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5-10-15-20 "Music of Our Lives" Draft - Round 14 (4 Viewers)

20 Yr Old Album: Yessongs - Yes

I turned 20 in early 1978 and it was another "big change" year for me.  I finished out my sophomore year at Miami of Ohio, but had decided to no longer pursue a degree in architecture.  I was disappointed in the program and the professors.  It was not a structural engineering degree, it was a five year design program that still required further education to become a real architect.  After Christmas of 1977 I dropped my architecture classes (but continued with the rest of them). 

I didn't know what to do with myself and was pretty depressed.    I had a lot of time on my hands so I occupied myself by way-stepping up my pot and beer consumption, and making my hallucinogenic experiences a 2-3 times a week thing as opposed to occasionally.   Our "dorm room" was actually re-purposed rooms in the campus hospital and was located in the center of campus right across from the Res.  We were the hangout for all of our friends who were looking to kill time in-between classes instead of studying or tramping all the way to their dorm.

Whatever you wanted was there in front of you, and at least several people were hanging out/partying in our room from 9am - until well after midnight.  We were playing bong Euchre, giving gratuity one hits - trading beers for blotter/microdot/mushrooms.  I stayed high and somehow maintained a 3.3 grade point thanks to my limited class schedule.   

The music was everything you would expect from 18-20 yr olds in the Midwest:  almost all early-mid 70s rock ...Led Zepplin, Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull, Rolling Stones, Steely Dan, Neil Young, Styx  :bag:  (not my album), Traffic, Eagles :bag: , Queen, The Who, Black Sabbath, Elton John, Fleetwood Mac, David Bowie, and I turned a lot people into lifetime Todd fans as well.  

When I got back home that summer, I was still smoking a lot of pot.  I worked a lot at the golf course, but when I wasn't working or out carousing, I was in my room getting high with my little pinch-hitter and blowing it out the window.  They are great, but not for powder ...I think I still have scars in the back of my throat.  I can't count the number of times my mom found my pot and flushed it but didn't tell my dad about it.  

While maintaining my stonedness in my room, I listened to the Yessongs album over and over.  It's great background music and it just seems to flow over you.  I listened to that album significantly more than just about anything else in that time.  Living at home, working and to college - I didn't have a lot of time on my hands, but when I did, my parents were agreeable to letting me paint one of the Roger Dean scenes that were on the album on my bedroom wall.  I can't even remember how long it took.  I posted this a couple of years ago here, so apologies for the repeat.  

note:  pretty sweet bicentennial red/white/& blue carpeting too.   :unsure:   

 
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The O.C. is one of those shows that defines the narrow generation of people born in the mid-late 80s or very early 90s.  The movie American Pie is right in that same sweet spot.  If someone says they love The O.C., you can pinpoint their age within like 5 years without knowing anything else about them.

I loved The O.C.
My wife and I didn't miss an episode.  Ages 33-36 at the time. 

Admittedly, we also watched every episode of 90210 and Melrose Place.  :lmao:

 
20 year old song - The Cure - Just like Heaven

Unfortunately 20yo JML was pretty insufferable. Breaking up with the latest love of his life desperately wanting independence without the emotional skills to deal with it. This song got me through some tough times. I hadnt been a big Cure fan before or after, they were in that i like some of their stuff zone. This song however is perfection. 

Nuff said
Right there with you at 20, except this song was out when I was 18ish and still in mad love with my high school gf.  She moved to Denver for her Sr. year.  I had graduated and went into the Army (Reserves) so after basic I waited for her to start college and flew to Denver to stay with her for about a month during the summer.  Drove her to work and wore Kiss Me cassette out. 

Of course it didn't end well and in college 1989ish I wore out this song for different reasons.

Lovesong - The Cure

Ugggg.  I still do like this song though...

 
Right there with you at 20, except this song was out when I was 18ish and still in mad love with my high school gf.  She moved to Denver for her Sr. year.  I had graduated and went into the Army (Reserves) so after basic I waited for her to start college and flew to Denver to stay with her for about a month during the summer.  Drove her to work and wore Kiss Me cassette out. 

Of course it didn't end well and in college 1989ish I wore out this song for different reasons.

Lovesong - The Cure

Ugggg.  I still do like this song though...
Disintegration fell between my ages for this draft (22), otherwise it would've been an obvious album choice for me.

But my 20 year old album is a no-brainer.

 
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W.t.f.

I'm going to leave that there...because wtf is my phone doing.

This is a lot tougher than I expected. I was all over the place my first couple years of college...getting weird and esoteric and diving into older stuff I had missed or never heard, while also listening to new stuff. Basically listening to everything...but I don't remember being all over any one song or another.

Will give it some more thought and think about any mixtapes I made back then.

 
Age 20 song:  New Order - Bizarre Love Triangle

The Cure, New Order and tomorrow's band ruled my sophomore year of college.  I would be happy with songs from any of them including this one. 

This song is one of their best, especially the extended remix.......

Touring in the fall. Will be seeing them in Minneapolis in September if COVID-19 doesn't change plans (suspect it will).  And Peter Hook has been playing some great shows, both New Order and Joy Division.  

 
While maintaining my stonedness in my room, I listened to the Yessongs album over and over.  It's great background music and it just seems to flow over you.  I listened to that album significantly more than just about anything else in that time.  Living at home, working and to college - I didn't have a lot of time on my hands, but when I did, my parents were agreeable to letting me paint one of the Roger Dean scenes that were on the album on my bedroom wall.  I can't even remember how long it took.  I posted this a couple of years ago here, so apologies for the repeat.  
That's really cool man :thumbup:

 
Song at 20 years: The Velvet Underground “Stephanie Says”

So In 1985 The Velvet Underground released an album of previously unreleased material, VU. I had only become a Lou Reed fan a few months earlier so I eagerly bought this and found it to be filled with great stuff, particularly “Stephanie Says”, which I played over and over. (Still do). Reed was such a ####### genius. 

 
These time frames are really ####### with me as I try to remember back.  Just like the last ones, this 20 year old time seems to be in a odd time for songs.  After further thought, I was late to the party for RH, so they won't be making an appearance in the 20s still.  But speaking of late to the party, this is what stood out as I thought about it more.  The album came out a few years earlier, but for some reason I wasn't on it, then I heard a couple songs and I was hooked.   Again, the theme of transitions and morphing of my music tastes - here blending that metal/rap vibe.   Obviously the whole album is great, but for whatever reason is this the song that I bothered to learn the lyrics to ( a rarity for me), and I remember singing this during the summer job.  

Round 7?/20 year old song:  Rage Against the Machine- Know Your Enemy 

Yes, I know my enemies!
They're the teachers who taught me to fight me!
Compromise! Conformity! Assimilation! Submission!
Ignorance! Hypocrisy! Brutality! The elite!
All of which are American dreams!


 
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20 Year Old Song:  Space Oddity - David Bowie

In 1990, the likes of Milli Vanilli, Vanilla Ice and Vanilla Michael Bolton dominated the charts, so I started listening to classic rock pretty heavily.  I've already talked about my fascination with space, and I have an affinity toward songs that make good use of stereo (seriously - if you haven't listened to this song with a good set of headphones, you really haven't heard it).  This is just one of my favorite songs of all time - some might even call it....stellar.

 
simey said:
I don't think listening to the Eagles is shameful, which is why I told Binky to get that bag off his head. 
I got into it with somebody in a draft here when I picked a Don Henley song as a guilty pleasure   Who knew the Eagles would be such a lightning rod :shrug:

I'm waiting for your big turn to Bluegrass.

 
20 yrs. old album

Misfits - Legacy of Brutality

nothing came close during that insane summer ... this was the main soundtrack to every waking moment - it wasn't all that i listened to, but it was damn near close. 

outta Lodi, N.J. they came, fronted by Glenn Danzig, and his love of the schlockiest schlock from the bottom of the D movie horror/sci-fi schlock bins of the 50s and 60s. 

camp and horror and cheez and 80 ft spiders and Marilyn and serial killers and blood sucking she devils and JFK and hell hounds and zombies ... for starters. they perfected this schtick, and created the horror punk genre in doing so. Danzig crafted the perfect frontman pose of "Evil Elvis", crooning over the macabre backdrop, borrowing liberally from Morrison, as well - Glenn paid homage to his heroes, and has an amazing set of pipes. case closed.

the Cramps are right there with 'em, but the 'Fits rocked it harder and faster - the Cramps own Psychobilly - the Misfits own horror punk. the Damned? ehhh, by the time they did embrace the darker themes they had morphed to Goth-lite.  Vanian may have adopted the Dracula look early on, but they were straight up pogo punk - so there ya go. 

we caught up to the 'Fits and became diehard fans 'round '84 or so, but this summer of '89 was gonna be all about this album.

they enjoyed a bit of a career bump due to Metallica paying such homage to them, and citing them as such a heavy influence.  this led to more pressings of previously released material, and for "real" Misfits fans to chest thump a bit ("Metallica? P'shaw ... we knew the 'Fits waaayyyy back in like, '84, man 😆) previously unreleased stuff and originals started to become collector's items, and pricey as ####.  it was mind bottling seeing their live album "Night of the Living Dead" going for well over $100. 

i had a few hoovers who fancied themselves musicians, and we'd plug n' play in my basement level flat - shiity lil' Gorilla practice amps, skeletal drum kit ... and my buddy Dean -  who was full on adopting a veal like transformation into the great Danzig, himself.  no ####, though ... kid could sing. 

so when i wasn't holed up at the lab, or noodling Kris to kingdom come, i'd be entertaining this lot, along with whoever else came in dragged on the bottom of my boots.  and the powder was flowing like crazy.  it had to be ... if the Exploited were pure glue music, the 'Fits were a perfect match for the snow - and we were not very good at hammering the tunes out - look, they weren't doing anything so ground breaking, except for their ambiance- the songs were rudimentary enough, but we were literally just pounding along to the disc or album. 

i was on the bass, my buddy Ray on guitar (kid could actually play), and Kroop on drums - Dean taking the vocals.  i soon learned that the more we carried on the cacophony the more coke fiendz we'd chase out the apartment ... it was a win/win. 

Kris and her crew loved it, though ... she booked us a slot at the high school she had graduated from a couple years prior ... she had a friend for everyone in the "band" - and they'd sit and actually encourage us to keep going - ####in' nuts - and none of 'em were getting high, just drinking a bit ... dunno how the hell they coulda subjected themselves to this #### on a semi-nightly basis, but - there they were.  

the Misfits had two proper album releases by this time: their '82 debut "Walk Aming Us", and "Earth A.D./Wolfs Blood" the following year ... the latter created the hardcore/thrash genre, don't let anyone ever tell ya differently. 

the album i chose, "Legacy of Brutality" (or, "Leg o' Bru") was a comp platter, culled from their earlier self produced and released EPs and singles, etc.  Danzig was quite the renaissance man - writing and singing and producing and designing all the art work and booking all the gigs ... best of all was his defacto logo design  one of the most iconic and recognizable of all time - this was his baby. he also created the "Fiend Club", which was a grownup version of a group fanclub, so to speak ... he took care of all the mailings and stuffed every envelope/package himself. 

we were as loyal a bunch of devotees that ever troubled daylight - this was our summer, fueled by coke and Danzig and Jerry and Robo and Googy and Doyle and Bobby ... and the tunes still thrill to this day - 

Some Kinda Hate "the maggots in the iron lung won't copulate"

Spinal Remains "i wanna savage/your spinal remains/i wanna saaah-vidge/baby, your spinal remains/in chains"

Hybrid Moments  "if you're gonna scream/scream with me/moments like this never last/when new creatures rape your face/hybrids open up the door ..."

Bullet  Danzig was fascinated with the consiracy theories swirling about the assasination - "Texas is so nervous when your husband is dead/Texas is so nervous when you pick up his head/Texas is the reason/that the President's dead"

Who Killed Marilyn?  Glenn adores her, he grew up worshipping Marilyn - this tune fingers everybody "ya think it was an overdose?/or could it have been the Pack?/could it have been the KENNEDYS?/or was it LAPD?" ... further on: "5:25/August fifth/nineteen sixty two/make it seem like suicide/make it seem like suicide/make it seem like suicide/MAKE IT SEEM LIKE SUICIDE!/but it ain't a mystery/baby, not to me"

Where Eagles Dare  sadly used in a liquor advert (Sailor Jerry rum?) a few years back - "i ain't no gotdamn sonofa#####/you better think about it baybayyy"

Halloween  "this day, anything goes/murdered bodies hangin' from poles" that laugh at the end, tho 🖤

American Nightmare  Evil Elvis extraordinaire - man, did he turn it up on this one ... damn - his look at serial killers: "hot cherry on a Friday night/and the sweat drips down my spine/i put an axe in my baby's head/i'm gonna end up doing time/ ... but she looks so good in red/American Nightmare running scared"

such an important and influential act, and Danzig is one of the most iconic personalities we've ever seen - they/he deserve a ton more love than they've been tossed.  

epilogue - showed up for the gig at Kris's alma mater and backed out.  Ray and Kroop were too wired/drunk.  they wanted to try, i pulled the plug ... think i "punked out", ironically enough 🤓

Dean passed a few years ago ... he knocked around various vocal gigs, even getting on the short list to replace Danzig on vocals when the legal battles finally cleared up, and Jerry Only was able to use the band name again (Jerry and Glenn fought in court over this for a decade).  the 90s era stuff sans Glenn was brutal. i never partook.  they shoulda never resurrected the Ghost, literally. 

Dean had an arrhythmia that always troubled him - he also was stricken with kidney failure.  was a great guy to know, easily the most jovial and friendly of the lot.  miss him a great deal. 

Ray moved out to the Island and became a fireman ... Kroop married into a wealthy Colombian family, and runs his own construction biz down central Jersey.  

💀💀💀

 
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Age 20 album: Neil Young - Decade

My first real introduction to Neil was during those aforementioned late nights zoning out to Traffic, as well as some other bands that will likely be represented going forward. Most greatest hits albums are a bit lacking and vacuous, but this six-sided collection was a dream come true for a new entrant to Neil's material. Too many songs to name as personal favorites, but I always like to cite "The Loner" as one of his more unheralded, lesser played gems.

 
I got into it with somebody in a draft here when I picked a Don Henley song as a guilty pleasure   Who knew the Eagles would be such a lightning rod :shrug:
I don't care if Binky likes or hates the Eagles. I was playfully telling him to get the bag off his head, cause I don't think there is anything shameful about listening to the Eagles, and I had taken them earlier at 10 years old, so it was fun to give him a <_< . The end.

 
I thought that was reserved for Rush.
I think Rush is more hated but I constantly see Eagles bashing going on as well. I like Rush in certain moods (mostly for running) but I can see why they would get hated on. I honestly don’t get the Eagles hate. Maybe it stems from The Big Lebowski?

 
Age 20 album:

In the months before and after turning 20, I was hearing more new songs that I liked on the radio than I had in many years. One example, "Things Can Only Get Better by Howard Jones came along at just the right time in my life to speak the encouragement I didn't realize I needed, and there was one song above the rest that really seized me by the ears: Something About You by Level 42.  Having glossed over most jazz/funk music up until then, their sound was unlike anything I had ever known before.  I rushed out and bought the album it came from, World Machine. It contained several other tracks I liked, but more importantly, it introduced that band in my standard rotation of songs for the next decade; even as the band fell out of the spotlight, I continued picking up their new (and prior) material and was always able to find at least 2-3 'deep' cuts that tickled my ears. 

 
Age 20 Album-  From Here to Infirmary by Alkaline Trio 

I mentioned all the partying we did in my early 20s but there was also a fog of depression and malaise. That sense of being unsure about where I was headed, where I should be headed, what kind of life I wanted, etc. Alkaline Trio tapped into that darkness. While this isn't their best album or even the album I listened to the most, it's the one that came out nearest me turning 20 and is a stand in for their whole catalog. Also a play on one of my favorite books and movies.

Mr. Chainsaw

 
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Age 20 Album - Full Moon Fever - Tom Petty

By 20 years old I was already a huge Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers' fan for many years. My first experience being when my Uncle John (RIP) gave me his first two records on vinyl around 1980 or so. After that he arguably took advantage of the MTV video revolution better than any other artist and developed into a full blown Rock Star. Full Moon Fever is not my favorite Petty album - heck it probably barely cracks the top 10 but it's still a great record and was ubiquitous during my junior year of college right after I turned 20. With this record he went from Rock Star to Super Star worthy of collaborating with an ex-Beatle and poet Robert Zimmerman. It's a shame he put out this record sans Heartbreakers - although most of them play on it especially Mike Campbell, but maybe he was trying to make some point. I gave this album a spin last night (well actually streamed it on Spotify but that doesn't sound as cool) and I probably underrate it based on it's popularity. It's pretty fantastic.

"There was a girl I knew. She said she cared about me. She tried to make my world, the way she thought it should be."

Love is a Long Road

 
Age 20 Album

Pearl Jam- Yield

At this point in my life, I was a full blown punk rock hardcore kid. But I never gave up on Pearl Jam even though they were neither, punk or hardcore. 

Yield is an incredible album that features 5 songs that will feature prominently in any live show to this day. 

 
I think Rush is more hated but I constantly see Eagles bashing going on as well. I like Rush in certain moods (mostly for running) but I can see why they would get hated on. I honestly don’t get the Eagles hate. Maybe it stems from The Big Lebowski?
I think it's because they get played/lumped in with classic rock these days and they just don't really fit there IMO. A typical classic rock playlist, may go Zeppelin > Beatles > Eagles > Pink Floyd or something and they're the softest, least inventive, poppiest etc... in that group by a mile. I liked them enough growing up, my dad had the greatest hits album like everyone else in the world but I've grown a pretty healthy hate for them over the years. It probably doesn't help that it's the same few songs from them that everyone hears. I think probably if you went deeper into their catalogue and classified them as classic country or something, maybe there isn't the hate? I don't know, just spitballing.

 
I think it's because they get played/lumped in with classic rock these days and they just don't really fit there IMO. A typical classic rock playlist, may go Zeppelin > Beatles > Eagles > Pink Floyd or something and they're the softest, least inventive, poppiest etc... in that group by a mile. I liked them enough growing up, my dad had the greatest hits album like everyone else in the world but I've grown a pretty healthy hate for them over the years. It probably doesn't help that it's the same few songs from them that everyone hears. I think probably if you went deeper into their catalogue and classified them as classic country or something, maybe there isn't the hate? I don't know, just spitballing.
I'm not a huge fan or anything  - not sure they'd crack my top 100 bands/artist even - but I'll listen to them once in a while.

They've had a few really good records and they have some good musicians. But I agree they aren't offering anything groundbreaking or anything that will blow you away - but I don't see why anyone would actively hate them. They're pretty harmless.

I also don't really listen to the radio other than sports talk - when I play music it's what I choose from Spotify so I guess I can understand it if the same songs get overplayed on classic rock stations.

 
Album at 20 -Lone Justice 

Maria McKee was a local girl and I was a huge fan. I went and saw them 4 times, all at small venues. I loved her, loved the band. Liked her solo stuff ever since but that first album of Lone Justice with “Sweet Sweet Baby Mine”, “Soap, Soup and Salvation”, and the cover of Tom Petty’s “Ways to be Wicked”- it will always have a special place in my heart.

 
20.s  Working Girl  - Spooner

College is an opportunity to reinvent yourself.  Very few people knew who you were in high school.  It's still an insular environment but that doesn't matter as much when you're out on your own for the first time.  When I was 20, I was wearing clothes from thrift stores rather than the ones I got from my parents for Christmas.  I got my hair cut short by a punky college girl in her dorm room.  And it was when I developed my lifelong love for going to see bands in small clubs.

I'd been to concerts growing in Milwaukee but they were always at large venues.  Fortunately Wisconsin was an 18 state at the time so I could start going to bars and clubs shortly after arriving in Madison.  Spooner was _the_ Madison band during my college years and I saw them play out a lot.  They put on a good tight show and had a large following.  I discovered how much fun it was to stand in the crush in front of the stage.  It led me to start going to see other new bands when they made their local tour stop at Merlyn's on State Street.

Spooner was made up of older guys who were more Power Pop than trendier Punk or New Wave bands.  They never broke out of the small Midwestern club scene but drummer Butch Vig and singer Doug Erikson eventually hit it big as members of Garbage.  Working Girl was one of my favorite Spooner songs; I still get a shiver up my spine when the bridge kicks into the last chorus.
i like the way you pick...

 
I think it's because they get played/lumped in with classic rock these days and they just don't really fit there IMO. A typical classic rock playlist, may go Zeppelin > Beatles > Eagles > Pink Floyd or something and they're the softest, least inventive, poppiest etc... in that group by a mile. I liked them enough growing up, my dad had the greatest hits album like everyone else in the world but I've grown a pretty healthy hate for them over the years. It probably doesn't help that it's the same few songs from them that everyone hears. I think probably if you went deeper into their catalogue and classified them as classic country or something, maybe there isn't the hate? I don't know, just spitballing.
A lot of American Classic Rock could probably fall under Classic Country.

 
Age 20 song:  New Order - Bizarre Love Triangle

The Cure, New Order and tomorrow's band ruled my sophomore year of college.  I would be happy with songs from any of them including this one. 

This song is one of their best, especially the extended remix.......

Touring in the fall. Will be seeing them in Minneapolis in September if COVID-19 doesn't change plans (suspect it will).  And Peter Hook has been playing some great shows, both New Order and Joy Division.  
My Mary loved to dance. So did i and we were good together on the floor, but even once a week in the clubs was too much for me and the weekend nights she loved so much for the mad crowds were the juicy-game nights at the poker tables where i was making a living. Didn't like her going to the clubs w her besties, because she had a pretty outrageous history & rep from her mud-wrestling days. So our compromise was that she go to a gay disco when she wanted to dance. Scary Mary had to turn that around on me, of course, so the deal became that, if i didnt take her out on a weekend nite, I had to go to the gay disco for our dancing, too. I dont know if BLT was a big gay hit, but i remember - mostly due due to the martial beat (which my Teutonic sweetie especially loved) - dancing to it a lot in this disco.

 
20 Yr Old Album: Yessongs - Yes

I turned 20 in early 1978 and it was another "big change" year for me.  I finished out my sophomore year at Miami of Ohio, but had decided to no longer pursue a degree in architecture.  I was disappointed in the program and the professors.  It was not a structural engineering degree, it was a five year design program that still required further education to become a real architect.  After Christmas of 1977 I dropped my architecture classes (but continued with the rest of them). 

I didn't know what to do with myself and was pretty depressed.    I had a lot of time on my hands so I occupied myself by way-stepping up my pot and beer consumption, and making my hallucinogenic experiences a 2-3 times a week thing as opposed to occasionally.   Our "dorm room" was actually re-purposed rooms in the campus hospital and was located in the center of campus right across from the Res.  We were the hangout for all of our friends who were looking to kill time in-between classes instead of studying or tramping all the way to their dorm.

Whatever you wanted was there in front of you, and at least several people were hanging out/partying in our room from 9am - until well after midnight.  We were playing bong Euchre, giving gratuity one hits - trading beers for blotter/microdot/mushrooms.  I stayed high and somehow maintained a 3.3 grade point thanks to my limited class schedule.   

The music was everything you would expect from 18-20 yr olds in the Midwest:  almost all early-mid 70s rock ...Led Zepplin, Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull, Rolling Stones, Steely Dan, Neil Young, Styx  :bag:  (not my album), Traffic, Eagles :bag: , Queen, The Who, Black Sabbath, Elton John, Fleetwood Mac, David Bowie, and I turned a lot people into lifetime Todd fans as well.  

When I got back home that summer, I was still smoking a lot of pot.  I worked a lot at the golf course, but when I wasn't working or out carousing, I was in my room getting high with my little pinch-hitter and blowing it out the window.  They are great, but not for powder ...I think I still have scars in the back of my throat.  I can't count the number of times my mom found my pot and flushed it but didn't tell my dad about it.  

While maintaining my stonedness in my room, I listened to the Yessongs album over and over.  It's great background music and it just seems to flow over you.  I listened to that album significantly more than just about anything else in that time.  Living at home, working and to college - I didn't have a lot of time on my hands, but when I did, my parents were agreeable to letting me paint one of the Roger Dean scenes that were on the album on my bedroom wall.  I can't even remember how long it took.  I posted this a couple of years ago here, so apologies for the repeat.  

note:  pretty sweet bicentennial red/white/& blue carpeting too.   :unsure:   
tremendous stuff to have in one's head - no matter one's age. keeps one in a mood to argue with the gods, which is 2nd only to caring for others in the human domain (even if the gods arent actually real). complexity & pomposity eventually got the better of them but, once Steve Howe joined them, waiting for each new recording was a lust which almost matched that for other lovelies. and the proof of their abilities to replicate their complicated compositions live in Yessongs was the royal frosting.

i'm basically alone in my YesLove anymore because most oldfolk no longer have the patience and it is necessary for a real YesFan to HATE Rush and, whereas most in my generation did, most younger folk not only abide but enjoy those rancid knockoffs with NOTHING in common w Yes but riffs & and a squealy singer. i SPIT on them - oops i got pablum on my lapel.....NURSE!!

 
tremendous stuff to have in one's head - no matter one's age. keeps one in a mood to argue with the gods, which is 2nd only to caring for others in the human domain (even if the gods arent actually real). complexity & pomposity eventually got the better of them but, once Steve Howe joined them, waiting for each new recording was a lust which almost matched that for other lovelies. and the proof of their abilities to replicate their complicated compositions live in Yessongs was the royal frosting.

i'm basically alone in my YesLove anymore because most oldfolk no longer have the patience and it is necessary for a real YesFan to HATE Rush and, whereas most in my generation did, most younger folk not only abide but enjoy those rancid knockoffs with NOTHING in common w Yes but riffs & and a squealy singer. i SPIT on them - oops i got pablum on my lapel.....NURSE!!
though I find that I don't play their stuff much anymore, I still like Rush eh.  

I play Yes when I'm home by myself still - which is often during the day.  

 
W.t.f.

I'm going to leave that there...because wtf is my phone doing.

This is a lot tougher than I expected. I was all over the place my first couple years of college...getting weird and esoteric and diving into older stuff I had missed or never heard, while also listening to new stuff. Basically listening to everything...but I don't remember being all over any one song or another.

Will give it some more thought and think about any mixtapes I made back then.
Damn. I'm going from mental more than emotional memory here...really strange that this period of intense internal/selfish exploration didnt leave me with any clear cut singles that deeply resonated. Even looking back at albums and songs from that year...lots I liked, lots I could make a connection to the time with...but no resonance.

U2 with or without you...I liked ok and still do, but mostly I looked identical to Bono in the video (I did the pony first! Maybe..or at least long prior to seeing the video) so much so that people used to follow me around off-campus NYC taking my pic thinking I was him- some even after I'd duck into a subway. Because yeah- I'm sure Bono was riding the subway by himself back then.

Troublefunk..get small. I was on the college concert committee for a year or so- mostly so I could get free tickets to shows and hang backstage. Lots of great bands- they might be Giants, and troublefunk were the highlights for me. I had never really heard gogo before this, and I loved the rhythm and call and response immediately. Sweaty blast of a live show.

The gypsy kings.. bambaleo. was all over the dance clubs I went to at the time. Still puts me in that young/dumb/out for anything mindset.

But my official 20yo single is

Skyway ...the replacements 

I wasn't a big fan- respected them, but didn't really dig them. But this song connected that year and iirc was kind of a soft oulier on the album. Went on every mixed tape I made. That memory of what 20yo me liked is why it goes here...haven't really thought of it since. Still a nice tune.

 
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tremendous stuff to have in one's head - no matter one's age. keeps one in a mood to argue with the gods, which is 2nd only to caring for others in the human domain (even if the gods arent actually real). complexity & pomposity eventually got the better of them but, once Steve Howe joined them, waiting for each new recording was a lust which almost matched that for other lovelies. and the proof of their abilities to replicate their complicated compositions live in Yessongs was the royal frosting.

i'm basically alone in my YesLove anymore because most oldfolk no longer have the patience and it is necessary for a real YesFan to HATE Rush and, whereas most in my generation did, most younger folk not only abide but enjoy those rancid knockoffs with NOTHING in common w Yes but riffs & and a squealy singer. i SPIT on them - oops i got pablum on my lapel.....NURSE!!
I still listen to Yes fairly often, and like I said I don't hate Rush but I understand where that hate comes from. I actually find Rush listenable when I'm on the treadmill running but otherwise I don't seek them out.

I came to Yes long after the fact since I was too young to appreciate them in their heyday. When I saw them, they still played flawlessly but by that time it was Trevor Rabin and not Howe on guitar. I think I'm a bigger fan now at 51 than I ever have been though since I'm exploring things I "missed".

Indirectly Little Feat (I know your history with George) is another band I listen to more now than I ever have and I curse myself for ignoring them in the past.

 
Damn. I'm going from mental more than emotional memory here...really strange that this period of intense internal/selfish exploration didnt leave me with any clear cut singles that deeply resonated. Even looking back at albums and songs from that year...lots I liked, lots I could make a connection to the time with...but no resonance.

U2 with or without you...I liked ok and still do, but mostly I looked identical to Bono in the video (I did the pony first! Maybe..or at least long prior to seeing the video) so much so that people used to follow me around off-campus NYC taking my pic thinking I was him- some even after I'd duck into a subway. Because yeah- I'm sure Bono was riding the subway by himself back then.

Troublefunk..get small. I was on the college concert committee for a year or so- mostly so I could get free tickets to shows and hang backstage. Lots of great bands- they might be Giants, and troublefunk were the highlights for me. I had never really heard gogo before this, and I loved the rhythm and call and response immediately. Sweaty blast of a live show.

The gypsy kings.. bambaleo. was all over the dance clubs I went to at the time. Still puts me in that young/dumb/out for anything mindset.

But my official 20yo single is

Skyway ...the replacements 

I wasn't a big fan- respected them, but didn't really dig them. But this song connected that year and iirc was kind of a soft oulier on the album. Went on every mixed tape I made. That memory of what 20yo me liked is why it goes here...haven't really thought of it since. Still a nice tune.
so precisely when did your taste in music begin to suck?

 

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