A 10-yr old reviews ELP |
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Progfan97402
Prog Reviewer Joined: March 12 2010 Location: Oregon Status: Offline Points: 93 |
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I know at 10 (this would be 1982-83), I wasn't much in to music, more into video games at the time (I owned a TI-99/4a home computer where many of the games available were knockoffs of popular arcade classics like TI-Invaders a knockoff of Space Invaders, MunchMan, a knockoff of Pac-Man or Parsec, a knockoff of Defender, but actually they're all very good in their own right). I think if I heard ELP at the time I might have actually liked some of their songs, usually their more radio friendly stuff like "Lucky Man" or "From the Beginning" (although my 10 year old self would likely cringe at "Still... You Turn Me On"). I can say for sure that their debut would have been too much for my ten year old self, except for "Lucky Man" and perhaps "Knife Edge"). Tarkus probably even more so, as even to this day, I felt the title track was brilliant and side two was a bit hit and miss. I can guarantee that I would have thought King Crimson sucked to my 10 year old self, especially if I heard "Moonchild" then. My parents owned no ELP or Crimson albums so this was stuff I discovered in my later teens, by which I was much more ready for this stuff, having a much more understanding of this material than I ever had at 10. Given I was the right age to been exposed to WAY too much synth pop and hair metal in that decade (the 1980s), I couldn't stand that stuff, so it was nice whenever I heard some good, decent songs from the '60s and '70s being played on the FM rock radio dial at the time.
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28075 |
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I don't remember liking music when I was 10. Probably thought it was for silly girls. I liked Thunderbirds , Action Man and not a lot else at that age. I am little surprised though that anyone finds the comments funny whether fabricated not. There are some very good put downs of ELP but this ain't one of them. |
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jayem
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 21 2006 Location: Switzerland Status: Offline Points: 995 |
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If Daddy had the unfortunate idea of playing a great ELP moment and Mr son was anti everything >
Same with good but not great ELP > If this was "poor" ELP but the boy was anti anyway > If this was uninspired ELP & the boy only a bit annoyed >
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Upbeat Tango Monday
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 10 2015 Location: Buenos Aires Status: Offline Points: 1189 |
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When I was 10 I was into Queen and The Ramones...but I didn't care that much about music. I used to spend my sweet time with my XT monochrome computer playing Maniac Mansion and using PrintMaster. XD (It still works today. Talk about good quality).
BTW, let me ask my ten year old son Spermdownthedrain what he thinks of this review: "Well, daddy, I think it's a fake review. You can't possibly expect a ten year old kid to utter a word like galore. I'd call the laddie's father a big, ugly liar." There you have it. My totally legit son doesn't trust the reviewer. |
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Two random guys agreed to shake hands. Just Because. They felt like it, you know. It was an agreement of sorts...a random agreement.
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Frenetic Zetetic
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 09 2017 Location: Now Status: Offline Points: 9233 |
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This thread reminds me of the time a good friend and I, at a place of business, saw a kid playing 21st Century Schizoid Man on guitar hero or whatever. After the song was over, the kid exclaimed "That was the most out of tune song I've ever heard!".
It's hilarious hearing people mislabel musical terms when describing a sound that isn't familiar, lmao.
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"I am so prog, I listen to concept albums on shuffle." -KMac2021 |
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M27Barney
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 09 2006 Location: Swinton M27 Status: Offline Points: 3136 |
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I think I've said this before, but I have two sons, the eldest likes Michael Buble and old swing crooner type music - but I think he also likes the commercial end of rock music like foreigner. He does not like ELP though.
However my youngest son , likes more or less a lot of the stuff that I like - but with more liking for the more contemporary prog acts like Steven Wilson and Opeth.....He also doesn't particularly like ELP either - but he would be more sympathetic than his older sibling....
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scruffydragon
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 09 2008 Location: trowbridge Status: Offline Points: 250 |
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I keep asking what I was doing when I was 10 years old, and the answer was playing with my mates on our Chopper bikes or messing around with nets in the local stream. Music was not even on my mind at that tender age. Music if I did hear it was often pieces caught on the radio or Top Of The Pops or introduced to us by our teachers.
Most people do not even start to take interest seriously in music until they reach teenage years, and even then it's to be with the in crowd and their mates. Progressive music takes a much more mature mind to appreciate then pop which is where most kids started out in my day with the chart hits. Only later on do some (very lucky) people discover that the best kind of music never made the music charts let alone was made to be commercial. I wonder what the 10 year old child's opinion would be 10 or 20 years time from now. I also wonder what the results of this dubious review would of been if another album say by more recent bands like Erasure or Blondie or Madness , or modern artists like Eminem, Rihanna or Lady Gaga.
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Quinino
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 26 2011 Location: Portugal Status: Offline Points: 3654 |
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At ten I listened to Silvie Vartan, Françoise Hardy, Serge Gainsbourg/Jane Birkin, Nana Mouskouri, Adamo (sorry to those I'm missing to recall) - that's what we had on the radio and I loved it.
I only discovered the existence of Mick Jagger/RS much later, at around fourteen, and received the Lucky Man single as a birthday gift at fifteen. (These are the strong and solid foundations of my earliest musical education, folks, excuse me for taking your time.) |
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