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Prodigy, Rage, Chemical Brothers, Beasties, Primus...
Would go and see any of them today, never actually seen Prodigy or Primus either.
Soundgarden got me through my college years, particularly Badmotorfinger. I remember being disappointed with Superunknown at first, then listened again, and again, and again and realised it was brilliant. Saw Cornell twice in my lifetime with Soundgarden and also with Audioslave. Sadly, will never see him play again 😔
There’s a whole world of middle-aged, chin-stroking 6 music listeners (myself included) who delete every band off their playlist once more than 100 people have heard of them
Has anyone seen DezB and Binners together in the same room?
This was the first album I played the groove out of.
Would go and see any of them today, never actually seen Prodigy or Primus either.
Saw Prodigy many years ago when I was in my early 30s, still felt old enough to be everyones dad 🤣
My 1st teenage album was actually a box set I brought with my paper round money...it was knocked down to £25...the box set of electro (Street sounds)....
Breakdance ....electric boogie......come on sing along, hands I the air...Great dayz
My 1st teenage album was actually a box set I brought with my paper round money…it was knocked down to £25…the box set of electro (Street sounds)….
Breakdance ….electric boogie……come on sing along, hands I the air…Great dayz
You'll have made money on it if you've still got it, those early streetsounds LPs go for good money. 2 3 Break!
Sadly my druggie brother sold it for H....still got all my other vinyl tho....even brought decks last year......and...my 16 year old son loves vinyl , he collects 60,70s and 80s rock like led zep...and even the prodigy...my boy!!
Most played album of my life....
Got to be Whitesnake, Live in the heart of the city.
I think it came out in 1980, and would have got into it through my mate , and his brother who were big into heavy metal back then.
I was deffo the odd one out at my school being a fan of Motorhead, ACDC, Saxon, Iron Maiden etc etc.
Regularly listen to all of them with the exception of Saxon.
Nowadays I'll listen to most stuff but can't remember the last time I bought an album.
Edit, 1980 was a REALLY, long time ago. Can't bring myself to type the actual number 🤣
Hmm my teens were dominated by early Floyd, Tull, Zeppelin, Genesis, ELP, etc. Simon and Garfunkel were reserved for those navel gazing moments.
I can add King Crimson ’In The Court Of The Crimson King’, and Steeleye Span ‘Below The Salt’. Steeleye were the first proper band I ever saw in concert, just when they’d released that album, the next band I saw live was ELP on the ‘Trilogy’ tour.
I thought everyone stopped appreciating new music on their 30th birthday
Don’t be daft! It’s the complete opposite!
There’s a whole world of middle-aged, chin-stroking 6 music listeners (myself included) who delete every band off their playlist once more than 100 people have heard of them 😉
Nah, I stop listening to bands once anyone else discovers them. If it ain’t niche, it ain’t nothing. 😉
Hypocrisy is the Greatest Luxury, Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy.
YES !
Hmm my teens were dominated by early Floyd, Tull, Zeppelin, Genesis, ELP, etc. Simon and Garfunkel were reserved for those navel gazing moments.
I can add King Crimson ’In The Court Of The Crimson King’
Ah yes of course - particularly 21st Century Schizoid Man.
I just realised I missed an important band off my list - YES. I couldn't believe how brilliant The Yes Album was. Still love it.
Dutch band Focus were the band of my teen years.
Bought double album Focus 3 when I was 16.
Played that to destruction on my Dads radiogram......
Superunknown by Soundgarden is the best album of the 90’s in my opinion. I also listened to some awful albums that I wouldn’t give the time of day to now. Real shite like Clawfinger, Biohazard, Guns N Roses and Body Count. Cringing just typing it!
I agree with pretty much all of this, I have just two points to make:
1) Appetite for Destruction is still amazing, the first half especially. Unpleasant, misogynistic, problematic, certainly. But it is still as exciting a half hour of rock music as you'll find anywhere.
2) ahahahahahaahahabahaha ****ing Clawfinger!!! I had completely forgotten about them! My god, if biohazard have aged badly, then Sweden's premier political rap metal band must have fared even worse. Just the fact that they had an anti-racism tune called N****er is making me die of vicarious embarrassment 30 years on 😬😬😬
That’s the thing though Guns n Roses are too mainstream rock cheese for me. Very cringe and full of guitar ****ery and awful lyrics. Prefer Clutch, Modest Mouse and anything a bit outside the ROCK! Sphere. Just realised I’ve been listening to Clutch for 28 years 😳
No fronts, no tricks
No soap politics
No guns, just blunts
We kick this just for fun!
Dog eat dog?
Yep, first cd I ever bought.
I play it roughly once every 5 years or so and then put it back on the shelf 🙂
I think I did OK for a soppy, glasses-wearing dweeb at school. Madness - Night Boat to Cairo was my first single, then Start, by the Jam. Dire Straits - Making Movies was my first album, Rumours - Fleetwood Mac the second, then an eclectic selection of SLF, the Specials, Blondie followed. Still love them all.
I turned 13 in ‘78 so I was right at the end of the ‘first wave’ of punk.
We weren’t well off so I only had about a dozen lp’s before I left school.
From memory these were:
New Wave (a Sire, so US biased, compilation featuring Patti Smith, Richard Hell, Ramones, Talking Heads, New York Dolls as well as The Damned, Boomtown Rats and The Runaways). It was very influential on me and in my later years I have at least 60-70% of the tracks on the ‘original’.
BUZZOCKS - First band I saw (Love Bites tour, Subway Sect was support). Always will have a soft spot for them. They were pretty revolutionary, being non-London based, first self ‘published’ single, their whole coordinated marketing around their current release, the legendary self promoted gig(s?) with the Pistols. Music is still pretty good too!
Feeding of the Five Thousand - CRASS. Yup the anarcho-punker fun sponge brigade. Original, on Small Wonder Records (still have it). Another seminal influence on the young mh. I got the cd of it about 10-15 years ago. It still gets a spin every now and again.
Moving Targets - Penetration. Man, you can’t get it all right can you?
Grubby Stories - Patrik Fitzgerald. The (other) punk poet (Gotta Safety Pin stuck in my Heart!). Not having a record deck, haven’t played this in over 20 years.
Then there’s the mid-later teen years: London Calling, Sandinista, Songs The Lord Taught Us, Killing Joke, Kaya, The Joe Strummer ‘curated’ Lee Dorsey Charley lps, The Islands Years Toots compilation.
Then the Smiths, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Foetus, Sonic Youth, SWANS, REM, etc., for the runout.
Sure there were some turkeys but I still listen to some regularly (London Calling, Toots, esp) after all these years.
I must admit I have some acquaintances that are definitely stuck in the past musically, never understood that as I prefer the Tabula Rasa method every now and again, I need new stuff… Never understood why someone would listen to, say, Stiff Little Fingers or Theatre of Hate as their main course in this day and age 🤷🏻♀️
And its only uncool when the plebs like it (and liking some mainstream stuff precisely because you’re cool…😂)
Still listen to The Wonderstuff, Hup, Never Loved Elvis...still love them.
PWEI, rarely listen to a whole album these days but they feature heavily on my Turbo Boost indoor riding play list!
The Ned's, well....in retrospect they had one great song...t shirts were awesome though.
Would go and see any of them today, never actually seen Prodigy
Pretty sure I saw them support the Shamen once! Although I could be wrong.
PWEI still play Their Law live....that's a banger!!
Never stopped playing my deeply unfashionable teen albums
First ever single bought (a thread in itself I suspect) The Boomtown Rats -Rat trap
Japan - quiet life
Duran Duran - Duran Duran
ABC - the lexicon of love
Haircut 100 - pelican west
Human League -dare
Before getting into
Green Day and anything pop punk in my 20s when MTV started
I remember fondly my teenage years, living life like it was an endless summer. The days of smashing rides on the quantocks, journeying to races at the weekends with mixes featuring:
Pearl Jam
Stone Temple Pilots
RATM
Green Day
Bush
The Offspring
Nirvana
Dubwar
Placebo
I look through my play lists now and all feature the above, predominantly the same tracks I listened to then.
I guess the only slight stain would be the first Single I brought which was Right Said Fred
I don’t seem to understand musical snobbery for any reasons as it spoils the fun and enjoyment of music.
Funnily enough/apropos of thread have had quite a fix of my teenage kicks throughout the last week or so
- Killing Joke ‘What’s This For’ and also some early live The Tube footage courtesy of YouTube (tubes thru time!)
- Black Sabbath ‘Sabotage’ and ‘Sabbath Bloody Sabbath’
- The Damned ‘Strawberries’
- Television ‘Adventure’
- Steel Pulse ‘Earth Crisis’
@doris5000 I remember going to see Clawfinger live! Was ace. Unfortunately I still have the broken nose to remind me of mosh 🤕 (JB’s)
Dubwar
they were fantastic. Never understood why Pain (and the fantastic EP Extra Pain) didn’t make it bigger!
Original murder and fools gold are great tracks.
National Wake. It sounds even better now.
I loved Dub War too - one of the few UK bands of that era that I wanted to see but didn't. I still rate some stuff on the first album (like Save The Nations) but preferred the second. And the singles from the 2nd album all had dub mixes on the B sides, which was the first time I had really heard 'dub' and I was blown away! Ended up listening to the b sides more than the originals! A real game changer for me.
I remember going to see Clawfinger live! Was ace. Unfortunately I still have the broken nose to remind me of mosh 🤕 (JB’s)
I can imagine it would have been good at the time - did love a decent mosh. Never made it as far as the JBs, but I was a regular at Wolverhampton civic hall 🙂
I'm liking the Dubwar love. @dorris5000, I managed to see them live at the Cavern in Exeter. They were awesome. Benji throwing Million dollar notes and a double bass, what's not to love?
Looks like Dub War have a new album out, released this year and on Spotify.
This thread came up when I was searching for something else.
A couple of weeks ago I played Use Your Illusion II, not a teenage thing but very early 20's.
It was the soundtrack of a dive trip to Scapa Flow.
God, it's awful!
I still have some from my youth on regular rotation. Beastie Boys back catalogue, Super unknown and Bad Motorfinger, RATM, Primus, PJ back catalogue, Blackalicious Blazing Arrow, J5, Kyuss, QOTSA, Beck etc.
Some of them I still follow and enjoy. I also listen to a lot of new and very old stuff. Music is ace!
Thin Lizzy particularly Jailbreak was the soundtrack to my teenage years. Along with ELP and Black sabbath. I saw thin Lizzy 3 times in the late 70s.
Quite honestly its all a bit dated now and I remember when punk then two tone arrived and it blew my mind
@tjagain - Some of the later Lizzy stands up quite well. I played all of Renegade the other night. It's better than I remember.
Also, Live and Dangerous is one of the greatest live albums of all time.
Lynott was only 36, he could of gone on and made a lot more music.
Travelling in the car with #1 Son (22) on Friday. Had Spotify going and I put Julian Cope ‘St Julian’ on. JC at the Guildford Civic at the time of that album was my first proper gig experience. Anyway as good an album as it is it does sound very 80’s, more 80’s than I remember. Don’t think it’s aged well. 80’s record production, especially on rock music was very hit and miss. Compared to R.E.M. or The Smiths the JC sounds a bit naff.
It was a time of change. Hippies and punks. I still listen to Yes, Genesis, Kevin Coyne, the Only Ones, the Sex Pistls, the Clash, Pete Atkin, Elvis Costello, The Sensational Alex Harvey Band. I haven't listened to Life before Death by R D Laing since those days - probably a good thing.
Eta think I'll give the Wombles and Elton John a miss as well.
Whitesnake, Live in the heart is still great to listen to now. Brief flirtation with Saxon got me into Budgie and Molly Hatchet of all things. Can't play Saxon at all, except perhaps 747. I was more into Talking Heads, Devo etc. though, which still sounds good. Night and Day by Joe Jackson found it's way onto my system the other day - love that album. There is a magazine devoted to 40 year old music, Blitzed.
rOcKeTdOg has/had my taste down to a tee....plus Tears for Fears; The Hurting, amongst some other late 70s, early 80s stuff
Hi!
Kid A was 22 years ago!!! Christ.
And to think, just over a year previous my favourite song was Millenium by Robbie Williams (excuse: I was 14). Then somehow I ended up knee deep in kid A. A year or so later it was Turn on the bright lights by interpol, an album I still listen to regularly.
I just read this post on page 1 and thought “damn! I love this guy”. Then realised it was me a year ago.
I’m lucky in that my fave band , Pet Shop Boys have been churning stuff out over the years that the ones that I liked in my youth and find a bit overplayed now have been replaced by the later hits :-).
I don’t mind a bit of Robbie and Millennium is still my favourite , I think due to the nicking of the bond music.
I did see him in Barcelona recently and have toyed with seeing him next year as he’s coming over again.
Went to see Therapy? on their Troublegum 30 tour 3 weeks ago, it was bloody brilliant.
Hearing this again on Six the other day reminded me how much I adore Pavement.
Slanted and Enchanted was an album favourite in me yoot.
rOcKeTdOg has/had my taste down to a tee….plus Tears for Fears; The Hurting, amongst some other late 70s, early 80s stuff
I remember going into Brum to pick up mad world on vinyl and playing it to death taking it around all my mates houses to listen to it.
Special mention to Ultravox's Vienna album on tape that I used to rattle the windows with which was hard on a one speaker cassette recorder like this
Hmm my teens were dominated by early Floyd, Tull, Zeppelin, Genesis, ELP, etc. Simon and Garfunkel were reserved for those navel gazing moments.
S&G are hardly navel gazing, that’s a much later concept. Add to those King Crimson, Moody Blues, Tangerine Dream, Mythos…
I thought everyone stopped appreciating new music on their 30th birthday
According to the likes of The Daily Mail and GQ Magazine. Who can both do one! I’ve never stopped finding new music, feeds from Flipboard are constantly bringing new music and bands to my attention, recently I’ve found Bloodmoney by Poppy, Believe by Trapped Under Ice, Home by The God Machine, Samsara I by Painkiller, Love by Lambrini Girls…
I consider teenage me lucky, whilst a lot of the music in the 80s and nineties was terrible, I got to see Metallica, Maiden, Anthrax, Alice Cooper, White Zombie and even Micheal Jackson before I was 20. I even got to see Gwar…..
First album I actually paid for and didn’t tape was Number of the Beast, by Iron Maiden it was a few years old by then. I think the next was Megadeth, So Far, So Good.. So what? A few others, like Slayer, Anthrax etc then along came Nirvana and the whole grunge scene commercially killing heavier music. Gutted I never got to see them play.
I think the advantage of liking the heavier music growing up, it’s just as unfashionable now as it was then but I can still listen to it.
My first musical era was The Specials, Madness, Selector etc. Don't really listen to that much now. Mid-teens was The Smiths, The Cure and lots of (mostly dreadful) goth stuff. Of that era the music I play most nowadays is The Pogues and Joy Division although the latter is a bit bleak. Lived in Manchester during the "Madchester" and enjoyed it but rarely revisit it musically. I also very into Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and PJ Harvey. I have stuck with both of those although the former has become increasingly hard going.
I had my Amazon Music review of my year a few days ago - I really need to widen my tastes as very little new since the turn of the millenium.