Eephus
Footballguy
T-Pain is gainingNo phrase has followed "featuring" more often than "Nate Dogg."
T-Pain is gainingNo phrase has followed "featuring" more often than "Nate Dogg."
This is the first song I ever heard by them, and I instantly liked it.I am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
20.19 I Will Follow - U2 - 1980 - (1st song off first album)
I think 22 songs is plenty for the official mix but I'd encourage people to post links to the songs that just missed the cut.Are the last 2 rounds tomorrow or are we extending 5 rounds after that? If so, are they all wildcards?
Generally a good song but that funky background guitar sound diminishes it for me.I am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
SOD.I am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
20.19 I Will Follow - U2 - 1980 - (1st song off first album)
Kind of their signature sound though... do you not like U2 in general?I am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
Nineteen-eighty?!?I am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
I agree, kinda hard to like U2 but not like I Will FollowI am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
That squealing sound isn't their normal sound. I like U2 lots.I am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
You don't like Edge's guitar in I will follow, because it's somehow a different sound than the rest of their songs? Is that it?I am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
The foundation of U2's sound was pretty much established on side one of their first album. I don't think I Will Follow is all that typical but Twilight and Into the Heart contain elements that they've repeated and embellished for the last 30 years. The Eno/Lanois albums sound different but it's like looking at the same picture through a different lens.I am shifting Precious by The Pretenders to "Punk/Post Punk" and taking this for 1st song off 1st album:
Nothing like some early Sonic Youth to really tie things together with the Dokken and Wall of Voodoo
18
Sonic Youth - Star Power
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T4eXkGl8zo
alt/indie
may switch to ahead-of, still undecided on another pick
JZilla said:I miss these guys. This is judd zilla music in a nutshell. Happy me day.
20
Priestess - Lay Down
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAgECFjKTbo
Wannabe 80's
The Politics of Dancing was played in every dance club in LA every night.
Thank Heaven For Little Girls or Sugarfix were the two I used to listen to. Also a 7' with Free Cocaine on it. It's probably the most emblematic song the Dwarves ever cut. Personally, I don't really listen to them anymore. Sort of outgrew it.can't remember too much (I had something on vinyl way back then and hadn't really thought about them until now)... but had that garage/surf/punk vibe to them that I got from Miserlou. Similar to The Cramps, IIRC.I have heard some of their stuff but never really got into them. I dont own any of their CDs. Ill try them again though. Anything you suggest as a starting pointawesome.Im going to shuffle things around a little to make my mix better (for me at least)
I am going to throw back Back Street Girl as a cover song and instead draft
9.3 Mommys Little Monster, Social Distortion, Title Track
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7sUh-DX7I0
I am then going to draft my 18th rounder
18.17 Miserlou, Agent Orange, cover
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rkb8gVAEreI
Thanks for listening
you listen to any Dwarves, acer?
Who is most of you? I didn't see anyone say anything about The Politics of Dancing. I went to college in Greenville, NC in the 80s, and there were plenty of clubs there that played new wave, post-punk, etc. that people danced to.The Bolshoi fell? Oof. I think I have a different view of 80s dance than most you and the internet. But I lived it, dern it. The Politics of Dancing was played in every dance club in LA every night.
I don't know. I read quickly and felt like it was getting kicked back. Then I decided to google 80s dance. Landed on digital dreamdoor and was kind of perplexed. That list of theirs is less than half right from my experience, but honestly, I don't know simey. Maybe "we're" wrong thinking new wave etc., qualified as dance and there was a whole nother world I missed.Who is most of you? I didn't see anyone say anything about The Politics of Dancing. I went to college in Greenville, NC in the 80s, and there were plenty of clubs there that played new wave, post-punk, etc. that people danced to.The Bolshoi fell? Oof. I think I have a different view of 80s dance than most you and the internet. But I lived it, dern it. The Politics of Dancing was played in every dance club in LA every night.
NIce, never would have thought of that song, but loved it in the movie and what little i've heard it outside the movie.18.6 R&B/notnewJack -- The Busboys, The Boys are Back in Town
yeahyeahyeah... favorite scene in a great 80s comedy
I didn't hear new wave etc. in dance clubs that would play like Billy Ocean, but there were specific clubs/bars that played new wave, college rock, etc. that had a dance floor, and people danced to it. Premiums was one of those clubs. Sometimes it had bands, and sometimes it played music like the Furs, Femmes, The Cure, Smiths, etc., and people danced. The New Deli was the same way. The club that played the best music in town was a place called the Paddock Club. It was behind the Harley Davidson shop. This was a gay bar (I'm straight) that both gays and straights went to, but it catered to homosexuals. I didn't go there a ton, but when I did it was fun. They had stage for drag queen contest on Friday Nights (which is the only night I have ever been there), and a big dance floor. It was fun, and a mystery. Since it was a mix of gays and straights, you sometimes wondered who was gay and who wasn't when it wasn't obvious.I don't know. I read quickly and felt like it was getting kicked back. Then I decided to google 80s dance. Landed on digital dreamdoor and was kind of perplexed. That list of theirs is less than half right from my experience, but honestly, I don't know simey. Maybe "we're" wrong thinking new wave etc., qualified as dance and there was a whole nother world I missed.Who is most of you? I didn't see anyone say anything about The Politics of Dancing. I went to college in Greenville, NC in the 80s, and there were plenty of clubs there that played new wave, post-punk, etc. that people danced to.The Bolshoi fell? Oof. I think I have a different view of 80s dance than most you and the internet. But I lived it, dern it. The Politics of Dancing was played in every dance club in LA every night.
I like Sonic Youth as much as the next guy unless the next guy is way cooler than me but it's hard to mix and even harder to skip rope to.Nothing like some early Sonic Youth to really tie things together with the Dokken and Wall of Voodoo
18
Sonic Youth - Star Power
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T4eXkGl8zo
alt/indie
may switch to ahead-of, still undecided on another pickReally surprised how long it took for a Sonic Youth song to go, though I guess Alternative is quite a deep category.
Yeah, I think it's best if we just stick to the 22 for the official mix. No reason people can't add a couple extra on their mix or have a b-sides mix or something.I think 22 songs is plenty for the official mix but I'd encourage people to post links to the songs that just missed the cut.Are the last 2 rounds tomorrow or are we extending 5 rounds after that? If so, are they all wildcards?
KarmaPolice said:19.15: READY FOR THE WORLD - OH SHEILA (R&B/NEW JACK)
Updating my picks from the day with linkage.KarmaPolice said:I like how this one pairs up with Cars.
20.05: PATRICK COWLEY - THEY CAME AT NIGHT (HOUSE/DANCE/DISCO)
Didn't see this when you picked it. Love this song. Thought about it for dance, but god (and Ephus) only knows what counts for 80s dance.KarmaPolice said:19.15: READY FOR THE WORLD - OH SHEILA (R&B/NEW JACK)
It doesn't even work in a hipster, ironic way?I like Sonic Youth as much as the next guy unless the next guy is way cooler than me but it's hard to mix and even harder to skip rope to.Nothing like some early Sonic Youth to really tie things together with the Dokken and Wall of Voodoo
18
Sonic Youth - Star Power
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T4eXkGl8zo
alt/indie
may switch to ahead-of, still undecided on another pickReally surprised how long it took for a Sonic Youth song to go, though I guess Alternative is quite a deep category.
hula hoop maybeIt doesn't even work in a hipster, ironic way?I like Sonic Youth as much as the next guy unless the next guy is way cooler than me but it's hard to mix and even harder to skip rope to.Nothing like some early Sonic Youth to really tie things together with the Dokken and Wall of Voodoo
18
Sonic Youth - Star Power
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T4eXkGl8zo
alt/indie
may switch to ahead-of, still undecided on another pickReally surprised how long it took for a Sonic Youth song to go, though I guess Alternative is quite a deep category.
Like Simey said, 80s dance depended a lot on the city, the club, the clientele and the night of the week. "Dance Music" has become a lot more strictly defined nowadays but that regimentation is a byproduct of fragmentation.Didn't see this when you picked it. Love this song. Thought about it for dance, but god (and Ephus) only knows what counts for 80s dance.KarmaPolice said:19.15: READY FOR THE WORLD - OH SHEILA (R&B/NEW JACK)
What's good for the goose...
That is probably true.I like Sonic Youth as much as the next guy unless the next guy is way cooler than me but it's hard to mix and even harder to skip rope to.Nothing like some early Sonic Youth to really tie things together with the Dokken and Wall of Voodoo
18
Sonic Youth - Star Power
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T4eXkGl8zo
alt/indie
may switch to ahead-of, still undecided on another pickReally surprised how long it took for a Sonic Youth song to go, though I guess Alternative is quite a deep category.
Indeed. Finding this out. (I didn't dance in the 80s - too cool (⌐■_■)Like Simey said, 80s dance depended a lot on the city, the club, the clientele and the night of the week. "Dance Music" has become a lot more strictly defined nowadays but that regimentation is a byproduct of fragmentation.Didn't see this when you picked it. Love this song. Thought about it for dance, but god (and Ephus) only knows what counts for 80s dance.KarmaPolice said:19.15: READY FOR THE WORLD - OH SHEILA (R&B/NEW JACK)
What's good for the goose...
We danced to Atlantic Star at the skate rink in middle school. :worm:We all used to dance to that stupid Nu Shooz song at the HS dances somehow. It's awful though.
At least with "No Parking" I can picture people actually dancing on Soul Train
I Zumba to Teenage Riot.Nothing like some early Sonic Youth to really tie things together with the Dokken and Wall of Voodoo
18
Sonic Youth - Star Power
you must be the next guy who is way cooler than meNothing like some early Sonic Youth to really tie things together with the Dokken and Wall of Voodoo
18
Sonic Youth - Star Power
World DestructionThis is for my friend, Andy Dufresne...
19.14 Ahead of its time -- Time Zone, World Dominationhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPHDQLuZaGo&feature=kp
Afrika Bambaataa and John Lydon
Huh. I'd hear Whitney Houston followed by Depeche Mode followed by Culture Club then Michael Jackson and some post punk. But New Wave/Alternative seemed dominant... on the oh so white west side.I didn't hear new wave etc. in dance clubs that would play like Billy Ocean, but there were specific clubs/bars that played new wave, college rock, etc. that had a dance floor, and people danced to it. Premiums was one of those clubs. Sometimes it had bands, and sometimes it played music like the Furs, Femmes, The Cure, Smiths, etc., and people danced. The New Deli was the same way. The club that played the best music in town was a place called the Paddock Club. It was behind the Harley Davidson shop. This was a gay bar (I'm straight) that both gays and straights went to, but it catered to homosexuals. I didn't go there a ton, but when I did it was fun. They had stage for drag queen contest on Friday Nights (which is the only night I have ever been there), and a big dance floor. It was fun, and a mystery. Since it was a mix of gays and straights, you sometimes wondered who was gay and who wasn't when it wasn't obvious.I don't know. I read quickly and felt like it was getting kicked back. Then I decided to google 80s dance. Landed on digital dreamdoor and was kind of perplexed. That list of theirs is less than half right from my experience, but honestly, I don't know simey. Maybe "we're" wrong thinking new wave etc., qualified as dance and there was a whole nother world I missed.Who is most of you? I didn't see anyone say anything about The Politics of Dancing. I went to college in Greenville, NC in the 80s, and there were plenty of clubs there that played new wave, post-punk, etc. that people danced to.The Bolshoi fell? Oof. I think I have a different view of 80s dance than most you and the internet. But I lived it, dern it. The Politics of Dancing was played in every dance club in LA every night.
A Reagan faux pas?World DestructionThis is for my friend, Andy Dufresne...
19.14 Ahead of its time -- Time Zone, World Domination
Afrika Bambaataa and John Lydon
Always like them - kind of a cross between a more popish Bowie and Brian Ferry. They have a handful of pretty strong ones that I won't mention ...Huh. I'd hear Whitney Houston followed by Depeche Mode followed by Culture Club then Michael Jackson and some post punk. But New Wave/Alternative seemed dominant... on the oh so white west side.I didn't hear new wave etc. in dance clubs that would play like Billy Ocean, but there were specific clubs/bars that played new wave, college rock, etc. that had a dance floor, and people danced to it. Premiums was one of those clubs. Sometimes it had bands, and sometimes it played music like the Furs, Femmes, The Cure, Smiths, etc., and people danced. The New Deli was the same way. The club that played the best music in town was a place called the Paddock Club. It was behind the Harley Davidson shop. This was a gay bar (I'm straight) that both gays and straights went to, but it catered to homosexuals. I didn't go there a ton, but when I did it was fun. They had stage for drag queen contest on Friday Nights (which is the only night I have ever been there), and a big dance floor. It was fun, and a mystery. Since it was a mix of gays and straights, you sometimes wondered who was gay and who wasn't when it wasn't obvious.I don't know. I read quickly and felt like it was getting kicked back. Then I decided to google 80s dance. Landed on digital dreamdoor and was kind of perplexed. That list of theirs is less than half right from my experience, but honestly, I don't know simey. Maybe "we're" wrong thinking new wave etc., qualified as dance and there was a whole nother world I missed.Who is most of you? I didn't see anyone say anything about The Politics of Dancing. I went to college in Greenville, NC in the 80s, and there were plenty of clubs there that played new wave, post-punk, etc. that people danced to.The Bolshoi fell? Oof. I think I have a different view of 80s dance than most you and the internet. But I lived it, dern it. The Politics of Dancing was played in every dance club in LA every night.
I was going with something (aggressive new wave) I think probably isn't dance just because we danced to it. So here's a compromise I like enough. I think ABC has been overlooked:
20.14 Dance/Disco/House -- ABC, When Smokey Sings