1988RedT2 wrote: Dead Kennedys! Honestly, what adolescent can listen to "Too Drunk to Berkeley" and not giggle his arse off?
Hey, holiday in Cambodia is a great song.
1988RedT2 wrote: Dead Kennedys! Honestly, what adolescent can listen to "Too Drunk to Berkeley" and not giggle his arse off?
Hey, holiday in Cambodia is a great song.
Hootie and the blowfish, butthole surfers, bush, and one that is sure to rile the nativrs- nirvana. Can't berkeleying stand nirvana. I don't know wtf I was thinking.
akamcfly wrote: ANY ska cover band or song. Ever. Sooooooo embarrassed.
Dude, I still love me some Aquabats and Less Than Jake.
When I was a kid I owned a Vanilla Ice tape at one point. My dad listened to it then destroyed it in front of me.
At the time I was mad but now I am grateful. Thanks, Dad.
I still like a lot of the music I can remember from my youth, as long as it's kid friendly.
Still LOVE Big Wreck!
Lancer007 wrote:akamcfly wrote: ANY ska cover band or song. Ever. Sooooooo embarrassed.Dude, I still love me some Aquabats and Less Than Jake.
I still like Reel Big Fish and Mighty Mighty Bosstones.
The_Jed wrote:Lancer007 wrote:I still like Reel Big Fish and Mighty Mighty Bosstones.akamcfly wrote: ANY ska cover band or song. Ever. Sooooooo embarrassed.Dude, I still love me some Aquabats and Less Than Jake.
It's a free country.
driver109x wrote: Limp Bizkit, Kid Rock...
I was actually going to add limp whatever. I respect kid rock because the man truly does care about his fans (see his ticket price wars and his soldier work) and is actually a pretty talented artist.
Add Marilyn Manson too the list
"Love" might be a strong word but... I admit to cranking up Too Fast For Love in a '89 Camaro with the T-Tops out and a Kraco Booster making all kinds of awful noise. I have to go wash my mind after typing that. Until Poison and Ratt came along... they were bottom of the barrel.
EastCoastMojo wrote: I have the opposite problem, I am finding myself liking songs that I hated when I was younger.
This. Growing up it was either country with my mom or oldies with my dad. I never cared for contemporary music. Keep in mind I turned 13 in '97.
For the past few years I've been mostly listening to late 90's top 40/alternative.
I have, In my opinion Impeccable taste in music
I still love everything I ever loved. Some perhaps not as much as I did when I was 16 and some a lot more than I used to.
There was the point in my "musical development" where I was avidly looking for what it was in music that I loved and since at 14 years old I wasn't sure what it was or if it even had a name I burned through anything I could. I will never intentionally listen to suicidal tendencies again but I understand why I liked it then. Same with COC, SOD, The Accused and all the other crossover albums I used to have.
This weekend the wife and I blasted the Wipers "Is this real?" and X "Los Angeles" and I realized I have owned at least one copy of each album since 1988. Those albums (and many, many others) still hit me as hard now as they did then.
Nick_Comstock wrote: I found a Meat Puppet cassette from my teenage years not long ago. Man that's some weird stuff.
Too High To Die was a pretty amazing, straightforward rock album. A lot of their other stuff was pretty strange, though. Music snobs dig them to this day. Mark Maron did a great podcast with Kurt Kirkwood maybe 6 months ago.
Anyway, my answer is Live. I saw them live (no pun) twice in '91 and '94, IIRC. Not sure what I was thinking.
gamby wrote:Nick_Comstock wrote: I found a Meat Puppet cassette from my teenage years not long ago. Man that's some weird stuff.Too High To Die was a pretty amazing, straightforward rock album. A lot of their other stuff was pretty strange, though. Music snobs dig them to this day. Mark Maron did a great podcast with Kurt Kirkwood maybe 6 months ago. Anyway, my answer is Live. I saw them live (no pun) twice in '91 and '94, IIRC. Not sure what I was thinking.
No, I still like it, it's jut weird. It's weird to find something like that and Immediately have a flashback to the first time you heard it.
"Last trip I took, was a boat that floated on it's back all day, in the middle of a song, about trees that are scared of the dark"
Oh, and somebody mentioned Godsmack...I'd reather listen to the sound of my own testicles getting ripped off by a rabid wolverine or a venomous duck than have to listen to those berkeleyers. Seriously berkeley Godsmack! I want to punch those berkeleyers in the face extremely hard! berkeley them! berkeley their mothers for having them!
JtspellS wrote: Most of the late 90s rap/rock/dj on a stage with a "rock" band.
Yep. Limp Bizkit being at the forefront.
xflowgolf wrote:JtspellS wrote: Most of the late 90s rap/rock/dj on a stage with a "rock" band.LOL @ Nick Yep. Limp Bizkit being at the forefront.
1999-2001 was a real void in "good" music. Even the underground was hurting for awhile.
While mainstream music is just hideous now, at least the underground is really fertile, IMHO.
gamby wrote:Nick_Comstock wrote: I found a Meat Puppet cassette from my teenage years not long ago. Man that's some weird stuff.Too High To Die was a pretty amazing, straightforward rock album. A lot of their other stuff was pretty strange, though. Music snobs dig them to this day. Mark Maron did a great podcast with Kurt Kirkwood maybe 6 months ago. Anyway, my answer is Live. I saw them live (no pun) twice in '91 and '94, IIRC. Not sure what I was thinking.
I love me some Too High to Die. That's a GREAT album.
I am ashamed to admit I was a KISS fan way back when. WTF was I thinking? I am also done with U2, their early stuff was bleeding edge but their later pretentious stuff wrecked all that for me.
A perennial favorite which I never get tired of: Pink Floyd. I can crank up 'Meddle' and it's like hearing it for the first time all over again. Same with 'Dark Side of the Moon'.
Can't believe I wasted money on Metallica CDs when I heard all the stuff on the radio.
That was my biggest regret. I'd hear a band on the radio and say "hey, I like this." Then I'd go spend hard earned money on a CD, only to hear the entire album on the radio over the next year.
Creed... ugh. What more can I say, I was a stupid teenager. I also listened to pop country for a while, sometimes I switch on the country station now and wonder how I ever endured listening to it.
Nick_Comstock wrote: I'd reather listen to the sound of my own testicles getting ripped off by a rabid wolverine or a venomous duck than have to listen to those berkeleyers.
So it is safe to say that you do not like them?
I have to admit, I was a pretty big Scorpions fan back in my early teenage years---- not so much anymore. I think (like a lot of bands) they got worse with age, while my tastes were growing up a bit.
I'm with Crumudgeon though..... I still enjoy Pink Floyd, although the radio has ruined most of their better known stuff. I'm still a big fan of The Final Cut, Meddle, Animals, and Roger Water's Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking.
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