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A horrifying journey through my CD collection...


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#1 Alky 2009

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 09:06 AM

From A-Z. I got one of those stupid ideas last week, to tackle my ever-expanding CD collection in alphabetical order (as determined by the database at rateyourmusic) - from !!! to Zwan. Warts and all. There will be 311. There will be Hootie and the Blowfish. There will be other horrors that send shivers up the spine of any music lover. Join me as I torture myself and look for the weeds that need to be culled from the collection. It begins...

Posted Image
!!! - Me and Giuliani Down by the Schoolyard (A True Story)
I think we only need 15 minutes to best summarize the early 00's "discopunk" thing - this track and The Rapture's "House of Jealous Lovers". The lyrics are stupid, but easy to ignore and its even easier to get lost in the rhythm of this thing. By the time you hit those "dooodoodoo do dodo do"s at the end, this track has pwned you. The B-side is notable mostly for the disorienting channel-panning tricks if you turn it up loud enough, but doesn't come close to reaching the heights of the title track.
Rating: 8.7

Posted Image
!!! - Louden Up Now
Considering how hard I fell for "Giuliani", I really really wanted to love this album when it dropped, but no matter how many chances I gave it - I could never fully embrace the album as a whole. Sure, "Pardon My Freedom" and "Dear Can" and "Hello? Is This Thing On?" hit the spot, but I felt like too many of the other tracks flounder around looking for a groove and trying to be all "omfg he's singing about Bush lol wtf shocking". Listening to it now, in full for the first time in years, I feel about the same. Some high points, but too spotty to really make for an enjoyable listen from start to finish.
Rating: 7.0

Posted Image
!!! = Take Ecstasy with Me/Get Up
Another fantastic 12" from !!!, taking on a great Magnetic Fields track and an underrated Nate Dogg jam. The A-side is a funky take on the Merritt joint, but I think the flipside is the better of the two... only just barely though. The first half of "Get Up" is pretty lazy, but once things shift away from the original a little more in the second half it really gets exciting. This release had me believing that !!! should stick to the 12" format, and that's how I felt up until the release of the next full-length, but more on that soon...
Rating: 8.2
"Mellow... but not smooth... kinda shitty."
"Jimmy Buffett..."

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#2 undo

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 09:42 AM

I'm sipping a scummy pint of cloudy beer in the back of a trendy dive bar turned nightclub in the heart of the city’s heroin district. In front of me stand a gang of hippiesh grunge-punk types, who crowd around each other and collectively scoff at the smoking laws by sneaking puffs of “fuck-you,” reveling in their perceived rebellion as the haggard, staggering staff look on without the slightest concern. The “DJ” is keystroking a selection of MP3s off his MacBook, making a mix that sounds like he took a hatchet to a collection of yesteryear billboard hits, from DMX to Dolly Parton, but mashed up with a jittery techno backbeat. “So… this is a hipster party?” I ask the girl sitting next to me. She’s wearing big dangling earrings, an American Apparel V-neck tee, non-prescription eyeglasses and an inappropriately warm wool coat. “Yeah, just look around you, 99 percent of the people here are total hipsters!” “Are you a hipster?” “Fuck no,” she says, laughing back the last of her glass before she hops off to the dance floor. Ever since the Allies bombed the Axis into submission, Western civilization has had a succession of counter-culture movements that have energetically challenged the status quo. Each successive decade of the post-war era has seen it smash social standards, riot and fight to revolutionize every aspect of music, art, government and civil society. But after punk was plasticized and hip hop lost its impetus for social change, all of the formerly dominant streams of “counter-culture” have merged together. Now, one mutating, trans-Atlantic melting pot of styles, tastes and behavior has come to define the generally indefinable idea of the “Hipster.” An artificial appropriation of different styles from different eras, the hipster represents the end of Western civilization – a culture lost in the superficiality of its past and unable to create any new meaning. Not only is it unsustainable, it is suicidal. While previous youth movements have challenged the dysfunction and decadence of their elders, today we have the “hipster” – a youth subculture that mirrors the doomed shallowness of mainstream society. Take a stroll down the street in any major North American or European city and you’ll be sure to see a speckle of fashion-conscious twentysomethings hanging about and sporting a number of predictable stylistic trademarks: skinny jeans, cotton spandex leggings, fixed-gear bikes, vintage flannel, fake eyeglasses and a keffiyeh – initially sported by Jewish students and Western protesters to express solidarity with Palestinians, the keffiyeh has become a completely meaningless hipster cliché fashion accessory. The American Apparel V-neck shirt, Pabst Blue Ribbon beer and Parliament cigarettes are symbols and icons of working or revolutionary classes that have been appropriated by hipsterdom and drained of meaning. Ten years ago, a man wearing a plain V-neck tee and drinking a Pabst would never be accused of being a trend-follower. But in 2008, such things have become shameless clichés of a class of individuals that seek to escape their own wealth and privilege by immersing themselves in the aesthetic of the working class. This obsession with “street-cred” reaches its apex of absurdity as hipsters have recently and wholeheartedly adopted the fixed-gear bike as the only acceptable form of transportation – only to have brakes installed on a piece of machinery that is defined by its lack thereof. Lovers of apathy and irony, hipsters are connected through a global network of blogs and shops that push forth a global vision of fashion-informed aesthetics. Loosely associated with some form of creative output, they attend art parties, take lo-fi pictures with analog cameras, ride their bikes to night clubs and sweat it up at nouveau disco-coke parties. The hipster tends to religiously blog about their daily exploits, usually while leafing through generation-defining magazines like Vice, Another Magazine and Wallpaper. This cursory and stylized lifestyle has made the hipster almost universally loathed. “These hipster zombies… are the idols of the style pages, the darlings of viral marketers and the marks of predatory real-estate agents,” wrote Christian Lorentzen in a Time Out New York article entitled ‘Why the Hipster Must Die.’ “And they must be buried for cool to be reborn.” With nothing to defend, uphold or even embrace, the idea of “hipsterdom” is left wide open for attack. And yet, it is this ironic lack of authenticity that has allowed hipsterdom to grow into a global phenomenon that is set to consume the very core of Western counterculture. Most critics make a point of attacking the hipster’s lack of individuality, but it is this stubborn obfuscation that distinguishes them from their predecessors, while allowing hipsterdom to easily blend in and mutate other social movements, sub-cultures and lifestyles. *** Standing outside an art-party next to a neat row of locked-up fixed-gear bikes, I come across a couple girls who exemplify hipster homogeneity. I ask one of the girls if her being at an art party and wearing fake eyeglasses, leggings and a flannel shirt makes her a hipster. “I’m not comfortable with that term,” she replies. Her friend adds, with just a flicker of menace in her eyes, “Yeah, I don’t know, you shouldn’t use that word, it’s just…” “Offensive?” “No… it’s just, well… if you don’t know why then you just shouldn’t even use it.” “Ok, so what are you girls doing tonight after this party?” “Ummm… We’re going to the after-party.” *** Gavin McInnes, one of the founders of Vice, who recently left the magazine, is considered to be one of hipsterdom’s primary architects. But, in contrast to the majority of concerned media-types, McInnes, whose “Dos and Don’ts” commentary defined the rules of hipster fashion for over a decade, is more critical of those doing the criticizing. “I’ve always found that word [“hipster”] is used with such disdain, like it’s always used by chubby bloggers who aren’t getting laid anymore and are bored, and they’re just so mad at these young kids for going out and getting wasted and having fun and being fashionable,” he says. “I’m dubious of these hypotheses because they always smell of an agenda.” Punks wear their tattered threads and studded leather jackets with honor, priding themselves on their innovative and cheap methods of self-expression and rebellion. B-boys and b-girls announce themselves to anyone within earshot with baggy gear and boomboxes. But it is rare, if not impossible, to find an individual who will proclaim themself a proud hipster. It’s an odd dance of self-identity – adamantly denying your existence while wearing clearly defined symbols that proclaims it. *** “He’s 17 and he lives for the scene!” a girl whispers in my ear as I sneak a photo of a young kid dancing up against a wall in a dimly lit corner of the after-party. He’s got a flipped-out, do-it-yourself haircut, skin-tight jeans, leather jacket, a vintage punk tee and some popping high tops. “Shoot me,” he demands, walking up, cigarette in mouth, striking a pose and exhaling. He hits a few different angles with a firmly unimpressed expression and then gets a bit giddy when I show him the results. “Rad, thanks,” he says, re-focusing on the music and submerging himself back into the sweaty funk of the crowd where he resumes a jittery head bobble with a little bit of a twitch. The dance floor at a hipster party looks like it should be surrounded by quotation marks. While punk, disco and hip hop all had immersive, intimate and energetic dance styles that liberated the dancer from his/her mental states – be it the head-spinning b-boy or violent thrashings of a live punk show – the hipster has more of a joke dance. A faux shrug shuffle that mocks the very idea of dancing or, at its best, illustrates a non-committal fear of expression typified in a weird twitch/ironic twist. The dancers are too self-aware to let themselves feel any form of liberation; they shuffle along, shrugging themselves into oblivion. Perhaps the true motivation behind this deliberate nonchalance is an attempt to attract the attention of the ever-present party photographers, who swim through the crowd like neon sharks, flashing little blasts of phosphorescent ecstasy whenever they spot someone worth momentarily immortalizing. Noticing a few flickers of light splash out from the club bathroom, I peep in only to find one such photographer taking part in an impromptu soft-core porno shoot. Two girls and a guy are taking off their clothes and striking poses for a set of grimy glamour shots. It’s all grins and smirks until another girl pokes her head inside and screeches, “You’re not some club kid in New York in the nineties. This shit is so hipster!” – which sparks a bit of a catfight, causing me to beat a hasty retreat. In many ways, the lifestyle promoted by hipsterdom is highly ritualized. Many of the party-goers who are subject to the photoblogger’s snapshots no doubt crawl out of bed the next afternoon and immediately re-experience the previous night’s debauchery. Red-eyed and bleary, they sit hunched over their laptops, wading through a sea of similarity to find their own (momentarily) thrilling instant of perfected hipster-ness. What they may or may not know is that “cool-hunters” will also be skulking the same sites, taking note of how they dress and what they consume. These marketers and party-promoters get paid to co-opt youth culture and then re-sell it back at a profit. In the end, hipsters are sold what they think they invent and are spoon-fed their pre-packaged cultural livelihood. Hipsterdom is the first “counterculture” to be born under the advertising industry’s microscope, leaving it open to constant manipulation but also forcing its participants to continually shift their interests and affiliations. Less a subculture, the hipster is a consumer group – using their capital to purchase empty authenticity and rebellion. But the moment a trend, band, sound, style or feeling gains too much exposure, it is suddenly looked upon with disdain. Hipsters cannot afford to maintain any cultural loyalties or affiliations for fear they will lose relevance. An amalgamation of its own history, the youth of the West are left with consuming cool rather that creating it. The cultural zeitgeists of the past have always been sparked by furious indignation and are reactionary movements. But the hipster’s self-involved and isolated maintenance does nothing to feed cultural evolution. Western civilization’s well has run dry. The only way to avoid hitting the colossus of societal failure that looms over the horizon is for the kids to abandon this vain existence and start over. *** “If you don’t give a damn, we don’t give a fuck!” chants an emcee before his incitements are abruptly cut short when the power plug is pulled and the lights snapped on. Dawn breaks and the last of the after-after-parties begin to spill into the streets. The hipsters are falling out, rubbing their eyes and scanning the surrounding landscape for the way back from which they came. Some hop on their fixed-gear bikes, some call for cabs, while a few of us hop a fence and cut through the industrial wasteland of a nearby condo development. The half-built condos tower above us like foreboding monoliths of our yuppie futures. I take a look at one of the girls wearing a bright pink keffiyah and carrying a Polaroid camera and think, “If only we carried rocks instead of cameras, we’d look like revolutionaries.” But instead we ignore the weapons that lie at our feet – oblivious to our own impending demise. We are a lost generation, desperately clinging to anything that feels real, but too afraid to become it ourselves. We are a defeated generation, resigned to the hypocrisy of those before us, who once sang songs of rebellion and now sell them back to us. We are the last generation, a culmination of all previous things, destroyed by the vapidity that surrounds us. The hipster represents the end of Western civilization – a culture so detached and disconnected that it has stopped giving birth to anything new.

#3 boobs

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 09:50 AM

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#4 Agrimorfee

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 09:53 AM

I'm sipping a scummy pint of cloudy beer in the back of a trendy dive bar turned nightclub in the heart of the city’s heroin district. In front of me stand a gang of hippiesh grunge-punk types, who crowd around each other and collectively scoff at the smoking laws by sneaking puffs of “fuck-you,” reveling in their perceived rebellion as the haggard, staggering staff look on without the slightest concern.

The “DJ” is keystroking a selection of MP3s off his MacBook, making a mix that sounds like he took a hatchet to a collection of yesteryear billboard hits, from DMX to Dolly Parton, but mashed up with a jittery techno backbeat.

“So… this is a hipster party?” I ask the girl sitting next to me. She’s wearing big dangling earrings, an American Apparel V-neck tee, non-prescription eyeglasses and an inappropriately warm wool coat.

“Yeah, just look around you, 99 percent of the people here are total hipsters!”

“Are you a hipster?”

“Fuck no,” she says, laughing back the last of her glass before she hops off to the dance floor.

Ever since the Allies bombed the Axis into submission, Western civilization has had a succession of counter-culture movements that have energetically challenged the status quo. Each successive decade of the post-war era has seen it smash social standards, riot and fight to revolutionize every aspect of music, art, government and civil society.

But after punk was plasticized and hip hop lost its impetus for social change, all of the formerly dominant streams of “counter-culture” have merged together. Now, one mutating, trans-Atlantic melting pot of styles, tastes and behavior has come to define the generally indefinable idea of the “Hipster.”

An artificial appropriation of different styles from different eras, the hipster represents the end of Western civilization – a culture lost in the superficiality of its past and unable to create any new meaning. Not only is it unsustainable, it is suicidal. While previous youth movements have challenged the dysfunction and decadence of their elders, today we have the “hipster” – a youth subculture that mirrors the doomed shallowness of mainstream society.



Take a stroll down the street in any major North American or European city and you’ll be sure to see a speckle of fashion-conscious twentysomethings hanging about and sporting a number of predictable stylistic trademarks: skinny jeans, cotton spandex leggings, fixed-gear bikes, vintage flannel, fake eyeglasses and a keffiyeh – initially sported by Jewish students and Western protesters to express solidarity with Palestinians, the keffiyeh has become a completely meaningless hipster cliché fashion accessory.

The American Apparel V-neck shirt, Pabst Blue Ribbon beer and Parliament cigarettes are symbols and icons of working or revolutionary classes that have been appropriated by hipsterdom and drained of meaning. Ten years ago, a man wearing a plain V-neck tee and drinking a Pabst would never be accused of being a trend-follower. But in 2008, such things have become shameless clichés of a class of individuals that seek to escape their own wealth and privilege by immersing themselves in the aesthetic of the working class.

This obsession with “street-cred” reaches its apex of absurdity as hipsters have recently and wholeheartedly adopted the fixed-gear bike as the only acceptable form of transportation – only to have brakes installed on a piece of machinery that is defined by its lack thereof.

Lovers of apathy and irony, hipsters are connected through a global network of blogs and shops that push forth a global vision of fashion-informed aesthetics. Loosely associated with some form of creative output, they attend art parties, take lo-fi pictures with analog cameras, ride their bikes to night clubs and sweat it up at nouveau disco-coke parties. The hipster tends to religiously blog about their daily exploits, usually while leafing through generation-defining magazines like Vice, Another Magazine and Wallpaper. This cursory and stylized lifestyle has made the hipster almost universally loathed.

“These hipster zombies… are the idols of the style pages, the darlings of viral marketers and the marks of predatory real-estate agents,” wrote Christian Lorentzen in a Time Out New York article entitled ‘Why the Hipster Must Die.’ “And they must be buried for cool to be reborn.”

With nothing to defend, uphold or even embrace, the idea of “hipsterdom” is left wide open for attack. And yet, it is this ironic lack of authenticity that has allowed hipsterdom to grow into a global phenomenon that is set to consume the very core of Western counterculture. Most critics make a point of attacking the hipster’s lack of individuality, but it is this stubborn obfuscation that distinguishes them from their predecessors, while allowing hipsterdom to easily blend in and mutate other social movements, sub-cultures and lifestyles.

***

Standing outside an art-party next to a neat row of locked-up fixed-gear bikes, I come across a couple girls who exemplify hipster homogeneity. I ask one of the girls if her being at an art party and wearing fake eyeglasses, leggings and a flannel shirt makes her a hipster.

“I’m not comfortable with that term,” she replies.

Her friend adds, with just a flicker of menace in her eyes, “Yeah, I don’t know, you shouldn’t use that word, it’s just…”

“Offensive?”

“No… it’s just, well… if you don’t know why then you just shouldn’t even use it.”

“Ok, so what are you girls doing tonight after this party?”

“Ummm… We’re going to the after-party.”

***

Gavin McInnes, one of the founders of Vice, who recently left the magazine, is considered to be one of hipsterdom’s primary architects. But, in contrast to the majority of concerned media-types, McInnes, whose “Dos and Don’ts” commentary defined the rules of hipster fashion for over a decade, is more critical of those doing the criticizing.

“I’ve always found that word [“hipster”] is used with such disdain, like it’s always used by chubby bloggers who aren’t getting laid anymore and are bored, and they’re just so mad at these young kids for going out and getting wasted and having fun and being fashionable,” he says. “I’m dubious of these hypotheses because they always smell of an agenda.”

Punks wear their tattered threads and studded leather jackets with honor, priding themselves on their innovative and cheap methods of self-expression and rebellion. B-boys and b-girls announce themselves to anyone within earshot with baggy gear and boomboxes. But it is rare, if not impossible, to find an individual who will proclaim themself a proud hipster. It’s an odd dance of self-identity – adamantly denying your existence while wearing clearly defined symbols that proclaims it.

***

“He’s 17 and he lives for the scene!” a girl whispers in my ear as I sneak a photo of a young kid dancing up against a wall in a dimly lit corner of the after-party. He’s got a flipped-out, do-it-yourself haircut, skin-tight jeans, leather jacket, a vintage punk tee and some popping high tops.

“Shoot me,” he demands, walking up, cigarette in mouth, striking a pose and exhaling. He hits a few different angles with a firmly unimpressed expression and then gets a bit giddy when I show him the results.

“Rad, thanks,” he says, re-focusing on the music and submerging himself back into the sweaty funk of the crowd where he resumes a jittery head bobble with a little bit of a twitch.

The dance floor at a hipster party looks like it should be surrounded by quotation marks. While punk, disco and hip hop all had immersive, intimate and energetic dance styles that liberated the dancer from his/her mental states – be it the head-spinning b-boy or violent thrashings of a live punk show – the hipster has more of a joke dance. A faux shrug shuffle that mocks the very idea of dancing or, at its best, illustrates a non-committal fear of expression typified in a weird twitch/ironic twist. The dancers are too self-aware to let themselves feel any form of liberation; they shuffle along, shrugging themselves into oblivion.



Perhaps the true motivation behind this deliberate nonchalance is an attempt to attract the attention of the ever-present party photographers, who swim through the crowd like neon sharks, flashing little blasts of phosphorescent ecstasy whenever they spot someone worth momentarily immortalizing.

Noticing a few flickers of light splash out from the club bathroom, I peep in only to find one such photographer taking part in an impromptu soft-core porno shoot. Two girls and a guy are taking off their clothes and striking poses for a set of grimy glamour shots. It’s all grins and smirks until another girl pokes her head inside and screeches, “You’re not some club kid in New York in the nineties. This shit is so hipster!” – which sparks a bit of a catfight, causing me to beat a hasty retreat.

In many ways, the lifestyle promoted by hipsterdom is highly ritualized. Many of the party-goers who are subject to the photoblogger’s snapshots no doubt crawl out of bed the next afternoon and immediately re-experience the previous night’s debauchery. Red-eyed and bleary, they sit hunched over their laptops, wading through a sea of similarity to find their own (momentarily) thrilling instant of perfected hipster-ness.

What they may or may not know is that “cool-hunters” will also be skulking the same sites, taking note of how they dress and what they consume. These marketers and party-promoters get paid to co-opt youth culture and then re-sell it back at a profit. In the end, hipsters are sold what they think they invent and are spoon-fed their pre-packaged cultural livelihood.

Hipsterdom is the first “counterculture” to be born under the advertising industry’s microscope, leaving it open to constant manipulation but also forcing its participants to continually shift their interests and affiliations. Less a subculture, the hipster is a consumer group – using their capital to purchase empty authenticity and rebellion. But the moment a trend, band, sound, style or feeling gains too much exposure, it is suddenly looked upon with disdain. Hipsters cannot afford to maintain any cultural loyalties or affiliations for fear they will lose relevance.

An amalgamation of its own history, the youth of the West are left with consuming cool rather that creating it. The cultural zeitgeists of the past have always been sparked by furious indignation and are reactionary movements. But the hipster’s self-involved and isolated maintenance does nothing to feed cultural evolution. Western civilization’s well has run dry. The only way to avoid hitting the colossus of societal failure that looms over the horizon is for the kids to abandon this vain existence and start over.

***

“If you don’t give a damn, we don’t give a fuck!” chants an emcee before his incitements are abruptly cut short when the power plug is pulled and the lights snapped on.

Dawn breaks and the last of the after-after-parties begin to spill into the streets. The hipsters are falling out, rubbing their eyes and scanning the surrounding landscape for the way back from which they came. Some hop on their fixed-gear bikes, some call for cabs, while a few of us hop a fence and cut through the industrial wasteland of a nearby condo development.

The half-built condos tower above us like foreboding monoliths of our yuppie futures. I take a look at one of the girls wearing a bright pink keffiyah and carrying a Polaroid camera and think, “If only we carried rocks instead of cameras, we’d look like revolutionaries.” But instead we ignore the weapons that lie at our feet – oblivious to our own impending demise.

We are a lost generation, desperately clinging to anything that feels real, but too afraid to become it ourselves. We are a defeated generation, resigned to the hypocrisy of those before us, who once sang songs of rebellion and now sell them back to us. We are the last generation, a culmination of all previous things, destroyed by the vapidity that surrounds us. The hipster represents the end of Western civilization – a culture so detached and disconnected that it has stopped giving birth to anything new.


You didn't write this, did you?
"Is everyone on here just an act sometimes?"--Hummingbird

Read all of my stupid song parodies here. Latest song improved/ruined: "Once Again" by Girl Talk.

Listen to my stupid song parodies, recorded a capella via cell phone, at vocalo.org .(search 'agrimorfee')

Read the slowly developing history of classic putative rock band The Anderson Council at my cheap, bland blog

Might as well throw my Last.fm page here, too.

#5 theremin

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 09:59 AM

You didn't write this, did you?


Did you have to quote the whole thing?? No wonder you're on the worst boarder list! :lol:

#6 Agrimorfee

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 10:01 AM

You didn't write this, did you?


Did you have to quote the whole thing?? No wonder you're on the worst boarder list! :lol:


I only quote completely long crap to make a point. :P

Santiago, continue your list. This might be fun. :)
"Is everyone on here just an act sometimes?"--Hummingbird

Read all of my stupid song parodies here. Latest song improved/ruined: "Once Again" by Girl Talk.

Listen to my stupid song parodies, recorded a capella via cell phone, at vocalo.org .(search 'agrimorfee')

Read the slowly developing history of classic putative rock band The Anderson Council at my cheap, bland blog

Might as well throw my Last.fm page here, too.

#7 Mr.Nobody

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 10:11 AM

This is neat. I myself am also in the process of listening to my music collection(Vinyl and CD) in A-Z order. It gets to be a pain when you get to those albums you either used to like or those albums where you thought "Hey this is cheap it can't be too bad". Good luck on your journey.

#8 Alky 2009

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 10:21 AM

This is neat. I myself am also in the process of listening to my music collection(Vinyl and CD) in A-Z order. It gets to be a pain when you get to those albums you either used to like or those albums where you thought "Hey this is cheap it can't be too bad". Good luck on your journey.


Thanks. I'll be tackling the vinyl after I finish this project, which could be in quite awhile.
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#9 Rob Gordon

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 11:13 AM

This thread will never see completion.

Personally, there's no way I could get through my entire CD collection nor do I have the desire.

I have been going through one of my iPod's (80 gig) by song, alphabetically. When the mood strikes of course. There's about 13,000 songs on it. I started that last summer and I'm in the "O"s
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#10 Alky 2009

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 11:35 AM

I think it will see completion, but not any time soon. I'm not being very strict on enforcing this, i.e. I'm allowing time to continue listening to new purchases and other stuff that strikes my fancy - but I'm finding it more exciting lately to pull stuff from the stacks I haven't heard in awhile. Sure, it's going to be a drag when I get to the four (five?) 311 discs I own, but that's part of the process. I'm fairly anal about these sorts of things, so I think I'll see it through. I'm just not silly enough to slap any sort of timeframe on it.
"Mellow... but not smooth... kinda shitty."
"Jimmy Buffett..."

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#11 Rob Gordon

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 11:40 AM

So, how many CD's you talking about going through?
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#12 Alky 2009

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 11:43 AM

So, how many CD's you talking about going through?


As of right now - 2,823 compact discs.
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#13 Rob Gordon

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 11:54 AM

So, how many CD's you talking about going through?


As of right now - 2,823 compact discs.


Yikes. Mine's around 8,000. Good luck.
Hmmm...should be playing Zappa and ZZ Top during the next summer games.
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#14 held

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 12:09 PM

So, how many CD's you talking about going through?


As of right now - 2,823 compact discs.


you sick bastard.. that's.. twice as many as me...? :blink: :unsure: :rolleyes:

edit- I kid. I'm more likely to purge rather than enlarge my stuff.
There is nothing more depressing than trying to appear happy when you are not."
- Nick Cave

#15 Alky 2009

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 01:08 PM

The desire to purge has led to this experiment. Speaking of which, does anyone know of a good place to pawn off old, unwanted discs? I have quite a few to get rid of that I know most of the reputable used shops won't want to take off my hands, and I'd honestly rather pitch them out the window than get the insulting, slap in the face dime a disc offer those shitty suburban chain stores will offer. But most of all, I don't want to just pitch these into the garbage to rot in a landfill. Anybody have some eco-friendly solutions?
"Mellow... but not smooth... kinda shitty."
"Jimmy Buffett..."

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#16 Alky 2009

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 02:48 PM

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!!! - Myth Takes
I think this is when !!! finally pulled their shit together to release a solidly enjoyable album from start to finish. "Must Be the Moon", "Heart of Hearts", and "Yadnus" are the obvious standouts (for good reason) but that's just the tip of the iceberg on this release. "All My Heroes Are Weirdos" is one of my favorite Nic Offer vocal turns ever and the bass work all over this album is wonderful. "Break in Case of Anything" and "Bend Over Beethoven" are also not to be missed. The weakest link is closer "Infinifold", but hell... they needed something to ease us bank to reality gently.
Rating: 8.5
"Mellow... but not smooth... kinda shitty."
"Jimmy Buffett..."

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#17 Agrimorfee

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 05:01 PM

The desire to purge has led to this experiment. Speaking of which, does anyone know of a good place to pawn off old, unwanted discs? I have quite a few to get rid of that I know most of the reputable used shops won't want to take off my hands, and I'd honestly rather pitch them out the window than get the insulting, slap in the face dime a disc offer those shitty suburban chain stores will offer. But most of all, I don't want to just pitch these into the garbage to rot in a landfill.

Anybody have some eco-friendly solutions?


http://www.halfpricebooks.com. They will take anything you got (including cassettes/books/mags/multimedia and some vinyl), but don't bitch about getting less than 25 cents.
"Is everyone on here just an act sometimes?"--Hummingbird

Read all of my stupid song parodies here. Latest song improved/ruined: "Once Again" by Girl Talk.

Listen to my stupid song parodies, recorded a capella via cell phone, at vocalo.org .(search 'agrimorfee')

Read the slowly developing history of classic putative rock band The Anderson Council at my cheap, bland blog

Might as well throw my Last.fm page here, too.

#18 James D

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 05:04 PM

This thread is ambitious.

#19 UselessRocker

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 05:16 PM

As soon as the line "Santiago 'n' Dunbar" was uttered in that movie, I joked that that's gonna be a band name next week. Anyway, good luck getting through this mission. I couldn't do it. The journey through my Aerosmith catalog alone would likely destroy my will to live.
"LETS GET SOME FUCKING ENERGY UP IN THIS BITCH MOTHERFUCKERS! You are not resigned to a fate of slow, painful death. The world is not as Radiohead and Portishead see it. "Oh the suffering! Oh the suffering, I feel the weight of the world and all it's pain" FUCK YOU......Be the grizzly, tear some shit up, rather than tearing yourself up." -- Montana, 12/21/08

#20 Alky 2009

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Posted 11 August 2008 - 05:18 PM

As soon as the line "Santiago 'n' Dunbar" was uttered in that movie, I joked that that's gonna be a band name next week.

Anyway, good luck getting through this mission. I couldn't do it. The journey through my Aerosmith catalog alone would likely destroy my will to live.


I'm imagining that when I hit the 'M' section and run into the Dave Matthews Band portion from the college years I'd like to forget, then I'll lose my will to continue.
"Mellow... but not smooth... kinda shitty."
"Jimmy Buffett..."

,

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