Plateforme Level Extreme
Abonnement
Profil corporatif
Produits & Services
Support
Légal
English
Any Guns 'n Roses fans out there?
Message
 
 
À
30/03/2007 05:41:08
Information générale
Forum:
Music
Catégorie:
Rock n roll
Divers
Thread ID:
01209630
Message ID:
01210342
Vues:
30
>>>>>>>Is that on the album "xxxxx Ocean Boulevard" or whatever it's called? I've >got that, on top of my wardrobe with the rest of the vinyl, bougfht in the >70s.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>I got it from a Cream album: either a greatest hits or Disraeli Gears cd.
>>>>>
>>>>>I loved Cream, back in the day. I recall all my mates in Scouts liking them too.
>>>>>
>>>>>>I did not like the stuff he did in the 80's. I prefer to listen to Cream, Derek & Dominoes and some solo stuff he did. If you have hte chance, get his double cd 'Just One Night' . It is mind blowing.
>>>>>
>>>>>Let's face it, there wasn't MUCH of worth from the 80s, and especially as all the progressive bands, like Pink Floyd and Genesis turned middle-of-the-road. Clapton was no exception, and it's from that point on that I turned my back on them.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>You leave out Talking Heads, Tom Petty, and REM, to name an easy three. I agree the 80s were not up there with the heyday circa 1970 but there was still plenty of great music coming out. Always has been, always will be.
>>>
>>>TH did their best stuff in the late 70s, Tom Petty I never followed, REM I've never liked (that guy's voice grates on me big style). There was some good music in the 80s, but mainly 80s new stuff; I was referring mainly to te established bands who sold out.
>>
>>
>>A lot of them sure did. I'm with you there. The Stones are still mailing it in and putting the money in the bank a quarter century later.
>
>Yeah, they haven't sold out (except their gigs have).
>
>>
>>Re Talking Heads, "Remain In Light", "Speaking in Tongues", "Little Creatures", "Stop Making Sense", and "True Stories" were all released in the 1980s. Every one of them is a classic IMO.
>
>Yes, you're right, of course. I don't know what I was talking about. In fact, there's little that they've ever brought out that I haven't liked. It's so long since I've visited my vinyl I've got my periods mixed up, and I've got at least 2 of the above myself! :-)
>
>>
>>I won't argue with you about the other bands. As I said earlier today in a book discussion, there is no point debating matters of personal taste.
>
>You're right. I get so sick of people who prattle on about how good the punk era was. Well that was during my "prime" years and, apart from a few bands: Stranglers, Jonathan Richman, and my fave, the Skids ("working for the yankee dollar", "into the valley")... and the odd track, I thought it was all just a dreadful noise. At that time, and going into the 80s, i was listening more to Ska, Lena Lovich, Laura logic (bit of a Superman LL thing here :-), Pretenders, TH, and the birth of the New Romantic or electronic age, with OMD, John Foxx (ex Ultravox), Ultravox, Be Bop Deluxe, and loads more.


The one band I have never stopped listening to from the punk era -- and they weren't really a punk band, they could actually play their instruments -- is The Clash. They recorded some great songs and always had passion. I was lucky enough to see them live twice.
Précédent
Suivant
Répondre
Fil
Voir

Click here to load this message in the networking platform