View Poll Results: What's you favourite music genre?
- Voters
- 126. You may not vote on this poll
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60's, 70's, 80's Rock
26 20.63% -
Jazz/Classical
8 6.35% -
Both Kinds (Country AND Western)
4 3.17% -
Heavy Metal, Death Metal etc...
7 5.56% -
Dance (Anything with 'House' or 'Hip' in the name)
3 2.38% -
Old time stuff
1 0.79% -
Weird International type music
0 0% -
Boy bands and all that modern Video Hits stuff (this is option 8 for those that can't count)
1 0.79% -
Anything & Everything EXCEPT option 8
11 8.73% -
Anything & Everything INCLUDING option 8
7 5.56% -
Music is the work of the devil
0 0% -
Childrens music including Hi-5
0 0% -
R&B
2 1.59% -
56 Rock'n' Roll (the real stuff)
29 23.02% -
CLASSICAL - jazz sucks!
18 14.29% -
Jazz - classics suck
2 1.59% -
BLUES, BLUES and more BLUES!!!!!!!
6 4.76% -
The Shadows and sod everything else!!
1 0.79%
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4th May 2004, 06:49 PM #61
I'am trying to visualise those days and unfortunally I vivedly recall
Frank Zappa , still got an album some were.Thank god those days are gone(I'm wishing my life away).
Off memory a schooner was about $0.30, packet of cigs was $1.00?(used to smoke),and my take home pay was around $100.(can't remember wheather that was weekly or not but it was still crap).
Back to the real music and I think that "Driver" has pretty well hit the nail on the head however when I'm in my shed I listen to what ever is on the radio and love the footy on weekends.Always wanted to be ten foot tall
and bullet proof?
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4th May 2004, 08:16 PM #62
Couple of random thoughts
Mick mentioned "Night on Bald Mountain" by Moussorgsky. I agree that it's a magnificent moody piece but also, what a great title! You know the music will be powerful from the title alone.
Here's one from left field. David Bowie wrote "The Man Who Sold the World". His version of it is quite good. Nirvana did a cover - not bad. But if you want to hear a really good, interesting and powerful version of it: Lulu. That's right: Lulu, short Scottish person. In my opinion, it's the only thing she's ever recorded that's got genuine merit. (All right, I'll concede that "Shout" is a good dance number).
ColDriver of the Forums
Lord of the Manor of Upper Legover
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4th May 2004, 11:13 PM #63
A couple of people have mentioned good concerts. Here's a memory:
In the early 80s I was living and working in the Middle East. I worked throughout the region but was based in Bahrain. Tina Turner was scheduled to put on a concert at the Hilton Hotel. It sold out in a hurry but we got tickets. A whole mob of Yanks travelled over from Dahran and Al Khobar in Saudi Arabia. (You can drink alcohol in Bahrain, incidentally).
Picture the scene: before the concert started there was a black tie dinner. We all sat there in the Hilton ballroom, looking very formal, eating the rubber chicken and making polite conversation. As the waiters cleared away the coffee cups, the MC parted curtains on the stage, stepped out and said: "Ladies and gentlemen - Miss Tina Turner!" He stepped off the stage, the curtains parted and there was Tina on a little tiny stage with two dancing girls and a 5-piece band.
They went straight into "River Deep, Mountain High".
Man, she blew the walls out! Within 30 seconds, the black jackets were off, the bow ties were askew and the half of the room that weren't dancing on top of the tables were giving it heaps all round the perimeter. Sensational! Best concert I've ever experienced - bar none.
ColDriver of the Forums
Lord of the Manor of Upper Legover
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6th June 2004, 02:58 AM #64
i love savage garden
hi,
i love savage garden they r ace ,+darren hayse and inxses.
great
woodymartsnumber one woodwork king
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6th June 2004, 10:34 AM #65Originally Posted by silentC
silentC.. it would only be wrong if you were watching Hi 5 for the MUSIC or the BOYS in the band... my favourite is Kellie
KevI try and do new things twice.. the first time to see if I can do it.. the second time to see if I like it
Kev
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6th June 2004, 10:38 AM #66
And just for the record, I am currently listening to the following:
Neil Diamond : In My LifeTime
Van Morrison: best of Vol 1& 2
Various movie sound tracks
Millsie (thanks to my 14 year old daughter)
DiDo
Wings
Annie Lennox
Billy Joel
KevI try and do new things twice.. the first time to see if I can do it.. the second time to see if I like it
Kev
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5th March 2005, 07:12 PM #67
coming in a bit late on this one but not many of you like the stuff i like so here goes. My tastes are mainly in Jazz, not the trad crap, and in particular Jazz vocal, piano and guitar.
Also love big band/swing music and best of all for me are all the fabulous vocalists of the 40,s through to the current day in popular music with the graets like sinatra,fitzgerald,bennett,darin,etc etc just too many to mention.
I have a collection of over 800 cd,s and dont know how many tapes and vynil and Im really lucky cause I litsen to them all day in the office and in the workshop when i get out there.
Classical music i find really beautiful, try sitting in a quiet dark room, relax and play something like Massenet's Thais-Meditation and it will touch every nerve in your body and bring tears to your eyes. good music does that to you if you really listen, its like poetry....getting wet again!
Suppose really I like most music thats well written and orchestrated and makes me listen to it.
beejay1
http://community.webshots.com/user/eunos9
,
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5th March 2005, 07:19 PM #68Originally Posted by Brudda
Still listen to the "hot august night" album on a regular basis. Terrific song writer.
beejay1
http://community.webshots.com/user/eunos9
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5th March 2005, 07:27 PM #69
I confess to enjoying classical music providing it doesn't involve singing (or at least I think its called singing but with it usually in a foreign language and pitched at dog whistle levels who can tell).
Dave . . .
I believe in Murphy's Law of Pre-requisites - Whatever I want to do, I have to do something else first.
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5th March 2005, 07:47 PM #70
Lee Kernaghan, Kasey Chambers, Adam Harvey and more Lee Kernaghan
Last edited by Tikki; 6th March 2005 at 12:45 AM. Reason: How could I forget Adam!!
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5th March 2005, 09:17 PM #71
It's quite something how music can affect you.
I never used to like clasical until I was with friends staying in an apartment in Rome. Jerry the guy I was traveling with found a station that was playing classical piano. I was hooked within 5 mins. Now, if I can't sleep I put on a classical cd of mixed composers. I'm usually out before the forth song. The first time I heard Pachelbel's Cannon in D I thought this is what I want to be listening to the moment I die (hopefuly later than sooner) I'm gonna have a medic alert bracelet made up the says in case of emergency play Pachelbel.
I had a creative writing instructor in college once that was what I first thought was "way out there" She had everyone close their eyes and "open their minds" and listen closely to the snippets of different music she was going to play for us and to write down what we saw and felt in our "minds eye". First thing I'm thinking is "when is she going to bring out the hooka and kilo of dope. It was quite an eye opener to hear how the music affected each person. The music invoked very similar visions and feelings in everyone. One thing I couldn't figure out though was why I had a real bad case of the munchies after!?!?
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5th March 2005, 09:31 PM #72
By the sounds of it, there are no Britney fans here.... Or at least not until she takes her cloths off
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5th March 2005, 09:39 PM #73
If yer a blues fan and don't know it yet Fleetwood Macs early stuff is something you might want to look for. The album that switched me onto blues was their Double CD Fleetwood Mac in Chicago 1969.
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5th March 2005, 11:31 PM #74
One of my nephews in England (who knows Uncle Col shares the same eclectic musical tastes as he) sent me a CD via my daughter when she came back from a Christmas holiday in the old country.
The CD is called "The Devil's Music" and its a compilation selected by Keith Richards of music that has influenced him over the years.
It's great! It's a mixture of blues, rock, boogie-woogie, soul, R&B, reggae and jazz. There are tracks by Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, Little Richard, Otis Redding, Booker T, Tina Turner and the unforgettable Professor Longhair and his Shuffling Hungarians!
ColDriver of the Forums
Lord of the Manor of Upper Legover
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9th March 2005, 09:12 PM #75
Used to play rhythm and blues in the sixties. Still don't remember much about it so it must have been good.
I'm listening to Pink Floyd's Pulse CD at the moment and to my dying day I will regret not getting to see them play live. If they ever do another concert anywhere in the world , I'm there.
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