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Pop Music: its influence on the youth
The teds were the so called teddy boys that
first appeared in yearly 50’s. They were regarded as the
country’s rejects and a symbol of Britain’s future failure.
The way the teds looked was created in order to shock the
public. For any youth style to endure however it needs icons
to give it credence, to actively communicate that styles
continuing viability. For the teddy boys this role was
performed by the explosion of early rock and roll artists
such as Bill Haley, Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly and Eddie
Cochrane. These performers served as highly visible
endorsements of this particular style, particularly since it
was perhaps the earliest example of an organic street look
being successfully adopted by stars of the mass media as
opposed to the mass media imposing style on the masses. The
soaring popularity of such artists gave the teddy boy
movement the legitimacy all subcultures crave and allowed
the style to reach far and wide; Britain’s youth soon had
Cliff Richard, Marty Wilde and Billy Fury to look up to and
mimic. And therein lies the proof of the important role of
music for youth identities. For whilst a local gang uniform
can influence the youth it comes in to contact with, a media
icon who adopts the style can use his or her elevated status
and mass media access to convert infinitely more young
people to that particular style.
Apart from the visual approval such performers
lent to the teds, there were the rock and roll lyrics they
were singing. Though tame by today’s standards many early
rock and roll songs were far more aggressive, self-promoting
and sexually, if implicitly, driven. Such songs did little
to raise the stock of the teddy boy in the eyes of society’s
moral guardians at first but it did give him a voice,
without which he could be all too easily accuse of lacking
purpose or meaning. In summary, the first major youth
subculture was shaped and crystallised by the music that
assimilated it.
So why does the youth market at any given time
appear to adhere to a group of distinct and dominant
subcultures? Some would argue that as different groups and
classes of youth encounter varying social experiences and
problems, their accordingly differentiated messages of
protest drive different communicative styles and sounds.
Others may see it in reverse; the mass media machine creates
and recreates style in order to maintain the profitability
of the youth market who can always be relied upon to be
relentless in their pursuit of the ‘up-to-date’. In truth it
is both. Youth subcultures are a natural by-product of
youth’s need for ‘resistance through rituals’ (Hall et al
1976 as cited by Hebdige), and for young people who have
opposition to the status quo or authority, regardless of
their ability to articulate this, subversive styles and
style attitudes are the most attainable form of resistance.
Meanwhile, there are many young people who are not motivated
to resist the norms of society. By definition these people
want to fit in and ironically the best way to fit in is to
adopt the so-called subversive styles of their peers. It is
this simple paradoxical situation, which creates the unique
nature of the youth market for fashion and music. Countless
acts have become overnight successes by relying solely on
this market. Any act which can give the impression of having
a purpose other than the music has a chance of tapping into
the youth market simply by making young people believe that
to buy their music or merchandise has a greater meaning than
the sale itself. This is not to say that such marketing
ploys are the sole domain of the fly-by-night pop creation.
Arguably the two most influential acts of the last century
David Bowie and The Beatles were no strangers to such
marketable stylisation hence Bowie being coined ‘the pop
chameleon’. His ever-changing persona in the 1970’s and
1980’s held a mirror up to the workings of the industry
itself. However, it would be very hard to argue that the
malleable nature of the youth market hasn’t been responsible
for a constant supply of artists who thrive on style over
substance.
Bowie is also notable for his affect on gender
issues. Before his emergence in 1969 popular music and style
was generally gender defined and clearly separated. In the
teddy boy era girls had their separate uniform and separate
role to fulfil within the everyday workings of that
subculture. Essentially the icons were male and therefore
the boys were more able to ‘become’ their heroes. Likewise
with the mods and rockers young women who joined the scene
generally played second fiddle to the pervasive motorbike
machismo. The teenybopper culture was where girls could
participate without the distraction of male symbolism and
dominance, but this often took place in the home rather than
the pub or the street corner. The emergence of Bowie and, to
a lesser extent, T-Rex and Roxy Music, had a seismic effect
on these static gender roles. In his first incarnation,
Ziggy Stardust, Bowie achieved cult status in the early
70’s. He attracted a mass youth audience willing to show
their dedication by aping his unique visual style ‘which
created a new sexually ambiguous image for those youngsters
willing and brave enough to challenge the notoriously
pedestrian stereotypes conventionally available to
working-class men and women’ (Hebdige).
Ian Taylor and John Wall described Bowie as
‘playing back the alienation of youth onto itself’ and this
is precisely what he was doing. However, Taylor and Wall
attacked Bowie for helping to create a class of passive
teenage consumers instead of a youth culture of persons
willing to question the world around them. There are two
major flaws in this accusation. Firstly it relies on the
assumption that the majority of youths are willing and/or
able to apply themselves to such sociological analysis of
their environment when most historical or observational
evidence would suggest otherwise. It may be true that for
every Ziggy lookalike with a social conscience there were
ten who just liked dying their hair and playing with make-up
but in reality the same could be said of every other youth
style. Secondly it could be argued that Bowie did more than
any other individual to promote the attraction of being
different. By blurring the gender lines, projecting an
otherworldly presence and concerning himself with less
fashionable social issues he extolled nothing other than the
art of setting oneself apart. The fact that the youth of
Britain and later the world flocked to buy into bowiemania
and all it’s capitalist trappings serves merely as a
reminder of the natural tendency of the youth market to
group, belong, re-group, and belong once more. If any proof
were needed of Bowie’s real intentions there is a big clue
in the name of one of his early backing bands, The Hype.
This was at a time when a strong sense of anti-commercialism
prevailed and yet ‘here was a band announcing itself as a
fraud from the outset, which embodied David’s first
faltering attempts to draw attention to the strategies put
in place to sell pop’ (Buckley 1999).
This watershed period for gender identities
meant that by the time punk truly arrived in 1977 it was not
a great shock to see women being just as quick and just as
numerous as men in adopting its styles and attitudes in a
very public way. Punk was the archetypal counterculture, the
only rule being that there were no rules, and street punks
could wear anything they chose and know it was possible to
incorporate it into the punk style. Apart from this
opposition to the traditional gender barriers punk also had
some female icons such as Siouxsie Sioux and the Banshees
and The Slits. Such artists made the most unfeminine of all
subcultures on the surface accessible to young women by
dispensing with the traditional selling points of female
music. Simon Frith states that ‘the legacy of punk to
women’s rock was that in making ugliness an aspect of
authenticity, it opened up to female singers sounds that had
previously been regarded as unfeminine and therefore
unmusical’ (Frith 1981). However, many would argue that this
did little to enhance the position of women in rock or shift
the gender boundaries since all it proved was that women
could succeed in rock just so long as they acted more like
men.
The importance of popular music for youth and
gender identities is obvious and significant. Music can and
has been both a channel of expression for youth subcultures
with a need to be heard as well as a powerful tool used in
tapping the economic power of the youth market. In summary
music’s role in youth culture is defined by this two-way
relationship. Whilst much is made by experts of the social
causes of new youth subcultures and the sensibilities of
those who follow them religiously, some with less romantic
notions of youth might notice how flimsy and changeable
these convictions must be. Setting punk aside- due to the
obvious economic factors at play in the late 1970’s- most
music driven subcultures are dominated by subscribers who
believe in little more than the importance of being seen in
the right tee-shirt. Those who disagree, we must assume,
would expect to be able to speak to some of the endless
stream of ever younger people sporting Nirvana tee shirts
and come away with a consistent and coherent reason for
displaying such an allegiance. In reality it is only ever a
small minority of youth in times of prosperity who display
interest in social consciousness. The music, which creates
youth cultures, may often be produced by members of that
minority who have something to say but the vast majority who
buy into it are doing so for reasons of peer acceptance
rather than any highbrow notions of subversive resistance.
Those who fail to see this at a time like now will perhaps
never see it.
Bibliography
Buckley, David: Strange Fascination-David Bowie-The
Definitive Story (1999)
Frith, Simon: The Voices of Women-Music For Pleasure (1981)
Hall et al: Resistance Through Rituals (1976)
Hebdige, Dick: Subculture-The Meaning of Style (1979)
Taylor, Ian and Wall, David: Working Class Youth Culture
(1976
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