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70's and first half the 80's... went downhill thereafter
90's improved a bit with bands like Nirvana, Pearl Jam and a few others. By the time the Noughties arrived I lost interest altogether. |
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birds of a feather asp
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It's an age thing probably but i'd say 70s and 80s pretty well matched but a distance to the 3rd place
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Indeed Dragon, although I will confess to topping up my music library with a bit of 60's lately.
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aye some great tunes in 60s to
but the thing is iis it an age thing or is good music just good music despite the era in which it was released eg straus and then how is musical choice affected by culture and background eg my wife who is from an ethnic background (caribbean) hates abba but loves adele ![]() |
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I can reason with that Dragon. Abba is more Disco/Pop whereas Adele is more soul.
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my wife (a lot youngrt thean me listens to radio 1 extra)
I listen to planet rock but aftr all these years i am so tuned into radio 1 extra coz i have no choice 70 and 80s still the best ever as you get older you accommodate and chill |
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Absolute Classic Rock is my favoured station, but for 60's/70's/80's nostalgia I usually tune into Greatest Hits Radio
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70s rck best ever
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1- 80s
2- 60s 3- 70s 4- 50s |
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You must be younger than us Tobes
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I was the first punk in Deptford, what a time that was, but also loved and still do House music, had some great times in Ibiza for many a year, I am 60 now and still love listening to it.
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80s
70s 60s 90s |
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Deptford
first went to Ibiza in 1978 great days sad to say gone for ever best music imho the Tamla Mowtown days . Hope you are well. Feeling a bit old Ronnie. |
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I always think people like their teenage years - 1976-1986 was a good 10 years for me for music.
Clash/Jam then Joy Division then new Romantics with people like Ramones running in the background - mellowed a bit into Dire Straits, but then supped up with the Pogues. The period 1963-1966 had some interesting stuff though with Motown/Beatles/Stones/Who/Dylan. |
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I always think people like their teenage years - 1976-1986 was a good 10 years for me for music.
Clash/Jam then Joy Division then new Romantics with people like Ramones running in the background - mellowed a bit into Dire Straits, but then supped up with the Pogues. The period 1963-1966 had some interesting stuff though with Motown/Beatles/Stones/Who/Dylan. |
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Think it depends on your favourite type of music - for example I love some 90s stuff because I'm quite into the heavy metal types of all sorts e.g. Megadeth, Metallica, Ozzy.
So of course I also love the classic rock periods 70s (Rainbow, Queen etc amazing), and even 80s when it was a little more popular Metal (Bon Jovi, Europe, Def Leppard, ACDC etc). I even like a lot of modern stuff that is more on the heavy end - Ozzy's new album (is top one, get it if you like him), Slipnot, Five Finger Death Punch, System of a Down. Then early noughties was some great stuff like Evanescence around. Think caveat is that some stuff I like (heavy metal) wouldn't have always been singles or 'chart' types always, more albums. Oddly, despite all that heavy stuff, I also love Abba ![]() |
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My musical youth could be cut down to Def Leppard > Metallica > Nirvana > REM.
But got to say, once grunge had come and gone the 90s was an absolute load of crap. Britpop was absolute toilet in general with maybe half a dozen good albums in the end. And, sorry but nu-metal may be the worst genre to ever stalk the earth. 60s is the best surely. Simply having the Beatles, the Kinks and the Stones all releasing some of the greatest music ever written within a few short years. Add in the Beach Boys, Love, Scott Walker, Motown, Hendrix, Simon and Garfunkel, Dylan, Velvet Underground. Just extraordinary. Can probably throw a towel over the 70s and 80s for me. 70s had some really interesting and experimental stuff such as Bowie, Roxy Music and early Police, XTC, Television etc. But the 80s just refined all that into some of the greatest pop music ever, before the big record companies decided getting a pretty face to front committee-room pop was the way to go later in the decade. |
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70's. At school loved Glam Rock, Bowie, Alice Cooper and Slade in particular. Soon moved on rock bands, Sabbath, Led Zep, Pink Floyd and Deep Purple. Even quite enjoyed the disco and punk era's. Concerts were great and cheap enough to go regularly...
Its always possible to discover a 'gem' album missed first time round. |
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Only got into early Alice Cooper in the last year or so. Why did no-one tell me it was that good? He'd always just been the Poison guy.
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Welcome to My Nightmare is a fantastic album.
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3 years either side of Jilted John... that's about my era
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Alice Copper is brilliant his early albums are some of the best in my vinyl collection - some great tunes , lyrics and guitar riffs
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Forgot to add one of my favourite bands that made me love some 80s/90s music - Green Day - and had great longevity as a band too so spanned decades from 80's up to present...
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I think when your favourites last a long time, then the exact decade becomes a bit less important for your music choice.
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70s defo, dragon spot on with the diversity , Mary Hopkins to the the sex pistols
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I should really say 90s for Green Day, as they barely made 80s, and they are one of the bands that really meant the 90s was still a decent decade for music, as well as the 2000s onwards...
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Later on, do like a bit of Nickelback
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The 60s was the most innovative if you assume Rock'n'roll was essentially ryhthm and blues with a white face. I was about to say the 60s till I noticed Steely Dan weren't formed till 1971. The 70s probably had more depth with Young,Springsteen and Mitchell producing their best albums and an awful lot of classic albums from a great host of others.
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I think the growth of bands like The Beatles, The Kinks and The Beach Boys over a few short years was just ridiculous. John and Paul go from Love Me Do to Rubber Soul in 3 years. 3 years! Rubber Sould and Revolver are released in the space of 8 months, and they even have the time to release Paperback Writer and Rain in between.
Look at the journey of Brian Wilson from creating brilliant pop surf songs to then doing Pet Sounds and Surf's Up later on. Same with The Kinks. Innovative blues rock of You Really Got Me in 64 to Village Green, Arthur and Lola (surely the greatest 3-album run ever) later in the decade. Just don't think any decade can compete with that level of innovation and creativity. Just imagine being 20 years old in 65 and having all that coming out one after the other. My mum and dad basically were 20 in 65 btw. Well 22. And from Liverpool. They literally had the Beatles in The Cavern a bus ride away. But not for them. They spent the decade listening to the crooners. Englebert. Johnny Mathis. I'll never understand how they managed to miss all that. |
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70's for me but I've seen this after just watching Tin Soldier by the Small Faces & now I'm not so sure
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Living through it, as a younger person, the 80s seemed like trash a lot of the time.
But, looking back in retrospect I realised how many good acts there actually were producing music across the 80s, and even much of the more pop stuff (Duran Duran etc) was actually very decent music written and played by the actual artists. It couldn't compete for 'invention' with something like the 60s, as 80s was a lot more produced as a sound, but still some very talented musicians around in it, and in comparison some far more impressive actual production of sound achieved in many ways. My only bugbear with the 90s was that it spawned areas like rap and dance music that to me spoilt music forever. Even though there are occasional areas of those sounds I like. |
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There was some absolute dross in every decade, but alongside that there was innovation and imagination from 63 to around th eend of the 70s. The best of 70s and 80s couldn't have happened without the 60s revolution. I went from infant to teenager in the 60s and was totally aware of the cultural shift that was happening, it will always be the sound track to growing up.
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1960s/1970s best songs ,, which when all is said and done is what counts
With a large part of the best in the 1970s merely being a continuation of the music and artists of the 60s A lot of the rest in the 70s was enjoyable but lacked real depth to be considered ,,, with exceptions such as Springsteen 80s music too tinny |
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Again exceptions in the 80s such as REM …
But even then as good as they were ,,, they didn’t write quite right something as good as Midnight Train to Georgia or Galveston … true timeless classics that are in a different league |
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Just listen to that simple guitar intro and then Glen Campbells voice comes in … game over
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I'm guessing that not many of the forumites on here are watching the brit awards tonight then?
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Got it on.
Just said to the family that I'm officially getting old as I hardly know any of these people. |
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seen less flesh on a porno video
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