I think there IS a quality factor, regardless of how you like the output or not.
Quality is not "good song" or "bad song" or "i like it" or "i don't like it".
You can definitely tell when someone has invested some time and effort into making something, when someone has had training and studied about stuff and applies that to a composition. THAT is quality to me. It's the general sense of effort put into something.
There's also the sense of achievement. How well does a piece work in the environment it is supposed to be displayed at?
This sense of quality can be perceived even by an untrained listener, because these are universal values. I don't need to understand what the guy on stage is doing to know if there's been a process of development, learning, training, research and effort to make what I am hearing. You can also feel the vibe of what is going on. There's a certain energy that the author intended to pass along, because all this effort and work, creates energy.
Harmony, melody, rhythm... all technical terms known just to us, which don't really make sense outside of our bubble, yet the quality of the work permeates outside this bubble onto the common folk, demonstrating these are not the factors that create it.
At least this is how I think about quality. You can put this onto any other art expression. I have many examples in pictorial art of people whose work I totally dislike but I understand the quality and significance behind what they have done, and I really appreciate this.
Victory Road wrote:one thing in particular that i think is that there are way more chip musicians in america and europe than australia, so statistically alone musicians in those countries have the bar set a lot higher for themselves.
This is a major fallacy, not statistics. Quantity does not imply quality, and no matter how many you have, doesn't mean the general bar is higher at all.