Apparently some Time story got killed at the last minute, because this barely copyedited piece on the recent resurgence of hard-rock bands that can only be described as "odd" for a lot of reasons somehow made it to the magazine's site. Not only is Don Dokken referred to as "Dan" in the story's second sentence (ouch!), and not only does Vince Neil's assertion that Motley Crue is in its heyday right now go unquestioned, and not only was the Rocklahoma festival—which, if anything, was the moment that hard rock could have been claimed as ruling the roost during the just-completed summer concert season—completely ignored (as was the fact that many of these touring bands were full of reshuffled hired guns), the numbers that were presented as evidence of writer/CNN Headline News personality Kris Osborn's "rock is back!" thesis were subject to some curious inflation:
In some cases the crowds and revenues have rivaled those of the 1980s. Ratt and Poison just wrapped up a long, large-venue summer tour where they played regularly before 8,000 to10,000 fans. Ratt lead singer Pearcy says he noticed an emerging younger fan base of teenagers and twenty-somethings who were born years after Ratt multi-platinum "Out of the Cellar" album released in 1984. "It has been a gradual build up again. It's rock and roll — colorful, dangerous, exciting," Pearcy said.
Hey, thousands of fans, that's good, right? But those numbers often resulted in half-empty venues, even for tours that had the fortune to be big-upped endlessly on VH1. That's not to say that there isn't a story about the number of hard-rock bands who hit the road this summer—look, it's Exhibit A!—but this one seems like it was tailor-made for one purpose: Getting Osborn some face time with his favorite bands. Even if he can't spell their lead singers' first names.
They Came from the Eighties [Time]
[Photo: AP]





Comments
I love it when big media outlets go slumming
Yeah, and Sabbath didn't tour as "Black Sabbath."
It was called "Heaven & Hell"... he could've just said Dio. Whatevs.
How much do you think he got paid for this? Kill fee or otherwise?
Rocklahoma did look pretty rad. The ratio of original to new band members was about 1:4.
There's no way in hell I'm reading this, but I'm sure the article mentions "Rock of Love" as evidence that hard rock is back, right?? RIGHT?
@Big Money, No Whammies: Nope.
Look...if Don Dokken is playing in Springfield, VA (home of Dave Grohl by the by) then he aint playing some large venue...he is playing JAXX...this isnt the 9:30 Club, this is where the 80s never died...where bands that arent national are forced to pay to play (oh the owner will couch it as you having to sell tickets for him, tickets he charges you for) also the same venue that hold Battle of the Bands tournaments whenever the place needs new equipment, crowning as winner the band who brings the most fans (who pay a cover)...
Dan Dokken is lost without George Lunch.
Did the entire article cite Chuck Klosterman circa 2003?
**"And not to be left out, Motley Crue and front man Vince Neil launch into "Looks that Kill" as their Ocean City, Maryland, audience screams along with the lyrics. "**
"Their audience"? *His* audience. It sure couldn't have been a Crue show.
Wow, that is a stinktastic piece.
Yeah, that piece was a trainwreck. All I can think is that if you're a "real fan", at least get the damn names right!
In the meantime, I looked at the article and photos and just thought of how tragic so many of them look now - like a bunch of dads at some form of Heavy Metal Fantasy Camp.
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