It does seem like the impact of guitar groups in the 60s was much more powerful than it is today. I suspect that this is because the music they were playing, which was driven by a technological innovation (the electric guitar) was fresh and new sounding and the baby boom generation was young and receptive to new styles.stringsncords wrote:Music HAS become disposable, because it's all been done before, and better.
I know I sound like my father, but....... The Beatles, Stones, and the other British Invasion groups blazed the trail for other guitar-based bands, to the point where there were high-school aged garage bands everywhere, and young boys and girls aspired to be guitar (and bass) heroes. There was memorable music being written and recorded back then that's still viable today - in my opinion, much more so that is being produced by current artists. Classic Rock acts still rule the concert industry; Paul McCartney and the Rolling Stones have much more drawing power than Lady Gaga (lots of unsold tickets on her last tour), Rhianna, Beyoncé, Pitbull, and pretty much any of the DJ-based rap and hip-hop "artists" that are currently ruling the pop music scene. There's no staying power to todays music - again, my opinion.
DJ's don't sell guitars - the music industry sorely needs a great young, guitar-based band, and it sure would be nice if they played Ricks.
Key point: this music was not well received by the older generation of the time.
Paul McCartney, the Stones, etc. were/are megastars, and obviously still popular, predominately among the very large baby boomer segment of the population. But to say that "there is no staying power to today's music" is to enjoy the benefit of hindsight without giving credit to some of the great music being made right now.
I would ask, what other music could possibly be made with the electric guitar? After rockabilly, the British invasion, blues rock, arena rock, prog, metal, etc.
If it's even possible to have a musical revolution with the impact of what happened in the '60s during one of the greatest teenage population booms of all time, it will arrive because of a new (and controversial) technology like computer and digital music, not because someone founded yet another guitar group. Pop music, aside from some throwback groups working from older styles, moved on a long time ago.
I love the oldies as much as you guys, but I don't hop in my car for a night out and turn up the Beethoven.
