930 Forums
=> GENERAL DISCUSSION => Topic started by: grateful on August 12, 2019, 04:21:45 pm
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Will rock and roll live forever? Has it already died?
As I stepped out of the shower today, I wondered what would signal the end of rock and roll. The collapse of Woodstock 50? Vampire Weekend? Peter Cetera joining Chicago?
Then it occurred to me that we still have original members of the Beatles, the Stones, The Who, Pink Floyd, Zep and a ton of others from the inaugural class. They're all in their 70s. When the last of that group finally dies, is that the day we'll all look back on and nod, yep, rock and roll is dead?
What say you?
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I think there have been many other generations of rock and roll....aren't there a few levels of the new guard
does rock n roll only exist in the late 50s and 60s?
look at the ovure of GWAR and how future genrations will listen and be influenced
and of course Superorganism, they already have planets named after them
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Mmm yeah no. I guess my question has an implicit bias towards innovators. The first ones to create something new. Yeah you can say that Chuck Berry and Elvis belong here, but you can't go too far back without getting into some proto-rock genre.
And isn't GWAR! derivative of Alice Cooper?
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And isn't GWAR! derivative of Alice Cooper?
HOW DARE YOU....ban this bordie and put a pox on his house
jez...noob mistake and I didn't have the !
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I just, came here, for the commas.
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We've really only had to deal with the untimely, premature deaths of the first generation of rock icons. In the next 10 years or so, most will be gone.
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is the premise of this thread that there is no one under 70 producing rock and roll?
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No, just that the first generation will be passing soon, and everything left will be derivative.
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um their stuff was derivative too
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um their stuff was derivative too
Derivative of prior artists in other genres, sure. But the rock and roll came into its own in an explosive way in the 60s and 70s.
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I guess you are trying to say there is only one 'rock n roll' and all this stuff since then isn't rock n roll, but a derivative that 60s rock
I think Run DMC (https://youtu.be/qXzWlPL_TKw) would beg to argue
(https://i1.wp.com/boingboing.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/king-of-rock-thumb.jpg?fit=800%2C450&ssl=1)
I mean even through out the 60s Rock music was evolving year by year
You seem to have a really narrow definition of rock
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I guess I meant classic rock.
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I miss Larry Bud Melman
I guess you are trying to say there is only one 'rock n roll' and all this stuff since then isn't rock n roll, but a derivative that 60s rock
I think Run DMC (https://youtu.be/qXzWlPL_TKw) would beg to argue
(https://i1.wp.com/boingboing.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/king-of-rock-thumb.jpg?fit=800%2C450&ssl=1)
I mean even through out the 60s Rock music was evolving year by year
You seem to have a really narrow definition of rock
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I think every genre gets watered down and morphs into something else. Iggy Pop says music of the Stooges was him just "mis-hearing" the blues. My ears tend to find a lot of the production/technology elements of today to be objectionable. Others hear something I don't. I think it's just natural. My ears know what they like, and I'm not sure rock will die completely because I think as long as anyone can actually hear something, there will be people blown away by something like the Beatles. I still see disenfranchised teenagers even today wearing Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd t-shirts. Some music will just continue to exist beyond the time it was created, well after the songwriters are dead. The other day the 4 seasons by Vivaldi was playing in my Uber, and it was instantly recognizable to me. I don't really listen to classical. But it's iconic, immediate, and the sort of music that is like a primary color on a palette. I don't think "Abbey Road" is ever going to disappear. When I put on side 2 even now, my mind is just blown. It hasn't aged. It never sounds stale. For whatever reason, some music never, ever seems to disappear, even if you can't comprehend why you still hear it on a weekly basis. If you told me in 1985 I'd still be hearing "Relax" by Frankie Goes to Hollywood like every damn week, I'd tell you no freakin' way.
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If you told me in 1985 I'd still be hearing "Relax" by Frankie Goes to Hollywood like every damn week, I'd tell you no freakin' way.
I'm going to hold off on joking about gay bar/club stereotypes and just ask, "where are you hearing Relax weekly?"
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We've still got the deads
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We've still got the deads
well, some of them...
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https://www.google.com/amp/s/theweek.com/articles-amp/861750/coming-death-just-about-every-rock-legend
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https://www.google.com/amp/s/theweek.com/articles-amp/861750/coming-death-just-about-every-rock-legend
Precisely.
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Meh, that doesn't really concern me. I'm more concerned with my own mortality, and those of other family members.
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Meh, that doesn't really concern me. I'm more concerned with my own mortality, and those of other family members.
Weird. I never noticed you dont post in the dead celebrity thread.
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Meh, that doesn't really concern me. I'm more concerned with my own mortality, and those of other family members.
Weird. I never noticed you dont post in the dead celebrity thread.
I actually do go there to post, but you ghouls always beat me to it.
My wife's friend's husband died Saturday. He was a minor player in the punk rock community of the city that he lived in his whole life (not DC) for the last 35 years. I only met him once, 15+ years ago. I'm actually pretty sad about that.
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Ric Ocasek (https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/Ric-Ocasek-Cars-Singer-Dead-in-NY-at-75-560430391.html)
Rock-n-Roll: not dead yet.
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One for the topic, Tom:
“We don’t even say the word ‘rock’ on the radio station — we’re New York’s new alternative,” said Mike Kaplan, the ALT 92.3 program director and format captain for alternative across Entercom, the station’s parent company, in an earlier interview. “I don’t think there’s a big win in using the word rock today,” he added.
“The raw, guitar-rock sound is really — I don’t want to say it’s done, but …” He trailed off. “It’s present, but it’s morphed and mixed with other instrumentation. Does anyone really go to Guitar Center anymore and pick up the guitar?”
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/18/arts/music/rock-radio.html?action=click&module=Editors%20Picks&pgtype=Homepage (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/18/arts/music/rock-radio.html?action=click&module=Editors%20Picks&pgtype=Homepage)
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Is it today?
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Well little Richard was not a guitar guy..RNR started with piano and honking saxes...to me it starts in New Orleans then gets mainstreamed with blues (Chicago chess...guitar...Chuck Berry) and rockabilly (Sun and Elvis)
But what Little Richard was more than anything was the attitude of rnr and that is never going to die..ain’t nobody ever been more punk than Little Richard
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Charlie Watts
I refuse to believe this
Ugh
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Lee 'Scratch' Perry (https://www.jamaicaobserver.com/latestnews/Lee_Scratch_Perry_is_dead)
Soon we will have no greats
Reggae edition
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Shane MacGowan
I have a feeling that 2024 is going to be a dark year.
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The Last DJ
https://www.jimladdrocks.com/