The Secret History of Rock

Graalsword

Jedi Council Member
I just found this interesting article about a book with the above name.

http://www.dailygrail.com/Guest-Articles/2010/11/The-Secret-History-Rock

Metallic Mysteries and Headbanging Hellenes

by Christopher Knowles

It's not a shocking new revelation to compare rock 'n' roll to ancient pagan rituals. Writers have been throwing the term "Dionysian" around since Elvis first showed that a white man could sing the blues. But as I discovered while writing my new book, The Secret History of Rock 'n Roll, the parallels go much, much deeper than that. So much so that if you strip away the surface details (and get past the whole sacred/secular dichotomy), the similarities between the ancient Mystery religions and modern rock 'n' roll can be downright mind-blowing.

Never mind that old pagan place-names like the Apollo, the Orpheum, the Palladium and the Academy are still used for concert halls, or that rock's Olympians (U2, Springsteen, Bon Jovi, etc.) still act out their dramas in "arenas" and "coliseums." The ancient world had its own guitar heroes, its own pop divas, even its own heavy metal bands and headbangers. And while studying the parallels of rock to the Mysteries, I wasn't surprised to see that it's genres like punk, hardcore and metal that seem to inspire something a lot like religion to their fans. Extremism and noise did the very same thing in ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome.

Dionysus was not only the god of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, he was also the god of cross-dressing, "frenzy," and hallucination (entheogenic potions were the main course at the Mysteries of Eleusis, among others). Dionysus was also closely identified with various groups of long-haired, armored priests, whose thrashing musical performances were the headline act of Mystery rituals from Phrygia to Samothrace, from Eleusis to the Vatican Hill.

The legendary Greek historian Strabo was a student of the Mysteries and wrote extensively on these ancient headbangers, who went by various names such as the Korybantes, the Kouretes, the Dactyls, the Kabieri and the Telkhines. Strabo described them as "a kind of inspired people," who were "subject to Bakkhic frenzy" and induced "terror at the celebration of the sacred rites by means of war-dances, accompanied by uproar and noise and cymbals and drums and arms, and also by flute and outcry."

The Kouretes - who the historian Nonnus described as being "sane in their madness" - derived their name from their androgynous hair and clothing, much like any number of early heavy metal bands from the late 60s and early 70s. Strabo again:

(T)he Kouretes of Aitolia got this name because, like 'girls' (kourai), they wore women's clothes, for, they add, there was a fashion of this kind among the Greeks, and the Ionians were called 'tunic-trailing,' and the soldiers of Leonidas were 'dressing their hair' when they were to go forth to battle.

As with Little Richard in the 50s and the glam rockers of the early 70s, it seems that crossing gender boundaries unleashed something primal in these performers. And just like the metal bands of the late 70s, the Kouretes evolved from a violent androgyny to a hypermasculine image and pose.

Strabo wrote that "the war-dance was first introduced by (the) Kouretes, and that this dance afforded a pretext to those also who were more warlike than the rest and spent their life under arms, so that they too came to be called by the same name."

The Korybantes dressed in full hoplite leather armor for their performances, a few dozen centuries before Kiss and Judas Priest. Strabo described their act in terms that could just as easily describe Slayer or Iron Maiden: "(one) fills full the fingered melody, the call that brings on frenzy...stringed instruments raise their shrill cry, and frightful mimickers from some place unseen bellow like bulls, and the semblance of drums, as of subterranean thunder, rolls along, a terrifying sound."

The Korybantes and Kouretes became favorite performers at the rites of Cybele and Attis, which were presided over by a gaggle of cross-dressing eunuch priests known as the Galloi, who History records as the world's first headbangers. Sir James Frazer wrote of the Galloi in The Golden Bough:

(The) Archigallus or high priest drew blood from his arms and presented it as an offering. Nor was he alone in making this bloody sacrifice. Stirred by the wild barbaric music of clashing cymbals, rumbling drums, droning horns, and screaming flutes, the inferior clergy whirled about in the dance with waggling heads and streaming hair.

Things got completely out of hand whenever the priests of Cybele came to town. The Galloi were known to whip up such a frenzy that devout young men would be driven to spontaneous self-castration. Frazer again: "(R)apt into a frenzy of excitement and insensible to pain, (the Galloi) gashed their bodies with potsherds or slashed them with knives in order to bespatter the altar and the sacred tree with their flowing blood."

If the sight of androgynous nutcases driven to self-mutilation sounds vaguely familiar, you might have read stories of a more recent glam rocker whose concerts often ended the same way. Erik Hedegaard took up the story in a 2005 issue of Rolling Stone:

There's the Max's Kansas City episode of 1973. Iggy was playing a gig at the famous New York club, in his customary loincloth, to an audience that included Lou Reed, Alice Cooper, Todd Rundgren, scenester Bebe Buell and other heavies of the time. Broken glass littered the stage, and Iggy was crawling over it, cutting himself up maybe worse than he'd intended. Blood gushed from his face and body, and from under his loincloth. Twenty minutes into the set, his soundman asked him if he wanted to stop. He didn't. He soldiered on, a bloody mess.

Needless to say, not all of the Mysteries were quite that intense. Sure, you had your Roman Bacchants (who got so out of hand they inspired a ruthless crackdown in 186 BC) and your macho Mithraists (who were baptized in the blood of a bull while tripping their brains out in a cave) but you also had more respectable cults, like those of Demeter and Isis. They were by no means sedate, but were able to keep a lid of some of the more excessive behavior of the Dionysians or the Galloi.

What is amazing is how well thought of the Mysteries were by the intellectual giants of their time. The opinion of the Roman orator Cicero was par for the course: “Nothing is higher than these Mysteries, they have not only shown us the way to live joyfully but they have taught us to die with better hope.”

Strabo himself was inspired enough by the Mysteries to write that "music, which includes dancing as well as rhythm and melody, at the same time, by the delight it affords and by its artistic beauty, brings us in touch with the divine, and this for the following reason; for although it has been well said that human beings then act most like the gods when they are doing good to others, yet one might better say, when they are happy; and such happiness consists of rejoicing, celebrating festivals, pursuing philosophy, and engaging in music."

Advice we'd do well to follow today.

I was not sure whether this topic should be in History or Music.
 
Hello Graalsworld,

also when it goes a little bit in another direction (the backgrounds of the hippie generation and it's musicians), Dave McGowan wrote some interesting articles about that time and it's musicians.

Inside the Laurel Canyon...
 
Yeah, Those articles are very interesting and shocking. All the people mentioned there, you end up with this face :O
 
Hi. I would like to had a few remarks.

Being a fan of what is generally labelled as prog rock, prog metal, post-metal, whatever (just to situate, for those who know this bands, Tool, Isis, Pelican, Mars Volta. ...), and what is labelled as world music (Indian classical music, middle-eastern classical music, ...), i do believe there are similarities. If you listen to some drum patterns from for example, Master Musicians of Jajouka (_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ON55MJ55pY&feature=related) and imagine them louder there are some similarities with modern metal. Or this one _http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wA727eYcO5E, listen to the solo the guy is playing at about 1:15 min and imagine it electrified and with distortion.

Then there's the drone:
Wikipedia said:
The systematic (not occasional) use of drones originated in instrumental music of ancient Southwest Asia and spread north and west to Europe, east to India, and south to Africa (van der Merwe 1989, p.11). It is used in Indian music and is played with the tanpura (or tambura) and other Indian drone instruments like the ottu, the ektar, the dotara (or dotar; dutar in Persian Central Asia), the surpeti, the surmandal (or swarmandal) and the shank (conch shell). In the West, they are found since the 1960s in modern drone music.

I would also mention an entire sub-genre called drone or doom metal (although i am not such a huge fan of this)

Wikipedia said:
Drone metal (also known as drone doom[4] and power ambient[5]) is a style of heavy metal that melds the slow tempos and heaviness of doom metal with the long-duration tones of drone music.[1][2] Drone metal is sometimes associated with post-metal or avant-garde metal.[6]

Typically, the electric guitar is performed with a large amount of reverb or audio feedback[1] while vocals, if present, are usually growled or screamed. Songs often lack beat or rhythm in the traditional sense and are typically very long. The experience of a drone metal performance has been described as not unlike listening to an Indian raga in the middle of an earthquake, by novelist John Wray, in The New York Times.[1] Wray also states, "It's hard to imagine any music being heavier or, for that matter, very much slower."[1] A pioneer band of drone metal called Sunn O))) has indicated a kinship with sound sculpture.[1] Jan Tumlir indicates a "sustained infra-sound rumble of sub-bass–-so-called brown noise".[2]

I am actually gravitating more each day to older forms of music because it evokes in me the same sensations that modern metal does, and adds a few others.
 
I don't know that there's a "Secret History of Rock". All styles of modern music build off of other styles of music. It’s a progression. Just because some freak like Iggy Pop does something that has remnants of a pagan ritual, doesn’t mean that’s where Rock comes from.

Half of the “product” is the music, the other half is the show. I worked in the industry in the late 80’s and saw it from every aspect. Most guys are just trying to “out-do” the next just to get noticed. During the day they all had day jobs and led normal lives and on stage it was all about the show.

It was a poor example of theater. It’s all about selling the product. No secret.

Not to go off on another tangent but, do you really think Lady Gaga wears those big outfits when she’s watching TV at the house? …or Madonna that pointy bra back in the 80’s?
 

Trending content

Back
Top Bottom