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| Author |
Message |
| 10 new of 23 responses total. |
happyboy
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response 14 of 23:
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Feb 23 18:48 UTC 2003 |
interesting idea. i tend to like the hiphop stuff that folks
have played for me with the more radical political leanings
(dead prez) most of the rest of it seems to be women hating/
self hating trash.
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jaklumen
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response 15 of 23:
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Feb 25 03:33 UTC 2003 |
The music may be going through some growing pains. Did rock face any
similar problems?
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dbratman
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response 16 of 23:
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Feb 25 07:13 UTC 2003 |
resp:11 - Twila, I would have guessed those Survivor lyrics depicted
the singer telling the girl both about herself and another girl. But I
am not hip to these things.
resp:12 - I am curmudgeonly enough to claim that the parents were
right, on both occasions. Most of the rock that parents widely
denounced, back in the days when parents denounced rock, was eminently
denouncable. It is recorded that many parents actually liked the
Beatles, yes, even in 1964. This might have something to do with the
fact that the Beatles were actually good ...
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charcat
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response 17 of 23:
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Feb 26 09:23 UTC 2003 |
one of the best rock and roll songs I know of was the cream, crossroads.
3 guys, live doing great stuff. makes this old cat dance everytime ;)
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dbratman
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response 18 of 23:
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Feb 27 02:48 UTC 2003 |
If you mean Cream, the band, they're at the bottom of my list. When a
Cream song turned up on "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" a few years ago, and
the only clue to its identity was that it was a late 60s rock song, I
guessed it was Cream because it was so totally lacking in any appeal.
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mcnally
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response 19 of 23:
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Feb 27 04:39 UTC 2003 |
While not everything Cream recorded was a success (their song "Toad",
for example, is practically synonymous with comically self-indulgent
drum solos) I personally find a lot of their music very likable.
I'll admit, though, to a distinct preference for the band's own
material over their covers of classic blues tracks like "Crossroads"
and "Spoonful".
Nevertheless, you're going to have a fight on your hands if you try to
take away my copy of "Disraeli Gears".
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dbratman
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response 20 of 23:
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Feb 28 09:06 UTC 2003 |
Why should I -want- your copy of a Cream album?
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remmers
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response 21 of 23:
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Feb 28 12:26 UTC 2003 |
I'd take it, but I already have "Disraeli Gears".
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jaklumen
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response 22 of 23:
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Mar 5 01:58 UTC 2003 |
I finally got a copy of the NY Times article from krj =)
Again, I think the gist of the article is that a lot of commercial
music (since the 1950s anyway) is aimed at specific age groups. I
laugh when Grexers complain about Britney and NSync-- I don't doubt
that they might be lacking in a little talent, but they are examples
of formulas that are not going to go away. The music is generally
about the adolescent stuff-- mating and dating, bump and grind, etc.,
etc. The lovestruck girl, sex kitten, hunk, angry young man (and
variants of such) are common stereotypes.
Adult Contemporary/Easy Listening or whatever you want to call it
seems very driven by nostalgia. What was cutting edge once, became
popular and mainstream, is now mellowed and tamed with hindsight. No
more scattered hormones. People have settled down, and are less
interested in stirring things up.
No matter how young boomers think they are, they cannot escape it.
There have been a number of notable exceptions-- musicians that cut
across the generation gap, but by and large it seems to me that a lot
of the tunes seem to be about romantic love.
Just a theory.
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twenex
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response 23 of 23:
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Jul 18 16:41 UTC 2005 |
Burying rock (especially classic rock) is crazy. Should Beethoven be banned
just because he wrote before 1990? Should Elgar? If you're going to ban
anything, you'd be much better off banning disco and late-90's crap like
techno. And, of course, other people would say that you would be better off
banning classical music and punk, and keeping techno around. Live and let
live, say I.
But if this ever changing world in which we live in
Makes you give in and cry
Say Live and Let Die
(Live and Let Die)
Live and Let Die
(Live and Let Die)
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