Death of Rock 'n' Roll


Rolling Stones tour delayed due to Mick Jagger health condition
David Bowie
George Harrison
....
and no new ones at all

Rock\n\Roll's dead pretty much, but Jazz's still alive!
czarivey
bdp , exactly so . I don’t listen to rock for that reason and if I want something on the "earthy plane", after all we are human and can’t praise God 24/7/365,
I listen to jazz which is FAR better both on the musical plane alone and the skill and dedication of those who play it .
I also hated/hate rock for clearing the airwaves in a year of the "swing" / American Standard Songbook era which was the high-water mark in real musical appreciation among the American general population .

I’d go so far as to say that American Jazz is better overall than American composed classical , bring in the big guns from Europe and you have another story .

tosta , perhaps . I had lost several men and shooting
the "enemy" in such a bogus war also heavy on my mind . In short my defenses were low and I imagine that is also so in prison .
But I often wonder, since as I said , Armed Forces Radio NEVER played
classical , if what I heard was just for me alone which would qualify for a miracle . Not that I know that or claim that .

flesher, what I would advise my grandson in your situation is to stop listening to music at all for at least 6 months , better yet a year .Music is a gift for us to be happy on this vale of tears but with 48Ksounds like you may have taken it a bit far and a vacation might be in order .
The recordings ain’t going anywhere and you might get a different perspective on things .


&bdp24 you are sadly mistaken. All Rock ‘n Roll is far from profane or worse. There are some extremist groups who espouse devil worship etc, but the majority is honest, good down to earth music for every person. rap on the other hand is for those who are intolerant and want to radicalize other people to follow a lifestyle of crime and hatred. 

Two of our greatest singers---Sam Cooke and Aretha Franklin---came from the Gospel world, and were denounced by the flock for their heresy---performing secular music.

Prior to modern times (sometime in the 19th Century, I believe), Classical music---music that has survived for one reason because of it being notated---was purely the music of the Aristocracy, the Kings etc. who were it's patrons. Composers were employees, and wrote the music needed for official ceremonies, as well as for the entertainment of the Royals, who were themselves often amateur musicians. J.S. Bach's day job was as a church organist, and his organ works were written for the Sunday Masses. That they survive as art is incidental!

The music of the proletariat was not written down (notated), but was passed down from generation-to-generation, sitting around fireplaces, at dances and taverns. The songs we now think of as "Folk" music (in not the literal, but rather largest sense of the word) survived by being kept alive by troubadours, traveling minstrels, etc. It was not until A.P. Carter, June Carter's Grandfather (Carlene's Great-Grandfather) notated and copywrote the songs he had grown up hearing the hillbillies in Tennessee singing (music brought to America by the English, Irish, and Scottish, mostly), and subsequently recorded by The Carter Family (considered the First Family of Country music), that that rural music made it out of the mountains and into the cities and towns of the rest of the U.S.A. and beyond. It is that Folk music that was one half of the recipe for making what became Rock 'n' Roll (see below).

It's not hard to understand therefore that at some point people look back, and embrace and celebrate that Folk music, later known as Hillbilly, Country, Bluegrass, Western Swing, and finally, which when mixed with the music brought to America and developed by African slaves and their ancestors---Blues, became Rockabilly---the first integrated music! It was that integration that first got Rock 'n' Roll banned by racist southern whites, who didn't want their kids listening to no n*gg*er music, even if it was being performed by whites (Elvis, etc.).

@sleepwalker65, woah nelly! It is not I who consider Rock ’n’ Roll profane (even if it is, I STILL love it. Well, some of it, anyway), for gosh sakes. That term was used to make a point---that Little Richard, Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, other Rockabillies felt a conflict between their upbringing and spiritual beliefs, and their involvement in Rock ’n’ Roll, which the Church considered The Devil’s music, and which IT referred to as profane. I thought that was obvious ;-) .