It has been a bad year for music.
This has got me thinking of who is left from the years that I grew up in,and the artists that I listened to.
I really started listening to music seriously towards the end of the seventies.
I was into Queen,The Clash,Siouxsie and the Banshees and The Jam(amongst others).
Freddie Mercury for me was one of the greatest all round performers of his generation and is still sadly missed.
1977-1987 for me was the best period for music in my lifetime,although I will admit to liking a lot of 60s and early 70s Rock.
Another band I got into was Big Country.They were big in the early 80's but went off the boil by the end of the decade,but still come up with some decent songs.Unfortunately the lead singer had some problems and went to America in a bid to overcome them.Stuart Adamson was his name(formerly of the Skids).He had set up a football team in the US but never really got his life back on track and he died of a drug overdose in around 2000/2001.
Incidentally 2 original members of the band are still doing the tour circuit with a new singer.
We lost Joe Strummer of the Clash a few years ago as well.
Other bands I like who lost original members include Pink Floyd,The Who and Echo and the Bunnymen.
One of the few bands that is still almost as they were are Simple Minds.Ultravox are now back together and also Orchestral Manoevres in the Dark(OMD) are back.
The retro tours seem to have given a lot of bands a new lease of life,but it really does make you feel old when you hear that so and so are getting back together after an absence of 15-20 years.
I would love to hear about other peoples musical tastes and their heroes from way back.
I was never really into Prince but I liked a few of his songs,but he was a very respected song writer and he wrote songs for many different artists across the spectrum of music genres.
It may be a dreadful thing to say but you can't help but wonder who will be next.:(
 
When I was at school Prince and Michael Jackson were at their peaks. My first ever cassettes were Michael Jackson's Bad and Johnny Hates Jazz - Turn Back The Clock.

I started to hit my teenage years towards the late 80's when there was a big rock scene in Birmingham. I spent so much time in Eddie's and XL's I probably saw them more than my own home.

I was into all sorts. The likes of Guns 'n' Roses, Bon Jovi, Def Leppard etc were very popular around that time, although considered more mainstream. Poison, Motley Crue, The Cult, Metallica, Faith No More....I could go on. There were plenty of more obscure bands that no one has probably heard of. I also listened to a lot of older music from the likes of Led Zeppelin, KISS, Ozzy, Van Halen etc.

I still listen to these but my tastes are alot more varied these days. I guess it depends on the mood. Some days I can have a Trance House CD on in the car, other days it may be Black Sabbath.

With an eight year old daughter I do find myself listening to alot more One Direction and Little Mix than I would ideally like :LOL:
 
Given that 'pop music' as it was once called (is it still?) really came into existence after WW2 and many of the celebrity early performers are now in their 70s, with some still working (Cliff Richard, Tom Jones to name but two major stars), I fear it is inevitable that we shall learn of more deaths in the next few years.

Obviously this week saw the deaths of two younger performers (Prince and Victoria Wood) but there are still many septuagenarians who were once (some still are) world class performers with the Rolling Stones members and those former members of the Beatles who are still with us falling into this category.

When you are a baby boomer yourself (as I am) it becomes even more relevant in many ways when contemporaries who grew into adulthood and then fame begin to leave life's stage for good. I was never a great pop music fan but obviously I was well aware of many of these performers as my life proceeded in the same era as theirs.
 
I think I have quite an eclectic taste in music. Don't laugh but the first single I bought was motorbikin by Chris Spedding in 75 on account of my love for motorcycles. At that time I wasn't attracted to any specific musical genre but liked all sorts of stuff that I would hear on Radio 1 (probably the last station I would ever listen to now ) or Luxembourg, ranging from Abba to Bowie and a little later The Stranglers, The Ramones, Siouxsie and the Banshees, The Buzzcocks and quite a lot of disco such as Chic (rip Bernard Edwards) and The Bee Gees or as Clive Anderson preferred to remember them les tossers. Soundtrack from Saturday night fever has to be one of the best film scores ever written. Although I was passionate about any thing with two wheels I didnt like and never have liked heavy metal. Around 1981 the electro pop and new romantic scene became popular and like many people in their early twenties started following The Human League, Heaven 17, Japan (rip Mick Karn) Spandau Ballet, The Teardrop Explodes, Simple minds and Birminghams own Duran Duran and the less well known but brilliant Fashion (rip Dik Davis). After that I went back to liking all sorts such As Prince, Big Audio Dynamite, Level 42 and Go West. By the way did anyone used to go to The Boat at Catherine De Barnes on a Sunday night? After the mid nineties I pretty much gave up listening to contemporary music but strangely got quite into Pink Floyd which I couldn't get my head around before. And that's about it really. Still like the occasional new song but am fairly well stuck in the past!
 
wolfheze,you and I have similar tastes.
Big Audio Dynamite in particular were underrated,with Mick Jones(formerly of the Clash),Japan and Heaven 17 all appear on my playlists regularly too.
The Stranglers and Duran Duran also feature.
Interestingly I too am stuck in the past,as I refuse to listen to national radio,although Absolute radio(used to be Virgin),gets listened to when I'm in my car as it probably gives the best mix of music.If you have a digital radio,check out Planet Rock or Absolute 80s.In fact Absolute have a station for most decades from the 60s onwards,although I think some are only available in London at the moment.
Film soundtracks is another that could take up it's own thread.
Pretty in Pink and the Breakfast Club stand out for me.All very 80's but some great tunes.
 
Don't you forget about me,is a tune I have seen Simple Minds do many times live.Always goes down a storm and gets the crowd on it's feet.
Amazing to believe the writers first choice to do the song was Bryan Ferry,another favourite song writer of mine,both solo and with Roxy Music.
 
Another film with a good soundtrack is grosse point blank.
I won't put the link on here but check out mirror in the bathroom (y)
 
Don't you forget about me,is a tune I have seen Simple Minds do many times live.Always goes down a storm and gets the crowd on it's feet.
Amazing to believe the writers first choice to do the song was Bryan Ferry,another favourite song writer of mine,both solo and with Roxy Music.
Must try to see Simple Minds 'The American' would definitely be in my Top Twenty
 
Must try to see Simple Minds 'The American' would definitely be in my Top Twenty


Yep,good choice,check out Book of Brilliant Things and Belfast Child live also.
2 more good films with good soundtracks,how about TOP GUN,for the main song being filmed in a desert bone yard,apologies for aviation content.
Also Donny Darko,classic 80s galore.
 
Unfortunately I didn't go to the barn until it had become a beefeater. Nice fillet though (y)
Seem to remember listening to an Ian Drury album and being surprised at how much swearing there was.
 
My very first musical memories (other than nursery rhymes), were a couple of songs I used to sing as a very young child - 'Keith West - Excerpt From A Teenage Opera', possibly better known as 'Grocer Jack', and Manfred Mann's 'My name is Jack'.
I also remembering feeling a very strong emotion, when listening to 'Windmills of your mind' and 'Where do you go to (my lovely)?' I now think of these and the emotion I felt as 'haunting'.
Through my late 'tens' and early 'teens', I didn't really have much interest in music, other than what I saw on Top of the Pops - Slade, Bay City Rollers, ABBA etc.
The first album I ever bought was ELO's 'Discovery' - I still love their sound to this day.
Everything changed when my cousin played me an album by Rush, and that started the ball rolling. AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, Rainbow etc, etc. I've never been into thrash metal, just good old melodic Rock.
But even then, I still had time for the likes of Ultravox, Simple Minds, The Tourists/Annie Lennox, Roxette, Talk Talk, Mike Oldfield and many others.
I still love my Rock music, but have also recently been watching youtube footage of the brilliant Cyndi Lauper ('I drove all night' and 'Time after Time' are outstanding).
I'll even include Frank Sinatra, Neil Diamond (Sweet Caroline is a belter!), Bread and Simon and Garfunkel.

The list could go on and on, but other notables would be R.E.M., Counting Crows, Amy Macdonald, Eric Clapton, The Pretenders, Adele ........

I think as we grow older, our musical interest broaden. The only genres that I really don't like are Country, Rap and Opera.

[Edit] Doh! - how could I forget The Red Hot Chilli Peppers.

Cheers

Kevin
 
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All checked in for my flight to Sydney from Manchester via Heathrow. Been waiting for this trip for nearly a year and now tomorrow I'll finally head to Australia and New Zealand!
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survived a redundancy scenario where I work for the 3rd time. Now it looks likely I will get to cover work for 2 other teams.. Pretty please for a payrise? That would be a no and so stay on the min wage.
Live in Market Bosworth and take each day as it comes......
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15 years at the same company was reached the weekend before last. Not sure how they will mark the occasion apart from the compulsory payirse to minimum wage (1st rise for 2 years; i was 15% above it back then!)

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