A love letter to the hard-rocking, but often snubbed, music of the era
of excess: the 1980s
There may be no more joyous iteration in all of music than 1980s hard
rock. It was an era where the musical and cultural ideals of rebellion
and freedom of the great rock 'n' roll of the '50s, '60s, and '70s were
taken to dizzying heights of neon excess. Attention to songcraft,
showmanship, and musical virtuosity (especially in the realm of the
electric guitar) were at an all-time high, and radio and MTV were
delivering the goods en masse to the corn-fed children of America and
beyond.
Time hasn't always been kind to artists of that gold and platinum era,
but Don't Call It Hair Metal analyzes the sonic evolution, musical
diversity, and artistic intention of '80s commercial hard rock through
interviews with members of such hard rock luminaries as Twisted Sister,
Def Leppard, Poison, Whitesnake, Ratt, Skid Row, Quiet Riot, Guns N'
Roses, Dokken, Mr. Big, and others.