Born too late
Being born in 1960 and a teenager in the 1970s, there was a sense of having been born too late; having missed the interesting times. The Beatles had broken up in 1970 and we had to be content with Paul McCartney and Wings and John Lennon and Yoko Ono; Jimi Hendrix, Joplin and Jim Morrison were dead before we became aware of their existence. There was a feeling that history had ended.
By the late 70s, the tenth anniversary of the important events were occurring – Woodstock being the most significant. When you are eighteen, ten years is a lifetime, who was there amongst us who would have remembered such times? The first film screened at the LSE Film Club when I began university was ‘The Last Waltz’, the farewell concert of ‘The Band, when almost every musician worth knowing took to the stage. The fin de siecle mood seemed to have enveloped even freshman undergraduates.
Even expressing a liking for rock bands that once graced the stages of the great rock festivals became unfashionable; an undergraduate friend who preferred rap bands and New Romantic poseurs described my liking for a heavy rock band as an affection for dinosaurs. No-one in London seemed to listen to Tommy Vance’s Friday on Radio 1; in fact, admitting to listening to Radio 1 invited hoots of scorn and derision, the only station to which to listen was Capital.
The music of the times is now hardly recalled; people refer to Punk, but hardly anyone plays it, the New Romantics and their ilk have virtually disappeared from the radar screen – when did you last hear Adam and the Ants on the radio? The artists who played in those times, and whose work continues, are artists who are timeless – Springsteen, Elvis Costello, the various bands who had endured from the 1960s, the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, The Who. No-one would ever talk about 1978, or ’79, or ’80, or the other years since in the way that people talked about 1967 or 1968.
It seemed we had missed history, that everything at which it would have been worth being present had happened, and that there was nothing left for us.
Suffering the human constraint of being born at a particular time, there is no possibility of knowing how people born at other times feel about the age in which they were born. Do those born in 1950 wish they might have been earlier in order that they might have enjoyed the first years of rock and roll? Do those born in 1970 ever think that they might have been interested in Punk music, had they been old enough?
The Band, Bob Dylan and Crosby, Stills and Nash CDs lie on the car seat; in thirty years time, what music will represent the golden age?
As you say everyone looks back, I enjoyed most of the rock bands but also looked back to the big bands, Miller, The Dorseys, Ted Heath and before that Armstrong, Shaw, Waller and so on, I think the word nostalgia says it all
I’m not sure living through the times of the big bands would have compensated for living through World War II, though!