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Reunion tours: Old guys, rock saviors?

2007 could reasonably be called the Year of the Reunion. Last year saw the reunions of Led Zeppelin, The Police, Rage Against the Machine, the Spice Girls, Genesis and Van Halen (All right, so they reunited in �06, but the tour started in �07). It was quite a year for music fans, to say the least.

That said, this recent crop of reunions begs the rather obvious � and dubious � question: Why? Was it for the love of music or for the love � or lack � of money?

The cynic in me would argue these musical icons rejoined forces to pad their once-overflowing wallets. After all, why are KISS and the Eagles still on the road if not for the hordes of die-hard fans who will see them play literally until one or more band members breaks a hip on stage?

However, the audiophile in me wants desperately to not only believe this overload of reunion tours is for the fans and the music � it also wants to kill the cynical side. Besides, whether it�s for the fans or for the giant paychecks, seeing The Police live is worth it for any reason, right?

Well, yes and no. I know, it�s a colossal cop-out but, nonetheless, it�s the truth. The answer is �yes� because, as an avid fan of music, of classic rock especially, this reunion fever is like heaven for me and other music fans. I have waited for a Zeppelin reunion since I was 13 years old. Conversely, the answer is �no� because my love for music has always cast a shadow over music purely for profit.

Weighing the pros and cons, I do believe that, on the whole, this trend of reunion tours � and the subsequent cash � is a good thing for music. It�s a chance for new fans who were not able to see bands like Genesis or Rage while they were around and old fans who just want to relive their glory days for two hours. Certainly, there�s nothing wrong with that.

Honestly, though, I don�t think this current trend can be spoken about as one collective unit that contains many (classic) bands. Instead, each band must be examined separately based on its own merits and actions.?Take The Smashing Pumpkins, for example. Here�s a band that got back together seemingly for the sole purpose of serving front-man Billy Corgan�s massive ego. Want evidence? How about the fact that the current lineup is merely half of the original pumpkin: Only Billy and Jimmy Chamberlin remain from the band that brought us Siamese Dream and Mellon Collie. The band just couldn�t afford space for anyone else after Corgan, his ginormous ego and Chamberlin rejoined forces.

After the failed-but-great Zwan and the failed-but-terrible Billy Corgan solo project, it appears Corgan just wanted his band back because everything else he touched turned to shit. It�s incredibly narcissistic and does no service to fans who want the real Pumpkins to play �Cherub Rock,� not just Billy-and-some-other-people. Besides that, the band was only gone for six years. I�m not even sure that is long enough to justify a reunion.

Reunion or not, the reformed Pumpkins have not been met with much praise � and rightly so. Their comeback record Zeitgeist received a lukewarm reception, with critics wondering why Corgan did it beyond �cash or attention or both,� as Pitchfork Media so eloquently stated.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, though, is Led Zeppelin. The three remaining members, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones, all resisted resurrecting the Zeppelin name because it wouldn�t be Zep without John �Bonzo� Bonham. After reuniting for one-offs such as Live Aid, the band realized it was a disservice to the fans to play without Bonzo, especially with a revolving-door lineup of drummers, none of whom had practiced the songs.

However, Led Zeppelin became a reality once again last December and played a show to benefit the Ahmet Erteg�n Education Fund, and their concert has been almost universally acclaimed. Arguably the only logical replacement behind the drum kit, Bonham�s son Jason, was also met with praise.

The difference? Well, for one, Zeppelin got back together for a benefit concert. They didn�t do it for the money, not that they couldn�t have made millions anyway. Two, they practiced for months to ensure they sounded as close to their legendary heyday as possible, even going so far as to play the show in a lower key due to the lowering of Plant�s voice over time. That�s commitment to the music, and, more importantly, it�s commitment to the fans.

This, of course, begs another question: Isn�t reuniting a disservice to the fans, no matter the reason? If bands break up because they feel the time is right (like Phish) or because an original member died (like Zeppelin) then it cannot possibly be a good thing for a reunited band to exist as only an anachronism of its former self. If you really think about it, it�s a little silly for three sixty-somethings to pretend it�s 1973 again.

But maybe, just maybe, the band is able to transcend time just as its music has. Maybe age should not be a factor if you can still play the guitar now like you did 35 years ago. And if you have a replacement musician? So what. It�s the songs and the atmosphere fans came to hear, anyway. Indeed, time will tell.

At any rate, 2008 seems to be gearing up as another year to remember for reunion tours. Already there are confirmations of Killing Joke (original lineup!), My Bloody Valentine and, interestingly enough, Stone Temple Pilots getting back together.

It may be a tad early for an STP reunion, to be sure, as they only broke up in 2002. Here�s to hoping the 2008 tour isn�t to help defray Scott Weiland�s rehab costs.

Steve Lampiris is a senior majoring in political science. If you (naively) think KISS is still on tour for the fans or you want to argue that reunion tours are inherently pointless, e-mail him at [email protected]

3 Comments | Leave a comment

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LOL. You did a good job rewriting Pitchfork’s opinion on here.

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Your history isn’t that good. the Pumpkins have pretty much always been Corgan, Chamberlin, and some other people. 90% of all the records were just those two playing. D’arcy and James Iha were basically touring members.

Check your facts before you go with the NMEs of the world who don’t know anything about the Pumpkins besides the fact that Corgan has an ego.

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yeah the pumpkins were pretty much always the brainchild of billy corgs. he was always the creative axis, so i dont think that the smashing pumpkins are a good band to use for an example concerning on article on reunions. “the smashing pumpkins” are only temporary unions made to realize corgan’s vision.

and idk… i always like to think that when bands reunite, like led zep, the last notion in their mind is that of money; i feel like what they were really concerned about was sustaining their position in the annals of rock history. the fact that they played one concierto thus far makes it seem like they just wanted to kinda poke their superiority through the current fabric of tediously mundane bullshit that comprises the weft and woof of music today, like animal collective, et cetera

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