A HISTORY OF MUSIC TIMELINEEarly Music -- chants, grunts, banging
Greco-Roman -- flutes, harps, shepherds
Medieval -- monks singing in unison, some broad named Hildegarde
Renaissance -- lutes, high tenor voices
Baroque/Classical -- opera, Masterpiece Theater
Romantic -- Strings, tuneful, Lincoln Center
Modern/Contemporary -- chants, grunts, banging
I don't know who wrote that, BTW, but apart from it being very droll, I am also of the opinion that it's basically accurate.
Especially the "chants, grunts, banging" part. 😎
Which brings us, inexorably, to the subject of the weekend's business. To wit:
George Harrison famously told John Lennon to listen to Bob Dylan's lyrics. Lennon responded "I don't listen to the words."IMHO, the greatest pop records ever made are almost mostly all about the music. They sound like what the lyrics say, to the point you don't need to actually listen to the words; lyrics are merely the icing on the cake. For example, if you don't speak English, and can't understand what Jagger is actually carrying on about in "Satisfaction," the record will still mean the same thing to you as if you could. Because the sound of what the band is playing behind Jagger speaks perfectly clearly to the song's meaning.
So -- that being the case, what is a post-Elvis rock/soul/country/folk record with perhaps not particularly good, trite or overtly asinine/nonsensical lyrics (or merely chants, grunts and banging) that you love to death anyway???
Discuss.
In case you were wondering, my fave -- hands down -- is...
I mean, that doesn't even HAVE lyrics -- just a lot of non-linguistic yelling.
And yet, you know exactly what it's about, don't you. 😎😎
Alrighty then -- what would YOUR favorites be?
And have a great post-Thanksgiving weekend, everybody!!!










