Recently there has been plenty of anguish in the wind about
the state of rock music in today’s cultural and economic marketplace. At the Grammies Dave Grohl felt the need to
come out and defend “the human element of music,” which, to some, meant he was
dissing electronica. (This goes to show
that rock music may be dying, but fans of electronic music will always have
thin skin). Over at The Guardian, Michael Hann argues that all rock and roll music
needs is a large flagship band to rally around.
But others aren’t so optimistic.
In the New York Times, JonCaramanica decries the artistic stagnation that has barnacled its way around
modern rock and roll radio. I think, at
the very least, we can all agree that modern rock radio sucks. In my town of origin, Cleveland, which also happens to be the home
of the Rock Hall of Fame, the station that once played contemporary rock music
has now been replaced by sports talk. Of
course, the radio station in question defined contemporary rock music as a
bunch of stuff from the 90s plus the warmed over grunge imitators of today, so
it wasn’t much of a loss.
The Apocalypse |
There’s plenty to quibble with when it comes to these
prognostications of death. In the case
of Caramanica’s New York Times
article, he is smart enough to define his subject not as rock music as a whole,
but as rock music on a major label that is played on a major radio
station. But he’s also dumb enough to
claim that the Black Keys’s newest album is nothing more than “one long
airless, swingless jam,” whatever that is supposed to mean. I suppose part of his argument is that rock
music is so in love with revivalism, whether what they’re reviving is classic
blues based rock or nineties grunge, that they haven’t moved the art form
forward. But is this really a phenomenon
located only in rock music? Plenty of
people have argued that the last fifteen or so years have been a time of
cultural stagnation, and they are not only pointing to rock music. The songs of Lady Gaga or Katy Perry could
easily fit within the milieu of the late 90s.
Their brand of revivalism just happens to be more popular.
But, at the same time, Caramanica might have a point. With the exception of the Black Keys, most of
the bands Caramanica sites as examples of rock and roll’s stagnation are pretty
convincing. In fact, modern rock radio
has been a wasteland for the past fifteen years or so. I have a solution to this problem: let rock
and roll die. Now, let me walk that
statement back a little. I don’t
actually want to kill of the genre of rock music. But I do think that the manner in which these
articles are defining rock music seems just as old fashioned and out of date as
some of the music they are decrying. Here
is how Caramanica defines the subject of his piece: “For the purposes of this
article, that’s [rock music] more or less rock released on American major
labels, regardless of origin, and played on mainstream rock radio stations.” He’s only looking at music that has been
played on the radio. When was the last
time you’ve actually listened to music on the radio? For many of us it has been years. And when I do listen to music on the radio, I’m
much more likely to tune in to local college radio stations than something
funded by a large corporate conglomerate.
This begs the question, why do we even care about the health of rock and
roll music in the mainstream?
Rock music has been around since the mid-twentieth century,
and in that time it has evolved to the point where it looks a whole lot different
from the music that was made by Buddy Holly and Elvis Presley. While rock music’s most famous signifiers of
rebellion and drugs came about in late sixties and early seventies, I would
argue that it didn’t become a truly vibrant artistic vibrant until the late
seventies and early eighties during the punk and new wave movements. It was during this time that rock musicians
decided that they couldn’t make the kind of music they wanted if they still relied
on the old forms of music production and distribution, leading many to create
their own music labels. From that time
forward, few artistically viable rock bands made it onto rock radio, but if you
picked up the nearest rock you might find a bunch of squirming hardcore punkers
taking pains to destroy rock music, and in the process reinventing it. With the exception of a brief boom in the
early to mid 1990s, great rock music hasn’t been found on the radio. But there has always been a vibrant
subculture that has played with the form and influences of the genre.
What was true in the 80s onward is true now. It is amazing that these music critics seem
so concerned with the economic health of rock music in a day and age when
thousands of new rock bands can be heard free through a myriad number of
internet sources, from Spotify to Youtube.
If you are looking for great new music through your radio dial, then you’re
looking in the wrong place. Sure, rock
musicians could probably construct songs that would be palatable to large
swaths of the American public, but do we really want a new Phil Collins for the
21st century? Besides, thanks
to the long tail, even popular music isn’t terribly popular by the standards of
the pre-Napster age. Now, with this new
world of easy and instant access comes plenty of other questions. How do musicians make money off of their hard
word? How can music fans cut through the
millions of mediocre to bad songs in order to get to the good stuff? The one question most people are not asking,
other than culture critics at large magazines and newspapers, is whether or not
there’s anything good on the radio. I
have no worries about the artistic viability of rock music. In fact there are too many great rock bands
out there for me to keep up with. What
we need to do now, as fans of art, is to make sure we are supporting musicians
who provide the soundtrack to our morning commute and our Friday night
debauchery.
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