Saturday, October 24, 2009

I Think I Remember Rock and Roll Radio

When the once mighty rock station WBCN in Boston disappeared this August, the reply from many was a disappointed shrug – disappointment in how one of the most important rock stations in the country was being transformed into a sports station by CBS, the corporation that owned it, and shrugs in that nobody was really surprised. If anything, many of the comments I’ve linked to ask why it took so long to happen.

This is not a eulogy for rock and roll music. Rock and roll is doing just fine, thank you. New bands like The Mars Volta, The Gaslight Anthem, Mastodon, Death Cab for Cutie and The Foo Fighters show the now-middle aged rock genre remains vibrant. Those are my choices for good rock music these days, and your opinion may differ. But what almost all these bands have in common is that you almost never hear them on the traditional radio stations or MTV. You can find them on the Internet, satellite radio and on tour, but almost never the way you used to.

When I came to Boston in 1987, EVERYONE listened to WBCN. Sure, it was a different time with fewer choices but within a week of being here my ears were opened to all the exciting music Boston had to offer. For every Bruce Springsteen song, they also played one by a great local band called Scruffy the Cat. Much has been written about WBCN being one of the first to break through Boston bands like Aerosmith, the J. Geils Band, The Cars and Til Tuesday. It was the classic story of local stations customizing their playlist to help local bands get known in their hometowns. Since Boston was, to paraphrase Spinal Tap, such a big college town, pushing local rock bands playing at local clubs went over well. WBCN’s practice was noticed by other bands on the edge of stardom, and whenever Bono and Sting played local arenas they always thanked WBCN for being one of the first stations to push them.

Eventually WBCN became part of the CBS empire, and you can guess what happened afterward. By the early 90s the local bands had vanished and it had basically become a classic rock station, playing the same 50 songs by Led Zeppelin and The Doors every other rock station plays. Rock music and the younger generation’s tastes had changed, but WBCN refused to acknowledge it. After the second Woodstock in 1994 there was a reboot, as if the suits finally realized new music existed, and the station went “alternative” just as alternative was becoming the mainstream. Within a few years it was playing the same 50 songs by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Nirvana and U2 again and again until CBS pulled the plug. Many were understandably angry.

But in hindsight, I think it was not only a mercy killing, but also pretty symbolic of the whole rut traditional rock radio finds itself in. You can’t goof on classic rock stations for making you sick of “Stairway to Heaven” when so-called modern rock stations do the same things with Pearl Jam’s “Daughter.” That song is now 16 years old, and Pearl Jam hasn’t really been relevant since it came out. Even if you like classic rock, do they play any new music by Dylan, Neil Young, Bowie and Springsteen or just the same old songs again and again?

Part of the problem is that rock is still considered rebellious music for younger generations and the bands being played on the radio are anything but that. It’s also that the programming and playlist decisions are made by middle aged men who are likely old farts when it comes to new music. But what has also happened is the concept of rock music and rock stars themselves have transformed, and the suits behind the rock stations are still mired in their past glory days with their heads in the sand.

The legendary rock journalist Stephen Davis has just come out with a new book on Guns n’ Roses called Watch You Bleed: The Saga of Guns n’ Roses. What Davis nails is that Gn’R was actually the last prototype of the classic rock and roll band. Remember the old Guns n’ Roses? It was the classic tale of poor band gets big, egos get bigger, excess consumes the band, members can’t get along until a classic implosion. All the while, the classic clichés of sex, drugs, lead-singer-as-petulant-idol/rebel and rags to riches worked. Guns n’ Roses also had the classic rock lineup of five guys, including the two guitarists and charismatic frontman.

Of course grunge changed all that and while grunge has come and gone, its changes to the classic rock music and rock band remain. Davis actually isn’t surprised the classic hard rock movement ended with Gn’R, as he writes all musical movements come to an end. But as I said, rock itself is just fine – you only need to look harder. And don’t look for it on commercial radio. WBCN’s demise is indeed the symbolic end of what became a lost era.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Putting Out Fires with Gasoline

Most kids know that words will never hurt them. Can someone please tell the White House?

Obama’s press office has decided to treat Fox News like an enemy, saying it is “not a legitimate news organization but a wing of the Republican Party.” Fox News, the undisputed leader in cable news whose ratings are up 20%, probably couldn’t be happier. And you’d think the guy who won the Nobel Peace Prize wouldn’t want to add a war with the media to his other wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Doesn’t all this seem a little beneath an American president and his office? There hasn’t been a single one in history that didn’t go through the media gauntlet unscathed. Look back 100 years ago to the age of yellow journalism and you’ll find things that would shock Glen Beck.

The White House posturing conjures up dozens of worn but true clichés: Never get into an argument with someone who buys ink by the barrel. Never let them see you sweat. Don’t let it get under your skin, etc. Has the White House forgotten how low the public regards the media? Outside of a very noisy minority of diehard partisans, does anyone take Glen Beck seriously? What would the president gain by giving him more attention than he deserves? Will it ever come out unspoiled in a mud wrestling match with Sean Hannity?

But there’s an even bigger mistake the White House is making. George W. Bush actually said it best. One day in Texas he invited some media to a barbecue. An editor there asked that if he didn’t read the papers, how would he know what the public thinks? Bush said, “You’re making a huge assumption – that you represent what the public thinks.”

If Beck, Hannity, O’Reilly and the rest of Fox News’ on-air talent had that much pull, how come McCain isn’t in the White House? In fact, why isn’t Fred Thompson in the White House? Limbaugh and his cronies pushed for Thompson, then Romney, then Hillary Clinton after McCain won the nomination. I don’t doubt the ratings of these guys, I’m sure they have plenty of fans and they make for good TV. But never think elections and bill debate are won and lost in the media. Don’t think Fox News represents the Republican Party. Obama needs to work with and influence the Republican Party, not Fox News. If you’re reading this and you like Rush Limbaugh, do you do every single thing he tells you to do and agree with everything he says? Of course not. Why on earth would the White House believe it?

I’ve worked with the media for years and can tell you that George W. Bush is absolutely right. Not only does the media not represent the public, but people outside the media who drink that Kool Aid are in serious trouble when it comes to gauging public opinion. It’s been disheartening to watch Republican leaders kowtow to people like Limbaugh and Hannity who they believe represents their Party, their voters and the so-called “Real America.” It’s beyond baffling to watch the White House press corps make the same mistake.