Winston Carter
Practically Family
- Messages
- 675
- Location
- Seagoville, Tx.
The rock music of the 60's and early 70's was the best. Then it spilled over into country with Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Merle Haggard, etc. and that was the best times for them. Music hasn't got any better since then. Some say that it was the drugs that inspired their thoughts.I'm probably in the same age range as you. I graduated high school in 1969. I've read that people tend to "bond" with the music and cultural artifacts of their impressionable years. I'm a little damaged, in that I not only enjoy the music of the late 60s and early 70s, particularly that of the "British invasion" and the San Francisco sound of that time, but I also find listening to modern "adult contemporary" (read: electronic instrumental) highly enjoyable.
There's another side to the story of that time, though. I just finished watching Ken Burns's 10-episode saga, "The Vietnam War." I remember how divisive that war was. Images of executions, naked children burned by napalm, dead students at Kent State contrast the "Summer of Love" and Woodstock. John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr. Robert F. Kennedy, all dead at the hands of assassins. Much of the turmoil of that time inspired the music: For What It's Worth (Buffalo Springfield), Ohio (Crosy, Stills & Nash), and music inspired the turmoil (terrorist underground group the Weathermen took their name from Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues). The two factions of that era defined many of us.
Now, we're in our sixties and seventies. We've seen a lot over the last fifty years: Man landing on the moon. The fall of the Berlin Wall. The invention of electronic musical instruments (Moog was ahead of his time). And, of course, cell phones and the Internet. We are now the old-timers and for better or worse, the younger generation is taking over.