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Tyler Herz wrote a new post on the site Group 2 Website 2 years, 2 months ago
It is the year 3022 in the United States. Most countries today live in a centrally planned economy in which everything in the market is predetermined, literally. our economy aligns very much with socialist values […]
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Tyler Herz created the site Group 2 Website 2 years, 2 months ago
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Tyler Herz created the group MUS 15 Group 2 2 years, 2 months ago
I really liked this letter to the reader as well. It also focuses on the fact that capitalism is no longer a theme in popular music. Also the lengthening in songs is awesome, which is something that was more common back in Beethoven’s time. I liked that local artists no gain more recognition which they deserve. I really liked the art that was added to the letter. The artifacts all seemed amazing and really served their purpose with futuristic aesthetic and I want to be signed to the blueprint recording studios! Really amazing job!
I loved the concept of “RO” as a new emerging surrealist psychedelic pop artist. And the album cover was so perfect. I like how RO loves to talk about socialism in his music.
I liked learning about how in socialism people listen to music in a more focused/less distracted way as well.
I liked how you mentioned that songs tend to be 10-15 min now because that’s really unconventional in this time, but now that artists have more freedom to make what they want it changes
I like the idea of the blueprint recording studio, and the album cover looks really good! It’s funny to think that UCSD kept adding colleges to the point where there are half a million people enrolled here.
Really appreciate the idea of local artists gaining more traction in this socialist economy, as competition has lessened drastically, as well as the concept of a 4-hour work day, 3 days a week! Also, I love the choice of a multidimensional, layered song choice for your musical artifact and the AI-generated art!
I love the idea and name for the Blueprint Recording Studios. I think it does a great job of creatively showing how music labels would be implemented in the future!
It was interesting to see how they chose to make music longer in socialism, which makes sense since people had more resources and time.