Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you had "cool" parents, you knew about cool 60s and 70s music too. While my mom listened to Joan Baez and other folk music, my dad had a ton of cool old records like Cream, Led Zeppelin, Velvet Underground, The Rolling Stones, even some early Bowie. And Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys. I loved going through his record collection and of course we had a huge cabinet stereo. We also knew a ton about disco and somehow had a ton of disco 8 tracks.
+1 . I'm a gen x who grew up on Fleetwood Mac, the Eagles, Beach Boys, Jim Croce, all the classic rock; my parents were older and so also liked older music like Buddy Holly (dad, the rock and roller) and the Four Tops (Mom, from Detroit).
And we listen to all that stuff today with our 4 year old, plus all the alternative rock and new wave and punk we were into in the 1980s and 1990s. It's the music that will be constant throughout his life, just like I still have CCR on my playlists along side The White Stripes or whatever.
You quoted me. My parents were younger; they were both born in '46 and had me in '69 (right out of college). I became a big Rolling Stones fan because of my dad's records... right through their "disco" phase... "Tattoo You" and "Undercover of the Night"... all that stuff. And I don't think I would have loved Bowie and Lou Reed as much as I did if it weren't for my early exposure.
Yes, I loved growing up with the juxtaposition of intellect and fluff. The Smiths... Love the Smiths. http://www.metrolyrics.com/the-smiths-how-soon-is-now-the-smiths-ml-video-yea.html
Anonymous wrote:No wonder we were hyper back then. The red dye in Kool Aid has been linked to ADHD.
Anonymous wrote:When I was really little I loved Captain Kangaroo. And of course Sesame Street and Electric Company.
Random: anyone remember an old sitcom called "Tabitha," which was a spin off of Bewitched... it was Samantha's daughter all grown up?
Also a sitcom called Angie, which starred the girl who got "taken advantage of" in Saturday Night Fever?
And finally anyone watch Zoom? It was on the PBS channel in Massachusetts in the 70s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you had "cool" parents, you knew about cool 60s and 70s music too. While my mom listened to Joan Baez and other folk music, my dad had a ton of cool old records like Cream, Led Zeppelin, Velvet Underground, The Rolling Stones, even some early Bowie. And Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys. I loved going through his record collection and of course we had a huge cabinet stereo. We also knew a ton about disco and somehow had a ton of disco 8 tracks.
+1 . I'm a gen x who grew up on Fleetwood Mac, the Eagles, Beach Boys, Jim Croce, all the classic rock; my parents were older and so also liked older music like Buddy Holly (dad, the rock and roller) and the Four Tops (Mom, from Detroit).
And we listen to all that stuff today with our 4 year old, plus all the alternative rock and new wave and punk we were into in the 1980s and 1990s. It's the music that will be constant throughout his life, just like I still have CCR on my playlists along side The White Stripes or whatever.
You quoted me. My parents were younger; they were both born in '46 and had me in '69 (right out of college). I became a big Rolling Stones fan because of my dad's records... right through their "disco" phase... "Tattoo You" and "Undercover of the Night"... all that stuff. And I don't think I would have loved Bowie and Lou Reed as much as I did if it weren't for my early exposure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you had "cool" parents, you knew about cool 60s and 70s music too. While my mom listened to Joan Baez and other folk music, my dad had a ton of cool old records like Cream, Led Zeppelin, Velvet Underground, The Rolling Stones, even some early Bowie. And Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys. I loved going through his record collection and of course we had a huge cabinet stereo. We also knew a ton about disco and somehow had a ton of disco 8 tracks.
+1 . I'm a gen x who grew up on Fleetwood Mac, the Eagles, Beach Boys, Jim Croce, all the classic rock; my parents were older and so also liked older music like Buddy Holly (dad, the rock and roller) and the Four Tops (Mom, from Detroit).
And we listen to all that stuff today with our 4 year old, plus all the alternative rock and new wave and punk we were into in the 1980s and 1990s. It's the music that will be constant throughout his life, just like I still have CCR on my playlists along side The White Stripes or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you had "cool" parents, you knew about cool 60s and 70s music too. While my mom listened to Joan Baez and other folk music, my dad had a ton of cool old records like Cream, Led Zeppelin, Velvet Underground, The Rolling Stones, even some early Bowie. And Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys. I loved going through his record collection and of course we had a huge cabinet stereo. We also knew a ton about disco and somehow had a ton of disco 8 tracks.
+1 . I'm a gen x who grew up on Fleetwood Mac, the Eagles, Beach Boys, Jim Croce, all the classic rock; my parents were older and so also liked older music like Buddy Holly (dad, the rock and roller) and the Four Tops (Mom, from Detroit).
And we listen to all that stuff today with our 4 year old, plus all the alternative rock and new wave and punk we were into in the 1980s and 1990s. It's the music that will be constant throughout his life, just like I still have CCR on my playlists along side The White Stripes or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:If you had "cool" parents, you knew about cool 60s and 70s music too. While my mom listened to Joan Baez and other folk music, my dad had a ton of cool old records like Cream, Led Zeppelin, Velvet Underground, The Rolling Stones, even some early Bowie. And Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys. I loved going through his record collection and of course we had a huge cabinet stereo. We also knew a ton about disco and somehow had a ton of disco 8 tracks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ironic part of the 80s was having a Hollywood cowboy as a President. American politics amaze me.
Hollywood manufactures reality.