Brian Eno — 25th  November 2009
It’s odd to think back on the time—not so long ago—when  there were distinct stylistic trends, such as “this season’s colour” or  “abstract expressionism” or “psychedelic music.” It seems we don’t think like  that any more. There are just too many styles around, and they keep mutating too  fast to assume that kind of dominance.
As an example, go into a record  shop and look at the dividers used to separate music into different categories.  There used to be about a dozen: rock, jazz, ethnic, and so on. Now there are  almost as many dividers as there are records, and they keep proliferating. The  category I had a hand in starting—ambient music—has split into a host of  subcategories called things like “black ambient,” “ambient dub,” “ambient  industrial,” “organic ambient” and 20 others last time I looked. A similar  bifurcation has been happening in every other living musical genre (except for  “classical” which remains, so far, simply “classical”), and it’s going on in  painting, sculpture, cinema and dance.
We’re living in a stylistic  tropics. There’s a whole generation of people able to access almost anything  from almost anywhere, and they don’t have the same localised stylistic sense  that my generation grew up with. It’s all alive, all “now,” in an ever-expanding  present, be it Hildegard of Bingen or a Bollywood soundtrack. The idea that  something is uncool because it’s old or foreign has left the collective  consciousness.
I think this is good news. As people become increasingly  comfortable with drawing their culture from a rich range of  sources—cherry-picking whatever makes sense to them—it becomes more natural to  do the same thing with their social, political and other cultural ideas. The  sharing of art is a precursor to the sharing of other human experiences, for  what is pleasurable in art becomes thinkable in life.
This  article first appeared in the December edition of Prospect magazine