When did you stop enjoying Rock?
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When did you stop enjoying Rock?
At 36, I NEVER thought I'd reach the point in my life where I stopped enjoying Rock. I currently play in a fairly modern rock band and considered what I was doing was kind of cutting edge for a steel player. But only in the last few weeks, I've lost the passion for Rock music. That goes for radio, MTV, etc. To me, it has become predictable and tired.
So I was wondering if any of you have felt like you've lost the Age of Innocence. Call it age, more responsibilities, or oversaturation from the media. Can any of you remember when the transition occurred for you and what caused that transition?
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Matt
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So I was wondering if any of you have felt like you've lost the Age of Innocence. Call it age, more responsibilities, or oversaturation from the media. Can any of you remember when the transition occurred for you and what caused that transition?
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Matt
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- Barry Blackwood
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- Steinar Gregertsen
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Never stopped enjoying (high quality) rock, just learned to enjoy a whole lot of other music as well. So it feels like I enjoy rock less sometimes, but that's really not the case...
Steinar
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Steinar
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www.gregertsen.com
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I still like it, at least some of it. My view on all genres of music is about the same, I like it if it is done well. I tend to listen to a wide variety of music. I posted recently how I am currently enjoying listening to sitar music. Then, I'll put on some U2, or Coldplay, and back that up with Bobby Flores or The Derailers. I think everything can be good in moderation. Although I play in country bands, I can't sit and listen to country all day, or just rock all day. I like a little of all of it.
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<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Mark Metdker on 17 January 2006 at 04:46 PM.]</p></FONT>
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Zum U-12 w/True Tone pickup thru a Nashville 112
Strats thru a VHT Super 30
Band Pics
http://community.webshots.com/album/176544894AuXSmi
jonchristopherdavis.com
www.lonestarattitude.net
<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Mark Metdker on 17 January 2006 at 04:46 PM.]</p></FONT>
- Jay Fagerlie
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I'm not tired of it yet....but I dig deeper than mainstream.
Go find it, it's out there. There are killer bands out there, you just gotta look.
I'll start you off....
Look for a band named "Superunloader"
I don't think they're touring anymore, but they are still out there active in the business....
Jay
Go find it, it's out there. There are killer bands out there, you just gotta look.
I'll start you off....
Look for a band named "Superunloader"
I don't think they're touring anymore, but they are still out there active in the business....
Jay
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- David Doggett
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The first time I stopped enjoying it was when Elvis went into the Army and Pat Boone and Frankie Avalon took over. I took up jazz, then folk and blues. Dylan, the Stones, the Byrds, Hendrix and Motown got me back into rock, but by then I wasn't playing it myself. Then I started getting into country and bluegrass, partly because I was interested in my roots, and partly because these genres have adult themes. I started playing dobro and pedal steel. Then the Eagles, New Riders, and Linda Rhonstadt brought me back to country rock. Then disco and grad school sort of cooled me out. Then punk, new wave Goth, and young women got me interested again for awhile. Then marriage and kids and Britney and boy bands and rap took my interest away, and I really didn't have time to search out the indies and the grunge scene. Then divorce put me on the meat market again, and I decided to go back to the beginning and play rockabilly, alt country and blues. Now my kids radio stations are beginning to work on me, and the more R&B oriented hip hop (Black Eyed Peas, Alicia Keys) is sounding interesting. But I can't figure out how to work steel into it - maybe RR can show the way. That's probably way more than anybody wanted to know - but that's what happened. It's been a long strange trip.
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- Mike Perlowin
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- Geoff Brown
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I've never lost interest in rock music, or pretty much any other genre. My tastes have changed over the years, but it's not as if I woke up one day and said, "rock music sucks and I'm moving on". Today, we have more music being made than ever before. "Rock" is such a broad term to begin with. So many sub-genres in there. If people limit their listening to their local FM radio or watching MTV, they're getting no exposure to 90% of the music that's out there.
- Leslie Ehrlich
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1975 was the year rock 'n' roll died for me. That was the year that disco took off, and for the rest of the decade 'corporate rock' replaced the hard-driving guitar rock of the early 1970s.
I was a teenager during the late 1970s, and I tried to avoid disco and corporate rock by learning to play the old guitar rock and southern rock stuff. Punk was pretty much an underground thing, the 'new wave' stuff that followed was too clean for me, and heavy metal was too fast for my liking.
By 1982 I abandoned the pursuit of rock stardom and music has been a hobby ever since. Several fads and formulae have come and gone since then and I've ignored all of them. I never abondoned rock 'n' roll however, and in recent years I've turned to recording and playing original music.
One thing I promised myself was that I would not turn to country music just because rock 'n' roll was changing. Good thing I didn't, because country music took a turn for the worse too.
I was a teenager during the late 1970s, and I tried to avoid disco and corporate rock by learning to play the old guitar rock and southern rock stuff. Punk was pretty much an underground thing, the 'new wave' stuff that followed was too clean for me, and heavy metal was too fast for my liking.
By 1982 I abandoned the pursuit of rock stardom and music has been a hobby ever since. Several fads and formulae have come and gone since then and I've ignored all of them. I never abondoned rock 'n' roll however, and in recent years I've turned to recording and playing original music.
One thing I promised myself was that I would not turn to country music just because rock 'n' roll was changing. Good thing I didn't, because country music took a turn for the worse too.
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- Bobby Lee
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I enjoy watching a good rock band in concert on DVD or HDTV. The studio recordings just don't excite me, though. Most of them are too sterile and contrived for my taste.
I've felt that way since the mid-80's. I sort of burned out on listening to rock when I worked at the Boogie factory.
I like playing good rock tunes on steel. A lot of rock has interesting chord changes, mode changes and rhythms. It's not as limiting as blues or country in that respect.
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I've felt that way since the mid-80's. I sort of burned out on listening to rock when I worked at the Boogie factory.
I like playing good rock tunes on steel. A lot of rock has interesting chord changes, mode changes and rhythms. It's not as limiting as blues or country in that respect.
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<font size="1"><img align=right src="http://b0b.com/b0b2005.gif" width="78 height="78">Bobby Lee (a.k.a. b0b) - email: quasar@b0b.com - gigs - CDs, Open Hearts
Williams D-12 E9, C6add9, Sierra Olympic S-12 (F Diatonic)
Sierra Laptop S-8 (E6add9), Fender Stringmaster D-8 (E13, C6 or A6) My Blog </font>
- Tony Prior
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I still enjoy and listen to a good deal of Rock...( not 80's Punky Rock) although I do like the Ramones and the Romantics...
Stones..Mountain..Cream..etc...(roots for me)
It's the Rolls that are killin' me, expecially them dang Sweet Rolls , Dinner Rolls, etc...
t
<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Tony Prior on 18 January 2006 at 02:59 AM.]</p></FONT>
Stones..Mountain..Cream..etc...(roots for me)
It's the Rolls that are killin' me, expecially them dang Sweet Rolls , Dinner Rolls, etc...
t
<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Tony Prior on 18 January 2006 at 02:59 AM.]</p></FONT>
- David Mason
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It seemed like into the mid-70's, bands (and guitarists) had distinctive sounds - you could instantly tell Hendrix from Clapton from Santana from Allman. To my ear, Boston, Heart, and Jefferson Starship took major steps in formulizing rock, and quick on their heels came the "designed" bands: Styx, Foreigner, Journey, Oreo Speedcookie, and on and on. There have been glimmers of talent sneaking through now and then - Dire Straights, the Police - but they've been few and far between lately. Nowadays, all the children's minds have been fried by too much television anyway, so musicality doesn't even matter - it's all about style. I am a fiend for long, evolving melodies, and as rock guitarists can't solo anymore, I get my jollies from violin concertos and Indian music.
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- Keith Cordell
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My interests have simply widened, as well. I'll never stop loving the Clash, Elvis Costello, etc., and I think unlike Mr. Perlowin I think Led Zeppelin was about the pinnacle of the genre but most of what is commercially promoted on radio is crap. Fortunately I have time to look for the stuff I listen to, like the Hellacopters from Sweden, the Handsome Family, Wilco, Son Volt, The Bottle Rockets... there is a wealth of great music out there if you take the time to look, and some of it is absolutely amazing.
Of course the old stuff still sets the standard and I'll always go back to Ray Charles when the **** hits the fan.
Of course the old stuff still sets the standard and I'll always go back to Ray Charles when the **** hits the fan.