Gulf Today

As time catches up with rock’s greats, can the genre survive?

- Associated Press

“Rock and roll is a spirit,” the rapper said. “Rock and roll is not conforming to the people who came before you, but creating your own path in music and in life.” “That is rock and roll, and that is us”

Mick Jagger “on the mend” following a heart valve procedure, Ozzy Osbourne postponing his tour over a fall, The Who’s Pete Townshend nearly deaf: time is no longer on the side of rock’s legends.

And with every farewell tour, biopic, throwback compilatio­n release and mid-20th century icon succumbing to age, chills from rock’s grim reaper can feel increasing­ly nippy, leaving some in the industry questionin­g the genre’s future.

Bands flying rock’s banner still exist, of course, with 2000s era groups like The Black Keys and The Killers announcing new music ater years of silence.

But not one rock group occupied a spot in the top 10 of 2018’s most-streamed acts, according to Nielsen Music, with nine hip hop and R&B performers along with pop megastar Ariana Grande leading the pack.

The influentia­l festival scene has begun relegating rock to lesser stages in favor of headlining pop, rap and electro acts: 2018 was the first year Coachella’s line-up dropped rock groups from the main atractions, with the leading festival following suit for 2019’s edition set to kick off this weekend.

August’s 50th anniversar­y Woodstock blowout will welcome back staples of the era like Santana, John Fogerty and Canned Heat — but even that event chose headliners including rap royalty Jay-z, electro-pop performer Halsey and pop star Miley Cyrus to draw a younger crowd. And in perhaps another sign of the genre’s declining share, the top Grammy awards gala hasn’t televised its rock

awards in years.

In a 2018 piece entitled “Rock is Dead, Thank God,” Dan Ozzi, a music critic for Vice, wrote that “the genre has been eclipsed in all measures of popularity and profitabil­ity by pop, hip-hop, and EDM.” “And by those standards, yes, rock is dead.”

The 1990s are seen by some in the industry as rock’s last glory days, with Nirvana, The Smashing Pumpkins, The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Pearl Jam and Soundgarde­n reigning over the scene.

But according to Danny Goldberg, Nirvana’s former manager, by the mid-1990s hip hop had begun occupying the innovative space formerly claimed by rock, galvanizin­g young people and reflecting contempora­ry times.

Hip hop “became the dominant voice of youth culture,” Goldberg said, saying that, as rock once did, the genre became “a transforma­tive art form.”

Today’s rock band of the moment Greta Van Fleet — a Michigan group that nabbed a Best New Artist nomination at this year’s Grammys — has been widely panned by critics as Led Zeppelin copycats. One scathing review from US music bible Pitchfork said the group’s retro sound offers but “a bowl of nostalgia” -- which it dubbed “the cheapest high in music.”

 ??  ?? 2016 file photo shows Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones posing for a portrait in New York.
2016 file photo shows Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones posing for a portrait in New York.

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