I have a total love/hate relationship with Little Steven and his show. I love the fact that I've gotten to hear songs like Psychotic Reaction and Talk Talk on the radio again but then he goes and ruins things by palying not only his own band but a lot of other boring late 70s shit that was "supposed" to be cutting edge at the time. I like the fact that he has made Iggy Pop, The Ramones, and the New York Dolls legitamate performers in the eyes of mainstream America but then he doesn't do the same thing for more current bands like Girl Trouble and Black Lips (who became popular on their own, I feel).
As for his statement, he is trying to be sensational-istic. Of course for his neck of the woods, kids in 1963 were probabaly trying to make it out of the projects by becoming the next Frankie Avalon or Bobby Rydell and that's all he knew. You see someone like Gene Simmons saying that he and a lot of other kids he knew were inspired by the Beatles being on the Ed Sullivan show, I begin to believe that it was a total East Coast thing, that there were NO rock and roll bands.
Little Steven could have exagerated a bit better by saying that in 1964, America was a vast wasteland and there was probably a couple of rock and roll bands every hundred of miles or so until you got to the east coast, then nothing. A lot of folk singers or twist groups like Joey Dee and the Starliters. But like I said, I think Little Steven likes to go for sensationalism.
Little Ricky said:February 8, 1964, I didn't know anyone in a rock 'n' roll band. February 9, the Beatles played The Ed Sullivan Show. February 10, everyone I knew was in one....My life began on February 9, 1964."
That would have got his point across and not made his statement so ridiculous. The Beatles coming to America and getting the attention and media coverage they did played a huge part in the proliferation of garage bands that came in the coming years, I don't believe anyone can honestly deny that. They were a catalyst and figurehead, much like Elvis was when he broke. Neither of them created anything new but they both defined Rock and Roll for most people when they first became popular.