Collarspace Discussion Forums


Home  Login  Search 

RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. What a time we missed for sure.


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid >> RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. What a time we missed for sure. Page: <<   < prev  6 7 8 9 [10]
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 12:39:28 PM   
WhoreMods


Posts: 10691
Joined: 5/6/2016
Status: offline
Puts me more in mind of Vinegar Joe, only duller and flashier.

This is a '70s R&B band.
And you'd probably dismiss this as disco...


< Message edited by WhoreMods -- 8/23/2016 1:05:38 PM >


_____________________________

On the level and looking for a square deal.

(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 181
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 12:43:06 PM   
WickedsDesire


Posts: 9362
Joined: 11/4/2015
Status: offline
it would appear real is me and everyine else is not

(in reply to WhoreMods)
Profile   Post #: 182
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 12:49:24 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline
You've got WickedsDesire on your side, there's that.

(in reply to WhoreMods)
Profile   Post #: 183
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 12:53:02 PM   
WhoreMods


Posts: 10691
Joined: 5/6/2016
Status: offline
I don't think he's on anybody's side.

_____________________________

On the level and looking for a square deal.

(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 184
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 12:54:21 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline

Let me guess;

You are one of those "brat subs," right?


(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 185
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 12:56:18 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline
Bingo.

(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 186
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 1:03:53 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline

Again;

Fuck you and go away.

(in reply to WhoreMods)
Profile   Post #: 187
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 1:07:16 PM   
WickedsDesire


Posts: 9362
Joined: 11/4/2015
Status: offline
all are fake other than me on this site

(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 188
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 1:11:11 PM   
WhoreMods


Posts: 10691
Joined: 5/6/2016
Status: offline
I think not. But have some of that disco stuff that proper musicians were killed off by:
The Brides Of Funkenstein
Betty Davis (Not her with the eyes: Miles Davis' ex...)

_____________________________

On the level and looking for a square deal.

(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 189
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 1:20:27 PM   
WickedsDesire


Posts: 9362
Joined: 11/4/2015
Status: offline
fakes galore

(in reply to WickedsDesire)
Profile   Post #: 190
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/23/2016 1:40:03 PM   
freedomdwarf1


Posts: 6845
Joined: 10/23/2012
Status: offline
Have you missed your meds again WD??

_____________________________

If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.
George Orwell, 1903-1950


(in reply to WickedsDesire)
Profile   Post #: 191
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/24/2016 11:56:02 AM   
WhoreMods


Posts: 10691
Joined: 5/6/2016
Status: offline
Unmusical and anti muso synthesiser thing.

_____________________________

On the level and looking for a square deal.

(in reply to freedomdwarf1)
Profile   Post #: 192
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/26/2016 2:38:58 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline
~FR~

For those in attendance who don't know the difference between Disco and Funk:

This is disco;

Disco Inferno

And this is Funk;

Cosmic Slop

We did the latter song in my band but uptempo'd it just a hair, and I played the side-along-bass part on guitar an octave lower than in the original heard here, to give some more 'grunge' feel to it. Not unlike how they themselves did it in live performances later.

The previous two selections from Mother's Finest were also an example of Funk. In any case, how some poster here could possibly confuse George Clinton with Disco is a subject for another day. Whatever day I'm not here being preferable.

I any case, what I meant when saying 'no more bands' regarding the Disco onslaught in the US is that after the movie Saturday Night Fever, within a year at least 90% of the clubs who used to have live bands onstage 2 times a month or 3-5 times a week either closed down or bought a mirror ball and mini spotlights for it.

But before we leave the subject; dark clouds, silver linings, etc:

Every Time I Turn Around (Back in Love Again)

L.T.D. wasn't actually a Disco group, but just a vehicle for the fantastic Jeffrey Osborne, who had a decent career before and after that group. But that's where things were at the moment, so we actually got a decent Disco song out of it.

Need to wait 'til a '70s thread to go further into it, except to say that he was an exceptional guy in person, too.

Al Green, all by himself, is another reason for consideration for a '70s thread, though I would hate much of the rest of it.

Hint; he was neither Disco nor Funk, but certainly ahead of the former, both temporally and artistically.








(in reply to WhoreMods)
Profile   Post #: 193
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/26/2016 2:54:56 PM   
AtUrCervix


Posts: 2111
Joined: 1/15/2016
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: swingingsixties

Yes for sure most of you were not even born then and come to think of it neither were you're parents or mine come to that. The City of Liverpool, a seaport and unique in Lancashire and distinct from Lancastrians and other Northern English Folk produced 80% of all the most popular music groups and solo singers of their time. The young folks then are dead or old folks now. The newly introduced pill for young women and sexual liberation and youthful rebellion, strange fashions, flower power, Vietnam and the rest. Far better than the roaring twenties because the workers and the young were leading the way not the middle class wealthy, lazy day, dancing folk. You could even understand the lyrics which you seldom can today if even such exist. No real talent is needed to write popular music today. Sex, drugs, rock and roll, even kinky stuff and all. Witch craft practiced, weird cults to, ask Charles Manson, he'll tell you. Were the Scouser's travelled the world did follow. 35 miles east in Manchester, other groups did follow. Success to did they have those lads from Lancashire, who like the German pied piper of Hamlein back in medievil times did play his flute and rats did follow.

t was a decade of enormous change – socially, politically and culturally.

Hemlines went up, aspirations grew and the music scene was revolutionised.

And nowhere led the charge through the 1960s more than the city of Liverpool.

Back in the 1950s a flourishing culture of groups began to emerge from the then declining skiffle scene. Influenced by American groups such as Buddy Holly and the Crickets beat bands sprang up. By the mid ‘60s it was estimated there were about 350 different bands active in the city, often playing ballrooms and clubs.

Of course the Beatles is the first name which springs to mind whenever the word ‘Merseybeat’ is mentioned but there were other big hitters like Cilla, Gerry and the Pacemakers, Billy J Kramer and The Searchers.

And, as our first dip into the archive proves – we’ll bring you the second part of our exclusive series next week – there were a whole host other talented musicians plying their trade – Tony and the Scholars, Colonel Bagshot, The Fourmost and the Roadrunners to name just a few.

Some are still with us, others are long gone. But one thing’s for certain – their music lives on.

1. The Beatles
2. Gerry and the Pacemakers
3. The Remo Four
4. Rory Storm and the Hurricanes
5. Johnny Sandon and The Searchers
6. Kingsize Taylor and the Dominoes
7. The Big Three
8. The Strangers
9. Faron & The Flamingos[19]
10. The Four Jays[20]
11. Ian and the Zodiacs[21]
12. The Undertakers
13. Earl Preston & The TTs
14. Mark Peters and the Cyclones[22]
15. Karl Terry and the Cruisers[23]
16. Derry and the Seniors
17. Steve and the Syndicate
18. Dee Fenton and the Silhouettes
19. Billy Kramer and the Dakotas
20. Dale Roberts and the Jaywalkers
21 The hollies
22.The Swinging Blue Jeans
23. The Searchers
24. The Liverbirds
25. Herman's Hermits
26. The Honeycombs
27. The Pretty Things
28.The Ivy League
29. The tornados
So many more besides.

Truly a time to remember and now a time long past.



Gawwwwd....get a'hold of yourself....are you on some kind of fucking rant???? Do you write for the Mersey Beat Times?

Get a fucking grip boy....

"No real talent is needed to write popular music today." (Are you insane? I'm fifty fucking 8 years old and even I recognize there are "greats"....today...are you on crack???? Do they compare to.....who the fuck ever? NO!!!!!But they're still remarkable).

There are musicians today that I can ASSURE you.....every one of the Fab Four today would recognize as 'at least above their station".....are they "The Beatles?"

FUCK no....who could ever be?

Who could compare to any of the Greats? Beethoven, Mozart, Montovani, even Elvis....to compare them is to be....an imbecile.

To compare The Beatles to the Beach Boys is to try to compare Puccini to Roy Orbison.

Two Greats that cannot POSSIBLY be compared.

(You're a moron).

The Beatles are....in direct comparison to Beethoven, Mozart....and others.

There is no parallel....there is no "greater than"....there is only....The Beatles.....Mozart....and others....









< Message edited by AtUrCervix -- 8/26/2016 3:02:37 PM >

(in reply to swingingsixties)
Profile   Post #: 194
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/26/2016 3:41:11 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline
Another lesson.

This is garage:

Fortune Teller

(Yes, I know this was covered by the Rolling Stones and 50 other bands. I like both, but this one better.)

The guitar tone sounds more proto-Ramones than anything else in '65. I'm only a fan of the Ramones when I hear what they copped from 10-15 years earlier. Not that I was actually much of a fan of whichever former or latter to begin with.

Moving Out

In the late '50s and earliest '60s, garage band was mostly about surfing, I think.

In any case, plenty of u toob searching for those interested. Why it was called 'garage,' was because it actually was.

So as to not call something that could be done on a dumbshitmutherfucker phone with one or two simple apps anywhere in a bedroom or a closet or a bus., as 'garage.' They used to have to play in the garage so as to give some two inches of space between a small group, and disturb the house marginally less.

For this, "bus" would be more apt.


















(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 195
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/26/2016 4:29:14 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline

Back to the topic:

Tainted Love

Can't have '60s without Burt Bacharach.

Walk on by

Done also by Cindi Lauper and 500 others.

This one was done by Cilla Black and 400 others, but here is one from Björk;

Any Who Had a Heart

Can't even get a glimpse of the martini crowd in mid-'60s without Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass playing Burt Bacharach. From the '67 movie;

Casino Royale

In that vein, also from 1967;

You Only Live Twice














(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 196
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/26/2016 4:39:45 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: WickedsDesire

fakes galore



Here's a secret;

The more people like you keep flooding this place, the more that others want to make themselves inaccessible, by whatever means.

(in reply to WickedsDesire)
Profile   Post #: 197
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/26/2016 5:28:48 PM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline

Moving on;

Happenings Ten Years Time Ago


Paper Sun


Hurdy Gurdy Man


Open My Eyes





< Message edited by Edwird -- 8/26/2016 5:29:53 PM >

(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 198
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/27/2016 5:18:07 AM   
WhoreMods


Posts: 10691
Joined: 5/6/2016
Status: offline
Nice tantrum (again), but:
There is no real difference between disco and funk. The people who insist that there is are the same sort of thin skinned and easily embarrassed tools who also like to insist that they read "graphic novels" rather than comics, watch "anime" rather than cartoons and fapp to "erotica" rather than porn. Calling something by a different name doesn't do anything to alter its innate nature, unless you're a character in a Harry Potter novel, particularly when you're using a different name purely to distinguish between something you approve and something else almost identical that you don't.

As for garage, it hasn't been 1966 for a long time now. Bleat all you want about garage bands, but since the '90s garage has been this sort of stuff:
So Solid Crew
Oxide And Neutrino
Dizee Rascal
Mis-Teeq
so named, after the Paradise Garage, a nightclub in New York that played that gay disco stuff you insist isn't funk.

_____________________________

On the level and looking for a square deal.

(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 199
RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. ... - 8/27/2016 6:45:57 AM   
Edwird


Posts: 3558
Joined: 5/2/2016
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwird

This is garage:

Fortune Teller

(Yes, I know this was covered by the Rolling Stones and 50 other bands. I like both, but this one better.)

The guitar tone sounds more proto-Ramones than anything else in '65. I'm only a fan of the Ramones when I hear what they copped from 10-15 years earlier. Not that I was actually much of a fan of whichever former or latter to begin with.

Moving Out

In the late '50s and earliest '60s, garage band was mostly about surfing, I think.

In any case, plenty of u toob searching for those interested. Why it was called 'garage,' was because it actually was.




Silly me, I forgot to include the girl garage bands, even after I'd looked it up for the post.

But pause the vid at 0:30 and, what have we here? Good gawd, y'all, that lady's got a Gibson Thunderbird bass! #notafake

Ah, so that's where Entwistle got the idea from.






< Message edited by Edwird -- 8/27/2016 6:52:49 AM >

(in reply to Edwird)
Profile   Post #: 200
Page:   <<   < prev  6 7 8 9 [10]
All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid >> RE: Music of the 1960s What a pity we we not yet born. What a time we missed for sure. Page: <<   < prev  6 7 8 9 [10]
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.105