Mobile? Click HERE for m.isthmus.com
Connect with Isthmus on Twitter · Facebook · Flickr 

Thursday, December 24, 2009 |  Madison, WI: 33.0° F  
The Paper
 

MAKING THE PAPER

Pop go the 2000s

Article Tools: Read moreRead more Making The Paper items
Email this articleEmail this article
Print this articlePrint This Article
Email the authorEmail the author
Recommend This ArticleRecommend This Article Add to DiggShare this item

At first it seemed a strange idea: a retrospective of pop music in the first decade of the new century? Did that much happen? Actually, it was jolting to think that it has been a full 10 years since the digital calendar rolled over from three nines to three zeros. But it has.

And, doggone it, Rich Albertoni was right, it's not only been a decade, it's been an evolutionary if not revolutionary decade. He has the evidence to back up that contention in his cover story this week, "Pop Explosion." If you've emerged from the thrall of Obamanescence that captured the town midweek, you can now turn your attention to Albertoni's testimony on how much the making, distributing and consuming of popular music has changed in the last 10 years.

A lot of this change was on the macro scale, affecting the music process internationally, but it had its local repercussions and expressions. Albertoni brings the universal to the local.

Madison, of course, has a long history of pop relevance — Steve Miller, Tracy Nelson, Ben Sidran, Fire Town, Garbage, Butch Vig — these are some of the names that reverberate within that history. More names have been added in the last decade as Madison rockers continue to make an impression on discerning ears. Albertoni identifies the trends he thinks have had an altering effect on the Madison music scene. He offers his list of the 10 most influential acts out of Madison in the last decade as well as the 10 folks he considers to have been the most influential in local music during that period.

You may agree or disagree with his choices and evaluations. But you won't disagree that Albertoni describes 10 years in Madison music history that sparkled with innovation and witnessed significant change in the creation and enjoyment of the music of the people.

— V.O.

vo@isthmus.com

Comments (2)

From Sybil Augustine on 11/09/09 at 6:02 pm

I know some people who want to comment are DJS who'd rather stay anonymous for their own protection.  Please make sure you register and use your real name so your comment can be published.  I'm sure you can understand why Isthmus needs to do this.  Thanks!


Last edited: 2009-11-13 19:00:38
From Heidi Olson-Streed on 11/13/09 at 3:50 pm

I'll start off with the full disclosure statement,   I have cohosted a radio program called Psychoacoustics on WORT 89.9 FM for the past 16 of it's 18 years on air. I have been an avid WORT listener for most of the past 25 years.  

I am very disappointed, and somewhat surprised, that Rich Albertoni completely omitted (and seemingly lumped in with "dead") one of the most valuable mainstays of the Madison music scene for the past 33 years (which would include the past 10), WORT 89.9 FM.  Wow, what'd we ever do to you?   

Without the passion and energies of the music director, Sybil Augustine, and volunteers at WORT most of the "Most Influential Madison Acts" and "People Who Most Influenced The Direction of Madison Music", would be without a place to promote their products locally on an almost daily basis.  Every rock show on WORT plays local music, and the station itself promotes local shows by local artists in locally owned venues more than any other staion in this city.  

Sure, radio on a national scale may be a dying medium, but locally WORT has continually provided a lot of exposure to local musicans and local venues.  It isn't preprogrammed, pseudo-advertising for the latest "musical product", which is what is killing radio nationally.  It is locally produced, by actual people, right here and right now.  It is made by people who are so passionate about the music they play that they do it for free, and out of a true desire to educate as many people as they can about something they truely enjoy.   Trust me, the music crew at WORT put in hours of listening, going to local shows and reading up on the music to make their two to three hour on-air slot the most fulfilling musical experience for their listeners.   While I'm sure there are many reasons why WORT has been voted "Madison's Best Radio" in the Isthmus' own readers poll for nine of the past ten years (so yeah, ALL of the 00's), I'm betting that the care that is put into it's music programming is one of the main ones.  

"Bad Sister" Heidi  

Psycoacoustics, WORT 89.9 FM  

Log in or register to comment

moviesmusiceats
Select a Movie
Select a Theater
PluggedcommentsViewedForum
Promotions Contact us Privacy Policy Jobs RSS
Collapse Photo Bar