threespires
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- 7 Aug 2019
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I bet you’ve got a stylophone as well ;)
Correct :-)
I bet you’ve got a stylophone as well ;)
I bet you’ve got a stylophone as well ;)
I bet you’ve got a stylophone as well ;)
Similar to my thoughts so far. There’s one quote in there that I’ll give double like/agreement, but I’ll save that for my review.OK, so the review is great but for me the album is so, so.
It didn’t exactly grab me. I’m afraid it got a couple of spins on consecutive mornings while I was working (on the most boring repetitive work I have ever had the displeasure to do) and it could have had more but I preferred to put my iTunes on shuffle.
It tries out a lot of things and is very much a studio album. It does what it does well enough and is not without some interest. Some of the Hop effects were a bit intrusive.
Probably telling that I liked the last so tracks best, the penultimate one had a bit of a John Barry vibe.
I didn’t love the vocals but didn’t hate them either.
Whilst I do not regret buying it back in 94 (and I do have a fair few of the albums mentioned form that year, Wildflowers probably being the favourite), I do not regret buying this although I might have kept it in the collect ion if I had.
So I’ll give it 6.5/10.
I’m the first year of Gen X and I owned 8-tracks too!!
But I also saved all my vinyl :)
I don’t think I went that far but you are right that it was absolutely a red letter day at my Catholic university when it was released!8-track, vinyl (still have some, but didn't collect much), cassettes, CDs, mp3s - you name it, and I had it. What, us Gen X's bitter??? ;-)
Anyone remember album release days on the radio? In March 1987 as a mostly broke college student, I recorded each song release of The Joshua Tree onto my cassette recorder off the radio so I'd have that to listen to. Fun times back then.
"Rock 105" would play one song per hour in order off the release that day, and I recorded them all. Needless to say, there was no going to class that day. That later became my first ever owned CD too. Most of my other favourite bands and albums I had on cassette still.
It wouldn't be for another 2 years until I actually owned a CD player, but I had something to play then.
So what did I do in 2017 when the 30 year anniversary concert of that album came out? I road tripped with my then 18 year old high school graduate to his first U2 show where they played the album in its entirety like any good father should. And yes, I still had a CD player in the car to listen to that album and other tunes going down the road.
OK, so the review is great but for me the album is so, so.
It didn’t exactly grab me. I’m afraid it got a couple of spins on consecutive mornings while I was working (on the most boring repetitive work I have ever had the displeasure to do) and it could have had more but I preferred to put my iTunes on shuffle.
It tries out a lot of things and is very much a studio album. It does what it does well enough and is not without some interest. Some of the Hop effects were a bit intrusive.
Probably telling that I liked the last so tracks best, the penultimate one had a bit of a John Barry vibe.
I didn’t love the vocals but didn’t hate them either.
Whilst I do not regret buying it back in 94 (and I do have a fair few of the albums mentioned form that year, Wildflowers probably being the favourite), I do not regret buying this although I might have kept it in the collect ion if I had.
So I’ll give it 6.5/10.
8-track, vinyl (still have some, but didn't collect much), cassettes, CDs, mp3s - you name it, and I had it. What, us Gen X's bitter??? ;-)
Anyone remember album release days on the radio? In March 1987 as a mostly broke college student, I recorded each song release of The Joshua Tree onto my cassette recorder off the radio so I'd have that to listen to. Fun times back then.
"Rock 105" would play one song per hour in order off the release that day, and I recorded them all. Needless to say, there was no going to class that day. That later became my first ever owned CD too. Most of my other favourite bands and albums I had on cassette still.
It wouldn't be for another 2 years until I actually owned a CD player, but I had something to play then.
So what did I do in 2017 when the 30 year anniversary concert of that album came out? I road tripped with my then 18 year old high school graduate to his first U2 show where they played the album in its entirety like any good father should. And yes, I still had a CD player in the car to listen to that album and other tunes going down the road.
Yes, my parents had an 8-track player and by virtue of wanting to hear my music in the house, I bought a few early on by necessity. That and vinyl at the same time, but if you didn't have good equipment on the needle, doing damage to your LPs or 45s was going to be an issue and wasn't going to be something to last for enjoyment.I'm early Gen X but have little recollection of 8-track, though I have faint (probably false) memories that one of my uncles might have had it in his Ford Capri! I assume it was just much more popular as a format in the US than in the UK?