The Beatles are still loved by most people today; including those that werenโt even close to being born yet during the Fab Fourโs heyday. Itโs not exactly surprising. The Beatles were great, and their music has endured well into the 21st century. However, with new generations come new tastes. What is it about The Beatles that Gen Z (and other generations outside of those around in the 1960s) find fresh interest in? Letโs take a look at a few reasons why Gen Z likely loves The Beatles in the 2020s, decades after the band called it quits.
1. The OG Music Videos
Music videos werenโt really a thing in the 1960s. They existed, sure, but they werenโt quite so popular yet. The Beatles made some of the first music videos of mainstream interest. The videos for โHelp!โ, โHello, Goodbyeโ, and โStrawberry Fields Foreverโ are just a couple of examples.
Videos by American Songwriter
Things were simpler back then. Productions were less flashy and more focused on comedic effect over anything else. Itโs what the people wanted. Younger generations likely find those old-school MVs refreshing.
2. They Wrote All Of Their Material
Nowadays, singer/songwriters arenโt as abundant as they used to be. Part of The Beatlesโ appeal was that they werenโt performing hits written by other songwriters. They wrote all of their own material with the occasional co-writing credit outside of John Lennon and Paul McCartney. In the 1960s, plenty of rock outfits settled for cover songs of overdone classics or sought the songwriting talents of others.
Without this authenticity, who knows if The Beatles would have been anywhere close to as good as they were?
3. Blending Genres
The Beatles are loved by Gen Z and generations beyond for their sound above all else. And part of what made The Beatlesโ sound so revolutionary was the ease of which they hopped from genre to genre.
Songs like โWhat Goes Onโ have a surprising country feel. Paul McCartney wrote a number of classical-sounding ballads, and John Lennon didnโt shy away from experimental rock. Plus, there was the bandโs psychedelic and Indian Classical periods. If the band stuck to one singular sound, they likely would have faded into obscurity pretty quickly.
4. The Use Of Innovative (Then) New Instruments
The Beatles werenโt interested in following the basic rock music formula of vocals, guitar, and drums forever. They often incorporated an oddball instrument into their music here and there. At the very least, they often used traditional rock instruments in innovative, experimental ways as well.
Youโll often hear a piano or organ in The Beatlesโ music, as well as a pre-synth Mellotron. George Harrison incorporated a sitar into the mix for a while. Things got real weird when they introduced a synth to the mix on Abbey Road, and one canโt help but think they inspired countless musicians throughout the 1980s to do the same thing.
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