It's Time For The Grammy's To Rock

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Feb 5, 2018 by Mark Maier

Last week was the Grammy's and if you are a fan of Rock, it was absent.  Jacobs Media's Fred Jacobs gave an interesting read on what is happening with the genre...

Maybe the Grammys first went off the rails back in 1989, the first year they decided to honor Heavy  Metal.  Strangely, the award that year went to the flute-infused sounds of Jethro Tull.  For the Rock genre at this awards show devoted to music, it’s been going downhill ever since.

Sunday night’s show was no exception, a three-and-a-half-hour tour that continued to amaze and mystify.  Rock was virtually MIA on the show, except that musical poet/singer/songwriter Leonard Cohen posthumously snatched the Best Rock Performance award.  Even Ian Anderson is scratching his beard over that one.

And they had to be guffawing at the Rock  & Roll Hall of Fame down the road in Cleveland.  While that august group has honored Madonna, Donna Summer, and ABBA in past induction ceremonies, they’re at least an organization mostly devoted to celebrating artists who have excelled in the world of Rock.

The Grammys?  Well, in some ways, Sunday’s show was a microcosm of Rock’s weird trajectory over the past decade or so.  Like a music test for an Active Rock station where the old stuff holds up well while the new music rarely scores big, the Grammy’s followed suit.  They featured relics that included U2, Sting, and Elton John, while relegating the modern day 2000s period of Rock to undercard status.  Those awards were given out at a ceremony far away from the prime time spotlight reserved for Pop, Rap, and Country.

It’s gotten so bad that hard rockers Avenged Sevenfold announced earlier in the weekend they were boycotting the show because of its disrespect and stupidity, despite the band being up for “Best Rock Song.”

But let’s not equate an out of touch awards show as a barometer of an entire music genre.  Sadly, however, there are other signs Rock is in the midst of a long recession, bordering on a depression.

A recent story in The LA Times by Mikael Woods features this blaring headline: “Coachella is going without a single rock headliner for the first time.” 

Obviously sharing the same consultant who advises the Grammys, Coachella’s headliners this April will be none other than Beyoncé, Eminem, and the Weeknd.  And like the Grammy awards, Coachella is loaded with Hip-Hop.  But while rockers like Tool, the Black Keys, and the Red Hot Chili Peppers were main attractions in past years, the festival’s organizers are moving in a different direction – away from Rock.

Hopefully, they’ll have more luck putting butts in seats than the Grammy Awards. Sunday’s show experienced an alarming 24% ratings drop from 2017, attracting under 20 million viewers.

For the Rock genre, January’s been a tough month.  Hip-Hop/R&B passed Rock as the most popular music genre last year, according to Nielsen’s 2017 Year-End Music Report.  (Rock, however, continues to outpace Hip-Hop.)  You can download their entire report here.

What goes around apparently comes around.  Metallica – losers to Jethro Tull for Heavy Metal honors back in the ’80s – came up short again for Best Rock Song, along with the aforementioned A7X.  The Foo Fighters took top honors this year. Metallica lost out for Best Rock Album, too, as they have been their entire careers, symbolizing other bad performance for the Rock genre.

So, is Rock in trouble as a genre – or even a radio format?

Opinions are many, and mine is that despite its long slide, there will always be a desire for electric guitars, heavy drums, and a scream or two.  The success of Michigan born and bred Greta Van Fleet is a testament to the possibilities.  Ironically, they’ll be playing Coachella, and a prediction is that you’ll be reading about their performance.

The “rock is dead/rock is back” argument was well-covered in a well-written article late last year on UPROXX.com by Steven Hyden, zeroing in on the Greta Van Fleet phenomenon, and what it may mean to rekindling the spirit of Jimmy Page, Keith Richards, and Angus Young.

Of course, it would be more meaningful if Rock – like vinyl – experienced a true resurgence because of a groundswell of young teens rather than aging Boomers.  After all, that’s where true musical movements start."

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