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I don't think gender has anything to do with the kind of music a person likes but I know that the music that is popular while growing up will stay with you for the rest of your life because it is the music you live your life to.The greatest impact is between the ages of 10 to when you graduate from high school, sometimes even beyond.This is a time when most of us have no cares and none or little responsibilities,we love friends,movies,the mall,dances,boys and music.Parents also affect our tastes by the music they expose us to. I remember my mom and dad listening to 40's music when I was a teen,I hated it, but when I grew up and I heard some of it I began to like it.My son grew up in the 90's but because I always listen to 60's and 70's music he listened to it too,even tough his favorite is hip hop.

2007-02-19 17:29:05 · answer #1 · answered by Georgewasmyfavorite 4 · 0 0

I don't think so, because I've been into rap since the the 80's, and now as an adult I'm still into it. But I also listen to jazz, which I couldn't stand as a kid.

Music knows no age or time limits!

2007-02-19 17:06:18 · answer #2 · answered by Ade 6 · 0 0

No, I think its the mind state which tends to get more perverted as time goes on which isn't what the older generation is used to. My dad is into certain music that came out during my time period so I don't think it does unless you don't open yourself to new material. Music from the same type of souls will always affect every generation.

2007-02-19 18:36:42 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

well it could but not really
i mean i've seen kids listening to things like britney spears while other kids listen to like older rock bands.
i think it depends on what your exposed to.
you can be 5 or 50, male or female and listen to the same thing
it also depends on whats "in"
if your friends all like one band you might go and listen to said band and like it, it doesnt really matter on age or gender.
at least i dont think so.

2007-02-19 16:58:44 · answer #4 · answered by HollyWounded 2 · 0 0

i think of that track tastes exchange in accordance to the present technology. working example, in the '50s, track became into WAAAAAAAAAAAY diverse than something we've around immediately; the '60s became into like an explosion of oddities; the '70s became into the early beginnings of hair steel, and so on., and so on. So the thought maximum women and adult men have diverse tastes in track is, in my opinion, a load of bullcrap. i'm an 18-300 and sixty 5 days-old female and that i'm into an identical form of track you look into, to boot as some heavier stuff, yet i'm no longer a hundred% adversarial to testing different genres. It only relies upon on character and flavor, to boot as what the media seems to be shoving down our throats and no count if or no longer we choose for to swallow it...or cough it lower back out and run like hell. What i'm partly delving into is a undeniable sociology of track, i assume you ought to call it: human beings tend to enhance their likes and dislikes in line with what's "popular" (i.e, a number of those rap and pa genres that each physique infants stereotypically are into), and what's "popular" is what's maximum paid interest to *universally*. there'll continually be exceptions to any rule, and, for sake of occasion, you and that i are exceptions to this one. that is no longer proper what's "popular" to something of the international; we like what we like because of the fact we like it, and we do unlike what we do unlike because of the fact we don't. Now, in the past this gets too long, i'm only gonna say, "that is my 2 cents. with a bit of luck they have been nicely donated."

2016-11-24 19:32:51 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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