Dr. Wallace Wrightwood: I'm gonna say this once. 'Gonna say it simple. And I hope to God for your sakes you all listen. There are no Abominable Snowmen. There are so Sasquatches. There are no Big Feet! [the family begins to giggle. Unbeknownst to Wrightwood, Harry is standing right behind him] Dr. Wallace Wrightwood: Am I missing something?

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Music is My Boyfriend

Music is a powerful thing. It can define an era, or even a period in your own life. Certain songs hold specific meaning and listening to them can immediately bring back memories of an ex-boyfriend or high school or even a season or holiday. Your musical tastes change throughout your life and what music you like says a lot about you.

I was perusing i-tunes looking for a Woodstock compilation - for the music that defined that era: Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, the Grateful Dead. Instead I found the Woodstock '99 album. In 1999 I was in the thick of my teenage years and, admittedly, was only beginning my phase into listening to truly bad music. The Snoop Dogg gangsta rap phase was mostly over by this point, and had been replaced by terrible radio "alternative" and the even worse rap-metal genre. I think the Woodstock '99 album represents the worst in American music, and my past music tastes. The worst. And, I went through some pretty bad music phases: Debbie Gibson, country (when country was BIG), the Disturbed, electronica. And America has gone through some bad music phases (or, is perpetually in a bad music phase). So, to be the worst, Woodstock '99 has to be pretty bad.

Woodstock '69 celebrated the spirit of peace and love. Woodstock '99 commercialized that and ended up with riots.

Unfortunetly, at the time I liked this music. I'm pretty sure I even owned the CD. But now, ten years later, I am no longer an angry teenager and my music tastes have changed and these bands are no longer a part of my life. When something is no longer important to you you sometimes forget it even exists at all, so I started to wonder: do people still listen to Limp Bizkit? Is Korn still a band?

So, thanks to Wikipedia, here's my rap-metal/things I listened to in high school/Woodstock 99/worst music ever version of "Where are they now?":

Buckcherry
I think I enjoyed the song "Lit Up". I don't know how anyone can't relate to a song that is entirely about cocaine. Buckcherry dissolved in 2002 but reformed in 2005 and in 2006 had success with another masterpiece of American song: "Crazy Bitch".

Limp Bizkit
I don't know if people listen to them or not, but Limp Bizkit is indeed still a band. That means that somewhere out there Fred Dunst is coming up with a follow-up to this:
I did it all for the nookie
C'mon
The nookie
C'mon
So you can take that cookie
And stick it up your, yeah!!
Stick it up your, yeah!!
Stick it up your, yeah!!
Kid Rock
Remember when he married (or almost married) Pamela Anderson? According to Wikipedia he is still an active musician and has released eleven albums over the course of his career. Eleven!

The Disturbed
They didn't go to Woodstock '99, but they did define my later teenage years (I think I had some unresolved anger issues). According to Wikipedia they are still together, and still releasing albums.

I'm beginning to think all of these bands are still together...which means someone is still listening to them. Maybe it's an age thing. You have to be young and angst-ridden to listen to some idiot rant:
Drowning deep in my sea of loathing
Broken your servant I kneel
(Will you give it to me?)
It seems what's left of my human side
Is slowly changing in me
(Will you give it to me?)

Looking at my own reflection
When suddenly it changes
Violently it changes
Oh no, there is no turning back now
You've woken up the demon in me

Get up, come on get down with the sickness
Maybe it's geography or maybe it's just the time you came of age. I was 11 when Kurt Cobain died. Nirvana did not really speak for my "generation". In any event, judging by my past music choices I think it's good our music tastes evolve as we do. I can't imagine what I'll like ten years from now. So, to the sixteen-year-old kid out there who was excited about the new Nickelback album: there's hope.

1 comment:

  1. I was very into grunge in middle school. I need to find pictures . . .

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