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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Joined: April 29 2004 Location: Heart of Europe Status: Offline Points: 20239 |
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That's pretty well it, isn't it??? By 76/77, most FM radio stations had taken over the AM radio playlists... Only a few radios were left playing less commercial stuff - and even then it was late evening or nightime only. Of course during daytime, they also played the stuff you mention (Aerosmith and Zeppelin were there too), but it was mixed with Bob Seger, Bruce Sprinsgsteen, Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, Al Stewart, etc.... and with a strong dose of the AM stuff (including disco).
actually I never heard this one (until this morning), but the French-speaking sex-obsessed youth I was preferred this one: |
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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Yeah Rupert Holmes, that Pina Colada song. And Steely Dan I'm a huge fan of, they're just too good. And early to mid 80's right on, lots of great music in there I certainly remember Rock Me Amadeus(and for sure Mozart can kick ass). Interesting reading these responses, and finding out about FM radio turning less underground and more to commercial pop around '76/'77(a little before my time of listening to radio which was mostly '79/'80 and then continuing throughout the 80's and 90's but increasingly less over the years until.. not at all). Edit: I still listen in the car sometimes but nothing current, all classic rock and like '80's flashback.'
Edited by YESESIS - October 24 2018 at 16:37 |
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Atavachron
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65243 |
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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I've heard that song September on the radio more times than I can possibly count, but they had another hit(they've had many actually) in the early 80's called Let's Groove, which was really big at the time but now you rarely hear it. Very good band.
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Raff
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 29 2005 Location: None Status: Offline Points: 24429 |
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I also started listening to FM radio around that time, and discovered a lot of great music. In the summer of '79 I visited London for the first time, and two songs in particular will always be connected to that experience in my mind: Supertramp's "The Logical Song" and Anita Ward's "Ring My Bell" (the first is still a favourite, the second ... not really). Among that year's releases that still count among my faves, I'd mention The Stranglers' The Raven, The Police's Reggatta De Blanc, The Clash's London Calling, Dire Straits' Communique, and - in a more prog-related vein - Pink Floyd's The Wall, Supertramp's Breakfast in America, and Roxy Music's Manifesto.
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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Oh man, Another Brick in the Wall.. I remember that song playing on the radio a lot and being pretty huge. My choir teacher literally hated it and I thought there most be something going on there that I'm(was) too young to understand or something.
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Atavachron
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They were magnificent, one of the great Soul/Pop bands in history. |
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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought." -- John F. Kennedy
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14691 |
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Interesting - 1979 is the year my love for music and prog in particular started and I started to distance myself from the stuff that was played day in day out on mainstream radio (I had loved Abba and Boney M. before, and the Beatles actually, but was giving up on these at the time - the Beatles came back later though). One band that I really loved at the time and had picked up from the radio in 1979 were Dire Straits (although the amazing Sultans of Swing, the first I discovered, is from 1978 actually; in 1979 they had Once Upon a Time in the West and News). And then of course Another Brick in the Wall II, and I also liked Logical Song from the beginning, and, somewhat embarrassingly, Barclay James Harvest's Love on the Line. Looking around a bit, in 1979 I was starting consciously to look for earlier music and I didn't pick up a lot from the radio in that year, this started massively in 1980.
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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Yeah, hard to argue with that.
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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Me too. My radio listening definitely exploded in the spring of '80. So many great songs then!
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stegor
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 23 2013 Location: Minnesota Status: Offline Points: 2028 |
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I used to record songs on cassette off AM radio with a microphone. It was around 1970-1973. I had a bunch of tapes in our pickup camper and my dad sold it before I realized I left them in there. It was a bad day. I can still see the hand drawn labels and every time I hear one of those songs my memory flashes back to the tape and my brain fills in whatever the DJ blurted at the end and what the next song was. Here's what I remember of the playlists: Come and Get Your Love - Redbone Liar - 3 Dog Night Fire - The Crazy World of Arthur Brown Jungle Fever - Chakachas Roundabout - Yes (single version) 2001 A Space Odyssey - Deodato Jump Into the Fire - Harry Nilsson In the Right Place - Dr. John Come and Get it - Badfinger Mother and Child Reunion - Paul Simon (I stopped the tape only about 30 seconds in. Now that song is only 30 seconds long to me) Baby Blue - Badfinger Back in the Black Bayou - Jim Staffford Bang a Gong - T Rex ... |
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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'70 - '73 seems like it would be just about the perfect time to be starting out with really listening to the radio. I'm kind of jealous that you had that time and now those memories. Sounds really cool.
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Fischman
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 21 2018 Location: Colorado, USA Status: Offline Points: 1612 |
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I really got started in '76. Kansas, Boston, Rolling Stones, Jethro Tull, Foghat, ELO, and Chick Mangione were the first artists to attract me.
But I lived in a rural area with no radio and really didn't get exposed to much. So there was a real explosion in '81 when I went to college. Then, it was Moody Blues, Rush, Black Sabbath, Shooting Star, Kinks, Who, Triumph, Blackfoot |
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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I'm guessing Boston would be on most people's list for that year. Foghat also makes sense. Cool, and I used to love Triumph as well, right on.
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
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Probably around 1979, I would listen to BBC Radio 1 every morning before school. I remember The Boomtown Rats, The Buggles, XTC and some old sh*t by Leo Sayer. My dad would switch the radio back to Radio 4 for endless news, the moment I went into the bathroom.
I guess it was around 1981/82, I really took a interest in rock (and some alternative) music and would listen to John Peel in the week, and Tommy Vance on a Friday night. My earlist memories of the rock show were probably Saxon, Judas Priest and some band called Genesis who I got hooked on for the next 38 years or so. |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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Another one for '79, right on. I know the music scene was a little different in England than here in the US(New York where I lived at the time), certainly the prog kings though. Cool memories.
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Fischman
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 21 2018 Location: Colorado, USA Status: Offline Points: 1612 |
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Funny. I really didn't appreciate them in their heyday, fixated as I was on hard rock. But over the years. I've really come to like them. Many great songs an tons of style. |
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YESESIS
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2017 Location: Maine Status: Offline Points: 2215 |
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That's right, they really are great.
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