Sign In Sign Out Subscribe to Mailing Lists Unsubscribe or Change Settings Help

smoe.org mailing lists
ivan@stellysee.de

Message Index for 2003021, sorted by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)
Previous message, by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)
Next message, by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)

From DanAbnrml9@aol.com
Subject Re: Big Five
Date Fri, 07 Feb 2003 10:05:40 -0500

[Part 1 text/plain iso-8859-1 (2.3 kilobytes)] (View Text in a separate window)

This thread is interesting, and again probably shows my age (22, for the record--I think it might make this list more interesting if I include that) a bit. But I'd love to pitch in, with some additional "notes" thrown in:

The first TAPE I ever bought was the Monkees' Greatest Hits. I wouldn't place them on my list of top 5, but, sheesh, considering that was the start, is it any wonder that I love this type of music? And keep in mind, I was buying this tape in, like, 1986.

1) Billy Joel/Elton John. Billy Joel is the first artist that I ever owned ALL the albums from. Like many, I saw he and EJ as two artists that were of a piece (with each taking a decidedly different tack, of course, but they still had similarities) so I was into both at the same time... this was like elementary/middle school.
2) The Cars. This really defined my move from what were my two separate interests--alternative rock and classic rock--into a more poppy mixture of the two. The second band I bothered to buy all the albums from, and I still haven't tired from them to this day. For the record, around the time I was getting into them (1993-1994) they were about the LEAST cool band to like. I find it funny now that I know hardly anyone in my age group who doesn't own some Cars.
3) Blur. The mid and late 90s (late HS/college) were defined by Britpop, and no band did it for me like Blur. Anyone on this list who raves about the Kinks deserves to buy themselves a Blur album--I'd recommend "Parklife" as a starter, though any of their mod trio discs--"Modern Life is Rubbish", "Parklife", and "The Great Escape"--would do the trick. The three work extremely well together, too, in that each is a bit of a class study of modern life in the UK (in order, they examine the poor/working class, the middle class, and the elite). Realistically Blur's influence on me was augmented by the many, many great groups to be around at the same time. I really needn't tell you about them; I'm sure most of you know.
4) Fountains of Wayne - While I loved their debut, it was "Utopia Parkway" in 1999 that tied it all together--Britpop, my new wave fascination, and good old American power-pop and made me seek out places like NotLame and the audities community.

Okay, that's only four. Maybe I should've included the Monkees?

--Jason

Message Index for 2003021, sorted by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)
Previous message, by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)
Next message, by... (Author) (Date) (Subject) (Thread)

For assistance, please contact the smoe.org administrators.
Sign In Sign Out Subscribe to Mailing Lists Unsubscribe or Change Settings Help