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Not sure if anyone has mentioned Sonic Youth, but I've got to give them a nod too. Saw them play the Daydream Nation album from start to finish which was awesome. Big fan of Pavement, too.
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Sonic Youth is another one of those bands I always thought was more interesting than they were any good. Day Dream Nation has some good tracks, Experimental Jet Set has some good tracks...but they have a lot of garbage out there too.
Pavement have two wonderful albums...Slanted and Enchanted and Brighten the Corners. No one has mentioned how amazing Television and Jonathan Richman/Modern Lovers were. Also...no mentioned of Lou Reed or Iggy Pop...or even Bowie! |
Never forget the look on my mother's face when I hauled home the original vinyl copy of Bowie's- Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.
She's a classically trained pianist and that darn near killed her. T. Rex's Slider was a whack up side the head as well. No one has mentioned how amazing Television and Jonathan Richman/Modern Lovers were. Also...no mentioned of Lou Reed or Iggy Pop...or even Bowie![/QUOTE] |
I LOVE T. Rex...that mid-70s glam is one of my favorite periods of music...Roxy Music and Mott the Hoople can be added in as well. Then Queen ruined it :(
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Originally Posted by BigPolishJimmy
(Post 12635936)
Saw the Surfers at least 3 times, Dead Milkmen, Chuck Mangione, Steve Ray Vaughn, Violent Fems, sheesh, too many to list. Worst show experience, being talked into walking to see the Cult open for Metalic, the venue was too far away, listened to the entire Cult set while walking through the woods only to arrive in time For Metalica to set up. Metalica was good, I just wasn't as into them. Worst show experience I actually saw.. the Cure on the Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me tour. Bad sound in our seat location, just an unbearable mix. Best show still might be the BH Surfers with the setting fire to the cymbals, naked dancing girl and sex change operation on the big projector screen. Just a singular moment of being so young and alive.
Originally Posted by thook
(Post 12636469)
Oh, and Mothers Of Invention/Frank Zappa.....before the 80's hit.
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Had all of the MTB in vinyl LP's. My wife sold them for $1 each during a garage sale. I've reminded her of that event each spring for the last 15 years.
Can't You See |
Originally Posted by Zaphod Beeblebrox
(Post 12635667)
cuz they all sound pretty much the same.
I can probably think of half a dozen american punk bands that all sound the same too :lol: try putting "tribe called quest" into pandora. Its been blowing my mind with good hip hop. |
De La Soul, Diggable Planets, Public Enemy...there was good hip hop.
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Traveling Wilburys for the win. There. I said it. Brought in the Supergroup. But how can you know one of the first bands to feature 4 lead guitar players?
I opened for Marty Stuart once. The guy seemed hammered, showed up over 45 minutes late on stage. They kept sending a roadie out to tune all the instruments, one at a time. Luckily it was my 21st birthday and the shows were at a winery. |
Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake
(Post 12637021)
De La Soul, Diggable Planets, Public Enemy...there was good hip hop.
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Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake
(Post 12636903)
I LOVE T. Rex...that mid-70s glam is one of my favorite periods of music...Roxy Music and Mott the Hoople can be added in as well. Then Queen ruined it :(
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Originally Posted by clubman
(Post 12637120)
Trying, hard , to stay, out of , 70's. OK just this one before I sign off for vascular surgery and a haze of morphine. Spirit (7 Dreams of Dr Sardonicus)....oooaaaaa flashbacks
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Was bored playing upright bass the other day and this came to mind. The moral of the story... we need more bongo sounding solos in music these days. |
Recalling these old 70’s bands reminds me of when I was a pre-teen in Southern Indiana visiting a buddy of mine. His older brother was in a ‘rock’ band and we got into his stuff. Humble Pie, Flash in the Pan, and Santana Caravanserai albums combined with Robert Crumb magazines. It shook my Methodist upbringing to its’ core. I was never the same again. I remember his brother and band were busted will driving his VW Van for possession of marijuana. It was a BIG deal. You would have thought they burnt down a church while chanting Satanic verses or something. I think he’s still in maximum security.
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[QUOTE=gomango;12636879]Never forget the look on my mother's face when I hauled home the original vinyl copy of Bowie's- Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.
She's a classically trained pianist and that darn near killed her. Should have played her Aladdin Sane. Some of the piano on there is pretty inspired. Maybe she still wouldn't have liked it though. I don't have it in me to read the entire thread - anyone mention Zappa yet? I don't think he got the serious attention he deserved. |
he hangs out in my signature.
...I love Zappa but some Zappa I just can't dig. I suppose when you make as much music as he did you're not gonna like it all. |
I'm with Zaphod...Zappa has some good albums, usually the simpler ones, but his jazz stuff is too experimental and too academic for me. He has things that are outright unlistenable.
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And now we've come full circle to what you can do with your new bicycles: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TnpTe...eature=related
[url] |
^^ i remember seeing this a little while back and thinking, "Man, Steve Allen is a real a-hole"
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Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake
(Post 12637943)
I'm with Zaphod...Zappa has some good albums, usually the simpler ones, but his jazz stuff is too experimental and too academic for me. He has things that are outright unlistenable.
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Originally Posted by Zaphod Beeblebrox
(Post 12634181)
I never understood why "Whiter Shade of Pale" is considered a wedding song....I like that song.
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Originally Posted by Zaphod Beeblebrox
(Post 12638122)
^^ i remember seeing this a little while back and thinking, "Man, Steve Allen is a real a-hole"
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Best concert ever: Saw the nation tour when Metallica and Guns and Roses were swapping headliner, with Faith No More as the opening act. Pittsburgh at the Civic Arena. I was (am) a metalhead, but didn't understand all the rave about Metallica (liked Megadeth better), kinda liked Guns and Roses.
Thanks to the traffic on Parkway West we missed the Faith No More set completely. Metallica was next up. Meanwhile, if you bothered to notice, the sky was clouding up, big time. Twenty minutes into their set a MASSIVE summer tunderstorm hit. Metallica stops for a moment, turns off all the lights and any other electric stuff, cranks up the amps and PA a bit more, and PLAYED!!!!! We're talking Fantasia. Night on Bald Mountain. They absolutely outplayed the worst Mother Nature could throw at them. And the storm lasted all but about 20 minutes of the remaining set. Damn! Now I understood why my friends were talking Metallica. Guns and Roses? Axel was having one of his 'special' nights. Three songs into the set, we left, and I've never been able to listen to them without sneering since. Runner up concert: Gannon College, 1968. We were supposed to get the Jefferson Airplane. Slick cracked her voice, the band said they'd still play, but offered refunds. 90% of the advance sale took the offer. The remaining few of us got to see Hot Tuna the second time they ever played in public. I'm on two hits of microdot and so wasted that Cassidy and Kaukonen pull me up on the stage and sit me down against Cassidy's amp for the entire concert. Second runner up: The Stooges (Raw Power tour) opening for Slade, the Agora, Cleveland. Hell of a wonderful night, helped by my being backstage before the concert matching Iggy shot for shot. We were still both walking by the time the band went on. He was walking better than me - and I had to drive back to Erie afterwards. Just out of curiosity: Does the Agora still exist? Haven't been to Cleveland in decades. |
Originally Posted by sykerocker
(Post 12638525)
Best concert ever: Saw the nation tour when Metallica and Guns and Roses were swapping headliner, with Faith No More as the opening act. Pittsburgh at the Civic Arena. I was (am) a metalhead, but didn't understand all the rave about Metallica (liked Megadeth better), kinda liked Guns and Roses.
Thanks to the traffic on Parkway West we missed the Faith No More set completely. Metallica was next up. Meanwhile, if you bothered to notice, the sky was clouding up, big time. Twenty minutes into their set a MASSIVE summer tunderstorm hit. Metallica stops for a moment, turns off all the lights and any other electric stuff, cranks up the amps and PA a bit more, and PLAYED!!!!! We're talking Fantasia. Night on Bald Mountain. They absolutely outplayed the worst Mother Nature could throw at them. And the storm lasted all but about 20 minutes of the remaining set. Damn! Now I understood why my friends were talking Metallica. Guns and Roses? Axel was having one of his 'special' nights. Three songs into the set, we left, and I've never been able to listen to them without sneering since. Runner up concert: Gannon College, 1968. We were supposed to get the Jefferson Airplane. Slick cracked her voice, the band said they'd still play, but offered refunds. 90% of the advance sale took the offer. The remaining few of us got to see Hot Tuna the second time they ever played in public. I'm on two hits of microdot and so wasted that Cassidy and Kaukonen pull me up on the stage and sit me down against Cassidy's amp for the entire concert. Second runner up: The Stooges (Raw Power tour) opening for Slade, the Agora, Cleveland. Hell of a wonderful night, helped by my being backstage before the concert matching Iggy shot for shot. We were still both walking by the time the band went on. He was walking better than me - and I had to drive back to Erie afterwards. Just out of curiosity: Does the Agora still exist? Haven't been to Cleveland in decades. As for FZ, Hot Rats, Chunga's Revenge, and Freak Out are among my favorites. Some other as yet unmentioned names: Camper Van Beethoven (the first three or four albums,) Laurie Anderson, Patti Smith, Tom Waits. |
Originally Posted by sykerocker
(Post 12638454)
Steve Allen made a career of signing all sorts of interesting rock, pop, and experimental music for his show, and then treating them like absolute crap while they're on stage. Elvis and 'Hound Dog' was only the beginning. Allen HATED rock and roll, so his shows appealed to the entire family. The teenagers got to see their faves (and probably didn't notice how they were being dissed) which mom and dad were entertained by having someone they'd really like shot being treated like ****.
That's why I like the Zappa appearance on that show...Frank handles Mr. Allen well. |
Originally Posted by Chris_in_Miami
(Post 12638758)
:beer: Outstanding stories!
As for FZ, Hot Rats, Chunga's Revenge, and Freak Out are among my favorites. Some other as yet unmentioned names: Camper Van Beethoven (the first three or four albums,) Laurie Anderson, Patti Smith, Tom Waits. |
I take back what I said about limiting CVB to the first few albums (though Key Lime Pie wasn't brilliant,) New Roman Times is pretty good for a concept-y album.
Victor Krummenacher was always fantastic, whether with CVB, the Monks of Doom, or Eugene Chadbourne. Speaking of bass players, Jaco Pastorius is buried a few blocks from here... |
Someone got around to mentioning the band in my av! Lowery goes from being smartass to sentimental in like one verse.
It took 11 pages for someone to mention the ultimate curmudgeon of rock, Neil Young? One of my favorite shows was just him and about 20 guitars and keyboards. |
Originally Posted by Talus
(Post 12639256)
Someone got around to mentioning the band in my av! Lowery goes from being smartass to sentimental in like one verse.
It took 11 pages for someone to mention the ultimate curmudgeon of rock, Neil Young? One of my favorite shows was just him and about 20 guitars and keyboards. |
Originally Posted by Chris_in_Miami
(Post 12638954)
Speaking of bass players, Jaco Pastorius is buried a few blocks from here... |
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