Attention: Please take a moment to consider our terms and conditions before posting.
Bands or artists that you didn’t really appreciate when you were young but do now
Comments
-
stonemuse said:Johnny Cash ... thought he was ok but nothing special. Then about 25 years or so ago, I started listening properly.Such a wealth of amazing songs and a brilliant back catalogue, not to mention when he ‘re-invented’ himself with Rick Rubin.
2 -
Queen
I didn’t appreciate them then but now I do appreciate how shite they really are.
Freddie Mercury aside obviously (who was a great singer and performer and a very interesting man)Seriously though, I probably say a lot of early 80s electronic stuff and the New Romantics....... some great music in there.3 -
Leonard Cohen
Gustav Mahler
Ludwig Van Beethoven
Janet Baker
Enrico Caruso0 -
During the 80s and early 90s I was into soul and Britfunk. To be honest it is my ‘go to’ era/genre.
I really didn’t care for 95% of other music that was about. The non-soul 5% I liked had local connections eg squeeze, culture club (particularly the Colour by Numbers album) and some new romantic stuff.
Then in 1991 Out Of Time album was released by REM. This made me listen to their previous albums and I realised how blinkered I’d been.
There are other groups and singles from that era, singles from groups I still don’t particularly like (some real cheesy) that i realised passed me by at the time and I now really like.
Deacon Blue, Style Council & The Beautiful South are the groups that spring to mind.
There are a lot of singles with a few being Modern Love - Bowie, Sign of the times - the Belle Stars, Heartache Avenue - The Maisonettes, E=Mc2 - Big Audio Dynamite, Big Area - Then Jericho, One Better Day - Madness, My World - Secret Affair and many more.
0 -
paulbaconsarnie said:During the 80s and early 90s I was into soul and Britfunk. To be honest it is my ‘go to’ era/genre.
I really didn’t care for 95% of other music that was about. The non-soul 5% I liked had local connections eg squeeze, culture club (particularly the Colour by Numbers album) and some new romantic stuff.
Then in 1991 Out Of Time album was released by REM. This made me listen to their previous albums and I realised how blinkered I’d been.
There are other groups and singles from that era, singles from groups I still don’t particularly like (some real cheesy) that i realised passed me by at the time and I now really like.
Deacon Blue, Style Council & The Beautiful South are the groups that spring to mind.
There are a lot of singles with a few being Modern Love - Bowie, Sign of the times - the Belle Stars, Heartache Avenue - The Maisonettes, E=Mc2 - Big Audio Dynamite, Big Area - Then Jericho, One Better Day - Madness, My World - Secret Affair and many more.
Edited to add I don't think he's recorded it which is a shame0 -
Another one going back to the 60's. Chris Farlowe. As a kid I just knew his "Out of Time" played constantly as a no 1 pop song. And then I forgot about him. Then around 1990 a load of us went to see a band of veteran blues guys called Box of Frogs and he guested as vocalist, and we were all blown away. Then I forgot him again, until my Czech buddy with the old rock show on Radio Jedna played Atomic Rooster live "Devil's Answer", and the vocalist started by referencing "Out of Time". I never knew Chris Farlowe played with them. It was a BBC Radio 1 recording, my buddy often digs out and plays such material and I'm listening and thinking "how could I have missed all this?"0
-
Solidgone said:Leonard Cohen
Gustav Mahler
Ludwig Van Beethoven
Janet Baker
Enrico Caruso0 -
Hall & Oates
Private Eyes is an absolute banger
Wonder why they never made it that big in the UK? They were massive in America2 -
rananegra said:paulbaconsarnie said:During the 80s and early 90s I was into soul and Britfunk. To be honest it is my ‘go to’ era/genre.
I really didn’t care for 95% of other music that was about. The non-soul 5% I liked had local connections eg squeeze, culture club (particularly the Colour by Numbers album) and some new romantic stuff.
Then in 1991 Out Of Time album was released by REM. This made me listen to their previous albums and I realised how blinkered I’d been.
There are other groups and singles from that era, singles from groups I still don’t particularly like (some real cheesy) that i realised passed me by at the time and I now really like.
Deacon Blue, Style Council & The Beautiful South are the groups that spring to mind.
There are a lot of singles with a few being Modern Love - Bowie, Sign of the times - the Belle Stars, Heartache Avenue - The Maisonettes, E=Mc2 - Big Audio Dynamite, Big Area - Then Jericho, One Better Day - Madness, My World - Secret Affair and many more.
Edited to add I don't think he's recorded it which is a shame
0 -
Chunes said:Hall & Oates
Private Eyes is an absolute banger
Wonder why they never made it that big in the UK? They were massive in America
1 - Sponsored links:
-
Redvaliant said:Jethro Tull
0 -
Garrymanilow said:Redvaliant said:Jethro Tull0
-
hoof_it_up_to_benty said:Garrymanilow said:Redvaliant said:Jethro Tull
im a massive prog nut. I’ve loved it since I got Selling England a and Brain Salad Surgery as a kid. When it’s good it can’t be beaten, but some can be overblown and self indulgent (I’m looking at you Tales from topographic oceans)0 -
Pink Floyd
Iron Maiden
Metallica
Badly Drawn Boy
1 -
Greenhithe said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:Garrymanilow said:Redvaliant said:Jethro Tull
im a massive prog nut. I’ve loved it since I got Selling England a and Brain Salad Surgery as a kid. When it’s good it can’t be beaten, but some can be overblown and self indulgent (I’m looking at you Tales from topographic oceans)
When I was a kid people seemed to listen to disco, punk or prog rock.0 -
Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding, Sam and Dave and just about every other soul singer from the Stax and Atlantic stables.I hated country music when I was younger but now really like a lot of it, though not the sentimental country ballads that typify the genre in some people's eyes.I disliked reggae in my teens but by my mid-twenties and through the 1980s it was one of my most played musical styles...and still is.1
-
Led Zep
The King - Elvis1 -
PragueAddick said:Another one going back to the 60's. Chris Farlowe. As a kid I just knew his "Out of Time" played constantly as a no 1 pop song. And then I forgot about him. Then around 1990 a load of us went to see a band of veteran blues guys called Box of Frogs and he guested as vocalist, and we were all blown away. Then I forgot him again, until my Czech buddy with the old rock show on Radio Jedna played Atomic Rooster live "Devil's Answer", and the vocalist started by referencing "Out of Time". I never knew Chris Farlowe played with them. It was a BBC Radio 1 recording, my buddy often digs out and plays such material and I'm listening and thinking "how could I have missed all this?"1
-
flyingkiwiDK said:Forgot to add OMD to the list2
-
I grew up really only listening to Soul Music, from the Otis Redding and Geno Washington my dad would play through to the Loose Ends, Second Image stuff I liked when younger.
I got sidetracked by clubbing in the 90s with house music somewhat but have come back to more traditional soul again now I am in my 50s. The more mainstream band I appreciate most now but ignored when younger are The Style Council.
0 - Sponsored links:
-
SE7toSG3 said:I grew up really only listening to Soul Music, from the Otis Redding and Geno Washington my dad would play through to the Loose Ends, Second Image stuff I liked when younger.
I got sidetracked by clubbing in the 90s with house music somewhat but have come back to more traditional soul again now I am in my 50s. The more mainstream band I appreciate most now but ignored when younger are The Style Council.1 -
Addickted said:addick1956 said:Matt Munroe . Was not my style at 15 but he has a really good voice.
Helen Shapiro my age group but not for me then. However she had a voice mature beyond her years .
Now does gospel, which is a little strange as she's Jewish.3 -
charltonbob said:SoundAsa£ said:ABBA.....without doubt the most talented and successful “pop music” group that has ever existed.
Brilliant song writers too.
I don’t have any of their albums but always enjoy hearing them from time to time.
And finally......I defy anyone who says that haven’t tripped the light fantastic whilst at a wedding, christening or party and danced to the timeless “Dancing Queen”.
They are not the most successful pop music group that have ever existed & to say they are the most talented is down to personal opinion & taste. If you think that they are the most talented group that ever existed it comes as a surprise that you don't own any albums & only enjoy hearing them from time to time so I'm guessing that this is a wind up to entice sad old men like me to bite :-):smiley:
They we’re all classically trained musicians and song writers and WERE the most successful POP MUSIC group, if you don’t agree then tell me a more successful one?
0 -
Housemartins / Beautiful South4
-
Genre - Power ballads3
-
Glen Campbell0
-
Although not a great performer songs written by Jimmy Webb0
-
Teddy pendergrass1
-
Chunes said:Hall & Oates
Private Eyes is an absolute banger
Wonder why they never made it that big in the UK? They were massive in America0 -
Garrymanilow said:Redvaliant said:Jethro Tull
In fact Ian Anderson is probably one of the few people I can listen to playing the flute, otherwise I really don’t like the instrument!0