Oh yeah? What about these guys?but I did like the carpenters and the partridge family![]()
Oh yeah? What about these guys?but I did like the carpenters and the partridge family![]()
Agreed, and they paid dearly for it in lost US sales until 1989. For example, "You Win Again", released in late-1987, placed Top-10 in many countries' weekly charts, but just #75 on the US Billboard Hot 100. A primary reason was because of backlash from American DJs.The Bee Gees were pretty good years before they lowered themselves to disco. To each his own re: BJ
Oh yeah? What about these guys?
When the music video industry became widespread in the early 1980's, then began the conditions that would result in the decline of popular music's creative quality. This marketing technique forced consumers to use their eyes more than their ears. In my personal opinion, the first real evidence, in bulk form, of this decline, came in the appearance of the "grunge" scene - a musical genre that just didn't do it for me - approximately a decade later.
As for the 70s, the Beatles were active in the year 1970, and their music was wildly popular in that decade. This was also the decade of Lynyrd Skynyd, which I am shocked to see mentioned only once in this thread - the one American band who's music I could not imagine doing without.
Never would have took you for Skynard fan. I was thinking you were more of a Flaming Lips kind of guy.
The Replacements, Husker du, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Sonic Youth, Pixies, Joy Division/New Order, Dinosaur jr, Galaxy 500, the Cure, Echo and the Bunnymen, The Smiths, Depeche Mode, The Stone Roses, and on and on. A lot of really good bands in the 80s.
A better discussion might be about which was the best 10 year period for music. In just my opinion that answer would over-lap the 70's and 80's. e.g 70's era Rush:
All this talk of owning people has me longing for days of yore.
No worries. Thanks. The Replacements are just fun. Simple as that. I've got a friend who grew up in that Minneapolis scene. He's got some great stories.did you drop your avatar? think I may have had you confused for somebody else who I've had a few run-ins with recently. Pay no attention to my cynical retorts. Never any malice on my end. Very nice mention on your part, the Replacements last night.
I would suggest that the 1930s was the best decade for popular music, using the 20th century as the baseline. The height of Tin Pan Alley and Broadway: the Gershwins, Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, Rodgers and Hart, Jerome Kern. Performers such as Ethel Merman, Bing Crosby, and Fred Astaire. Big bands such as Duke Ellington. Then, popular music became a massive cultural force on Feb. 9, 1964. If you weren't glued to your television set on that night, there's no way of describing what followed. In no era since then has popular music been more pervasive, vital and socially important. So I'd argue for the '60s as another decade for the "best" music.
painted black is nowhere near as angry as anarchy in the UK.
Finger pointing at the moon, just citing a song that was angry, yet in same era of I want to hold your handHeck, John Lennon's Happy Xmas (War is Over) is angrier than Paint it Black. Paint it Black is more about hopelessness and self-pity than rage.
Bing Crosby was a huge innovator. Not only did he recognize the stylistic change needed to communicate with audiences with the advent of amplification, two decades later in the later 1940s, he was an early investor in Ampex, which invented the first widely produced tape machine. He was also the first star to abandon live radio and record his programs on tape.
Your email same as name? Another poster had that too...How do the 70s change musically if The Beatles don't break-up, Hendrix/Morrison/Joplin don't croak. Music scholars of the board discuss...
How do the 70s change musically if The Beatles don't break-up, Hendrix/Morrison/Joplin don't croak. Music scholars of the board discuss...