Music Tastes
742617000027
Posts: 25MI6 Agent
Hi,
well for any fans, it's easy to see I'm a big Slipknot fan. {[]
They're an acquired taste I guess, but if you're a fan let me know and I'm sure we'll get on.
I also love AC/DC, Guns 'N Roses, Pantera, Dead Kennedys and other bands.
I'd like to get to know some members and thought this would be a good conversation starter.
What sort of music are the rest of you in to?
well for any fans, it's easy to see I'm a big Slipknot fan. {[]
They're an acquired taste I guess, but if you're a fan let me know and I'm sure we'll get on.
I also love AC/DC, Guns 'N Roses, Pantera, Dead Kennedys and other bands.
I'd like to get to know some members and thought this would be a good conversation starter.
What sort of music are the rest of you in to?
Comments
John Barry, The Beatles, Tony Bennett, Elton John, Mike Oldfield, Elvis, Frank Sinatra, Paul Simon, Robbie Williams. Probably not your bag at all! 8-)
The Beatles are legends.
White Album I think is the greatest album ever made.
Drinking champagne at the wrong temperature is like listening to Slipknot without earmuffs...
Roger Moore 1927-2017
I agree with you fully on your first point (despite my silence when that topic recently arose elsewhere), but I'm one of those people who think that George Martin should have got his way with the White Album- ie, cut it down to a single album containing the best tracks and removing what Martin called "scribble".
Roger Moore 1927-2017
Also, classic performers like Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Steppenwolf, etc...
I like Led Zeppelin, David Bowie, Deep Purple, Zutons, Artic Monkeys and really I think that's about it on favourites. Though I do like Elton John also quite a bit.
But I just have to say that I utterly despise practically all rap and hip hop, apart from a few Eminem songs that do actually have a point.
-- Current mainstream country western (Kenny Chesney, etc.)
-- Super-extreme metal (Cannibal Corpse, all the Norwegian idiots, etc.)
-- Hardcore gangsta rap...for that matter, most R&B and hip-hop, except that with a real sense of humor
-- The Grateful Dead
Aside from that, pretty much anything goes.
I told you it was varied, didn't I?
Clearly George Martin should have been the judge on what defines scribble. My tuppence worth would put, eg, "Revolution 9" and "Wild Honey Pie" as the obvious droppers but after that there's no clear choices (and I suppose even those two tracks have their fans). I'd happily drop "Rocky Raccoon" and "Bungalow Bill", but I'm sure someone loves them. As you say, opinions differ.
Yupp. Rocky Raccoon is one of my favourites on that album .
Great amount of legendary music from the Beatles, I guess some songs just don't catch others as much as they would another fan.
Ditch Ringo's rubbish song... still I like the momentum of Record 1 as it is...
Roger Moore 1927-2017
This topic soon turned to just be about The Beatles :P. So much for Slipknot then.
Well, cheer up, The Beatles were the dog's b*llocks, after all. And for an oldster like me (check out who I listen to! Apart from Robbie, they're all old or dead.) there's not much to say about Slipknot- that's not a slight on Slipknot, just my way of saying I don't know enough about them to discuss their music.
Some favorites include Stan Getz, Paul Desmond and Gato Barbieri on the sax and Kenny Burrell, George Benson and Pat Metheny on the guitar.
Pat Metheny is my favorite; he has one of the most unique and instantly recognizable sounds even though he plays a myriad of different kinds of guitars. Whether he's playing solo or with an ensemble, all you need to hear is 4 or 5 bars and you can instantly recognize that it's him. His stuff as frontman of The Pat Metheny Group consistently blows me away and he has put on some of the best live concerts I've ever heard.
Sorry again, Slipknot. It's not your fault: there's just always a little more to talk about when the subject is the Beatles, because there's more going on. A song as seemingly basic as "Back in the USSR" is a case in point.
"Back in the USSR" is one of the classics that really demonstrates the kind of creativity and sophistication the Beatles routinely displayed. Some of it may be lost on people who are not old folks like me.
It does sound like the Beach Boys -- complete with the oo-oo harmonies. In fact, it's a deliberate choice to sound like the quintessential, teen fun-in-the-sun band, if you consider the lyrics. The song is designed to remind the listener of those odes to teen life in the United States that were common in '50s-early '60s rock 'n' roll ("California Girls," "Surfin USA," Chuck Berry's "Back in the USA"). Except that in this case the song references the Soviet Union, a rather dull, grey, drab place that few in those days would associate with teen culture (the Beatles and their decadent Western music were banned there for years) or the kind of stuff mentioned suggested in the lyrics. And it's not just the Beatles thumbing their noses at the USSR. There's an implicit suggestion that teen culture in the West is mindless fluff.
"Back in the USSR" is just a clever bit of '60s irony, courtesy of John, Paul, George and Ringo, that spoke volumes about the differences between East and West during the Cold War.
And I don't mind talking about the Beatles at all. One of the greatest bands ever.
I hope I wasn't being a know it all. One of the most interesting things about pop music from the '60s onward is the genesis for certain songs. In fact, there is a book out that I haven't read, but that sounds terrific, to my ears anyway. It's "Like a Rolling Stone: Bob Dylan at the Crossroads" by Greil Marcus, about the writing and recording of "Like A Rolling Stone." Sounds like it would be awfully interesting, given the influence of the song in the rock 'n' roll world.
Oh, so Slipknot are one of your local bands... just reading about them on wikipedia.
Why did those ex-band members leave?
Where do you stand on the nu-metal/heavy metal debate?
Roger Moore 1927-2017
And a whole host of others I'm definitely forgetting.
Mozart, Bach, Wagner, etc. etc.
Best tune in the world? Maggie May - Thank you Rod!
Slipknot rule the nu-metal world. .
The members switched around at first because they decided to change from having three drummers to one drummer when they found Joey Jordison. Singer was replaced by Corey Taylor...
Best line-up they ever had is as it is now.
Roger Moore 1927-2017
However, best gig I've ever been to, hands down, was the inimitable Grace Jones, 3 years ago, in Glasgow's Barrowlands. As a casual listener of her stuff, I went along more for the experience (she is infamous, after all) and for the reason she was in a Bond film. But she blew us all away. Simply an electrifying presence, completely and utterly bonkers in an OTT diva stylish way (particularly when she grabs your arm and swings you about screaming "DANCE!!!"). And coupled with Sly & Robbie live, the Parisian-Jamaican beats on Libertango were just breathtaking - I'd never have thought.
Depends. Two different sort of Slipknot fans. Old School fans and fans of the newer material.
Older stuff like the self titled album is more metal, heavier and grittier.
Iowa is my personal favourite album. It's an underrated masterpiece. Listen to a few songs, see if you like.
They only have three big selling albums, Slipknot, Iowa and Volume 3. You aren't too far behind to become a fan!
Classical
Jazz
Classic R&B
Classic Rock
Alternative
Some Country
Batman: "The Hammer Of Justice is UNISEX!"
-Batman: The Brave & The Bold -
Yeah. It was a blast. B-) If you can't appreciate this guy, you're missing out---metal, glam, horror-theatre and comedy, all rolled into an intoxicating two-hour show.
My ears are still bleeding, 24 hours later {[]
ADDENDUM: I'm a rock n' roll man, first and foremost---Beatles, Bowie, Stones, Kinks, Who, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Queen, Sabbath, Jethro Tull, Yes...and those are just the first ones I can think of...all Brits ?:)
...and the Doors, Kiss, Cheap Trick, REO Speedwagon, Aerosmith, Alice Cooper, Van Halen (early stuff), Black Crowes, Ramones, Talking Heads, Neil Young, Frank Zappa, U2, Elvis, ad infinitum...
Newer stuff: I'm enjoying Velvet Revolver, Queens of the Stone Age, Jet, The Killers...
"Yeah, you know you gotta help me out..." - from the last scene of The Matador; 'All These Things That I've Done' B-)
Plus classical, blues, real country...sadly, there's much more music than there is time to enjoy it...
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM
Thar must have been a blast, Loeffe, {[] I'm a little bit green with envy right about now - haven't been to a really good show in about a year.
He's still got it...that's the advantage of being ugly all along---old age doesn't do any real harm )
"I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
"Screw 'em." - Daniel Craig, The Best James Bond EverTM