TB said:
...Some 18-34 year olds may like some old Rock songs, but they certainly don't think they're "new". It's just stuff they heard Grandpa listening to or found on You Tube. They can't be stupid enough to think that Bob Seger is a new artist, can they???"
No, they're
not stupid. They know these acts aren't
new, but the music, especially catalog stuff, is 'new and different' to them. Moreover, it's the basis for bands like Nirvana, NIN, Metallica and rock acts that blossomed in the 80s, 90s and today. Hell, half of today's country acts were influenced by Skynyrd, 38 Special, Allman Bros, Marshall Tucker, Garth Brooks, and Randy Travis. These bands have
lots of catalog stuff. Many 18-34s haven't heard Floyd or the Doors a thousand times, even if their parents or grand parents wore out the vinyl or CDs. And musicians in the 18-34 demo respect and study the musicianship of artists like Densmore, Manzarek and Krieger; Richards, Jones and Watts; Page, Bonham and Plant and many others. OK, so hearing
Money or
LA Woman for the 734th time can be tiresome, but there are plenty of 18-34 folks who are hearing it for the first time... or maybe the 51st time, and they dig it. My neighbor's kid is 19, in college and plays a decent guitar. Who does he model himself after? Petty and Roger McGuinn. I heard Stairway a few days back on 93 or 97... can't recall, and hit the scan button. A few hours later I was surfing around the dial and heard
Good Times, Bad Times off the very first album, probably on 97 or 107, and I kept listening. The song's maybe 48 years old, but it stills rocks the house, and it brought back some fond recollections.