Posted on 09/07/2014 2:09:28 PM PDT by BBell
Gene Simmons not only thinks rock music is dead, it was murdered by the internet and the entitled Americans using it to steal music.
The KISS bassist, who is arguably one of the most successful living rock stars in the history of music, blames file sharing for the death of one of America's most beloved musical genres during a recent Esquire interview conducted by his son, Nick.
(Excerpt) Read more at celebrity.yahoo.com ...
My Daughters has you tube videos of people from all over the world who are truly talented but will never see the inside of a studio. A good number of the local bands where I am at are very good yet no one outside of this area will ever hear of them.
But somehow Katy Perry and Lady Gaga can make a living?
File sharing is different from YouTube watching and listening.
YouTube at least makes the smallest fee available to the artists, while wholesale copying proves nothing to the artist.
My wife was just asking about what rock had evolved into since the Grunge era. Neither of us could really identify a group or movement that really defines it today.
I don’t think file sharing really had a hand in it. It boils down to nothing that really has captured the imagination.
That should read, “provides,” not “proves.”
I remember when rockers bitched about people who taped their songs off the radio.
I’ve bought “The Best of Three Dog Night” for times: Once in vinyl, an eight-track, a cassette tape, and a CD. That’s enough. I ain’t paying royalties again.
should be “four” times
I believe the issue here is that people are giving free copies to others.
It was murdered by the suits. They did it numerous times. Rock and roll has probably “died” more times than Little Richard has retired (going back to 1957).
Bad music and idiots wearing spandex hopping around on stage killed rock.
If you consider Katy “I kissed a girl” Perry and Lady “will do anything for attention” Gaga Rock and Roll then I guess they made it.
It used to be that concert tours were promoted by record companies to sell records and get them played on air, which was where the real money was. Now records are put out to promote concert tours, and that’s where the real money is. Say, 10,000 tickets at $70 a pop average, 700K gross for a couple of hours. Times 50 tour dates, that’s 35 million in a couple months.
The music industry pretty much lost a generation, I think.
Hey Gene,
I taped TONS of LP’s from my friends in the 70’s/80’s.
Did blank cassettes KILL rock???
OR maybe technology is being blamed for corporate music labels being greedy by dropping any group that doesn’t sell 10 million units on their debut while charging fans 18 bucks for a 10 cent CD???
Bull.
Some bands upload their music for FREE on soundcloud and pack clubs every place they go. It’s the new way music is shared.
I remember those days. I made copies off the radio because I could not afford the albums. Not to mention why blow all my money on one album for only a couple of songs.
I think Rock hasn't died. It's just that the vein is tapped out. Everything that could be said was said over the 35 years or so that it was the number one expression of the experience of youth in western industrialized societies.
There's a British rocker named Steven Wilson who - IMHO - creates music in an idiom similar to that of The Who. Have you ever heard of him? A lot of his music is available on YouTube.
He's a successful musician in his own right, but he's not very influential because he's just too late on the scene with what he does.
No one has really figured out where the "thing" that Rock expressed goes next.
Personally, I think that there's a lot of untapped potential in the struggle against Islam, a force that enslaves hundreds of millions of people all over the world, and which is attempting to put the collar of slavery around the neck of the entire human race.
Only problem is, such music would place a bull's eye on the forehead of everyone who was involved in producing it.
And now, if you buy files off of a service like iTunes, you don’t own anything except a license to play it on whatever device you happen to have.
You can’t legally resell it, give it away, or bequeath it to your heirs.
Records, 8-tracks, cassettes, and CDs don’t require you to click to accept a user agreement.
I confess-I’ve downloaded songs off of YouTube, the vast majority of which I already own in vinyl form. I don’t see why I should have to pay again just to save myself the trouble of hooking up the cables and transferring the songs to my computer.
But rest assured, Mr. Kiss, I’ve never purchased or downloaded any of your songs, nor do I ever plan to.
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