It didn’t.
I'll assume you mean "Rock", since technically there's a difference between "Rock & Roll" and "Rock".
If this were requirements for writing a conditional like of code, it would be illogical garbage. But as a programmer, I think I know what you're trying to say.No, I'm talking about Rock 'N Roll, not Rock & Roll or just Rock.
Rock n roll is far from dead, like Rudd said though, you're not gonna hear it on the radio
I was watching Tyler Childers live shows so far in 21 last night. He has gone full blown rock n roll now and it's excellent. Country rock, but definitely rock.
Plenty of Tyler's, Markus King, Blackberry Smoke, Black Crows and many more. Rock n roll in indeed alive and well.
The world it seems just prefers rap or pop these days. They can have it, and leave me the rest who don't get radio play
The correct answer isn't on the list. It's August 1, 1981. The day MTV launched.
This bro old and madI'll assume you mean "Rock", since technically there's a difference between "Rock & Roll" and "Rock".
I'd say it was when a generation rebelled (as they always do) and started buying into Rap and Hip Hop as their preferred "music". This genre requires little to no musical ability and is comparatively inexpensive to produce. The loss of revenue from file sharing hindered the funds record companies could provide to support the more expensive Rock genre so the cheap *** Rap **** took over.
Kids don't care about learning to play an instrument like they did years ago. It's not as cool anymore. The guitar is no longer a weapon of mass destruction that brings the panties down like it did ~30 years ago.
There's more to it, but I think this is a major factor.
MTV started the decline, but rock into the '90s was still decent. Alternative/Indie/Grunge, etc.The correct answer isn't on the list. It's August 1, 1981. The day MTV launched.
Nailed it.I'll amplify some of those statements like a Fender Deluxe:
You won't hear new rock on the radio but it is being made in great abundance with very high quality. The fact of the matter is that manufacturing formula country and R&B hip-hop songs is a very efficient industry and it targets an audience of young people who really don't care about the musical elements...melody, virtuosity of voice or instruments, or really even the production of the sound.
The same trap sounds and predictable, monotonous "melodies", and cute lyrics are easy to reproduce, and they form an instant bond between the (usually 17-36 year-old) listener and the song..."it's almost like I have heard this before, but it's new right?"
The variety of rock sounds during the 60s-90s was an amazing mess. A lot of risks were taken and producing radio-ready music was EXPENSIVE. So the corporate music industry did what it does: It started focusing on the music that is easy and cheap to produce and sell rather than take risks.
The good news is that there are still thousands of great acts touring, recording and making enough scratch to get by. You can find them all on Youtube or Spotify or whatever and go to massive music festivals all over the country. Who gives a crap about what 15 year old girls want to hear?
This is the part that gets me. Some old fart says rock died in the 80's. You then play them some shr doing rock from the 2000's and they say well that ain't any to good IMO. Yes ACDC rocks, but there are still bands coming out today that rock just as hard. I mean the Arctic Monkeys are hardly known by anyone that I know personally yet they have 2 decades worth of amazing rock and roll songs out right now. I think the real problem is people aren't confident enough to listen to a song they've never heard and decide by themselves whether or not they like it.Selling out shows and playing rock, and instead of celebrating that, some 40-50 year old rock fans complain that they stole LZ's sound.
Some are just hung up on their favorite period of time in music. Eddie Trunk primarily focuses on the 70s and 80s because he's nearly 60 and that's what he grew up on. I don't think things are as dire as they seem though. There's far too many "reaction" channels on YT, but if you scroll through some of the rock reaction ones (or metal, or country), there's plenty of people (young and old) choosing to expose themselves to everything from Elvis to Sepultura. Collecting vinyl is a thing again and young collectors in particular aren't only buying Taylor Swift records.This is the part that gets me. Some old fart says rock died in the 80's. You then play them some shr doing rock from the 2000's and they say well that ain't any to good IMO. Yes ACDC rocks, but there are still bands coming out today that rock just as hard. I mean the Arctic Monkeys are hardly known by anyone that I know personally yet they have 2 decades worth of amazing rock and roll songs out right now. I think the real problem is people aren't confident enough to listen to a song they've never heard and decide by themselves whether or not they like it.