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@butterflyeclipse28 Sorry 4 the late response (1 year). It started with the 'peer' bs as a teen. After a 1/2 doz trips or so I began to truly enjoy it - even alone. To me, it was a sign of 'strength' to enjoy it alone like the generation before referred to as 'holding your liquor'.. Dumb move as it really was nothing but blind faith/luck that I made it through those times alone without any real issues. When your 'peaking', your mind is very vulnerable. I was plain lucky.I'd never repeat.
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These guys did this song better than anyone back then
They really rocked the cochran original
The WHO copied Blue Cheer on this one
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The drummer is so metal. I can seriously see how metal was influenced by these classic bands.
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Like I said, its been a long time. I did buy their first LPs and enjoyed them. With the Doors, I loved their first 3 especially the 2nd. Many of those bands had 2 or 3 great LPs and then seemed to fizzle out. I was a fan of County Joe & the Fish. Saw the Grateful Dead a few times too.
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I know all these bands, but out of the research I did, these were the top 3 bands said were the most revolutionary... Cream and Hendrix are almost my favorite! The Doors are great too! Love The End, but some people don't... I see you don't listen much to Led Zeppelin, because usually a fan wouldn't make a mistake like that when you spelled Led Zeppelin wrong... Lol... But still you could be a fan, but Led Zeppelin is an interesting band, because each song they did were always different.
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The Beatles and the Stones were pretty much concurrent in the early days. The Beatles wrote the Stones first hit and for the most part the Stones followed the Beatles lead. But the Stones introduced me to a lot of bluesy music I otherwise may not have found. And certainly the Stones are longer running than the Beatles. Led Zepelin did come on pretty strong. What about Cream, Hendrix, the Doors and Big Brother? I can't comment on what happened in the 70s because I turned to bluegrass music then!
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First of all... RIP! Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix! Led Zeppelin made another revolution in music too... I found out that the 3 most revolution bands were:
1: The Beatles
2: The Rolling Stones
3: Led Zeppelin
That's what I found out, but there was a lot of bands before to increase into these musical climaxes...
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I agree, but music does have its ups and downs. The 1950s saw the first generation of rock and was cooling off when the Beatles turned everything upside down. That culminated in 1970 when Jim, Janis and Jimi died. I would say that pulled the plug on the hippie era which unfortunately gave way to disco. I recently began looking at YouTube to see some of my favorites of that era. There were no videos then except TV so I never had a chance to see them unless I went to a concert & I did that often.
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"music started getting really good"... Music is all good, you meant when the revolution in music was happening... Because all music is good, there's no specific bad music... Except for the talentless who do it for the money and popularity...
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Oh, about 59. I started college in the fall of 1967 when all the music started to get really good. It was quite a time, majoring in rock music and minoring in engineering.
Sabbs great blue cheer greatest!!!
Izzy94bg 3 years ago 5
wow
talk about having no taste
st0wnerer 3 years ago 4