I like to think it had a direct affect on the music selection for Tony Hawk Pro Skater 2 and Bill Gate's decision to step down as CEO of Microsoft to focus on charitable works. But, in reality, it likely had no affect on history.
So... Funny story. My brother found System of a Downs Toxicity on Limewire or whatever months before it came out and burned me a copy. I listened to it non stop and bought the album when it came out.
Listening to the official Deer Dance I noticed that they changed the song just slightly between my brothers version and the release. That was pretty wild.
This "clarification" is just even more confusing. Like do you mean, "What would be the effect on history if we could all see into the future, but only through song?" I guess I'd hope that we'd try better to stop 9/11, COVID, and Trump.
Nothing very specific. Bu$hleaguer could be mistaken for being about George H.W. Bush instead of W. There are songs ostensibly about 2000's Roskilde Festival stage collapse, but I doubt anyone would catch on that they were about an event that hadn't happened yet. Plus some songs about climate change that might sound a little alarmist by 90s standards.
I think the people of 1999 would be overwhelmed by the staggering number of different heavy metal subgenres we have in 2024. And very few of them would download any of it. So not much would change.
Can you give any specific examples of "rare shit" or at least broad categories? It's the Internet, im picturing legacy porn but am hoping for things from comic book guys secret video archive.
not really, I'm not into underground stuff, but lots of people look for rare recordings, unreleased music, etc. live shows. it's mostly for music but you can get movies and ebooks and stuff too. I share a wide variety.
one I've not been able to find even on soulseek is Jesus Christ Superstar
In 2006, the band Stefy released the Orange Album. They were amazing electro-pop but after they completely failed to make themselves a presence, they got dropped from Wind Up Records and Stefy went off into obscurity.
If you listen to it now, you can kinda place it into a whole genre of electro-pop music that really started to catch on a few years later. People weren't ready for it yet.
I think a big part of why EDM and anime took long too catch on was that there wasn't enough exposure. Once everyone started getting "broadband" and more comfortable using technology things really took off.