Weekend Plans Post: No Longer Batching It Rock And Roll Weekend
After a couple of weeks away, Maribou is back home. The cats are no longer wandering around at 4 in the morning yelling “WHERE’S MOMMY”. I did this thing where I filled the fridge door with *MY* drinks and the top two shelves of the fridge with *MY* food and *MY* ingredients and, over two weeks, they disappeared until it was time to fill the door with her stuff (allowing for a few cans for me) and making sure the shelves were ready for the stuff that we’d want to pick out TOGETHER.
So far that has meant the soft rolls from Kneaders. I swear, the first ingredient on those things has to be sugar because they are sooooo good. Good for sandwiches, good for dipping in soup, good for just splitting and putting a pat of butter in there. Delivery of groceries from our various places. And just getting back on the horse. Whew.
One of the things that happened while she was away was a lot of listening to music. On the twitters, there was an interesting discussion of the evolution of Rock and Roll and how it seems to be receding.
Yeah, I was going through and trying to find some guitar-oriented rock that was vaguely recent and The Darkness is the closest that I could find to a band that is doing what bands in the 80's were doing.
I blame autotune.
— Jaybird (@OG_Jaybird) January 18, 2022
The Darkness was on my mind because I spent the weekend previous listening to them. And, seriously, they’re just a treat. They’re doing the post-modern thing with rock and roll by knowing the tropes in and out and around and sideways and have no problem mocking them… but the mockery comes from a place of dear, dear love for the genre. They’re playing with it.
I’m sure you remember their breakthrough song “I Believe in a Thing called Love” if only for the absurd video:
“Are they serious or are they making fun of this sort of thing?”, you may be tempted to ask. “Yes”, I’ll answer.
They had a more ballady song “Love is Only a Feeling” that is their shot at “Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?” where it’s pretending to be a love song but it’s not really but it kind of is. It contains the absolutely amazing lyric:
The state of elation that this unison of hearts achieved
I had seen, I had touched, I had tasted and I truly believed
Seriously. That couplet is a g-darn triumph. And the song is good too.
They came out with a Christmas song that I enjoyed and thought was pleasant enough… until it was pointed out to me that it was just an excuse for the lead singer to yell “bell end” and “ring piece” a dozen times. And so my enjoyment of the song turned into a childish snicker. It’s a musical version of Joyce’s “If You See Kay” poem. I am childish enough to still enjoy it anyway.
But now I understand why the rock station doesn’t keep it in its Christmas rotation.
They came out with “Rock and Roll Deserves to Die” for their 2019 album and I seriously need to give a content warning for this video. If you watch it to the end, you will see the lead singer’s, erm, buttocks. So be warned.
In an interview, Justin Hawkins (the lead singer), explained: I remember when we first started, people were like, “Ah, rock and roll. At last, there is a band that has come to save rock and roll.” And it always makes me laugh, because I think, “Rock and roll is the only genre that seems to need saving all the time.” It’s like terminally tied to the train tracks – a night train being driven by rap artists and jazz artists. You never hear the whole, “Who’s going to save hip-hop?” None of them say that, do they? I always think, “If it’s going to come precariously close to creative inertia – to the point where everything is completely retro and nothing exciting or challenging happens – then yes, the genre does deserve to die.”
It looks like it’s still around. For another few years, anyway.
This weekend will be spent doing mostly Maribou’s laundry from her trip, coming down from the insanity of work this week, and, yes, listening to some rock and/or roll.
So… what’s on your docket?
(Featured image is “She’s in Her Library, All’s Right with the World”)
Turns out suspension doesn’t actually get you off work. Who knew?
Neither do weekends.
Thanks to Omicron, a gift from the Gods of Science, there is light at the end of the tunnel.Report
Dropped off the quilt at the longarmers’, hit a nicer grocery store than what’s available in town. Will need to make it up a bit tomorrow by going in to work for a little grading and to write a couple lab quizzes….
Still have something like 1/3 of my students on required isolation pending a negative COVID test….Report
Speaking of music…my venerable iPod Classic dumped it’s database yesterday after I loaded some new music on it. I had to do the unthinkable and install iTunes on my computer to reinstall the software on it, which meant wiping it and reloading it. To make matters worse, my chosen music management software (MediaMonkey–it’s the best) ALSO had database issues, likely from me rebuilding my file server last weekend. So anyway, I rebuilt that database as well and I’ve spent the last couple of hours reloading music onto my iPod. Good times.
I’m desperately clinging to this thing since you can’t get them any more. I even cracked it open and replaced the hard drive a few years ago, and now I keep it in a rubber sleeve so you can’t see the scars.Report
I don’t think rock is gone. I do think it’s splintered into so many tiny pieces it will never be mainstream again the way it used to be. While I rarely discuss this in respectable company, I am a metal head. A very discerning one in certain ways, but a metal head nonetheless. There is still some really good, hard, guitar driven music coming out and has been over the last 20 years. What’s critical I think is ability to tolerate some level of death metal inspired vocals. Not everyone does it, and I actually think the genre is passed peak death metal vocals. But if you can’t get through it, and a lot of people very understandably can’t, and I do not try to convince anyone they should, I think the whole area of new, creative rock music is kind of cut off. It’s way harder to get into anyway. Just my opinion though.
This weekend for me is looking desolate. At least there’s some football. I’m rooting for a 49ers win tomorrow night just because I think it will upset people. Otherwise it’s figuring out what the hell to do with a 4 year old maniac when it’s too cold for outdoor activities.Report
I admit to preferring Robin Gibb to Cookie Monster.Report
It isn’t for everyone. It may not have ever been for me had rock radio in the mid to late 90s maintained at least an Alice in Chains level of heaviness and guitar work. But when it went into that weird semi-swing/’ska’ phase for 30 seconds then the pop punk thing it forced me to go underground to get my fix.Report
Based on what I hear here, the power ballad, at least, is not dead.
Rock is still very much alive, it just doesn’t get airplay on top 40 anymore. I’m a huge power pop and garage fan and get no end of suggestions from Facebook groups and Bandcamp.
This weekend has me going to a Jayhawks show, and seeing a dear, old friend for the first time in too long.Report
Please share your favorites of the suggestions of garage.
Seriously.Report
Just a quick one for now: The Len Price 3. They have a new record coming out in the spring, but here’s a sample of their past work.
https://youtu.be/-AT4H7cix_EReport
A little bit of early Who in there. I like it!Report
The holy grail for garage rockers.Report
Rock, as we know it, has reached Jazz status.
It’s not dead, it’s just derivative, and (as previously stated) splintered.
It has no where to go. Any new path the it takes leads to calling it something else.Report
I like this answer.
We used to say that grunge killed rock. Upon reflection, it’s clear that grunge didn’t kill rock. Grunge merely shattered rock into a thousand pieces. One of those fragments is the 80’s big hair rock that we all still love but maybe doesn’t really exist any more except as a homage to what used to be.Report
Yeah, Jericho’s band Fozzy is a tribute band. Even though they play original songs, they’re obviously giving their due to the 80’s.
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