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**Fake Scarcity Mixtape Draft #1: Tuesday picks 12 & 4PM EDT (1 Viewer)

Had a hard time with this one, went with the cheezy "if it mentions a word like a team name, you're set" method.

10.15 - You Can Call Me Al - Paul Simon - Team Nicknames (Angels)

He looks around, around
He sees angels in the architecture
Spinning in infinity
He says Amen! and Hallelujah!
This is one of my favorite videos, love the downtrodden looks on PS face while Chevy Chase is lip-syncing.
 
Showing my age here, but [Fallout Boy's 2003 debut album] Take This to Your Grave is still one of the most influential albums of my music life.
It's interesting that you're coming from a perspective where an album this "young" can feel aged.

I heard something on the radio recently that some survey or another was taken, and that on average, people's musical interest ossifies at age 33. Obviously, there is a lot of indidivual variation. But I know it happened to me early -- everything post-grunge feels brand new to me. Mid-1990s stuff falls into the exact same mental bucket as an act that comes out tomorrow.

That can get in the way of appreciation often, but thankfully not 100% of the time.

 
10.14 Pumped Up Kicks - Foster the People - legitimately popular song hit #3 in 2011
LHUCKS alias?
Nope. I am trying to pick songs that fit the categories and haven't been used in previous drafts. I just do a quick search and see if there are any obvious draft threads referencing the song. It was going to be this or the Box Tops - The Letter, but that had been used a couple of times before.

 
Showing my age here, but [Fallout Boy's 2003 debut album] Take This to Your Grave is still one of the most influential albums of my music life.
It's interesting that you're coming from a perspective where an album this "young" can feel aged.

I heard something on the radio recently that some survey or another was taken, and that on average, people's musical interest ossifies at age 33. Obviously, there is a lot of indidivual variation. But I know it happened to me early -- everything post-grunge feels brand new to me. Mid-1990s stuff falls into the exact same mental bucket as an act that comes out tomorrow.

That can get in the way of appreciation often, but thankfully not 100% of the time.
This works for me, with my turning 30 in 2000. Anything starting with a 2 in the date is 'new!' Sorta.

 
Showing my age here, but [Fallout Boy's 2003 debut album] Take This to Your Grave is still one of the most influential albums of my music life.
It's interesting that you're coming from a perspective where an album this "young" can feel aged.

I heard something on the radio recently that some survey or another was taken, and that on average, people's musical interest ossifies at age 33. Obviously, there is a lot of indidivual variation. But I know it happened to me early -- everything post-grunge feels brand new to me. Mid-1990s stuff falls into the exact same mental bucket as an act that comes out tomorrow.

That can get in the way of appreciation often, but thankfully not 100% of the time.
The mid 90s to early aughts is my musical deadzone. We were raising little kids at the time and rarely were able to go to shows. I listened to stuff that was semi-popular, some old favorites and lots of children's music. It wasn't until I got an Archos Jukebox circa 2003 and started downloading that my horizons reopened.

 
Showing my age here, but [Fallout Boy's 2003 debut album] Take This to Your Grave is still one of the most influential albums of my music life.
It's interesting that you're coming from a perspective where an album this "young" can feel aged.

I heard something on the radio recently that some survey or another was taken, and that on average, people's musical interest ossifies at age 33. Obviously, there is a lot of indidivual variation. But I know it happened to me early -- everything post-grunge feels brand new to me. Mid-1990s stuff falls into the exact same mental bucket as an act that comes out tomorrow.

That can get in the way of appreciation often, but thankfully not 100% of the time.
Going through my iTunes playlists (not that these are exact because many songs are remastered and listed as a later release date) the breakdown of rated songs (basically any song I won't immediately consider skipping if it comes up).

1950s - 4

1960s - 20

1970s - 63

1980s - 466

1990s - 362

2000s - 341

2010+ - 132

Probably ~150 songs should be removed from the 80s/90s/00s buckets and moved into the 50s/60s/70s due to the release dates being the compilation release date and more classical music being moved back decades but you can definitely see where I hit the age of caring about music.

If just looking at 5 star

1950s - 0

1960s - 6

1970s - 21

1980s - 114

1990s - 135

2000s - 104

2010+ - 48

Though ~50 songs should be moved into the 50s/60s/70s bucket

 
Showing my age here, but [Fallout Boy's 2003 debut album] Take This to Your Grave is still one of the most influential albums of my music life.
It's interesting that you're coming from a perspective where an album this "young" can feel aged.

I heard something on the radio recently that some survey or another was taken, and that on average, people's musical interest ossifies at age 33. Obviously, there is a lot of indidivual variation. But I know it happened to me early -- everything post-grunge feels brand new to me. Mid-1990s stuff falls into the exact same mental bucket as an act that comes out tomorrow.

That can get in the way of appreciation often, but thankfully not 100% of the time.
Interesting. For me it's more a matter of growing up, changing tastes, and changing friends. I started getting really "into music" in the late 90s with a handful of close friends. From ~99-06 or so, high school thru early college, a very close friend and I were so into it, mostly the hip-hop and pop punk/ska scenes of the time, lots of shows, sharing music, CDs, filesharing sites, all that. He ended up dropping out of college in the summer of 2005 and our relationship deteriorated (he was into drugs, I distanced myself from him and his friends, lots of backstory there that I'll skip). I listened to very little new music between like 2006 and 2009 and then got back into it on my own late in college with the help of this forum.

So there's like a window in there that is my mental stopping point. I look back on the music I listened to back then and can't help but cringe sometimes especially with the cheesy emo punk, but there's nothing to be ashamed of. I'd be lying if I said I didn't still listen to it at times, and I can still hear a lot of similarities in the music I listened to back in the day with newer stuff.

I wish we were more into the "classics", so to speak. My repertoire is almost nonexistent on music prior to 1980 and pretty thin from 1980-mid 90s other than a decent amount of new wave/shoegaze. Maybe that should be my next goal.

 
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This song is named for the state the band comes from. Last time I saw these guys, I purposely avoided set lists, but I so badly wanted this to be the last song played and have it accompanied by pyro, fireworks and the like... and of course it was

The most bombastic song from a band who wants to play "big" songs in full stadiums...

9.17 - The Killers - Battle Born (Nevada)

http://youtu.be/zPJQQeeYDYI

 
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10.12 King Of Pain - The Police

Popular/top 5 - Peaked at #3.

As I'm sure you're all very familiar with the studio release, I've linked a live version above that's actually from a Sting solo tour. Could be my favorite live track of all time. If you don't want to listen to the whole thing (and I think you should) at least listen to the instrumental jam from about 2:55 to 5:00. Some great guitar work by Dominic Miller there.

 
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Who's the other holdout on Country?

If I was going in a different direction I might have gone Burundi, but tons of good countries left.

Pissed that Brazil was taken though.

Countries:

Canada

Australia

England

France

Wales

Sweden

Ireland

Brazil

Scotland

Nigeria

Italy

Germany

Denmark

Iceland

Norway

South Africa

Spain

New Zealand

Scotland
I took Mali.
Papua New Guineaeta: IIRC, didn't somebody take Argentina?
ha, I actually draft Mali.
 
Showing my age here, but [Fallout Boy's 2003 debut album] Take This to Your Grave is still one of the most influential albums of my music life.
It's interesting that you're coming from a perspective where an album this "young" can feel aged.

I heard something on the radio recently that some survey or another was taken, and that on average, people's musical interest ossifies at age 33. Obviously, there is a lot of indidivual variation. But I know it happened to me early -- everything post-grunge feels brand new to me. Mid-1990s stuff falls into the exact same mental bucket as an act that comes out tomorrow.

That can get in the way of appreciation often, but thankfully not 100% of the time.
Interesting. For me it's more a matter of growing up, changing tastes, and changing friends. I started getting really "into music" in the late 90s with a handful of close friends. From ~99-06 or so, high school thru early college, a very close friend and I were so into it, mostly the hip-hop and pop punk/ska scenes of the time, lots of shows, sharing music, CDs, filesharing sites, all that. He ended up dropping out of college in the summer of 2005 and our relationship deteriorated (he was into drugs, I distanced myself from him and his friends, lots of backstory there that I'll skip). I listened to very little new music between like 2006 and 2009 and then got back into it on my own late in college with the help of this forum.

So there's like a window in there that is my mental stopping point. I look back on the music I listened to back then and can't help but cringe sometimes especially with the cheesy emo punk, but there's nothing to be ashamed of. I'd be lying if I said I didn't still listen to it at times, and I can still hear a lot of similarities in the music I listened to back in the day with newer stuff.

I wish we were more into the "classics", so to speak. My repertoire is almost nonexistent on music prior to 1980 and pretty thin from 1980-mid 90s other than a decent amount of new wave/shoegaze. Maybe that should be my next goal.
At least now you can use the internet and apps like Shazam to track down stuff you like quickly. It is awesome how quickly that has changed the ability to discover songs and artists and the history of said artist in other bands. When I was in high school/college this revolution hadn't happened. Many mainstream stores didn't even have a ska or punk distinction - most of those CDs were in an indie section. Even when I would go to huge, independent stores (like Amoeba in Berkeley) there was rarely a distinction (or stuff was misplaced). To find new ska music I would look at CD jackets in the indie section for bands in suits along with any type of horn/woodwind and, if I liked the band, would read about bands/artist they thanked and go from there.

 
Had a hard time with this one, went with the cheezy "if it mentions a word like a team name, you're set" method.

10.15 - You Can Call Me Al - Paul Simon - Team Nicknames (Angels)

He looks around, aroundHe sees angels in the architecture

Spinning in infinity

He says Amen! and Hallelujah!
This is one of my favorite videos, love the downtrodden looks on PS face while Chevy Chase is lip-syncing.
This song is named for the state the band comes from. Last time I saw these guys, I purposely avoided set lists, but I so badly wanted this to be the last song played and have it accompanied by pyro, fireworks and the like... and of course it was

The most bombastic song from a band who wants to play "big" songs in full stadiums...

9.17 - The Killers - Battle Born (Nevada)

http://youtu.be/zPJQQeeYDYI
10.12 King Of Pain - The Police

Popular/top 5 - Peaked at #3.

As I'm sure you're all very familiar with the studio release, I've linked a live version above that's actually from a Sting solo tour. Could be my favorite live track of all time. If you don't want to listen to the whole thing (and I think you should) at least listen to the instrumental jam from about 2:55 to 5:00. Some great guitar work by Dominic Miller there.
Damn nice day for picks!

 
10.10 - Me Oh My - The Honeycutters (Category: Female)

The Honeycutters are a band from Asheville, NC. Their third album just came out, and this song is the title track off of the album. The lead singer, Amanda Platt, writes all of their songs, and this is the first album that she has produced herself.

 
10.10 - Me Oh My - The Honeycutters (Category: Female)

The Honeycutters are a band from Asheville, NC. Their third album just came out, and this song is the title track off of the album. The lead singer, Amanda Platt, writes all of their songs, and this is the first album that she has produced herself.
Nice, but I have a feeling I'm going to need a box of tissues when I listen to your mix.

 
10.10 - Me Oh My - The Honeycutters (Category: Female)

The Honeycutters are a band from Asheville, NC. Their third album just came out, and this song is the title track off of the album. The lead singer, Amanda Platt, writes all of their songs, and this is the first album that she has produced herself.
Nice, but I have a feeling I'm going to need a box of tissues when I listen to your mix.
It's definitely not a mix to work out to, but you won't need any tissues. I decided a couple rounds ago my theme is "Whiskey sippin' songs."

 
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10.18 - "The Saints Are Coming", U2 & Green Day (Sports Team - New Orleans Saints)

This still gets played with some frequency on local rock radio. As much as I've heard this rendition around here, I ahd never seen this video version until just now looking it up on YouTube. I'm not sure what to make of the fantasy scenes of U.S. military being redeployed to New Orleans in the wake of Katrina.

 
9.07 - And Your Bird Can Sing - Guadalcanal Diary - US State - Georgia

Cover of a Beatles song by an alternative 'jangle pop' group from Georgia in the era of early R.E.M.
Nice to see Guadalcanal Diary get some love. They were a good band.
Wow! Thought I was the only person in the world who had ever heard of them. They had interesting lyrics to their songs, fun to see live, and Murray Attaway can really sing.
This is very nice. And Attaway really can sing.

 
Mrs. Rannous said:
Mrs. Rannous, on 19 May 2015 - 11:34 AM, said:I had real problmes picking the female singer category. There are so many choices, I got stuck. But here goes:

10.16 "Just Give me a Reason" - Pink (featuring Nate Ruess)
My daughters love to sing that together. They harmonize on the chorus; it's really cute.

 
Mrs. Rannous said:
Mrs. Rannous, on 19 May 2015 - 11:34 AM, said:I had real problmes picking the female singer category. There are so many choices, I got stuck. But here goes:

10.16 "Just Give me a Reason" - Pink (featuring Nate Ruess)
My daughters love to sing that together. They harmonize on the chorus; it's really cute.
my kids and wife love that tune too.

I'm kindof an indie-snob, but Pink is pretty amazing- hard to not like/admire what she does. that Reuss guy, solo or with Fun, makes me want to stab my eyes out and stuff them in my ears.

 
11.02 Natalie's Party - Shack (nuclear family) Mick & John Head

Liverpool's Shack overcame record label problems, natural disaster and addiction to release the magnificent HMS Fable album. Of course, it came out in 1999, right about when Britpop hit the wall. The only luck they had was bad but at least they've been able to persevere. The brothers are still performing (separately) around NW Britain.

Natalie's Party was the album opener and fits into my mix the best but the best song on the LP is Streets of Kenny, which is one of the most beautiful songs ever written about buying heroin.

 

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