Like it or not, 5 Seconds of Summer is rock's future
by
Miles Raymer
on
April 29, 2014 at 2:00PM
As rock 'n' roll has become increasingly irrelevant to the modern pop music conversation, its most faithful fans, those who still believe it's infused with the same revolutionary transformative energy it had at its birth, have started to fall into one of three categories: snobs who would have spent the 60s listening to jazz and complaining about how vapid the music on the radio was, those who grew up on rock and aren't about to ditch it for rap or dance music, and the very young. Out of all of them, the latter type of listeners have done the most work to rejuvenate the genre's outlaw image—when all of your peers are listening to electronically generated music, listening to something with loud electric guitars front and center is a more rebellious act than it's been in decades.