A large share of the music people stream today comes from algorithmic recommendations rather than deliberate search. That single fact quietly reshapes what we like, what we think is “good,” and even what gets made in the first place. Taste isn’t just a personal quirk anymore; it’s a powerful force shaped by culture, technology, and increasingly, AI.
Understanding Taste: What It Is and Why It Matters
Taste is your internal compass for what feels right, compelling, or beautiful—whether that’s music, fashion, food, typography, or ideas. It’s not the same as preference (“I like vanilla”) and not the same as expertise (“I know a lot about wine”). Taste sits in between. It’s judgment with feeling.
An easy analogy: preference is what you order; expertise is knowing the menu; taste is knowing why one dish feels more satisfying than another—and being able to sense quality even when styles change.
Culturally, taste acts like a shared language. When a group agrees that something is elegant, tacky, avant-garde, or dated, that consensus shapes markets and movements. Think of how minimalist design went from niche to mainstream—first in architecture, then Apple products, then almost everything with a logo.
Taste is not fixed. What was once considered refined often looks strange later. In the 18th century, powdered wigs and ornate furniture signaled status. Today, they signal costume drama.
Why? Because taste evolves alongside social values, economics, and power. When industrialization made mass production possible, simplicity became a virtue. When digital tools lowered the barrier to creation, originality became scarcer—and therefore more valued.
Here’s the “aha” moment: taste is history encoded as instinct. Your reactions carry the residue of cultural shifts you didn’t consciously choose.
You might think your taste is purely yours. It isn’t—and that’s not a bad thing.
Your taste is influenced by:
Taste develops the way a muscle does: through repeated, varied use—not through a single “refined” choice.
AI doesn’t just recommend—it nudges. Algorithms learn what keeps your attention, then optimize for it. The result? A feedback loop.
For example, Netflix thumbnails change based on what you’re likely to click. Spotify learns whether you prefer complex jazz or mellow lo-fi, then feeds you more of it. Over time, your taste can narrow without you realizing it.
But there’s a twist. AI can also expand taste—if used intentionally. Designers use generative tools to explore aesthetics they wouldn’t have drawn alone. Curators use AI to surface forgotten artists. The tool isn’t the problem; passivity is.
Another “aha” insight: AI doesn’t replace taste—it reveals it. It mirrors your patterns back to you, faster and at scale.
The real skill today is not choosing with AI or against it, but choosing consciously in its presence.
Taste Audit (15 minutes):
This simple audit builds awareness—the first step to refining taste rather than inheriting it by default.