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Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Proof That Musicians Are Less Lonely Than They Used To Be

A new study shows that artists feel less isolated than ever before. But that doesn’t mean they’re falling in love.


Somewhere around the turn of the millennium, musicians started saying they were "lonely" or "alone" in their songs less.


Somewhere around the turn of the millennium, musicians started saying they were "lonely" or "alone" in their songs less.


This graph was made by Nickolay Lamm, the artist/researcher who previously showed us how big humans eyes will become and what Barbie should really look like.

His new History of Music project compiles a series of similar graphs, each showing how often a certain word has been used in popular songs over the past five decades.


Confused? The horizontal axis on the charts measures the year a song came out, and the vertical axis measures its popularity on Billboard's year-end Hot 100 chart for that year. Cells that are red feature the word in question a lot; blue cells feature it less. So: a cell at the far right of the graph is new, and a cell at the top of the graph is a song that was popular.


Nickolay Lamm


Artists are feeling more connected, but they're not necessarily in love.


Artists are feeling more connected, but they're not necessarily in love .


They say "I love you" less than they did back in the '60s and '70s.


Nickolay Lamm


People generally express being much less "sad" than before.


People generally express being much less "sad" than before.


Nickolay Lamm


Maybe because they're having so much "sex."


Maybe because they're having so much "sex."


Nickolay Lamm




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