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What Is It Called?

March 26th, 2009 | posted by Carl | 11 Comments | Posted in Main, Music Trends

Here we are – 2009.  Another decade has nearly past.

So – where’s the music?

We just did CDs based on five decades of music.  Each of those decades had a sound that branded it – sometimes more than one.  Almost all of these forms sprang from the Youth of the day.  Some were in protest of the way things were.  Others were protesting the protests.  But all the forms were propelled by the “under 30” crowd.  Created by and for, bought and sold to the young.

The 1960s, of course, basically created music as we know it.  The Beatles, Beach Boys, Dylan and the Stones were basically genres themselves.  Rock (as opposed to rock ‘n roll) and Pop became the terms and offered numerous branches that still thrive today.

The 1970s gave us Glam Rock and Hard Rock (per Led Zepplin and others) and Prog Rock (or Art Rock).  There was the Singer/Songwriter genre and Bubblegum.  Then Disco and Punk toward the end of the decade – each the antithesis of the other.

The 1980s showed Punk move to New Wave.  Corporate Rock (Toto, Foreigner) and Hair Bands were products of MTV and a rebellion against punk and new wave.  The end of the decade showed a confusion of styles that would erupt later, but also the beginnings of Rap and Hip Hop.

The 1990s burst out with more rebellion from the 80s with Grunge, Alternative and even Alt-Country.  But the kids need to dance so Techno , Electronic and Industrial music developed and Goth blended the three together.  The main genre that really kicked in was Rap and Hip Hop, which swamped the charts and all other music forms.

Then you have the Oughts – the current decade…. Was there a movement?  Is Tween the operative term for music this decade?  Where was the rebellion?  What are we calling the sound of being under 30?  Sure – punk sort of came back via things like the Warped Tour.  But it was more a side act than a movement.  All the past genres have come back – even as Classic Rock from the 60s finds followers in a new generation.  But what is the sound?  When they do a retrospective of the decade – was has been born?  Are Britney, Beyonce and Miley the leading forces in music for this decade?  I mean – I know we are all old farts and pop music is not for us.  But as music historians, we should still be able to identify a trend.  A movement.  Youth’s creation of a new sound.

Was there one?

Happy St. Patrick’s Day

March 17th, 2009 | posted by admin | 1 Comment | Posted in Main

One of my favorite Irish tunes…also known as the Humors of Whiskey:

So stick to the cratur’ the best thing in nature
For sinking your sorrows and raising your joys
Oh what moderation gives hope to a nation
Or brings consolation like poteen me boys.

Full lyrics here:

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Evoking fond memories or bad cover band

March 13th, 2009 | posted by Tom | 10 Comments | Posted in Music Trends

So, for the first blog entry, I’ve decided to discuss a music topic, one that I hope will generate plenty of “lively” discourse. The topic is bands that continue to tour long after they’ve ceased to be relevant, and whether those bands evoke fond memories of days gone by, or have they become just a bad cover band.

Rolling Stone actually ran an article a few issues back called “The Battle of the B-List Bands” which referred to competing bands touring on the “good name” of former big bands, like L.A. Guns, the Temptations, Guess Who and Asia. The article tried to assess which of the competing bands were truer to the band in its hey-day, either in terms of how many original members were currently touring or which band had more essential members. In some of the examples, there was no contest — of the two touring Asia bands, one has all four original members and the other has a guy who for a while filled in John Wetton’s spot as lead singer. Aptly stated by the writer, “if you have to see Asia, go original”.

This got me thinking of other bands who tour on what might have been a big name…

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Split Enz – One Night on a Leaky Stage

March 12th, 2009 | posted by admin | 2 Comments | Posted in Music News

The band Split Enz reunited today amidst heavy rain to play Sound Relief, a benefit concert for the survivors of the Victorian bushfires in Australia.
History never repeats? For a special cause, it does

WHEN Tim Finn’s five-year-old daughter Elliott saw the devastation caused by the Black Saturday bushfires, she helped raise a couple of hundred dollars at her Auckland primary school by organising a disco-themed fund-raiser.

Father Tim felt that the least he could do was reform his band Split Enz — even though it had said its official farewells on a national stadium tour of Australia in 2006. read more

Here are a few videos from the concert, Message to my Girl and I Got You:

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