Sex, drugs, and rock n' roll. This has been a staple saying of what rock and all its greatness once stood for. From Jimi Hendrix lighting his guitar on fire to Slash passing out on stage, the definition was based upon hard rocking, party driven, take-no-prisoners musicians focused on playing, not crying.
"I can't help but think that pretty quickly he realized that where we were coming from was somewhere he hadn't seen in a long, long time," Slash says in his autobiography entitled "Slash" about Kiss member Paul Stanley attending an early Guns n' Roses show. "Guns was the type of snarling beast that thrived in pits like that."
Unfortunately, in the midst of the hip-hop and pop uprising, rock has inevitably lost its sense of place amongst the legends that paved the way. This new generation, in touch with their "true feelings" is not looking for a party on the weekends or a catchy tune, instead a meaningless lyric, which relates to their own self pity amongst an upbringing of cry babies.
"Slit my wrists, take away the pain. Slit my throat, there's no one to blame. Lost in the fields of confusion, restless nights, they're not far away," the leader singer of Avenged Sevenfold belts in "Turn the Other Way."
Undoubtedly change is not something new to the rock n roll genre. It's something which has molded the guitar heavy sound for decades. From Jerry Lewis and Chuck Berry to the revelations of Led Zeppelin and Van Halen, rock has seen its fair share of changes
But these changes have stayed consistent. From the 1950's up until the grunge movement came about, rock has been about the feeling, the good times and the musicianship. But somewhere rock n' roll lost its identity.
I'm not the only one who misses the heavy riffs and epic solos of bands who were immersed in the stuff they were playing, not the money they were making. Just ask Eminem who sampled Aerosmith's "Dream On" off of their debut album in 1973. Or the Smashing Pumpkins, who covered Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love."
The unfortunate road leads to the death of what once was, as the teenie boppers continue to download and blast the Jonas Brothers, Miley Sirus, and Kanye West. It's nice to look back at the days, long before I was born, when the teenagers were sneaking The Beatles, ACDC, Ratt, and Ozzy Osbourne onto their record players. A movement which through the ages has dwindled but stayed alive through the few souls out there still rocking their Stones, Coda and Metallica t-shirts. "For Those About to Rock," I most definitely, "Salute You."




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