Tastes change with age?


Felt old, today, when I was seemingly unreasonably annoyed when a kid drove by in a rattling junk car with a boomin' system.  Pretty sure the kid thought it sounded good.

It's unreasonable, because I may or may not have once been a kid in a rattling junk car with a ridiculous set of subwoofers who may or may not have thought it sounded good at the time.  I guess tastes change with age, wisdom, exposure, and experience.  A "friend" might have once been able to stomach some Mad Dog 20/20 Orange Jubilee but now thinks he appreciates terroir.

Aside from perhaps having more "disposable" income as "audiophiles" age or moving with technology, might others prefer different types of music/gear than they once upon a time did?
stfoth
@wolf_garcia - they aren’t traditional straight ahead jazz piano records, but try Herbie Hancock’s Mwandishi period records. Speaker’s Corner just remastered Crossings- its funk, jazz, and almost every idiom turned on it’s head.
I don’t think you’ll find anybody doing what Little Feat did in their prime with Lowell. I have, however taken a liking to guitarists like Rory Gallagher and Paul Kossoff, Ollie Halsall (Patto) and I still dig Skynyrd, pre-crash.
Steely Dan’s first album was one of the great debut albums by a band that turned out pop hits but had the sensibility of avant garde jazz players. Elliott Randall’s leads were smokin’ on that first record.
@shadorne - Solid Air is a gorgeous album.
Highly recommended- Roy Harper’s Stormcock, especially the first side. It is balladeer stuff, but dark, Jimmy Page plays 12 string on the second track- The Same Old Rock and Roll.
Mose Allison was kind of beatnik-ish, and wrote and sang some great songs. Cool pianist, too. 
Walter Becker's two solo albums are "beatnik deluxe" masterpieces, as are all the Steely Dan albums really. 
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