The irony here for me is that club DJs, who have been the brunt of much criticism (often justifiably), are often restoring dynamic contrast to music which has none built into it. Certainly not all DJs, and certainly not dyamics in the traditional musical signposts, but dynamics nevertheless.
One cat in particular, a British guy by the name of Colin Cooper (see http://www.radiogotsoul.com/content/audio/...cat=ColinCooper ) makes these longass nonstop house mixes with plenty of dynamic variety in the "upper strata" of the sound field. Now, that's house music, and there's usually not a lot of variety in tempo or basic beat or dynamics within same (although there's a lot of variety on what gets layered on top of that basic beat). "Musical journey" is a cliche, but that's what this cat puts together.
I know that's a type of music (or esthetic) that not a lot/most of the people here are going to be interested in (most will probably find it repugnant), but the point is that there are people who recognize the "problems" with the music that "the industry" is providing and who are being proactive in "correcting" it to meet their needs, as well as the needs of any potential audience they might have. The "tools" are there for damn near anybody to take a basic cut and play with it any way they want to.
That's "dangerous", but it's also liberating. Depends on who's doing what and for what reasons, and it makes GIGO directly relevant to operator as well as raw materials in a way that's perhaps more direct than ever before. Bottom line is that if you don't like it, you can fix it, one way or the other.
Noting & bemoaning the loss of what was is certainly understandable, but if it doesn't serve to motivate some sort of corrective, all it is is more whinyass pissybitching. My hat's off to anybody who carpe diems, no matter what genre they're in.