Topic: [totw] The band that changed your life. (Read 3528 times)

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I just cannot get into any of the chili's at all. It's weird because I used to like it so much, I think I just got sick of it and now none of it appeals.

And yeah, as much as I like Is This It and Room on Fire so much more, I still think First Impressions is good. It's different which is what they needed since the first two were like one album split apart basically.
You thought Room On Fire and Is This It were that similar?  Room On Fire came off as a lot harder to me.  Like, I loved Is This It because it was so ridiculously mellow and laid back and WARM and you do not hear warm indie rock nearly enough, and I wasn't disappointed by Room On Fire, but I definitely thought it wasn't nearly as mellow, you know?  Like it tossed that out and replaced it with a more traditional rock sound I guess.  First Impressions seemed to continue that trend, and while I'm glad they're developing as artists/not sounding the same forever, it wasn't really as compelling to me.  It felt like they'd lost most of the fresh sound that made me like them to begin with.

Also ahahaha who would think LET'S GET THE STROKES TO OPEN FOR METALLICA was a good idea?  They're a little too big for that anyway, I think!
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I see what you're saying, and I feel the exact same feelings you do towards Is This It. The warm feeling definitely comes across, and I love that album the most, I just think Room on Fire is very similar. I was disappointed in First Impressions, but it grew on me quite a lot. It's still my least favourite though. As for live, The Strokes before Metallica was a terrible idea. Both the times I've seen The Strokes live were absolutely incredible, and I've seen a lot of fucking amazing bands live. They were on a par with Muse.
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I haven't lost my respect for the Chili Peppers, because yeah, as headphonics said, they're still incredibly talented musicians. My friend is the biggest Frusciante fan I know and he constantly raves about how great all his solo albums and how great the Chili Peppers are... and yeah, I can see it; some of his works are amazing and Flea is a really good bassist, etc. Thing is though, EVERYWHERE I go these days, all I hear is the Chili Peppers. It seems like they're one of those bands that are universally liked by pretty much everyone...and whether I'm at a mall, outside or anyone's car they're always being played. So I guess you could say that overplaying them killed them for me, but I don't even listen to them at home anymore as I've used to because I feel I get enough of it outside!

Anyway, I got into music pretty late...at around 14. I remember I always used to listen to whatever was on the radio or whatever my dad played in the car, but I remember hearing "Time Is Running Out" by Muse on the radio and absolutely loving it. I ran over to Music World and bought it as fast as I could and listened to the album religiously for a while. Not only did I just listen to radio, but I just took whatever my friends were listening to -- Sum 41, Linkin Park, shit like that -- and being satisfied. But after getting the Muse album it pretty much broke me free from all of MY FRIENDS' tastes and I started exploring music by myself. Even then, though, I was sort of close minded and just listened to some modern rock and some classic rock.

9th grade was probably one of the biggest musical milestones in my life. I remember seeing this kid sitting in gym class in the beginning of the school year and he was wearing a Sex Pistols' "Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols!" t-shirts and I was so INTRIGUED as to what this was.  At this point I was getting pretty bored of listening to Muse so I asked him what it was and he said it was a band... from thereon I asked him to write down on a piece of paper the top 50 albums that he knew and later I downloaded it all and listened to it. Sure, there was some classic rock on it (we've both grown out of it by now) but it also had a lot of INDIE artists and just really weird bands like SONIC YOUTH that I've never heard of before and I soon fell in love with.
Funny thing is, my dad always used to play stuff like Sonic Youth and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds in the car when i was younger, I just never really thought much of it, just HEY MUSIC WOO. Like el capitano, I pretty much grew up with some of my favourite bands without knowing it for a while!
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Yeah I think a few of us feel the same, my parents used to always listen to stuff like James Taylor, Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan etc and I just thought it was boring rubbish, now I appreciate it a whole lot more and I can actually talk to them about it once in a while!
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Frank Zappa definitely shaped my perspective and the way that I write music. Also, I think RHCP was very influential and I've noticed many people here also hold them in high regard.
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I guess it was Nirvana.
now is the winter of our discontent
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The first band I really got into must have been... shit probably Blink 182. It quickly branched off from there however, and I was introduced to Blind Guardian in the winter of 2002 and that set me on my current musical journey, and I couldnt really be farther from my starting place unless I listened to that crazy space music that is on late at night on npr
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Not so much a single band or artist but a genre of music has pretty much changed my outlook on lots of things. Noise music, particulaly harsh noise is actually more of a recent discovery for me, sometime during the past semester at university. I've never really been too big into music or anything and pretty much just listened to whatever people recommended (downloading random albums off the zoo and stuff) and never formed my own opinions about stuff. When teloch introduced me to noise i found a genre that I actually liked for itself and understood.

It came at a point in my life when I was doing the whole "oh man is this university even worth all this shit" thing, on top of my "black man epiphany" which pretty much involved me staring at this dude's face and studying his details for two hours straight in one class and led to the realization that everything is beautiful no matter what it is blah blah blah.

Basically i found noise tying in to all of this stuff and as a result the past half a year or whatever of my life has been generally far more CHILL and relaxed and stuff, and i hope this is a permanent thing. I'm a happier person overall and I think noise music has been a major contributing factor in that.
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you are one fucked up human being
DEUCE: MEETING THE URINE UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL AND REALIZING IT'S JUST LIKE ME AND MY PREJUDICES  THIS WHOLE TIME WERE COMPLETELY FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF PTTTTHTHTHH GOD IT'S EVERYWHERE<br />DEUCE: FUCK THIS TASTES LIKE PISS<br />PANTS: WHERE IT SHOULD TASTE LIKE COTTON CANDY OR PICKLES<br />DEUCE: OR AT LEAST LIKE URINE NOT PISS
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why
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I beg you not to laugh, but my ventures into music started with Busted. They seemed to be what dragged into listening to music. I may not have stick with them very long, but it led me to discover other types of music such as rock for a short while before I converted to rap. I guess it's due to them and influence of friends I was able to find my way back recently to rock and alternative music.
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Quote
on top of my "black man epiphany" which pretty much involved me staring at this dude's face and studying his details for two hours straight
DEUCE: MEETING THE URINE UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL AND REALIZING IT'S JUST LIKE ME AND MY PREJUDICES  THIS WHOLE TIME WERE COMPLETELY FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF PTTTTHTHTHH GOD IT'S EVERYWHERE<br />DEUCE: FUCK THIS TASTES LIKE PISS<br />PANTS: WHERE IT SHOULD TASTE LIKE COTTON CANDY OR PICKLES<br />DEUCE: OR AT LEAST LIKE URINE NOT PISS
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everybody..... yeahhhhh
I USE Q'S INSTEQD OF Q'S
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KoRn
yes coulombs are "germaine", did you learn that word at talk like a dick school?
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everyone knows that Korn isnt music!!!!!!!!

you liar   :shh:
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thanks for the warn but uh... i was serious.

i feel enough shame no need to warn me as well :(
yes coulombs are "germaine", did you learn that word at talk like a dick school?
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sorryz i had just woken up, i have no idea what climbtree is talking about either but his one came off as a little bit less of ONEWORD REPLY JOKEPOST
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korn was the first band that really got me into music. I remember buying their first 3 albums (got the life had just come out like a month before) with my christmas money. I loved korn so much, they were just the epitome of musical talent to my 14 year old mind.

once I found out about SOAD and Tool my tastes became less horrible, but they were pretty bad fora  long time! It wasn't until I was out of highschool and into college (I guess i was 19 or 20) that i actually developed taste and liked bands that weren't embarassing (although i kind of went the opposite direction, listening almost exclusively to postrock so nobody had ever heard of any bands i liked (heh, yeah i'm progressive so what)).

Also slipknot had a pretty big influence on me for a while, in-between korn and tool. fuck man i hate how like, everyone was stupid as hell when they were younger so like nobody blames you for it but its still embarrassing!
yes coulombs are "germaine", did you learn that word at talk like a dick school?
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climbtree is referencing a song by the backstreet boys. just a fun little cultural tidbit for all you boy-band initiates!

my introduction to music came through ah man what would it be. my parents really like musicals so i grew up listening to man of la mancha and cats and les mis, but my sister really liked the singing nun (which is good every once in a while). other than that i guess my sister liked linkin park a lot when i was maybe 12/13? and i memorized the words to every song, from there i started listening to fuck uh kmfdm, audioslave, placebo and they might be giants.  then i kind of piggybacked on my friends' musical taste during high school (indie and some punk), and now i'm leeching from gw and college friends a little.

but out of all of these, the band that changed my life.... i really don't know! i guess it would be a band that i found by myself. maybe they might be giants, because if i hadn't been listening to them and whatever chris cornell was doing at the same time i might have just stayed there. linkin park may apply as the first actual band that i got really into and wrote for months and months in my battle.net profile about. chester bennington has really... nice piercings, don't you agree? i am a teardrop in an ocean.
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Nirvana gave me an extra layer of skin to help me get through the transition from going to school in a place like Miami to going to highschool in a backwoods burg that didn't even have a gifted program.

Ironically, the next band to have a major effect on me was Danzig, which is almost as diametrically opposed to Nirvana as one could get. I'd gotten older, I'd dealt with some messed up things in my life. I realized I would rather be angry than sad. Having a girlfriend whose parents hated me made "Mother" strike a specific chord.

AFI, as corny as it sounds, helped me through a rough spell. For a long time, I didn't like their music, particularly the vocals. I guess I just had to be in the right frame of mind to listen to it, and to listen through it. A lot of their stuff has some strong resonance for me. "When you're bound by your own convictions a discipline can be your addiction" "I don't want to fuck you, so fuck you!" "Before I lay me down to rest, I'd throw away everything to live."

Now, I'm listening to a lot of Morrissey. I'm going on 26, fronting a hedonistic punk band - but I don't drink, do drugs, smoke, or engage in overt promiscuity. I've again become the outsider, and nobody handles the outsider quite as well as the Moz.

Others that have made a big impact on me, though mostly musically, are At The Drive-In, Sonic Youth, and Tom Waits.
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