r/Music

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The original post: /r/music by /u/cmaia1503 on 2024-10-03 14:00:21.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/dailymail on 2024-10-03 09:47:48.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/KillerCroc1234567 on 2024-10-03 00:48:15.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/robindy on 2024-10-03 12:05:31.

Ok. So yes. Title says it all. I've got one hour and I am about to do some serious next level superhero level house cleaning and I am feeling just really freaking great and want to add some absolute sunshine jams to join me on this journey!! Can be any genre and new old whatever. I just wanna jams that are gonna make me love and enjoy and fully breathe in every goddamn second of pushing that vacuumn around this wonderful house for the next 60 lol. Thanks in advance amigos (y amigas). I am really excited to see what this brings!

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The original post: /r/music by /u/ComfortableNo2879 on 2024-10-03 11:36:18.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/Metro-UK on 2024-10-03 10:47:46.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/MathematicianReady39 on 2024-10-03 09:14:57.

I recently found myself revisiting Radiohead’s In Rainbows, and it struck me again how every single track just flows perfectly. No skips, no filler, just pure magic from start to finish. It’s one of those albums that feels like a complete journey every time I listen to it, and it got me wondering if others have albums like that.

So, I’m curious which album can you listen to from start to finish without skipping a single track?

*Can you plz upvote this post 🙏

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The original post: /r/music by /u/T1mek33per on 2024-10-03 08:45:09.

One of the songs in the Meet the Robinsons soundtrack is called Another Believer, by Rufus Wainwright.

While the song isn't awful by any stretch of the imagination - I find the majority of it decent enough - the two lines "give me just one more chance, one more glance" have a different rythymn and tone from the entire rest of the song, and I adore it.

I'm wondering if there's any full songs that match it or come close to it, because it scratches an itch in my brain that ends up worsened by the brevity.

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The original post: /r/music by /u/ImperfectAsh on 2024-10-03 03:42:38.

Do you think they were ever good or just had a couple of good songs with good producers?

I kinda feel like Justin is a lesser Jeff Rosenstock trying to be Phil Collins and somehow more melodramatic.

Thoughts?

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The original post: /r/music by /u/cmaia1503 on 2024-10-03 01:28:26.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/zetunuteas2113 on 2024-10-03 00:42:58.

I was listening to Atlantic City by Bruce Springsteen and even though it’s a serious sounding song, and I don’t know the history of Atlantic city, everytime I hear the opening lyric “they blew up the Chicken man” I cannot help but think of the Family Guy chicken that fights Peter. Then I started to think about other songs that are considered be serious affair but that opening lyric is so silly sounding that you can’t help but laugh a little. I immediately then thought of the Skunk Anansie song Selling Jesus with the opening lyric “they kill you with your smelly fingers, your smelly fingers from the sex u had on Christmas Day” . But then everything else in the song is pretty straight forward to the tone of it. What about you?

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The original post: /r/music by /u/danieldeceuster on 2024-10-03 00:18:48.

Discussed generational rock bands with a friend. Basically 5 bands that were "the" rock bands for a generation...widely known and popular, put out all the most recognizable music, that type of thing.

Boomers was easy...Beatles, Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, Eagles, and Led Zeppelin.

Gen X was not very contested either and we settled on Aerosmith, AC/DC, Van Halen, Metallica, and Guns n Roses.

Millennials got more difficult. Ultimately we agreed on Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Green Day, Blink 182 and Linkin Park. I think Korn, NIN, Sublime and Smashing Pumpkins could make a case too.

Then we got to Gen Z and...we had nothing. Like literally, we couldn't think of any widely known, popular, hit making rock band that's come about in the past 25 years.

I suggested Imagine Dragons and maybe My Chemical Romance fits. Am I just totally oblivious to modern rock music? I look at the charts and see Green Day, Metallica, Foo Fighters, Pearl Jam...who are the big rock bands of the day currently besides the guys who have been doing it for decades? Help appreciated.

We thankfully never got to Gen Alpha.

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The original post: /r/music by /u/solidprospect on 2024-10-03 00:11:39.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/Press245 on 2024-10-02 23:54:31.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/indig0sixalpha on 2024-10-02 23:20:15.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/daily_mirror on 2024-10-02 22:03:13.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/isaacnymy on 2024-10-02 20:40:55.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/aaaronbrown on 2024-10-02 19:31:23.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/Faintly-Painterly on 2024-10-02 18:51:48.

I know the Dixie Chicks made everyone super mad in 2003 for dissing George W, got kicked off radio stations, people filming themselves destroying their CDs, etc, despite being very popular at the time. This is the earliest example of a more modern looking "cancellation" that I am aware of. Are there any other notable earlier instances of a really people artist or band being shitcanned like this over one thing they said?

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The original post: /r/music by /u/Goldfish240 on 2024-10-02 18:30:43.

I don’t know much about music history, but something I have learned is that topics like this rarely have a simple explanation. That being said, what is the history behind nu-metal, and what exactly gives it such a bad rep?

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The original post: /r/music by /u/lucygetz on 2024-10-02 18:10:38.
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The original post: /r/music by /u/banjonyc on 2024-10-02 17:51:07.

With the recent sale of Pink Floyd's music rights for $400 million, it got me thinking of Billy Joel. He is preparing to sell his music catalog ( he is establishing residency in Florida so he won't have to pay New York state taxes when he sells it) so I was wondering how much he might be able to get for his vast music catalog. I was thinking somewhere in the neighborhood of 800 million. Thoughts?

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The original post: /r/music by /u/Londontown-Artist on 2024-10-02 17:24:14.
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band question (zerobytes.monster)
submitted 3 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 
The original post: /r/music by /u/NAwAAaaaaaA on 2024-10-02 16:51:38.

So i and my friends wanted to jam together, maybe create a band. We have keyboard, bass, vocalist who plays guitar and me(i play guitar). So my strugle is that i dont know how to go about my part of our performance. So singers plays basic open chords and that sounds good, and i dont know what should i do with my guitar. Should i just wait for the one guitar solo which is my part? that does not sound that fun to me. So my question is what can i add to songs with my guitar i know it may sound dumb to some pepole but i am self tought guitarist from the internet and just have no idea.

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