And we've talked about that. All music is based on the artists of the past, even the seemingly brilliantly creative stuff flowed freely in the 60s and 70s. But music is no longer as critical to the human experience as it was back then. Think about it - in 1974, aside from music (LP, 8-Track, and Radio), a teen or young adult has access to 4 to 6 TV channels (depending on where they lived), a few local events, and books anywhere from 3 to 6 movie theater screens, and magazines. There was no internet, no video gaming, or much of anything else to do besides talk, take drugs or just hang around. Individuals needed music as an escape and outlet. They had free time, they had a little money and for the most part they were not pressed to help the family survive. By the 1980s we had video games, the early days of computers, and dozens to a hundred TV channels in addition to the things above. Megaplex cinemas were being built, movie budgets were growing exponentially and more movies were being released every year, and more kids were in situations where they could drive almost anywhere they wanted, within reason.
Today there is no limit to the number of things to occupy a young adult's attention - and in fact most of us are very easily bored and need multiple simultaneous sources of stimulation. I see people staring at their handheld screen at the same time they are listening to music, watching TV or movie, or attending live performances. This is a new time - how can anyone become one with a rock recording when they are only partially paying attention to any of the music they listen to anymore.
I keep pondering why the last Van Halen album wasn't the biggest album made in the past 20 years. It was everything all the Van Halen fans claimed they wanted since David Lee Roth left the band, yet no one cared and it sold surprisingly poorly and far fewer copies than the label and marketers expected. When I talk to Van Halen fans, most didn't even know it came out and those who did gave a listen, liked it, but didn't really need more Van Halen music in their lives - not really. They were glad it came out, but it didn't mean anything in the current cultural environment.
So, while I am writing about the "death of Rock and Roll", in many ways I am writing about the death of music which the young adults soak into their souls and which influences them for the rest of their lives. Rock used to play that role. Hip Hop and Rap started out playing that role, but it was quickly appropriated by suburban whites who thought it was written about them, but it was a fantasy of imagined suffering and lack of position those white kids were missing in their opulent and easy lives.
Today it seems the young adults are more moved by participating in the political world of global warming activism, cancel culture and "wokeness" more than much else. That's why I claim "EDM" is the only music truly moving a generation. It isn't because EDM is as powerful as Rock was, but it is the only music that seems to be really impacting people.