what's your music taste?
How eclectic is your music taste?
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I'll listen to almost anything. Only things i won't listen too is a lot of Rap and all types of Metal.
I particularly like J-Pop, J-Rock, and 60's, 70's,80's Rock music.
I particularly like J-Pop, J-Rock, and 60's, 70's,80's Rock music.
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Anything that sounds good. I even have a couple of classical and Japanese drum ones that I listen to.
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Classical music, jazz, Jpop, rock ... shall I continue ?
Genres don't mean shit. If it has a rhythm and instills/emanates emotion then there's little more I require...
...provided it wasn't generated on a PC without any talent or instruments involved.
Genres don't mean shit. If it has a rhythm and instills/emanates emotion then there's little more I require...
...provided it wasn't generated on a PC without any talent or instruments involved.
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You could say that I have an absurd taste for music. I love metal (mostly melodeath, folk, symphonic black and a little power) but I also love the perfect opposite, namingly the calm classical music. But I also enjoy some country (like Johnny Cash) and celtic folk music very much.
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Music taste?, now that thats a tricky one.
I mostly prefare Metal like Iron Maiden but I doesn't realy have anything against other genres. Expect thoose one hit wonders who usally gets spammed on the radio.
I mostly prefare Metal like Iron Maiden but I doesn't realy have anything against other genres. Expect thoose one hit wonders who usally gets spammed on the radio.
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Giles wrote...
You could say that I have an absurd taste for music. I love metal (mostly melodeath, folk, symphonic black and a little power) but I also love the perfect opposite, namingly the calm classical music. But I also enjoy some country (like Johnny Cash) and celtic folk music very much.Classical isn't the perfect opposite of metal. Some people would argue that metal is a modern progression of what we consider classical music.
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Dante1214 wrote...
Giles wrote...
You could say that I have an absurd taste for music. I love metal (mostly melodeath, folk, symphonic black and a little power) but I also love the perfect opposite, namingly the calm classical music. But I also enjoy some country (like Johnny Cash) and celtic folk music very much.Classical isn't the perfect opposite of metal. Some people would argue that metal is a modern progression of what we consider classical music.
As it happened, some of the most important metal musicians in the developing years of metal(Randy Rhoads, Cliff Burton, Glenn Tipton, Eddie Van Halen, James Hetfield, and others) actually studied classical music in their early lives, and they brought many of these sounds to metal when they played in metal bands. It's always striking to me to think about how different metal became harmonically from the the mainstream blues based rock of the day very quickly.
So in a sense, metal took up the mantle of harmonies associated with classical music, although at this point it would have been the classical music of antiquity(particularly romantic and baroque music) that influenced metal rather than classical music contemporary to the 70s and 80s, when metal was emerging.
Also, while to many classical music conjures sounds of Bach and Mozart, classical music runs a huge spectrum. It can be peaceful and dreamy, or edgy and violent. "Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima" by Penderecki is a stark example of the latter. Or for a less avant-garde example, the ritual dance section of Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring" is wild and primal.
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Well i listen to...
Rock
Classic Rock
Heavy Rock
Experimental Rock
Acid Rock
Psychedelic Rock
Garage Rock
Blues
Blues-Rock
Heavy Metal
New Wave
Power Pop
:D
Rock
Classic Rock
Heavy Rock
Experimental Rock
Acid Rock
Psychedelic Rock
Garage Rock
Blues
Blues-Rock
Heavy Metal
New Wave
Power Pop
:D
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pop.
rock.
anything J-
reggae
metal
screamo
electro
80's rock
rap
jazz
country,etc.
music is my life!
rock.
anything J-
reggae
metal
screamo
electro
80's rock
rap
jazz
country,etc.
music is my life!
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I usually go for what my mood calls for. So, I'm situational selective :roll:
Rock
Alternative
Jazz
Feelgood
Metal
Folkrock
Classical
Satire (Tom Lehrer as an example)
Indie
Skaa
Industrial
Dark Cabaret
Note that I find labeling music makes it easier to have other people relate when I explain my music taste. But then again, if one try to label something too obscurely one might as well just tell the name of the band.
Rock
Alternative
Jazz
Feelgood
Metal
Folkrock
Classical
Satire (Tom Lehrer as an example)
Indie
Skaa
Industrial
Dark Cabaret
Note that I find labeling music makes it easier to have other people relate when I explain my music taste. But then again, if one try to label something too obscurely one might as well just tell the name of the band.
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a lot of punk
mixes with punk rock
jpop j rock .ect.
a big old mix of rock and metal
Alternative wtf stuff
crazy DDR techno shit
a few sappy love songs
one or to random raps
that one country song
you know you all like one ;)
and so you take all that + some out of place stuff and throw it in to my head and i head bang all day long
mixes with punk rock
jpop j rock .ect.
a big old mix of rock and metal
Alternative wtf stuff
crazy DDR techno shit
a few sappy love songs
one or to random raps
that one country song
you know you all like one ;)
and so you take all that + some out of place stuff and throw it in to my head and i head bang all day long
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WhiteLion wrote...
Dante1214 wrote...
Giles wrote...
You could say that I have an absurd taste for music. I love metal (mostly melodeath, folk, symphonic black and a little power) but I also love the perfect opposite, namingly the calm classical music. But I also enjoy some country (like Johnny Cash) and celtic folk music very much.Classical isn't the perfect opposite of metal. Some people would argue that metal is a modern progression of what we consider classical music.
As it happened, some of the most important metal musicians in the developing years of metal(Randy Rhoads, Cliff Burton, Glenn Tipton, Eddie Van Halen, James Hetfield, and others) actually studied classical music in their early lives, and they brought many of these sounds to metal when they played in metal bands. It's always striking to me to think about how different metal became harmonically from the the mainstream blues based rock of the day very quickly.
So in a sense, metal took up the mantle of harmonies associated with classical music, although at this point it would have been the classical music of antiquity(particularly romantic and baroque music) that influenced metal rather than classical music contemporary to the 70s and 80s, when metal was emerging.
Also, while to many classical music conjures sounds of Bach and Mozart, classical music runs a huge spectrum. It can be peaceful and dreamy, or edgy and violent. "Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima" by Penderecki is a stark example of the latter. Or for a less avant-garde example, the ritual dance section of Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring" is wild and primal.
I agree. Take Tschaikowsky for an example, or for that matter Vivaldi or Wagner and then listen to modern metal, escpecially prog-death and the influences are striking.
But please note that also the "bluesbased" rock of the -70 contains massive material from classical music. most outstanding is early Deep Purple imo.