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Born to be Wild - American Rock golden age series - BBC4 - starting 10/01/14 2100
alcockell
Posts: 25,160
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Hi folks,
We have
Born to Be Wild
Season 1 Episode 1 of 3
Riders on the Storm New series. A look at the evolution of 20th-century American rock music, beginning with the days of flower power, Vietnam and LSD, when bands like the Doors, Jefferson Airplane and MC5 sang about `the revolution'. The first episode concentrates on the late 1960s, exploring the artists that made the soundtrack to the Peace and Love generation, culminating in the Woodstock music festival. However, the event proved a watershed moment for rock music's reactionary era, as the marketeers lined up ready to turn this kind of output from protest into profit. Contributers include Alice Cooper and Tom Petty
then
Jimi Hendrix: The Road to Woodstock
A definitive account of one of the guitarist's most celebrated performances, at the New York festival in 1969, featuring signature renditions of Purple Haze, Voodoo Child and the Star Spangled Banner. The programme includes interviews with Woodstock promoter Michael Lang and Hendrix's band members Mitch Mitchell, Billy Cox, Larry Lee and Juma Sultan
and one on The Doors tonight...
Who's watching?
We have
Born to Be Wild
Season 1 Episode 1 of 3
Riders on the Storm New series. A look at the evolution of 20th-century American rock music, beginning with the days of flower power, Vietnam and LSD, when bands like the Doors, Jefferson Airplane and MC5 sang about `the revolution'. The first episode concentrates on the late 1960s, exploring the artists that made the soundtrack to the Peace and Love generation, culminating in the Woodstock music festival. However, the event proved a watershed moment for rock music's reactionary era, as the marketeers lined up ready to turn this kind of output from protest into profit. Contributers include Alice Cooper and Tom Petty
then
Jimi Hendrix: The Road to Woodstock
A definitive account of one of the guitarist's most celebrated performances, at the New York festival in 1969, featuring signature renditions of Purple Haze, Voodoo Child and the Star Spangled Banner. The programme includes interviews with Woodstock promoter Michael Lang and Hendrix's band members Mitch Mitchell, Billy Cox, Larry Lee and Juma Sultan
and one on The Doors tonight...
Who's watching?
0
Comments
Great to see a clip of The Byrds. Never seen that clip with Gene Clark playing the Fender XII on Mr Tambourine Man before.
Great to see Creedence though....my all time favourite band.
the 60s and 70s - what most people are aware of anyway - has been done to death.
Covering the 70s...
And supposedly white artists were only playing to white people - program shows black artist bemoaning this fact. Program insinuates that white artists were (1) racist for only playing to mostly white crowds, and (2) racist for not recognizing the black heritage of modern rock music.
In reality, white artists were happy to play to absolutely anyone. If black people didn't want to buy and listen to rock music unless it was played by black people, then that makes them racist. White artists and music fans have always brought, played and appreciated black music - albums sales overwhelmingly prove this fact.
And then the program crassly and racistly diminishes a whole genre of rock music just because it doesn't sound soulful enough. Yeah, I know because for rock music to have any credibility it MUST sound at least partly black.
This program was incredibly racist.
And where did the change in FM radio come along, from the early 70s when supposedly played anything it wanted (and yet still apparently played "The Joker" 100 times a day) to the late 70s when it was full of corporate rock?
All I saw in the 70's program was a couple of seconds of Nancy Wilson dancing about with her guitar.
One of many band omissions I could pick on.
Its picked too big a subject in 3 one hour programs and is achieving nothing.
One of the few LPs I still have. It was an early birthday present from my wife, though she was the girlfriend then.
Journey etc...
A few second snippet of Alone, and a mention that Heart regretted being part of the 80's hair rock scene.
I am enjoying the 80's program more than the previous two.
I am a big rock fan, but what strikes me about tonight's program as well, is too much attention is being given to bland chart crap.
Bon Jovi, yaaaaawwwwnn !
I agree. I am a fan of a lot of American rock music. It seems though that the ones that had the most chart success in the 80's and I include Guns n Roses along with Van Halen and Motley Crue etc, were prize ********s who were pissed up and arseholes.
Yet a band such as Heart who I have come to appreciate more get a few seconds.
If you want a truly great American rock album, listen to "Marquee Moon". Yet Television didn't even get a mention in this series.