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Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 6:32 am
by rhanson187
taylor - baba from the untited djs of america compilation he did

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:39 am
by lesterdiamond
David wrote:Slam - Positive Education (Soma)

That was the one that did 'it' for me... :wink:
Me too. I love that track, every time I hear it it sounds as good as the 1st time.

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 2:00 pm
by Angstrom
I'd like to thank this thread for making me dig out my copy of Ricochet - which I haven't listened to in about 15 years.

wow, I really was influenced by that album!

I'd forgotten it was a 'Live' album, supposedly completely improvised then edited to fit on vinyl. It goes to show the power of the moog style sequencer for live improvisation.

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 2:28 pm
by mosca
there are 3

human league - being boiled
kraftwerk - the model
the soft cell - tainted love (and after investigation 'sex dwarf')

mosca

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 3:09 pm
by luke_l
Some Justice by Urban Shakedown

Back in the day. Whoever said hardcore will never die was sadly wrong.

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 3:58 pm
by glitchrock-buddha
ILTK wrote:I thought we were supposed to list the one song/band that made us start listening to music and not just treating it as background noise as way back as we could remember...
Well actually that's not exactly what I was thinking, but it's another good question itself. As I said in the first post, Echoes by Pink Floyd was probably my most stand-out song experience which really made me look at music differently, and I thought aha! yes!, but I was in grade 11 and had been listening to lots of music for years. At the time I was heavily into grunge, classic rock, some hip-hop, but that just blew me away.

If I was going way back to the first song I was ever obsessed with and made me love music, I would honestly probably have to say the ghostbusters movie theme song. I actually wanted it so bad I tried recording myself singing it into a tapedeck, but that just wasn't the same, I wasn't sure why. I was about 6 years old I think and stole the cassette from my grade 1 classroom. Man was it worth it.

grb

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 4:07 pm
by markaugust
trigger: desire - 69 (ccraig)

I was like what the f&^%k!?

is this electronical music too?
and people make this on their own?

as for now-now I am pretty blown away with the funk in "Where We At [Version 1]"
from "Henrik Schwarz & Ame & Dixon"

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 5:03 pm
by zpixel
Baba O'Riley - The Who
I heard this in a mall and then promptly passed out

Lucky Man- ELP
Turning point for me. Almost drove off the road that day.

20th Schizoid Man - King Crimson
I didn't know you could sound this wicked.

Wuthering Heights - Kate Bush
Instant woody for me.

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 10:58 pm
by diverdee
Burning spear - Slavery days.
Growing up where I did, with lots of friends of african/carribean ethnicity that song impacted with me on so many levels.
I love reggea & dub anyway - but the lyrics just haunted me.

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:06 pm
by quandry
diverdee wrote:Burning spear - Slavery days.
Growing up where I did, with lots of friends of african/carribean ethnicity that song impacted with me on so many levels.
I love reggea & dub anyway - but the lyrics just haunted me.
classic track on a classic album. His voice is so unique and perfectly suits the darker lyrical material he often deals with. Marcus Garvey and then Dry and Heavy are two classic reggae albums fo sho.

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:17 pm
by ILTK
quandry wrote:classic track on a classic album. His voice is so unique and perfectly suits the darker lyrical material he often deals with. Marcus Garvey and then Dry and Heavy are two classic reggae albums fo sho.
Burning Spear and Steel Pulse are also 2 of my favorite reggae bands from way back, Steel Pulse has such an awesome sense of timing, well except from that horrible fling with rhytm boxes and sequenced stuff they had.

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:23 pm
by quandry
ILTK wrote:Burning Spear and Steel Pulse are also 2 of my favorite reggae bands from way back, Steel Pulse has such an awesome sense of timing, well except from that horrible fling with rhytm boxes and sequenced stuff they had.
Two of my faves for sho, saw Steel Pulse for the first time last year and they were great live. Other favorites of mine Israel Vibrations, Mighty Diamonds, Heptones, Culture, The Etheopians, Ernest Ranglin, Monty Alexander, of course the Wailers, but also Bunny Wailers solo stuff, Hepcat...I like me some reggae bass--familyman and robbie are two of my bass heros.

Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:27 pm
by b0unce
seen horace andy, and the skatalites
koolest old timers I've ever shared a space with

Posted: Wed Jun 14, 2006 12:02 am
by Martyn
Mika wrote:"Echoes" Pink Floyd
Yeah, same here.

That made me want to learn guitar, and turned me into a rock monster until one weary night sitting in my car after work, overlooking the lights of a town I was living in at the time, I heard Papua New Guinea by FSOL on the radio. That took me to another place and I've been into electronicly produced music ever since. I still love that tune.

Posted: Wed Jun 14, 2006 2:07 am
by went to the gypsy
mr roboto

(the urge to destroy is also a creative impulse ...)