I play in the band, and I have to say, there's some of the contemporary music that is wonderful, but a lot of it just hasn't been culled by the sorting process yet. Thirty years from now much of it is likely to drop off the playlist never to be remembered, just like most other forms of music. There's some of it that I play, and do my best to play well, that does NOT inspire me, and some that I love to sing. Same with the hymns in the hymnbook. Beethoven, Bach, Wesley, and others all did some great work. But some of those hymns played too slow and too quiet or too poorly in too small a cathedral are also uninspiring to me.
There is only about 10 percent of the music I've written myself that I still like 5 years after I wrote it!
The thing about the contemporary music on the radio is that a lot of it is too personal and too complex to work well for congregational singing, especially for us old fogies who are used to following the written music because we want to sing the right notes. That's why I'm in the band, gives me the opportunity to learn the music faster because I have sheet music, from which I can go off into improv licks when it's appropriate. But that performance grade music is tough for people who don't listen to it all the time on the radio to sing.
That being said, there's nothing wrong with trying to improve one's spiritual state by listening to a Christian station sometimes, or all the time, instead of listening to musical genres that glorify bad behavior, or that cause tension or frustration for the listener. I also understand that some folks are going to be frustrated and tense having to listen to music they don't appreciate on a Christian station! That's okay, music is really close to being our underlying machine language, and the kind of music a person likes is a very subjective and personal thing; it's pointless to criticize someone else's music preference, just as it's perfectly natural and fine to have your own.
Not that there isn't "bad" music out there, but for me, "bad" means poorly played or poorly sung, off key or out of time.
Okay, I've gone on way to long now, have a lovely day, all.