Re: why oldies didn't evolve
Don't want to step on your toes or anything like that, but perhaps the "baby boom" generation should be defined for the sake of clarity. Demographers generally consider people born from 1946 - 1964 to be in the baby boom generation. The earliest boomers turned ten in 1956, and are turning 60 this year. The midpoint birth year for this group is 1955, turning ten in 1965, and turning 60 in 2025. Thus, somewhere around half of the boomer generation would have been forming their musical preferences during the mid fifties to mid sixties.
Personally, I have just turned 50, but my preference in rock and roll music skews strongly about ten years older than would be expected for my age group. I like many of the tunes from the late 60s through the mid 70s, but there is something about the earlier music that just grabs me. I was bitten by this bug in 1969, and have been a different breed of cat ever since. Most folks that I know around the same age like oldies, but not nearly as passionately.
> I wouldn't consider the audience for 50s/early 60s music to
> be boomers...I'm at the older end of that generation, and
> 'most anything pre-1962 is before my time & not something I
> can really relate to. The British invasion was really the
> beginning of the boomers' music. Anything before that would
> be the tail end of the depression generation (whatever it
> was called).
>
> Depending on when in the 90s your friend made his changes,
> he may have been jumping the gun a bit...50s music was still
> viable thru the first half of the decade (though he was
> right in seeing problem on the horizon). Maybe the time
> wasn't quite right when he made his changes.
>
Don't want to step on your toes or anything like that, but perhaps the "baby boom" generation should be defined for the sake of clarity. Demographers generally consider people born from 1946 - 1964 to be in the baby boom generation. The earliest boomers turned ten in 1956, and are turning 60 this year. The midpoint birth year for this group is 1955, turning ten in 1965, and turning 60 in 2025. Thus, somewhere around half of the boomer generation would have been forming their musical preferences during the mid fifties to mid sixties.
Personally, I have just turned 50, but my preference in rock and roll music skews strongly about ten years older than would be expected for my age group. I like many of the tunes from the late 60s through the mid 70s, but there is something about the earlier music that just grabs me. I was bitten by this bug in 1969, and have been a different breed of cat ever since. Most folks that I know around the same age like oldies, but not nearly as passionately.
> I wouldn't consider the audience for 50s/early 60s music to
> be boomers...I'm at the older end of that generation, and
> 'most anything pre-1962 is before my time & not something I
> can really relate to. The British invasion was really the
> beginning of the boomers' music. Anything before that would
> be the tail end of the depression generation (whatever it
> was called).
>
> Depending on when in the 90s your friend made his changes,
> he may have been jumping the gun a bit...50s music was still
> viable thru the first half of the decade (though he was
> right in seeing problem on the horizon). Maybe the time
> wasn't quite right when he made his changes.
>