I'm going to be trying this again to describe my musical opinions and review some music as a hobby. Hopefully, this will stick and not be something I lose interest in quickly.
While there's no question the massive losses in 2016 of David Bowie,
Prince and Carrie Fisher (and that's just scratching the tip of the
iceberg) were tragic, there were four musical losses that felt like
gut-punches in 2017. The first was probably the hardest as it still
hurts now. In 2011, I picked up an Alice Cooper 3-pack of albums, he was
a man with ties to many Classic Rock and Hard Rock superstars like Joan
Jett, Joe Perry, Slash, Ozzy Osbourne, Joe Satriani, Steve Vai and
Nikki Sixx, and I was curious. One of the albums was the concept album
"The Last Temptation," in which a man or boy is tempted by the devil
while seeking fun, a sort of "carnival gone wrong" event. One track that
stood out to me on the album was "Unholy War," a song where the man is
no longer willing to deal with Satan's lies and tells him to go away and
get out of his life, preparing to do whatever it takes to do this. It
was written by Chris Cornell, who I would later find out didn't have a
religion due to the violence he saw people who did carry out, which was
surprising in the fact that the song seemed like it was written by a
Christian who had battled the devil and came out victorious. Because of
how well the song was written, I never forgot the name, but since grunge
wasn't a big genre, I didn't learn any more until early 2017. Then,
woman-led metal band Halestorm released their third covers EP,
containing "Still of the Night" by Whitesnake, "I Hate Myself For Loving
You" by Joan Jett and "Ride the Lightning" by Metallica. Another song
was "Fell on Black Days" by Soundgarden, a band I heard of but didn't
know anything about, and was credited to Chris Cornell. Its down yet
intense mood set it apart from the barnburners on the rest of the album
(save "Heathens" originally by twenty one pilots and also on the EP, but
since I saw Suicide Squad and owned the original, the biggest surprise
was hearing it performed by a hard rock band with a woman singing it)
and I decided to get the original. I planned to try out Soundgarden more
when I wasn't busy keeping up with the latest releases, then came May. I
was on Twitter two days after my birthday, May 18th, 2017, and saw the
hashtag, #RIPChrisCornell
. I couldn't believe it. He didn't seem old like David Bowie, and while
I didn't know what killed Prince, he was different enough from him to
avoid whatever it was. But I checked Lzzy Hale's Twitter and she was in
mourning, telling Toni Cornell to carry on the torch of her father. I
don't remember how many other artists I checked to see if they commented
(I know Alice Cooper also mourned, but that was after I visited), but
to my surprise, I went to Billy Ray Cyrus' page and he had a tribute.
Before now, he'd only said anything about Nirvana when it came to grunge
(since he had met Kurt Cobain a couple of times), but he had a picture
of Chris Cornell playing acoustic guitar and called him "the voice of a
generation." A few years later, Miley would sing "Say Hello 2 Heaven" at
a tribute event called "I Am the Highway" with members of Temple of the
Dog backing her up, two of them being Pearl Jam's Stone Gossard and
Jeff Ament according to setlist.fm. Toni would release a single in 2018,
covering "Nothing Compares 2 U."
Before the month was out, Gregg
Allman of the Allman Brothers Band also died. Like Chris Cornell, Billy
Ray posted a picture of him playing acoustic guitar on Twitter and said
something, I forget what. Mostly, I just remember the previous year
going to a show called "Generation Axe" at the Paramount Theater in
Seattle, a gathering of five amazing guitar players. I think the idea
was the brainchild of Steve Vai, and also involved were Nuno Bettencourt
of Extreme fame (by that, I mean he was in a band called Extreme),
Tosin Abasi of Animals as Leaders, Yngwie Malmsteen (who can blend metal
and classical music well) and Zakk Wylde, a massive Viking-like man
inspired by Skynyrd, Hendrix and Black Sabbath. He's actually Roman
Catholic, though. That night, Wylde played a rendition of Gregg Allman's
"Whipping Post," a song about a man who has been cheated on, feels
terribly abused and outright yells, "Sometimes I feel tied to the
whipping post, tied to the whipping post, tied to the whipping post,
tied to the whipping post, Good Lord, I feel like I'm dyin'." Its guitar
work by Duane Allman made it a crowd favorite and before people shouted
"Free Bird!" at concerts, they would shout "Whipping Post!" There is
actually a live album of Frank Zappa somewhere where this happens and he
decides to change a song of his to a Southern Rock song on the fly. So
it was hard to take in that another talented songwriter had died and
with him, the Allman Brothers Band was no more.
In July 2017, Two
months later, after seeing Transformers; the Last Knight and enjoying
it, I was online again for news. Another severe blow hit, this one a
little closer. "Last Knight" seemed as catered as possible to appease
both the masses and the old-school fans and the old-school fans were
STILL calling it shit. But we wouldn't have even made it to movie 5
without movies 1-3, and a common link in one through three was a
specific band started off the end credits, they even became close enough
to composer Steve Jablonsky to get their songs mixed into the
Soundtrack, such as the track "Nest" from Revenge of the Fallen. They
were alternative rock band Linkin Park, and while most online parodied
them for how "emo" their songs could get, all I heard was "What I've
Done," "New Divide" and "Iridescent," even downloading the first two
into Rock Band 3. The enduring spirit presented in these songs, the
willingness to continue in a war-torn landscape, fit the movies
perfectly and I had even hoped I would save up to see them in the
KeyArena in 2017 to hear "New Divide" live. But Chester Bennington was a
close friend of Chris Cornell's, to the point he had been chosen to be
his kids' godfather. Personally, I think the flak the live-action
Transformers series was getting at the time didn't help, either, since
he helped make it. Chester Bennington, one of the few younger musicians
considered cool enough to hang with Glenn Hughes, Duff McKagan and Steve
Stevens in the Kings of Chaos and one of the main reasons three action
movies work, hung himself in July 2017. And I'm not going to lie, this
contributed to the rage and wedge between me and the rest of the
Transformers fandom that ultimately led to me leaving it to find
fanbases with less negativity and demands that the franchise abandon all
attempts at reinvention and cater exclusively to the old-school fans.
The
last, sad, painful stop was October 2nd, 2017. As a madman killed
people in another shooting the government would simply shrug at, an old
soul went home miles away from the tragedy. I'll admit, I didn't have
much of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers before the death of Tom Petty
and I haven't had the resources or drive to pick up much since then, but
the man left a pretty sizeable dent in my thoughts on music
nonetheless. I don't remember if it was 2009 or 2010, but I wanted to
buy some Beatles solo albums. Ringo Starr had always been my favorite,
he was a storyteller with the Beatles, he was Mr. Conductor on Shining
Time Station and he was the one of the four who liked the others
post-breakup the most. I heard from Wikipedia he recorded an album
called "Vertical Man," the album was the closest you'd get to a 1990s
Beatles album; with a cover of "Love Me Do" with Harmonica played by
Aerosmith's Steven Tyler, Paul McCartney lending his talent on "What in
the...World?" (that's how it is on the back, the chorus doesn't have
unnecessary pauses) George Harrison showing up for the last times on
"King of Broken Hearts" and "I'll Be Fine Anywhere" and fun rockers like
"One" and "Puppet" plus a heartfelt ballad to wife Barbara with "I'm
Yours." There was also a trio, "Drift Away," a cover song I heard
performed by The Nylons on a CD my Mom had over 20 years ago. This one
was slower and more deliberate and had Tom Petty and Alanis Morrisette
(it was released in 1998) singing lead on some verses. It created an
image of Ringo walking down the street and Tom Petty and Alanis walk up
to him and encourage him to keep going, "getting by with a little help
from his friends." I would later hear Tom Petty duet with Carl Perkins
on a posthumous Carl Perkins album that featured many friends of his
across Classic Rock, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, John
Fogerty, Johnny Cash and even archived performances of "Blue Suede
Shoes" by Jimi Hendrix and John Lennon. I also remember watching a
George Harrison documentary with a good friend and her family and seeing
the Traveling Wilburys, seeing Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Roy Orbison, Bob
Dylan and Harrison himself having a happy time playing music. Hearing of
Tom Petty's death felt surreal. It wasn't a "you had to take one more,
death?" It wasn't rage-inducing, it was just heartache. His recording
career had just turned 40, the same era of bands like Cheap Trick, Heart
and Foreigner, and they didn't seem worried about how little time they
might have left. Cheap Trick released three albums recently, one a
Christmas album, Foreigner releasing live albums like crazy and Heart is
preparing to tour this year with legs with Sheryl Crow and Joan Jett
opening for them. It seemed too young to be gone.
Looking back
two years later, as more classic rock artists retire, it makes me want
to treasure as many legacies as I can by seeing the artists live. I
don't make much money, though, so it feels impossible at times. I wanted
to create a Tribute Band through Facebook, but it was hijacked by a
Southeast Asian boy band of the same name, so I had to delete it when it
was clear too many confused people were liking the page. Unlike Gene
Simmons, I don't think Rock is Dead, not with bands like Black Stone
Cherry, Halestorm and BabyMetal around, but I more worry that we will
lose part of its history as more and more acts either die or retire.
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