This touches on such powerful currents as independence, freedom, creativity, and a younger generation throwing off the shackles of a society of elders which told millions the depressing message, which Kureishi and others implicitly understood: No matter your talents, if you were born working class there was little chance of you amounting to anything other than factory fodder or home-keeper.

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The Beatles were a generous, optimistic expression of something more than that – one which was in its musical forms quintessentially English and Northern English while speaking to a wider Britain. In this they may be the last musical artists of stature and significance who were able to give voice to these qualities.

Other profoundly English artists did not have the same optimism. The music of The Kinks and Ray Davies had a tangible loss and regret for a past age; the Sex Pistols in the 1970s were filled with an explosive anger and sense of rebellion; while in the 1980s The Smiths and Pet Shop Boys evoked a wistful melancholia about deeply buried emotions and feeling different.

Where in this age of conservatism and conformity is the music of the future, and how will things change after the coronavirus pandemic?

The Beatles after The Beatles became an even bigger cultural canon, incorporated into an establishment which had once dismissed and sneered at them and all popular music. Instead, the Beatles became part of the “official” story of what made Britain “great” – from the illusions of “cool Britannia” to the delusions of presenting the UK as a classless society and meritocracy.

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The Beatles incorporation was aided by Lennon’s retreat from music in the 1970s after his radical political phase, followed by his brutal murder at the age of 40 in 1980. In a different way, McCartney’s continual desire to present an affable people-pleasing persona also aided this – even though it masked his never-ending quest to seek out new musical forms and experiment up to the present. I am not talking about Wings, but his Fireman albums with Youth are one good example.

This was part of a wider reclaiming of pop culture from the forces of imagination, change, rebellion and even young people – a generational defeat by oldies going on about how marvellous it was when they were young. Such comments should be an incitement to cultural revolution – but not as of yet!

This begs two questions – where in this age of conservatism and conformity is the music of the future, and how will things change after the coronavirus pandemic?

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IN past decades there was sometimes obviously, sometimes in the margins, music which not only sounded like nothing else, but could be described as the music of the future. This is the experience that music writer Jon Savage had when listening to Joy Division over 40 years ago.

He recognised that it came from the Manchester of the late 1970s, the doubt and despair of then, and that it spoke and represented something from another age and time which could be called the future. This is the experience many of us had when first listening to Elvis, David Bowie, Kraftwerk and others, and for me as well as these artists, groups such as the Bronx based sisters who formed ESG – one of the most sampled bands in music history who sadly hardly sold many of their own records. In recent years the R&B sci-fi of Janelle Monae would be another pioneering example of music from another world.

For most of this century, with notable exceptions such as Janelle Monae, such music has been conspicuous by its absence. Is that cultural chasm set to continue given the many other forms of expression and entertainment available to trigger and challenge the imagination, as well as the hold of retro-culture?

The world is not going to be the same after the virus, and neither is culture and music.

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In these tragic times the loss, dislocation and disruption which has happened across society is going to provide an opportunity to do things very differently, at a macro-level, about the big important stuff.

Music will be no exception to this. Maybe we can start – along with all the other things – to think about music that isn’t about corporate sponsors and control, a mainstream which is about nothing but brands, merch and monies, and the endless procession of festivals which are not really festivals.

Music gatherings with their grotesque range of VIP packages are a perversion of everything the original, democratic promise of rock and roll was about; they trash and diminish what American writer Barbara Ehrenreich has called our sense of “collective joy”.

The search for music to answer something inside us which connects us will never go away.

Music is part of what it is to be human – part of the universal common language which connects us across the peoples, nations and continents of this planet – and makes us something bigger – touching upon what musician David Byrne has called “the geometry of beauty”.

All through the age of recorded music it has tapped into economic and social challenges – from the Great Depression and folk and protest songs, to the 1960s era of new openings, 1970s revulsion at the deadening realities of life across the West, and liberation and freedom in the best of hip hop, dance and club culture in recent decades.

The search for music to answer something inside us which connects us will never go away.

Corporate behemoths cannot fully answer the desire deep in the human imagination. Nor can continually being stuck in a permanent “Year Zero” of the past, reminiscing about The Beatles, the 1960s, punk, or whatever it may be. Rather, the search for the songs and sounds which give voice to our desire to celebrate our need for independence, freedom, creativity and autonomy, while also marking our interconnectedness, will go on.

We are not going to stop the music now or ever, but after what has been called “The Great Levelling” of the coronavirus, we really do need humanity to dance to a different beat.

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