![]() |
70's music...
Tonight I was sitting in a grocery store parking lot waiting for the GF. There was nothing on the radio. I started thinking about the 'old' days when I was little (early 70's). Man, they had some great songs. Some that came to mind:
Sundown Wreck Of The Edmund Fitzgerald Time In A Bottle Cats In The Cradle Bennie & The Jets Black Water Horse With No Name ..you get the idea. I'm not sure what category you'd put those in (rock, pop, etc...), but man were they great songs to sing along to. It really sucks we don't have those kind of songs today. Almost everything is crap that you'll never hear a year from now. Am I alone here, or do you think the early 70's were loaded with timeless classics??? List some fave 70's tunes...Looking for some ideas for a compilation disc. Thanks... |
I'm a child of the 80's but I agree with you. Nothing beats Classic Rock
|
The 70's had the very worst of music and the very best of music.
Unfortunately what we view as the culture of the mid to late 70's and what people equate to what the 70's was about was centered around the worst of music and that was disco. I suppose every era has it's really, really bad music but these days it's not as identifiable with a movement or a culture. I would say this era's real bad music is R&B. That music is just sickening. Sure there are your beacons of hope in the R&B world but for the most part it is filled with Puff Daddies or P Diddies or whatever. The decade defining music for the 60's was definitely pop rock, the 70's was disco, and for the 80's it was split in the middle between hair band music and the electronic movement. The 90's was such a hodgepodge that I wonder what you could say was the defining music. Maybe "grunge" music, I don't know. |
Two words: Black Sabbath
|
Originally posted by woofman Two words: Black Sabbath |
I saw an interview with legendary drummer Bill Bruford (Yes, King Crimson, Genesis, etc.) and he said the reason the late `60s to the mid `70s was the golden age of rock was because record labels actually encouraged bands to sound different than everyone else. They encouraged creativity and originality. And if you made a list of all the "classic" artists of that period, you'll see that almost all of them have a distinctive sound that is unique.
The last decade or so that isn't the case. If someone breaks it big, then the labels scramble to sign 100 copycats to try to capitalize on the "current hot sound". |
Re: 70's music...
<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/KGhF3QAOM0A&hl=en_US&fs=1&"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/KGhF3QAOM0A&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
|
Re: 70's music...
Here are some others in line with what you’ve listed. I picked songs that I wouldn’t mind hearing on the radio, you know how some songs that were good back then just don’t play well today.
Taxi – Harry Chapin December 1963 (Oh, What A Night) -- The Four Seasons Night Moves – Bog Seger Brandy (You're a Fine Girl) - Looking Glass Chevy Van - Sammy Johns One Tin Soldier – Coven Blind Feeling – Gary Wright * Golden Country – REO Speedwagon New York State of Mind – Billy Joel I'm Not Gonna Let It Bother Me Tonight – Atlanta Rhythm Section Dead Skunk - Loudon Wainright III Isn't It Time - The Babys Driver's Seat - Sniff 'n' the Tears Jessie's Girl - Rick Springfield Spill the Wine - Eric Burdon Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn) - Bob Dylan Stanglehold - Ted Nugent If I Could Read Your Mind - Gordon Lightfoot * This is off of his “The Dream Weaver” album, I always liked this song better than “Dream Weaver”. |
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by dvdsteve2000
(Post 1544675)
Time In A Bottle |
Re: 70's music...
I'll be 52 in a couple weeks. The early 70s(1970-75) is my favorite era of music. My high school years. There was still a dividing line between AM and FM. Not until 1976 did the barrier start to come down and album rock artists either disappeared or their music became more commercial, breaking into AM and giving birth to AOR( I blame the first Boston album and to a lesser degree the first Bad Company album).
On AM you had: all the America hits-Horse With No Name, Ventura Highway, Sister Golden Hair, etc, Paul Simon-Kodachrome, Mother and Child Reunion, Me And Julio.., etc. Rod Stewart-Maggie May, You Wear It Well Jim Croce Three Dog Night Badfinger-No MNatter What, Day After Day Todd Rundgren-Hello It's Me, I Saw The Light, Couldn't I Just Tell You Elton John-Crocodile Rock, Honky Cat, Rocket Man, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road ELP-Lucky Man, From The Beginning, Still You Turn Me On Linda Ronstadt-You're No Good Ace-How Long Run Run Run-Jo Jo Gunne Loggins and Messina Carole King-It's Too Late, Jazz Man, Sweet Seasons, So Far Away Neil Young-Herart of Gold, Old Man CSNY- Our House, Teach Your Children Ten Years After-I'd Love To Change The World the last days of CCR the last days of Guess Who McCartney-Admiral Halsey, Another Day, Junior's Farm,Listen What The Man Said Lennon-Imagine, Mind Games, Instant Kharma Rare Earth Ozark Mt. Daredevils-Jackie Blue The Buoys-Timothy Moody Blues-The Story in Your Eyes Alice Cooper-Eighteen Cat Stevens Bread Jaggerz-The Papper Right Place Wrong Time-Dr. John great soul Backstabbers Smiling Faces Sometimes Me and Mrs. Jones Ain't No Sunshine Let's Stay Together Give Me Just A Little More Time Too Late To Turn Back Now I could list for hours FM classic rock hadn't really kicked in yet. There was underground radio similiar to deep tracks on sirius/xm. I listened to Beaker Street on KAAY Little Rock, AR. Mon-Fri. 11pm-2am. Otherwise you bought the albums for REO STYX KANSAS FOGHAT YES GENESIS ZEPPELIN BLACK SABBATH HUMBLE PIE SAVOY BROWN BLUE OYSTER CULT FREE BOWIE NAZARETH GRATEFUL DEAD AEROSMITH MONTROSE KISS ZZ TOP T REX MOTT THE HOOPLE and many others Almost forgot DOOBIES-Long Train Runnin', Listen To The Music STEELY DAN-Do It Again, Reeling In The Years JACKSON BROWNE-Doctor My Eyes the pre Hotel California Eagles |
Re: 70's music...
Spill the Wine was a War song sung w/ Eric Burdon.
|
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by dvdsteve2000
(Post 1544675)
It really sucks we don't have those kind of songs today.
It's not an insult. Ten years ago I was listening to a new album every day. Now it's one every two weeks, if that. |
Re: 70's music...
Bowie's "Heroes"
Eno's "Another Green World" The Ramones "Rocket to Russia" Amon Duul II's "Wolf City" King Crimson's "Lark's Tongue in Aspic" Harmonia's "Deluxe" Leonard Cohen's "Songs of Love and Hate" Television's "Marquee Moon" Roxy Music's "Siren" Nick Lowe's "Jesus of Cool" Talking Heads' "More Songs about Buildings and Food" Kraftwerk's "Trans Europe Express" Steely Dan's "Pretzel Logic" Funkadelic's "Maggot Brain" The Clash's debut Hawkwind's "Hall of the Mountain Grill" Neil Young's "Zuma" New York Doll's debut Genesis' "Foxtrot" Randy Newman's "Good Ol' Boys" Sparks "Propaganda" Big Star's "Radio City" Joy Division's "Unknown Pleasures" Little Feat's "Dixie Chicken" The Stooges "Raw Power" T. Rex's "The Slider" The Jam's "In the City" |
Re: 70's music...
Man has peaked in music. The start of this century has changed in many areas of entertainment.
|
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by palebluedot
(Post 1544927)
Unfortunately what we view as the culture of the mid to late 70's and what people equate to what the 70's was about was centered around the worst of music and that was disco.
|
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by nothingfails
(Post 9889798)
I know it's fashionable to hate disco, but give me "Stayin' Alive" and Donna Summer over any of that Nickelback crap that's out there and especially over 95% of the mainstream hip hop music out there. Even rap artists make fun of disco but 90% of their hit songs wouldn't exist without those Chic songs they always sample.
|
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by Hiro11
(Post 9893151)
I don't think anyone hates disco anymore. I think it has already gone from hated and mocked, to ironically liked, to embraced under a different name ("dance music"), to becoming highly influential and inspiring all kinds of music, to being actively embraced by hipsters and directly incorporated in their mucis to gradually gaining mainstream fans for the original stuff from the seventies. The whole "disco sucks" thing is way past dead.
I still see a lot of people bashing disco.... especially funny when you see people who listen to people like Britney and Christina saying "disco still sucks" when they would've both jumped on the disco bandwagon if they were around 30 years ago. Some years back in college I took a "History of Rock and Roll" class for an easy A and when it came time for disco, the teacher made no attempt to hide how much he hates disco music to this day, and it pisses him off that so many students know all those Bee Gees songs so many years later... even tho for someone who teaches the history of rock music to not know that The Bee Gees were around for a decade before they started making dance music is interesting in itself. |
Re: 70's music...
As good as it gets.
<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/_EBMo8xHGNs&hl=en_US&fs=1&"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/_EBMo8xHGNs&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object> |
Re: 70's music...
Some good music in the '70s, but I prefer the '80s.
|
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by Hiro11
(Post 9893151)
I don't think anyone hates disco anymore. I think it has already gone from hated and mocked, to ironically liked, to embraced under a different name ("dance music"), to becoming highly influential and inspiring all kinds of music, to being actively embraced by hipsters and directly incorporated in their mucis to gradually gaining mainstream fans for the original stuff from the seventies. The whole "disco sucks" thing is way past dead.
As it turns out rap music did more harm than disco ever did. Back in the 70's the reason they hated disco was: 1) white burnouts couldn't dance 2) rock legends were making disco music also And they were afraid that the way of rock music was going to change. Kinda what happened with hair heavy metal in the early 90's when Nirvana hit the scene. If anything it was soul, R & B music the changed and looks like that won' ever be back. Instead now of 70's rap samples we get drum machine sounds in black music. And no music about loving a woman, but what a hoe she is. |
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by palebluedot
(Post 1544927)
The 70's had the very worst of music and the very best of music.
Unfortunately what we view as the culture of the mid to late 70's and what people equate to what the 70's was about was centered around the worst of music and that was disco. I suppose every era has it's really, really bad music but these days it's not as identifiable with a movement or a culture. I would say this era's real bad music is R&B. That music is just sickening. Sure there are your beacons of hope in the R&B world but for the most part it is filled with Puff Daddies or P Diddies or whatever. The decade defining music for the 60's was definitely pop rock, the 70's was disco, and for the 80's it was split in the middle between hair band music and the electronic movement. The 90's was such a hodgepodge that I wonder what you could say was the defining music. Maybe "grunge" music, I don't know. What you're referring to as R&B is actually hip hop/rap which is a very different segment. True R&B (with the exception of Alicia Keys and maybe a few others) has fallen out of popularity with the masses. |
Re: 70's music...
R&B hit it's peak in the early 70's with "Me & Mrs. Jones" by Billy Paul and "I'll Be Around" by The Spinners. Man!!
|
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by Norm de Plume
(Post 9893391)
Some good music in the '70s, but I prefer the '80s.
To this day I still think the period from 1975 to 1985 was the best. Thanks in part to three letters....MTV |
Re: 70's music...
Originally Posted by cck
(Post 9893344)
As good as it gets.
Ides of March |
Re: 70's music...
Was born in 1972 and consider myself a "child of the 80s", as far as my musical memories go. Most somgs I hear from the 80s bring back many memories, as I was too young to remember much from the mid-to-late 70s.
There are some great lists in this thread, and over the last few years I have found myself listening to a lot of 70s music myself. Aside from the Steely Dan, Doobie Brothers, etc.,. I love the music of some of those storyteller types, guys like Gerry Raferty and Al Stewart. They didn't just sing, they told a tale in so many of their songs. Some of the lyrics there just blow me away. And of course there are so many more ... I just haven't seen those guys mentioned here. (or maybe i misesd it) |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:59 PM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.