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Guitar Hero Must Die!

Posted Fri Dec 19, 2008 4:40pm PST by Mick Farren in The MOJO Blog

The new generation of music games are sounding a widdly-widdly death knell for rock 'n' roll, argues MOJO's Mick Farren.

Saturation yuletide advertising has finally convinced me that virtual music games like Guitar Hero and Rock Band, in which participants attempt to "play" classic metal solos by following flashing light sequences on guitar-shaped plastic peripherals, pose an even greater threat to the future of rock 'n' roll than Simon Cowell.

For confirmation that these games are an unpleasant victory for short-attention commercial exploitation, we need look no further than a South Park episode titled "Guitar Queer-o," in which Stan and Kyle become Guitar Hero heroes, and, when Stan's dad attempts to teach the fourth graders to actually play a real guitar, Cartman scathingly responds that "real guitars are for old people."

What's being exploited here is as old as rock 'n' roll itself. Few of us have not, at some time in our lives, or perhaps as recently as this morning, played clandestine air guitar or posed in front of a mirror pretending to be Elvis, Jimi, Joe Strummer, or even Joe Satriani. But the global electronic game corporations who have co-opted this youthful narcissism into a competitive game of manual dexterity, with plastic reproductions of Gibsons and Fenders, are having a negative impact on music's future. OK, so we tolerated Tom Cruise dancing around in his underwear to Bob Seger in Risky Business, but enough is, culturally speaking, enough.

Guitar Hero and Rock Band broaden the perceived gulf between performer and audience by pandering to the most juvenile extremes of rock 'n' roll idol worship. Worse than that, they betray the great populist promise of rock 'n' roll--which has held good from the days of The Shadows--that any garage band with a set of cheap instruments and perfunctory chops can achieve icon status if it gets the breaks and is sufficiently relentless.

Equally unpleasant is the unseemly rush by many of our current guitar "heroes" to lease their music for inclusion. Among the shameless are Aerosmith, Metallica, Motorhead, AC/DC and the Sex Pistols, while The Beatles and the Jimi Hendrix estate are reportedly ready to deal. Whether or not this is more heinous than flogging one's songs for TV commercials is open to debate, but the basic absurdity is underscored by the song "Thunderhorse" by DethKlok--the fictional death metal band from the U.S. TV cartoon show Metalocalypse--being incorporated in Guitar Hero II.

At a time when musical education in schools has become a cause célèbre, the promotion of video games that offer nothing more than a closed loop of virtual experience, devoid of creativity, does nothing to help. A spokesman for the game makers has claimed that they teach "sensitivity to rhythm, as well as develop the dexterity and independent hand usage necessary to play the instrument," but this seems disingenuous when the games do nothing to impart the real fundamentals of music.

And just to add injury to insult, an outfit called Mad Catz in San Diego, California will retrofit a perfectly good Fender Stratocaster, replacing strings, pickups and fretboard with the input controls for Rock Band.

Is nothing sacred?

Commune with fellow music maniacs at MOJO4music.com. Mick Farren blogs at Doc40.blogspot.com.

1490 Comments

1. Yahoo! Music User -
You're a moron. Studies in England have shown that interest in playing ACTUAL musical instruments has drastically risen since GH and RB became popular. While I was already a guitar/bass/keyboard player before these games, Rock Band actually inspired me to take up the drums. Yes, I own an actual drum kit and can play and Rock Band DID in fact teach me many of the fundamentals of drumming.

2. Yahoo! Music User -
Seriously? An episode of South Park is your evidence that Guitar Hero is bad? Wow...

3. violence -
no need to call him a moron, fool. the man has valid points. Were it not for these games, i wouldnt have heard of many great rock songs, which are now among my favorites.

4. Yahoo! Music User -
With there being an overload, in my opinion, of pop and rap music in the masses; these games also introduce kids to music they may never have even been exposed to. My 9 yr old has come to love some of my "oldies" from playing them on Rock band and Guitar Hero... now has them on her ipod.

5. Yessenia -
I can see your point. I mean before guitar hero came, kids actually got out of their house and started a real band. I still cant believe the sex pistols let guitar hero put Anarchy in the UK in the game.

6. DUDE -
Guitar Hero and Rock Band are just more ways for idiots to feel like they have accomplished something.

7. mike -
Dude:

Your right, I can't believe people needs games like that to feel they have accomplished something. As a matter of fact, lets just ban all games because they all make you feel the same way. Down with MADDEN, I hate people playing that game and feeling like they accomplished something because they won the Super Bowl. Dude, your comment was a joke man.

8. Will B -
I believe the author's point for one my co-worker has the game and he says he likes Dragonforce only because of that song through the fire and flames. It makes me mad that he doesn't like listening to the genre of music but for the fact it is on GH. Number two alot of kids didn't know who Slash or Gun's in Roses where until Gh came out.

9. Yahoo! Music User -
Will B:
Who cares how they know those bands. "Alot" of kids don't know who Slash or "Gun's" "in" Roses are because they're too young to have been musically conscious when they were popular. It doesn't matter anyways. "Gun's" "in" Roses and Dragonforce both suck.

10. cherrycherry -
As long as kids now days learn who the Beatles (and other great bands)are, i don't care if it's through an innocent game.

if i had a kid, i would be so happy that they would like a game with no violence!

11. cherrycherry -
As long as kids learn who the Beatles are!

and if i had a kid, I'd be so happy that Guitae Hero has no violence.

Where are the groupies? I thought that was why guys got in band!?!

12. Kyle -
I hate it when people say they like a song only when its on rockband or guitar hero. Its making a parody of the rock genre

13. Yahoo! Music User -
Yeah, I hate it when people only say they like songs after they've heard them too. Real music fans like music before they even listen to it.

14. KleR -
Way to take a "GAME" too seriously. It's just a game for people to enjoy, they play it because they want to have the instant satisfaction of having good music at that moment. It's just a game;

Also, the instruments for these games cost less than the real life counterparts.
Also, Jimi Hendrix already has some songs for Guitar Hero, and the Beatles are getting their own game for Rock Band.

15. Terry -
I used to be a purist, too,I was pissed when when"Rock-and-roll" became a Cadillac ad,but thats the way of the world. At the very least,GH and RB are keeping the classic rock genre alive, though it does bug me that the only Rush song some of those kids will ever here is "Tom Sawyer" or that all they know about the Clash is,well you know,dont make me say it!!

16. Mohawk -
It takes away the edginess of rock and roll, all of a sudden every single nerd with guitar hero is a "metallica fan" and "loves" the sex pistols even though all they know is that one song on guitar hero. it truly sickens me to see what I held sacred to be used for the pacification of a generation

17. coffee -
playing guitar hero is good for fun. for people who can't really play, but want to feel like they're playing. nothing wrong with that. great idea even. and i hate the infernal thing. but please, leave the real guitars alone... ouchie, already- a Fender Strat is a terrible thing to waste.

18. Metalfish -
Being a guitarist/bassist recording musician I tried to get my teenage son into playing, bought him a bass-he will spend hours playing guitar hero but does not want to spend the time it takes to actually learn some scales some he can REALLY PLAY. I think it's a generational thing. Instant gratification is what it's all about. Why spend years to do what you can pretend to do in hours? I don't think it has been good for music, generates lots of revenue though, and let's face it, the only thing more important than instant gratification is money, right?

19. Keane -
I agree with Mohawk and truckmetal23.LOL! No seriously though i do agree with them. I personnally wouldn't and have not wasted my time with it because I would rather play a "Real" guitar and use a "Real amp". But you know even before these games, fake A#* wanna be punk bands existed and didn't even know who the Stooges,Johnny Thunders,exc. were/are.The Real "Blank Generation" perhapes?

20. Karl Hungus -
For those of us who have tried to learn real guitar...and suck, GH is a way to get back a little bit of dignity by pretending to be cool.
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