Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I reject the notion that Don't Stop Believin' is a boomer song. It came out in 1981. That makes it squarely Gen X. I will not entertain debate on this point.
But they claimed it w/ the Clinton ads. Gen X would probably be Smells Like Teen Spirit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Smell’s Like Teen Spirit or maybe Sweet Child O’ Mine.
It drives me nuts that people always go on and on about Nirvana being the "voice of Gen X" (one of the reasons I never felt like I fully fit into Gen X and why I was not at all surprised when demographers decided there is actually that microgeneration of x-ennials that I fall into)
But if we're going by that marker, then it likely IS Smells Like Teen Spirit
I prefer Weird Als parody
Anonymous wrote:I'm GenX and I think most of us would probably know the top songs from the 90s. I could sing (or dance in some cases) along to any of these:
I Will Always Love You - Whitney Houston
I'll Make Love to You - Boys II Men
I Swear - All-4-One
Jump - Kriss Kross
The Sign - Ace of Base
Macarena - Los Del Rio
Waterfalls - TLC
Baby Got Back - Sir Mix-A-Lot
Gangsta's Paradise - Coolio
MmmBop - Hanson
I don't know if these are necessarily "representative" though.
Anonymous wrote:Smell’s Like Teen Spirit or maybe Sweet Child O’ Mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I reject the notion that Don't Stop Believin' is a boomer song. It came out in 1981. That makes it squarely Gen X. I will not entertain debate on this point.
Born to Run is more of a boomer song. Maybe Sound of Silence. Or Fortunate Son.
Anonymous wrote:I reject the notion that Don't Stop Believin' is a boomer song. It came out in 1981. That makes it squarely Gen X. I will not entertain debate on this point.
Anonymous wrote:I reject the notion that Don't Stop Believin' is a boomer song. It came out in 1981. That makes it squarely Gen X. I will not entertain debate on this point.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is the equivalent to a box full of junkmail