Lincsong
I'll Lock Up
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AMC Gremlin.
Senator Jack said:You really think the boys in the Glenn Miller Orchestra weren't smoking pot? Let's put away those rose colored glasses again.
Senator Jack said:On the Monkees:
You have to take the group as the whole of the parts - this includes the session muscians and the writers (Weill/Mann, Goffin/King, Diamond, Boyce/Hart and others) As a collection of artists they made it work. Was it a ripoff? Did it devalue the music? Not a fair question. The boys did put up fight to play their own instruments, but Kirschner was hired to take care of the musical end of things and wanted complete control (most of the writers, you'll notice, are from The Hit Factory). Nesmith, a songwriter before the Monkees, was only allowed to contribute a few of his great songs like Papa Gene's Blues and You Just May Be the One.
The Beatles are often cited as the downfall of music in an odd way. A rarity, they were musicians who were able to write hit after hit, some like A Hard Day's Night on demand. (They needed a title song in 10 hours and came up with what I've always thought was the greatest rock and roll song ever) When they were a huge success, the record labels began to rely less and less on tin pan alley and more on the bands they signed, even though most of the bands could only write a few great tunes each year. If you look back at the lps from this era, you'll notice that it marks the birth of 'filler' material. The forces behind The Monkees were simply using the old tin pan alley method, what had been successful since the invention of the victrola, to make the group shine. Perhaps in the end there was nothing really wrong with that.
Finally, I think it's easy to dismiss performers like The Beatles, Sinatra, and Elvis these days. We're so far removed from their time that we have forgotten how innovative they were. When you remove the hype from all of them - when you forget about the fans, the hysteria, the endless press releases - the fact is these people made great records. And as far as dismissing any musicians because they smoked reefers, maryjane, spliffs, blunts or whatever else they called it over the years, you'd probably have to dismiss 90 percent of 20th Century musicians. You really think the boys in the Glenn Miller Orchestra weren't smoking pot? Let's put away those rose colored glasses again.
Regards,
Senator Jack
This, and the "oil crises" were the reasons that AMC produced all those small hippy cars in all those hippy colors. Hippy targeted marketing,...Lincsong said:The 1969-1970 Coupe DeVille and Sedan Deville
The 1971-1974 Eldorado
Both are big fat pigs.
The seventies was all about stereotypes. Or maybe I should say it was about marketing the stereotypes. Everything that became popular in the seventies was grabbed by the media and the military-entertainment complex, and then exploited to it's fullest potential. I think it was the beginnings of the all too earnest crass materialism we see running so rampant in the world today.happyfilmluvguy said:I am finding it very interesting how almost everyone in this thread hates the 70s based on it's stereotypical appearance.
Maj.Nick Danger said:Hey,...I wanted to be a Monkee, or at least one of the Banana Splits.
But I was too young to grow the sideburns.
That show was just too trippy for me!Rafter said:MajorDanger, What 'bout H.R. Pufnstuff!
This 1970's TV show was like Banana Splits on acid!
happyfilmluvguy said:I am finding it very interesting how almost everyone in this thread hates the 70s based on it's appearance. Too much hate, not enough love. How's that for the 70s!
Rafter said:MajorDanger, What 'bout H.R. Pufnstuff!
This 1970's TV show was like Banana Splits on acid!
Senator Jack said:I loved Uncle Croc's Block. Too bad it only lasted a year.
Absinthe_1900 said:It was the polyester fumes that did it.
Just imagine how many people were permanently damaged by orange shag rugs, and plaid bellbottoms.
Doran said:H.R. Pufnstuf rocked my world. Sid and Marty Kroft.
The Kroft Superstars.
LAND OF THE LOST with the green creatures webbed to the cave walls. "Marshall, Will, and Holly, on a routine expedition..."
DR. SHRINKER - HE'S A MADMAN WITH AN EVIL MIND.
Loved that stuff.
Then again, I was 7.