Topic: Classic Rock Rising -Thanks To Video Games

It’s unusual for a kindergartner to beg his father to download Accept’s 1984 hit, “Balls to the Wall” to an iPod Nano, but not for Gary Wedbush of Manhattan Beach, Calif.

His sons, ages 6 and 9, play 10 hours of “Guitar Hero” a week, and are so obsessed with the game that they’ll wake up early, make breakfast, and get ready for school — all on their own — just so they can squeeze a few more minutes of play into their day.

The curious side effect is both kids are now fans of classic rock and, less thrilling for Wedbush, heavy metal.

It’s not an isolated case. “Guitar Hero” and “Rock Band” are exposing kids to music that they otherwise wouldn’t pay attention to on the airwaves.

“It’s a big part of our secret agenda,” says Harmonix co-founder Alex Rigopulos, whose company created both franchises. The games “are about connecting people with music in a deeper way.”

They’re also about reaching a massive audience. “Rock Band” sold 1.5 million units in two months, according to the most recent numbers by The NPD Group market research firm.

Fans of the game have already downloaded 5 million songs. And the “Guitar Hero” franchise has sold 14 million units in North America since its launch in 2005.

After rocking through “Guitar Hero II,” “III” and “Encore: Rocks the 80s,” Wedbush’s kids compiled iPod playlists containing 50 to 60 classic rock songs by the likes of Lynyrd Skynyrd, Megadeth and The Vapors.

“My kids spend most of their day driving around with their mom listening to KROQ,” a Los Angeles-area radio station that plays mainstream tunes by the likes of Modest Mouse and The Strokes, says Wedbush.

The credit for that? “It really was Guitar Hero,” he says.

Young fans of Aerosmith and The Outlaws
“Rock Band” has had similar effects on Julie Volchenboum’s four children. Her 11-year-old son plays the game for about five hours a week — and would play more if his screen time wasn’t limited, she says.

He has the game’s entire set list, which includes 30-year-old tunes like The Outlaws’ “Green Grass & High Tides,” Aerosmith’s “Train Kept A Rolling” and Deep Purple’s “Highway Star,” and often instigates family-wide dance parties in the kitchen.

His habit also has his parents rummaging through their music collection to find forgotten, full-length albums by Boston or The Who. “Rock Band” has even inspired Volchenboum’s son to learn Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing” on the piano.

“He’s a music connoisseur now,” says Volchenboum, 37. “He can more reliably name a rock song than I can.”

The result is intentional, says Paul Degooyer, senior vice president of DVD, gaming, and audio at MTV, which distributed “Rock Band.” Advisors carefully assembled the game — just like an album — to propel players through a broad collection of music.

The game “is driving people who might not be into classic rock into it. That’s exactly what we were trying to do,” he says.

Older artists see the appeal
Beyond influencing young musical tastes, the games have had an impact on classic recording artists.

According to Neilson SoundScan, which tracks both digital and retail music, sales of Aerosmith’s single, “Same Old Song and Dance,” increased 136 percent the week after “Guitar Hero III” was released, and skyrocketed 400 percent the week after Christmas.

The success prompted Aerosmith to help create “Guitar Hero: Aerosmith,” a musical tour of the band’s history and influences, that is scheduled for release in June.

This is in stark contrast to the original, cover song-filled “Guitar Hero.” Its sequel secured the original recordings for only a third of the tracks. Now artists are seeking inclusion in the games.

“It's cool to see so many bands working closely with us,” says RedOctane co-founder Charles Huang, whose company published the "Guitar Hero" franchise.

Early on, artists “were disengaged and just licensing us music; now they want to be heavily involved. Bands and labels are seeing this as one of the newest ways to introduce music.”

The Sex Pistols wanted to be in “Guitar Hero III” so badly that the band reunited to re-record “Anarchy in the U.K.,” because it didn’t have the original master recordings.

Living Colour decided its guitar solo in “Cult of Personality” was too easy, so it, too, hit the studio. Both Guns N’ Roses’ Slash, and Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello, wrote a new song for the game.

But for fans of the old stuff, “Guitar Hero” and “Rock Band” have allowed for some intense, inter-generational jam sessions. Wedbush, who is a fan of classic rock, says his sons now have the same taste as 40-year-olds.

“It’s cool to see them getting into music,” he says. “Not to over-simplify, but any time you find common interests with your kids it’s a very cool thing. You get to connect in a way that’s different than the normal parent-child relationship.”

His boys usually quietly strum away on their plastic guitars. “Every time I go by,” recounts Wedbush, “I have to say, ‘If you’re going to play this game, play it loud.’ ”

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Re: Classic Rock Rising -Thanks To Video Games

Just picked up my daughter at school, had to stop for gas so she could get a look at a boy she likes that works there after school and Foghat came on the radio playing Slow Ride on Sirius classic...I went to change it just to see if something better was on, she switched it back and turned it up louder!  Now she has good taste in music, but I can't take credit for that song, she learned it from Guitar Hero!

StringsforaCURE~Helping cancer patients one STRING at a time.
http://stringsforacure.com/

Re: Classic Rock Rising -Thanks To Video Games

How cool would it be if Joe turned up on a future Guitar Hero game. Talk about getting the message out. Is there anything we can do about that?? Would it be something Joe is interested in doing do you think?? Just a thought.......

"Music should strike fire from the heart of man, and bring tears from the eyes of woman."
                                                                                                   Ludwig Van Beethoven

Re: Classic Rock Rising -Thanks To Video Games

Guitar hero is a good way to get the next generations attention, but I noticed my son, who's almost 19 and a lot of his school buddies listening to 70's rock mixed in with their current faves even before Hero became popular. They may have picked up on it through their parents, like my kid did, or from hearing some of these rock anthems blasted at sporting events. I feel the bottom line is simply that the 70's produced the best music of any decade. I know you 80's hairbanders wanna throw in your two cents, but the hairbands were pretty much emulating the likes of the Stones and Areosmith etc., not just musically, but in their excesses too. Just one guys opinion who's pretty much seen it all since the Beatles came ashore and then some. Please respond with your feelings.

                                                                                                            Think Green,

                                                                                                            J Dawg

What is success? Is it do yo' own thang, or is it to join the rest?   -Allen Toussaint

Re: Classic Rock Rising -Thanks To Video Games

Oh no you didn't Jane!  Geezer level?  Excuse me?  You can't buy a vowel on my game show anymore.  big_smile

And for everybody else just FYI...

There is no MTV on in my house and there is no guitar hero because my kids all have their own instruments, their own Ipods and boom boxes and their own computers.  They also have A averages, are killer athletes and can hang out till the wee hours at concerts with me and conduct themselves like grown ups.  That's all because they live with an old geezer bluesman. lol

I also know I'm in the minority of most forum folks.  I have expressed this before in another thread.  JDawg, maybe I'll come to that point one day, that I find it a good way to get their attention, but not yet.  I can get their attention.  Trust that.

I don't give a flying crap about most psychobabble nor the people who tell me I'm wrong about how I run my world.

"By their fruits ye shall know them."

Rock On & Keep the FAITH
             It is
Blues From the Bottoms

Re: Classic Rock Rising -Thanks To Video Games

Paul-I'm giving you the 2nd high-five in one day...I also thought this would be GREAT and I was thinking with Joe's Gibson relationship, its not really that unrealistic of an idea.  Sometimes when I get ideas I wonder the same thing, would Joe want that?  Maybe we can funnel these kinda questions on the new street team site...I can't see a negative side right now... In the meantime, we can at least fantasize about what song we would suggest. wink

PaulB74 wrote:

How cool would it be if Joe turned up on a future Guitar Hero game. Talk about getting the message out. Is there anything we can do about that?? Would it be something Joe is interested in doing do you think?? Just a thought.......

StringsforaCURE~Helping cancer patients one STRING at a time.
http://stringsforacure.com/