billyporter
Senior Member
what is your music history, specifically music tha first got you in to music? plus the 'special' big bands that have been in your life?
i have 3 older brothers and i often would listen to their singles on an old plastic, mono record player! it was the sixties.
stuff like the stones, beatles and traffic, they are 3 bands i can recall.
btw, even at that young age i knew the beatles were gods! ringo!!!
going forward a few years when i was probably around 12 years old.
my parents bought me a cheap stereo[plastic of course!]
the first record i ever got[was going to say bought but obviously my mum had the money to buy the records.] was double barrel by dave and ansill collins. its a reggae song and i love it[still], and i don't even like reggae!
i really liked the british glam rock music which was happening around '72 i think.
i got mainly singles back then, they were the big things to get. so i had stuff by the sweet, slade, bowie, t.rex, wizzard, alvin stardust, gary glitter, and other 45s i can't remember now.
the only albums i recall having then were slade alive and slayed?
i loved slade big-time, and still believe they were the best band of the glam period. unfortunately they get little respect unlike bolan and bowie.
i think part of that is because they wore incredibly ridiculous outfits and the guitarist had the kind of haircut that makes people want to punch him!
however years later they did start getting praise by modern musicians.
i think that because all those artists back then released so many singles they were thought to be just that, a singles band.
of course everyone knows that singles don't contain great music, don't we?
i liked slade because they sounded rough, as did noddy's voice. and you noticed the loud guitars.
they must of been the 'training ground' for me to end up loving hard rock.
i liked them in their golden period, i suppose.
coz i luv you up to, [and not including] the slade in flame film/album. they'd lost it by then and didn't sound the same to me.
take me ba'k 'ome is my favourite slade song.
a couple of years later:
one day i heard queen and they sounded so much different than any other group i had heard. that would of been 73 or 74.
one thing i liked about them was that they'd often surprize. all of a sudden they'd play a chord which you weren't expecting and it would sound 'wrong.'
the first 3 queen lps are my favourite, especially queen 2.
back then in the record shops they'd be in the heavy rock section.
with every new queen lp i listened out for brians guitar in particular. i prefer the heavy queen so i wanted lots of guitar solos. which i never really got!
i had all their albums for years but i've gotten rid of the game and hot space and recorded just the songs i like on them.[which weren't many!]
i never saw them live but i did see brian live many years later.
once queen had 'died' and weren't releasing music i became aware of a band mentioned in kerrang! magazine, king's x.
they were the magazine's band of the year. when a reviewer mentioned which artists influenced the band one name that popped up was queen. its only because of that, that i checked them out.
i had read that they sounded unique, and they were. they often put 'wrong' chords in their songs too. they'd do the unexpected.
plus they were a heavy band that could make catchy, melodic music.
their early producer described them as being a mix of sabbath, the beatles, hendrix, with a dash of james brown.
their peak has long gone unfortunately. like all bands that period doesn't last forever.
i still get their new albums but they don't surprize any longer. heard it all before. mind you they made a lot of records within that peak back then.
as i've gotten older i don't watch any music shows anymore or buy music magazines.[which i used to buy many.]
when i have seen a video its a case of i've heard it all before, plus image is the main thing with artists these days, especially for the girls.
the last band that turned me on was fleet foxes.
along the way i've had many other records by different artists.
one being jeff beck.
i was in a 2nd hand record shop in nz years ago, browsing. i saw the there and back lp which looked good. although i'd heard of jeff i hadn't heard his stuff.
i asked the assistant to play the record while i looked around the shop. as soon as i heard the first track i recall thinking, 'my god! this is the music i've been waiting all my life for!!!'
i was blown away and quickly went and bought it having only heard a couple of minutes of the opening song.
actually it was in the same shop that i heard the track 'letting go' by ufo. again it blew me away, it was fantastic, and i bought it.
after that i bought all their lps up to that point in time.
the other 'big' band for me was thin lizzy. i bought all their music as well.
my musical league table would be:
the beatles.[they are permanently at the top. seeing them makes me emotional actually! they are truly the greatest band of all time.]
just below them:
queen and king's x
a fraction below them:
thin lizzy.
then all the others.
i have 3 older brothers and i often would listen to their singles on an old plastic, mono record player! it was the sixties.
stuff like the stones, beatles and traffic, they are 3 bands i can recall.
btw, even at that young age i knew the beatles were gods! ringo!!!
going forward a few years when i was probably around 12 years old.
my parents bought me a cheap stereo[plastic of course!]
the first record i ever got[was going to say bought but obviously my mum had the money to buy the records.] was double barrel by dave and ansill collins. its a reggae song and i love it[still], and i don't even like reggae!
i really liked the british glam rock music which was happening around '72 i think.
i got mainly singles back then, they were the big things to get. so i had stuff by the sweet, slade, bowie, t.rex, wizzard, alvin stardust, gary glitter, and other 45s i can't remember now.
the only albums i recall having then were slade alive and slayed?
i loved slade big-time, and still believe they were the best band of the glam period. unfortunately they get little respect unlike bolan and bowie.
i think part of that is because they wore incredibly ridiculous outfits and the guitarist had the kind of haircut that makes people want to punch him!
however years later they did start getting praise by modern musicians.
i think that because all those artists back then released so many singles they were thought to be just that, a singles band.
of course everyone knows that singles don't contain great music, don't we?
i liked slade because they sounded rough, as did noddy's voice. and you noticed the loud guitars.
they must of been the 'training ground' for me to end up loving hard rock.
i liked them in their golden period, i suppose.
coz i luv you up to, [and not including] the slade in flame film/album. they'd lost it by then and didn't sound the same to me.
take me ba'k 'ome is my favourite slade song.
a couple of years later:
one day i heard queen and they sounded so much different than any other group i had heard. that would of been 73 or 74.
one thing i liked about them was that they'd often surprize. all of a sudden they'd play a chord which you weren't expecting and it would sound 'wrong.'
the first 3 queen lps are my favourite, especially queen 2.
back then in the record shops they'd be in the heavy rock section.
with every new queen lp i listened out for brians guitar in particular. i prefer the heavy queen so i wanted lots of guitar solos. which i never really got!
i had all their albums for years but i've gotten rid of the game and hot space and recorded just the songs i like on them.[which weren't many!]
i never saw them live but i did see brian live many years later.
once queen had 'died' and weren't releasing music i became aware of a band mentioned in kerrang! magazine, king's x.
they were the magazine's band of the year. when a reviewer mentioned which artists influenced the band one name that popped up was queen. its only because of that, that i checked them out.
i had read that they sounded unique, and they were. they often put 'wrong' chords in their songs too. they'd do the unexpected.
plus they were a heavy band that could make catchy, melodic music.
their early producer described them as being a mix of sabbath, the beatles, hendrix, with a dash of james brown.
their peak has long gone unfortunately. like all bands that period doesn't last forever.
i still get their new albums but they don't surprize any longer. heard it all before. mind you they made a lot of records within that peak back then.
as i've gotten older i don't watch any music shows anymore or buy music magazines.[which i used to buy many.]
when i have seen a video its a case of i've heard it all before, plus image is the main thing with artists these days, especially for the girls.
the last band that turned me on was fleet foxes.
along the way i've had many other records by different artists.
one being jeff beck.
i was in a 2nd hand record shop in nz years ago, browsing. i saw the there and back lp which looked good. although i'd heard of jeff i hadn't heard his stuff.
i asked the assistant to play the record while i looked around the shop. as soon as i heard the first track i recall thinking, 'my god! this is the music i've been waiting all my life for!!!'
i was blown away and quickly went and bought it having only heard a couple of minutes of the opening song.
actually it was in the same shop that i heard the track 'letting go' by ufo. again it blew me away, it was fantastic, and i bought it.
after that i bought all their lps up to that point in time.
the other 'big' band for me was thin lizzy. i bought all their music as well.
my musical league table would be:
the beatles.[they are permanently at the top. seeing them makes me emotional actually! they are truly the greatest band of all time.]
just below them:
queen and king's x
a fraction below them:
thin lizzy.
then all the others.

.. I thought it was the coolest song ever, the mix of soprano female vox, with the big strings and the hard riffs was a fresh and bombastic mix for me back then jeje... Thanks to them I kept on discovering a plethora of other Rock and Metal bands... It's also when I discovered my musical mommy, Tori Amos. It was love at first listen to be honest...Then from there I kept discovering all these other great female musicians from the 90s like Fiona Apple, Puala Cole, Sarah McLachlan, Plumb and Charlotte etc... and not too long ago I started getting into Classic Rock and Blues. It's why I joined these forums 
