Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread katahdin

Then later that week there was one other song he jumped around too and 
loved it almost as much as Thousand dollar car - it was The
BottleRockets 
Welfare Music.

This kid knows what he likes so I finally bought him his first rock 
and roll cd 

There's something about the BoRox that's so damn simple, basic and catchy
that kids love 'em. My two boys (8  4) go wild over 'em, so wild that
I've sworn that if they ever do an instore or some other gig in Philly
that's not a smoky bar at midnight, I'm going to take my 8-yr-old to see
them. Every time he finds out I'm going to see them, he asks with a sad
look on his face, "Is this another place you have to be 21 to get into?"
So if any of you Doolittle folk on this list wanna schedule a Philly
instore next time they're in town, there'll be at least 2 of us there. :)

Steve Kirsch
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread stuart



[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Then later that week there was one other song he jumped around too and
 loved it almost as much as Thousand dollar car - it was The
 BottleRockets
 Welfare Music.
 
 This kid knows what he likes so I finally bought him his first rock
 and roll cd

 There's something about the BoRox that's so damn simple, basic and catchy
 that kids love 'em. My two boys (8  4) go wild over 'em, so wild that
 I've sworn that if they ever do an instore or some other gig in Philly
 that's not a smoky bar at midnight, I'm going to take my 8-yr-old to see
 them. Every time he finds out I'm going to see them, he asks with a sad
 look on his face, "Is this another place you have to be 21 to get into?"
 So if any of you Doolittle folk on this list wanna schedule a Philly
 instore next time they're in town, there'll be at least 2 of us there. :)

I caught em at an in-store and it was great.  The place was full of kids in
the 2-12 range and they loved em.  Its the  music of course, although the
appearance of  Henneman and Parr (especially) on the day after the big rock
show of the night before is also probably pretty mezmerizing to a kid. g

Stuart
np: Earle/McCoury   This might get to listening to bluegrass again.

btw.  anyone know what Buddy Miller is up to?



Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread Ndubb

 Anyway, I was strumming and playing a Dylan tune, a Neil Young tune, Gram
 Parsons, Husker Du, Woodie Guthrie,  whatever. 

One of the things is not like the other. Ain't it cool that Husker Du can be
lumped in with these others? That's what No Depression means to me. I think.

NW



Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread Jeanne Berrong

 There's something about the BoRox that's so damn simple, basic and catchy
 that kids love 'em.

Uh, my four year old is in the other room singing "Kit Kat Clock."  Forget
Barney and them Teletubbies, give the BoRox their own PBS morning show!




Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread Dave Purcell

Some guy named Neal wrote:

  Anyway, I was strumming and playing a Dylan tune, a Neil Young tune, Gram
  Parsons, Husker Du, Woodie Guthrie,  whatever. 
 
 One of the things is not like the other. Ain't it cool that Husker Du can be
 lumped in with these others? That's what No Depression means to me. I think.

Exactly. The Husker stuff works quite well stripped down to the 
basics. A friend of mine used to throw picking parties full of the 
kinds of people who give folk a bad name -- lots of guys playing 
bad versions of Blackbird and The Weight. I used to love playing 
stuff like Don't Want To Know If You Are Lonely.

Dave, who once played some 80s indie rock classics on his living 
room floor with some guy named Neal


***
Dave Purcell, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Northern Ky Roots Music: http://w3.one.net/~newport
Twangfest: http://www.twangfest.com



Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread Will Miner



On Fri, 26 Mar 1999, Dave Purcell wrote:

 Exactly. The Husker stuff works quite well stripped down to the 
 basics ... snip ... I used to love playing 
 stuff like Don't Want To Know If You Are Lonely.


I always have thought that if a song is a great song it should still work
on just a bare acoustic guitar.  The only exceptions are songs that are
really better done on a bare acoustic piano.  The Huskers were once upon 
a time some pretty good songwriters, and that's why I'd bet you could 
play a Huskers song in the middle of songs by Dylan, Woody, Neil Young 
and so on and if you didnt know the song you'd never guess.

Will Miner
Denver, CO



Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread Carl Abraham Zimring

Excerpts from internet.listserv.postcard2: 26-Mar-99 Re: What are the
kids liste.. by Will [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 The Huskers were once upon 
 a time some pretty good songwriters, and that's why I'd bet you could 
 play a Huskers song in the middle of songs by Dylan, Woody, Neil Young 
 and so on and if you didnt know the song you'd never guess

Another plus for the Huskers is that Grant Hart's songs (like Don't Want
To Know If You Are Lonely) are both catchy and relatively simple to
play.  Oftentimes he'd use no more than four chords.

Dunno that the "if a song is a great song it should still work
on just a bare acoustic guitar" rule is a universal one, though I agree
with it much of the time.  Aside from LL Cool J's amazing acoustic
rendition of "Mama Said Knock You Out", there aren't a whole lot of
hiphop songs that would sound good on acoustic guitar.  

Carl Z. 



RE: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread Michele Flannery

Speaking of LL Cool J accoustic hip hop songs, another good one:

Luka Bloom's version of "I Need Love"

-Original Message-
From: Carl Abraham Zimring [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, March 26, 1999 1:58 PM
To: passenger side
Subject: Re: What are the kids listening to today?


Excerpts from internet.listserv.postcard2:  

Dunno that the "if a song is a great song it should still work
on just a bare acoustic guitar" rule is a universal one, though I agree
with it much of the time.  Aside from LL Cool J's amazing acoustic
rendition of "Mama Said Knock You Out", there aren't a whole lot of
hiphop songs that would sound good on acoustic guitar.  

Carl Z. 



Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread Will Miner



On Fri, 26 Mar 1999, Carl Abraham Zimring wrote:

 Dunno that the "if a song is a great song it should still work
 on just a bare acoustic guitar" rule is a universal one, though I agree
 with it much of the time.  Aside from LL Cool J's amazing acoustic
 rendition of "Mama Said Knock You Out", there aren't a whole lot of
 hiphop songs that would sound good on acoustic guitar.  


Well, and I did mean to make a distinction between "a great song" and "a
great record."  A lot of great records are made with what are otherwise
weak songs or songs not at all.  Probably a lot of hip-hop would fall into
that category because the medium isnt based around songs so much as a kind
of aural graffiti art.  Still, it works a lot of times you wouldnt expect. 
For example, I have a CD single of the Fugees' "Vocab," which consists of
about six versions of the song, one of which is acoustic; that's the best
version, I think.  I can also imagine getting away with bluesy versions of
"Fight the Power" or "The Message," to name a couple off the top of my
head. 


Will Miner
Denver, CO



Re: What are the kids listening to today?

1999-03-26 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 3/26/99 8:22:47 PM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Still, it works a lot of times you wouldnt expect. 
 For example, I have a CD single of the Fugees' "Vocab," which consists of
 about six versions of the song, one of which is acoustic; that's the best
 version, I think.  I can also imagine getting away with bluesy versions of
 "Fight the Power" or "The Message," to name a couple off the top of my
 head.  

Dionne Farris did an acoustic version of her hit "I Know" that was pure
acoustic funky soul.

There is a videotape of Seal doing acoustic versions of some of the dance
songs from his first album, and many of his CD singles have acoustic versions
of his hits in addition to non-album tracks. I can't think of a single one
that doesn't work amazingly well in that arrangement. Of course, I think Seal
rules, so I may be biased.

Seal, I mean Slim