Saturday morning earworm invitational
Sep. 2nd, 2006 06:26 amI'm going to go finish cleaning the house and then get dressed and buy some fruit and doughnuts at Byerly's so my folks and grands and my Onie can come over for breakfast. (Hazards of being a morning person.) But first:
athenais posted her rock and/or roll quiz results, and I got to talking about soundtracks to my college years in the comments. It's not always what popular music of the time would indicate -- the Wilburys and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers were more a part of the second half of my college years than time would indicate, because Matt was the one with the stereo, and Matt is a huge Tom Petty fan. (Or was, but I suspect that the correct answer here is "is.") First half of college featured more Rolling Stones than one would expect, given that I graduated high school in '95, and also
skzbrust's album was frequently in the rotation but not on the Top 40 radio at the time. On the other hand, some stuff is totally temporally predictable: the Counting Crows popping up under every rock*, for example, and Janelle bringing Alanis Morisette's first album into the physics office, and "Semi-Charmed Life" coming on the radio every time
timprov and Curt and I were in an automobile together.
So what's the soundtrack of your late teens/early twenties? Any songs that immediately take you back, and are they of the type where everyone** of your age would recognize them or stuff that made people outside your social group confused?
*
scottjames, half the time I use that expression, I think of our conversation in high school:
Me: "Stop finding suitors for me under every rock!"
You: "I can't help it if that's where they live!"
**For non-
markgritter values of "everyone."
So what's the soundtrack of your late teens/early twenties? Any songs that immediately take you back, and are they of the type where everyone** of your age would recognize them or stuff that made people outside your social group confused?
*
Me: "Stop finding suitors for me under every rock!"
You: "I can't help it if that's where they live!"
**For non-
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Date: 2006-09-02 11:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-02 11:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-02 12:27 pm (UTC)Golly.
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Date: 2006-09-02 12:31 pm (UTC)College music to me REALLY = Morrissey/The Smiths! Most. Morose. Music. Evah.
And I LOVED it! :)
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Date: 2006-09-02 12:49 pm (UTC)Were I to actually list the artists on my soundtrack to life... well, it'd take a while. But Queen is definitely up there. :)
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Date: 2006-09-02 01:33 pm (UTC)Kills the both of us
To die by your side
The pleasure, the privilege is miiiine
:-)
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Date: 2006-09-02 01:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-02 02:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-02 02:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-02 02:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-02 02:43 pm (UTC)By my own choice: The Cure, Erasure, Kraftwerk, Rush, Jethro Tull, the Grateful Dead, Queen, Clones at Play[1].
Through exposure by others: Guns N Roses, Nirvana (yuck), Jane's Addiction, Laurie Anderson, Nancy Sinatra, Red Hot Chili Peppers.
[1] Excellent New Orleans funk band, now sadly defunct. I would kill or die to get hold of a copy of their tape now.
An incomplete list
Date: 2006-09-02 03:05 pm (UTC)College: Steeleye Span, Cat Stevens, Louis Armstrong, Monty Python, Cab Calloway, PDQ Bach, the rock of the time, silent movie scores.
Post college: More Steeleye Span and Celtic Folk/Rock, Patti Smith, Leadbelly (and other old folkies), Lionel Hampton (and other Big Band), Dr. Demento, I went through a bluegrass phase at one point...
... and then I hit 25 and my musical taste was frozen forever. No! Wait.... come back...
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Date: 2006-09-02 03:29 pm (UTC)P.
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Date: 2006-09-02 03:38 pm (UTC)I haven't really done a lot of branching out in music in the 10 years since I got out of college, sadly. Although I have discovered Kelly Hogan and Vienna Teng and they both make me really really happy.
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Date: 2006-09-02 04:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-02 04:50 pm (UTC)I do, on my bookshelf, have a taped-from-the-radio tape with a lot of the rest of the college years music--the Freshman by the Verve Pipe (and I went to college in michigan, so we can identify 6 different versions of it) and lots of other things that I can't remember.
These days I still listen to the exact same *kind* of music on the radio, just 10 years later--still modern rock/alternative, still some of the same bands, sometimes even the same songs, if the radio's playing 'old' stuff. ;)
Latecomer
Date: 2006-09-02 04:55 pm (UTC)The postpunk and new wave eras made for some mighty good radio, so I could keep up with the free music of the times. When that era was overwhelmed by formulas and commodification, I was a college radio DJ, still playing what little good stuff there was (and getting it for free).
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Date: 2006-09-02 05:08 pm (UTC)I did pick up Procul Harum, Yes, and Emerson Lake and Palmer from Jonathan Adams in college. There was certainly a lot of Monty Python, including the music (when I went and played with Ron's radio show, I liked to slip in their musical tracks in the midst of "ordinary" music without telling people).
I got a stereo about half-way through, and listened to music more after that. I don't think music was important between me and any girlfriends, either.
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Date: 2006-09-02 05:38 pm (UTC)Nancy Sinatra and the Red Hot Chili Peppers: together again for the first time.
Re: An incomplete list
Date: 2006-09-02 05:44 pm (UTC)One of the bits of soundtrack for the last half of my time at college was Pete Seeger's double-disc album with Arlo Guthrie, "Precious Friend." Love that. There are all kinds of things we quote from that without thinking, like, "I read it! It's really true."
I had to kill a record store clerk with my dagger-like glare once, because I asked if they had any Pete Seeger, and he said, "Uhhh, like, do you mean Bob Seger?" No. In fact, I can tell the difference. Honestly.
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Date: 2006-09-02 05:46 pm (UTC)When I was 12, my dad gave me a couple of Janis Ian albums along with some Jethro Tull, Nancy Kress's Beggars in Spain, Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time, and all the textbooks from his college philosophy major*. He set them down in my room and said, "Here. I think you're going to need these." And left.
He was right.
*He was a philosophy/chemistry double major.
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Date: 2006-09-02 05:47 pm (UTC)And now that you mention it, I could totally see Nancy Sinatra and the Chili Peppers doing an album together. It'd be the new Tammy Wynette + KLF. :-)
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Date: 2006-09-02 05:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-02 05:52 pm (UTC)Also, like everyone else our age, I saw Green Day quoted as prose on way too many college T-shirts etc. It's not something unpredictable! It's something totally predictable by now!!! I can predict exactly what Green Day song you're going to quote here, and in the end it's trite! Aughhhh!
...and yet, she said guiltily, that very same song kind of knocks me back to exactly those years, so I guess it worked. If they put it in a movie set in the mid-90s when I'm 50, 90, whenever, I will know exactly what they're evoking, and it will, in fact, be evoked. So I suppose I can't complain too much.
Re: Latecomer
Date: 2006-09-02 05:55 pm (UTC)What we could hear from the physics office, besides Janelle's Alanis album, was MPR. So fund drive weeks were the bane of our existence, and they invariably fell before a big test, when we could have really appreciated actual music most.