Favourite Era For Music?

Favourite Era For Music?

Author
Discussion

aaron_2000

Original Poster:

5,407 posts

83 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
Favourite, not best. 80's I'd say is by far the best era for music. My favourite era is without a doubt the 1990's. The KLF, Radiohead, BV3000, Blur, Happy Mondays, 808 State and so many more.

Patch1875

4,894 posts

132 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
90's for me definitely.


anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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Late 70s, class everywhere, Steely Dan, Chic, Tom Petty ATH, etc all making their best music.

Simes205

4,536 posts

228 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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70’s for me.
The start of well engineered and produced music involving the final era of completely live musicians on sessions.
So many great genres but in their less diluted state.
The start of electronica too.....

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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80s definitely. The remnants of punk plus new wave and synth pop. Gave birth to some great bands, many of whom are still going or evolved into solo artists.

Honk

1,985 posts

203 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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70's.

Rock,prog,glam,pure pop,disco,punk,new wave, electronica.

ajprice

27,453 posts

196 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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As a student at the time of 90's indie, it's stuck with me. Radiohead, Placebo, Ash, Garbage, Pulp, Skunk Anansie, Echobelly, Sleeper...

Wacky Racer

38,143 posts

247 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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Early seventies.

Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Wishbone Ash, glam rock, Bowie, Yes, Genesis, Barclay James Harvest.

pvn

351 posts

230 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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1930s. Swing era - Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, Django Reinhardt, Billie Holiday, Early Ella Fitzgerald and many, many more.

TheChampers

4,093 posts

138 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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The bit that started in 1978 with X-Ray Spex’s Germ Free Adolescents and ended in 1990 with Depeche Mode’s Violator. So many great songs, albums, singers and bands in that time; such variety and quality.

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
TheChampers said:
and ended in 1990 with Depeche Mode’s Violator.
Oooh harsh. Songs of faith a devotion was a great album. I think the (all) music died when Alan Wilder left DM.

David A

3,606 posts

251 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
80s 90s

Indie and house / trance.

Huge fan of carter USM and also a load of oakenfold sequel on vinyl for example.

Teenage years and uni years - all associated with various memories. smile

Ozone

3,043 posts

187 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
wormus said:
(all) music died when Alan Wilder Vince Clarke left DM.
whistle

singlecoil

33,545 posts

246 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix both started in the Sixties. The Beatles split and Jimi Hendrix died in 1970. That proves beyond all possible doubt that the Sixties were so far ahead of other decades that nobody up til now has thought that that fact needed to be mentioned.

vournikas

11,703 posts

204 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
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I reckon singlecoil calls it about right about the 60's WRT recent decades, for its combination of rock / pop / folk / psychedelic genres.

But IMVHO the best era for music was the early 1800's to the 1930's. It starts with - oddly - the end of the "classical" era and the beginning of the "romantic" era when the likes of Chopin / Lizst / Schumann / Brahms wrote groundbreaking melodic stuff. It ends with the likes of Vaughan-Williams / Elgar / Debussy etc still writing stuff that had a "nod" to previous composers, but started introducing more "challenging" passages in their music.

After the 1930's, we get to stuff from (for example) Stravinsky and Schoenberg hurl



Simes205

4,536 posts

228 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
vournikas said:
I reckon singlecoil calls it about right about the 60's WRT recent decades, for its combination of rock / pop / folk / psychedelic genres.

But IMVHO the best era for music was the early 1800's to the 1930's. It starts with - oddly - the end of the "classical" era and the beginning of the "romantic" era when the likes of Chopin / Lizst / Schumann / Brahms wrote groundbreaking melodic stuff. It ends with the likes of Vaughan-Williams / Elgar / Debussy etc still writing stuff that had a "nod" to previous composers, but started introducing more "challenging" passages in their music.

After the 1930's, we get to stuff from (for example) Stravinsky and Schoenberg hurl


Well if you want to get into that one then the Js Bach wrote the best counterpoint and that was in the late 17th century!
We still study his harmony so it must be good!!

Hoofy

76,341 posts

282 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
90s for both rock and dance.

vournikas

11,703 posts

204 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
Simes205 said:
vournikas said:
I reckon singlecoil calls it about right about the 60's WRT recent decades, for its combination of rock / pop / folk / psychedelic genres.

But IMVHO the best era for music was the early 1800's to the 1930's. It starts with - oddly - the end of the "classical" era and the beginning of the "romantic" era when the likes of Chopin / Lizst / Schumann / Brahms wrote groundbreaking melodic stuff. It ends with the likes of Vaughan-Williams / Elgar / Debussy etc still writing stuff that had a "nod" to previous composers, but started introducing more "challenging" passages in their music.

After the 1930's, we get to stuff from (for example) Stravinsky and Schoenberg hurl


Well if you want to get into that one then the Js Bach wrote the best counterpoint and that was in the late 17th century!
We still study his harmony so it must be good!!
yes

As I was writing my previous post, the spectre of JSB was crossing my mind as he is on a pedestal - for me - as a composer. But he's the exception in the baroque era. I find the rest of the stuff from that period pretty tiresome; Vivaldi especially.

Hub

6,431 posts

198 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
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I think the answer tends to be the decade you grew up in - your formative teenage years where you find your taste and consume so much music.

For me it's the 90s - Manchester, rave scene, grunge, rock, trip hop, britpop, electronic, trance etc - so much variety, and most of my favourite albums are from that period. Things went a bit more stale in most genres in the '00s and now I've got to the point where I have little clue or interest in popular music, and there is good music being made, but finding it is more difficult because there is just so much of it out there!

marcosgt

11,018 posts

176 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Perhaps people should post their ages along with their 'favourite era' smile

Most people are posting decades, but the 70s covers everything from the Beatles to the Sex Pistols!

Me, I'd say 1977 to 1984.

Of course, that's slap bang in my teens/early twenties, when music was really important as opposed to stuff like mortgages, kids, careers biggrin

As I get older, my taste broadens, but doesn't change much, although I do find myself feeling pangs of nostalgia when I hear disco these days, which I most certainly didn't tolerate in period! biggrin


M