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Music In Adolesence

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Slipkid
Posted 2012-01-30 11:31 PM (#449190)
Subject: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
September 2003
Posts: 9301

Location: south east Michigan
I heard or read this somewhere the last few days.
I'm sorry I can't footnote the reference.
I sure hope it wasn't here of the OFC.
Anyway...
It was suggested that the music we embrace when we are 13 years old or so becomes "our" music for life. At 13 or 14 we stop listening to what our parents listen to and choose something of our own... or at least of your immediate peer group.
After giving it some thought I concluded, yeah, that's me in spades. I was 17 or so in the early seventies when so much great music happened so fast. Yet even with that I still tend to drift a few years back from that. It really shows in the song ideas I bring to practice.
.
Think about it.
Does that fit you, too?
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Weaser P
Posted 2012-01-30 11:36 PM (#449191 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
October 2005
Posts: 5331

Location: Cicero, NY
Interesting. Very honestly I have to say "No, it really doesn't."

I was huge into classic rock when I was a teen, morphed into prog rock for a little while, quickly moved into what I would consider jazz/rock fusion, then jazz.

Now I find myself loving acoustic singer/songwriter material but float very easily between all of the above. I really don't think that I have a single genre that I call mine.
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Nick B.
Posted 2012-01-30 11:38 PM (#449192 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
December 2009
Posts: 686

Location: Route 66, just east of the Cadillac Ranch
Fits me to a T.
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Slipkid
Posted 2012-01-30 11:43 PM (#449193 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
September 2003
Posts: 9301

Location: south east Michigan
Right on Nick.
.
And just ignore whatever Wease says.... I know I always do.
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Weaser P
Posted 2012-01-30 11:54 PM (#449194 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
October 2005
Posts: 5331

Location: Cicero, NY
"I'm an island unto myself..."

(but I enjoy it)
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Nick B.
Posted 2012-01-31 12:08 AM (#449195 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
December 2009
Posts: 686

Location: Route 66, just east of the Cadillac Ranch
Slipkid wrote:
Right on Nick.
.
And just ignore whatever Wease says.... I know I always do.


Those of us who were "17 or so in the early seventies" need to stick together.
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CanterburyStrings
Posted 2012-01-31 12:29 AM (#449196 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
March 2008
Posts: 2683

Location: Hot Springs, S.D.
I was listening to John Mayall and Frank Zappa when I was in grade school. Everybody else was listening to the Beatles and the Turtles. But my tastes, while I wouldn't say they've CHANGED (I still love Mayall and Frank), they have broadened.

What I enjoy listening to most now is classical. And jazz. And the music that my friends play. I have a lot of CD's that my friends have made, and when I don't have classical or jazz on the radio, they are what I find myself listening to.
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Beal
Posted 2012-01-31 1:37 AM (#449197 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
January 2002
Posts: 14127

Location: 6 String Ranch
Back then I was very into the music of the day. Now I go between Bluegrass junction and watercolours with a little outlaw country thrown in when the other two get too much to handle.
While it pains me to agree with Weazer I tend more towards the S/S and acoustic.
I had a college roomate who was into obscure things, Hungry Chuck, Bob Martin, Paul Seible, Townes VZ, Willie etc and I like that still, but I can live without the Beatles or DC5 or Who (sorry Brad)
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moody, p.i.
Posted 2012-01-31 2:29 AM (#449198 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
March 2002
Posts: 15678

Location: SoCal
When I was in high school (early 70's) I thought Jimmy Webb tunes were the best. My friends all thought he was corny. Now those same people tell me that Wichita Lineman is their favorite tune...
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Weaser P
Posted 2012-01-31 2:31 AM (#449199 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
October 2005
Posts: 5331

Location: Cicero, NY
Beal wrote:
While it pains me to agree with Weazer...


Nobody'll hold you to it, Beal.
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Patch
Posted 2012-01-31 2:36 AM (#449200 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
May 2006
Posts: 4233

Location: Steeler Nation, Hudson Valley Contingent
While I still find myself drawn to the styles I liked as a teen, I have to say that I was a late bloomer in many ways musically. I didn't pick up guitar until college, and that genuinely led to further exploration musically. And though I certainly can't play many differnt styles of guitar, the fact that I do play has led to a sincere appreciation of, and in many cases a genuine preference for, those many different techniques, skills, and sounds.

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Darkbar
Posted 2012-01-31 2:56 AM (#449201 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
January 2009
Posts: 4535

Location: Flahdaw
Back then I liked all styles of music, and still do (even some country, but no rap)
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Phil Wong
Posted 2012-01-31 3:14 AM (#449202 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
June 2003
Posts: 1792

Location: Rego Park, NY,
Brad,
I heard this on Criminal Minds last week when they were trying to determine the age of the Unsub.
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Beal
Posted 2012-01-31 3:37 AM (#449203 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
January 2002
Posts: 14127

Location: 6 String Ranch
DB, Rap ain't no music, cup cake.
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Old Man Arthur
Posted 2012-01-31 4:02 AM (#449204 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
September 2006
Posts: 10777

Location: Keepin' It Weird in Portland, OR
I liked Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull and Alice Cooper.
People who put on a stage show and told stories with their music.
Back in the day when an Album was a complete body of work, no just random songs on a disk.

So lately I have been listening to the Trans-Siberian Orchestra and Phillip Glass

It is not stuff that I can play on guitar, but it is soothing.
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stephent28
Posted 2012-01-31 4:08 AM (#449205 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
April 2004
Posts: 13303

Location: Latitude 39.56819, Longitude -105.080066
started out listening to Pat Boone, Boots Randolph, Ace Cannon, Bill Black Combo, Elvis, etc and have never lost my love for them. I listen and like pretty much everything but there are fringes that I don't especially care for.

I have tried for years to listen to and learn to like/love classical music but it just bores me to tears.

I do like to go to the symphony or orchestra and hear it live....but the recordings turn me cold.
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DaveKell
Posted 2012-01-31 1:49 PM (#449206 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
November 2011
Posts: 741

Location: Fort Worth, TX
I think that study was right on in its conclusions. When I was a pinstriper at a major motorcycle manufacturer, I was at least twice as old as the majority of my coworkers. The music I had to listen to all day really would grind on my nerves. I found no validity to it at all. I got into a discussion one day with a kid there who blurted out that he hated the Beatles. I gave him the story of how they changed history and millions of lives. He told me Curt Cobain is credited with having more influence than the Beatles. I said if that were true, all of you guys should be dead now - just like Curt. I rarely listen to music when I work, but spent an awful lot of time on that job with ear phones in listening to 70's music.
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Waskel
Posted 2012-01-31 2:52 PM (#449207 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
February 2005
Posts: 11840

Location: closely held secret
moody, p.i. wrote:
When I was in high school (early 70's) I thought Jimmy Webb tunes were the best. My friends all thought he was corny. Now those same people tell me that Wichita Lineman is their favorite tune...

And it's new every time they hear it...
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fillhixx
Posted 2012-01-31 4:11 PM (#449208 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
November 2005
Posts: 4832

Location: Campbell River, British Columbia
I'm very open minded about music.
I like NRBQ before, during, and after Big Als tenure.

Also XTC. Basicly, if it's got music and letters I like it.
With the possible exception of RUN DMC.
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G8r
Posted 2012-01-31 7:48 PM (#449209 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
November 2006
Posts: 3969

At that age things were about to transition into disco. I hated pop (ABBA, Anne Murray, Olivia Newton-John - uugghh), with a few exceptions like Elton John, The Guess Who and The Eagles. Spent most of my time listening to Allman Bros, Little Feat, Flying Burrito Bros, Pink Floyd, CSN&Y, Rush, and a bunch of sh*tkicker Southern bands like Skynard, Marshall Tucker, and Molly Hatchet depending on what flavor of mind-altering substance I was ingesting at the time. Some of those have held up far better than others.

Nowadays I'm more interested in finding good singer/songwriters and acoustic guitar players.
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ProfessorBB
Posted 2012-01-31 8:46 PM (#449210 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
January 2006
Posts: 5881

Location: Colorado Rocky Mountains
Late 50's through the 60's for me, but '65-'67 most of all. I have MP3s of Billboard's annual top 100 (top 30 before 1956) for every year Billboard has published the list, but I listen mostly to the mid-60's. They're all on my office computer. I think it has something to do with my first girl friends and cars back in those days. Every song brings up a memory or two.
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Mr. Ovation
Posted 2012-01-31 9:02 PM (#449211 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
December 2001
Posts: 7237

Location: The Great Pacific Northwest
I re-read the premise and it helped me to answer...

"the music we embrace when we are 13 years old or so becomes "our" music for life. "

The keyword being "embrace." I was 13 in 1971. I didn't know much about the music of that era as my parents were into what may have been pop at one time. Big bands, Neil Diamond, John Denver, Carpenters, Herb Albert and such. Now some of the tunes were pretty cool and still are, but... when I turned 16 ('74) a had a car with a radio, I started listening to heavier stuff. I guess maybe I was aware of some of it before '74, but not much. By '78 I was no longer in this country and the music landscape was huge, but I was into rock. Blue Oyster Cult being the first I "embraced." My tastes haven't really changed, although I listen to just about anything, I'll listen to a well crafted, lyric driven rock tune more than once.
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Old Man Arthur
Posted 2012-01-31 11:28 PM (#449212 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence



Joined:
September 2006
Posts: 10777

Location: Keepin' It Weird in Portland, OR
DaveKell wrote:
I was at least twice as old as the majority of my coworkers.

So, when I had a job I used to burn CD's from my computer music collection to take to work.
That way, I don't care if that 15¢ disc gets trashed and I could give them away to someone who liked them...

I remember this one dude (kid) asks "Who is that? Is that Janis Joplin?"
"Why Yes, it is."
"I used to hear that when I was a kid... My Grandma used to listen to her all the time!"

But I did give him the disc to take home for himself.
It probably gave him good memories, although he might not admit it.
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elginacres
Posted 2012-02-01 2:50 AM (#449213 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
July 2005
Posts: 1609

Location: Colorado
The recent reference comes from last week's Criminal Minds - the character Spencer Reed helped narrow down a list of suspects by the music...by quoting some researcher that the most impactful music in one's life comes from the music listened to at age 14.
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Mark in Boise
Posted 2012-02-01 3:24 AM (#449214 - in reply to #449190)
Subject: Re: Music In Adolesence


Joined:
March 2005
Posts: 12759

Location: Boise, Idaho
Just before I was 13 we moved to North Dakota. I could only get a couple radio stations on my transistor radio and one played polka as much as it played "rock". Didn't like the Beatles, because I heard the same songs over and over. Moved to Kansas 3 years later, where they at least could get KOMA out of Oklahoma City. Three Dog Night was probably my first favorite band and then got into whatever they called stuff by John Denver, Jim Croce and that ilk. ELO, Pink Floyd and all that was good, too, but I've stayed with the Denver and Croce type stuff.
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