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| The Hangar: Off-Topic Forum Pour a cold one and post all off-topic subjects here! |
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#61 |
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Forever Awesome
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Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 8,884
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#62 |
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Picture of our Head Coach below:
Veteran
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Bayonne, NJ
Posts: 1,952
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After 2000.... I can't think of one - LOL
How about 1966-72? great music |
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#63 |
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Forever Awesome
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Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 8,884
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#64 |
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Let's Kill them all.........
Hall Of Fame
Join Date: May 2009
Location: In Morris Co.,N.J.,at the right end of a Browning 12 gauge
Posts: 12,624
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#65 | |
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Not one image until my posts are restored.
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Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,370
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Quote:
Now, pick any band from the 2000s and fast forward the same amount of time as the previously mentioned era. Anyone believe they could do the same? Not a chance in hell. |
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#66 |
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We Know Geno
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 7,446
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#67 | |
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Patron and Grapefruit Juice Bitchess!!!
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Jerseystrong
Posts: 17,015
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Quote:
Last edited by Ruby2; 02-08-2013 at 07:10 AM. |
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#68 | |
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Not one image until my posts are restored.
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Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,370
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Quote:
Fifty years later, most people can hum a melody from songs by The Stones, Floyd, Zep, you name 'em. You really believe this will be the case in 50 years with even the best Indie group of today? That's truly laughable. The majority of the listening public couldn't do it right now. |
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#69 |
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We Know Geno
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 7,446
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Just a funny thought, but The Beatles were the One Direction of their era. Just so we're all clear on that.
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#70 | |
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Patron and Grapefruit Juice Bitchess!!!
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Jerseystrong
Posts: 17,015
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Quote:
Last edited by Ruby2; 02-08-2013 at 07:45 AM. |
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#71 | ||
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Not one image until my posts are restored.
Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,370
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Quote:
Actually, The Beatles made their bones as the consummate bar band in their native Liverpool, and then for an extended stay in rough & tumble Hamburg. Probably the original "grunge". Quote:
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#72 |
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We Know Geno
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 7,446
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Perhaps, but the fundamentals are still there. Good looking guys, clean/polished look, millions of screaming girls.
I wonder what would happen if One Direction took LSD, though. Hmm... |
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#73 | ||||
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All League
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 4,069
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From what I understand, back then, music was new to everyone. If you weren't listening to it live, for all intents and purposes, you really weren't listening to music. It was different and made you feel good. It was a social experience where you went out for drinks and smokes (and other stuff) with a ****-ton of people, and got lost in sounds you didn't know existed. From a playing standpoint, you actually had to have talent/skill/passion for it, because you weren't going to get rich from it or get the girl or win fame. It was something you did because you loved creating something unique to the world. Now, every 7 year old walks around with headphones on silently listening to his own music, completely desensitized to what it even means to have music. This is because every wannabe who can pick up a guitar or make two sentences rhyme or has access to a mic or computer is on YouTube and or the radio, or DJibg for his highschool and friends. Music has become spaced out and expanded dry. There's like 10 genres now for each 1 genre there was back then. There are 4 genre-subsets to encompass literally a series of noises laced through a computer with someone backing it with his or her off-pitch vocals (dubstep/chillstep/brostep/glitchstep)...not that I don't enjoy it; bro step is funky at clubs, and chillstep is awesome to study to....its just that it's not music, yet there are four different legions of fans who subscribe to why each is better than the others. And with all of this constant influx of music, we become desensitized. If you asked anyone from my generation who their favorite act is, they'd rattle off at least 5 artists comprising probably three or more genres. Back then, it was easy to be the kings of music cuz there was no real competition as the artist, and because it was so new and cool and inaccessible, the public flocked to it. I don't know that music today is so much different or worse than back then. The qualities are still similar... Lots of it is to rebel against parents/culture/mainstream, and lots of it is simply to feel good. Parents still think their kids music is 'just noise' as they did back when Zep was tearing it up...it's just a matter of scarcity. /snowdayprententiousthesis. |
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#74 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 19,066
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None. Which is a shame because I'm sure there is some very fine stuff out there. I just do not listen to the radio for tunes at all anymore. I'm stuck with the old stuff. Also I don't have kids so no forced exposure to the new music.
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#75 | |
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Not one image until my posts are restored.
Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,370
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Quote:
Plus, Berry had two relatively new weapons in his arsenal, the electric guitar and amplification. Until Les Paul created the electric version, the acoustic guitar was almost a rhythm instrument, as even with a resonator, it was not easily heard over big bands or orchestras. Now, a visionary like Berry could be heard, and seen, front and center, which turned on tons of future artists like Page, Beck, Lennon, Scotty Moore, Elvis, Richards, to name just a few. |
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#76 |
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Rockin' In The Free World
Rookie
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 943
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Mumford and Son's
Brad Paisley's American Saturday Night..... The guitar work is amazing, even if it is country Mark Broussard: Cerencro |
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#77 | |
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fermenting
Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: New York, NY
Posts: 12,130
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There's quite a few good bands in this thread, but I'm shocked no one has brought Gary Clark Jr to the table yet |
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#78 |
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murse in training
Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Staten Island
Posts: 7,451
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I'm a 44 year old guy who really likes alternative music. I also love the bands of the '60s and '70s. The inability for some folks to get on the bus with alternative music is no big deal, they are just stuck with what brought them happiness and a comfort level. But to say that the bands nowadays are not passionate/talented/successful is a bit myopic imho.
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#79 | |
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All League
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 4,069
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Alternative music is awesome, and I actually don't follow much mainstream. I love so many (maybe too many) different kinds of music, and typically am opposed to labeling any of them as a specific type. I never said today's musicians didn't have passion or talent. Quite the opposite, I think today's musicians have much more talent...as is standard in the evolution of anything. My long rant was simply to give my version of reasoning/justification to Borgo's post about today's musicians not being able to fully sell out arenas 40 yrs from now, the way the artists of 40 years ago still are today. |
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#80 | |
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All League
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 3,946
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Modern music buyers just aren't into it...it's buried, but it's there...lots of it. You just have to look. Too many old codgers are too busy saying it's not like the good old days anymore, and fail to bother to take the time to seek it out, or if they have, give it a fair shot. The internet is a gold mine for high quality music. I can't keep up with how much good music there is. |
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