"Everybody's talkin' about the new sound,
Funny, but its still rock n' roll to me."
-Billy Joel
-Billy Joel
One thing that makes me feel good, blessed even, about
growing up when I did, was the music culture that existed when I was growing
up. I was an ‘80s teen, but its not just the ‘80s that I’m talking about. I’m
talking about this wonderful thing that came out of the 1950s, and evolved and
grew during the 1960s. This wonderful thing called Rock Music, which by the end
of the ‘60s had become the anthem and rallying cry of nonconformist youth, and continued
strongly throughout the 1970s and 1980s.
I’m not sure how I would have gotten through my teen years
without rock music. Before the age of
12, I really was a rather unhip child, fairly unaware of popular music, rock or
otherwise. But once I discovered rock, I grew to love it… all of it, not just
the ‘80s, but wonderful stuff from the ‘70s and ‘60s and ‘50s as well. By the time I was a teen in the ‘80s, it was
something that had already been handed down by prior generations. And it was a
world all its own… one that nurtured generations of nonconformists . . . rebels
of all sorts . . . hippies, freaks, glam rockers, punkers, New Wavers, and
others . . . music with a message . . . or with an attitude . . . with a
difference . . . a music that told many an odd, strange, misfit kid (like me)
that it was okay – even cool – to be odd, strange, and misfit.
I remember spending a lot of time by myself, solitary, in my
room, some great record (yes, records, on a turntable, remember those?) on the
stereo… it could be something great from the ‘80s.. or from earlier decades… maybe
U2, maybe the Police, maybe the Beatles, or the Stones, or some Led Zep, or
some Talking Heads . . . maybe something mellow, or psychedelic, or hard… but
whatever it was, it had the same effect on me of immersing me into a different
world - - perhaps one that was more heroic, or magical, or full of greater
possibilities that encouraged an odd, freaky kid to imagine great things.
I didn’t go to my school senior prom. It fell on the same
date that Pink Floyd (that’s the ‘80s Momentary Lapse of Reason version, say
what you will), was having a concert in a local arena. I had wanted to see Pink
Floyd in concert (even a Roger Water-less, David Gilmour dominated Pink Floyd) for
ages, and when it came time to choose between going to a rock event from a seminal
rock band, and going to some social event that celebrated fitting in to a place
I never fit in . . . well, I chose to rock.
I
remember the line for the tickets. I and a good, fellow
freak friend of mine, agreed to show up at the Specs music store early
on the
morning of the ticket sale to get ourselves Pink Floyd tickets. I showed
up
early enough, I thought, but to my surprise there was an enormous line
of
people who had camped out and waited in line to get tickets. I thought
for sure
that I had messed up, and that by the time I even got inside to get my
ticket,
they would be sold out. I looked around for my friend, and to my
surprise,
there he was, almost at the front of the line, looking disheveled after
having
camped out there all night. He was hungry, and when a nearby Eckerd
Drugs opened, I went to get him a candy bar. We stood in line and
chatted with some of the
other people there, fellow freaks, as if we were all old friends, or
some
extended freaky family. Soon enough,
Specs opened, and my friend got me a ticket.. and we rejoiced that were
both
going to see Pink Floyd.
On
the night of the concert, I arrived at the arena and took my place
among the packed crowd, but I could not find my friend. I actually was a
bit concerned that he didn't make it for some reason. The concert
started and there I was, enjoying a Pink Floyd concert. At one point, it
started to rain, and this being an outdoor concert, we got a bit
drenched. But that didn't matter, we stood there enjoying the music, all
united together withstanding the elements in the name of rock n roll.
The rain didn't last long, and when it stopped, the water glistening
over everything, on came the song "Wish You Were Here." It just seemed
poignant, and meaningful... and I thought of my friend. The concert
ended, and indeed, it seemed shorter that night than I would have
liked... I guess I would have wanted it to go on longer . . . but off I
went with a mind full of memories.
My
friend, incidentally, did actually make the concert, and had staked out
a place close to the stage to groove to Pink Floyd. I found that out
when we next saw each other, both at school, and both wearing Pink Floyd
concert shirts.
To
me, at least, the true era of rock ended in the around the early to mid
'90s. Rock continued, of course, and there were and are many good new
rock bands.... but no longer would rock dominate as the voice of quirky,
rebellious youth . . . and an era, and a culture, would recede into the
past. How, indeed, do today's youth even manage to grow up without
Rock?
*The title of my post comes from Led Zeppelin's classic 1976 concert film (of a 1973 concert) The Song Remains The Same,
where during a performance of "Stairway to Heaven" Robert Plant comes
to the line about "the forest will echo with laughter," and he ad libs
"Does anybody remember laughter?"
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