure kids have that passion today.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting question. Pretty much all the teens I know listen to the same thing—rap/hip hop and top 40 type music. There is also much less diversity in dress that when I was growing up in the 70s and 80s. Most boys predominantly wear athletic wear, and girls wear a variation of what’s on trend (there was the UGG phase and the tiny shorts phase, etc.). There are few outliers like Goth kids. But we are deep in suburbia. Maybe it’s different in DC proper?
Anonymous wrote:I was a teen in the 80's and back then, the music you listened to completely determined the social group you were a part of. For example at my HS the "punks" which also included the surfers/skaters listened to punk bands as well as new wave and dressed in a certain aesthetic The "grits" listened to Motley Crue, Bon Jovi, etc and had long hair and wore jean jackets. The "normal" people mainly listened to top 40. But the music you listened to also determined how you dressed, and who you hung out with. I really don't get the impression that music is such a social divider among teens anymore. Am I right about this?
Anonymous wrote:I thought this was about something else --- music students at school. I don't think music defines student groups, no. But my DC is really into her chorus and her music friends at school and those are her social group.