Try GOLD - Free
In Defense of the Insufferable Music Fan
The Atlantic
|November 2021
What we lose when we “like everything”

I spent much of my youth in sprawling record stores, drifting through aisles marked by signs that said things like ROCK, R&B, HIP-HOP, and—it was the ’90s— ALTERNATIVE. Anyone who grew up in or near a city in the later decades of the 20th century probably remembers the dial locations of classic rock, country, modern rock, “urban.” (Of course, there were also the catchall behemoths of Top 40 and adult contemporary; young snobs like me looked down on them as the presets of dilettantes.) But these days, to judge by the omnivorous listening enabled by Spotify and the stylistic free-for-alls of mega- festivals like Coachella, the genre boundaries that once defined popular music and its fandoms may be collapsing.
On the one hand, that’s hardly a surprise: Physical music stores and terrestrial radio—those two mainstays of 20th- century music consumption that depended on genre to segment and serve specific consumer markets—are coming to seem as obsolete as a yellow Sony Discman. On the other hand, the notion that musical genres might no longer matter as they once did feels more like a momentous cultural shift than merely like fallout from new distribution and marketing modes. Musical genres have long had a peculiar imaginative power and participatory quality. They aren’t just labels imposed by an industry; they’re shaped by passions and arguments, love and disgust, allegiances and disavowals.
This story is from the November 2021 edition of The Atlantic.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Atlantic

The Atlantic
Songs of Herself
How did Taylor Swift convince the world that she's relatable?
12 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
Culture Critics
On July 5, a couple of days after I saw Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, Black Sabbath played its final show, at Villa Park, in Birmingham, England.
5 mins
October 2025
The Atlantic
THE NEIGHBOR FROM HELL
Israel and the United States delivered a blow to Iran. But it could come back stronger.
28 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
Whither the Dictionary?
These are parlous times for lexicographers.
8 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
THE GREATEST FIGHT OF ALL TIME
It was oven-hot inside the arena, and that was before the fight began.
34 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
John Cheever's Secrets
In a new memoir, Susan Cheever searches for the wellspring of her father's genius.
10 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
The Ghost of Lady Murasaki
A thousand years ago, she wrote The Tale of Genji, a story of sex and intrigue in Japan's imperial court. I went to Kyoto to find her.
19 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
The Invention of Judd Apatow
How a kid from Long Island willed his way to the top of American comedy
30 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
How Originalism Killed the Constitution
A radical legal philosophy has undermined the process of constitutional evolution.
40 mins
October 2025

The Atlantic
YOU DESERVED BETTER
A letter to America's discarded public servants
8 mins
October 2025
Translate
Change font size