studio150
Well-known member
The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
The Wall
Brothers In Arms
Born To Run
Wildflowers
The Wall
Brothers In Arms
Born To Run
Wildflowers
As with classic literature, I have never felt the need to try to enjoy something just because others say it is a classic. Same with Ballet, Opera etc, if you don't like it you don't like it. There is so much out there to enjoy without forcing yourself to enjoy things just because lots of others do. It is nothing to be ashamed of imo.
We may have done this before, I am quite old and may have forgotten
Inspired by the 1972 album thread that some think only has a handful of great albums. Some of you don’t even need to listen to them to have an opinion which is just plain bloody weird to me
Two spring to mind, I may be back with more
Joni Mitchell - Blue
Johnny Cash- most albums but At Folsom Prison is the one most list as his “best” album
I have tried but feck me, I can’t stand either of them
The best rythm section on earth for a while back then.
Sorry, I don't waste too much time thinking about things I don't like?
Can't agree with that last assertion. John Paul Jones and John Henry Bonham Shirley?
The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
The Wall
Brothers In Arms
Born To Run
Wildflowers
Can't agree with that last assertion. John Paul Jones and John Henry Bonham Shirley?
Screamadelica is absolute shite
Rick Laird and Billy Cobham, Shirly?
Or was it Colin Hodgkinson and Tony Hicks?
Or Sly and Robbie?
Or Steve Severin and Budgie
Or....
Rick Laird and Billy Cobham, Shirly?
Or was it Colin Hodgkinson and Tony Hicks?
Or Sly and Robbie?
Or Steve Severin and Budgie
Or....
Oh Matt. And I thought we were going to be good friends if we ever met at a Lewes game and bored other people on Tom Carlse's greatness
Nothing to do with trying to like it. If it's a big thing amongst your friends and acquaintances, and of a genre you're generally interested in, you listen to it to see what everybody is enthusing about. It may become a classic, but if you don't like it, or just don't get it, that seems to me to be what the OP is asking.As with classic literature, I have never felt the need to try to enjoy something just because others say it is a classic. Same with Ballet, Opera etc, if you don't like it you don't like it. There is so much out there to enjoy without forcing yourself to enjoy things just because lots of others do. It is nothing to be ashamed of imo.
I can relate to that. I think that as we get older, our attention span - at least as far as music is concerned - gets shorter and shorter. Plus a tacit acknowledgement that we've got less and less time left to spare sitting cross-legged on the floor (not that you can do that with artificial hips anyway!) listening to a whole LP, both sides, until the small hours and still get up bright as a button the next morning!I am nearly always happy to give a recommended album a few listens before I make a final judgement. Mostly it doesn't work if I don't rate it on the first listen but two albums come to mind that I absolutely love having dismissed them on first hearing:
Deja Vu by CSNY
Raising Sand by Alison Krauss and Robert Plant. In fact it was someone on here who told me to stick with it for few listens when I had dismissed it out of hand on the first listen.
I find that many albums grow on you. In the days of LPs I would listen to albums quite a few times, even if I wasn't keen on first listening. These days, sadly I just dismiss things out of hand as the choice is so great, so it's easy to move on. Back then I didn't have a bigger choice than my record collection, these days I download stuff, listen and often move on. A song will come up on shuffle and I'll think "WTF is this, it's great or it's shit" but without looking I generally don't have a clue who it is even though it is in my itunes collection.
Icy, I agree with both your choices and also the sentiments about repeat listening.I am nearly always happy to give a recommended album a few listens before I make a final judgement. Mostly it doesn't work if I don't rate it on the first listen but two albums come to mind that I absolutely love having dismissed them on first hearing:
Deja Vu by CSNY
Raising Sand by Alison Krauss and Robert Plant. In fact it was someone on here who told me to stick with it for few listens when I had dismissed it out of hand on the first listen.
I find that many albums grow on you. In the days of LPs I would listen to albums quite a few times, even if I wasn't keen on first listening. These days, sadly I just dismiss things out of hand as the choice is so great, so it's easy to move on. Back then I didn't have a bigger choice than my record collection, these days I download stuff, listen and often move on. A song will come up on shuffle and I'll think "WTF is this, it's great or it's shit" but without looking I generally don't have a clue who it is even though it is in my itunes collection.
Sgt Pepper
and I LOVE the Beatles.