Best Of Rock: Moments When We Might Have Lost Rock n’ Roll…But
Didn’t
By Ralph Greco, Jr.
From
legislation to outlaw it to past preachers who condemn it — bucking trends,
scrutiny and inflation — rock has risen again and again like the archetypical
Phoenix, soaring over each obstacle that has ever crossed its path. But there
have been those times — shifts in the cultural landscape, tragedies, even
technological advances — that have tested rock’s mettle (or metal).
Below are 10 black moments of our recent history that could have seen the annihilation
of rock and roll…but didn’t.
“The Day The Music Died”
The plan crash that killed Ritchie Valens, Buddy Holly and J.P. "The Big
Bopper" Richardson could have easily ended rock and roll in its early days.
Tragic as it was, the early fans of rock bolstered on, saddened but forever
reminded of these great rock n' roll Gods.
Elvis Gets Inducted Into the Army
At the time Elvis’ induction, it certainly seemed like the end to the
short yet amazing rise in popularity of rock and roll…or at least the
King’s career. Some might argue that the latter did indeed happen —
what with Priscilla and Col. Tom Parker’s successful attempt to remake
a squeaky-clean Elvis Presley when the King came home on March 1960. But Elvis
had a momentary shining comeback on the infamous1968 TV special. Despite his
tailspin into Vegas infamy, the true King of Rock n' Roll has never been more
popular, as sales of recent posthumous CDs attest.
Altamont
Often sighted as the antithesis to the ‘rock-can-cure-the-ills-of-society’
vibe of Woodstock, this outdoor concert, on a cold day/night near the end of
the decade saw inexplicable violence. Deaths, fights and finger-pointing, all
with the Rolling Stones providing the soundtrack, this could have been the end
of festival shows. Altamont certainly provided evidence for those who were quick
to bemoan the decadence and danger of rock and roll. But life did go on…
Paul McCartney’s ‘Official’ Announcement Of The Beatles
Break-Up
What could be argued as the greatest band ever officially calls it quits in
1970. But the individual mop tops released great solo stuff and left a legacy
that continues its influence to this day.
The Tragic Trilogy: The Deaths of Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Jim
Morrison
Definitely a crappy start to the decade, with the aforementioned Beatles break-up,
Altamont, and these three deaths (and many more to follow), rock could have
easily ended here. Alas, it didn’t. The 70’s saw the rise of great
progressive bands, Led Zep’s Visigoth-like rule and legendary concerts.
Disco
Never really a threat, so don’t sweat it.
MTV Launches
A blight on the rock n' roll landscape to be sure, creating an ‘art’
form out of what was (is) really just three-minute conceptual commercials with
pop soundtracks. MTV has influenced performances (and I use the term ‘performance’
loosely), film, commercials as well as generations of naive artists, since its
inception. But as cream often does, the true musical mavericks (or just the
simply talented) rose to the top of the medium (does anybody really remember
a-ha?) and with the popularity of You Tube and its brethren nobody needs to
watch videos on TV anymore. MTV is left languishing as nothing more then a wasteland
for tween angst.
Milli Vanilli Win Grammy
Though they will deny it to their dying day (which might just very well be sooner
then anybody can guess) the ‘recoding industry’ claims they did
not know that the gorgeous duo of Fab Morvan and Rob Pilatus were not really
singing their songs. Awarded the “Best New Artist” Grammy for 1990,
The Recording Academy retracted the honor after the truth was found out, and
Arista records dropped the band and deleted their catalog. But the damage to
Grammy's rep had already been done. Seeing as great rock acts have been denied
the little gold statues decade upon decade, this slight hiccup in the TV musical
landscape didn’t matter much anyway.
First Airing Of American Idol
Truly a pop staple nowadays, the problem with this TV rot is that it does occasionally
invite great rock stars (Brian May of “Queen,” Little Richard to
name a few) on its whore-of-a stage set to legitimatize its vapid proceedings.
Had rock been less stalwart, Ryan Seacrest and his cronies might have been able
to convince the public that this bad copy of British Import “Pop Idol”
is really what music is about these days…but we all know different. The
old axiom has never been more true: “Popularity does not quality make.”
Death Of FM Radio
Once a truly great American innovation, FM rock radio has truly died a death
these first few years of the new century. The preponderance of talk radio, pre-programmed
‘Jack’ format and corporate media buyouts have led to a stagnant
radio landscape. Luckily for us all, internet radio and satellite exist.
 



©Copyright 1997, 2008 Vintage Rock
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