5-10-15-20 (Your Music Through The Years)

5 - Handel's Messiah
I don't have many early memories but music at that age would be what my Dad played and he was and still is a classical nut. He would drag me to the nearby cathedral every Advent to listen to Handel's Messiah. I hated it then and resist it still now but would probably hum/sing along to all the tunes.






10 - Vanilla Ice - Ice Ice Baby
At the age of 10, I was on the cusp of getting into music myself. But I don't think I was quite there. I discovered The Stone Roses first and then shortly after that Nirvana so I'm guessing 1991 and 12 was when I first really got going. I remember about the age of 10 being asked what my favourite music was and answering The Cure as my step-sister loved them. But it was a lie - even though she was into cool things like them and the Smiths I was all about Kylie Minogue, Bananarama, and this song - which is the first (and almost the only) one I ever learned all the lyrics to.






15 - The Charlatans - Just When You're Thinking Things Over
1994 is probably the key year for me in music growing up. So many key albums came out then - Oasis' Definitely Maybe, Jeff Buckley's Grace, Counting Crows' August and Everything After, Dan Penn's Do Right Man - and it was also the first year I started going to go gigs (and I saw all of them in the next 12 months except for Dan Penn). But at that age, what I really wanted was to be Tim Burgess. I used to sing this dressed up in a parka in front of the mirror. I loved and still love the Charlatans and this is still one of my favourite songs of them.






20 - Doobie Bros - Long Train Runnin'
I moved to Paris when I was 20 and had the time of my life. Nothing to do with my degree, which was long hours and pretty horrible. But largely to do with working in a pub, making friends, drinking a lot, and getting into girls in a big way. We had several "theme" tunes in the pub including I Can See Clearly Now, Misirlou, and Get Miles by Gomez. But if ever I need picking up this was the song I played - the anthem to many a hedonistic night.




25 - Gillian Welch - Revelator
By 25, I had a job, which included going to gigs 4-5 nights a week, mostly to review them. I used to take mates and dates as my plus one and Gillian Welch was always my lucky charm. When she was upgraded from support act to main and only band at one gig two years before, I asked a girl out I knew during the interval and it went well after that. I saw Gillian in Milton Keynes the next year and then at Shepherds Bush Empire in 2004. The last gig was special as she played I Dream A Highway as an encore. But my favourite of hers - perhaps my favourite song, full stop - is this one.






30 - Ben Folds - Gracie
A few days before I turned 30, my son was born and my life changed. I played this song on the way home from the hospital at 2 or 3am.





35 - Poly-Rythmo - Aihe Ni Kpe We
I've listened to west African music ever since I got into music. But I only started buying original vinyl from there in 2014 - I'm not really sure how I found out about it, but suddenly it was almost all I was buying. This, my favourite Poly-Rythmo song, is from the first album of theirs I bought that year for the princely sum of €6. I've upgraded my copy since then and still love it.





40 - Muriel Grossmann - Reverence
Thanks to this forum, my love of jazz - which was always there, but never as a focus area - really sparked into life. Muriel Grossmann has made my past two albums of the year, including Reverence, and her next release out in December is going to be close for 2020. The rest of my family hate this kind of music, but I adore it.

 
Realized tonight that I’m almost eligible for an update to my list. I’m going to wait a few months, but I’ve got a good idea of what my selection for 50 is going to be.

Anybody else due for an update to a previous post? Any newer members want to share their history?
 
Realized tonight that I’m almost eligible for an update to my list. I’m going to wait a few months, but I’ve got a good idea of what my selection for 50 is going to be.

Anybody else due for an update to a previous post? Any newer members want to share their history?
Glad you bumped this, I meant to do this back then, I think I'll work on it today.
 
I did five and got no further…. I should um… work on that.

Admittedly this is hard … 10 and 15 are going to be difficult to think about what I was listening to versus what I listen to now…
 
1978... 5... I’m fairly certain I got my first record player when I was six, so I’m fudging a little bit here. For Christmas I got a portable turntable. It had a denim cover that looked like a jeans jacket and I got a few forty fives. I got the Beatles “Lady Madonna” b/w “The Inner Light” and “Hey Jude” b/w “Revolution”. I also got KISS “Beth” b/w “Detroit Rock City” Damn it’s been ages since I listened to Destroyer, I should get a copy of that on vinyl. Anyhow, clearly, this is where a life long obsession with music, The Beatles, and vinyl started. I’ve still got these forty fives too. I need to rescue them from my parents attic. Even then it was the burgeoning eclecticism that would engulf my listening room later in life. Obviously, my parents dug the Beatles. I’m not sure that they knew that Paul wrote Beth and I’m absolutely certain they had never heard Detroit Rock City and really only have themselves to blame for the Guns N Roses, Metallica and Voivod that would blast from my cheap Roses’ purchased stereo in high school. This is the root. The beginning of the weird.



Here’s that turntable:

10 - 1983

I bought my first full albums on cassette in w cc 1982. Pac-Man Fever by Buckner & Garcia and Eye of the Tiger by Survivor. I don’t own those physicalarkalbums anymore. I believe I have Survivor in my mp3 collection. That Christmas, I got the first album that spoke to me as an album (also on cassette and lost or ruined years ago)… it was in fact a behemoth and landmark album. I remember dancing to it in the fifth grade. While I no longer have that Cassette, I’ve had a copy ever since and it was one of the first discographies I truly worked on when I started doing that when I became a collector during the CD era. I had a vinyl copy that I got rid of when I offloaded my Ryan Adams and Aerosmith records after we found out about Mr Adams being a bit of a scumbag. I still have a full run in CD.

Michael Jackson - Thriller. The song that stands out as shaping both my musical taste and also just being fascinating was “Billy Jean”

 
5) Michael Jackson – Thriller
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While I've mostly had nothing to do with the man or his music for years now, there is absolutely no denying that this was a formative album of my young childhood. It's the one non-Children's record I remember having in the collection that was  mine! And I played it a LOT. In a nice segue to future me, it was around the transition from 5 to 6 that I got my copy of "Weird Al" Yankovic In 3-D on cassette which, of course, featured the "Beat It" parody, "Eat It."

10) MC Hammer – Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em
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...and I ain't ashamed to admit it, either! Thankfully my taste in Hip Hop drastically improved over the next few years, but I played the everloving shit out of this tape in the meanwhile. I also had Let's Get It Started and Too Legit To Quit tapes and even picked up The Funky Headhunter, with its Dogg Pound feature, on CD before ultimately moving away from the Hammer. When rumors abounded of an album on Death Row Records, I was curious but by no means chomping at the bit for it.

15) Ol' Dirty Bastard – Return To The 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version
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Game changer. My gateway to the Wu. Thanks to the inclusion of "Dirty Dancing" on the soundtrack to the Jerkey Boys movie ODB became an instant favourite for me, but I remember this CD costing me quite a bit since it wasn't one of the top albums in suburban southwestern BC when it came out. Everything about ODB appealed to me, his unpredictable flow and antics and seeming "just don't give a flying fuck" attitude. This album put me all-in for anything Wu-Tang related over the next few years and remains, to this day, my absolute favourite Wu release.


To be continued...
 
5) Michael Jackson – Thriller
View attachment 199048
While I've mostly had nothing to do with the man or his music for years now, there is absolutely no denying that this was a formative album of my young childhood. It's the one non-Children's record I remember having in the collection that was  mine! And I played it a LOT. In a nice segue to future me, it was around the transition from 5 to 6 that I got my copy of "Weird Al" Yankovic In 3-D on cassette which, of course, featured the "Beat It" parody, "Eat It."

10) MC Hammer – Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em
View attachment 199049

...and I ain't ashamed to admit it, either! Thankfully my taste in Hip Hop drastically improved over the next few years, but I played the everloving shit out of this tape in the meanwhile. I also had Let's Get It Started and Too Legit To Quit tapes and even picked up The Funky Headhunter, with its Dogg Pound feature, on CD before ultimately moving away from the Hammer. When rumors abounded of an album on Death Row Records, I was curious but by no means chomping at the bit for it.

15) Ol' Dirty Bastard – Return To The 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version
View attachment 199051

Game changer. My gateway to the Wu. Thanks to the inclusion of "Dirty Dancing" on the soundtrack to the Jerkey Boys movie ODB became an instant favourite for me, but I remember this CD costing me quite a bit since it wasn't one of the top albums in suburban southwestern BC when it came out. Everything about ODB appealed to me, his unpredictable flow and antics and seeming "just don't give a flying fuck" attitude. This album put me all-in for anything Wu-Tang related over the next few years and remains, to this day, my absolute favourite Wu release.


To be continued...

20) Eminem – The Marshall Mathers LP
1000002637.jpg
Released during my nearly half dozen years as a full Eminem stan this was absolutely pinnacle. I've shared elsewhere about hearing The Slim Shady EP well before he hit the mainstream thanks to the magic of RealPlayer and I was hooked – for a few years I tried to get my hands on absolutely anything of his that was available in Canada. This album officially cemented Em's place in the tip lyricists of hip hop canon. Hell it spawned the now mainstream term "stan!" And while it didn't shy away from the absolute shock value he reveled in on his debut, there was much more nuance and introspection here — some maturity to his immaturity. Love it or hate it, it's an absolute beast of an album!

25) Geoff Berner – Whiskey Rabbi
1000002636.jpg
Here we enter the era where I listened to far more local music than industry stuff, and Geoff Berner became an instant favourite the first time I saw him a few months before the release of this album. He is officially the musician I have seen the most live (that I haven't toured with, anyway), and holds the hilarious and dubious honour of being the only person I've ever skipped my own set at a festival to see (only one person, a friend I'd not seen in a year or two, showed up for my set and she was fully game to join me in going to watch Geoff instead!) This album was the first of a trio of Trio albums that really did a great job of capturing the live energy you could expect from a live set, and to this day he remains to many The Whiskey Rabbi.

30) Fish & Bird – Left Brain Blues
1000002635.jpg

Full disclosure: I performed at the album release show for this and it remains a favourite gig of mine. This marked the beginning of the end of Fish & Bird as an Indie/Trad Folk duo and the beginning of the beginning of Fish & Bird as a 5-piece Indie Folk band. If I recall correctly all 3 future band members appear at points on this release, which contains some of my all-time favourite lyrics from Taylor Ashton, most notably on "Mark My Grave" and "My Garden." Adam Iredale-Gray's instrumental "Road To Mortlach" also holds a place in my heart as I was in the van with him and our other friends' band he was touring with when we all visited Mortlach, Saskatchewan (a village with population between 250 and 275) for the first time at the invitation of fans of the band who did not think they would be able to make the show in Regina the next night. Over the next couple of years Adam I would both return to Mortlach a few times on separate tours. If I were ever to start a record club or label, this would be an album I'd love to put out.

35) Jason Isbell – Something More Than Free
1000002638.jpg

I ran into a friend at another friend's show in Vancouver shortly before this was released. He'd hitchhiker all the way from Winnipeg just to be at the show. When we were catching up outside over a smoke we got to talking music and he mentioned he was loving the last couple of things Jason Isbell had put out. I told him I was unfamiliar and he mentioned he'd been in Drive-By Truckers – in fact, he'd written and sung one of my absolute favourite DBT tunes ("Danko/Manuel" - by this point I'd only ever listened to DBT on torrented mp3s and wasn't yet richly familiar with the band's history or members.) The next day I nursed my hangover watching Isbell videos. When this album came out a week or two later it pretty much instantly became my favourite release of the year, and Isbell has stayed firmly at the top end of my favourite artists since.

40) Shabaka & The Ancestors – We Are Sent Here By History
1000002639.jpg

Another game changer moment for me. Also, this makes me miss Google Play Music, which I still think had better algorithms than Stupify, and introduced me to some amazing stuff. Case in point. A single for this showed up in my feed shortly before release. With absolutely zero context, but figuring the name and art were awesome I checked it out and quite enjoyed it. A few weeks later the album dropped and tore my world wide open again — I fell in love with not only this album, but all things Shabaka and, by extension, the South London scene. I'd just started buying records a few weeks before this came out, and my quest to get any and everything Shabaka played on strongly guided the first year and a half or so of my collection, while simultaneously introducing me to a whole ton of other players and albums I've come to love along the way. I'm sad I've missed the opportunity to see him play saxophone live, but I'll be forever grateful for so many doors of sound he helped open for me!
 
20) Eminem – The Marshall Mathers LP
View attachment 199058
Released during my nearly half dozen years as a full Eminem stan this was absolutely pinnacle. I've shared elsewhere about hearing The Slim Shady EP well before he hit the mainstream thanks to the magic of RealPlayer and I was hooked – for a few years I tried to get my hands on absolutely anything of his that was available in Canada. This album officially cemented Em's place in the tip lyricists of hip hop canon. Hell it spawned the now mainstream term "stan!" And while it didn't shy away from the absolute shock value he reveled in on his debut, there was much more nuance and introspection here — some maturity to his immaturity. Love it or hate it, it's an absolute beast of an album!

25) Geoff Berner – Whiskey Rabbi
View attachment 199059
Here we enter the era where I listened to far more local music than industry stuff, and Geoff Berner became an instant favourite the first time I saw him a few months before the release of this album. He is officially the musician I have seen the most live (that I haven't toured with, anyway), and holds the hilarious and dubious honour of being the only person I've ever skipped my own set at a festival to see (only one person, a friend I'd not seen in a year or two, showed up for my set and she was fully game to join me in going to watch Geoff instead!) This album was the first of a trio of Trio albums that really did a great job of capturing the live energy you could expect from a live set, and to this day he remains to many The Whiskey Rabbi.

30) Fish & Bird – Left Brain Blues
View attachment 199062

Full disclosure: I performed at the album release show for this and it remains a favourite gig of mine. This marked the beginning of the end of Fish & Bird as an Indie/Trad Folk duo and the beginning of the beginning of Fish & Bird as a 5-piece Indie Folk band. If I recall correctly all 3 future band members appear at points on this release, which contains some of my all-time favourite lyrics from Taylor Ashton, most notably on "Mark My Grave" and "My Garden." Adam Iredale-Gray's instrumental "Road To Mortlach" also holds a place in my heart as I was in the van with him and our other friends' band he was touring with when we all visited Mortlach, Saskatchewan (a village with population between 250 and 275) for the first time at the invitation of fans of the band who did not think they would be able to make the show in Regina the next night. Over the next couple of years Adam I would both return to Mortlach a few times on separate tours. If I were ever to start a record club or label, this would be an album I'd love to put out.

35) Jason Isbell – Something More Than Free
View attachment 199065

I ran into a friend at another friend's show in Vancouver shortly before this was released. He'd hitchhiker all the way from Winnipeg just to be at the show. When we were catching up outside over a smoke we got to talking music and he mentioned he was loving the last couple of things Jason Isbell had put out. I told him I was unfamiliar and he mentioned he'd been in Drive-By Truckers – in fact, he'd written and sung one of my absolute favourite DBT tunes ("Danko/Manuel" - by this point I'd only ever listened to DBT on torrented mp3s and wasn't yet richly familiar with the band's history or members.) The next day I nursed my hangover watching Isbell videos. When this album came out a week or two later it pretty much instantly became my favourite release of the year, and Isbell has stayed firmly at the top end of my favourite artists since.

40) Shabaka & The Ancestors – We Are Sent Here By History
View attachment 199068

Another game changer moment for me. Also, this makes me miss Google Play Music, which I still think had better algorithms than Stupify, and introduced me to some amazing stuff. Case in point. A single for this showed up in my feed shortly before release. With absolutely zero context, but figuring the name and art were awesome I checked it out and quite enjoyed it. A few weeks later the album dropped and tore my world wide open again — I fell in love with not only this album, but all things Shabaka and, by extension, the South London scene. I'd just started buying records a few weeks before this came out, and my quest to get any and everything Shabaka played on strongly guided the first year and a half or so of my collection, while simultaneously introducing me to a whole ton of other players and albums I've come to love along the way. I'm sad I've missed the opportunity to see him play saxophone live, but I'll be forever grateful for so many doors of sound he helped open for me!
Love the details and stories you included in your write-ups!
 
Wow I can’t believe I haven’t posted in here the first go around. Used to love, I think it was Pitchfork, who did this feature back in the day. I’ll do it next week on my work computer which will help kill a half hour.
 
Wow I can’t believe I haven’t posted in here the first go around. Used to love, I think it was Pitchfork, who did this feature back in the day. I’ll do it next week on my work computer which will help kill a half hour.
They still do it from time to time.
 
10 - 1983

I bought my first full albums on cassette in w cc 1982. Pac-Man Fever by Buckner & Garcia and Eye of the Tiger by Survivor. I don’t own those physicalarkalbums anymore. I believe I have Survivor in my mp3 collection. That Christmas, I got the first album that spoke to me as an album (also on cassette and lost or ruined years ago)… it was in fact a behemoth and landmark album. I remember dancing to it in the fifth grade. While I no longer have that Cassette, I’ve had a copy ever since and it was one of the first discographies I truly worked on when I started doing that when I became a collector during the CD era. I had a vinyl copy that I got rid of when I offloaded my Ryan Adams and Aerosmith records after we found out about Mr Adams being a bit of a scumbag. I still have a full run in CD.

Michael Jackson - Thriller. The song that stands out as shaping both my musical taste and also just being fascinating was “Billy Jean”


15… 1988
1711767226467.jpeg
Metallica - …And Justice For All

I’ve been a bit on a kick recently listening to some of the stuff I listened to when I was a kid. Thinking back to the fact that New Kids on the Block released Hangin’ Tough around the same time and I had that cassette as well. This album was a turning point though. I started to stop buying and listening to pop music. There were a few exceptions, Prince has been a mainstay. Jackson could still do no wrong. Madonna would hold my attention for another decade or so, Wilson Phillips and the ilk would be guilty pleasures until I was much older.

Part of it was that I wanted to listen to more serious music, although a lot of the hair metal that I listened to at the time certainly wasn’t serious. Part of it was that I wanted more from my music.

I do really think listening to this album nonstop had a lot to do with it though. There was a rawness and a musicality that wasn’t being served by Debbie Gibson and this played to the other part of being a teenage boy that say Samantha Fox didn’t. There was also the fact that this was music that my parents told me to turn down and would probably rather I didn’t listen to at all and as a result, it was more alluring.

 
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15… 1988
View attachment 199089
Metallica - …And Justice For All

I’ve been a bit on a kick recently listening to some of the stuff I listened to when I was a kid. Thinking back to the fact that New Kids in the Block released Hangin’ Tough around the same time and I had that cassette as well. This album was a turning point though. I started to stop buying and listening to pop music. There were a few exceptions, Prince has been a mainstay. Jackson could still do no wrong. Madonna would hold my attention for another decade or so, Wilson Phillips and the ilk would be guilty pleasures until I was much older.

Part of it was that I wanted to listen to more serious music, although a lot of the hair metal that I listened to at the time certainly wasn’t serious. Part of it was that I wanted more from my music.

I do really think listening to this album nonstop had a lot to do with it though. There was a rawness and a musicality that wasn’t being served by Debbie Gibson and this played to the other part of being a teenage boy that day Samantha Fox didn’t. There was also the fact that this was music that my parents told me to turn down and would probably rather I didn’t listen to at all and as a result, it was more alluring.


“Hangin’ Tough” to “…And Justice For All”…that’s some serious listening range.
 
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