Nope. It's actually dead. Sorry. Rock music is rock music.vurt wrote: Sat Nov 03, 2018 6:16 pm rock is far from dead.
its just evolved to something a little different.
sigur ros and muse as well as radiohead have both had big hits here in the uk.
but, when i was a young metal fan, having hits was anathema to us. it was the death knell for metal bands.
look at metallica, awesome, then one gets in to the charts.
they follow that with the black album :ffs: then it just got worse...
my point, if you want to talk about rock being dead, the problem is you are looking in the wrong place.
look in to post-rock. a scene which is huge, while a lot of it is clichés there is some great stuff if you search![]()
Reference the Top 40 charts for the past 5-10 years (UK and US). The top 10 tracks at any given time are populated by hip-hop, R&B, and electronic based acts. Even currently, 3 out of the 10 top selling acts in the UK all have 4-on-the-floor electronic drums for their percussion beds. 2 out of those 10 are hip hop. The rest are electronic based. This has been the trend for years. It's the same in the US.
Couple this with sales figures from every major music instrument retailer in the US (Guitar Center, Sweetwater, and Sam Ash), and guitar sales are down in a massive way and have been for years. The big sellers are now synths, samplers, keyboards, software, plugins, etc.
Times have changed, is all.
