OT: ♫ The Music Thread ♫

Ben Grimm

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Dec 10, 2007
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eco's bones

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Jul 21, 2005
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Elmira NY
I still will never understand the appeal of Taylor Swift to anyone over the age of middle school girls. They say it's like Michael Jackson; her music doesn't have that soul, groove, or musicianship.

Anyone heard the new Opeth? It's on my list when I have the motivation.

Planes Mistaken For Stars put out a posthumous album after their singer passed away. Curious to hear it to end the year.

I don't understand the appeal on a lot of things. She's just one of them.

But we're all different to some degree. Someone likes this someone likes that. Some people like just about everything. I've never found it easy to like any group that found mass appeal and it doesn't matter the genre. Oh, it's popular......then it must suck. I admit that's kind of f***ed up but that's the way it's always been with me. Along the way I've lost interest in complaining about what other people like. If they try to stick it in my face I'll either be annoyed or dismissive but otherwise I leave it alone and tune out what I don't like.

A complaint I do have. I can see if there's a political candidate you don't like using your song telling them---suing them if necessary to stop is fine and dandy but prostituting your music in service of a political candidate at least on a national level is a bit much.

By the way that goes for priests and preachers too.
 
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nyrage

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Aug 2, 2005
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Houston, TX
I picked up the Interstellar soundtrack by Hans Zimmer because of all the interstellar talk lately. Darn you, @nyrage . Darn you to heck.

Darn me? You should thank me. It's the greatest soundtrack of all time. I would sit in a theater in the dark just to hear it loud.

I cannot believe that Zimmer didn't win an Oscar for it. Grand Budapest Hotel? It was a good movie, but best original score? Holy cow, biggest snub since Interstellar not being nominated for best picture. American Sniper? The Theory of Everything? Boyhood? Imitation Game, etc?

I will never bring up Shakespeare in Love beating out Saving Private Ryan after the 2014 snubs of all time.
 

nyrage

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Aug 2, 2005
2,141
1,996
Houston, TX
Merry Christmas! I hope you like these 2 X-Mas offerings.





The first thing I did when I worked at Atlantic/Elektra/Warner was to replace the last page of Metallica's signed contract with a photocopy.

I started out in the Royalties dept. Every quarter, I used to have to bring million dollar checks to their A&R guy for the band. The guy has such a big crush on me and would bribe me with anything Metallica-related just to hang out with him.

Lots of great stories back in those days. Later on I worked for the Atlantic executives doing all kinds of things I shouldn't mention. So many great memories though.
 

RempireStateBuilding

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Dec 13, 2009
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NY




I caught a stream of a King Crimson show from the 80s and it gave me a whole new appreciation for this band. I've tried listening to them before because I always hear them referenced as an enormous influence for all sorts of bands, but I never heard anything that hooked me until Beat and Discipline. Both albums have been on repeat for a couple weeks now.
 

eco's bones

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Jul 21, 2005
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Elmira NY

I'm gonna post albums.


Yeah I got this one when it came out. The back cover had this photo of some 50's lounge band. When the lounge band found out they were on the back cover of the DK's album they didn't like it and sued and the DK's in subsequent pressings had to put out a new back cover---where the lounge band had their heads lopped off. I've got the back cover with this band in its entirety.

Pretty much everything was vinyl, cassette or 8 track then. I almost always went with vinyl. A shitload of independent labels sprouted up in the late 70's and early 80's. That's where most of the punk and post punk bands were and that was almost always vinyl unless it was something like a bootleg cassette. The Bad Brains first real release came from ROIR (an independent) on cassette and it was years and years until that finally came out in vinyl. For me that was the quintessential American punk rock album and still is.
 
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eco's bones

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Jul 21, 2005
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Elmira NY
@eco's bones Thx for posting. I'm gonna try to post one punk album every day.

Here is kind of a funny story. T.S.O.L. put out this EP on Posh Boy. I think it was their first actual recording to go to vinyl. They were getting bored and thinking about breaking up (which they put off for a while) but wanted to get something out just to say they did something. There was some English character running this fly by night record Posh Boy label in Southern California. They went to him.....they didn't think there was any money in it and they expected this guy would never pay them anything anyway but they wanted something out just because. So they did that. On the back cover all the thank yous to this and that. One time I was watching this interview with their singer Jack Grisham and he mentioned that one credit on the back cover was for this church he burglarized for their PA.....so I went and looked and yep it's there.
 
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Ben Grimm

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Dec 10, 2007
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The MC5. Rock or possibly the first punk band of all time.

Agreed. I love the title "Kick out the Jams". It's one if the best titles ever and maybe the best title reference to live music ever. Sometimes I miss guitar solos, jams, and live albums. They aren't as popular as they once were.
 
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