View Full Version : The "Why the hell haven't I ever listened to this before?!" thread
YanksFC
29 Jul 2002, 11:51 AM
This thread is for music or artists that you wonder why you never listened to until recently.
Mine is Iggy and the Stooges. I have several Iggy Pop solo efforts ("The Idiot," "Lust for Life," "Blah Blah Blah"), but never thought about checking out Iggy's earlier stuff with the Stooges until recently. Legs McNeil's chronical of the '70s New York punk scene, "Please Kill Me," was the impetus for my purchase of Iggy and the Stooges' "Raw Power," as Iggy is prominently featured in McNeil's book. Anyway, I absolutely love the CD and will probably get the Stooges' two other albums.
Your turn.
Col Mustard
29 Jul 2002, 12:01 PM
I'll have to go for David Bowie on this one. I've avoided his stuff for so long because I just can't stand him as a personality. He comes across on TV as a pretentious nerk and his films make me want to retch.
However I started with Hunky Dory and I haven't looked back. His back catalogue being on offer at 3 for £18 hasn't hurt things either.
Top 5 so far:-
Hunky Dory
Low
Ziggy Stardust
The Lodger
Scary Monsters
hangthadj
29 Jul 2002, 12:02 PM
Nice thread to start....
For me I been a big fan of alt-country or whatever the hell its called...But it wasn't to the re-release of the Mekons Fear and Whiskey that i listened to the Mekons. I always hear them lumped into alt-country grandfathers or something like that, but that album is so much more than that. I been playing it to death (much to my roomates chagrin) and need some more mekons, but I don't know where to start. Maybe thats why I never listened in the first place for so long...
Northside Rovers
29 Jul 2002, 12:13 PM
David Gray.
obie
29 Jul 2002, 12:16 PM
Miles Davis. The recent re-issue of Birth Of The Cool has been a revelation.
eneste
29 Jul 2002, 12:35 PM
Unrest
I remember my friend having a bunch of Unrest 7" back in junior high and just looking at the covers I didn't think I would like them. 10 years later I decide to pick up Perfect Teeth and I love it. I don't know why I didn't before it's the sort of stuff I would like.
Pixies too. I didn't like Teenage of the Year that much so I didn't think I would like the Pixies. That was silly.
Foots
29 Jul 2002, 01:40 PM
Eminem
Dolemite
29 Jul 2002, 04:33 PM
Originally posted by obie
Miles Davis. The recent re-issue of Birth Of The Cool has been a revelation.
i think flamenco sketches is one of the best songs ever recorded.
nicodemus
29 Jul 2002, 05:04 PM
I got Johnny Cash's "From Folsom Prison" over the weekend and said to my wife, "Why don't I own this man's entire catalogue of music?"
Additionally, I got all of Bill Monroe's reissues on the German label, Bear Family Records for my birthday, and it was the same thing, why did it take me so long to get this?
hangthadj
29 Jul 2002, 05:12 PM
Originally posted by nicodemus
I got Johnny Cash's "From Folsom Prison" over the weekend and said to my wife, "Why don't I own this man's entire catalogue of music?"
i thought the same thing after i got the "Love, God, Murder" boxset as a gift.
bmurphyfl
29 Jul 2002, 05:14 PM
David Byrne - Rei Momo
A friend shared this with me about a year ago but it came out in 1989. It's amazing. It has all of the pop sensibilities of The Talking Heads but with a latin groove. Byrne is one talented mofo for being able to so easily shift gears between rock rhythms and latin rhythms while still pumping out the pop.
Murf
nicodemus
29 Jul 2002, 05:19 PM
Originally posted by bmurphyfl
David Byrne - Rei Momo
A friend shared this with me about a year ago but it came out in 1989. It's amazing. It has all of the pop sensibilities of The Talking Heads but with a latin groove. Byrne is one talented mofo for being able to so easily shift gears between rock rhythms and latin rhythms while still pumping out the pop.
I like Byrne's latin stuff, but thought I would provide a humorous anecdote about it. I was listening to his version of Maria Lando with a friend from Costa Rica, I asked her what she thought and she said, "The music is good, but his Spanish is terrible...I can't understand much of what he is saying."
Dave Marino-Nachison
29 Jul 2002, 10:49 PM
This hasn't happened to me in a while but most recently with Book of Love. Probably the only synthpop act with a female singer to really give the "big guns" of the 80s a run for their money. OK, maybe them and Yaz/Alison Moyet. But Book of Love was American! Pretty impressive.
Unorthodox Yank
29 Jul 2002, 11:14 PM
Any of Kim Deal's Bands.
Eric B
30 Jul 2002, 06:20 AM
Voi Vod
I hadn't thought of them much after hearing Killing Technology, but am very impressed with the recent stuff like Phobos and Negatron. Each album seems to be different.
eneste
30 Jul 2002, 04:13 PM
Originally posted by Dolemite
i think flamenco sketches is one of the best songs ever recorded.
He just read that out of a Rolling Stone article with David Bowie.
evilcrossbar
30 Jul 2002, 05:29 PM
Originally posted by Dolemite
i think flamenco sketches is one of the best songs ever recorded.
'Sketches from Spain' is actually a great Jazz album.
His most well-known album however, is 'Kind of Blue' (which I believe is the biggest selling Jazz album of all time.
Often that's not a good sign when something is the top selling, but here it's justified.
It's one of the best Jazz albums ever recorded (Miles Davis- trumpet; Julian 'Cannonball' Adderley- alto sax; John Coltrane- tenor sax; Wynton Kelly- piano; Bill Evans- piano; Paul Chambers- bass; Jimmy Cobb- drums).
evilcrossbar
30 Jul 2002, 05:36 PM
My own relevation was a while back when I listened to 'Joy Division'.
I was never a huge New Wave fan (mostly because I only knew crappy 80s knock offs). 'New Order' (what Joy Division was before the lead singer/songwriter killed himself never cought my fancy.
Joy Division however, is in a class all by itself.
I also just got 'Gang of Four' The Peel Sessions.
Kenobi
31 Jul 2002, 01:11 AM
Bob Dylan. I always lumped myself in the "he's a great songwriter but I'd rather hear other people sing his songs" category, but lately, I've been borrowing his old stuff from my boss (huge Dylan fan). I'm still not entirely sold on his voice, but it's pretty interesting to hear the original versions of some of those songs. Plus, I almost like the lesser-known stuff better.
YanksFC
04 Nov 2002, 05:00 PM
Wire. Just got "Pink Flag." Great stuff. Never knew that "Strange" was a Wire original (REM covered the song on "Document," and I always thought it was an REM original) Moreover, Elastica blatantly ripped off "Three Girl Rhumba" when they did "Connection."