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vintermanntoday at 7:43 AM2 repliesview on HN

I'm not sure it's the same people being paid for aesthetics as for the art. In streaming, for instance, background music is extremely profitable, and a good example of "just aesthetics". But you rarely see artistic artists crank out a few tracks for the "music for studying" playlists just to pay the bills.


Replies

qbit42today at 9:49 AM

They are not always the same but there is more overlap than you would think. One place that I know is being hit hard is Nashville (no comment on what this implies about the state of US country music). There are a lot of local musicians with their own (small) bands whose primary income came from (relatively low quality, compared to their own music) song-writing, playing back-up instrumentals/vocals for studios, stuff like that. This income stream is shrinking rapidly.

TheOtherHobbestoday at 9:17 AM

They're not going to put their name on it if they do.

Until fairly recently "jingles" - ad music - were a huge source of income for many musicians with full time careers. Likewise library music, which was prerecorded with a specific mood so music editors could drop into their projects without having to commission it, and then the composers would be paid for performance royalties/residuals.

Writers - not such a thing now, but in the 60s and 70s a surprising number of "serious" writers in the UK began their careers writing ad copy.

Famous movie directors - many started in the ad slop trenches.

Music videos are literally ads, and it's not a surprise they use many of the same techniques and are directed by ad industry people.

And then in tech there's ad tech...

AI is just the newest arrival to the party.