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Grex > Music1 > #84: The Worst and Most Annoying Music | |
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| Author |
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vidar
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The Worst and Most Annoying Music
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Jan 8 20:16 UTC 1994 |
What is the absolue worst music you have ever heard? I am not talking
about a specific type of music, but rather the song that every time you
hear it, you want to kill the D.J. running the radio station.
2.) What is the most annoying song you have ever heard?
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| 134 responses total. |
robh
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response 1 of 134:
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Jan 8 21:14 UTC 1994 |
Probably "Achy Breaky Heart" by Billy Ray Whazzisname.
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vidar
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response 2 of 134:
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Jan 8 22:22 UTC 1994 |
Yeah, I hate tht one too.
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omni
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response 3 of 134:
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Jan 8 22:58 UTC 1994 |
There areseveral rap type songs that fit this description.
Suffice to say it's not Capricio Espanol by Rimsky-Korsakov.
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sandeep
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response 4 of 134:
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Jan 9 11:31 UTC 1994 |
"I Will Always Love You"
anything by Air Supply
"Safety Dance" by Men Without Hats
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vidar
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response 5 of 134:
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Jan 9 14:45 UTC 1994 |
"I got a man"
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katie
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response 6 of 134:
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Jan 9 17:47 UTC 1994 |
Anything by Gloria Estefan or Rush.
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chelsea
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response 7 of 134:
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Jan 9 18:09 UTC 1994 |
"Feelings".
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katie
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response 8 of 134:
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Jan 9 20:08 UTC 1994 |
Oh, yeah, and Neil Diamond.
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bartlett
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response 9 of 134:
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Jan 10 05:12 UTC 1994 |
Anything by Robin Hitchcock is likely to send me into fits of homicidal rage.
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hawkeye
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response 10 of 134:
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Jan 10 16:55 UTC 1994 |
The only song I really can't stand anymore is "All Right Now" by Free.
There should be a rock-n-roll graveyard for overplayed rock classics.
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carson
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response 11 of 134:
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Jan 10 18:00 UTC 1994 |
I can think of a LOT of rap-type stuff I'd kill DJs for playing, and I
consider myself a fan.
I turn off the radio anytime I hear anything by Vanilla Ice, They Might Be
Giants, or Boston. Ugh!
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skeez
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response 12 of 134:
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Jan 13 00:22 UTC 1994 |
i cannot stand generic new jack swing songs that get played more than public
enemy ever did, and the ones that gain instant popularity off of body parts,
profanity, and your typical stupid shit that most of 96.3 plays.
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vidar
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response 13 of 134:
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Jan 13 00:38 UTC 1994 |
Thank you for you input Sky. But could you please, please control you
usage of naughty words? Pretty please, with anything you want on top?
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skeez
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response 14 of 134:
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Jan 16 02:00 UTC 1994 |
Like you don't. Sprinkles, pleez.
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vidar
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response 15 of 134:
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Jan 17 18:55 UTC 1994 |
No, but I at least make an effort to try.
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bartlett
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response 16 of 134:
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Jan 17 20:03 UTC 1994 |
Now that the holidays are safely past, I can admit that Tchaikovsky's
Nutcracker causes many of my major bodily processes to go into reverse or
randomly malfunction in amusing or horrifying ways.
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vidar
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response 17 of 134:
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Jan 18 01:20 UTC 1994 |
Doesn't this belong in the vomit conference?
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rcurl
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response 18 of 134:
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Jan 18 05:40 UTC 1994 |
When I was taking "music appreciation" in college one of the selections
was the orchestral version of Moussorgsky's _Pictures at an Exhibition_.
At the time, the music conveyed to me a sense of successive strainings
at resolutions. I likened it, in youthful idiocy, to straining for a
bowel movement. I am afraid that I permanently lessened my enjoyment
of the piece. Please, everybody, *don't* think of bowel movements the
next time you listen to _Pictures_.
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albaugh
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response 19 of 134:
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Jan 18 19:31 UTC 1994 |
I certainly won't, but I might think of someONE the next time I have a... :-)
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omni
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response 20 of 134:
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Jan 18 19:51 UTC 1994 |
Some Wagner pieces are pretty annoying to my ears. Unfortunatly, my mother
has a Wagner addiction. Some of his work isn't THAT bad but....
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bartlett
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response 21 of 134:
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Jan 18 21:58 UTC 1994 |
Re 17 and 18, now I didn't specify which bodily functions went into reverse
or how they malfunctioned, did I? Didn't think so. As for 18, but it's
such a compelling metaphor. I won't think of evacuation next time I hear
Pictures, but I'm likely to spontaneously burst out laughing. God I hope
it's not at a live concert.
Which reminds me, a little drift. During last Friday's performance of the
Snowmaiden in Detroit, I nearly disgraced myself on stage. You see, it was
the number right after intermission, a very delicate,
sweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeet (like chocolate frosted Sugarbombs) little
dance piece with soprano solo. Well, just as the first gentle notes crept
out into the hall, they were trampled by one of the sillier honks I've ever
heard from an oboe in my time. I barely held it together, when I noticed
that the guy to my left was just about to explode into gales of laughter
too. We almost created one of those positive situations that would have
ended in the security weenies having to peel us both off the floor and carry
us off stage, but fortunately profewssionalism prevailed, just barely.
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vidar
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response 22 of 134:
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Jan 18 22:12 UTC 1994 |
Listineng to your parent's music gets on you nerves, because yo'
parents like it.
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omni
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response 23 of 134:
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Jan 19 04:48 UTC 1994 |
Actually, I like most of everything my mother has. I was turned on to
Classical when I was 2, when I heard Grofe's "Grand Canyon Suite". I remember
being frightened by the thunderstorm passage, but now, as an adult, I know
better.
My favorites are Mozart, Bach, Beethovan, Chopin among others.
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md
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response 24 of 134:
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Jan 21 14:58 UTC 1994 |
Most Mahler, interminable minimalist noodlings, most ragtime,
and of course Pachelbel's Canon. In other words, all the
anemic or downright crappy stuff that suddenly becomes
fashionable with the beret-and-french-bread crowd in places
like Northampton and Ann Arbor. I'd love to love Mahler.
I sense that there's value there that I'm just not capable
of hearing. But the rest of it will always have the effect
on my nervous system of fingernails screeching down a chalkboard.
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