Kingfish Wrote:
Drank Wrote:
My point still sort of stands, though. What Mick's looking for is still out there, but it isn't up to the standards that it once was. That's because the conditions that originally produced that music no longer exist or have changed, and people who do make it are typically working well within the confines of the established template and are therefore not doing anything all that exiting or even necessary.
I've been thinking about this all weekend (not this post specifically but rather your whole point).
I'm still not sure I completely understand you. Is it your point that drug exploration and the accompanying music was groundbreaking in the 60's and therefore interesting, and now drugs have been explored and therefore not new and not interesting?
Or is your point more that we know fully about drugs and consequences now and continuing a tradition of hero worshipping drug addicts is foolish?
The latter makes more sense to me than the former.
I'll reiterate this for probably the third time now. My point was not about general drug use and the relevance of the art and music created under its influence. It was about "heroin-influenced, macho, swaggering rock" which is a very specific style of music ("Stonesy") which, yes, has been thoroughly explored and is mostly a dry well at this point. I know a lot of you would disagree with this. I mean, bands can still make great music in that style, provided that they can contribute something worthwhile of their own, but it really isn't going to live up to that "heroin-influenced" style naturally. Artists can artificially try to immerse themselves in that, which at this point would end up seeming more like a foolish parody than an homage. Of course they can
pretend, but that is, as I said originally, "put-on bullshit".
The latter point is true as well. I mean, we all love some music that was produced by self-destructive, drug-addled artists. I'm not suggesting that their work shouldn't be admired or that it won't still be a huge influence on everyone. But heroin was always a drug of decadence, and another part of this is that in today's fractured musical climate, decadent rock stars are no longer relevant. Young people will always idolize that sort of lifestyle because it seems free and rebellious, but I think that most mature adults can see through the illusion of that now, especially given the more calculated business model of the modern music industry.
Basically my point was that "heroin-influenced, macho, swaggering rock" does not exist anymore except as play-acting, and how can that every live up to the real thing of the past?