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Post by sayne on Oct 28, 2016 7:42:57 GMT -5
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Post by debjorgo on Oct 28, 2016 11:49:02 GMT -5
“It boils down to people feeling everybody is having this great experience, but feeling excluded because they can’t see what everyone else sees — and it makes them angry.”
Angry? Somebody has got some emotional problems. Probably why they can't enjoy some of these songs.
About half of these songs haven't been played since they came out. Another third, I haven't even heard of. There should be some sort of vetting to coming up with the worst of all time. (I've been wanting to use the word "vetting" in a sentence.)
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Post by sayne on Oct 28, 2016 21:31:44 GMT -5
“It boils down to people feeling everybody is having this great experience, but feeling excluded because they can’t see what everyone else sees — and it makes them angry.” Angry? Somebody has got some emotional problems. Probably why they can't enjoy some of these songs. About half of these songs haven't been played since they came out. Another third, I haven't even heard of. There should be some sort of vetting to coming up with the worst of all time. (I've been wanting to use the word "vetting" in a sentence.) I don't know how you are, but if you're a boomer or older Gen X'er, I imagine that you haven't been a consistent Top 40 radio listener for quite a while. Not a dig, but that might explain why you don't know a lot of the songs. Nevertheless, I thing the article is really more about songs that people are sick of, rather than songs that are bad. I know I always skip to the next song on my phone when a Beatles song comes on. Not because it's a bad song, but because it's too familiar. I crave new stuff. Most classic rock stuff gets skipped by me. I like deep cuts and indie stuff - new and old. For me, Imagine - skip, Hey Jude - skip, Yellow Submarine - skip, and about 99% of the other songs on their list that I know.
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