Rock 'n' Roll Children

"Rock 'N' Roll Children" is the sixth single released by heavy metal band Dio, appearing on their 1985 LP, Sacred Heart. It reached number 26 on the Billboard Top Album Tracks chart. By coincidence, it also reached number 26 in the UK Singles Chart in August 1985, and remains their most successful release in the United Kingdom to date.

"Rock 'N' Roll Children"
Single by Dio
from the album Sacred Heart
B-side
  • We Rock (live)
  • The Last In Line (live)
ReleasedJuly 1985
RecordedAugust 25, 1984 (live recordings)
Philadelphia, USA
Rumbo Studios, Los Angeles, California, USA
GenreHeavy metal
Length4:32
LabelVertigo
Songwriter(s)Ronnie James Dio
Producer(s)Ronnie James Dio
Dio singles chronology
"Mystery"
(1984)
"Rock 'N' Roll Children"
(1985)
"Hungry for Heaven"
(1985)

Rock 'n' Roll fairy tale

"Rock 'N' Roll Children" is a song exemplary of Dio’s style of blending the theme of rock ‘n’ roll with fantasy elements. It is about boy and a girl, meant for each other and at the same time hostile opposites, ending up alone in the dark. The song seems to be closely connected to the song "Sacred Heart" from the same album, which is about a quest imposed by a wizard to find the sacred heart bleeding in the night; in "Rock 'N' Roll Children" the fall in the darkness of the couple is expressed as the breaking of a heart.

Some of the elements in the lyrics of the song "Sacred Heart" are used in the music video of "Rock 'N' Roll Children". In this video, two kids get in an argument because the boy is planning on quitting his rock 'n' roll music career for a steady job and his girl accuses him of "selling out". A rainstorm comes up and the two seek shelter inside an antique store named Curios. The store belongs to the wizard played by Ronnie James Dio, who seems to have some secret involvement in the matter of their trouble. They hide in a closet and disappear in the nightmare world of the wizard, separate from each other. This dark world of the wizard reflects ordinary society, a hostile world for children of rock 'n' roll, because they don’t want to be enslaved by its rules and authority figures (such as parents and teachers). In the end, the boy and girl find each other and make up with the implication that the boy will return to his previous career in rock 'n' roll. The wizard's game is over until the next passerby enters his store.


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