B
blipndub
New member
Still thinking about the broader cultural context. I like Richard Monroes comment, the earlier drug comment too.
The 80's were a time of excess and over-the-top everything, from politics to stock markets, culture etc. Or at least the culture was responding in a backlash manner to a fatalisitic view of a nuclear world and an ever growing distance between rich and poor, corrumpt politics etc. The music was in large part an ear candy for the masses that was strict entertainment without much emotional depth.
the 1990's ushered in an emotionally tortured venue of heroin reality and nihilistic anxieties over the state of the world/society. there wasn't any room for the exuberance of a kick ass solo amongst the doom and gloom. Now things are all messed up again and being squished back into some retro/new form and maybe solos will re-appear, but we've got to move through this apocalyptic sensibility that grew out of the moody 1990's. Bands like like Korn, and Mudyvane (and other masked rockers) are busy occupying the pop guitar scene. But they too will pass.
The 80's were a time of excess and over-the-top everything, from politics to stock markets, culture etc. Or at least the culture was responding in a backlash manner to a fatalisitic view of a nuclear world and an ever growing distance between rich and poor, corrumpt politics etc. The music was in large part an ear candy for the masses that was strict entertainment without much emotional depth.
the 1990's ushered in an emotionally tortured venue of heroin reality and nihilistic anxieties over the state of the world/society. there wasn't any room for the exuberance of a kick ass solo amongst the doom and gloom. Now things are all messed up again and being squished back into some retro/new form and maybe solos will re-appear, but we've got to move through this apocalyptic sensibility that grew out of the moody 1990's. Bands like like Korn, and Mudyvane (and other masked rockers) are busy occupying the pop guitar scene. But they too will pass.