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5-10-15-20 "Music of Our Lives" Draft - Round 14 (2 Viewers)

Well @zamboni stole my (God of) Thunder, but I'll still go with:

Age 10 album: KISS  Destroyer

Yes, KISS was my favorite band from around age 7 to around age 10. Their makeup schtick was most likely instrumental in that but in spite of their childish lyrics they really had some great hooks and pulled off pop "metal" better than the hair metal bands they would influence and later join sans makeup.

When I was 8 me and two friends, brothers Steven and David, put on a "concert" in full makeup (applied by the brothers' mother and aunt) in their basement for their family and a few other friends. My sister did the light show - which was basically flipping the switch on and off from the top of the stairs. Steven was Ace, David was Gene (both played air guitar and bass making noises with their mouths) and sang.  There was no Paul. I was Peter and played on a Muppets toy drum set. My big moment came when I sat on a stool and sang "Beth". I'm sure it was pretty terrible but I got a huge round of applause.

Nowadays KISS is a distant cherished memory. Once in a while I will listen to this album or Ace's solo record but otherwise they have fallen completely out of my rotation for at least 25 years.

Song: Detroit Rock City

 
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One of the few redeeming qualities my older sister had at that time 
love it!  :lol:

Well @zamboni stole my (God of) Thunder, but I'll still go with:

Age 10 album: KISS  Destroyer

Yes, KISS was my favorite band from around age 7 to around age 10. Their makeup schtick was most likely instrumental in that but in spite of their childish lyrics they really had some great hooks and pulled off pop "metal" better than the hair metal bands they would influence and later join sans makeup.

When I was 8 me and two friends, brothers Steven and David, put on a "concert" in their basement for their family and a few other friends. My sister did the light show - which was basically flipping the switch on and off from the top of the stairs. Steven was Ace, David was Gene (both played air guitar and bass making noises with their mouths) and sang.  There was no Paul. I was Peter and played on a Muppets toy drum set. My big moment came when I sat on a stool and sang "Beth". I'm sure it was pretty terrible but I got a huge round of applause.

Nowadays KISS is a distant cherished memory. Once in a while I will listen to this album or Ace's solo record but otherwise they have fallen completely out of my rotation for at least 25 years.

Song: Detroit Rock City
hated 'em!!! 

(not really)

maaaaan, they were so polarizing - you either loved Kiss or spat on those who did - meh, i just joined the other kids who mocked them because they were fewer in number, and i dug being contrarian. 

but i would low key LOVE when i heard their songs on the radio (pretty much all on AM up here, as 'NEW FM wouldn't really touch them).

it had to be the radio, 'cuz being caught with any of their albums or tapes woulda sunk my duplicitous fool ###  :unsure:

couldn't agree more about those hooks, and, man "DETROIT ROCK CITY" is KING!

a fixture in my rotation for dome 40+ years ... along with "Strutter" and "R n' R All Night"

 
Well @zamboni stole my (God of) Thunder, but I'll still go with:

Age 10 album: KISS  Destroyer

Yes, KISS was my favorite band from around age 7 to around age 10. Their makeup schtick was most likely instrumental in that but in spite of their childish lyrics they really had some great hooks and pulled off pop "metal" better than the hair metal bands they would influence and later join sans makeup.

When I was 8 me and two friends, brothers Steven and David, put on a "concert" in their basement for their family and a few other friends. My sister did the light show - which was basically flipping the switch on and off from the top of the stairs. Steven was Ace, David was Gene (both played air guitar and bass making noises with their mouths) and sang.  There was no Paul. I was Peter and played on a Muppets toy drum set. My big moment came when I sat on a stool and sang "Beth". I'm sure it was pretty terrible but I got a huge round of applause.

Nowadays KISS is a distant cherished memory. Once in a while I will listen to this album or Ace's solo record but otherwise they have fallen completely out of my rotation for at least 25 years.

Song: Detroit Rock City
I always thought Peter got the short end of the stick with the band and had the best voice.

Black Diamond FTW

 
The One

The Only

The Immortal

GRAND FUNK RAILROAD!
one of my great sonic regrets was losing my GFR love to the nasty social pressures that the first decade of the Rock Era was rife with among the young people. the rift between whether one was a Beatles or a Stones or a folk person (this was suburban Boston - we didnt have a "soul" faction) grew so that bands the "beeries", jocks or greasemonkeys liked would fall out of fashion if you were hip, no matter how good they were. JGeils, Ten Years After, Grand Funk - the first wave of hair(?)band str8up proletarian rock was completely out to the flower children. such stoopit ####, but the chicks were big in this and i did what got me w hippiechix.

the last time me Da & I really got along was when he enlisted my help in a household thing. we lived on the slope to a harbor and house drainage is a ##### when youre in the path of an entire water table, so me Da decided to put drainage pipes around our foundation. i was the main beneficiary cuz i lived in the semi-finished basement so i could have my sex (alone), drugs and rock & roll in private, but in the spring it would get a foot of water, so i volunteered to dig the ditch around the house for the pipes. i pointed my stereo speakers out the window and played mostly three albums - Traffic's John Barleycorn, McCartney's 1st solo album and GFR's Closer to Home - as i dug. The harder the work got, the more i just put Closer to Home on the repeater switch. but it was then the hippiechix decided GFR wasnt hip enuff and i stopped following em. i ran away from home in the fall, they threw my stuff out and me Da & i havent had a connectful conversation, nor have i owned a GFR album in the 50some yrs since.

when i came back to school after a yr & a half on the road, my class was all up in planning prom/grad activities. so precious it made me puke and my literal street cred gave me enormous heft as a Merry Prankster. i'm surprised the school didnt kick me right back out, after a coupla teachers had worked so hard to get me back in on a grad track instead of me taking the dropout route, but....

the thing that chapped me the most was the voting for class song. the nominees were namby-pamby, hopeful bull#### stuff, so i made a big deal about getting The Ballad of Dwight Fry (the song takes place in a nuthouse and features the chant "I-I wanna get out of here") on the ballot. the class advisors werent having it but caved to the noise we made. finished 2nd to the putrid Teach Your Children., so that's what we sung at graduation. God bless the piano player (an underclassman who thought either i or Alice was cool) in the band though cuz, as we filed out, he cut into the playing of our alma mater with the very creepy piano line from Dwight Fry, the band cut out, and the last third of the class to file out did so singing "I wanna get out of here!". aah - nostalgia aint what it useta be....

 
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10yo Album - Little Deuce Coupe by the Beach Boys

First album i ever bought. As Hello Mudda, Hello Fadda resonated with a 10yo's fear/hatred of camp, one of the Beach Boys early hits, In My Room really reached me as an ode to the place i got sent without dinner a LOT and actually used the word most common to that sitch, "scheming". I coulda been an Olympic schemer if there'd been such a sport. So, when my Auntie Glo gave me $5 mad money on a shopping trip, i headed straight to Jordan Marsh's record department to buy this band's newest 33, with the cool car on the cover. Tried my first harmony singing on 409, but outgrew my MetroBoston surfer/hotrod phase real quick. The one carryover, is that my first gf - the Li'l Bardot i've written a lot about here and friend w benefits for over 40 yrs - was named Betsy and i used my knowledge of Ballad of Ole Betsy (about a car, but...) from this LP to great effect, tormenting my lovely with various obscene versions over the decades.

 
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10yo Album - Little Deuce Coupe by the Beach Boys

First album i ever bought. As Hello Mudda, Hello Fadda resonated with a 10yo's fear/hatred of camp, one of the Beach Boys early hits, In My Room really reached me as an ode to the place i got sent without dinner a LOT and actually used the word most common to that sitch, "scheming". I coulda been an Olympic schemer if there'd been such a sport. So, when my Auntie Glo gave me $5 mad money on a shopping trip, i headed straight to Jordan Marsh's record department to buy this band's newest 33, with the cool car on the cover. Tried my first harmony singing on 409, but outgrew my MetroBoston surfer/hotrod phase real quick. The one carryover, is that my first gf - the Li'l Bardot i've written a lot about here and friend w benefits for over 40 yrs - was named Betsy and i used my knowledge of Ballad of Ole Betsy (about a car, but...) from this LP to great effect, tormenting my lovely with various obscene versions over the decades.
For some strange reason, this was the only Beach boys album I owned (I think I was tired of their bigger hits)...and 409 was my my mixtape included favorite.

She's real fine.

Giddyup, giddyup.

 
For some strange reason, this was the only Beach boys album I owned (I think I was tired of their bigger hits)...and 409 was my my mixtape included favorite.

She's real fine.

Giddyup, giddyup.
very weird choice of Beach Boy album for someone of your age, but kinda cool. giddyup -

 
10 y/o Album:  Queen - News of the World

Pretty sure this was the first album I ever bought for myself at a record store. 

We Will Rock You/We Are the Champions was ubiquitous, of course. And what 10 year old kid could resist that album cover?

It's Late 
Great pick - this was among my top albums about a year later at age 11 or 12.

Also great call on the deep track It’s Late - love Roger Taylor’s fierce drumming on the back end of the tune.

 
10 Yr Old Album - Are You Experienced - The Jimi Hendrix Experience

In my 10 yr old song/single, I talked about how I was still AM radio - and the Beatles had gotten a little too intimidating.  

This was in the summer before 5th grade and we had just moved to a nicer, much newer neighborhood with all-brick homes and central A/C.  I didn't know anyone and our next door neighbor was an Air Force Colonel that had a kid in college and one in 8th grade.  The 8th grade kid was fairly new as well, and didn't know a whole lot of people around either.  A few days after meeting, he brought over this album.  

I wasn't excited about it, and really wasn't interested - I mean I had heard about him lighting his guitar on fire, a lot of scary, non-pop stuff.  

I ended up loving it and we listened to it all that summer.  I still owned no albums myself (well, except for my Alvin & the Chipmunks albums) and I didn't move into the good stuff until another music influence in 7th grade.  After school started, we didn't see each other very much - different schools, and big age difference.  In the meantime, I shifted to Carole King and James Taylor (Tapestry was the first album I bought with my own money ...did get the K-Tel radio hits that for Christmas prior to that purchase).  

So why is this my 10 yr old album if I didn't even own it?  Or play it after a few months? 

It changed my perspective about music.  Even though I ended up needing another influence to push me over the edge from AM pop rock (still takes me home quite a bit) -  Jimi opened the door. 

Note:  I could only play it during the day when my dad was at work because we wanted to hear it on the big stereo.  It was in entryway in our house and filled the house with whatever music was being played.  My dad did NOT want to hear Jimi.  If we listened to it in my room, I still had the record player from when I was four.   

 
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Yeah I hadn't really started getting my own identity as far as music fandom goes, until I was 11 or 12, maybe a little behind the curve.  This record was already old but it's one of a dozen or so aging hippie standards that I'd have been subjected to, on many a Sunday morning around that time.  I can still smell the Aunt Jemima!

10yo.album Cat Stevens - Teaser and the Firecat

very tempting to take Thriller and I thought about it even up to this posting but it's not like I was the most massive fan, it was just everywhere and yeah it was dope
 
10 year old album - In 1976, the album I listened to the most is by a group some people on this forum like to hate on. My dad bought the album, but I took it over.  I started taking guitar lessons when I was in third grade, and the first cool song I learned to play was Country Roads by John Denver.  At 10, I wanted to Iearn to play Lyin' Eyes, and although my attempt could be considered very rough sounding, it sounded good to me. Hotel California would be released at the end of '76.

Their Greatest Hits (1971-1975) - Eagles - song sample - Lyin' Eyes

 
Yeah I hadn't really started getting my own identity as far as music fandom goes, until I was 11 or 12, maybe a little behind the curve.  This record was already old but it's one of a dozen or so aging hippie standards that I'd have been subjected to, on many a Sunday morning around that time.  I can still smell the Aunt Jemima!

10yo.album Cat Stevens - Teaser and the Firecat

very tempting to take Thriller and I thought about it even up to this posting but it's not like I was the most massive fan, it was just everywhere and yeah it was dope
I had "Catch Bull at Four" on repeat for a greater part of the time it took me to build this see-through model engine.  

 
I'm gonna lose sleep over my Age 15 picks. That was such a watershed year for me and music had a lot to do with it.

 
I'm gonna lose sleep over my Age 15 picks. That was such a watershed year for me and music had a lot to do with it.
:lmao:   

I was just thinking this exact thing.

Between ages 10 and 15 I had major changes in music taste and at 15 was clearly headed in a different direction.  Gotta figure out a way to represent both.

 
10 year album - Green Day Dookie

I think this was fairly obvious given what I wrote up in my 10 year song, but there's good reason why it's tier 1 by itself. And it isn't because it's their most influential album (American Idiot). Nor is it my favorite (Insomniac). Nor is it in my top 5 from 1994 (Throwing Copper, Rubberneck, Jar of Flies, Ill Communication, Unplugged in NY). It's just the perfect 1994 album for 10 year old me. 

I may not have really understood many of the subjects Billy Joe ranted about during the album (except for masterbation of course), but from one snot nosed brat to another I related with its attitude. I didn't realize this until I was much older, but amidst all of the self loathing bellowed throughout was a keen sense of awareness wrapped in this warped sense of humor packaging. It was teenage angst personified. As a pre teen that was probably a little bit too grown up in some ways and way too immature in others this whole album just struck a cord unlike anything else from its time. And some of its content has aged quite well:

I dont know you but I think I hate you

you're the reason for my misery 

strange how you've become my biggest enemy 

and I've never even seen your face

 
At 10, I wanted to Iearn to play Lyin' Eyes, and although my attempt could be considered very rough sounding, it sounded good to me.
This is a weird story in response to a 10yo's favorite, but this thread has my memory box on fire, so....

When my Mary was dying, i developed two very bad excesses - peanutbutter crank & poker machines. Mary was down in Sacramento (where she often worked and qualified to live and receive benefits from, due to loooong private duty nursing shifts down there) for the better healthcare & welfare, but there were no casinos near there then, so i worked Thursday nite to Sunday dealing/playing poker in Reno, then drive down to take care of Mary as soon a the heavy tourist traffic died down. Meth worked better to keep me going thru that dealing cards all nite, playing cards all day chasing $$ but would sometimes make my head shortcircuit. Playing poker machines was my chill when that happened but would quickly turn me into an angry, fitful zombie. I would play a poker machine terminal in my corner bar - drinking & snorting & losing & yelling & threatening. Some awful ####. And singing waaaay too loud along w the juke box for many to enjoy their songs. Night bartenders/customers are used to that kinda stuff, but Reno is a 24 hour town and therefore have a phenomenon of day bartenders - people who specialize in running their bars like the Irish run pubs, with a sense of community, family and chronic, rather than acute, alcoholism.

Having a giant bozo yelling at them that they werent bringin the drinks & tokens fast enough (and i would often drop $1000s in a day on a rager and bar owners let big losers behave however they want) and singing over the day drinkers' country songs decidedly didnt fit the day-bartender gestalt, but they couldnt do nothing about it. This Marcy did not like serving me, the only time she would smile at me was when i'd sing harmonies along to stuff like I Cant Make You Love Me and Lyin' Eyes which, because my voice is deep and my harmonies are under rather than above the lead notes, makes for unusual, occasionally compelling musical conjugations.

One time, just after playing Lyin' Eyes (her favorite song), i yelled for another rack of dollars and Marcy had apparently had it. She slammed the rack on the terminal and squeezed my giantass face between her fingers like a grandma.

"You're an #######, you know that?! But i know you aint really an #######, because #######s cant sing like that. Whaddya say you don't be that #######, eh?"

She was right. I tend to exhaust my habits eventually more than have to detox from them and i stopped my zombiepoker sessions right there, was always a perfect gentleman to Marcy from then on and, after Mary died, me and my son's mother Kathy (a lounge singer) made Marcy a studio tape of our ICMYLM & Lyin Eyes harmonies as a 10th anniversary gift. So there's that -

 
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Age 10 Album- Kansas- Leftoverture 

My brother, who was 13 owned it. He played it every morning before school. I still think I know a lot of the lyrics by heart: 

On a misty morning, I can hear the dewdrops falling, down from clean in heaven I can hear the voices calling

 
Ok...grandparent haul in 1978, age 10, first time I picked out all my own albums including the following:

Kansas- Point of Know Return (discussed in the singles post)

Queen- Live Killers (queen became my favorite band from age 10-12...saw tour '80 as my first concert at the Oakland coliseum)

The last one...honestly can't remember how/why I would've heard of them at 10yo...maybe my 16yo brother? But as a young pianist, the keyboards appealed to me and something about the rhythm did too.

10yo album

Kraftwerk- Trans Europe Express (still a favorite and was tempted to take one of these for my 10yo singles too...while the title track was and still is a fave, there was an after school special horror movie quality to showroom dummies that appealed to 10yo me. Saw them live in 81' and after a quick fade to Black, the lights came back up to 8 kraftwerk fellas lined up in front of their keyboards for this song...exact replica showroom dummies of themselves which were almost indistinguishable from the live members.

 
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Kraftwerk- Trans Europe Express (still a favorite and was tempted to take one of these for my 10yo singles too...while the title track was and still is a fave, there was an after school special horror movie quality to showroom dummies that appealed to 10yo me. Saw them live in 81' and after a quick fade to Black, the lights came back up to 8 kraftwerk fellas lined up in front of their keyboards for this song...exact replica showroom dummies of themselves which were almost indistinguishable from the live members
when I think of Kraftwerk ...can't help it

 
As previously noted, I didn't have a turntable when I was ten, so I'm picking another single.  This was everywhere that summer.

Mungo Jerry  -  In The Summertime

Oh my god, those sideburns.  I bet he grew those when he was five.

My best friend, Vivian, loved Neil Diamond, so I could have gone with Velvet Gloves and Spit or Tap Root Tapestry, but I honestly don't remember most of those albums.

 
10 y/o Album:  Queen - News of the World

Pretty sure this was the first album I ever bought for myself at a record store. 

We Will Rock You/We Are the Champions was ubiquitous, of course. And what 10 year old kid could resist that album cover?

It's Late 
yuuuuuge - immense, even  :thumbup:

Great pick - this was among my top albums about a year later at age 11 or 12.

Also great call on the deep track It’s Late - love Roger Taylor’s fierce drumming on the back end of the tune.
love this one, spot on! 

howzabout "Sheer Heart Attack" - Taylor wrote and did the vocals - adding to "Tenement Funster" and "Drowse" and "She Makes Me" and "I'm In Love With My Car", all sung by him on previous albums (no Ringo dittys here, those are 5 of my favorites in their catalog, along with the later to come "Rock It" (Prime Jive)

... and pretty cheeky to have a song title as a call back to their third album of the same name. 

 
10.alb  Led Zeppelin II - Led Zeppelin

This was the first album I ever bought.  I got it at the Treasure Island store on South 27th Street in Milwaukee.  Treasure Island had a grocery store at the back of the department store so my sister and I got to hang out while my parents shopped for food.   I usually occupied myself in the toy or sporting goods aisles but I'd heard Whole Lotta Love that morning on American Bandstand and thought it sounded cool.  Billboard shows Whole Lotta Love peaked on the US charts on January 30, 1970 which fits the timeline because I probably would have had some Christmas money burning a hole in my pocket.  I think it cost somewhere around three dollars which was the equivalent of three or four Hot Wheels in those days.

I'd only heard the first part of the hit on Bandstand so the rest of the album was a revelation to me.  I don't remember my thoughts at the time about the orgasmic section in Whole Lotta Love but it was love at first listen for the transition between Heartbreaker and Living Loving Maid.  I remember being told to turn it down and telling my mom that I wanted a hair style like John Bonham's on the album cover.  I've had long hair in my life but never quite that long.  I got my hair cut short a week before SF shut down so it'll take a might long confinement for it to grow out like Bonzo's.

 
10.alb  Led Zeppelin II - Led Zeppelin

This was the first album I ever bought.  I got it at the Treasure Island store on South 27th Street in Milwaukee.  Treasure Island had a grocery store at the back of the department store so my sister and I got to hang out while my parents shopped for food.   I usually occupied myself in the toy or sporting goods aisles but I'd heard Whole Lotta Love that morning on American Bandstand and thought it sounded cool.  Billboard shows Whole Lotta Love peaked on the US charts on January 30, 1970 which fits the timeline because I probably would have had some Christmas money burning a hole in my pocket.  I think it cost somewhere around three dollars which was the equivalent of three or four Hot Wheels in those days.

I'd only heard the first part of the hit on Bandstand so the rest of the album was a revelation to me.  I don't remember my thoughts at the time about the orgasmic section in Whole Lotta Love but it was love at first listen for the transition between Heartbreaker and Living Loving Maid.  I remember being told to turn it down and telling my mom that I wanted a hair style like John Bonham's on the album cover.  I've had long hair in my life but never quite that long.  I got my hair cut short a week before SF shut down so it'll take a might long confinement for it to grow out like Bonzo's.
awwww, maaaan - if my favorite album of the 60s didnt work as my 15yo pick, i woulda took this. oddly, i have a story about it.

we moved from MetroBoston out to Salem when i was 12. everybody where i'd grown up was kinda po' (i like the old joke about being so broke we couldnt afford the last 2 letters). i had been in fancy old houses cuz my whole fam had been sponsored over piecemeal to be domestics for rich folk, but that seemed unreal, like history or sumn. Salem had old rich AND nouveau riche among the po'folk.

I was not unused to having utilitarian friends. we had one kid could barely speak without drooling but we pal'd up w him every time a Stones record came out cuz he could decipher what Jagger was singing. and there was this kid named Ratto, son of a guy who ran a huge construction company, who you knew you were popular if he cozied up to you cuz Ratboy chased you 'round if he thought you could help him matter w the other kids. he invites me over to the house after the White Album came out because his old man had a tape deck where you could actually play Revolution #9 BACKWARDS. plus he said we could have booze. i go over to this hood i never been and this is a brand new 10,000 sq ft house with glass everywhere and a pool and ####. his folks had left him there alone.

he takes me into his dad's sound room. ya, frikkin sound room - tens of 1000s of dollars in equipment & soundproofing. leaves me there - comes back w mixed frikkin drinks. i was used to pouring a little each of parents' alcohol bottles into a Listerine bottle and takin it like medicine to get loaded without getting caught, and Ratboy's got martinis workin'. first, he plays me Beethoven's 9th and it sounded like i imagine those Japanese orchestras with 10,000person choruses do, then the real poop on the Beatles #9. aMAZing. we drink martoonis til we puke and i never wanna go again cuz this cat is soooo squirrely.

the next yr he says i gottagottagotta come over and hear sumn. he hounds me til i comply. now i hadnt liked what little i heard of Zep1, so i wasnt even paying attention, nm looking fwd to ZepII comin out. Ratboy gets us drinks and takes LZ2 out like its the Maltese Falcon and puts it on full blast, holy cripes, it's what i like to call "dark night of the soul" music, stuff thats too weird or youre too loaded or youre riding somewhere that feels like sumn's gonna go way wrong or whatever. but this was darknightofthesoul all on its own, like there hadda be altars & robes & #### in the room they recorded it in. even "Thank You" - one of the most beautiful rock love songs ever - creeped me out cuz i felt they was just playing it to get young girls to put on their altar and do awful things to. sounded as good as any record i heard before or since left but i got outta there before i puked and never hung w Ratboy again. Sure enough, any girls who listened to LedZep were fanatic about it and a smart fella notices that kinda  devil-woman #### in Witch City. nufced

 
Beastie Boys - Licensed to Ill (age 10 album)

Listened to this constantly as a kid. Could take some hair metal here but I went back and listened to the Poison and Cinderella albums that year and I really only remember the hits. I can still recite almost every single lyric on Licensed to Ill though.

 
Fast forward about a year later. Same girl, we are still in drumline together.  We had to go over to her house and practice something.   She had an older brother in HS and he had a kickass drumset so we looked in the room that was in.   He was into metal, and hanging on the wall was the poster for this album and I think the one before it.   I was just getting into more horror stuff, so I thought it was damn near the coolest thing I had ever seen.   Pretty sure at this point I had seen the video for the main single from the album, but that isn't for sure.   Anyway, she ended up making a tape for me of the album and a couple other songs and I was hooked - the dueling guitars, that voice, and that distinct snap of Harris' bass.   Not overly metal-y,  and was a nice springboard for the stuff I was starting to dabble in like Def Leppard, Dokken, etc..  but this was for sure the beginning of the metal phase.    

Round 4/10 year album:  Iron Maiden - Somewhere In Time 

Caught Somewhere in Time

Sea of Madness

 
I will echo what others have posted - these next 2 to 4 picks are going to be rough.   That hits the whirlwind of HS/college, ladies, concerts, exploring stuff on your own.   I need to really stop and think about what was the most influential songs and albums for me during that time period.   I mean, I am guessing from my username that one of those will be easy to narrow down.  

 
Born to be Wild was in the spin class I took today. Figured a lot of happy people in here after hearing that

 
The Police?
4.xx  10 Year-Old Album - The Police - Synchronicity

This was the first cassette I ever owned, played in my walkman constantly. I started tuning out the parents at age ten without even knowing I was doing so, and therefore, changed an entire family dynamic through technology. Suffer the Sony corporation, guys. Anyway, this was purchased on the strength of "Every Breath I Take" and "King Of Pain," which were radio mainstays at the time.

Thriller comes in a close second here. I remember that album was so big I walked down the street to pay a dollar for the lyric sheet from a friend. I owned the cassette version that simply came with Jackson's picture on the front.
 
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10 year old album:  Glass Houses - Billy Joel (1980)

It’s Still Rock and Roll To Me was one of my favorite songs as a kid.  The idea that he sang both sides of a conversation was just so cool to me.  You May Be Right and Don’t Ask Me Why are just classics.  Great, fun album.
One of favorites from this album is "C'était Toi (You Were the One)".  Since I took French, I knew just how difficult to have lyrics in two languages that both scanned and meant the exact same thing.  Very impressive.

 
10 year old album:  Glass Houses - Billy Joel (1980)

It’s Still Rock and Roll To Me was one of my favorite songs as a kid.  The idea that he sang both sides of a conversation was just so cool to me.  You May Be Right and Don’t Ask Me Why are just classics.  Great, fun album.
Always liked All For Leyna from the album. Upon listening again, the beginning actually sounds a bit like a slower version of Bon Jovi’s “Runaway”

 
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15 year old song:  Hungry Like the Wolf - Duran Duran

Like most people my age, MTV was a HUGE influence on my musical choices, rightly or wrongly. I was a young teen/tween when they first hit the airwaves, and watched MTV more than every other channel combined for a 3-5 year period. There was about 1,000 songs I could have chosen to represent this era of music and time in my life but I'll go with Simon and the Taylor brothers here. I wore out the Rio cassette in my Walkman (or more likely a cheaper knockoff version of the Walkman) while I did my chores around the house or otherwise. I could have chosen Rio as my 15 year old album but have something else in mind that represents the era in my life for other reasons.

 
rd.5 - 15 years old song:

Come Out You Black And Tans

yeah, a lot was happening with my musical tastes at this time, and there are 100 different directions i could go - but this was the year my Irish granpa passed away at the age of 84, two days before Thanksgiving.  

he was a tough lil' sum##### - 5'5", 140 lbs of pure piss and vinegar. drank and smoked up 'til the day he finally passed - with a full head of salt n' pepper hair, and one foot missing from the diabetes which did him in for good. 

was born in 1900, and was forced to flee County Clare after the Easter uprising of 1916 - he had a big family, and according to him, 2 brothers were hanged, and at least 5 (by his recollection) cousins were executed, as well.  

he made his way back to Clare, and was put on a "coffin ship" (dubbed as such due to the deaths incurred on the voyage over) to Americay within weeks. 

landed in NY harbor at the age of 16 - no family with him, and the Ellis Island folks stripped him of the "O" in his last name (O'Dowd was shortened to plain Dowd), and off he went. 

had one contact over here, an older cousin, who snuck him in to the basement of his building on 9th Ave to sleep ... he would get scraps of food, some water - but basically holed up there 'til he could find some work. 

he kicked around with some day labor (brick laying, mostly), before landing a gig at the Domino sugar factory in Brooklyn, circa 1920ish. 

he worked there for his next 45 years, never missing a day's work.   forced vacation once a year, but the old man never called in sick, he showed the #### up.    

met up with the lovely Maureen Coffey a short time later, and they were married in 1925. 

my mom was born in '33, their second child, as her brother was born in '30.  my granma passed away during WWII, leaving him two kids he was ill-equipped to care for or love. 

he was a hard drinker, and mom told me he was as nasty as could be at times.  so she became the "Ma" of the family, taking care of both guys - was a tough life for her. Paddy was no picnic. 

when my mom was dating my Italian father, gramps had a #### fit, telling her no way in hell would he walk her down the aisle if she was marrying some "guinea bastid". he forbade her to say yes to the marriage proposal, but, here we are.  the old man caved.  

this was considered a mixed marriage, and mom told me the Irish and Italians never once exchanged greetings or pleasantries at the service or reception.   they might as well have drawn a line down the middle. 

so, why honor such miserable old curmudgeon?

because after he finally retired, he holed up in a quasi senior housing apartment, and i would make the visit to see him every Saturday with my mom. 

she would cash whatever checks arrived for him (pension, SS, etc) and do his shopping - would make sure his clothes were laundered, tidied up the place, and cooked him his Saturday supper. 

we always bought him four staples: smoked cali butt ham, carton of Lucky's, potatoes, and his whiskey.  

my mom was a pretty tough and stern woman, and, after getting to know gramps i could see why.  hard to imagine any love being in her home after her mom passed - but, yet, there she was, calling him "Daddy", and making sure he was looked after.  it was a side of her i never got to see - a loving, nurturing side - it was the main reason i always volunteered to accompany her ... i needed to know that she was more than the harsh head of the household we lived with the rest of the week.   i empathized with her, and that helped me understand her better as our lives wore on.

while mom was busy taking care of biz, i would sit with him, and he would crack a Rheingold and pour a tall glass of Bushmills - Lucky Strike always dangling. 

he would regale me with tales of "home", about how him and his friends would constantly be in trouble with the nuns and clergy ... tales of hiking the Cliffs of Mohr, of his first ever girlfriend ... how he would horse back ride to Cork with his cousins - he had a glint when he spoke of all that, and he would always preface every sentence directed at me with my name. 

i could see that life wore him down, and the events of '16 hatdened him to pure survival mode - i asked him why he never took a day off, and he told me "if you can get out of bed, you can sure as #### go to work!" in that molasses thick brogue of his ... and the "F" word was always different, a variance predicated on how much he was drinking - it would be "fook" or "foog" or "farg" at any given time ... and it ALWAYS got liberal use when talking about the English.  

he had to go back to Ireland once, shortly after the Black n' Tans came over to trouble the Republicans ... he told me of being warned not to be out on the streets after sundown, as per their edict - and how he would have to cut through a graveyard a few times as they gave chase. he was hassled and beaten a few times, but made it back here in one piece. 

read about those pr1cks Here.

one of the last times i did get to see him before he went into the hospital he had been beaten up pretty severely ... 84 yrs old at the time, and he was followed home by some punks who rolled his ### out on 10th Ave. 

his face looked like 5 lbs of raw chop meat, save for where the blood was still caked.  both eyes blackened, probably had a concussion, but refused to go seek medical help ... he told my mom all he needed was a few highballs and a good home cooked meal.  

he sat that day and sang this tune, telling me the bastids who jumped him were ####### compared to what the English were like - the ol' man actually wanted to go out looking for them ... he was a piece of work. 

so he sat and drank and smoked and sang - had mom working the record player because he wanted me to stay sitting with him.  

he told me that afternoon to take care of "Joany girl" (my mom), and to continue to work hard in school so i'd have a better life than they ever could have ... he told me how proud of me he was, and how he'd tell "Jackie Robinson" (his neighbor in the next apartment who he spent most of his time with, "Jackie" called gramps "the Leprechaun") how smart and talented his grandson was.

mom wouldn't take us to see him in the hospital, and she forbade us to go on our own ... said he was either too ornery or too drugged up (they amputated his foot a couple weeks before he passed).

but i bucked her wishes ... saw him two days before he died - he was so happy to see me, said he woulda done a jig " if the fargin' bastids hadn't cut his foogin' leg off!"   

he told me the American dream was all mine to pursue, and to never be afraid of any obstacles ... he gave me a hug, and asked if i remembered the Wolfe Tones song ... of course i did. 

he belted the chorus out, laughed a bit, then told me to leave before Joany girl showed up - told me he loved me - those were the last words i ever heard from him. 

 

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