Growing Old with Young Musicians. They say that people
outgrow music or, at least, certain musical tastes, and that is doubtless true.
For I no longer take much interest in classical or jazz, which used to preoccupy
me a great deal more than ever it does at present. I was always keen on rock
music, particularly what is called progressive rock, but even that changes and
one finds oneself listening to what is called heavy metal and, by contrast,
electronica, meaning Tangerine Dream-like stuff which is likely to be
synthesizer-based instrumental. Not that one listens to a great deal of it or
all that often. There are other things besides music; but, all the same, if I
had to describe my predominating tastes at present it would be heavy metal and
electronica, and would include such bands as Motorhead, Iron Maiden, the
Spiritual Beggars, Black Label Society (BLS), Michael Schenker Group (MSG),
King Crimson, the aforementioned Tangerine Dream, and - yes - Arch Enemy. I
don't know what it is about them, maybe a combination of factors including
Michael Amott (also of Spiritual Beggars), but their music and lyrics impress
me sufficiently for me to want to rate them as high if not higher than all the
rest. And I'm fifty-four, for christs sake! Anyway, it
seems to me that age is not really - thank god! - a problem in regard to taste
and that, when push comes to shove, one would rather listen to good
contemporary music, with a 2000+ date, than simply regurgitate the past or,
worse, dwell on the past as though nothing else mattered. Certainly it is good
to keep the faith with some of one's old favourites, and it sure as hell makes
one feel better to be buying and/or listening to someone approximately one's
own age who, like Alice Cooper or Ozzy Osbourne or even Deep Purple, is still,
to all appearances, 'going strong' and sounding hip. But I couldn't do that
exclusively, and I thank my lucky stars, or whatever it is, that I am flexible
enough to change with the times and grow new tastebuds with the passing of
time.