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  • 33세부턴 듣던 노래만 듣는다 (ttimes)
    대중음악아카이브/분석과 비평 2015. 5. 8. 11:29

    원문: http://www.ttimes.co.kr/index.html?no=2015050618517776129



    <33세부턴 듣던 노래만 듣는다>

     

    구유나 기자 2015/05/06 


    사람들이 평균 33세부터 더 이상 새로운 음악을 듣지 않는다는 온라인 연구 결과가 나왔다. '스카이넷 앤드 에버트(skynetandebert.com)'라는 음악 연구 사이트를 운영하는 아제이 칼리아가 미국 음원 스트리밍 서비스 스포티파이의 데이터를 분석한 결과다. 


    칼리아는 10대는 대중음악에 심취하며 20대를 지나면서 점차 흥미가 떨어지고 30대에는 음악 취향이 성숙한다고 말한다. 단, 여성은 대중 음악에 대한 관심이 최소 13세부터 최대 49세까지 이어졌다. 


    반면 남성은 10대를 지나서부터 30대 초반에 이르기까지 흥미가 급속도로 떨어졌다. 기존에 이용하던 서비스나 상품보다 양질의 것이 나와도 투자 비용이나 귀찮음 때문에 원래의 것을 선택하는 '자물쇠 효과' 때문이다. 그는 나이가 들수록 새로운 음악을 덜 듣게 되는 두 가지 이유를 설명한다. 


    ① 사람들은 나이가 들어 생소한 음악을 접하게 되면 이를 10대나 듣는 노래라고 치부하기 쉽기 때문이다. 

    ② 사람들은 본인이 어렸을 적 즐겨 들었던 음악을 다시 찾는 경향이 있기 때문이다.



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    영어원문: http://www.uncut.co.uk/news/study-shows-people-stop-listening-to-new-music-at-33-68144


    <Study shows people stop listening to new music at 33>

    u Michael Bonner ㅣ May 1, 2015


    Study was conducted using Spotify data from US listeners

    A new online study claims that people stop listening to new music at 33.



    The study was conducted using data from US Spotify listeners by Ajay Kalia of website Skynet and Ebert.

    His results found that people, on average, stopped listening to new music at the age of 33. He writes, “While teens’ music taste is dominated by incredibly popular music, this proportion drops steadily through peoples’ 20s, before their tastes ‘mature’ in their early 30s,” continuing, “Until their early 30s, mainstream music represents a smaller and smaller proportion of their streaming. And for the average listener, by their mid-30s, their tastes have matured, and they are who they’re going to be.”


    The study also shows that there’s a slight gender gap at play (“Women show a slow and steady decline in pop music listening from 13-49, while men drop precipitously starting from their teens until their early 30s, at which point they encounter the ‘lock-in’ effect”), also stating that becoming a parent “has an equivalent impact on your ‘music relevancy’ as aging about 4 years”.


    Kalia attempts to explain the tendency to gravitate towards less mainstream, non-current music, writing, “Two factors drive this transition away from popular music. First, listeners discover less-familiar music genres that they didn’t hear on FM radio as early teens, from artists with a lower popularity rank. Second, listeners are returning to the music that was popular when they were coming of age – but which has since phased out of popularity.”


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    연구보고서 링크

    http://skynetandebert.com/2015/04/22/music-was-better-back-then-when-do-we-stop-keeping-up-with-popular-music/

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