REVIEW

Sunday Morning Playlist: Arena Rock

Written by uao
Published September 11, 2005

Blue Oyster Cult [concert poster] (1979)   Styx [promotional poster]

Arena Rock, mostly extinct now, is a form of classic rock that gained popularity in the mid-70's and began to fade by the early 80's. As the name implies, it is not the music of underdog indie bands; it is music designed to be performed live in stadiums and arenas by megaplatinum titans. Its genesis stems from the convergence of three popular early 70's genres; heavy metal, hard rock, and progressive rock. Arena rock is none of the above, or a little bit of each; the music is "hard" insofar as it emphasises guitar pyrotechnics, it's progressive in the sense that many arena rock classics come from "concept" albums. It is set apart from its influences by an unnatural emphasis on big, anthemic hooks and giant verses. Arena Rock is also home to the power-ballad; a hard rock/heavy metal style of big syrupy romantic music. The lyrical material for most of these hits was remarkably narrow; boy-gets-girl, being a rock star, let's party, and variations on those themes.

While many of the bands classified here as "arena rock" have legitimate roots in other, more organic musical genres, they all share the enormous sales and sense of spectacle necessary to maintain a career of playing stadiums. By 1980, many of these bands were at the zenith of their popularity, selling millions of units, and only seemed on the way up.

Meat Loaf [concert poster]   Foreigner [concert poster]

They were done in by the obvious limitations in the style. Bombast grows boring, as do stadium concerts, where the performers are mere ants on the stage from the upper decks. Younger fans found a more personal connection with punk, new wave, and indie rock, and the older fans outgrew going to stadiums for their music. Arena rock stood outside the current musical trends of the day for the most part, and by the time the MTV 80's were really rolling it no longer bore any revelence; declining admission sales and album sales caused the music industry to tighten its belt considerably; venues became smaller again, recording and production costs were capped, and few arena rock bands were still around when the 90's alternative rock era began.

Much of this music lives on in a state of suspended animation on classic rock radio, a mausoleum devoted mainly to the late 70's. All of it is instantly familiar to rock listeners of a certain age. Some of it is still pretty good; the best arena rock bands were truly in their element when designing spectacle. Others sound pretty embarrassing now; dated and pompous. Still, all of it conjures up an important era in rock's history, and deserves some recognition for what it was.

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Sunday Morning Playlist: Arena Rock
Published: September 11, 2005
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Music: Hard Rock, Music: Lists, Music: Metal, Music: Pop, Music: Progressive Rock, Music: Rock
Part of a feature: Sunday Morning Playlist
Writer: uao
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Comments

#1 — September 11, 2005 @ 16:23PM — The Proprietor [URL]

Frampton's signature effect is called a talkbox, not a squack box. Frampton and most 70s guitarists enamored of the effect used the Heil Sound talkbox, although there were other models from Electro-Harmonix and Kustom that enjoyed some popularity at the time.

An interesting trivia bit about "More Than A Feeling" is that Tom Scholz has said that he was very influenced by the Left Banke classic "Walk Away Renee" when writing it.

#2 — September 11, 2005 @ 16:29PM — uao [URL]

Thanks for the correction and bit of trivia, Proprietor. I wasn't sure what to call that darned thing. I'll fixt it in the text.

Walk Away Renee? Somehow I can't hear it, although "More Than A Feeling" does contain the line "I See my Marianne walking away..."

#3 — September 11, 2005 @ 16:53PM — Guppusmaximus

Nice review of some great bands... Me personally, I would've listed ASIA instead of Loverboy because Loverboy were one hit wonders(my opinion).With tracks like "only time will tell" and "Heat of the moment"... ASIA was definately Arena Rock!!

#4 — September 11, 2005 @ 17:00PM — uao [URL]

Asia would have been an excellent inclusion. I'm not sure I'd bump Loverboy for them, since Loverboy represents something of a road-not-taken by arena rock. Maybe I'd toss the Tubes, who only made the list at the very last moment when my mind was drawing a blank.

#5 — September 11, 2005 @ 18:52PM — cathi [URL]

I love your list!!!!! these are songs that I would play as well on a lazy day. thanks

#6 — September 11, 2005 @ 19:00PM — Uncle Fiscus

Where's AC/DC?? These hacks stink!! Or Zepplin??

#7 — September 11, 2005 @ 19:33PM — uao [URL]

Uncle Fiscus: Led Zeppelin and AC/DC were left off because the term "arena rock" diminishes them; they both are primarily known as heavy metal or hard rock. As for the rest being hacks, isn't that what arena rock is all about? Read the article, and you'll understand.

#8 — September 11, 2005 @ 22:43PM — Bruiser

Three of the bands listed - Blue Oyster Cult, REO Speedwagon, and Heart - played at the first concert I ever attended: the 1981 Texxas Jamm at the Houston Astrodome. For the record, the other two bands that played were Foghat and the long-forgotten Rockets.

The last two studio records that Cheap Trick have released are among their finest.

#9 — September 12, 2005 @ 01:28AM — Sister Ray

Maybe you could substitute Bob Seger for the Tubes. He would be more familiar to fans of arena rock, and you hear him a lot on classic-rock radio.

Punk just didn't catch on in the Midwest as much as the critics hoped it would. MTV really knocked off the arena bands.

Drifting a bit, remember when early MTV played "closet classics" from the 60s? There was a clip of the Doors doing "Touch Me" and videos by Blue Cheer, The Crazy World of Arthur Brown and Donovan. Lots of swirling lights, etc.

#10 — September 12, 2005 @ 07:07AM — Paul Roy [URL]

Damn, I've seen nearly every one of these bands in concert. That must make me an arena rock lover. I guess there's worst things to love.

#11 — September 12, 2005 @ 08:50AM — uao [URL]

I did consider Bob Seger, but he already turned up in my 'Detroit Rock' playlist, and I'm saving him for a 'Heartland/Midwestern Rock' list as well.

However, his late 70's work definitely could qualify as 'arena rock' too.

#12 — September 12, 2005 @ 13:44PM — Linda

Enjoyed your reviews. However, you left out a very important chapter in Nuge Tune History. In 1990, Ted's band THE DAMN YANKEES, and self-titled CD,
spawned four smash AOR hits ("Runaway," "Coming Of Age," "High Enough" and "Come Again"); High Enough reached #3 on the Billboard Charts.

Additionally, in 2000, the Ted Nugent/KISS Tour made the Top 10 Grossing Tours of the year.

#13 — September 12, 2005 @ 17:50PM — uao [URL]

Thanks Linda, I should have said something about Damn Yankees (and added a bit after seeing your comment). It slipped my mind completely, but yes, that was a major chapter in his bio.

#14 — September 13, 2005 @ 15:36PM — godoggo

A defining characteristic of what I think of as arena rock is that it would seem absurdly incongruous if played in a small club, thus disqualifying not only Cheap Trick but also Aerosmith, but of which, not coincidentally, I like.

I also think that a lot of the characteristic mannerisms of arena rock were innovated by The Who, around the time they commenced sucking (I'm sure you all agree). For me the ultimate arena rock moment is "They're all wasted" which was obviously calculated to elicit the ultimate arena rock response: "Whoooooooo!"

#15 — September 14, 2005 @ 14:49PM — NashTrick

Cheap Trick remains a force today. A lot of "new" bands in rock point to them as a major influence....STP,Foo Fighters,etc...all recognize Cheap Trick as their roots. Quite a compliment by todays standards.

Give Cheap Trick's 2003 release "Special One" a whirl...great as ever!!! PEACE.

#16 — October 10, 2005 @ 08:50AM — Christine Foster

I agree with your listing of arena rock artists but I would have left off the Tubes and put Nazareth.Also as a Canadian I loved "Loverboy" but our greatest arena rock band here is the hard workin band "Trooper".

#17 — October 28, 2005 @ 15:25PM — Benatarlvr

Great review of Pat Benatar. However, she hit number #1 in 1981 with Precious Time. Not 1982. And Get Nervous was #4 in 1982 not 1983. Overall a great countdown.

#18 — April 4, 2006 @ 05:52AM — Trigaba

Why is everyone so reluctant to classify Rush as an Arena Rock band? Are they too progressive and conceptual to break the pop seal? Geddy Lee's high-pitched voice and abundance of keyboards makes me thing they definitely belong in this countdown.

#19 — April 4, 2006 @ 06:06AM — guppusmaximus

Ya know... Looking back on this review, I don't believe Pink Floyd could ever be classified as Arena rock along with RUSH. They were way too progressive and pioneering for their time to be lumped in with the comercially appealing rock of the 70's. I mean if you're going to overlook those qaulities, you may as well add ELO or YES to this list. But I do feel it was a great article and I do love alot of those bands....

#20 — January 23, 2008 @ 13:04PM — Ray Violette

Loverboy were hardly a one hit wonder as mentioned in the comments section, with a bunch of Top 40 hits. I saw them in 1981, and they were definitely arena rock then. I saw them in 2006, and they're still arena rock, although playing smaller venues, with all original members (save their bassist who passed away). Their latest album is actually quite good and is getting some surprising airplay.

#21 — February 18, 2008 @ 14:17PM — Kirt

Exactly. You hit the nail on the head with this one. I would only add these bands for consideration. April Wine, Cars, ZZ Top, Van Halen, Sammy Hagar, Scorpions, Judas Priest, Joe Walsh, Black Sabbath, Molly Hatchet, Fleetwood Mac. All huge arena bands when I graduated from HS back in 1982.

#22 — April 10, 2008 @ 17:23PM — Eye-roller

I don't even like .38 Special, but even I know ('84? Dallas Texxas Jam, watching MTV) that the dark-haired bearded guy (Don Barnes) sang "Hold On Loosely", and nearly all of their other hits. Always seemed like Donnie Van Zandt was just there to sprinkle on some of Skynyrd's "cachet", if one can call it that...

Also, according to the latest re-writing of the Boston foundation myth (in some schwag mag I picked up at '06 Austin NAMM), Scholz actually did go back to Boston and re-record everything with the ostensible band while the label-appointed "producer" stayed back in LA and ran interference.

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