---
title: "Hard Rock / Heavy Metal / Punk - The History of Rock Music (Part 6)"

description: "Not everyone was into prog rock... rock was about to splinter, and without a guiding force like The Beatles, the genre would take unexpected twists and turns and shouts in the 70s."

status: complete

date: 2024-11-05

kind: solo

guestSlugs: []

listenUrl: "https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lovemusicmore/episodes/Hard-Rock--Heavy-Metal--Punk---The-History-of-Rock-Music-Part-6-e2qgsdh"
appleUrl: "https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/hard-rock-heavy-metal-punk-the-history-of-rock-music-part-6/id1567355195?i=1000675737949&uo=4"
spotifyUrl: "https://open.spotify.com/episode/5XYVoQD8WoQuLi3zD2STZh"

topicsDiscussed:
  - "The history of rock"
  - "Metal"
  - "Guitar"
  - "History of Hard Rock"
  - "Influence of The Beatles"
  - "Punk Rock Origins"
  - "Cultural Impact of Rock"
  - "Evolution of Rock Music"
  - "Led Zeppelin's Legacy"
  - "Black Sabbath's Innovations"
  - "Judas Priest's Influence"

hostNote: |
  Lose The Beatles and rock becomes a ship without a rudder. That's the premise of this chapter, and what fills the void is stranger and more varied than anyone expected.
  
  Tony Iommi loses the tips of his fretting fingers in a factory accident, tunes down to make the strings easier to bend, and accidentally invents the heaviest sound anyone had heard — "otherworldly, evil cosplay" is how I describe it. Meanwhile Iron Maiden is stacking two simultaneous guitar solos, and punk is doing the opposite of all of it: stripping out the virtuosity, turning the volume up on the social and political, and making music anyone could play.
  
  By the end you understand why there isn't one rock sound anymore, and why that's exactly the point.

selectedMoments:
  - label: "The splintering of rock music"
    startSec: 46
    note: "I discuss the genre's transition from blues to hard rock."
  - label: "Helter Skelter's influence on punk"
    startSec: 136
    note: "I connect The Beatles' song to the punk rock ethos."
  - label: "Black Sabbath's unique style"
    startSec: 318
    note: "I explain Tony Iommi's adaptations and Black Sabbath's impact on hard rock."
  - label: "The emergence of punk rock"
    startSec: 812
    note: "I describe the roots of punk rock and its rejection of excess."
  - label: "The authenticity of punk music"
    startSec: 997
    note: "I contrast punk's rawness with the virtuosity of rock."
  - label: "The impact of musical subgenres"
    startSec: 1039
    note: "I reflect on rock's ongoing splintering and evolution."

excerptQuotes:
  - text: "...that’s not the blues inspired Delta music that we had before. Now instead we have this like otherworldly, evil cosplay kind of music..."
    startSec: 361
    reviewed: true
  - text: "Punk rock kind of comes out of that. There’s a rejection... stripped down, raw... It’s addressing more of the social and political issues."
    startSec: 909
    reviewed: true
  - text: "...it strikes just a certain itch. I mean, like even now, there's every once in a while, there's just like this feeling of like, oh, I need a little bit of that Black Sabbath again."
    startSec: 405
    reviewed: true
  - text: "This is, again, this is like the ship without a rudder now that we've lost the Beatles..."
    startSec: 1085
    reviewed: true
  - text: "Iron Maiden does a great job of having two guitar solos happening at the same time... it's so cool..."
    startSec: 684
    reviewed: true

faq:
  - question: "What are the origins of punk rock?"
    answer: "Punk rock originated in the mid-1970s as a response to the excesses of hard rock and progressive rock, focusing on a stripped-down, raw sound."
  - question: "How did Black Sabbath influence heavy metal?"
    answer: "Black Sabbath's innovative sound and Tony Iommi's unique guitar style helped to shape the heavy metal genre, pushing it beyond traditional blues."
  - question: "What bands are considered pioneers of hard rock?"
    answer: "Pioneers of hard rock include bands like Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, and AC/DC, who set the stage for the genre's evolution."

transcriptPublished: false

draft: false
---
