During a recent appearance on Lost in Vegas, J. Cole reflected on how the shift from buying music to streaming has changed the listening experience and, in his view, diluted meaningful critique. “What I don’t like right now is… you pay your $10 or $15 a month, you got every song in the world,” Cole said. “We already undervalue it.” Cole contrasted that accessibility with earlier eras, when listeners had to make a conscious investment to hear an album. “If I didn’t like an album when I bought that sh*t on CD… I got the right to not like this, because I spent $15.99,” he said. “Now I can have a conversation with somebody else that spent their $15.99. Cole argued that streaming has removed that sense of commitment, allowing people to jump into conversations about projects they have little connection to. “You don’t even care about this artist… you just see a conversation happening and you want to be a part of it,” he said. “There’s no barrier of entry for anyone to experience the music.” For Cole, that lack of investment leads to surface-level reactions rather than deeper appreciation. He described a time when listening to music was more intentional and communal, rather than driven by online discourse. “Back in the days… they only had the option of listening with their heart,” he said. “They buy the record, put it on… it was a full-on experience.” Instead of immediate critiques or social media debates, Cole closed out by saying listeners were more focused on simply absorbing the music. “They didn’t sit around like, ‘I think he could have shaved off five songs,’” he added. “Nah… they just like, ‘Wow. Look what we got.
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