Hello Nasty is underrated. I think it got unfair crap for being their first "adult" album, but to me it holds up better than Ill Communication
Hello Nasty is underrated. I think it got unfair crap for being their first "adult" album, but to me it holds up better than Ill Communication
I was waiting to see someone bring this up. Not just ska but how about the brief swing music revival? It's like the grunge generation responded to nu-metal by reviving happy go lucky music from WWII era.
After grunge's demise, the best thing that ever happened to me was discovering audio galaxy, which recommended similar bands to the ones you already enjoyed. Armed with that knowledge base, a T3 dorm room Internet connection and a napster account, I spent my entire sophomore year of college discovering White Stripes,…
Oh yeah, panthers as cats, hadn't really thought of that angle. Perhaps Melmac TV picked up games from the future and ALF already knew of the Jake Delhomme era. Is that how light and sound waves work? Someone let me know so I can update my ALF fan fiction accordingly
ALF
Why was ALF in a Panthers jersey? Didn't the show take place in LA?
I'll never forget seeing Beavis and Butthead Do America in the theater. The place was packed and there couldn't have been a single person there over the age of 19. Pretty sure my friend and I were the only ones in the place who laughed at the "you're a federal agent never end a sentence with a preposition!" line
Aren't there King novels that haven't been made into movies yet that they could try first? Like Eyes of the Dragon?
Caveat: I saw them live right before their first album was released, so it was the first time I was hearing all the songs. So actually hearing them on record and being slightly underwhelmed later in life may have made the live show better in retrospect. Highlight of the night was definitely when Jack emerged from…
Blind Willie McTell is another good one. The original version of Your Southern Can is Mine is badass
Much better live than on record
Can't speak for anyone else, but for me they traced back to Son House whom I had never listened to before but I'm a huge fan of now. Not sure if you are being facetious but that's my serious answer
Nothings ever been creepier than that Duracell family from the early 90s. They stared straight into my soul and I instantly regretted ever purchasing Energizer for fear of my family's well being
Yankee deer ftw. I also would have accepted Shawn Bradley
There's no other way is the best thing blur ever produced. Kurt cobain agrees with me. In hell
The band starting off politely and then subtly transitioning into condescension is absolute torture. Especially that final smug line about Nick bumping his drum set up to an even ten pieces
Can't remember the episode or anything else that happened in it, but the scene where Jason Segal's character completely bombs his audition with that local garage band was the most painful thing I've ever seen on TV. My stomach drops just thinking about it. The perfect representation of "welcome to adulthood, kid"
I agree that Rooster owns and for years I had no idea that the lyrics were about his dad's experiences in Vietnam which just increased the own age a solid 62%
I remember I Stay Away and Man in the Box being their biggest hits at the time, but in retrospect everyone now seems to think of Rooster as their defining song.
Outside of Santeria does Sublime have a single song that doesn't already sound terribly dated?
Not to overstate it, but if that movie doesn't win 15 Oscars, cure cancer and send Lebron back to the Cleveland Cavs, then I consider it a disappointment.