What Are You Listening To Today?

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Posted by Rampop II
8/08/2022 7:35 pm
#181

Rock wrote:

[A Little More Love]

Aww. 

Apparently she spent the last five years at least in a great deal of pain because her breast cancer had returned undetected and metastasized to her lower back, the pain initially being misdiagnosed as sciatica. It had reached stage IV by the time it was discovered. 

Prominent advocate for breast cancer awareness, opponent of deforestation, andlongtime friend of the dolphins
Also clapped back at last year's woke denunciation of Grease

Goodbye to Sandra Dee. May she swim with the dolphins, now pain-free. 

 
Posted by Jinnistan
8/08/2022 8:48 pm
#182

Rampop II wrote:

Also clapped back at last year's woke denunciation of Grease.

What?  Is this about that line in "Tell Me More"?


 
Posted by Jinnistan
8/08/2022 8:50 pm
#183



 


 
Posted by Rampop II
8/08/2022 9:30 pm
#184

Re: War & Eric Burdon: 

Ahhh. Nice grooves. 


Re: "Is this about that line in "Tell Me More?"

I think so, if you're talking about "Did she put up a fight."
For that line, they called it "rapey."
They also called it:
"sexist" because Sandy changes her image to impress Danny (despite the fact that Danny does the same for her),
"slut–shaming" because of Rizzo's preggers predicament,
"racist" because there's only one Black couple at the dance contest, and...
"homophobic" because all the couples in the movie are straight. 
All this, of course, despite the movie being set in 1950s small town America.
Also there was some complaint about Rizzo being a bully because she makes fun of Sandy for being a goody–goody. News flash, right? Rizzo is a bully! That's part of her character arc!

I don't think this particular cancel–cry really caught on, though. A couple of private high schools cancelled their productions of Grease when some students complained. The Twits got wind of that and it became the social media outcry du jour for a few months, which then led to a bunch of tabloid headlines blowing it all out–of proportion for another round of freaking out about Gen Z and cancel culture. Olivia Newton–John basically said everybody needed to lighten up and enjoy the movie for what it was. 

So it looks like a brief gust of mere hot air from the confused and exploitative, and maybe not worthy of letting them sully the moment. But I brought it up, so that one's on me. Bad Rampop. 

Last edited by Rampop II (8/08/2022 9:31 pm)

 
Posted by Jinnistan
8/08/2022 9:37 pm
#185


 
Posted by Rock
8/08/2022 9:55 pm
#186

Rampop II wrote:

Rock wrote:

If you're looking to get into Venom…

 

I’m having a ball with these! I had no idea how much fun these guys were going to be. It really is party music, isn’t it! I’m not sure I see the connection between this and the Norwegian “black metal“ of later years? This definitely does not feel like “serious” music for a metal–faced meanie. Maybe I didn't understand that the church–burning Norwegians were only having a good time, because Venom feels like true hedonistic metal levity for revelers sweatily celebrating the death of disco.
 

There's a humourlessness in a lot of more extreme metal that I find a little offputting, so when you go in expecting black metal to be a bunch of dullards who take their lyrics way too seriously, the goofy good vibes of Venom is extremely refreshing. Like, I found myself unmoved by Cannibal Corpse (outside of a few songs) because their devotion to extremity feels so airless and masturbatory, while I have a lot of fun with Autopsy's Severed Survival and Impetigo's Ultimo Mondo Cannibale. They're technically scratching a similar itch (extremely heavy, dense, abrasive soundscapes with gory lyrics), but they have a certain looseness that makes them easier to enjoy.

I am quite a bit younger than you guys and didn't live through the hair era, but I actually found myself gelling to that more than I expected, because the predominant mode of metal when I was getting into it was that humourless, wanky bullshit, so music by a bunch of dumbasses singing about partying and gettin' it on didn't seem so off putting in comparison. Power ballads though, no thanks. (I generally prefer the stuff from the earlier half of the decade, when things didn't get sappy. Just a bunch of hairy dudes on the verge of tears. Embarrassing.)

I should note that I'm probably not the best person to make the case for the Norwegians, so perhaps I am not doing them justice. I liked Darkthrone, but have avoided delving further as a lot of the musicians seem like objectively terrible people. Not something that always bothers me, but with difficult music like this, I can't be bothered to make the effort.


I am not above abusing mod powers for my own amusement.
 
Posted by Rampop II
8/08/2022 10:23 pm
#187

Rock wrote:

Just a bunch of hairy dudes on the verge of tears. Embarrassing.

You mean like Ozzy and Lita's "Close my Eyes Forever," Bon Jovi's "Never Say Goodbye" and Crue's "Home Sweet Home?" Rotten stuff. absolutely awful. Oh, and GnR's unforgivable cover of "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," so deplorable that Dylan disavowed the song... if I'm not mistaken, Jinnistan?

To the best of my understanding, the general consensus among metal fans at the time was that such songs were intended to attract more female fans, specifically of the ditzier variety... and to reap more groupie blow jobs. I guess one could say that, rather than clear the air of some of the sexism associated with the music industry, they opted to lean into it.

 
Posted by Rampop II
8/08/2022 10:43 pm
#188

Meanwhile, intelligent female rockers struggled to be taken seriously. The few that braved the raging waters put up with all kinds of crap. Doro Pesch, "Queen of Metal," was apparently criticized for what was perceived to be sexualized imagery, accused of pandering to male chauvinist fantasies or some shit. 
So guys like Rob Halford and David Lee Roth could gyrate all they wanted (Halford being openly gay, no less), but if a female showed up in tight leather, she oughta be ashamed of herself. There's that fear of female sexuality, again. 
Then straight–ahead female rockers like Girlschool just went largely unnoticed. I admit I had never heard of them until I saw 2005's Metal: A Headbanger's Journey  (truly good documentary covering the evolution of the genre through the decades). 

Both of the above–mentioned female artists retained spots on the list I made for my niece, by the way. 

And people be talkin about Vixen. wtf? Is there some Vixen I haven't heard that is metal? Cuz the only Vixen music I've heard is about as metal as Pinocchio's nose. People want to pad the 80's female metal roster with shit like Vixen, Heart, Bananarama... Nothing wrong with Heart or Bananarama, but, metal? 

Maybe I digress...
 

 
Posted by Rampop II
8/08/2022 11:10 pm
#189

The mid–late 80s wave of enthusiasm for thrash metal was in many ways backlash to ever–cheesier hair metal, glam rock, or what many called, "false metal." 

 
Posted by Jinnistan
8/08/2022 11:18 pm
#190

Rampop II wrote:

Oh, and GnR's unforgivable cover of "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," so deplorable that Dylan disavowed the song... if I'm not mistaken, Jinnistan?

I don't think so.  I'm pretty sure that Dylan still plays it.
 


 
Posted by Rock
8/08/2022 11:22 pm
#191

Girlschool I'm aware of because they were associated with Motorhead. Anybody who's okay with Lemmy is okay with me.




I admit I'm not at all familiar with Doro Pesch. A subject for further study, I'm sure.
 


I am not above abusing mod powers for my own amusement.
 
Posted by Rampop II
8/08/2022 11:29 pm
#192

Jinnistan wrote:

And also (you tease) list the actual list as well.

I'd better hurry before the momentum is lost entirely. I really wish I could provide a playable version of this list because I put a lot of effort into ensuring one track would flow effectively into the next, but I do not know of a way of doing it. Dropbox invariably re–arranges mixes according to actual track numbers. Spotify ruins the flow with commercials. Posting 18 YouTube videos would kinda work, but it might get a little cluttered? I guess I could list these as links. Like I said, though, it's pretty standard fare, so I think there will be few surprises. 

OK, what do you guys think? Shall I post YouTube vids for each song? Or just post the songlist?

 
Posted by Rampop II
8/08/2022 11:30 pm
#193

Rock wrote:

Girlschool I'm aware of because they were associated with Motorhead. Anybody who's okay with Lemmy is okay with me.
 

FUCK, YES!!!

 
Posted by Rampop II
8/08/2022 11:32 pm
#194

Jinnistan wrote:

Rampop II wrote:

Oh, and GnR's unforgivable cover of "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," so deplorable that Dylan disavowed the song... if I'm not mistaken, Jinnistan?

I don't think so.  I'm pretty sure that Dylan still plays it.
 

Oh. 

Glad I asked.

 
Posted by Rock
8/08/2022 11:49 pm
#195

Rampop II wrote:

Rock wrote:

Just a bunch of hairy dudes on the verge of tears. Embarrassing.

You mean like Ozzy and Lita's "Close my Eyes Forever," Bon Jovi's "Never Say Goodbye" and Crue's "Home Sweet Home?" Rotten stuff. absolutely awful. Oh, and GnR's unforgivable cover of "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," so deplorable that Dylan disavowed the song... if I'm not mistaken, Jinnistan?

To the best of my understanding, the general consensus among metal fans at the time was that such songs were intended to attract more female fans, specifically of the ditzier variety... and to reap more groupie blow jobs. I guess one could say that, rather than clear the air of some of the sexism associated with the music industry, they opted to lean into it.

When the music is honest about its celebration of hedonism, I can get behind that (provided there's a riff good enough to back it up). But who are we kidding, these guys don't have feelings*. When they pretend otherwise, it just makes for extremely lame music.

*I will make an exception for Ozzy, who I think can imbue genuine emotion into his vocals in a way most other metal singers (even technically superior ones) are unable to. I think there are plenty of heartfelt, sincere vocal performances scattered throughout his Black Sabbath stuff and his solo albums with Randy Rhoads. But it's important for the song not to go full sap. The emotion has to feel earned.


I am not above abusing mod powers for my own amusement.
 
Posted by Rock
8/08/2022 11:51 pm
#196



 


I am not above abusing mod powers for my own amusement.
 
Posted by Rampop II
8/09/2022 12:33 am
#197

 "C'mon Let's Go" is the one I included on the CD. Great tune. A little like Motörhead's "Snaggletooth." 

I don't think their music was even available in North America until the early 90s(?); and that would make me feel better about having never heard of them. By the early 90s... well... let's not go there just yet. We have unfinished business, here....

Last edited by Rampop II (8/09/2022 12:37 am)

 
Posted by Rampop II
8/09/2022 6:43 am
#198

Rock wrote:

I admit I'm not at all familiar with Doro Pesch. A subject for further study, I'm sure.
 

Oh, I can help with that!

Introducing...
Warlock



This 1985 TV appearance from the UK may be hilariously fraught with tuning and technical difficulties (instruments randomly cutting in and out), but don't it just burst with energy and pyrotechnic 1980s glory.



This is one of my favorite tracks from their album Triumph and Agony (1988), which also features their huge hit single "All We Are."



A cut from their first album Burning the Witches (1984)



One of many audience videos that can be found on YouTube; skip ahead to 1:20.








I wonder if whoever wrote that bit about Doro being criticized for sexual imagery wasn't confusing her with Wendy O. Williams:









She was also down with Lemmy...


 

Last edited by Rampop II (8/10/2022 3:38 am)

 
Posted by Rampop II
8/11/2022 2:03 am
#199

Jinnistan wrote:

crumbsroom wrote:

And make this list (immediately ) health permitting, of course.

I concur.  And also (you tease) list the actual list as well.


.
.
.
As requested...it's a little late, but The Metal never gets cold.

My niece received her CD yesterday, with her name as the addressee hand–printed in Metallica–style lettering. Like I said, there won’t be a lot of surprises on this essentially “best of” introductory list. I’d love to know what list you guys would have made, or any suggestions you want to put forward, as well as which song you would have chosen for any given artist. I’d especially like to know what Van Halen song you would have chosen. I’m not an expert on classic VH, I only know the first album and 1984. My choice may be predictable but I think it’s solid. Anyway, without further ado...

The "1980s Metal Essential Essentials" starter kit:






































.
.
.
If anyone is interested, here’s a link to the original 3+ hour list on Spotify.

 

 
Posted by crumbsroom Online!
8/15/2022 2:41 pm
#200

Somehow I missed all of this metal. The perils of living in a fog.

Very nice. I'll need to check all of that out. And it seems I'm not the only one who overthinks the mixed tape to the point of near paralysis. I found the only way to move forward is just to make one after the other and keep piling them up in the room of whomever is my recipient.

"Does music ever end?", they would ask hopeful

"Never", is all I could reply handing them another bag full of cassettes.

Currently though, this is where I am at.









 

Last edited by crumbsroom (8/15/2022 2:59 pm)

 


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