Photo: Desmond Child | By Fraser Lewry, Louder Sound | Legendary songwriter Desmond Child, who co-authored such classics as Kiss’s I Was Made for Lovin’ You, Bon Jovi’s You Give Love a Bad Name and Livin’ on a Prayer, Aerosmith’s Dude (Looks Like a Lady), Angel and Crazy and Alice Cooper’s Poison, has
revealed how the music he was writing in the 1980s was overshadowed by the arrival of grunge.
In a new interview with Songfacts, Child says, “That kind of music was overshadowed by Nirvana,
Smells Like Teen Spirit, and the whole Seattle sound, which brought in grunge. It was the complete
opposite of the extroverted presentations: chest out, reaching out, looking up.
“The new generation were what we’d call ‘shoegazers’ – they just looked down because they had to,
because they weren’t really guitarists and couldn’t really play. They could play three or four chords
and had trouble with that. They were not virtuosos like Joe Perry, Richie Sambora, Eddie Van
Halen, Steve Vai, who could light up the stage with their extraordinary playing.
“The shoegazers were more conceptual. Some of them were art students that took up guitar. Their
hair was in their face, they looked down, their chests were sunken in, their clothes were baggy
instead of tight – everything was completely the opposite.”
Child goes on to reveal that, while the kind of songs he was writing were no longer in vogue, he
understood why.
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Go here to ready why Mr. Child thinks his songs were out of style:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/music/news/they-weren-t-really-guitarists-and-couldn-t-really-play-they
could-play-three-or-four-chords-and-had-trouble-with-that-songwriter-desmond-child-on-the
shortcomings-of-90s-guitarists/
Photo: Desmond Child | From his Facebook page