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Old 10-31-2014, 03:54 PM   #51 (permalink)
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Which Metallica did you check out? Hopefully it was the earlier stuff like Ride the Lightning or Master of Puppets.
Both, actually. Those are the two I started her on.
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Old 11-02-2014, 06:39 PM   #52 (permalink)
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How did your current taste in music evolve?
Slowly, as I knew from the time I was just a little girl (maybe 3 or 4 years old) that I loved music, and it was the only thing that could calm, perplex, and inspire me.


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Where did you start out?
My parents had somewhat conflicting musical tastes when I was growing up (for instance, my mom was a fan of Heart and Pat Benatar; my dad's taste varied from The Cars to Metallica) so some of my first albums were a little wacky/strange for an 11 year old girl.

A few things I remember being in the earliest incarnation of my music collection:

Aerosmith - Eat the Rich
Motley Crue - Dr. Feelgood
The Cars - Candy-O
Prince & the Revolution - Purple Rain
Pat Benatar - Crimes of Passion
Poison - Look What the Cat Dragged In

I never really seemed to have the affinity that other young people had for the current music. I listened to the radio a lot - there was a station that had 80s, 90s, 00s music but mostly focused on the 80s. There are a few songs that I can sort of recognize from the 00's but to this day I'm so out of the loop that I don't even care anymore.

I also grew up with a 60s and 70s station that ran for about 20 years. I cried for days when they were swallowed up by a modern country station.

I used to read vintage music books/magazines, really did all I could to get in touch with the decades I felt most comfortable curling up into. From those, I discovered Kraftwerk, and the Velvet Underground.

Which genres and bands were the turning points?

When I was 16, I finally bought my own record player. I inherited a bunch of records from both my parents and grandparents. My life changed almost instantly. I went from downloading tons of 60s and 70s music on Shareaza(? can't remember if that's the correct name but it was a cool thing) and burning mixed discs every week to listening to the multitude of 7" singles I had to play. It was then that I began to also appreciate the music of the 1950s (though I was already into Buddy Holly, from what I remember). I bought my first record that summer - Nancy Sinatra's "Boots". That's where my appreciation for 60s girl groups probably came into full swing.

At age 17, my love for the Carpenters, Bread, America, Strawberry Alarm Clock, and several others came into view.

At age 18, I discovered my favorite band of all time, Sparks.

At age 19 I was utterly obsessed with the Shangri-Las, Sigue Sigue Sputnik, Lesley Gore, and Squeeze.

At age 21 my obsession with T. Rex/Marc Bolan began.

When I moved to California at age 22 I discovered my love for a lot of groovy stuff I always knew was out there, but I'd never loved half as much as I did - Alan Parsons Project, Roxy Music/Bryan Ferry, and I was introduced to the wondrous heartache known as Elliott Smith.

There's a lot I'm leaving out for lack of memory but I feel my taste is still evolving at age 25. I'm still clawing further into the past, really cultivating a comfort zone, as well as learning new things (for instance, I LOVE Franz Ferdinand and Daft Punk's newest album was a staple for me for weeks).
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Old 11-25-2016, 03:40 PM   #53 (permalink)
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Default Your Music Odyssey

How have your tastes changed/evolved over the years? (Or have they even?) What did you used to like that you no longer enjoy or can no longer connect with? What music has been with you always? What music have you grown into/discovered after many years?
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Old 11-25-2016, 04:01 PM   #54 (permalink)
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Loved metal, then Batty posted Ke$ha and it was all downhill from there.
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Old 11-25-2016, 04:03 PM   #55 (permalink)
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I use to hate progressive rock and most psychedelic based projects. Now I can't get enough. I think that's been my only major change.
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Old 11-25-2016, 04:03 PM   #56 (permalink)
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I could swear we had something like this, but I can't find it anymore.
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Old 11-25-2016, 04:18 PM   #57 (permalink)
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http://www.musicbanter.com/general-m...our-taste.html
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Old 11-25-2016, 05:44 PM   #58 (permalink)
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Alright... *sigh*, here goes.

Early on in life, all I was really subjected to were church hymns, CCM, Country radio, and Christmas music. I think my first musical love would've been video game soundtracks like Yoshi's Island, Super Mario RPG, and of course, Donkey Kong Country. I first played that game in 2004, when I got it on GBA as a present the day my sister was born. I played that game nearly every waking moment, and I especially adored the aquatic level theme. I still love the **** out of every song on that game. Later on I would get the rest of the series as they systematically came out for the system, and I adored their soundtracks as well. I got a modded Xbox around 2004 as well, which was pre-loaded with around 150 original titles and emulators for Sega Genesis, MAME, Commodore, NES, SNES, some others. I really got into the soundtracks for these games too. Unfortunately, my brother was the one interested in skateboarding and I had no interest in it. Thus, I never had much desire to play Tony Hawk's Underground. But if I had, I would have a very different story here. Well, I did play Disney Extreme Skating some... and that game had some cool songs in it that probably shaped a bit of my taste.

Moving on of course, I didn't have much of a penchant for the Country or Gospel I would hear on a regular basis, though I liked some of the Elvis I would hear at times. But in 2009, that's when my tastes really started to begin developing. MJ had died while we were driving down to the beach for vacation. We listened to his songs the entire ride there, and something about the emotion of it really struck with me. I came to adore his music, getting a copy of Off the Wall for christmas that year. I especially loved Rock With You, Workin Day and Night, and She's Out of my Life, and I feel I can still put on that album and feel the same as I did the first time I heard it. The rest of middle school saw me getting into general 80s pop music via way of XM radio and my mom's CD collection. I grew to like Duran Duran, Tears for Fears, and Thompson Twins the most. In 7th grade, I set my radio alarm clock to the pop station, and for a few months was into radio pop. In 8th grade, I got into classic rock via the local rock station, and then from there got into grunge in 9th grade. The tail end of the year, I joined my first band, Nuclear Event. The guitarist knew a guy who could play bass for us and also had a drum set that I could use. The guy was rich as **** and practices had a neat atmosphere cause of the house. After like two practices I finally got that Green Day song down (Brain Stew) and accepted his offer to buy the set for 650. After a few months of playing I realized the guy was an ass and wouldn't give me any input or creative freedoms, as well as constantly demeaning me for my poor drumming (even though he can't play guitar worth ****, links if asked). I started getting into the general high school trope, pop punk and post-grunge. Breaking Benjamin was my favorite group. Then one day in 10th grade, my friend Nikki had brought her iPod classic to school and showed it to me, all the **** I had seen and read about online was there: Deftones, Incubus, Tool, Black Sabbath, Jimmy Eat World. All stuff I wanted to get into but never really got around to in my spare time. She gave me her flash drive to borrow and I copped all that ****. I also got into Primus around the same time, which was pretty influential regarding my tastes in experimental and noise later on. That summer I also got into my first real metal bands, and started my love for stoner rock. I got into Mastodon and Corrosion of Conformity.

The biggest impact of all, though, was meeting Neil. By the start of 11th grade I was already getting into punk, I was listening to Pissed Jeans, Melvins, Dead Kennedys, what have you. I was also getting into Velvet Underground and first learned of noise music, which I did enjoy at a surface level. But meeting Neil, I learned so much more of punk culture, getting into orgcore, further into stoner rock, his tastes mirrored that of mine but at a much deeper level. I started a punk band with him later that year, General Disregard, and we made some decent **** at one point. I even began actually enjoying hip hop by means of MF Doom, Aesop Rock, and A Tribe Called Quest. I started getting into some jazz too, mostly Thelonius. Early 12th grade I joined this forum and you all know the story from there.

tl;dr: All I heard early on was country, then I liked video game soundtracks like DKC, then I listened to 80s pop, then I listened to classic rock, then grunge, then pop punk, then post-grunge, then alternative metal, then more metal and more punk, then noise rock and post-hardcore, and then present times.
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"SMOKE CRACK MUDA****KKA"

I'll check that dictionary, but in the meantime I'm impressed - as is everyone else in the world - by your eloquence, obvious accomplishments and success, and the evidence of your blazingly high intelligence.
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Old 11-25-2016, 06:50 PM   #59 (permalink)
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Hello, Sir! <3

Let's see. I would not exactly call it an evolution of my taste so much as a crystallization. When I first started following you on your music odyssey, I had many individual albums that I liked, but I did not know enough about what types of music would be grouped together in genres or indeed what things I liked across genres (aside from testosterone).

Now I have come to realize that I love prog rock (or even prog metal or avant-prog), as well as folk, the darker the better.

And testosterone and phallic guitars.
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Old 11-25-2016, 06:55 PM   #60 (permalink)
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edit: posted in the wrong thread.
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Actually, I like you a lot, Nea. That's why I treat you like ****. It's the MB way.

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