Bobos In Classrooms

Back in the mid-1970s, Jimmy Page told an interviewer that “I always thought the good thing about guitar was that they didn’t teach it in school.” In other words, for Page, and his fellow British guitarists growing up in the late 1950s, rock and roll and the blues were genres you had to be dedicated enough to learn on your own.

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Found via Bloggingheads, David Brooks writes that “Miami” Steve Van Zandt, Bruce Springsteen’s longtime rhythm guitarist (and eventually, owner of the Bada Bing Club) would like to see that changed:

It seems that whatever story I cover, people are anxious about fragmentation and longing for cohesion. This is the driving fear behind the inequality and immigration debates, behind worries of polarization and behind the entire Obama candidacy.

If you go to marketing conferences, you realize we really are in the era of the long tail. In any given industry, companies are dividing the marketplace into narrower and more segmented lifestyle niches.

Van Zandt has a way to counter all this, at least where music is concerned. He

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