There is nothing I can add to the sincere tributes paid by people more eminent than me about the bravery, heroism and sacrifices of those who took part. But this anniversary has made me look at rock’n’roll in a very different way. This fantastic record, and others like it, hit the charts just 12 years after D-Day. I’ve always loved 1950s rock’n’roll, always wished I’d been one of the original teenagers who experienced that unprecedented whirlwind of excitement. But I now have great sympathy for the preceding generation, the old “fuddy-duddies” still only in their thirties but so easy to deride. As teenagers, they’d been through the war – they’d had enough terrifying, horrifying “excitement” to last them a lifetime. They’d fought for freedom, they’d fought for peace. Little Richard must have been the very last thing they wanted.
It’s the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings.

- No, no, I've ...16th Feb 2014
- Fed up with e...15th Feb 2014
- Ladies and ge...14th Feb 2014
- Why McCartney...13th Feb 2014
- Glorious love...12th Feb 2014
- The greatest ...11th Feb 2014
- Don't you hat...10th Feb 2014
- Knitting need...9th Feb 2014
- People from L...8th Feb 2014
- "Working in a...7th Feb 2014
- It's a nation...6th Feb 2014
- My mum worked...5th Feb 2014
- Yes, yes, we ...4th Feb 2014
- Whispering Bo...3rd Feb 2014
- The thing abo...2nd Feb 2014 prev next