The joke turned on the notion that rock'n'roll was the music of the young. It had arrived in the mid-1950s in an eruption of hormones and rebellion, its themes teenage lust, longing and a future that stretched ahead, vast and mysterious. For men knocking 40 still to be singing of such things seemed ridiculous. And yet, the Stones were back last summer, Jagger approaching his 80th birthday, playing all the same songs.
All this struck me last Thursday night, when I stood in a crowd of 65,000 to see Bruce Springsteen, who is 73, play a three-hour set in London's Hyde Park. A similar thought crossed my mind when a record TV audience watched Elton John, 76, perform at Glastonbury, for what he said would be his last UK show. And, again, when I visited the National Portrait Gallery to see a rediscovered collection of photos depicting the earliest years of the Beatles, the pictures taken by Paul McCartney, who is 81. Rock'n'roll has existed for the span of a human life. Its greatest practitioners were once the embodiments, and laureates, of youth - and now they are old.
For some artists, the response has been to seek to defy the years and somehow return, if not to the state of being young, to a simulation of it. Jagger is the exemplar, his 2022 performances "extraordinary in a zoological way" as the writer Sarfraz Manzoor told me, audiences marvelling at the mere fact that a human of his age can look and move like that.
This story is from the July 14, 2023 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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This story is from the July 14, 2023 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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