Sellout wrote:
I think zubblewu listens to the same music as my mom...
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All4one wrote:
The History of British Rock.
I'm in the middle of compiling every important British rock tune from 1957 till 2013. Currently working on the early 70's.
What do you mean "important"?
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Sellout wrote:
All4one wrote:
The History of British Rock.
I'm in the middle of compiling every important British rock tune from 1957 till 2013. Currently working on the early 70's.What do you mean "important"?
Every song that proved influential and practically affected the face of rock music.
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"sburban jungle" from homestuck volume 1-4
my brother is playing it on his ipod and he doesnt actually read homestuck
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Africa//Toto
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A poorly recorded rough draft of "Aspirations" by sassycatsassycat/Sockdog/I don't know what to call myself yet! But I've been listening to Friday I'm In Love by the Cure (:
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"Self Destruct" // Pegboard Nerds
Best. Song. EVER
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Sellout wrote:
A poorly recorded rough draft of "Aspirations" by sassycatsassycat/Sockdog/I don't know what to call myself yet! But I've been listening to Friday I'm In Love by the Cure (:
Awesome. By the way, congrats on Scratcher status.
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Mediterraneo - Marc Antoine
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Finally finished the compilation about the history of British rock music from 1957 up to today.
It's really quite extensive and it covers (chronologically):
Skiffle, rock and roll, British Invasion, blues rock, folk rock, psychedelic rock, progressive rock, glam rock, heavy metal, punk rock, New Wave, post/punk, New Romantic synthpop, jangle pop, Gothic rock, indie rock, C86, dream pop, Madchester, Baggy, shoegazing, post rock, Britpop, post-Britpop, post-punk revival, and more recent alternative.
I purposely left out all the dance-punk stuff that came out after the post-Britpop generation.
Last edited by All4one (2013-04-29 02:29:09)
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All4one wrote:
Finally finished the compilation about the history of British rock music from 1957 up to today.
It's really quite extensive and it covers (chronologically):
Skiffle, rock and roll, British Invasion, blues rock, folk rock, psychedelic rock, progressive rock, glam rock, heavy metal, punk rock, New Wave, post/punk, New Romantic synthpop, jangle pop, Gothic rock, indie rock, C86, dream pop, Madchester, Baggy, shoegazing, post rock, Britpop, post-Britpop, post-punk revival, and more recent alternative.
I purposely left out all the dance-punk stuff that came out after the post-Britpop generation.
could u post that
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Sellout wrote:
All4one wrote:
I purposely left out all the dance-punk stuff that came out after the post-Britpop generation.
Why?
Not that it's terrible, but it might stray too much from the rock feel the rest of the collection is promoting.
rugs wrote:
could u post that
I can try, but certainly not soon. I just came up with the track list today - I might upload it as separate discs (for different eras or decades), maybe on YouTube or Scratch. If I'm going to upload on Scratch, though, I might have to find clean versions of some songs - one or two have a bit of a naughty verse or so.
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All4one wrote:
Sellout wrote:
All4one wrote:
I purposely left out all the dance-punk stuff that came out after the post-Britpop generation.
Why?
Not that it's terrible, but it might stray too much from the rock feel the rest of the collection is promoting.
So dream pop and shoegaze are somehow more rock than dance punk?
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veggieman wrote:
"Little Girl" // Danger Mouse, Sparklehouse, and Julian Casablancas
"The Man Who Played God" // Danger Mouse, Sparklehorse, and Suzanne Vega
I love her voice <3
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All4one wrote:
Finally finished the compilation about the history of British rock music from 1957 up to today.
It's really quite extensive and it covers (chronologically):
Skiffle, rock and roll, British Invasion, blues rock, folk rock, psychedelic rock, progressive rock, glam rock, heavy metal, punk rock, New Wave, post/punk, New Romantic synthpop, jangle pop, Gothic rock, indie rock, C86, dream pop, Madchester, Baggy, shoegazing, post rock, Britpop, post-Britpop, post-punk revival, and more recent alternative.
I purposely left out all the dance-punk stuff that came out after the post-Britpop generation.
What's the stuff like Arctic Monkeys and Franz Ferdinand called?
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veggieman wrote:
All4one wrote:
Finally finished the compilation about the history of British rock music from 1957 up to today.
It's really quite extensive and it covers (chronologically):
Skiffle, rock and roll, British Invasion, blues rock, folk rock, psychedelic rock, progressive rock, glam rock, heavy metal, punk rock, New Wave, post/punk, New Romantic synthpop, jangle pop, Gothic rock, indie rock, C86, dream pop, Madchester, Baggy, shoegazing, post rock, Britpop, post-Britpop, post-punk revival, and more recent alternative.
I purposely left out all the dance-punk stuff that came out after the post-Britpop generation.What's the stuff like Arctic Monkeys and Franz Ferdinand called?
Uh...post-punk revival, or maybe post-Britpop? I guess indie rock, too, but that's a pretty broad term.
Sellout wrote:
So dream pop and shoegaze are somehow more rock than dance punk?
All right, fine then, I'll listen to some British dance-punk/new rave bands tomorrow and see if they fit in fine. I just thought the Arctic Monkeys was a good way to close the set.
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