Dan,
So where do y'all hear about these people??
Being an old fart helps. The reality is that very little 'new' music is being produced these days. I know that some think people like Seeker, Six Amicus and I are locked in a bygone era musically, but the fact is that creatively the music world is filled with many copyists and few innovators these days.
I do not listen to the radio and never have. I have been attached to the music industry for years so end to hear about what is happening from my peers. What I do when presented with music is to read about the band/songwriter and find out who they were influenced by, inevitably it is a name that erupted in the late sixties or early seventies.
For example, a few years ago someone sent me the masters of a 'Badly Drawn Boy', a singer/songwriter from Manchester. I listened with interest as the kid most definately has potential. Dylan, Nick Drake, Smiths...he was an open book and needs to polish up his picking. When I heard that he had played the Festival Hall I was disappointed. As a promoter I could think of several dozen people who deserved that spot more than he.
So the first thing to do is to forget the time, and ageist thing and search back in history. You will find that the past has much to offer. Just as there are no new Mahler's, Tchiakovsky's, Beethoven's and bach's roaming the earth these days, neither are there many Townes Vand Zandt's.
An example. Somebody mentioned 'Moby Grape' earlier, here is a track from the eccentric genius Alexander Spence from his disastrously uncommercial 'Oar' album recorded in 1969. Despite its lack of PC lyrics, it still sings. I have yet to read the bio's of many serious lyricists who do mention him somewhere. An unfortunate life was lived, but face it, most of us would be happy to die producing half an 'Oar'.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DouiBOOlEok&feature=related
HS