I had a fun time-machine-like experience while on vacation in August.
We were at my Mother-In-Law's getaway place in Maine. It's not a cabin. It's not roughing-it by any means.
But it IS out of cell phone range and internet range and cable and broadcast television range. So you can be pretty disconnected.
There are a ton of books floating around, so in the quiet moments (when we send the kids outside, that is) there are plenty of things to idly flip though.
When my Mother-In-Law bought the place a couple of years ago, it came as-is. So we inherited a huge collection of VHS movies and books and such. Many of them had been there for decades.
And that was my experience when I picked up The Rolling Stone Illustrated History Of Rock & Roll.
It was---as advertised---a comprehensive history of Rock & Roll, published in 1980. Each section was an essay on either a single important musician/band, a particular movement or a full genre.
Hilariously, it touts that this is the updated edition (the original came out in 1976), so it's more complete than ever.
So it's a view of Rock & Roll that predates Nirvana. It predates the internet. It predates Rap music.
Those are obvious.
It also describes a world that has never seen a CD. A world where all four of The Beatles are still alive and could potentially reunite. A world where MTV did not yet exist.
Most interestingly, it had really interesting summations of artists who---from today's perspective---were perhaps being analyzed too soon.
Talking Heads had put out a few promising albums, but the piece on them doesn't/couldn't predict their breakthough commercial success or their lasting influence.
Elvis Costello had put out his blistering triptych debut and follow-ups, but gave the reviewer no hint of the many genre exercises and tributaries that he would so ably traverse in the coming years.
My favorite review was on Bonnie Raitt. In 1980, she was critically beloved, and was an impressive live act. But she hadn't had a commercial breakthrough yet. And the reviewer thought her own material was weak, and, more damningly, that her ability to select material was weak (like this track written by Little Feat's Bill Payne). And thus she'd probably never realize her potential.
Which is hilarious to read here in the future, where Bonnie has won many Grammys, sold millions of records and is widely regarded as important and influential.
Hear the song on Youtube.
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