/dadrock/
get in here lads
/dadrock/
get in here lads
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Can I say that heartland rock = dad rock ?
Sure why not
Steely Dan should be Sup Forumscore. Hecking brilliant
I've been hearing this come on Classic Rock radio stations lads... #feelingoldasfuck
"Son, check this out. Dark Star is gonna blow your mind." - my dad, I wish
friendly reminder that Darkness on the Edge of Town is the superior album
I agree, but Born to Run is more likely to get people to click on my thread !
posting some dad stuff
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daily reminder that Born to the Run is the only track by Springsteen I really like, not just 'ok this is nice'
didn't ask
ok
daily reminder I don't really care about you.
ok dood ;(
go cry somewhere else alright? you're cramping our style
user....... ; /
who /deeppurple/ here
>that feel when you are a highway star
Was just listening to this, fuck that falsetto gets me everytime
I saw both Springstein and U2 back in the day when they were in their prime
Fucking this. Probably the greatest live album of all time
That's a pretty good one.
Sorry forgot my pic
forgot to quote:
More like soyboy-core
Grimes is dad rock?
>pretending to be me
nice try
>implying geidi primes is a live album
Thinking the old Grimey is dadrock
wew lad
lad wews
I'll mash u up m8
yawn
all that soy is makin you tired
Jelly as fuck
i'm 50 years old
are you ok ?
Any other stories my dude? Even something like buying a new record and it ends up being an all time classic or something. I love old music stories
Best The Who album?
Springsteen is a great story teller. Been listening to him more lately. Even though i don't really relate to the whole working class Jersey theme I still find his lyrics pretty interesting.
For me, A Quick One. You can't really go wrong with anything from debut through Who's Next. I just prefer the earlier beat music to the later hard rock.
yes
I've really been getting into Steely Dan lately. Dire Straits too.
Excellent bands, I tip my hat. best Straits record? Self titled debut all the way for me
youtube.com
>mfw the 2nd solo guitar kicks in
Their early stuff is great for the singles (Boris the Spider is my favorite) but Tommy and Quadrophenia are better all-around albums, great production and cool concepts. I'm not a fan of Who's Next though.
Incoming based Dadrock
I like their studio stuff better. Ramblin' Man is the song every country star for the past sixty years wishes they wrote.
Studio version of Midnight Rider is superior. But Whipping Post live is one of the most epic songs i've heard.
Self titled but i love pretty much all of them from those first 10 years.
Allman is just a different beast live vs. in studio. Much like the Dead. Both good.
One time I accidentally put on a 20 minute archival set live version of "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" with an out of tune saxaphone on the bar jukebox instead of the normal 5 minute studio version. Got a lot of dirty looks.
>Ramblin' Man is the song every country star for the past sixty years wishes they wrote.
Nah there was a lot of good country + folk country + country rock from the 50s into the 80s (and alt-country from the 80s into the 00s)
What have you guys been listening to recently? For me:
>Donald Fagen - The Nightfly
>Steely Dan - Aja, Pretzel Logic
>The Police - Synchronicity, Ghost in the Machine
>U2 - The Joshua Tree
>Bruce Springsteen - Tunnel of Love
>Chicago - Chicago Transit Authority, Chicago II
>Fleetwood Mac - Rumours
>Dire Straits - Brothers in Arms, Dire Straits
>George Harrison - All Things Must Pass
>Yes - 90125
>Boz Scaggs - Silk Degrees
>The Doobie Brothers - The Captain and Me
>America - America
>Toto - Toto
>Stevie Knicks - Bella Donna
>Daryl Hall & John Oates - Private Eyes
>Van Morrison - Moondance
>Wings - Band on the Run
I love how early Who sounds kind of like the Beatles with a way more aggressive rhythm section. The first song off A Quick One's a perfect example: youtube.com
I used to have my alarm clock set to blast that song every morning. It really did the trick.
good song
going through Steely Dan and Simon/Garfunkel discogs . All those records you listed are dope btw
Traffic are cool, they seem pretty forgotten about these days but they had a lot of great albums in the 60s/70s.
I really love Jack and Diane, and Take Me Home Country Road. Theres a certain vibe to these songs I can't explain, but what else would I like
John Denver is GOAT. John Mellencamp isnt bad either, never really saw that name posted here before. I just checked my itunes and I have 5 albums of his, so whataya know
Take Me Home is the only country song I've heard. How do I into the John Denver and the genre?
That was one of the main inspirations for power pop, yeah. The Who and The Beatles (honestly the two best bands of that UK 60's wave), kind of fused together. And The Who was very much a pop art band, very noticeable on Sell Out but A Quick One has strong signs of that too. Boris the Spider is fantastic and honestly pretty much alike nothing else then, then I Need You has a random spoken word section in the middle, Whiskey Man has a fucking tuba solo, Cobwebs and Strange is just downright weird, A Quick One While He's Away kickstarts the "let's string sections together and make a single song" thing of Bohemian Rhapsody and Paranoid Android. All the while you have this agressive poppy music with lots of suspended chords and stuff, it's great.
I might get shit for this but John Denver's Greatest Hits is perfectly good. Some artists just didn't have great albums through and through. In either instance, Greatest Hits are very good starting points. I don't really know enough about country to lead you on too much, I mostly listen to folk or american primitivism
You're forgetting one act to complete the trinity my dude. (The Kinks)
Are we agreed that 90% of 60s records are best in mono ?
>Want to listen to the beach boys
>Hate their clean artificial image
>Not Ameriburger
>Embodies white stereotypes
more like 80% since 1968 and 1969 are better stereo almost always
68 no, 69 I will agree
Oh yeah, The Kinks is definitely up there, though they were far more a person-centric group than The Who or The Beatles which is why I feel it falls short to me compared to the other two, but they're up there. The Beatles were as a band very much perfect for one another's writing style, while Townshend developed a fantastic style of composition for the tools he had at hand. The shining thing of The Kinks is mostly Ray Davies, though, not so much the rest.
WHY THE FUCK DO I GET 0 REPLIES WHEN I MAKE THIS THREAD AND YOU GET 60 REPLIES
Rock is fucking dead dude. Just give up. The dream is dead.
Is thunder road the greatest opener of all time?
>hanoi rocks (does this count as dadrock?)
>new york dolls
>dust
>lucifers friend
>kiss
>roxy music
>jerusalem
objectively yes
What about heartland rock revival bands like The Gaslight Anthem, The Hold Steady, War on Drugs, and The Menzingers first album
TOL is incredibly underrated. I highly recommend the Live in LA 88 release
Yo, whats the name of that band that was like the japanese deep purple
objectively yes
Deep Purple
Only good album in this thread.