TG盗号软件API破解技术|【唯一TG:@heimifeng8】|黑帽SEO快排加速✨谷歌搜索留痕排名,史上最强SEO技术,20年谷歌SEO经验大佬✨How the pandemic changed music : NPR



The coronavirus pandemic reordered almost everything about the music industry, from touring to streaming, interrupting careers and stealing lives. Illustration by Jackie Lay. Photos by Frazer Harrison / Stephen Shugerman / Matt Winkelmeyer / Clive Brunskill / Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images hide caption
toggle caption Illustration by Jackie Lay. Photos by Frazer Harrison / Stephen Shugerman / Matt Winkelmeyer / Clive Brunskill / Pascal Le Segretain/Getty ImagesThe global coronavirus pandemic, when it arrived in our lives five years ago this week, affected the world of music in basically the same way it did everything else. Musicians froze their lives and retreated into quarantine, like the rest of us. They canceled in-person events. They learned how to use Zoom. Some of them probably baked bread. Too many of them died.
In some ways, the pandemic shrank the distance between those of us who considered ourselves listeners and those who thought of themselves as makers of music. During the first few months, some of us, lacking familiar comforts, took it upon ourselves to learn to play, or sing, or dance, as a way to fill empty rooms or social media feeds. Soon we found that pop stars were doing the same thing, some reimagining their careers.