Monday, September 2, 2019
Drugs In The Music Industry Essay -- essays research papers
 Drugs in the Music Industry           The Music World-glamorous, fast paced, and a world most of us will never  be part of. But if we knew what it entailed, would we still want to be? The  whole world seems to be building itself around drugs more and more every day,  and music industry isn't immune. In fact, music is one of the most influential  art forms of today's society, and drugs, especially to today's youth, just add  to the attractiveness of it all.    In the last two or three years, drugs, especially heroin, have risen in  use dramatically. Kurt Cobain was the most high-profile drug-related rock star  since the 1970's and was still battling heroin addiction when he committed  suicide in 1994. Along with him, his wife Courtney Love made it fashionable to  be a "junkie". In the last year, Stone Temple Pilot's singer Scott Weiland and  Depeche Mode singer David Gahan, among others, have been arrested for cocaine or  heroin possession. The number of top bands that have been linked to heroin  through a member's overdose, arrest, admitted use or recovery is staggering:  Smashing pumpkins, Everclear, Snoop Doggy Dogg, Dr. Dre, Blind Melon, Red Hot  Chili Peppers, The Breeders, Alice in Chains, Sex Pistols, Sublime, Iggy Pop,  the list goes on and on. Together, these bands have sold more than 60 million  albums(Newsweek pgs 50 & 53).         Since kids emulate popular musicians, what is there to keep them from  emulating their drug use? Moreover, what's to keep the majority of the  population from doing the same? In the 60's and 70's, drug use was never spoken  of nor did anyone admit that it was a problem. Nowadays, there is not a person  in the world who hasn't heard about the rising drug use. But what are they  doing about it? Back in the 80's, higher prices, the fear of contracting AIDS,  and lower purity kept drugs out of the mainstream. Now, drugs are cheaper and  easier to get then ever, being imported into the country at double the rate it  was in the 1980's. Unfortunately, the outsider's view of drug use isn't the  harsh reality. Janis Joplin, Billie Holiday, and Charlie Parker are among the  many to die from heroin and other drug addictions. Drugs seem to make you a  funnier, wiser, cooler person, but what the younger generation fails to realize  is that they are fatal.         Despite this, drug...              ...are easy because they are wealthy,  popular, and sublimely happy. Being rich and famous isn't all it's cracked up  to be. They lead normal lives, have kids and pay bills just as we do, but this  is still no excuse to put your life into your own hands.    The music industry may be finally facing up to the truth that drug abuse  has become a serious problem, though. The National Academy of Recording Arts  and Sciences gathered in 1996 to discuss what could be done about it. The sense  of crisis has been growing since Kurt Cobain committed suicide, blamed at least  partly on his heroin abuse.(Time p57)Expressions of concern are easy to come by,  but the chances for meaningful industry action are less clear. Record  executives refuse to be drug police, especially in a society where drug abuse  has long been accepted, and even condoned, as part of the creative process.    Geffen Records has retained a drug counselor for it's musicians who seek  help. (Time p 58). But the industry must recognize that pressure from the  label to keep tutoring and recording can blow a drug problem out of proportion.  It is a minimal step, but at least a start toward trying to keep musicians  healthy, productive, and alive.                       
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