It's gone bad, throw it out!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I was 1990s in highschool. That shit is still great. All the lousy music cropped up in the early 2000's.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Op was prolly in hs around 2005 when music sucked.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Fuck you and hell yeah.
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Same as it ever was.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
My first purchase CD was Kenny Fuckin’ G. Sigh. Still, some pretty melodies I guess, and that’s not all bad.
Started improving right away by moving on to a lot of John Williams soundtracks and Weird Al. Then a lot of Classic Rock “best of” albums. Start to fold in some folk music from the British Isles and sellout former college-rock bands (Crash Test Dummies’ first two albums are actually good. Fight me!).
Add one English degree from a southern university and a move to Texas after a leftward political swing during law school (seriously you guys, nothing like seeing how the sausage is made to understand that while important and not without a certain rigor, the law is fucked up and EVERY judge is an activist judge, so you just need to do the right thing), and blammo, you get a dude who is way more into artsy fartsy “Americana” alt-country than your average Lemmy user. Now I want to listen to some Isbell before I go to bed. Good night y’all.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Ya'll don't like Voltaire and P Diddy anymore? /s
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
It says “high school”, why are you all talking about songs from the 2010s?
…oh no…
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Most (but not all) music has something to recommend it. If you don’t like entire eras of music it’s not because the music is “bad,” it’s because it’s not to your taste anymore (or, for stuff you didn’t listen to, never was).
Much like with food, if you can find what makes a particular genre enjoyable and listen for that, you can enjoy a lot more. I would never listen to Taylor Swift the same way I listen to Rush or Pink Floyd, but I still loved Midnights. I wouldn’t listen to Bach the same way I listen to Nightwish, but they’re both fantastic.
There’s nothing wrong with being discerning in your tastes. But there’s also nothing wrong with the styles of music you don’t like, it’s just a different flavor. I don’t like cilantro and never will, but I understand why people do. And I didn’t like coffee until I learned how to taste it properly. The same is true of music.
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Our names be similar like whaaaat
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Idk why ppl say the music doesn't hold up. Foo fighters still rock even though Dave gohl a PoS.
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You’re not the first fellow TheReal<Something> I’ve found in the wild, but it always makes me do a double-take.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Just wait until you taste "Songs I Recorded in High School"
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I listened to a lot of somewhat niche cringet punk and red dirt country bands (odd combo i know but I was a confused teen) in high-school. Like bands that know on has heard of, no I'm not bragging these bands were just that awful. But I was young and HAD to be different and some of the songs would make me cringe so hard now that my soul may leave my body if listened to. You're right about one thing my music tastes changed drastically
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My first musical physical media purchase was Backstreet Boys, but the rest after wasn't cringe, I swear!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Speak for yourself, I've still got a running list of early morning songs that'd play on the school bus radio from highschool.
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Only because the passage of time declared Backstreet Boys to be no longer a cringe!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I love the Crash Test Dummies. Give Yourself a Hand is probably my favorite album but I also really like A Worm's Life. Their records are all so different from each other too, which is nice because their sound evolved but remained recognizable.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I'm pretty basic. I liked The Ghosts That Haunt me and God Shuffled His Feet the best, and unironically enjoy almost every single track on both albums. Once they started drifting away from that wry and/or jaunty folk-pop-rock, I wasn't as interested, but I can appreciate that Brad in particular wanted to explore other ground and give his lyrical notions more space to breathe.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
And then they're stuck in your head for weeks like a fucking mind virus.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Not from what I experienced unless… oh, right… millennials …mmmmyea. Throw it out. Something happened with music around then.