From Benny Goodman to credit union leaders: Breaking the noise barrier and embracing the future
“I guess people used to think my music was noise.”
Toward the end of his career the “King of Swing” Benny Goodman was due to record at a studio. Just down the hall a punk rock band was recording. Benny’s manager arrived at the studio first and heard the other band playing and kindly asked the studio manager to ask them to stop while Benny was in the building. Of course, since the punk rock band was also paying for studio time the studio manager politely said, “I’m sorry, I cannot do that.”
Shortly after Goodman arrived at the studio and stopped at the door to where the punk rock band was playing. He stood and listened for a few minutes as the punk rock band continued playing and recording. Goodman looked at his manager and quipped, “I guess people used to think my music was noise.”
In the first half of the 20th century, the era of Swing and Big Band was embraced and beloved by high school and college-age kids but looked down upon by the older generation. According to an NPR study, the music we listen to between the ages of 17 and 22 is what sticks with us for the remainder of our lives, and we tend to cringe at anything “new” as we get older. Yet, we forget that the musical preferences we carry with us through our older years was once new and was once considered “noise” to an older generation.
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