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- <text id=92TT0795>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Getting Down to Their Roots
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 71
- Getting Down to Their Roots
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The good times are beginning to roll again for a whole new
- generation of black rockers
- </p>
- <p>By Janice C. Simpson--With reporting by Patrick E. Cole/
- Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> According to conventional wisdom in the music business,
- black musicians do rap and soul, whites do rock 'n' roll. So
- what to make of a group like Follow for Now? Their dreadlocks
- and fade-style haircuts seem to come straight out of a Yo! MTV
- Raps video clip. So do the lyrics to songs such as White Hood,
- their spirited diatribe against skinheads and other white
- supremacists. But the thrashing guitars and drum licks the five
- members of the band play on their eponymous debut album leave
- little doubt that their musical roots reach deep into hard rock.
- </p>
- <p> Ever since Living Colour broke through the color barrier
- four years ago and went on to pick up two consecutive Grammys
- for Best Hard Rock Performnce, growing numbers of young
- African-American musicians have begun jamming to a rock beat.
- Says Living Colour lead guitarist Vernon Reid: "Rock 'n' roll
- is black music, and we are its heirs."
- </p>
- <p> That legacy dates back to the early 1950s, when Chuck
- Berry and Little Richard first introduced white teens to the
- wildly exuberant sounds that eventually became known as rock 'n'
- roll. Even after the British invasion of the 1960s, black
- rockers like Jimi Hendrix, the Ohio Players, and Sly and the
- Family Stone danced back and forth across the color line. That
- ended with the disco era of the 1970s, whose slick,
- producer-driven, synthesizer-motorized tunes created a racial
- schism in pop music that has yet to mend.
- </p>
- <p> Now, however, eager for any opportunity to prop up sagging
- sales, record companies are rediscovering the appeal of black
- rock 'n' roll. Virgin Records has signed up neohippie Lenny
- Kravitz, whose latest record, Mama Said, has sold about 2
- million copies worldwide. Sony Music produces Fishbone, seven
- musical renegades who have attracted a cult following with their
- energetic mix of rock, punk and funk. Elektra Records is pushing
- Eric Gales, 17, a wunderkind who leads a musically adventurous
- three-man band. Epic recently released a debut album by Eye &
- I, a genre-busting quintet propelled by the lusty vocals of
- female singer DK Dyson. And pop music maestro Quincy Jones has
- given his blessings to the movement: his label, Qwest Records,
- gave newcomers Who's Image a $750,000 advance, an unusually high
- bid for unproved talent.
- </p>
- <p> As in traditional rock, the guitar is the central
- instrument for these musicians, but their riffs resonate with
- blues and jazz, reggae and rap, and all the other rhythms of the
- black musical experience. "We didn't watch MTV and take a little
- of this and that because it was hot," says Follow for Now
- guitarist David Ryan-Harris. "We grew up among a lot of various
- musical influences, and we use them all." Lyrics in these songs
- deal with race relations and other social issues that reflect
- a consciously black sensibility. "A lot of rock is about coming
- of age," says Living Colour's Reid. "And one thing that's a
- definite, salient part of a black person's coming-of-age is
- dealing with racism."
- </p>
- <p> But while more records are being made, black rockers say
- they still have a hard time getting radio programmers--white
- and black--to play their music. "Radio is now the stumbling
- block," says Nuumi Rayfield Jarvis, founder of the Los Angeles
- chapter of the Black Rock Coalition, a national network of 50
- bands that organized seven years ago to promote black rock.
- Because it ranges from jazz fusion to thrash metal, black rock
- doesn't fit neatly into any of the traditional grooves that
- determine how music is marketed. Executives who program for
- traditional rock stations fret that the white teens who make up
- their audiences won't identify with black rockers. Black
- programmers argue that their listeners are turned off by the
- heavy-metal sound. Says Mike Stradford, programming director at
- KKBT-FM, a rhythm-and-blues station in Los Angeles: "We make
- money by playing the music that our listeners want to hear."
- </p>
- <p> Black rock 'n' roll has found sanctuary on alternative and
- college radio stations and in small rock clubs. So far, its
- biggest fans have been mainly hip young whites. But the Black
- Rock Coalition is working to spread the gospel, particularly
- among young black music lovers. It publishes a newsletter and
- organizes concerts, including a music festival in Bari, Italy,
- last June and free performances in playgrounds in black
- neighborhoods all through the summer. It has also produced its
- first album, The History of Our Future, an eclectic sampler
- distributed by Rykodisc that features 10 of the association's
- bands. Says executive director Don Eversley: "We're trying to
- show that some of the artificial boundaries that have been put
- up shouldn't exist."
- </p>
- <p> There are signs that those walls may be falling. Columbia
- Records executive Randy Jackson says 25% of the 100 or more demo
- tapes he receives each month now come from black rock-'n'-roll
- groups. And just last week hard-core rapper Ice-T released a
- debut album with Body Count, the new heavy-metal band he has
- started. Meanwhile, Little Richard, who has quit the business
- several times since becoming a Seventh-day Adventist minister
- 35 years ago, believes the time may be ripe for another
- comeback. "I've got what it takes to do it," he says. "If they
- come and make me an offer, I will come and make it in a big
- way." Sounds like the good times may finally be rolling again.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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