Much made of Gene Simmons recent assessment that in his view “rock is dead”. Not the first time we’ve heard this and likely not the last. But is it true? My take on what Gene was trying to say is it’s dead for new music and new artists. Not entirely true, but again, I get where he is coming from. The truth is rock, hard rock, and metal are far from dead, but also far from the mainstream in many cases. There are some real good signs for rock out there as far as a live entity. Festivals are bigger than ever and there are more of them of all sizes than ever (maybe too many). U2, Foo Fighters, Metallica, Bon Jovi AC/DC. etc will always fill arenas and stadiums around the world. The mega bands will always draw. Motley is currently doing great business on their final tour. The road has also become a bit over crowded with too many bands touring too often. Competition is fierce out there at all levels for the concert dollar because money is not being made on album sales like the good ole days. The next tier from the pure out and out headliners are the co-headline shed bands. Think Kiss/Def Leppard. Bands teaming up and splitting set times equally to assure a good crowd. Of course this also means shorter set times and expensive tickets many times. There are very few bands not bringing name support or co-headlining these days. Most need the help selling tickets. And this is a huge problem for breaking new rock. There are so few opportunities now for a new young band to get in front of big audiences because the headliners need a name to help sell. Sure some of these packages have a new young band third billed but lets be honest, nobody is in the building that early to see them and in some cases they are buy ons, paying the headliner to play. This all ties in to the issue of the growth of rock.
Another huge problem is lack of development from what is left of record labels. It’s all about the first week now. And then albums are quickly forgotten. Sometimes not even a live show. Too many people in too many bands. Very little focus. Make a splash week one, off the charts by week four. Artist development and consistently working an album for a few singles is almost done now. Many labels hire outside “indies” to do promotion. They work hard for the weeks they are paid but when the label pulls the retainer fee they are on to the next. Tons of hired guns out there. Good people don’t get me wrong, but the real interest in the project is far from long term. Label cuts are so severe few pick up the ball after the outside help ends. Radio is also an issue. Way too many stations don’t truly support new music, or play it first week when the artist is there and never touch it again. The simple truth is mainstream radio will always do what the MOST people want. And the majority would rather hear Free Bird again than a new artist or song. Sad but true.
Delivery of music is also a problem. Everyone knows I am no fan of downloads. But to me it also kills the business. With labels less and less likely to send physical product along with some packaging and information it makes it easier to ignore. If a CD is on my desk I’m likely to have a listen at some point. If i get one of a million emails with a song attached that needs to be downloaded and transferred in any number of formats and services it is so easy to just click delete and not take the time unless it’s really something you want. I also have very little interest in the streaming services. Granted I get my music for free, but I’ve heard none of it that excites me and I think it grows the singles mentality instead of people truly getting into a band and an album. Call me old fashion but I hate when I go see a band an the entire crowd is only there for one song and is lost the rest of the time. Pure sales are so sparse now it’s hard to think who the next artist will be to score a gold record (500K). Used to be a little airplay and video play and you could make that happen. I think the RIAA is going to have to rethink sales awards.
Here’s the upside. There are a TON of artists new and classic making great new music! The bad? So little of it has a chance to break through for the reasons above and many more. But I have never been more excited than I am now for new/newer bands. Alter Bridge is growing and doing great and an arena act in Europe. Kyng, Mastodon, Scorpion Child, Rival Sons, Monster Truck, Farmikos and many more are among my favorite new things and I play them on a regular basis. So I think from that end things are healthy. But what is truly concerning is how few people I find truly care about this stuff now. And how few have no idea Iron Maiden are still around! (dead serious, listen to calls in my satellite show). Everyone is too distracted now. We are over saturated and over stimulated with too many other things. That huge release day moment doesn’t seem to exist for rock anymore. And that sucks. I don’t mean YOU. If you are reading my site and connected to my outlets you are clearly a fan who wants to be in the loop and still very much tied in. But so many who used to be have lost that passion. As a lifer for me that’s hard to understand. I know peoples lives change, but if you love rock how can you not always? Is it dead in this respect for good? No, I don’t think so. Again the mega bands will always do well. Watch what happens when a new Foo Fighters track comes out. But they have become the token mainstream rock act for every show that needs one. We need some new blood for sure getting a shot. The mega 70’s guys only have so much left and some already have stayed too long at the party. We need that one great band with great SONGS above all to come and charge the whole scene. Let’s hope they are out there in a garage somewhere right now. We’ve had those moments where everything was given a kick in the ass; the birth of thrash, the Nu Metal movement (like it or not), the release of Appetite and the impact GnR had, the grunge movement and all the good and not so good from that. We need that band and moment again and it will come. Rock is far from dead. I don’t believe it will ever die. It’s a bit underground and in some cases over saturated but is going nowhere. I have lived it my entire life. I am out there all over the world experiencing the passion so many still have for it. And after 31 years I will continue to fight to get more platforms to help grow it and expose it. It is not easy. People would be stunned to know how hard it is for me to keep all the things I have going even after more than three decades and the success I have been able to carve out with a loyal following. But it has always been for me from day one about keeping it alive. Every day I meet someone that says to me the same thing; “Eddie thanks for keeping this alive”. John 5 just said it to me yesterday on the radio. I appreciate that like you can’t believe because it has always been the primary reason I do what I do. I know rock is not dead because I see and feel the support from all of YOU in all that I do. So thanks for that! We just need a few more to join the party and that one great new band to make it cool again in the mainstream. It will happen, just a matter of time. Keep rocking my friends and keep the faith!
ET
178 Responses
I agree Ed. But I do lean towards Gene at a slant. Where I live there’s one radio station that plays rock music but they mix it with up and coming not so rock and roll and it kills me to listen to them so I turn on my iPod and jam the oldies and new stuff that is actually rock. So really radio stations like this one (93.5 Wzbh the beach) is slowly killing rock. But all in all I still love my cd’s and just the other day went looking for Smith & Myers accoustic sessions on cd but could not find cause its only download I think and I can’t bring myself to do it to give apple my money.
Being in a heavy rock band I get exactly what Gene said. Well done Eddie explaining it to the consumers.
There’s so many reasons why the music business is in this shape. Economy, why pay $30.00 for 2 CD’s when you can listen or download for free, why pay for music at all? I still do, always will, because I want the package, photos, lyrics, liner notes, especially from the albums I grew up with in the 60’s, 70’s & 80’s. Even a new album like “Redeemer Of Souls”, or “Space Invader”, even if I knew how to download, LOL, I wouldn’t. I bought both CD’s, paid cash for them, wouldn’t have it any other way. Younger people, most don’t really know or care about what they’re missing by downloading everything. Years ago, a new release like R.O.S. would probably sell 250,000 copies in it’s first week, today, it’s a fraction of that, because of downloads and “file-sharing”. No, I don’t believe Rock is dead at all, but unfortunately, buying is dying. Another problem for new bands, what can they write that hasn’t been written? What can they do, that hasn’t been done? It has to be so hard today for new bands, almost impossible to do something, anything without being over-compared. I agree with Eddie, have to keep the faith, one way or another Rock will survive. For many of us, it helped to keep us alive, now it’s time for us to return the favor.
ROCK AND ROLL AIN’T NOISE POLLUTION
ROCK AND ROLL AIN’T GONNA DIE
ROCK AND ROLL AIN’T NOISE POLLUTION
ROCK AND ROLL IT WILL SURVIVE! 🙂
I know, it’s ROCK ‘N’ ROLL! 😉
Brain fart from exhaustion, LOL!
Metal dead, rock hanging on. Yes, TMS is a top rated show on VH1 classic, which is in only 30% of U.S. Households.
Doug R, How come u weren’t 1st one to post?
Another pathetic piece of Wood, right John.
BTW, Metal’s not dead, Rock is fine, despite negative comments from negative people like you John Wood. We’re trying to do something good, something positive here, so why don’t you take your negative attitude elsewhere.
Gene did a lot for record sales when he and Paul put out a reunion album…without the members who had reunited lol.
Your heart is in the right place, but the reason fans don’t embrace new music is that you’re picking the WRONG BANDS. You continue ignoring all the new Swedish rock bands that play American style, sleazy hard rock, and THOSE are the ones who can break through. You have this huge platform and you focus on American bands that just don’t make the grade, and that’s why people tune out new music. If you exposed people to new bands that know how to make the 80s style sound current (Sister Sin, Hardcore Superstar, Crashdiet, Confess, Dynazty, Gasoline Stars, Julian Angel, Crucified Barbara, Bullet, etc), then maybe you’d be onto something.
i agree with Dino ( even though you forgot to say gotthard which is a swedish band deeply influenced by Deep Purple) these new swedish bands sound like where 80’s rock left off before grunge kicked in. i keep telling people if they played this stuff on the radio here i’m sure these bands would break big time in the states and people i’ve played their stuff for agree with me . It’s time to start putting these bands on a platform here it’s possible these bands are the kick in the ass everyone needs to start hearing
I agree. There are some awesome bands coming from Sweden.
http://davesmiles.hubpages.com/hub/Sweden-Is-Bringing-Glam-Metal-Back-To-The-World