T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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223.1 | HM in 80's generally better, IMO | ZUMA::MINARDI | | Mon Sep 05 1988 09:02 | 19 |
|
I think that bands like Zep and Floyd were incredible, and would
have been incredible no matter what decade they existed in. (Yeah,
I know that Floyd still exists.) I don't think that it's a matter
of what the year was or anything. Zep's classic style is still
embraced (or at least influences) by many of today's bands, they're
timeless.
Personally, I hate the music of the sixties and seventies, with
the exception of the good hard rockers of the time, and a couple
other bands, like the Doors, and Pink Floyd.
It seems like every rock station on the radio dedicates all
of sunday to playing sixties music. Invariably I'm stuck listening
to the Beatles, and psychedelic crap. I'd rather listen to
Casey's top 40 than 70 percent of that stuff. Now if they played
a lot of Zep and Sabbath...
/Motorbreath...sixties were better if that was your type of
music, if it's heavy metal you desire stick to the 80's FOR THE
MOST PART.
|
223.2 | | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | | Mon Sep 05 1988 10:22 | 15 |
| A lot of that sixties crap was due to the fact that there were a
lot more young people who were socially conscious, and being young
people they question everything. I question lotsa stuff, my daughter
questions lotsa stuff, and most of you who are aware of whats going
on probably question lotsa stuff. IMO lotsa sixties "classics" were
driven out of the "need" to express attitudes, feelings and
personality. Today's eighties music really doens't have the same
awareness that the hippies of the sixties had. Seems that the attitude
is sex, drugs, and rock-n-roll, disco sucks and so does soul.
Personally I'd rather listen to Iron Maiden or Van Halen than old
Sabbath, Doors, or even old AC/DC. Zep is my all time favorite 'tho.
the devil dog who is wondering why he is here on a holiday.
|
223.6 | Tuesday morning babbling. :^) | BTO::BAGDY_M | An armour plated raging beast... | Tue Sep 06 1988 07:05 | 23 |
|
There were alot of descent bands that came out of the 60's
& 70's. Look at ELP, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (although Neil's
off on his own and the other three do reunions), Cream, Ten Years
After, and-so-forth-and-so-on... Music was a way to rebel back
in those years. A way for people to relate to one another. Back
then was the time of being free in thought and action. Look at
Woodstock ! If anything like that happened now, the government
would call a state of emergency, and people would be arrested.
If I remember the numbers, there were two fights, and nine births
that 72 hour weekend, where there were somewhere near 250,000
people,(if not more) there.(Don't quote the figures, since I saw
a video taped recording of the whole event three years ago, and
have forgotten alot of the numbers) To the people in that timeframe,
the music said just about everything that they wanted to say in
words. Listen to CS&N sometime. They're _VERY_ political in their
music.
The frame of mind was alot different towards music then, as
it is now, and when we're forty and our kids are listening to the
future music, will they be thinking the same thing about the 80/90's?
METALord (was five in `68)
|
223.7 | Evolution | TORA::JMINVILLE | Only a fool would say that | Tue Sep 06 1988 12:22 | 14 |
| RE: .1
In my humble opinion, it is very likely (very, very, very likely)
that if it hadn't been for The Beatles and all that other "psychedelic
crap", there might never have been Heavy Metal. Also consider that
many things we take for granted (e.g. long hair, dressing the way
you want, listening to loud music) were not acceptable in the 60's
and it took years of rebellious music, art, and literature to get to
where we are today.
I agree that it can be a drag to hear so much of the so-called "classic
hits" format. I sure as hell get sick of it.
joe.
|
223.9 | Party Metaphore #2 | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | | Tue Sep 06 1988 13:06 | 19 |
| As far as mediocrity goes, the reason the 80s may seem mediocre
as compared to the 60s and 70s is the fact that there are many
different bands playing many different types of metal. With so many
different types, there is bound to be stuff you don't like. Another
piont to consider is that HM gets more airplay than it useta. This
leads us to believe our favorites are selling out, when all they
are doing is getting more popoular. This goes to a point I made
some time ago about HM being our music and now too many people like
it, which takes off some of the rebellion factor. It's like having
a cool place in the hills to party (in my case it was Enchanted
Forest), then other people hear about it, pretty soon lotsa people
go there and it's not your spot anymore, its everybody's spot. You
either enjoy the place with everybody or you find a new spot. I
don't think HM is mediocre in the 80's, people are just looking
for a new "spot".
the devil dog who's wondering if he made sense
|
223.10 | HM dominates top 50... | CLBMED::JMINVILLE | Only a fool would say that | Tue Sep 06 1988 13:16 | 15 |
| BTW, here are some stat's on HM as related to the top 50 albums
this week:
# 3 Guns N' Roses 32 weeks on the top 50
# 4 Def Leppard 52 weeks...
# 7 Van Halen 10 weeks
#11 Cinderella 4 weeks
#17 Poison 12 weeks
#37 Scorpions 14 weeks
#48 Jimmy Page 6 weeks
That's 14% of the total. Pretty decent, huh? Anybody know
if 14% is any kind of a record for HM?
joe.
|
223.12 | deja vu | HAZEL::STARR | You ain't nothin' but fine, fine, fine! | Tue Sep 06 1988 13:56 | 6 |
| See note 175.*
(for my response in particular, see note 175.3)
cat
who_says_that_this_notesfile_is_getting_more_repetitive_than_HM_ever_will_be
|
223.13 | | REGENT::GALLANT | The Wild Heart | Tue Sep 06 1988 14:09 | 9 |
|
I KNEW this was discussed somewhere else! I just couldn't
remember where.
Thanks, Cat!
Tig~~
|
223.14 | Forced Fads and Image=Pure Bullshit | RAIN::DELPHIA | Mike Delphia | Tue Sep 06 1988 17:22 | 19 |
| The reason I wrote this note was that I don't think the great heavy
metal bands of today are as talented as the great heavy metal bands
of the sixties and seventies.I am not trying to live in the past
as may be suggested and I have listened to a great deal of contem-
porary HM,but if you took the 1973 Led Zeppelin(lets agree that
this is was a great 70's HM band) and *******(you name your own)
as today's great heavy metal band,ask yourself 1.Who came up with a
more original sound,2.Who developed their influences into a sound
that was Band X's and not Band X's influence,and 3.Did that bands
sound set a trend to develop and influence future music to major
proportions. The sad answer is that our old dead bands did more
for music than the ones we have now do.The music today relies more
heavily on fads and image than old music did,fads and image were
fun to have in the old days,now they are a must.Radio stations
know this and alot of HM fans do too,that is why you here as much
60's and 70's antiques as you do 80's music,If all radio stations played
was 80's music there would be alot of idle radio's.What major influence
on the art of music has ANY band,HM or non-HM had in the 80's?
|
223.16 | why greater talent? | ZUMA::MINARDI | | Wed Sep 07 1988 08:02 | 33 |
|
RE: 14
Please.
First of all, how many "great" heavy metal bands are there from
the 60's BESIDES ZEP?
Secondly, yes, Zep was/is a major influence. A lot of their music
is VERY blues - oriented. I wouldn't call that a breakthrough
or trendsetting sound.
That's ONE band, one example. What other REAL HM bands in the sixties
were so outstanding and unique that no great 80's HM band compares?
I don't hear much in the way of 60s or 70s HEAVY METAL on the
radio, nor do I consider that period a HM renaissance era or
anything. I do hear a lot of music from that period on sundays though,
but not HM.
What advantage in "talent" did bands from that time have over
today's bands?
In my opinion, the 70s were a stagnant time for music. The
diversity of the sixties gave way to the BORING 70s... when bands
like Dr. Hook made it big. James Taylor. Boston was probably the
biggest band of the 70s, and I don't think that's saying much.
Kansas, Fleetwood Mac, etc. I'm not flaming these bands, I just
think that they weren't doing anything of any importance.
The record industry also suffered greatly during this stale period.
The late seventies/early eighties finally came alive with
some new music, and great heavy metal bands to spring us from the
boring, disco seventies.
...well, enough dribbling
/Motorbreath
|
223.17 | before ya jump on it | ZUMA::MINARDI | | Wed Sep 07 1988 08:16 | 6 |
| As an addendum to my last note...
yeah, I know Zep was kicking a** in the seventies, along with
a couple other bands. They were the exception NOT the rule.
/Motorbreath
|
223.18 | Short and to the point? | COMET::FERRISM | | Wed Sep 07 1988 08:32 | 9 |
|
Without the music of the 60's and 70's there would be no HM conference
to read today. Just as the 60's influenced the 70's, the 70's
influenced the 80's. HM is nothing but a new term for a sound
that has been developing over a period of many years. No one band
woke up one day and decided to call themselves HM, it took alot
of time to progress to todays definition of HM. I believe there
is a note on influences of HM where alot of this has been talked
about.
|
223.19 | OUI | ZUMA::MINARDI | | Wed Sep 07 1988 08:38 | 9 |
|
Amen.
I agree with that totally as opposed to "this is better than that."
This was touched before in another note, which was started on a
different topic. I think this is a valid discussion.
/Motaahhhbreath... who CAN'T WAIT to pick up Metallica's new tape!
|
223.20 | | HAZEL::STARR | You ain't nothin' but fine, fine, fine! | Wed Sep 07 1988 08:51 | 25 |
| re: .16
(Motorbreath - I agree with your point. This is just nitpickin' on my part.)
> That's ONE band, one example. What other REAL HM bands in the sixties
> were so outstanding and unique that no great 80's HM band compares?
Cream. (Ooops, my Clapton fanaticism is showing again. Sorry!)
> What advantage in "talent" did bands from that time have over
> today's bands?
No advantage in talent, but they did a have a large advantage business-
wise. The bands of the sixties could afford to be more experimental and
try more things than the bands of the eighties, who have to achieve
large scale success before they are allowed to experiment with their music.
> diversity of the sixties gave way to the BORING 70s... when bands
> like Dr. Hook made it big.
Hey, do you mean you don't like "Cover of the Rolling Stone"? That's a
great song!!!
cat
|
223.21 | Is it realy | SALEM::BUTKUS | | Wed Sep 07 1988 09:25 | 15 |
|
As far as the 70's hard rock/metal there isn't that much to be found
forinstance Led Zep 3 albums and a few single cuts some Cream
some Alice Cooper some T.Rex,Hendrix,Who,Trower,Sweet and A few
others who I can't think of.There wasn't the variety that there
is today especially when you look at some of there greatest hits
albums not to knock Dr.Hook but anyone who would put the song
""you make my pants want to get up and dance""as a greatest hit
can't have made that many good songs,but then again this is just
one mans opinion.
M
B
|
223.22 | Live in the past for better value! | RAIN::DELPHIA | Mike Delphia | Wed Sep 07 1988 10:17 | 8 |
| RE:16
> First of all, how many "great" heavy metal bands are there from
> the 60's BESIDES ZEP?
To many more than there are today.If Led Zep and the other "greats"
were not around there would be nothing for Metalical(and several
others) to palagerize there music from.
|
223.23 | Not to attack your opinion, but | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Big Wilbur will get YOU!!! | Wed Sep 07 1988 11:45 | 34 |
| re: .22
<Flame on>
You have obviously NEVER listened to any of Metallicas music, otherwise
you would never make an ignorant statement like that! I find their
sound quite unique and ABSOLUTELY NOTHING like Zep, the Stones, Cream
or anything else I've heard from this 60s. It is not blues based, as
was most of the music of the 60s (and almost ALL the music of Zep). Zep
literally STOLE songs from many great bluesmen, words, music, and all,
without giving any credit, even!!! They even copped songs from the
Yardbirds! So who was doing the plagiarizing?
Now I do agree that the 60s was a time when popular music was evolving
and without that process, there would be no Metallica (or others)
today. I CANNOT accept the statement that they plagiarize their sound
and material. This is BLATANTLY false!!!
<Flame off>
I'm sorry that you feel we attacked you or the 60s, and I'm also sorry
you feel you have to attack us and the 80s. I have nothing against the
60s, or Led Zeppelin, much of my favorite music was done during that
time period. But it's just not true that the people of that time
period were any more talented at either songwriting or performing. On
the contrary, I would have to say that a performer must be much more
competent in technical ability to make it in the record business today.
I completely agree with Cat in that they had more freedom to experiment
with their music back then, it wasn't such a big money making business
as it is today. I consider that a damn shame too.
gh
|
223.25 | c'mon!!! | ZUMA::MINARDI | | Wed Sep 07 1988 12:53 | 16 |
| re: 22
HAHAHAHAHAAA!!!
I will try to restrain myself...
You definitely have not listened to ANY Metallica material, or you
would NOT have made that statement. As was said before, and as I
said, Led Zep was a blues based band. Led Zep was good, like I said,
but I still haven't heard you naming off "the big list" of
60's heavy metal hero bands, and that's because there weren't many.
You made a statement earlier about not living in the past, but in
my opinion you obviously are.
/Motorbreath...a fanatic of many bands... with an open mind (I like
to think)
|
223.26 | Flame Broiled | RAIN::DELPHIA | Mike Delphia | Wed Sep 07 1988 12:55 | 33 |
| RE:23
flame on
I have heard alot of Metalica, and if you don't or can't see where
they got there influence from then clean out of your ears.The british
blues movement began in the early 1960's and EVERYONE that was ANYONE
in HM(or anything else)was influenced by it.Rock and Roll(which
HM is an off-shoot)is a DIRECT development of the blues sound.And
further more If you ever read "When the Levee Breaks"or the other
sheet music LED ZEP CREDITS THE PERSON WHO WROTE THE ORIGINAL SHEET
MUSIC ON BOTH THE ALBUM AND IN THE SHEET MUSIC!!!SO DON'T TELL ME
THEY ARE STEALING ANYTHING!!!Jimmy Page wrote"I'm Confused",a Yardbirds
song and turned it into "Dazed and Confused" when he started Led
Zep.Finally listen to "Gallows Pole",by Leadbelly,the blues artist
in the 30's who wrote it - see the difference?See the album credits?
the sheet music?,No it doesn't say Page-Plant wrote it.Further did
you EVER read the lyrics to a HM song???? Compare them to a ANY
blues song,see any similarities in content,theme,etc???And if,and
I take this back somewhat about Metalica,you don't think that this
has been the era of copy-cat bands(Great White,Kingdom Come and
friends)then you obviously never listened to 60's and 70's music.
flame off
I'm sorry too.I feel we have all been short-changed and that money
is into something that deterimes what is made availible to us,the
public.Music is something that really priceless when done well but
I feel the greedy record companies are shoveling us garbage in hopes
of lowering our tastes in order to have a bigger market share.I
agree with cat and losing that freedom has cost us all.I'll
keep waiting and hoping.
|
223.29 | uhhh, yyeeeeeah, that's it | ZUMA::MINARDI | | Wed Sep 07 1988 13:33 | 17 |
|
No Pete, all those "good" 80s bands have done nothing but
stolen their lyrics, and music from Led Zeppelin.
Actually, no...wait... All rock bands conceived since 1950 have
stolen everything from the American blues masters of the 20s and
30s.
yeah, that's it.
I agree with you about the stuff from the 60s.
Led Zeppelin were THE BIGGEST plagiarists by stealing the
blues sound, and lyrics!!!
/Motorbreath... who can correctly spell METALLICA!!!
|
223.30 | curious | SALEM::BUTKUS | | Wed Sep 07 1988 14:13 | 10 |
|
Now does that mean anyone who plays a blues type of music and has
a singer with a high voice was influenced by Zepplin and were do
you get the comparisson(not mad or defensive just curios(sp?)
in Great White sounding like Zep. the only thing iv'e heard that
could be considerd anything like Zep is Rock Me.
M
B
|
223.31 | hopeless | RAIN::DELPHIA | Mike Delphia | Wed Sep 07 1988 14:51 | 1 |
|
|
223.32 | When were you a teen-rocker? | RICKS::UPHAM | | Wed Sep 07 1988 15:05 | 9 |
|
Having read thru this little debate, I was just wondering how
old you are Mike Delphia. I am 25 not old enough to remember the
60's and only really got into music starting in the mid-70's. So
my view is definitly that the 80's have been the balls while everything
before that I don't really care for.
/Bill......It could be an age thing.
|
223.33 | hopeless... | ZUMA::MINARDI | | Wed Sep 07 1988 15:16 | 11 |
|
...to have a meaningful discussion with anyone that only wants
to hear what they believe.
in note .0 you said you wondered if the best had come and gone,
when you actually already had your mind made up.
wait a sec... why am I bothering?
/Motorbreath...yet another rathole
|
223.34 | my opinion on a couple points | HAZEL::STARR | You ain't nothin' but fine, fine, fine! | Wed Sep 07 1988 15:22 | 23 |
| re: could be an age thing....
Nawwwww....cause I'm 25 (ooops, 26 as of a couple days ago!),and grew up
in the mid-70s also. But I still love music from the Sixties (Cream,
Hendrix, Beatles, Stones, etc. etc.), the Fifties (Buddy Holly and Carl
Perkins are two of my favorites!), and even the Forties (love some
big band stuff - Glenn Miller, Count Basie, old Sinatra, Dorsey Bros.,
etc.).
The point (besides that I have weird taste?) is that age has little to
do with it - it's just personal taste as to what you like.
re: Metallica vs. the blues
Well, of course Metallica isn't a direct decendant of Robert Johnson.
But if you looked at a family tree of musical influences, you could start
at Metallica and trace it back to both the old blues masters and
classicl music, by way of bands such as Deep Purple adn LZ and Hendrix
and mnay more in between.
Remember - nobody operates in a vaccuum - everything started somewhere!
cat
|
223.35 | That was then, this is now | CSC32::J_HERNANDEZ | | Wed Sep 07 1988 16:09 | 11 |
| Both sides are making good points, but saying that Metallica was
influenced by Zep is like saying that apples were influenced by
oranges cuz they're both fruit. I went out to the "Rock Van" during lunch
and listened to "Fade to Black". I saw a similarity to "Stairway
to Heaven", they're both slow songs right? C'mon guys, I love Metallica
and I love Zep, go back and see the way this conversation is rat-holed
including this reply.
the devil dog who can't wait until he's been in the HM conference
for 30 years and is arguing with some youngsters about same future
band getting their influence from Iron Maiden.
|
223.36 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | The Milano Mosh!!! | Thu Sep 08 1988 03:10 | 18 |
|
. . . and Pete . . .
YES is garbage?!?!?!?!?!?!?
Starship Trooper, Roundabout, Long Distance
Runaround . . . garbage?!?!?
I ache all over
:-)
Hey, you're entitled.
Just had to stick up for them.
|
223.37 | | SUBURB::DALLISON | welcome to the jungle..... | Thu Sep 08 1988 04:37 | 19 |
|
Why is it *most* successful 80's band are being categorised as
either Zepp influenced or Zepp rippoffs ?? (I can hear crys of "well
they were").
what a load of ....
This may shock some of you, but Led Zeppelin is, or were, *not* the
greatest band in the world. Why the **** should everyone WANT to
go around copying Zepp ?? Are they that good?? I think not. Alright,
you do get the blatant ripp offs (Kingdom Come), but it seems people
are using the worn out "They are ripping off Zepp" line as a weapon,
when it really isn't true.
As for the "similarities/influences" btwn Zepp/Mettallica - I nearly
wet myself laughing.
-Tony
|
223.38 | Who's on first, What's on second, I don't know.... | BTO::BAGDY_M | The speakers pour out molten steel.. | Thu Sep 08 1988 06:57 | 26 |
|
If you want my honest opinion to both sides of this debate....
I won't knock anyone who can make my salary (which ain't much anyways)
at least 20 times over. I may be a little jealous though.......
:^)
I believe I saw `Kingdom Comes'' guitarist and lead singer on
WPIX(?) outta' NYC back a few month's ago. (Dad `n Mum gotta'
Satellite Dish) The lead singer was saying that although they have
a similar Zep sound, they don't want to be thought of as a `copy'
of Zep. (Which they may sound like they're doing just the opposite)
He was saying that the `Zep sound' was what helped get them started.
Well....it `helped' get them started, so now the question is...
`who promotes a band with the `Zep sound', knowing that there are
more `Zep sounding' groups out there, and they aren't unique and
don't have a new sound ?' Producers are probably (and don't take
this to the bank) playing on the fact that Zep is still popular
now, as they were when they were together.(Can't blame John for
that though) So....bring another band into play that may follow
in `Zeps' shoes, and `we'll make the people and our wallets a
little happier.'
So, can we blame the band or the record producer?
METALord"
|
223.40 | The good, the bad, and Slash ... | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Big Brother's watching you | Sat Sep 10 1988 08:35 | 18 |
| re: .14
The HM bands today are very talented, as were the HM bands of
yesteryear like Cream, Sabbath, Deep Purple, etc. The main difference
to me is this, when Zeppelin first hit the airwaves, Jimmy Page
brought something new and relatively unheard of, as did Hendrix.
It had the same effect as showing a microwave oven to the caveman,
very impressive .... but NOW were in the age of laser this, midi
that, and digital everything. Kids in middle school are in bands
and covering Racer X, while the old timers are still listening
to "Freedom Rock". Personally I LOVE the new music even though
a lot of it sounds like something I heard years ago, only faster,
more intricate, more polished, or raunchier. Now I still love *some*
of the classics (may "Stairway To Heaven" rest in peace ...) but
as the music grows and evolves, so must the listener.
Mr Scary II
|
223.41 | Money, money, money | CSSE::NIXON | Main Squeeze | Wed Sep 14 1988 00:49 | 28 |
| It seems to me that the music of the 80's ends up suffering from the
"bottom_line_blues". The other morning I heard Charles on 'BCN making
a joke about how the sales department would be upset cuz of the metal
tune he was getting ready to play. I couldn't believe it!!
I wonder how many talented musicians/bands we loose because of this
money over talent trend? Or how many new and innovative sounds we
never get to hear because they don't fit the "proper mold of
heavy_metal", as defined by bands such as Zepplin.
Maybe we could borrow that squad you've got going to MTV and send
them to a couple of record companies and radio stations. Just to
let them know that it really would be alright to put more Iron Maiden,
Metallica, etc on the radio......that we'd really like to hear from
some new bands that aren't into the money side of things necessarily
but are playing from the burning passions within themselves that
is heavy_metal!!!!! These bands deserve exposure, too!!!!!!!!!
ITS NOT MEDIOCRITY, ITS MONEY, MONEY, MONEY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Opps.....sorry....I guess I'm just a little frustrated with the
radio lately....and it is a little late......I think I'll trot off
to bed now......
'nite,
Vicki
|
223.42 | Everyone in music rips off someone... | EUCLID::OWEN | | Fri Sep 16 1988 14:03 | 10 |
| Let me say this about ZEP. I love them, but the fact is that they
were a blatant rip-off of the basic blues riffs of the Early Sixties.
And those blues were taken from early classical.
Is this to say that Kingdom Come is a ripoff of classical music.
I don't think so, but what comes around goes around....
I did however read in Rolling Stone that the guy who heads up Kingdom
Come did admit to copying Led Zep. He said "..were only in it
for the money"
|
223.44 | | HAZEL::STARR | You ain't nothin' but fine, fine, fine! | Fri Sep 16 1988 14:34 | 9 |
| > Blues taken from early classical....
Well, I'm not the classical buff. But if I remember my musical history
correctly, classical music derived in Europe from religious songs, or
something like that (weren't there some monks writing that stuff first?).
The blues came out of songs by the black tribes in Africa. I believe
they both developed very independently of each other.
cat
|
223.45 | sorry...... | EUCLID::OWEN | | Fri Sep 16 1988 16:13 | 3 |
| ok, so i'm a little misinformed, but to say Zep was totally origional
is absurd, just like it's absurd to say that Kingdom Clone(oops
Come) is origional.
|