T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
518.1 | I'll keep you company Keith... | SHAPES::STREETR | uncontaminated by cheese | Fri Oct 13 1989 14:04 | 8 |
| Of course its the best era of all......in my opinion ;-)
Spencer Davis Group, Small Faces, Hendrix, Donovan, Dylan....
... and quite a few 'one hit wonders'.... Scott Mackenzie the
epitomy of 'flower power'.....Brenton Wood....Thunderclap Newman
..... I'd better leave the soapbox.....
Ray.
|
518.2 | ... How could I forget... | SHAPES::STREETR | uncontaminated by cheese | Fri Oct 13 1989 14:06 | 6 |
| .... the one group that overshadowed everything else in the '60s
THE BEATLES.
Ray.
|
518.3 | W�cko Keith!!! | JUMBLY::OCONNOR | This is the 'c' | Fri Oct 13 1989 15:03 | 17 |
| Keith Edmunds!! You ought to be ashamed of yourself!!
A man who just reached 30 this year on about 60s music being the best
of all time...somehow I find it hard to imagine a six year old
"peaking" on the dancefloor to Nancy Sinatra's "These Boots" or
kiss-curl puppy-love smooching to "Yesterday", buying soda-pops for the
assembled pre-pubescents blah blah...
Tell us about your *real* past...trying out those khaki army combat
baggies down on King's Road in '77, buttonholing Jo Strummer for an
invite to a Wayne County paaaarty etc...
I think the kids should know...
- Tim
PS You sound like you've spent too long up in that plane again...
|
518.4 | | WELMTS::GREENB | Datacrime alert! Datacrime alert! | Fri Oct 13 1989 15:34 | 16 |
| In answer to the question in the title, I say 'No, but.....'
Yes, there was a lot of good stuff around then, and some of it I
still listen to now (non-nostalgically, mind; I love it for what
it is), but some of it, particularly the chart pop, is dreadfully
dated.
Two styles from the era I still listen to are the Motown/Stax soul
stuff, and psychedelia. As previously mentioned, I also love the
Doors, Dylan, Beatles, earlier Stones, Kinks, Scott Walker
But let us not forget that the likes of Ken Dodd, Des O'Connor
(any relation, Tim?), Matt Munro and Engelbert Humperdink were also
riding high in the charts.
Bob
|
518.5 | Or maybe he's just working hard :-) | HYEND::SCHILTON | When they said sit down,I stood up | Fri Oct 13 1989 17:23 | 8 |
| re.3
>> Keith Edmunds!! You ought to be ashamed of yourself!!
He very well may be after last night. I don't think he's
recovered sufficiently to make an appearance in Notes yet
today.
|
518.6 | Sigh... | BAHTAT::SALLITT | Dave - @RKG & ICI, 0642432193 | Mon Oct 16 1989 16:43 | 7 |
| It was the times as much as the music.
Imagine catching The Stones live in the back bar of your local.
Or BB King live with the Animals at your town hall.
|
518.7 | | BURYST::EDMUNDS | Keith Edmunds, CSSE DECnet Phase V | Mon Oct 16 1989 19:52 | 4 |
| I've often wondered if it was the time of my life, or the music (or
both). I was born in 1959, and thus the sixties were my childhood.
Although I have no wish to be any younger than I am, there is a certain
nostalga in childhood memories.
|
518.8 | Too bad there isn't a SHA BOOMS in Reading! | SHARE::ROBINSON | | Tue Oct 17 1989 16:51 | 10 |
| Re: .5
Looks like Zebra's Don't ever Change their Stripes Right Keith?
To get back on the Subject, how about the GrassRoots! They had a few
really great songs! And then the Foundations, with Build me a
Buttercup!....
|
518.9 | | BURYST::EDMUNDS | $ no !fm2r, no comment | Tue Oct 17 1989 22:16 | 5 |
| .8� Looks like Zebra's Don't ever Change their Stripes Right Keith?
I was at a combined Stag and Hen night for a couple who are getting
married (Sue: I didn't get drunk, honest!). I've never been to one
before...
|
518.10 | Turning over a new leaf? | HYEND::SCHILTON | When they said sit down,I stood up | Wed Oct 18 1989 20:10 | 4 |
| re.9
>> (Sue: I didn't get drunk, honest!).
Oh, Keith, I *am* disappointed in you.
|
518.11 | To be taken with a grain of salt :-)\ | SHARE::ROBINSON | | Thu Oct 19 1989 16:56 | 7 |
| re .10
>>Oh, Keith, I *am* disappointed in you.
Aren't we all, Aren't we all :-)
|
518.13 | Where have all the people gone :-) | SHARE::ROBINSON | | Fri Oct 20 1989 16:14 | 13 |
| Yeah Di I have a comment :-)
Looks like we scared everyone away... so much for having a sence of
humor :-)
Anyway, I really don't like the remakes of the old songs, to me its
because the new groups don't have any imagination of their own, so they
go for the 'old' stuff. Like the remake of 'Radar Love', and the new
remake of "what I like about you", and so on......................
Kel
|
518.14 | Take it easy...but take it... | JUMBLY::OCONNOR | Got it | Fri Oct 20 1989 16:17 | 9 |
| What's worth remembering about these `charity concerts' is that they
are extremely business-minded...probably two objectives: 1) Audience
satisfaction and 2) Make vast amounts of dosh (for the charity)...
...and not necessarily in that order.
Our neanderthal hippie friends were more interested in the dawning of
the age of aquarius methinx...(plus the odd few profiteers of course).
- Tim
|
518.16 | Call me cynical.... | HYEND::SCHILTON | When they said sit down,I stood up | Fri Oct 20 1989 16:39 | 10 |
| re.14
>> What's worth remembering about these `charity concerts' is that they
>>are extremely business-minded...probably two objectives: 1) Audience
>>satisfaction and 2) Make vast amounts of dosh (for the charity)...
>>...and not necessarily in that order.
Another "motivator": The performer gets heaps of good publicity for
participating and exposure to the vast audience watching (potential
new fans, of course)
|
518.17 | | JUMBLY::OCONNOR | Got it | Fri Oct 20 1989 16:55 | 8 |
| Re last:
Simple Minds got some stick on this point (profiting from a charitable
cause) from, of all people, a Tory MP. It seems the man in the suit
objected to some remark Jim Kerr made about `the Tory rags'. Maybe Our
Bob can confirm this...as I can't remember the exact details.
- Tim
|
518.18 | . | SHAPES::FIDDLERM | | Fri Oct 20 1989 17:01 | 6 |
| The tory mp made a remark something about them being hypocrites
and only in it for the money, and called them some nasty name I
can't remember. Jim sued him, and they settled out of court for
a large amount of money.
Mike
|
518.20 | He's a *businessman*, after all! | HYEND::SCHILTON | When they said sit down,I stood up | Fri Oct 20 1989 17:26 | 10 |
| re Woodstock
"They" sold tickets to lots of folks, but obviously lots more
showed up unexpectedly without tickets and there had been no
plans made as to how to collect money from these folks at the
gate.
Because of the sheer numbers of people the idea of collecting
money for admission was quickly abandoned and the promoter I
guess ended up taking a financial bath.
|
518.21 | | JUMBLY::OCONNOR | Got it | Fri Oct 20 1989 17:35 | 7 |
| I don't recall the promoter's name, but the uhhm farmer who let them
all have a mud bath (to the tune of a massacred `Star Spangled Banner')
was (Max ?) Yagsur.
- Tim
I go back so far I can remember the Mountain song "Yagsur's Farm"!
|
518.22 | :-) | HYEND::SCHILTON | When they said sit down,I stood up | Fri Oct 20 1989 17:41 | 2 |
|
You mean Yasker?
|
518.23 | Carrying a couple of "keys"... | JUMBLY::OCONNOR | Got it | Fri Oct 20 1989 18:00 | 7 |
| You mean "When they said sit down...I rolled over in the mud.."
"Watch out for the brown acid!"
I saw the film once and have no no no no no desire to see it again.
- Tim
|
518.25 | | BURYST::EDMUNDS | $ no !fm2r, no comment | Fri Oct 20 1989 18:45 | 3 |
| I *think* it was 1969 (but Bob will know!)...
PS Hi Di!
|
518.26 | About a month after the moon-landing | HYEND::SCHILTON | When they said sit down,I stood up | Fri Oct 20 1989 18:47 | 6 |
| It was in 1969 (August, I believe).
I've never seen the film and was too young in 1969 to be
interested in what they were doing. (Probably even ended up
in the mud once or twice ... y'see I was a kid at the time.)
|
518.28 | This is like Current Affair :-) | SHARE::ROBINSON | | Fri Oct 20 1989 19:10 | 19 |
| If you read the American Music notes file (or maybe Records), get the 2
mixed up... there is a note on Woodstock, and a Guy wrote in,
apparently, he was ther with some of this friends, and he said that
they were camping out when it started to rain, for the whole day it
rained, and they saw this guy standing against a board (leaning on it
most likely :-), and they asked him if they could all hold it over
their heads to stay dry... next thing you know more people came by, and
stood under it, and a photographer from LIFE magazine took a picture of
it. It was in the 20th addition that was just out a few months ago,
and I saw him, well, I saw a bunch of people standing under a board.
So Dec has some famous people working for them :-)
And you KNOW your getting OLD when you meet guys and they tell you they
were conceived at Woodstock :-) I was in second grade at the time :-)
give me a break :-)
Kel
|
518.30 | I wish it was summer again :-) | SHARE::ROBINSON | | Fri Oct 20 1989 20:10 | 8 |
| Di,
Remember that night we skipped aerobics and went to the outside bar?
and there was a guy planting flowers, and he told us that his parents
were at Woodstock, and he was conceived there? :-) and my first
reactions were "MY GAWD, I"m GETTING OLD :-)", then I stopped talking
to him, before I got arrested for 'robbing the cradle" :-)
|
518.31 | | WELMTS::GREENB | Inflatable head-membrane | Fri Oct 20 1989 21:52 | 6 |
| Enough of that, Kel, where's my Rollers toons????
8^)
Bob (I grew up in the seventies well when I say grew up I mean attained
the age of consent) Green
|
518.32 | | JUMBLY::OCONNOR | Got it | Mon Oct 23 1989 13:53 | 11 |
| I must confess I wasn't conceived at Woodstock either...I was about 10
at the time. The first (and only) time I saw the film was while I was
in college in Galway ten years ago.
Any "peaking" I did was done to the backdrop of Television, the Clash
("I'm so booooored with the USA" etc) and I'd curl up with my Cadbury's
to the sound of Joni Mitchell or Joan Armatrading...(b blah)
I remember staying up to watch the moon-landing though (!!)
- Tim
|
518.33 | Where were YOU in '69'????? | SHARE::ROBINSON | | Mon Oct 23 1989 15:14 | 14 |
| Re. .31
Give me your FAX number, and I will fax you out a copy of all the words
to the Roller Tunes :-), at least when the rollers came out I was young
and naive :-) how old were you Mr. GreenB :-) Lets take a minute and
try to figure this out :-) :-) :-) :-)......
Seriously, when Woodstock was taking place, I was only getting ready
for the 2nd grade, I was turning 7 years old that week (the week of
Woodstock), and same goes for Di, we are the same age :-)
Kel
|
518.34 | | WELMTS::GREENB | Inflatable head-membrane | Mon Oct 23 1989 15:22 | 8 |
| Kel,
I don't know the fax no., but the old infernal mail'll do.
FWIW, I was a mere stripling of 13 at the time of Woodstock, so
by the time the Rollers hit, I was a strapping 18/19 year old.
Bob
|
518.35 | 7 + 6 = 33 :-) | SHARE::ROBINSON | | Mon Oct 23 1989 15:25 | 14 |
| Bobby BABY :-)
Now what were you strapping??? inquiring minds want to know :-)
Ok, so that makes you 6 years older then me... WOW! :-) Just figured
out your age :-) :-) :-) its Monday morning :-) it takes a while.....
So what is your internal mail stop??? if that package gets lost in the
mail, you will be laughed out of DEC :-) because YOUR name will be on
this package :-)
Kel
|
518.36 | YES !!! | BAHTAT::BELL | SWAS Leeds 845 2214 | Wed Oct 25 1989 15:41 | 50 |
| Hey everyone, haven't we drifted of the point some what. Keith's
base note was about the 60s Music vs what we get now. As a man who
was there, (I'm a genuine Boom Baby dating from 1950,my teens
coincided exactly with that decade ) I would say that the 60s music
was the best because so much inovation took place across such a
wide spectrum.
Gets on Soap Box.
Think about it, there were the groups,
Beatles, Stones, Hollies, Kinks, Searchers, Small Faces,
Spencer Davis Group, Beach Boys, Byrds, Doors, Lovin Spoonful,
Cream, Animals, Shadows,Mamas and Papas etc,etc,etc
Solo artists, Elvis, Cliff, Tom Jones, Cilla, Dusty, Jimi, Dylan
Simon and Garfunkel, Donovan etc, etc,
The American Black Labels
Motown, Stax, etc,etc
plus some pretty awful pap aswell e.g. the 'Bubble Gum' rock of
'68, Jim Reeves, Herb Alpert, Englebert Humperdick etc,etc..
The point about all this is the variety of music on offer was so
wide every one could find something to enjoy, and all of these artists
I have listed above sounded DIFFERENT. Nowadays everything is
synthesised and sequenced so much it could (and often is ) anybody.
If I never hear another S.A.W. record in my life it will be too
soon.
Add to all of this the cultural changes taking place during the
60s, Art, Fashion, Cinema, Television, Civil Rights, Vietnam, the
Pill and you start to get an inkling of what it was like to live
through that period and be a part of it.
OK I admit that a lot of the current 60s nostalgia trip is coming
from Thirtysomethings like me who had a ball 20+ years ago and now
want to relive it, BUT I play 60s music at home on record and I
play 50s,60s and some 70s stuff in my band and my kids enjoy it.
It still works if you want to have a party and get up and dance.
BTW Will the 'Pet Shop Boys' etc still be remembered in 20 years time?
Right I'll get off my Soap Box now.
Does that give you thoughts Keith ?
Richard_rapidly_approaching_forty_Bell
|
518.37 | the worm turns | VOGON::MURRAY | | Thu Nov 23 1989 08:15 | 11 |
| Strange thing - My oldest kid's 14 and his room's papered with about 40
or 50 K.Minogue? posters *but* a few weeks ago I heard Sgt Pepper
blasting out. Then one by one all my old records migrated upstairs
and now we get nothing except Beatles , Stones (mostly Satanic
Majesties) and Jimmi Hendrix et al. His latest archeological find is
Bob Dylan and now my guitar's found a new home and I'm being asked for
the chords to Tambourine Man and Dont Think Twice etc.
Must remember to lock up those fragile Bill Haley 78s.
Jim
|
518.38 | �? | MACNAS::DKEATING | Irish Punts beat the Maltese Cross | Thu Nov 23 1989 09:44 | 4 |
| That's nothing Jim...wait 'till he starts bringing home some of
your old ex-girlfriends!!! :-)
- Dave K.
|