by Omnitir » Thu 11 Aug 2005, 21:54:31
I agree that Rock music was born of the oil age, but that does not mean it cannot continue post PO. There will always be electricity! We aren’t going back to the Stone Age, just an era of sustainability. And rock doesn’t need to be played through massive amplifiers. It can be created on a computer using small amounts of power. Electric guitar can be played through personal digital processors that use as much power as an mp3 player. It can even be played unplugged (shock horror!).
Sorry country lovers, but rock music will be around for a long time yet. But that doesn’t mean you have to listen to it.
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')The electric guitar requires less talent than the acoustic.
That is absolutely incorrect. With the exception of Curt Cobain power cords, most rock guitarists are as talented as trained classical musicians. Guitarists capable of playing complex guitar solo’s need a thorough understanding of scales and modes, not just basic chord progressions like an acoustic guitarist. For example, after my first guitar lesson I could play complete songs on an acoustic with simple chord progressions, while it took several years of lessons and hard practice to be able to solo on the electric at a performance level.
And another point: rock music isn’t about distortion. There are plenty of rock songs that can be performed by a solo acoustic guitarist.
All forms of electronic music will continue after the oil crash. They may not be performed the same way as they were (stadium concerts etc), but they are loved by too many people for them to simply dissapear.