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re: Why do you think we listen to the music we listen too.
Posted on 11/19/13 at 10:03 pm to CaptainPanic
Posted on 11/19/13 at 10:03 pm to CaptainPanic
Seeing Napster reminded me of this.
Posted on 11/19/13 at 10:05 pm to The Dudes Rug
Founder of Phish's cover of Gin & Juice 
Posted on 11/19/13 at 10:17 pm to MrTide33
quote:
I got saved at age 7
Saved from what?
Posted on 11/19/13 at 10:29 pm to HeadyBrosevelt
quote:
Wrong.
That's cute.
12-18 is the adolescent age where you are most impressionable.
That is the age of your formative years where everything was better and music was "good".
My point is nostalgia.
This post was edited on 11/19/13 at 10:31 pm
Posted on 11/19/13 at 10:46 pm to TheDoc
i don't really like any music from that time range (2005-2011)o
Posted on 11/20/13 at 12:49 am to MrTide33
quote:
MrTide33
Answers question with why I listen to what I listen too and how that may relate to others. One part of who I am is faith.
Out of everyhting, that is what gets focused on.
Posted on 11/20/13 at 5:08 am to HowardThePig
quote:
Why do you think we listen to the music we listen too.
I have a sister 8 yrs older, she turned me on to everything in the 60's ....
I took over after that .....
Posted on 11/20/13 at 6:32 am to HowardThePig
My dad was constantly playing music around the house when I was growing up. Everything from Otis Redding to Van Morrison to Dr. John to The Allman brothers and the grateful dead. So I got a large portion of my taste from him.
I also spent a large portion of my younger years with my grandmother (my dad's mom) and she was always listening to Hank Sr and Townes Van Zandt. While I hated that music at the time I definitely think that she's the reason I love great songwriters and country music today.
I also spent a large portion of my younger years with my grandmother (my dad's mom) and she was always listening to Hank Sr and Townes Van Zandt. While I hated that music at the time I definitely think that she's the reason I love great songwriters and country music today.
Posted on 11/20/13 at 7:01 am to HeadyBrosevelt
quote:
I'd say mid high school/college years like age 16-22 is when someone truly develops their taste.
This. It makes crappy music live on forever in a small number of people who were that age at the time. Luckily that age for me was Seattle/Grunge era music. A few bands from everyone's era will stand up to time. Pearl Jam for example, but then this is when you are most receptive to music. My friends never listened to the Beatles but they listened to Led Zepplin. I was about 8 years old when John Bonham died so it is not like I remember LZ being great when they were in their prime.
The music you love when you are 16-22 is the music you are going to love forever. Because it is always going to remind of the time when you were (happiest is not right word) most carefree.
Posted on 11/20/13 at 9:20 am to LSU alum wannabe
our band could be your life
real names'd be proof
me and mike watt played for years
punk rock changed our lives
real names'd be proof
me and mike watt played for years
punk rock changed our lives
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