a musician who rose to prominence in the arena rock movement back in the 1970s.[[#CITEREFWaksman2009|Waksman 2009]], pp. 21–31."},"parts":[{"template":{"target":{"wt":"refn","href":"./Template:Refn"},"params":{"group":{"wt":"nb"},"1":{"wt":"One example of a direct continuity of sound between groups is how, in 1988, the band [[Aerosmith]] gave the outfit [[Guns N' Roses]] (GnR) a touring opportunity for the latter's [[Appetite for Destruction Tour|first major set of performances]], with GnR guitarist [[Slash (musician)|Slash]] adapting and expanding their mutual, arena-friendly style.{{cite magazine|first= Steve |last= Appleford |title= Aerosmith Get Pumped for Tour With Slash: 'It's Still Rock & Roll' |magazine= [[Rolling Stone]] |date= 10 April 2014 |access-date= 8 June 2017 |url= https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/aerosmith-get-pumped-for-tour-with-slash-its-still-rock-roll-20140410}} The [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] has remarked that the nine-minute-long GnR [[Single (music)|single]] \"[[November Rain]]\" and its related [[music video]] \"solidified the band as a group of musicians capable of lavish arena-rock level productions both on and off the stage\". The band notably performed the song at the [[1992 MTV Video Music Awards]] alongside [[Elton John]], a musician who rose to prominence in the arena rock movement back in the 1970s.{{sfn|Waksman|2009|pp=21–31}}"}},"i":0}}]}"> [nb 2] Later in the 90s and 2000s, post-grunge acts such as Creed and Nickelback released their own successful arena rock anthems. [24]
Ethnomusicologist Chris McDonald of Cape Breton University has argued that the label of a musical artist as "arena rock" and "old wave", done by music critics dismissively, originates from a background of classism influenced by modernism. Thus, mass popularity is put forth as an argument against perceived artistic merit, through the eyes of critics focused on high culture while disdaining market forces, particularly given the white, working class to middle class makeup of the fans. Focusing on the Canadian trio Rush, McDonald stated that the panning of the group as "dazzling yet empty" due to the musicians' focus on rock spectacle is a consequence of critics' psychological distance from the "middlebrow" populace that listens to them. [4]
The use of commercial sponsorship for the large-scale tours and concerts of the 1970s, a practice that continues, has caused the music to pick up the pejorative label of being "corporate rock". [25] [8] [6] Writer Chris Smith argued that the style dehumanized listeners, setting them up as passive recipients rather than allowing them to truly engage with musicians, and additionally put different bands in a position akin to homogenized products. [8] It has also been regarded as essentially malign capitalist propaganda. [25] The distance between taste-makers' judgment of certain groups as "uncool" and their mass audience appeal had existed since the style's origins after the ending of the 1960s, [10] and a wide variety of other dismissive terms have been used such as "dad rock". [nb 3] [6]
Deliberately playing against criticism and claiming to represent the people against the elite has been used in musical marketing. [10] The association of arena rock with the so-called "yuppies" and their conspicuous consumption additionally has tied the style with a group often maligned in the media, subject to mocking caricatures and other kinds of ridicule. However, as pointed out by historian Gary A. Donaldson, the music eclipsed the waning genre of disco and related bands successfully toured across the world. [5]
Arena rock—a label initially used by the popular press to describe bombastic rock bands such as Journey and Chicago—includes rock bands that write excessively sentimental songs about love and angst. The fact that Mariah Carey covered Journey's song "Open Arms" illustrates the compatibility between these two melodramatic genres. More evidence to support this link is [Canadian cultural critic Carl] Wilson's observation that "Celine [Dion]'s main form, the power ballad, was the 1970s' arena-rock invention that did most to recover the schmaltz impulse after its 1960s exile" (2007: 66). More recent arena rock acts such as Nickelback have adopted a more contempt-laden, rather than romantic, look at love. Nevertheless, songs such as "This Is How You Remind Me" reveal a comparable preoccupation with heartbreak, are consistent with arena rock's anthemic tradition, and are similarly critiqued for poetic triteness.
An entire generation of young musicians was growing up with the sort of stuff that trickled onto the radio after Kurt's death, and it didn't take them long to figure out what was working and what wasn't. They copied Pearl Jam, which is not necessarily a bad idea, but they noticed that the artier stuff didn't sell as well as the heavy arena anthems of their first album. They copied Soundgarden, a fine pursuit on its own, but they failed to take into account the intricacies of that band's songs. These young musicians went on to form bands such as Creed and Nickelback, and listeners were stuck with a whole generation of flaccid wannabes carrying the torch for mediocrity. They sold millions but were as empty as the hair-metal bands their forefathers had fought so hard to vanquish.