When was the last time you were surprised by liking a piece of music?
When was the last time you found piece that didn’t match your usual listening habits, but ended up liking it? How did you come accross it?
My taste has been mostly rock, metal and certain kinds of electroic music, but
Fallout introduced me to Billie Holiday
Youtube channel Inside the Score got me started on classical music, like actually listening and enjoying Beethoven, Sibelius and Dvorak and going even to a concert instead of just knowing the bits you can not avoid.
The jazz covers of Phoenix Wright music, especially The Dark Fragrance of Coffee, got me seeking for more of similar style.
There's a site that gives you an album a day to listen to and review from the book '1000 albums to listen to before you die'. One day I got an Abba album and I thoroughly enjoyed it. It had a surprisingly dense, dream-like production to it. I expected simplistic pop but was surprised by how well structured and layered it was.
People shit on Dancing Queen because of its ubiquity, but that track is an absolute masterclass in how to write a beloved three minute pop song. Benny & Bjorn know their shit.
So, I like metal. Death, thrash, heavy, doom, prog, it's all great.
However, something like 8 years ago, I found myself really enjoying Lana Del Rey and I still can't explain why. Then a year or two ago the same happened with Dua Lipa. They are the only artists I can't explain and when I get suggestions similar to them I don't like them.
If you'd told me this time last year that my new favourite genre of 2023 was going to be Finnish rap, I'd have said "no I hate rap".
Well, actually I'd have said "this is some kind of Eurovision related nonsense isn't it?" and the answer is yes. The people's champ Käärijä hooked me in with his party metal, got me checking out his rap back-catalogue and now Spotify has decided all my playlists should be Finnish and here we are.
For me also. Eurovision has been very meh for me, but this year I actually liked many of the songs and Germany really didn't deserve the last place in finals.
I don't like the style Käärijä's albums are produced, but live he is awesome. Cha cha is even better when he can do his own thing instead of worrying the choreography.
Love that live show! The week after such a crushing disappointment, too.
It was a ridiculously strong year, and agreed 100% about Germany. I've actually been listening to a fair bit of Lord of the Lost as well since the final. I am a Eurovision superfan so may be biased, but it's kinda crazy how many new types of music it can introduce you to.
Also had Ylivoimainen by KUUMAA on repeat, the Finnish national selection was absolutely stacked (as per).
We got the moves - Electric callboy. Popped into my recommended when it released, with me having 0 knowledge about the band or what they're all about. Just saw this dude in a weird costume and apparently it's techno? Not the kind of music I like, gave it a try anyway. Then it got fucking wild. Not a day goes by without at least one EC song since then.
The new Lil Yachty album this year surprised me for sure. Really big departure from what he usually does, and he did it (in my opinion) really well. Never been a fan of his in the past
Though it is more in line with what I usually listen to, experimental hip hop, psychedelic rock, indie. Just didn't expect it from him.
Something separate from what I usually enjoy would be That's The Spirit by Bring Me the Horizon. Never been into that genre really (metal? I'm honestly not sure how they're classified) but I really enjoy this album and I'm sure it's gonna be right near the top of my Spotify Wrapped this year.
Sails of Charon - Scorpions - Woah just woah this is where all those great guitar gods took inspiration from? (from Randy Rhoads to Yngwie Malmsteen). Second realization: Welp now I know why Scorpions made such a huge, they were great. Now I can deconstruct the image of those sad arena shows. Ok Germany I get it, you guys aren't square for liking Scorpions, they were the tits. Obs: I had the same realization when I saw a clip from AC/DC playing way back when on the streets and Angus was killing it.
I guess when I ran into Aesop Rock, and got absolutely infatuated? I don't do a lot of rap, so his stuff hitting so damn hard was a surprise.
I remember a few of the other times. Mostly it has taken the right moment, the right mindset and the right artist. A dark autumn evening and a walk in a park for Dark Sanctuary, falling asleep to SunnO))) and waking up to it was a mindblowing experience.
Carpenter Bruts album Trilogy opened up electronic music for me, and Crypt of the Necrodancers soundtrack cemented it.
I grew up performing. Loved music of all kinds.
Went and studied music at university.
Then ended up hating music. Which is so weird I know. Something about needing to perform to survive haha. I didn’t like it.
I started listening to pop music in different languages. German. Italian. French. Etc.
Was surprised and became obsessed with an obscure Italian pop band from Turin called Pinguini Tattici Nucleari.
Flew there from Australia. Saw them play.
Now they are huge in Italy.
But yeh. Dunno why it took listening in a language I didn’t understand to do it for me.
Probably something with appreciating the actual music, rather than a catchy pop song. I say great music “creates interest”. And it definitely does.
I have never been good at remembering lyrics and often kind of ignore them. I have been surprised multiple times about what songs that I have listened for a while are about when the lyrics finally click in my head.
I enjoy more the sound of the artist and in good music you don't need to understand the words for the emotion to come through.
Like Memories of Dust is one of the most emotional songs even though the lyrics are in [human language]
An old podcast introduced me to 'All Day' by Girl Talk. I thought it was the weirdest shit at first but I kept coming back to it, now I listen to it basically any time I'm doing menial/tedious work.
2 years ago when I think I listened to River of Darkness by The Midnight, I always liked 80s/retrowave/whatnot aesthetics so having music to match it all is especially great
I grew up not liking rap and hip hop, except exclusively liking Eminem. But lately I've been trying to branch out. Thought I'd give Kanye a try, so I listed to the College Dropout album and wow, I was not expecting to like it the way I did. Almost the whole thing is solid beats and decent rhymes. Same with Graduation. Color me impressed Kanye, I don't like you as a person but your early music is great.
I think I've learned over the years that I can like almost anything, and although I'm more likely to like music from my favourite genres, it's possible I'll like anything.
The most recent example I can think is that an artist I like did a cover/colab of Unholy by Sam Smith and after listening a couple of times I listened to the original and found I actually prefer that.
I also like things which are borderline not music, like The Shaggs.
Wow! That's a blast from the past I wasn't expecting on here. The genre is industrial, which is basically anything with a rock vibe and also a techno beat.
Normally I used to listen to pretty heavy rock music and metal. Ever since seeing Hamilton all I can listen to is Broadway musicals. They get shit done!
Nice. It's a bit different from my usual listening. Plus my Spanish is very very basic.
Another that came up on the generator with a sort of similar vibe was Getz/Gilberto, more light jazz but you might like it (if you don't already know it).
Bit of a deeper cut, but Dr Syntax is amazing, has been around since the golden age of UK Hip Hop (IMHO), the early 2000s, and is also from Brighton.
If a real lover of music doesn't like Hip Hop/Rap, they are invariably looking in the wrong place. There isn't really a more diverse, granulated, genre - including Punk and Jazz (both of which I love).
If you fancy looking a bit further afield, you could start your adventure with Aesop Rock. Bon voyage!
I discovered a band, that I never could manage to listen to or was even interested. A while ago I got totally hooked - TOOL 🔨
And the most amazing thing the YT algo recommend - Dom whiting’s Drum’n’Bass bike ride (streams)
As a fanatic cyclist I love the combo and couldn’t stop listening after the first minutes. Of course, I’m looking forward to participate to one of those.
The older I get, the less surprised I am by liking stuff that doesn’t fit the story of who I am. Because when you break it down, music is just movement of air, and how can different varieties of air speak to who you are.
So the music I like is just the music I like, and that’s fine with me.
Not a single piece, but I was pleasantly surprised by Ethel Cain's album Preacher's Daughter. Definitely not the sort of music I usually listen to, so I didn't expect that much despite what I'd heard about it, but I actually ended up quite liking a fair few of the songs (although definitely not all of them).
I generally listen to a pretty big variety of music, but over the past few years I’ve really been liking jazz and big band music from the 1930s and 1940s. So much so that I made an internet radio station of public domain music from that era so I could listen to it like it was a radio broadcast then.
I was blown away at how insane it is, like how could anyone ever make something like this at all is bewildering to me. The song structure and sounds didn't even make sense to me at first.
But now this genre of music is the thing I love the most. This song is my absolute favorite of all time.
I use video game playlist when I need to get into the zone at work. Video game soundtracks are often designed to suck you in and keep you engaged without being intrusive.
Maybe not the last time, but the last time I remember stumbling into a new genre. Mdou Moctor completely blew me away. Nigerian psychedelic rock meets folk and blues in such a unique and beautiful way.
Incredible musicianship, catchy songwriting, really easy to get lost in the music. It’s not something I ever sought out, it was just mentioned in a Reddit thread.
I was shocked by how much I enjoyed APESHIT by the Carter, it also helped me discover Formation by Beyonce. I don't really enjoy her other songs but those two are rad.
I like everything, so there are very few genres or styles of music that I don’t expect to ever like at all.
Well raggaeton is one of them…
But man, have you guys listened to DATA by Tainy? It’s actually fucking good.
My main gripe with raggaeton has always been the samey and honestly uninspired production.
I know Bad Bunny had a banger last year, I haven’t listened to the whole album. But I didn’t love the few songs I heard.
But man DATA is awesome. It gives me Dawn FM vibes. It’s dark, very synth-genres inspired, and I do get an OPN vibe from it. Maybe that’s why I loved it tbh.
If you guys haven’t listened to it, give it a try. Specially if you like synth-genres and experimental electronic music, but don’t like raggaeton.
There’s this series of compilation albums called Dark Country, most notable for having a lot of the music from the Rebel Galaxy games. I would not call these good, exactly. But they have a very specific vibe and they all do that vibe extremely well. It’s not what I normally listen to by a long shot, but I keep coming back to them. They’re gritty, dark, cheesy, catchy, and fun.
Randomly heard the track "Hollywood Baby" by 100 gecs in a store or restaurant or something. It instantly hooked into my brain and I'm still not sure why.
I was surlrised by two different pieces: To Ponemo Stithous Mou (Giannis Parios) which is improvised and it's incredible + Chaser (Mammal Hands) because I found it in my savdd music but didn't know how and when I found it and I was surprised by how I liked it
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GoGo Penguin (1, 2) - probably my biggest positive surprise in the Jazz/Fusion genre as of late. Singlehandedly re-invigorated my interest in the genre. I basically didn't listen to this genre at all for a very long time but they changed that
Mammal Hands (1) - I thought I didn't even like saxophone but this band changed that. Very unexpected, very great. Apparently I just listened to the "wrong" kind of Jazz bands before. Discovered them right after GoGo Penguin.