what was the first band or bands that you've gotten into as a child and what genre was it? what was its appeal? which of these early bans have influenced your taste in music as an adult?
what was the first band or bands that you've gotten into as a child and what genre was it? what was its appeal? which of these early bans have influenced your taste in music as an adult?
I was only into classical music as a young child, and subsequently The Beatles and Pink Floyd (but only Dark Side of the Moon), The Moody Blues' Days of Future Passed (which is very symphonic in style)...I later liked 1990s Popular Rock bands but D. Bowie was the first artist I really bought into. I still like most of these artists although with Bowie he has faded a little in terms of his recent output.
Doo-*** and Motown around age 3.
I remember it hitting something deep in my soul. Still does.
When I was around ten years old, I used to steal my parents' Queen CDs and hide away in the little cubby-hole by our stereo system with a pair of headphones for hours. I think that was my first real "band," though I did enjoy the Elton John and Hair Broadway soundtrack songs my mom played for me when I was even younger. I get super nostalgic when I listen to any songs from those artists/albums today, though they haven't really influenced the type of music I listen to now, I think.
i didn't listen to music as a child because i was too ashamed of it, and then around the age of 14-15 i got into japanese music. so i guess my first ever band that i got into was... actually i wasn't into bands, i was into artists and i pretty much worshiped YUI [fun editors note, i type her SLI]: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xuw...hort-ver_music. mostly because she was unpretentious and simple in a way that i hadn't encountered in music anywhere else, and i could relate to that sort of down-to-earth naivete.
other japanese artists/bands i nerded over: Ikimono Gakari, school food punishment, Kagrra, Salyu, Amano Tsukiko, uhh probably more but i've blocked them out of my memory.
MORE ESOTERIC J-POP:
as a child (gradeschool, middle school and stuff) it was 80s hair metal stuff. Ratt, Kiss, Guns n Roses, etc... i liked them all, but i feel like there was a good amount of image shit going on (I secretly listened to bad 80s electro-pop stuff too, but i would never have admitted to it ).
The first band i really really got into just for myself was Janes Addiction.
Michael Jackson, Run DMC
When I was 5, I would to listen to a defunct(?) band called Buddislam which recited Mahayanna sutras on a background of Salafist Jihadi music.. I don't even know who they were or where they came from, but I still have the cassette tape which my uncle got from a contact within the Iranian Communist party.
I had a cassette that was the sound track to this chinese drama:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2162790/externalreviews
(it's about a snake demoness type thing that falls in love with a mortal man and pretends to be human and stuff and marries him and the evil monk forces that try to keep them apart.
one night she gets drunk and transforms into a huuuge white snake and he sees and like, faints or dies? and she has to journey to the underworld to save him, making herself vulnerable to being caught and punished by the gods. finally he gets back to health but she's locked in a tower for a thousand years...)
also i didn't realize until older but the guy in the show is played by a woman??? no idea why...
Opeth, ISIS, Agalloch and MF DOOM in ages 15-16.
And yeah, hugely influential on taste. I listen to a lot of extreme metal, post-rock and hip-hop and it's pretty obvious that it all started from these four.
growing up, my dad listened to 50s and 60s pop music like the supremes and bobby vinton on the oldies station and sang along while he drove. sometimes he would engage me and my brother in the back with silly made up lyrics or funny faces. when i first started listening to music by myself it was pop/rnb tapes that i found lying around in the basement and when i was 8 i used to dance alone in my basement all the time to bobby brown or paula abdul. after my parents broke up when i was 9 my mom got really into grunge music and this was around the time i started watching mtv and i was surrounded by stuff like nirvana and alice in chains and nin. what i would count the most is the first time i remember actually feeling strongly affected by music enough for it to become important to me. that was fiona apple, which got me into other female singers like natalie imbruglia. i went through other music phases after that. but the two musicians who stand out the most are nirvana and fiona apple.
50s&60s, classic rock, whatever that was before classic rock (like the byrds), beachboys, rio speedwagon, 80s hair metal, heavy metal, 80s pop, also the country music from the late 70s to early 80s, and some from late 50s on up. Oh, and disney and other films shows (like winnie-the-pooh songs).
I pretty much stopped listening to music soon into the 90s. But I guess that makes up for all the stuff i loved that were way before my time.
IEE 649 sx/sp cp
Don't make fun of me, Vivaldi when I was 6 or 8. I still love Vivaldi.
Also Abba because my mom was obsessed about them.
Younger than that, it was all kind of child music.
Later, it was Susanne Vega and Michael Jackson (about 12 I would say).
Then Robert Miles. The Prodigy at 16.
And then my childhood was over
I don't know how it all influenced my music taste, I listen mostly to electro now.
The band that impressed me most in my whole life: Röyksopp.
My aunt played Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and maybe a few others like that, all the time. Before that I listened to Greek and Arabic belly dance type music that my mom played. I remember hearing a song on a classic rock station by Santana and thinking, "whoah! what is this?" and the song haunted my dreams for a very long time after. It still gives me the same feeling as the first time I heard it. I might have been 8 or 9.
Edit: the song is abruptly cut off at the end.
No one told me about her
The way she lied
Well, no one told me about her
How many people cried
Well, it's too late to say you're sorry
How would I know, why should I care
Please don't bother trying to find her
She's not there...oh oh oh
Nobody told me about her
What could I do
Well, nobody told me about her
Though they all knew
Well, it's too late to say you're sorry
How would I know, why should I care
Please don't bother trying to find her
She's not there....
Well, let me tell you about the way she looked
The way she acted, the color of her hair
Her voice is soft and cool
Her eyes are clear and bright
But she's not there...
“My typology is . . . not in any sense to stick labels on people at first sight. It is not a physiognomy and not an anthropological system, but a critical psychology dealing with the organization and delimitation of psychic processes that can be shown to be typical.” —C.G. Jung
My first musical introductions were country and 60s/70s rock. The first three songs I ever fully learned the lyrics to were:
"Swingtown" by The Steve Miller Band, "Boot Scootin' Boogie" by Brooks and Dunn, and "Achy Breaky Heart" by Billy Ray Cyrus
This is bound to happen when raised by Texans.
I later spent a few solid years on 80s/90s hip hop and r&b.
My music tastes have always been a bit all over the place, but those were my first introductions.
In middle school, I thought I was cool, listenin' to Blink 182 with my walkman.
The Monkees.
Smash Mouth, Killers, Green Day
The appeal is that they were catchy.
I don't like Smash Mouth anymore, the Killers devolved into some kind of pink-purple mush, and instead of listening to American Idiot Green Day, I listen to Dookie Green Day.
I still like alternative and punk; they are a major influence in most music I like to listen to.
I just never really found music or bands that truly impressed me... most bands are actually pretty unimpressive if you ask me. I think about the only music that genuinely wowed me was like Beethoven...
Definitely Symphony No. 9... My other favorites are Choral Fantasy, Piano Concerto No. 5, and "Moonlight Sonata". My God, how can music be so beautiful...
But you know, I don't really listen to classical music a lot, I also like pop music. I actually found Britney Spears' "Oops I Did It Again" to be pretty interesting... (produced by Max Martin). It sounded pretty unique. But I get bored of songs easily, and the artist needs to put A LOT of effort into making it in order to impress me.
My dad raised me on Green Day, Blink-182, Barenaked Ladies, and English Rock Bands like Keane, Oasis, Muse, etc.
I still enjoy some throwback songs from some bands but I think the punk/chord style rock influenced what I listen to now.
Queen.
Because that's what I am.
I don't know about you but yeah I'm a 90ies kid yet ended up liking the 70ies
The appeal: Dramatic, loud, majestic, classic, ecstatic, showy and strong. Influenced me in what way... I still like music that is very confident and full of energy.
Favorite tune:
I think it was this band:
I dont think it affected my future music taste. Im open to any genre of music as long as it feeds me something emotionally and spiritually.
They make depressing music which matched my personality then. Their songs was not used for dancing, it was only for crying. I had an obsession with crying. The band broke up last year and I went to one of their last concerts and bawled my eyes out because they played a big part in a bad period of my life. Toward the end though their music turned shitty and lacking substance and emotion so it was for the best.
Originally I listened to a lot of classic rock stuff from my parents, Beatles, Pink Floyd, the Who, ... The first band that I got into on my own was Barenaked Ladies. I liked the clever lyrics and the catchiness of the music. I got the impression that Steven Page was Ne leading and Ed Robertson was Si leading but I took a closer look and now think Page might actually be EIE.
I'm not sure that it "influenced" me but I still like anything catchy with a strong beat and melody. In terms of genres I still enjoy indie pop/pop rock, but I also like a bit of classical and electronic type stuff, and occasionally hip hop. Lately I've been really into synthwave (Kavinsky, Electric Youth). Classic rock is still cool but if you listen to something too much it sort of loses its impact.
Marilyn Manson and Slipknot.
Fall Out Boy - I wasn't as precocious as you guys
MCR mogged the living shit out of them in retrospect
Last edited by suedehead; 04-09-2017 at 06:00 PM.
Kylie Minogue, Depeche Mode, Britney Spears, N-Sync/Justin Timberlake, Robbie Williams...
The former two because of my parents, the latter because of the era...
I am a 90s kid (and So/Sx synflow), so...