A Brief History of My Musical Tastes

The Pop Era
1997:
“I’ll Be Missing You,” and “Barbie Girl.”
1998:
“Ghetto Supastar” and “Miss America.”
1999: “Mambo No 5” and “Blue”
2000: “The Real Slim Shady” and “Can I Get A”
2001: “In the End” and “Whenever Wherever”
2002: “Lose Yourself” and “Hey Baby”

The Hip-Hop Era/Videogame Era
2003-2006:
In sixth grade I started to become pretty obsessed with hip-hop music and culture…but not overly obsessed. I wasn’t listening to anything too far from the mainstream. I sort of took a break from hip hop in late seventh grade and all of eighth grade. I returned to hip hop (more obscure shit this time) in summer and fall 2005 only to lose interest in it a few months later. During this time I became more and more engaged in “alternative” rock and underground/electro-rap thanks to soundtracks on MVP Baseball, Madden NFL, and NBA 2K.

The Modern Age
2006-Now: A lot of credit should be given to Chris as he showed me/got me into a lot of music that I was pretty unfamiliar with. 2007 is when I started to research bands online and explore the unexplored. It’s pretty incredible to think that my top two favorite bands of today (the Black Lips and No Age) were completely unknown to me before 2008. This is true for so so many of my other favorites. My rock tastes haven’t changed that much in as though I still don’t like a lot of the screamo and hardcore punk that I didn’t like before. I remember initially saying something like the Black Lips are something country truck drivers listen to. Obviously I don’t believe that anymore!

Glen

One thought on “A Brief History of My Musical Tastes”

  1. Hahah, my first couple eras probably look like yours! I’ll do one of these later. And I’ll take the credit lol, but you also have showed me some incredible bands, like Animal Collective and No Age. Don’t be too hard on yourself about not knowing the Lips and NA before ’08. I’m in the same boat and also I showed you “How Do You Tell A Child That Someone Has Died” as your first BL song, and Cole has stated that it was inspired by country/truck driver music, so you’re spot on.

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