Moderator: Andrew
Journeyman2122 wrote:Do you think The Classic Rock/Melodic Rock genre is making a comeback? I have been reading articles that a lot of teens are listening to classic rock now because they hate today's music. What can you attribute this to, 1. today's music sucks 2 there are no guitar heros anymore so people are listening to bands like Van Halen, Journey, ACDC, and older Metallica. This website is the haven for Melodic Rock and I thought I would throw this out. If anybody has any thoughts on this please share them.
Andrew wrote:Journeyman2122 wrote:Do you think The Classic Rock/Melodic Rock genre is making a comeback? I have been reading articles that a lot of teens are listening to classic rock now because they hate today's music. What can you attribute this to, 1. today's music sucks 2 there are no guitar heros anymore so people are listening to bands like Van Halen, Journey, ACDC, and older Metallica. This website is the haven for Melodic Rock and I thought I would throw this out. If anybody has any thoughts on this please share them.
Yes, in some ways. People are seeing thru the BS and want real music. But whether it comes back in a new form rather than the dinosaurs breaking thru again remains to be seen.
I think the dinosaurs will further influence a new era of talent and melodic bands/artists. So you are more likely to see melodic rock in a new form while the classic rock artists of yesteryear get a little more credit for their craft.
Sassie wrote:I think it would be great if the kids listened to the music we listened to. If for no other reason than just to listen to the words.
Sassie wrote:I think it would be great if the kids listened to the music we listened to. If for no other reason than just to listen to the words.
strangegrey wrote:
These days, bands are given ONE album to come out of the gate swinging...if they aren't an overnight success, they are discarded and tossed by the side of the road. The problem with this mentality, is that these bands (since they no longer have a few albums to develop) they either have to do it before they release an album (which, I feel is very hard to do) or trust a label picked 'cant miss' producer, that comes in with not only a handful of songs, but songwriters, side musicians, etc. All one has to do, to see this first hand, is to watch how Bo Bice was manhandled by his label, during the recording of his debut album. He was given one song on the album, (which is, sadly, the best song on the record), the pile of songs he brought in were imediately discarded by the producer (who was one of the principle songwriters on the album), his band was shoved aside for a label picked group, etc, etc.
Given the above thoughts, it's hard to imagine that there isn't at least a large pile of bands that are now gone, that were given their one album...and then shitcanned....that, if given the opportunity to release another album or two...would have really broken out and shipped high numbers. So you have to look at record companies these days, pissing away opportunity cost...The way they do business suggests that theres alot of potential sales that don't get realized because the business is not long-sighted, but short-sighted.
Unfortunately, record companies will NEVER admit this. Instead, they look to rediculous excuses as the reason why album sales are down, ie file sharing, etc. But the fact of the matter is that in the early 90s, when record companies purged their A&R staffs to bring in college kids that they thought were more in touch with grunge and other slacker crap that they were pushing then....they got rid of people that really KNEW the business and KNEW how to develop artists.
It's not a fluke that there hasn't been one single long lasting, several-album rock artist (that got his/their start post mid-90s) that has maintained serious, broad, long-reaching success.
strangegrey wrote:The problem, as I see it...is that there's other factors that come into play these days.
Labels, as with most businesses (at least here in the US), are in very much a 'show me, show me' mentality. Back between the 70s and late 80s, labels would 'invest' in a band, give them 3-4 albums to develop a style/voice and cultivate a more 'long term' following. Just 3 artists that would have never made it past the first album are:
Bon Jovi (33 million records sold)
Billy Joel (79.5 million sold)
Journey (45 million sold)
There are others on the list that wouldn't have made it past album 1...but these 3 are a good example. If you take these 3 artists, combined, they account for a total of over 157 million albums.
Think of it in these terms, if these artists were never given the opportunity to move past album one, that's 157 million albums (at least 10 times that in gross revenue) that record companies would have pissed away.
****
These days, bands are given ONE album to come out of the gate swinging...if they aren't an overnight success, they are discarded and tossed by the side of the road. The problem with this mentality, is that these bands (since they no longer have a few albums to develop) they either have to do it before they release an album (which, I feel is very hard to do) or trust a label picked 'cant miss' producer, that comes in with not only a handful of songs, but songwriters, side musicians, etc. All one has to do, to see this first hand, is to watch how Bo Bice was manhandled by his label, during the recording of his debut album. He was given one song on the album, (which is, sadly, the best song on the record), the pile of songs he brought in were imediately discarded by the producer (who was one of the principle songwriters on the album), his band was shoved aside for a label picked group, etc, etc.
Given the above thoughts, it's hard to imagine that there isn't at least a large pile of bands that are now gone, that were given their one album...and then shitcanned....that, if given the opportunity to release another album or two...would have really broken out and shipped high numbers. So you have to look at record companies these days, pissing away opportunity cost...The way they do business suggests that theres alot of potential sales that don't get realized because the business is not long-sighted, but short-sighted.
Unfortunately, record companies will NEVER admit this. Instead, they look to rediculous excuses as the reason why album sales are down, ie file sharing, etc. But the fact of the matter is that in the early 90s, when record companies purged their A&R staffs to bring in college kids that they thought were more in touch with grunge and other slacker crap that they were pushing then....they got rid of people that really KNEW the business and KNEW how to develop artists.
It's not a fluke that there hasn't been one single long lasting, several-album rock artist (that got his/their start post mid-90s) that has maintained serious, broad, long-reaching success.
RockinDeano wrote:Without looking it up, what band has had their first three records all sell more than 6 million copies each?
RockinDeano wrote:Without looking it up, what band has had their first three records all sell more than 6 million copies each?
I guess there is a little bit of capitalism, conservatism and individualism in your blood, afterall! Scary.. huh?
RockinDeano wrote:Crazie Scarab wrote:RockinDeano wrote:I never liked those Bible thumping cocksmokers, but hey, money is money.
I guess there is a little bit of capitalism, conservatism and individualism in your blood, afterall! Scary.. huh?
You will never find conservatism in me. If you do, I am dead. You couldn't pay me to vote conservative or republican. I would rather live in Greenland.
Crazie Scarab wrote:RockinDeano wrote:Crazie Scarab wrote:RockinDeano wrote:I never liked those Bible thumping cocksmokers, but hey, money is money.
I guess there is a little bit of capitalism, conservatism and individualism in your blood, afterall! Scary.. huh?
You will never find conservatism in me. If you do, I am dead. You couldn't pay me to vote conservative or republican. I would rather live in Greenland.
Send me $200.00 out of every paycheck you recieve for the rest of your life and I'll believe you, bro!
Crazie Scarab wrote:Crazie Scarab wrote:RockinDeano wrote:Crazie Scarab wrote:RockinDeano wrote:I never liked those Bible thumping cocksmokers, but hey, money is money.
I guess there is a little bit of capitalism, conservatism and individualism in your blood, afterall! Scary.. huh?
You will never find conservatism in me. If you do, I am dead. You couldn't pay me to vote conservative or republican. I would rather live in Greenland.
Send me $200.00 out of every paycheck you recieve for the rest of your life and I'll believe you, bro!
Too much? Heck, I'll give you a 50% tax break!Make it $100.00 each paycheck and I'll believe you! LOL
Andrew wrote:FOR THE LOVE OF GOD - DOES EVERY BLOODY THREAD CONTAINING MUSICAL DISCUSSION HAVE TO BE RAILROADED OFF TOPIC?????????
I am genuinely interested in this musical topic, but damned if I am going to wade thru more political BS. Take it to the politics forum.
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