Business World

2016 in the beginning of the end of a rock era

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NEW YORK — The year 2016 began with David Bowie releasing one of the most acclaimed albums of his vast career, a sign of new creative energy from the rock legend. Two days later, he was dead, from an undisclose­d battle with cancer.

Three months after that, another pop icon, Prince — who had covered Bowie’s classic “Heroes” at one of his final concerts — also died, succumbing to an accidental overdose of painkiller­s despite his outward signs of vigor.

By late 2016, Leonard Cohen put out an album ominously entitled — and the storied songwriter and poet, who spent his life reflecting on spirituali­ty and mortality, passed away within weeks.

The past year — so momentous on the political front — also marks a symbolic turning point for rock, with a generation of musical elders starting to exit the stage.

The year culminated with another milestone — the Nobel Committee for Literature endorsed rock as part of the literary canon, selecting music icon Bob Dylan as this year’s laureate and hailing his “new poetic expression­s.”

The sense of a rock era’s passing could also be felt in California in October with Desert Trip, a new music festival that is likely to go down as the most profitable in history.

Some 150,000 fans, disproport­ionately older, came out to hear six top rock acts including The Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney and Dylan — with a subtext that it was unclear for how much longer the septuagena­rian greats would be playing.

Other major musicians who died in 2016 included: Maurice White, founder of funk all-stars Earth, Wind and Fire; Eagles frontman Glenn Frey; country icon Merle Haggard; two-thirds of the progrock trio Emerson, Lake and Palmer (only Carl Palmer is left); Jefferson Airplane cofounder Paul Kantner; and Phife Dawg of hip-hop groundbrea­kers A Tribe Called Quest.

LIKE JAZZ IN ANOTHER TIME

It is obviously coincidenc­e that so many artists died in quick succession. But there is also a precedent — the 1980s and early 1990s, when towering figures in jazz were dying.

In a loose parallel to Dylan’s Nobel prize and the establishm­ent recognitio­n it represents, the US Congress in 1987 designated jazz as “an American national treasure.”

Lawmakers at the time were hoping to step up education and historical preservati­on of jazz — a process well under way for rock, with Dylan earlier in 2016 announcing that his archive would go to the University of Tulsa, alongside papers of his Oklahomabo­rn inspiratio­n Woody Guthrie.

Like with jazz in the late 20th century, the deaths in 2016 come at a time when music purists fret that the future will have fewer cohesive albums of the type of Bowie’s final work, Blackstar.

The top stars who died in 2016 consciousl­y made music away from the spotlight.

Bowie lived with his family in a New York penthouse and was rarely seen, Cohen retreated to Los Angeles where he spent time in a Buddhist monastery and the prolific Prince secluded himself in his Paisley Park complex in Minnesota. For Bowie and Prince, “basically for the last couple of decades, they either were in isolation or at least had autonomy over what they were doing,” said Theo Cateforis, an associate professor of music history and cultures at Syracuse University.

“And that seems unusual for a newer artist who has such accessibil­ity and is expected to have a Twitter feed and be in some sort of constant engagement,” he said.

“Their passing allows us to reflect on what careers were like in previous eras — and that kind of artist may be less and less frequent in the future.”

LASTING INFLUENCES

But many of the musical innovation­s of Bowie and Prince live on. Both recognized the importance of a visual component to their music and embraced MTV in its infancy.

Prince and Bowie both became well- known for their collaborat­ions. Kanye West may be the closest contempora­ry parallel, Cateforis said, with the rapper pursuing his vision by bringing in other musicians.

Among their most lasting legacies, Bowie and Prince were both fluid in their conception­s of masculinit­y. Each at least suggested an openness to gay relationsh­ips and designed outlandish outfits that smashed through gender barriers.

“These two men kind of gave masculinit­y a gift,” said Rob Lindley, a theater director and actor who recently co- staged a joint concert of Bowie and Prince music at the Chicago Humanities Festival.

“They said it’s okay — you can wear heels and mascara and still be a dude, and there is something really rebellious and rock ‘n’ roll and beautiful about that, and nobody was doing it before them,” he said.

Lindley, 43, said that when he was growing up, he would hear the phrase “gone too soon” and think of earlier times and the deaths of Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Patsy Cline and Billie Holiday at young ages.

“Then all of a sudden it becomes your music,” he said. “It’s getting personal now.” —

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