View Full Version : Best and worst of musical decades: The 1980s
clean
01-22-2006, 07:18 PM
"There are many reasons to hate MTV (and you won't find me arguing against a single one of them), but none is more justified than the fact that it became the marker for how we remember certain years, simply because it is easier to remember visual images than it is to recall audio moments. It also didn't hurt that MTV had the tendency to hit on one band -- even a band as awful as Extreme, one of the biggest MTV stars in the months before "Nevermind" -- and to play them to death, or at least play them until you could remember every frame of the video.
The network's impact on our cognitive recollection is so great that anyone under the age of 30 can immediately recall the hair on that guy in a Flock of Seagulls far more quickly than they can remember their ATM number. This effect is only compounded by VH1's "Behind the Music" franchise, where only the seamy stories get a hearing and where Leif Garrett and Nikki Sixx are more important to rock than Bob Mould or the Mekons.
The celebration that you're not hearing about this fall, and the one I'd like to see magazine covers memorialize, is the 10-year anniversary of the death of hair bands. We can blame MTV for much of their rise and also part of their death, when the network switched gears to Cobain & Co. But for a significant chunk of time -- from, to pick an arbitrary benchmark, the release of Guns N' Roses' "Appetite for Destruction" in 1987 until that fateful day of Nirvana in 1991 -- bands like the Gunners, Poison, Great White and Mötley Crüe actually dominated the charts and sent sales of men's hair spray skyrocketing."
http://www.salon.com/ent/music/feature/2001/08/30/eighties/index.html
-Slap-
01-22-2006, 08:16 PM
Prolonged exposure to MTV will eventually smooth out the wrinkles on your brain.
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-30-2006, 04:05 AM
Prolonged exposure to MTV will eventually smooth out the wrinkles on your brain.
:laugh: ^5
Steve Lukather (probably one of the most recorded guitarists in music history) puts the smackdown on the emptyV culture in this fun interview:
Jeb Wright: Steve Lukather, A guy who can actually play
Monday 23 January 2006 09:24 by Arend
With Lukather's Xmas album Santamental re-released on Favoured Nations and Toto's new album Falling in Between coming out in February 2006, Jeb Wright talked to Lukather about life, music & the biz. Check out some striking moments out of the very interesting interview.
Jeb: We have done a couple of interviews before and I bug you with an email once in a while but to be totally ****ing honest with you, I have always thought you were a bit out of place in Toto.
Steve: What?
Jeb: Not the sound of the band or anything but you are an awesome guitar player and you don’t always show it in Toto.
Steve: I purposely do that. Here is a perfect example: When I have a solo I tend to be silly at first. All the guys in the band will go, "That is really great, Steve. Your guitar player friends will really love that sh*t. Now will you play something that goes with the song?" I say, "Okay, fine." Outside of my day job I play all kinds of crazy sh*t. I have a fusion band called El Grupo and when I play with them I go nuts. When I play live with Toto I stretch out a bit and play with a lot more flash. But you have to do what is right for the tunes. Toto is not just about my guitar playing; they are not my guitar band. There are six other guys and Toto is really much more about composition then they are about riffs.
Jeb: Toto’s last studio album started seeing you guys open things up.
Steve: This one is a hundred million light years better than that.
Jeb: A lot of people do not understand how sessions work.
Steve: Here is the big myth about the studio guy: They say that we just show up and read the charts, play the parts, get the money and go home. They say there is no heart or soul to a studio guy. The truth be told, 99% of the time we were handed a blank piece of paper and we wrote our own parts. We rearranged and basically produced most of the records we played on. Rarely did we ever just have to read the notes. Jeff and I were hired to bring what we had to the party. We were in demand because of how fast and how good we could do it. We were in and out and it was done.
Jeb: I was looking at everyone you have played with and my jaw dropped. People usually have a style that is their niche. You are all over the place from Kenny Rodgers to Michael Jackson to Cheap Trick.
Steve: I get around, bro. I have had a fantastic run. I used to shy away from talking about the studio guy thing. I thought that it maybe detracted from my role in Toto but the fact of the matter is that I am actually really proud of what I have done. There are not too many mother ****ers who have done what we have done. No matter what you think of the band, we certainly contributed to a ton of massively successful records. It is even more so when you realize the amount of creativity that we got to put into the albums. A lot of cats just stare at me and go, "Will you make my record for me?" Seriously, there were big time massive name producers who were not even there when we cut our tracks. Yet at their speech at the Grammy’s they are thanking themselves. I was on the Album of the Year for three years in a row in the 80's.
Jeb: Does it come naturally to you to change hats so easily?
Steve: I never really thought about it; I just do it. I dig all kinds of music. I just listened to the tune and tried to do what was right. A lot of times we were hired to polish the turd. You would not believe some of the demos we had to listen to. It makes you wonder how they get record deals, let alone how they sell two million copies of it.
Jeb: You are hired to make them sound like a real band.
Steve: That whole era is dead and gone. I used to walk into a room and ask who I was playing with. We would just jam and play till we got a take. Now it is all done by computer and it is all smoke and mirrors. Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain! You go to a concert now and it sounds like the record because it is the record. I think that is kind of jive. I watch all these late night shows and we hear these horrifically bad garage type bands. These cats just can’t play or sing and they are playing in front of 50 million people. The guys who can actually play don’t even get looked at. It is ridiculous to me. Everyone has to be so hip.
Look at the Rock N’ Roll Hall of Fame. How sad is that sh*t. Blondie is in but Van Halen is not. The whole thing is just Jann Wenner’s yank. It is as ridiculous as his Hundred Best Guitar Players in Rolling Stone. That was so bad and glaringly wrong that it was funny. Any ‘best of’ anything is so subjective. It is like asking a blind guy who the best looking chick in the room is. He is going to say the one who smells the best. **** that sh*t, man. No one needs to be validated like that – it is just a joke. Do you think Mozart ever got an ASCAP check? He didn’t even know his sh*t was any good. He was dead for 200 years before anyone started playing his sh*t and now it is classic.
Jeb: Maybe I am just getting old but it seems to me that things were better back in the day.
Steve: They were better. My kids are all about classic rock. There is only one Green Day. We don’t need a hundred of them. But now I sound like some old fart who is b****ing about how much better music was back when I was a kid. All the young punks just go, "You’re an old fart man. Your music sucks."
Jeb: You can’t win.
Steve: I’m not trying to win; that’s the point. I have my niche and people dig it or they don’t. My next year is booked up. I am laughing my ass off. I am booked up till I am 50, so life is good. To be a working musician in this era is rare. I know guys who were great who have to leave the ****ing music business because there is no work. I am so ****ing lucky and I know it. It breaks my heart to see great players taking a day gig; it kills me. Then you see all these ****ing schmucks who have been playing guitar for six months and barely even can play a barre chord on the Leno show.
Everyone wants to be tragically hip. I honestly believe that people talk themselves into liking complete rubbish because they are supposed to like it. I don’t want to name names, as that is a sh*tty thing to do, but you know what I am talking about.
Jeb: My daughter and son go to shows with me and they love the classic sh*t. I took them to see Alice Cooper and they were amazed at how good the live music sounded compared to the popular bands they like.
Steve: When we grew up we were told that you had to be really ****ing good to even be considered to make a record. We practiced really hard for many, many years because that is what it took. It was not about how my hair looked. Somewhere in the middle of all that, MTV started and they changed the rules. Suddenly, it was all about style and not about chops. It is to the point now where it is uncool to be really good. That is hysterical to me. That is what is wrong with everything. The music business is not run by musicians; it is run by suits. They don’t want to develop artists; they want one hit records and they want to get on to the next.
Jeb: I want to talk about some of your sessions that you have done. Tell me about your playing on the Dream Police album by Cheap Trick.
Steve: I did some of that. They didn’t credit me on the record but they gave me a platinum record and Rick Nielsen gave me a solid gold pick – I thought that was pretty cool. The song Voices is pretty much me. If you listen to it, it doesn’t sound like Rick. He didn’t need me to do it, the producer, Tom Werman, brought me in. I cut the tracks with the guys and it was a lot of fun. Rick is a great musician. They didn’t need me; they just wanted something different. I think Robin Zander has one of the greatest voices in rock n’ roll. I was brought in for flavor.
Jeb: You were also on Eric Clapton’s Behind the sun.
Steve: I played a little rhythm guitar. I talked my way on to that one just so I could be on the record. I knew the producer and they asked Eric and he said for me to come on down. I was a bit star struck meeting him. He invited me to do the Crossroads thing a couple of years ago but I wasn’t able to make it.
Jeb: From the inside is an amazing album by Alice Cooper. What did you do on that album?
Steve: I wrote a couple of tracks and I was on the whole record. I wrote Serious and Nurse Rosetta. Rick played on Serious with me. I had not heard that for 20 years and my son downloaded it off iTunes. He said, "Dad check this out." I said, "Man, is that me?" I remember writing those songs with Alice, Bernie Taupin and David Foster.
Jeb: Did you play with Dick Wagner on the album?
Steve: He was great and we played together well. Davey Johnston from Elton’s band played on a couple of tracks as did Steve Hunter. I was ****ing 20 years old when I did that – I was still a zit faced teenager.
Jeb: Let’s talk about the infamous Peter Criss solo album.
Steve: I did a couple of records with Peter. Kiss are great guys; they get the joke. Peter didn’t even play on the record; they hired another drummer. He sang the sh*t so it was valid from that point of view.
Jeb: Peter Frampton’s Breakin’ al the rules was an underrated album.
Steve: We cut that live at the A&M sound stage. There is a funny story on that one. Jeff Porcaro was on it as well. It was really fun. We cut it with a mobile truck. We were cutting tracks on the sound stage and the truck was out in the parking lot. We did this take and at the end of it Peter goes, "How was that?" There was dead silence. Jeff, Peter and myself go into the mobile truck and we see the producer is passed out on the console. I think maybe he was taking some qualludes or something. Peter was mortified. I think the tape was still rolling but the cat just nodded off.
Jeb: In 1979, you did an album with John Mayall.
Steve: Back in the day you would get hired for a session but you would not know who the artist was. You would just be told to report on this date. All I got to do with him was play some silly little rhythm parts. I didn’t get a chance to blow, which would have been great with John around. It is really great getting to be around greatness like John. He was there and he was really cool.
Jeb: He is the Toto of the blues. No one gives him the respect he deserves in America.
Steve: He works really hard. I agree with you. He spawned some pretty serious guitar players.
Jeb: Is that you playing on Beat it. Everyone thinks it is Eddie Van Halen.
Steve: Eddie played the guitar solo but I played everything else. I played bass and all the rhythm guitar parts. Jeff and I made that record. Eddie and Ted Templeman cut the two-inch tape but you can’t do that the way we were doing the album because you can’t get it to synch back up again. You have to understand, this is the early 1980's. You have Michael’s vocals and Eddie’s solo on tape and then Jeff had to go back and play the groove for the whole song. I just over-dubbed everything else.
Jeb: A lot of rockers were pissed when Eddie played on that album.
Steve: I never really gave it much thought. Ed and I have been friends since the 70's.
Jeb: We were long haired, pot smoking, mullet headed rockers and we worshiped Eddie and hated Michael Jackson. Seriously, a lot of rock fans thought that was the moment rock died.
Steve: All he did was do a ****ing session for god sakes. It wasn’t the end of Van Halen by a long shot.
Jeb: When you get outside of your inner sanctum then that is what rock fans talk about.
Steve: That is what is wrong with the world. Everybody loves their heroes but heroes are people too. Eddie did it for a laugh. There was a backlash for sure but does anyone really care anymore.
Jeb: How did you get involved with the Tubes?
Steve: I wrote Talk to ya later. We wrote it in an hour and then we cut it. I played bass on the record because the bass player refused to play on the record because I was on it. Fee and I have been friends forever. I played all the guitars on it and then it became a hit for them. I did the same thing for She’s a beauty.
Jeb: You also played with Meat Loaf.
Steve: That was a live album they did. They brought me in to fatten up the guitars after the show. Meat and I are old friends. We have played live together many times. He belongs to the same country club I do. All of my friends are golf heads. I am not a golf head but I hang out with them. There are charity events that go down and we all get up and play. Meat throws down like it is the last time he is ever going to get on stage. He is singing "Louie Louie" and he is throwing it down.
Jeb: You played with Stevie Nicks.
Steve: I did a couple of records with her. I am on the song Stand back. That is another classic example of the producer not being in the room when I played. They were looking for that Billy Jean type of guitar part. They tried eight guys. I walked in and did it in one take. She called me on the phone and thanked me. I did another record with her in the early 80's.
Jeb: How did you end up on a Tommy Tutone record?
Steve: We were on the same label. His A&R guy asked me to come down and play on his album. It was the record after "867-5309." There is a lot of sh*t that I am on that you might not expect to find me on. You would not expect to see me on a Barbara Streisand record. I will tell you one thing about this chick: I was sitting next to her watching her sing and that woman has pipes. The tunes may be cheesy but you cannot deny that woman can sing.
Jeb: Talk about an amazing singer, you worked with Aretha Franklin.
Steve: I did three records with her. The band was awesome. I was three feet away from Aretha throwing down. It made it hard to play because she was so bad ass. They are some of my favorite records that I have ever played on.
Jeb: Do you ever get star struck?
Steve: The wildest one that ever happened to me was George Harrison. We actually became friends. We did a big benefit for Jeff Porcaro right after he passed away. Eddie was there as was Donald Fagan, Boz Skaggs and a then unknown Cheryl Crow. George and I became friends. He invited me out to dinner. He said, "Meet me at Marino’s on Melrose. I have invited a few people out for dinner." George is the reason that I play guitar. To become friends with him was amazing; god bless his soul. He was very nice to me.
I was sitting there waiting for everyone to show up and Bob Dylan walks in. I was like, "Hey Bob, I am a friend of George’s. Jeff Lynne then walks in. We were having Martini’s with Bob; George didn’t drink by then. We were just sitting there talking about Sammy Davis Jr. I just thought, "If only the guys I grew up with could see this." The whole restaurant was going nuts. George invited us up to Jeff’s place for a jam. A bunch of us ended up jamming on Beatles songs. It was really ****ing cool. I could have literally died right there. I have had a few moments like that. Once I was sitting next to Elton and said, "Play Levon for me."
Jeb: You also played with Warren Zevon.
Steve: Waddy Wachtel brought me into that. Warren was great. I was a big fan and Warren was hysterical. He has the driest sense of humor in music. The nice guys die and the a-holes live forever. I have happened to trip and fall in some great places.
Jeb: You played with Jimmy Webb.
Steve: He is a great songwriter. I did a couple of records with him. One he produced and the other Linda Ronstadt produced. Linda was great. She is so proper. George Massenburg was co-producing the album. I said the word fart when Linda was out of the room. George bet me fifty dollars that I couldn’t get Linda to say the word fart. Linda walked in the room and I whispered in her ear that if she said fart then I would get fifty bucks off of George. She looked and me and smiled and then looked at George and said, "Fart." She laughed about it.
Jeb: Before we end I have to ask you what it was like to play with Roger Waters?
Steve: That was ****ing unreal. I happened to be in the studio; we were recording in the same complex. David Gilmour is a good friend of mine and he is one of my all time heroes. I love Pink Floyd and I love how their music makes me feel. I have a lot of great childhood memories that have their music as the soundtrack. Jeff Beck did most of the guitars on the Amused to death record. I was wondering the halls and they came out and said, "We need a couple of parts. Can you come on in and play?" I was like, "Are you kidding me? I’m in." I walked in and brought my sh*t in and I got to play some rhythm parts and I got to play a solo on one tune. It was a great honor for me.
Jeb: Have you played on Van Halen albums or just sang?
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-30-2006, 04:06 AM
Continued....
Steve: I just sang background on them. Eddie and I have written tunes together; he was on my first solo record. I played live with Van Halen a bunch of times. Ed is my neighbor. Ed and Val are both very close friends of mine.
Jeb: A lot of people are worried about Ed. Is he okay?
Steve: He is fine. He went through a really rough spot. Let’s face it, on top of what you may have heard about him hurting himself, he got divorced, got cancer and lost his mother all in the same year and a half period. And his band falls apart and there is all that bad vibe. It is tough on a cat. You have to give him a little slack. His body of work speaks for itself. There is still a lot of good music left in Ed. You just have to let him go through what he is going through.
Rumors are dangerous. The internet is dangerous. You start saying sh*t about somebody and then it morphs into this other sh*t. He is just a ****ing man who is trying to raise his son and get his health and his mind right. It can’t be easy being a guy like that. He has pressure to be absolutely brilliant every time he touches the instrument. You can’t reinvent the wheel every time. He has been unfairly eaten alive. Give the guy a ****ing break. Sometimes when you get older maybe you do lose a little of an edge. We are trying to bust our asses and trying to think what we are doing is valid and good. It is always going to be compared to your most famous work. Consequently, someone is going to say that it is not as good. Maybe everyone is going to say that and maybe it is true; I don’t know. I can’t imagine Jimi Hendrix being alive doing smooth jazz records. Who is to say that would not have happened? It is like going to see the Sex Pistols when they are 45 years old.
Jeb: Now they are in the Hall of Fame. Times have changed.
Steve: It is the Jann Wenner Hall of Fame. It is completely invalid and it is starting to catch up to him. It is only based on Jann Wenner’s personal taste. It is embarrassing. Everybody hates the Hall of Fame. The blogs on the net are starting to rake him though the coals. He deserves to be raked through the coals. He is everything that he hated when he started the magazine. Half the goddamn magazine is male underwear models – we all know where that is coming from. In the meantime, he is flying around in his corporate jet with his multi-trillion dollars stuff and he is supposed to be the voice of rock ‘n roll. He is a has-been. Now he is inducting himself into the Hall of Fame. That is ****ing beautiful! That summarizes what he is all about.
They put the Loving Spoonful in? They made a couple of nice little tunes but the Hall of Fame? Where is Jethro Tull? Where is Yes? There a lot of people who deserve to be in. I am never going to be in because they hate me. Toto made some cute little records too but as musicians I think we deserve to be in there. I know that sounds egotistical but they put in these one hit wonders and it makes you scratch your head. They are finally going to induct Black Sabbath. The Sex Pistols being in the Hall of Fame goes against everything they stood for. They are 50 year old guys trying to be punks. That is like seeing your Grandfather dressed up like Motley Crue. That is so wrong; don’t do that. They had one bad record. I understand it. I was in London with Boz Skaggs in 1977 and I saw the whole Punk think unfolding. It was really scary to me as I was just a teenager. It was a moment in time. The Clash were a much better band. Sid Vicious didn’t even know how to play the instrument but nobody cared because it wasn’t about the music. It was social **** you. That is great when you are 19 but it is sad when you are 55.
Check out the entire interview at classicrockrevisited.com!
smalltowngrll
01-30-2006, 08:02 AM
For those that truly appreciate music...the 80's hair bands will remain the best rock ever! Heck...even my daughter tells me I was lucky to have the best rock...she says "They just don't make music like that anymore!".
And, yet, for most men, they not only were appreciative of the music, but of the videos, too. How could they not have recalled "She's my Cherry Pie" ...yep the car! Oh, I'm sure you all could come up with many more! And what else about 80's hair bands...the men had better hair than the women!! It was bigger and better! Who cares about the hair...cuz all you really wanted to do was bang your head.
My very first concert was the Scorpions...I was in awe, and I fell in love from that moment forward. I would always be a "Rocker Chick". Well, in my dreams anyway!
Here's to the 80's....May they live on in each of us that holds the great memories...our own memories!
Hogan11
01-30-2006, 08:24 AM
For those that truly appreciate music...the 80's hair bands will remain the best rock ever!
:saywhat: I'm absolutely horrified by such a statement.
Seriously, I'm sure you're a great girl and all, but you need to stop talking to that Orange 4 life guy at the tailgates.....or, if you haven't met Jake yet, you should...you'll have a lot in common when it comes to this area, trust me. Ha!
smalltowngrll
01-30-2006, 09:35 AM
Did my reply get eaten by the system....or did it get deleted?
Mile High Shack
01-30-2006, 09:53 AM
:saywhat: I'm absolutely horrified by such a statement.
Seriously, I'm sure you're a great girl and all, but you need to stop talking to that Orange 4 life guy at the tailgates.....or, if you haven't met Jake yet, you should...you'll have a lot in common when it comes to this area, trust me. Ha!
Hogan, you ever read anything by Chuck Klosterman?
smalltowngrll
01-30-2006, 11:06 AM
:saywhat: I'm absolutely horrified by such a statement.
Seriously, I'm sure you're a great girl and all, but you need to stop talking to that Orange 4 life guy at the tailgates.....or, if you haven't met Jake yet, you should...you'll have a lot in common when it comes to this area, trust me. Ha!
I suppose that was a completely exclusive statement...and I may have overstepped my boundries. I suppose music can be looked at like beauty is...and the old adage about beauty being in the eye of the beholder can hold true about music...it truly is in the ear of the listener. Not that the masses don't know the difference between true music or music that's just ringy dingy's...but, it's that which reaches inside you and causes you to move! Whether it's banging your head, or whatever.
For some the best rock was the 70's, and there certainly lies a great appreciation from that era in my mind. It did not have the profound effect on my life as it did in others, so in my minds eye, it wasn't the "Best", although "Great".
It seems that each generation of music has a major influence on the generational music that follows, and although hair band rock may have died (so to speak), their influence still exists in much of todays rock. So, it may not have exactly "died" but just morphed.
haha...and by the way...I don't recall talking to that Orange 4 Life guy. Although, I did talk with a lot of people (and had a lot to drink)...so, maybe I just don't remember. :-[ ugh!~
Hogan11
01-30-2006, 05:18 PM
Hogan, you ever read anything by Chuck Klosterman?
You know, not really.....although I know about Fargo Rock City, I never really took much of an interest in it because I generally despised the hair era. I also avoid Spin as much as I avoid Rolling Stone, which is to say, like the plague. I don't think I've read a copy of either rag since 1988. I generally don't bother with any of them much anymore, not even fanzines.......with the exception of Creem that is (gee...I wonder why ;D )
Hogan11
01-30-2006, 05:24 PM
haha...and by the way...I don't recall talking to that Orange 4 Life guy. Although, I did talk with a lot of people (and had a lot to drink)...so, maybe I just don't remember. :-[ ugh!~
O4L is a great guy...he also loves that hair metal stuff. He's at near every home game around OF1 so I'm a bit surprised that you somehow missed him.
Here's some interesting reading for you as well.....a couple of legendary threads that, IMO, should be in the Ring Of Fame. Enjoy!
http://72.22.74.110/BB/showthread.php?t=11645&highlight=Kurt+Cobain
http://72.22.74.110/BB/showthread.php?t=11627&highlight=Kurt+Cobain
smalltowngrll
01-30-2006, 06:57 PM
O4L is a great guy...he also loves that hair metal stuff. He's at near every home game around OF1 so I'm a bit surprised that you somehow missed him.
Here's some interesting reading for you as well.....a couple of legendary threads that, IMO, should be in the Ring Of Fame. Enjoy!
http://72.22.74.110/BB/showthread.php?t=11645&highlight=Kurt+Cobain
http://72.22.74.110/BB/showthread.php?t=11627&highlight=Kurt+Cobain
Hogan...thanks for sharing that thread! I thoroughly enjoyed reading through it! I read the first 5 pages word for word and then skimmed through many of the rest of the pages! I learned a lot of info I didn't know and confirmed my thoughts on music as it was. I'm a huge fan of almost all music...with a few exceptions. It still amazes me how the finely written tune with some great lyrical mastery can truly dig deep within a person.
Lately I've been a huge fan of Green Day...and Linken Park....I know...main stream, but they get me through my long runs!
Nuggets4
01-31-2006, 03:58 PM
For those that truly appreciate music...the 80's hair bands will remain the best rock ever! Heck...even my daughter tells me I was lucky to have the best rock...she says "They just don't make music like that anymore!".
You sure she's not then muttering under her breath "Thank God"?
smalltowngrll
01-31-2006, 06:42 PM
You sure she's not then muttering under her breath "Thank God"?
She's a teenager...she mutters that a lot! LOL
Hogan11
01-31-2006, 09:26 PM
Jim DeRogatis is someone I hold in very high regard.....I recommend Kill Your Idols...A New Generation of Rock Writers Reconsiders the Classics as essential reading.
Not especially on toipic, but I thought I'd throw it out there nonetheless.
DB-Freak
01-31-2006, 09:50 PM
O4L is a great guy...he also loves that hair metal stuff. He's at near every home game around OF1 so I'm a bit surprised that you somehow missed him.
Here's some interesting reading for you as well.....a couple of legendary threads that, IMO, should be in the Ring Of Fame. Enjoy!
http://72.22.74.110/BB/showthread.php?t=11645&highlight=Kurt+Cobain
http://72.22.74.110/BB/showthread.php?t=11627&highlight=Kurt+Cobain
Good ****.
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-01-2006, 12:51 AM
You sure she's not then muttering under her breath "Thank God"?
:laugh:
Mixed feelings...
The 80s gave us a lot of goofy, untalented hair bands and poseur pop stars, to be sure, but there was still some aspiration to musicianship, songwriting, vocal performance, etc.
I didn't particularly dig 80s metal, but at least a lot of those cats wanted to really study music and learn how to play their instruments.
When the 90s hit, it was back to the same old deconstructionist crap we saw in the late 70s when the punk thing emerged as a rebellion against "dinosaur" bands like Led Zeppelin and the Stones.
Popular music really started circling the drain in the 90s and never recovered, IMO.
(Or else I'm just old. ;))
BTW, I blame emptyV and the suits who run the record biz as much (if not more) than the artists.
Mile High Shack
02-01-2006, 07:04 AM
You know, not really.....although I know about Fargo Rock City, I never really took much of an interest in it because I generally despised the hair era. I also avoid Spin as much as I avoid Rolling Stone, which is to say, like the plague. I don't think I've read a copy of either rag since 1988. I generally don't bother with any of them much anymore, not even fanzines.......with the exception of Creem that is (gee...I wonder why ;D )
I don't read spin either, but I picked up his book in the library per chance...the newest one.....Dying to Live, it was funny as crap
now I'm reading sex, drugs and cocoa puffs, pretty freakin' hilarious
Fargo Rock City was also cool, b/c I grew up listening to hair metal, although I didn't agree with him regarding Poison and Metallica (he liked poison and didn't like metallica)
Mile High Shack
02-01-2006, 07:04 AM
Hogan...thanks for sharing that thread! I thoroughly enjoyed reading through it! I read the first 5 pages word for word and then skimmed through many of the rest of the pages! I learned a lot of info I didn't know and confirmed my thoughts on music as it was. I'm a huge fan of almost all music...with a few exceptions. It still amazes me how the finely written tune with some great lyrical mastery can truly dig deep within a person.
Lately I've been a huge fan of Green Day...and Linken Park....I know...main stream, but they get me through my long runs!
good gawd, lincoln park?
wash your ears out girl
Spider
02-01-2006, 07:32 AM
This is why I listen to country Music ..... will listen to some Rock , led Zepplin , Lynard Skynard , bands along those lines , I also like Elvin Bishop ......
smalltowngrll
02-01-2006, 08:30 AM
good gawd, lincoln park?
wash your ears out girl
LOL
Like I said...gets me through my long runs! Which is about the only time I listen to them.
BMF Bronco
02-01-2006, 09:37 AM
I just went to a Motley Crue Concert about two months ago, those old bastards can still rock out with the best of them!
Smiling Assassin27
02-01-2006, 09:40 AM
Man, that is a GREAT interview! Luke has always told it honestly and I didn't realize all the stuff he's played on! I was sold on him when i read an interview with Eddie back in like 84 and he said Lukather was one of the few guitarists he really admired. Same with Alan Holdsworth.
The 80's did produce some really great songs and vibes. Then again, it also produced the Blow Monkeys and Spandau Ballet. Being able to see all these groups really brought a new element to music and spawned the culture since everyone wanted to look like their fave musicians. Seeing a dude dressed like David Lee Roth in Wagon Mound, NM just blew me away!
alkemical
02-01-2006, 10:38 AM
INXS was way ahead of it's time.
Mile High Shack
02-01-2006, 11:46 AM
INXS was way ahead of it's time.
they were a good band for the 80's
now they are a joke...doing a reality show to get their lead singer
what a bunch of jokes
Smiling Assassin27
02-01-2006, 12:14 PM
i wouldn't say ahead of their time. really, they were a simple rock and roll band. what made them outstanding was the presence of Hutchence. their songs were solid but not innovative, by any means.
alkemical
02-01-2006, 01:14 PM
what?
Pop music now is where full moon/dirty hearts was at like 10 years ago.
Smiling Assassin27
02-01-2006, 01:36 PM
Right. That statement does nothing but slag INXS. Sorry, the likes of Maroon 5, Switchfoot, et al being like Full Moon, Dirty Hearts is off the mark. Besides, INXS was doing in 93 what the Cult and U2 had been doing for years themselves.
alkemical
02-01-2006, 02:58 PM
i dunno about the cult, their music was pretty different than INXS, and u2 as well. They were actually 'serious'......
Smiling Assassin27
02-01-2006, 03:00 PM
yeah, i'm talking about the melodies and musical sound, not so much the lyrical content. Songs on that INXS record remind me a lot of Love or Electric by the Cult musically.
alkemical
02-01-2006, 03:36 PM
Well i could argue that 'sea of change' by beck is just a rehashed donovan record...
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-01-2006, 04:48 PM
Man, that is a GREAT interview! Luke has always told it honestly and I didn't realize all the stuff he's played on! I was sold on him when i read an interview with Eddie back in like 84 and he said Lukather was one of the few guitarists he really admired. Same with Alan Holdsworth.
Yeah buddy! :thumbsup:
A lot of people think of Luke either as a session player or as "that guy from Toto," but the dude can play almost anything. My favorite Luke projects are the fusion records where he just goes beserk and plays whatever he feels like.
Holdsworth is in a class all by himself - a shamefully underrated and underexposed genius.
DB-Freak
02-01-2006, 05:43 PM
Well i could argue that 'sea of change' by beck is just a rehashed donovan record...
That album is absolute beauty.
alkemical
02-02-2006, 08:27 AM
you ever listen to donovan? "mello yellow"
DB-Freak
02-02-2006, 02:59 PM
you ever listen to donovan? "mello yellow"
Unfornately no.
But I'll give em a try really soon.
Anything you wanna recommend about him?
alkemical
02-02-2006, 03:00 PM
a greatest hits will work fine if you are going to buy an album - but for the most part - anything will do.