Your current top 10 recordings you owned in 9th grade [non US people, use the equivilent]

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Beastie Boys - Licensed to Ill
Black Flag - Six Pack
Buzzcocks - Product 3xCD
Dead Kennedys - Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables
Germs - Media Blitz
Minor Threat - Complete Discography
Nirvana - In Utero
Propagandhi - How to Clean Everything
Sonic Youth - Washing Machine
Vandals - Peace Through Vandalism / When in Rome do as the Vandals

Man, I was narrow!

Jon Williams (ex machina), Thursday, 6 March 2003 13:50 (twenty-three years ago)

Tell us what the equivalent is then!

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 6 March 2003 13:57 (twenty-three years ago)

Well, I was 14 and 15 years old in 9th grade.

Jon Williams (ex machina), Thursday, 6 March 2003 13:59 (twenty-three years ago)

Man, that's tough ... most of them I wouldn't even listen to now ...

But:
Roxy Music - Siren
Steely Dan - Aja
Neil Young - Rust Never Sleeps
Lou Reed - Rock & Roll Animal
Beatles - Revolver
Best of the Byrds
Cream - (Some German compilation)
The Who - Tommy
Queen - A Night at the Opera
Todd Rundgren - Hermit Of Mink Hollow

dave225 (Dave225), Thursday, 6 March 2003 14:03 (twenty-three years ago)

'88/'89 was my changeover year from metal to post-modern, explaining the bi-polar nature of this list.

Bon Jovi - New Jersey
The Cure - Disintegration
Dokken - Back For the Attack
Soul Asylum - Hang Time
Iron Maiden - Seventh Son of a Seventh Son
Depeche Mode - Music For the Masses
Metallica - ...And Justice For All
Echo & the Bunnymen - s/t
Megadeth - So Far, So Good, So What
Mighty Lemon Drops - World Without End

paul cox (paul cox), Thursday, 6 March 2003 14:03 (twenty-three years ago)

OK thanks! I actually used to make lists of favourite albums then, I may still have a few.

Favourite at 14 - something by Bowie probably.

Favourite at 15 - The World Won't Listen by The Smiths.

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 6 March 2003 14:03 (twenty-three years ago)

Well, let's see....9th grade (or Freshmen Year of High School, to the layperson) would've been.....jeez, 1981, so it invariably included.....

Pink Floyd The Wall
AC/DC - Back in Black
Devo - New Traditionalists
Adam & the Ants - Prince Charming
Ozzy Osbourne - Blizzard of Ozz
Iron Maiden - Killers
Rush - Moving Pictures
Queen - The Game
Kiss - Unmasked
Ramones - Pleasant Dreams

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 6 March 2003 15:40 (twenty-three years ago)

9th grade: that would've been September 1980 - June 1981, just when I began collecting records in earnest. I was still very much in transition, I recall. My top 10 probably would've been:

* Squeeze: Argybargy
* Devo: Freedom of Choice
* Devo: Duty Now for The Future
* Talking Heads: Fear of Music
* The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
* Dead Kennedys: Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables
* Rush: Moving Pictures
* Ramones: Road To Ruin
* Ramones: End of the Century
* Elvis Costello: Get Happy!

mike a (mike a), Thursday, 6 March 2003 15:46 (twenty-three years ago)

Note: a few months later I discovered college radio, which changed my taste for good.

mike a (mike a), Thursday, 6 March 2003 15:46 (twenty-three years ago)

This would be 1995 for me so:
1. Depeche Mode - Violator
2. Pooh Sticks - Optimistic Fool (still my favorite record for springtime dancing in dormroom)
3. Sebadoh - Bakesale
4. Superchunk - Foolish
5. Nirvana - In Utero
6. Aphex Twin - Selected Ambient Works Volume II
7. Future Sound of London - Lifeforms
8. Portishead - Portishead
9. My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
10.KCRW Rare on Air Volume 2
11.Primus - Frizzle Fry

I think I mostly just bought whatever spin reviewed and I was lucky enough to get the good stuff first and then be too broke to pick up Offspring records or whatever else.

Aaron Grossman (aajjgg), Thursday, 6 March 2003 15:49 (twenty-three years ago)

REM - Murmur
Stone Roses - S/t
Liz Phair - Exile in Guyville
Velvet Underground - Best of
Replacements - Tim
Suede - s/t
Cure - Boys Don't Cry
Red House Painters - (roller coaster one)
Television - Marquee Moon
Pogues - If I Should Fall from the Grace of God

Carey (Carey), Thursday, 6 March 2003 15:54 (twenty-three years ago)

1980-81, Canby Union High School, Canby, Oregon, home of the Cougars. Colors: blue and gold. Much feathered hair, for both boys and girls; primary music: metal, baby. The young Neudonym listens to:

The Clash, London Calling
The Clash, Sandinista!
Stevie Wonder, Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants
The Police, Zenyatta Mondatta
Chuck Mangione, Children of Sanchez
The B-52's, The B-52's
David Bowie, Scary Monsters
Pete Townshend, Empty Glass
Yes, Tales from Topographic Oceans
Bruce Springsteen, The River

and a whole lot of radio.

Neudonym, Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:01 (twenty-three years ago)

Is this supposed to be the top ten I would've made in 9th grade? Or my current top ten, composed only of records I owned in 9th grade? Actually, you know what, that first Digable Planets record would be #1 either way.

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:02 (twenty-three years ago)

Prolly something like this (in no order):

Sonic Youth, Daydream Nation
Pixies, Bossanova
Dinosaur Jr., Bug
Sebadoh, III
Seam, Headsparks
Afghan Whigs, Ceremony
Crain, Speed
Slint, Spiderland
Camper Van Beethoven, Key Lime Pie
Swans, White Light from the Mouth of Infinity

hstencil, Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:02 (twenty-three years ago)

Hm, 9th grade, 14 years old, 1992-93...

Fishbone Reality of My Surroundings
Camper Van Beethoven Key Lime Pie*
They Might Be Giants Flood
De La Soul 3 Feet High and Rising
Arrested Development Length of Time it Took to Make Album ;-)
Dead Milkmen Beelzebubba
Fishbone s/t
Faith No More The Real Thing
REM the one before Automatic for the People
Neil Young Harvest Moon

*Hey hstencil, you know they're playing together again, right?

nickalicious (nickalicious), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:08 (twenty-three years ago)

Geez, you folks were way more hip than me. I don't think i even owned ten records in the 9th grade. Here's what i probably owned and yet still retain. And for the record, this was 1980-1981 at Dana Hills Maximum Security Youth Facility in south Orange County, CA.

ELO - _Out of the Blue_, _Face the Music_, _Time_, _New World Record_
CW McCall - Convoy (from my folks collection)
Soundtrack to _Star Wars_. Still got it. Double vinyl, baby!
Soundtrack to _Cosmos_. A marvelous entree into classical/electronic.
(I also might be off by a year or so for this one).

Yes i was a geek.

I don't think i even heard a real punk single/album until 1982, and that was probably the video to "Hungry Wolf" by X (and even that's debatable.)

Matt Maxwell (Matt M.), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:12 (twenty-three years ago)

oh shit I forgot dead milkmen

Jon Williams (ex machina), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:14 (twenty-three years ago)

*hey nickalicious I do know that, but I didn't go see 'em in NYC 'cause tickets were like $25*

hstencil, Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:14 (twenty-three years ago)

Hmmm... That would be mid 1985 or earlier (and not counting stuff like Japan's "Tin Drum" since I aquired that one way later). Almost impossible to list

First and foremost:
Quick Step & Side Kick - Thompson Twins (probably the only one that would make my current Top 100)

..and (in random order)...

Into The Gap - Thompson Twins
Upstairs At Eric's - Yazoo
You And Me Both - Yazoo
Born In The USA - Bruce Springsteen
Colour By Numbers - Culture Club
Dream Into Action - Howard Jones
Dare - Human League
Music From The Elder - Kiss
Hunting High & Low - a-ha

My parents owned "A Hard Day's Night", "Help!", "Rubber Soul", "Revolver" and "Sgt. Pepper", but I guess that doesn't count?

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:14 (twenty-three years ago)

Tell us what the equivalent is then!

Probably "10th grade" in the UK. Kids in the UK start school at 5, don't they?

(Easier here, because Norwegian kids start school at 6, just like American ones)

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:17 (twenty-three years ago)

MM: I also owned a whole lot of ELO, but I was officially "over" them by then as far as my friends knew. Secretly, however....

Neudonym, Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:18 (twenty-three years ago)

i wasn't really into music that heavy in those days, but here's roundup/guess:

um...

nirvana, "nevermind"
right said friend, "up"
whatever deee-lite's second to last album was called
b-52s, "good stuff"

ouch. i can't think of anything else that i definitely was into that year, but i can say that belly, hole, polly jean harvey, pearl jam, the breeders, and all the other predictable 90s "alt-rock" was soon to follow.

Raymond Cummings, Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:18 (twenty-three years ago)

and for the record - 14 years old, 1991-1992, Calvert Hall H.S.

Raymond Cummings, Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:22 (twenty-three years ago)

let's see this was...1992/3, so...

public enemy - fear of a black planet
de la - 3 feet high
(i was starting to get reactionary about hip-hop at this point and by 94 i wouldnt buy another hip-hop record for two years, illmatic and enter the wutang were both late 93/early 94 i think, which means they were 10th grade)
husker du - zen arcade
the clash - s/t
pixies - doolittle
dinosaur jr - you're living all over me
minor threat - complete discography
new order - substance
joy div - one of the best ofs, prob
rave tapes!

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:23 (twenty-three years ago)

In 1985, my favourite artists were Howard Jones, Thompson Twins and Culture Club.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:26 (twenty-three years ago)

Aaaah that would be 1977-78! Memory fades and plays all sorts of strange tricks, but I've tried to exclude the people who I know I hadn't discovered or didn't like (i.e. basically anything that wasn't punk!) at the time and I'm pretty sure I'd have had all of these in some form or another, even if only on tape from mates:

Alternative TV - The Image Has Cracked
Buzzcocks - Another Music In A Different Kitchen
The Clash
Elvis Costello - My Aim Is True / This Years Model
Damned Damned Damned
Ian Dury - New Boots & Panties
Heartbreakers - LAMF
Penetration - Moving Targets
Pere Ubu - Modern Dance
PiL - First Edition
Siouxsie & The Banshees - Scream
Magazine - Real Life
New York Dolls - 1st / Too Much Too Soon
Ramones - Ramones / Leave Home / Rocket To Russia
Talking Heads - '77
Vibrators - Pure Mania, V2
Wire - Pink Flag
XTC - White Music
X-Ray Spex - Germ Free Adolescents

Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:34 (twenty-three years ago)

The Dave Clarke 5 - Coast to coast
Beach Boys - Endless Summer
Jan & Dean - ?
Ramones - Pleasant Dreams

lawrence kansas (lawrence kansas), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:36 (twenty-three years ago)

Ooops, that was slightly more than ten, wasn't it?

Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:37 (twenty-three years ago)

We American kids start school at 5, too. We just have this non-numbered Teutonic "kindergarten" prelude.

I basically spent that year listening to stuff like:

Sundays - Reading, Writing, and Arithmetic
Pet Shop Boys - Please
Sisters of Mercy - Floodland
Smiths - Louder than Bombs
REM - Document
Blur - Leisure
Bauhaus - The Sky's Gone Out
New Order - Brotherhood
10,000 Maniacs - Hope Chest
Morrissey - Viva Hate

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:38 (twenty-three years ago)

14 -15 at school. again 88 - 89. so we're talking...

subhumans - ep/lp, from the cradle to the grave
slayer - reign in blood
metallica - master of puppets
black flag - the first four years
voivod - dimension hatross, nothingface
dead kennedys - plastic surgery disasters
napalm death - scum
carcass - reek of putrefaction

that's 10 anyway. after this point the metal quotient faded into indie with the punk rock a constant still.

simon 803 (simon 803), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:39 (twenty-three years ago)

standard alt. fare; wish I has been exposed to more hip hop and punk/hardcore at that time.

Cure - Disintegration
Pixies - Doolittle
Thowing Muses - Real Ramona
Dinosaur Jr. - Green Mind
Smiths - s/t
JAMC - Automatic
Sundays - WR&A
R.E.M. - Green
Stone Roses - s/t
Sonic Youth - Goo

Aaron A., Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:42 (twenty-three years ago)

1978-9, Norwich Free Academy, Norwich, Ct.
In no particular order:
1. Led Zeppelin
2. Led Zeppelin 2
3. Pink Floyd, DSOTM
4. Boston
5. Rolling Stones, It's Only RnR
6. Eagles, Their Greatist Hits
7. Aerosmith, Live Bootleg
8. Ted Nugent, Double Live Gonzo
9. Beatles, the Blue compiliation
10. Led Zeppelin, lV

You have to understand, there was (and still isn't) any outlet for anything other than AOR radio. It wasn't until my Junior year that I realised there were other forms of rock music than hard rock/classic/metal.

Davlo (Davlo), Thursday, 6 March 2003 16:52 (twenty-three years ago)

Patti Smith-Horses
David Bowie-Station to Station
John Cale-Slow Dazzle
Rolling Stones-Metamorphosis
Roxy Music-Siren
Aerosmith-Toys in the Attic
The Kinks Present Schoolboys in Disgrace
Ramones
Eno-Another Green World
Sparks-Indiscreet


Arthur (Arthur), Thursday, 6 March 2003 17:02 (twenty-three years ago)

tribe called quest-peoples instinctive travels...
black flag-first four years
pixies-dolittle
minor threat-discography
public enemy-it takes a nation of millions...
roxy music-siren
english beat-special beat service
the cure-head on the door
dinosaur jr-bug
fugazi-13 songs

~ddb

ddb, Thursday, 6 March 2003 17:07 (twenty-three years ago)

Most of you bastards ended up with better selections than I and I hate you. There.

Of what I had then, I would named Def Leppard's Pyromania and Duran Duran's Rio. That would be about it.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 6 March 2003 17:44 (twenty-three years ago)

Ned would you take Pyromania over Hysteria? I would. The former came out when I was in 3rd grade, maybe.

hstencil, Thursday, 6 March 2003 17:45 (twenty-three years ago)

9th grade? gadzooks. 1976. Must admit to pretty questionable taste at that point. I seem to recall i liked whatever was on Dr Demento's radio show that week (not so bad), and I think I had a pink floyd album (coolness factor decreases noticeably here). And my parents Stan Freberg records (these I still like). There wasn't much good on the radio in Montreal back then, that I can remember. Still, at least I had the good sense to think my neighbour who liked Kiss was kinda wierd.

pauls00, Thursday, 6 March 2003 17:48 (twenty-three years ago)

Hstencil, the cut off limit is ninth grade, see. ;-) Pyromania came out at the end of seventh grade for me -- Hysteria the start of senior year.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 6 March 2003 17:55 (twenty-three years ago)

neudonym -- you went to CUHS? Did you graduate in 86 or 87? yikes, someone who went to my h.s. *hides*

jack cole (jackcole), Thursday, 6 March 2003 17:57 (twenty-three years ago)

1990/91...hmmmm

It would've been:

* Annihilator - Never, neverland
* Poison - Flesh and Blood
* Megadeth - Rust in Peace
* Skid Row - S/t
* Iron Maiden - The Number of the Beast
* Anthrax - Persistence of Time
* Xentrix - For Whose Advantage?
* Exodus - Impact is Imminent
* Kreator - Coma of Souls
* Slayer - Seasons in the Abyss

jel -- (jel), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:03 (twenty-three years ago)

RAWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWK!

Jel's version of something a la Klosterman's Fargo Rock City is something I wanna read.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:07 (twenty-three years ago)

Ned I meant in general, do you take Hysteria over Pyromania?

hstencil, Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:10 (twenty-three years ago)

Beatles, entire catalog
Yes, Close to the Edge
XTC, Skylarking
Led Zeppelin, II
Beach Boys, Endless Summer
Danny Elfman, Music for A Darkened Theatre
Saturday Night Fever soundtrack

I think this is all I still own from 9th grade.

dleone (dleone), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:11 (twenty-three years ago)

Ah, I see! Yeah, I would. Pyromania is great but I think doesn't have as many truly great songs -- and I lurve how Lange went shined-up brutality on Pyromania to brute sheen on Hysteria. Remaking the album from the opposite way around = brilliant!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:19 (twenty-three years ago)

(that looks like a cool book, will track it down, thanks Ned!!!)

jel -- (jel), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:20 (twenty-three years ago)

Yer welcome! I think you will very much enjoy it. :-)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:25 (twenty-three years ago)


i was transitioning out of being into punk/metal for skateboarding reasons... to more general music... the doors movie opened doors there... rem's popularity... and i started listening to hip-hop and r&b more ... etc etc...

minor threat "out of step"
descendents "hallraker"
dead milkmen "beelzebubba"
rem "murmur" or any of those mid-80's albums...
the doors "best of" or something similar.
salt n pepa "hot cool and vicious"
def leppard "pyromania"
public enemy "it takes a million..."
faith no more "the real thing"
sir mix-a-lot "swass"

?
m.

msp, Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:37 (twenty-three years ago)

to be perfectly honest, my relationship to music ranged from indifference to disdain. so my top ten would consist of:

nothing at all.

then again, I lived in a rural area, the nearest towns of any significant size about 20 minutes away -- which is a lot when you dont have access to buses or have a driver's license.

jack cole (jackcole), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:40 (twenty-three years ago)

i took this to mean "what albums that you liked in 9th grade do you now think DON'T totally suck"
Thus:
Beastie Boys--Check Your Head
Nirvana--Nevermind
Public Enemy--Fear of a Black Planet
Led Zeppelin box set
Sonic Youth--Goo
Pink Floyd--Dark Side
PJ Harvey--Rid of Me
Guns n Roses--Appetitte for Destruction
(this is too hard, I give up)

oops (Oops), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:45 (twenty-three years ago)


then again, I lived in a rural area, the nearest towns of any significant size about 20 minutes away -- which is a lot when you dont have access to buses or have a driver's license

that was my situation as well... small beach town in florida... radio and mtv were the only sources of music exposure...

i think i was way more into skateboarding, dnd, and video games at the time.

m.

msp, Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:48 (twenty-three years ago)

1985, Lenape High School in southern NJ

Kate Bush - Hounds Of Love (literally did not leave my turntable for months)
Kate Bush - The Dreaming
David Bowie - Heroes
Robert Plant - The Principle Of Moments (loved this record!)
The Beatles - The White Album
The Who - Quadrophenia
Prince - Purple Rain
Rush - Grace Under Pressure
Men At Work - Business As Usual
Dire Straits - Brothers In Arms

I was right on the cusp of divorcing myself from Top 40 radio, in another year most of this list would be changed ... replaced with The Cure, The Smiths, Cocteau Twins, etc.

Best freshman HS music memory ... a girl in my algebra class recognized the lyrics to "Panic In Detroit" on my notebook.

zaxxon25 (zaxxon25), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:48 (twenty-three years ago)

yeah, unfortunately we didnt even have cable where I lived until maybe my senior year in high school -- so my only contact with music at school was what people were playing there -- stuff like Howard Jones, Bon Jovi, etc -- all stuff that turned me off.

jack cole (jackcole), Thursday, 6 March 2003 18:50 (twenty-three years ago)

jack: I am absolutely floored that we went to the same school. I graduated in '84, but my brother Tim was class of '86 and my other brother Jeff was class of '89. This is freaking me out a lot.

And yeah, you're right about all the crap our classmates listened to...but other schools were probably worse. Molalla? Silverton? Oregon City?

Neudonym, Thursday, 6 March 2003 19:02 (twenty-three years ago)

nah, i figured out who you are, m.c. and I remember your brother tim, too. i was a freshman when you were a senior. in fact, I posted a link to your children's book on the website i call home. I remember when you did an authors even for it at the bookstore i work at in beaverton.

jack cole (jackcole), Thursday, 6 March 2003 19:08 (twenty-three years ago)

damn small world. you still at that store? that place roxxoroxx.

a lot of my records were bought on my parents' credit account at gary's rexall drugstore or at that creepy stereo store that used to be out at the Roth's IGA mall. the rest: well, portland tower or the ctc mall chainstores.

okay, so no one else cares. but you all have to understand: this was a town of what, jack, like 6000 people? and now we meet again.

(jeez i hope i wasn't too much of an asshole in high school.)

Neudonym, Thursday, 6 March 2003 19:14 (twenty-three years ago)

nah, you weren't asshole. in fact, I remember you as being really nice -- the only nice guy on the football team -- and the person I was always compared to by Mr. Nichols, etc in the English dept, ha ha ha. yeah, I'm still out there at the bookstore -- run the used book buying dept.

jack cole (jackcole), Thursday, 6 March 2003 19:18 (twenty-three years ago)

roughly 1988-89

Sinéad O'Connor - The Lion and the Cobra
World Party - Goodbye Jumbo
Public Enemy - Fear of a Black Planet
Cure - Disintegration
Public Image Ltd. - 9 and Second Edition
Siouxsie and the Banshees - The Scream and Peepshow
Cocteau Twins - In the Pink Opaque
Guns and Roses - Appetite for Destruction
Metallica - ...and Justice for All
Sundays - Reading, Writing and Arithmatic
Sarah McLachlan - Touch and Solace
Midnight Oil - Diesel and Dust
and of course, Never Mind the Bollocks and my mixtape of Weird Al.

Now you know why I want Gier Hongro destroyed for saying 87-91 was the Dark Ages.

Lord Custos Epsilon (Lord Custos Epsilon), Thursday, 6 March 2003 19:22 (twenty-three years ago)

jc hit me up at zinoguy@ku.com and we can continue all this later so as to not have to get into the whole nichols/sanvitale/birnbaum debate, places we ate lunch at, etc.

Neudonym, Thursday, 6 March 2003 19:27 (twenty-three years ago)

Simon & Garfunkel, Kronos Quartet, Blues Traveller AND NOTHING ELSE.

Sadly I was not listening to Debbie Gibson and Boney M anymore. My loss.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Thursday, 6 March 2003 20:16 (twenty-three years ago)

Sterling, you sound like the most emo/avant/bluesy 9th grader of all time.

Neudonym, Thursday, 6 March 2003 20:20 (twenty-three years ago)

yes S&G were emo

Neudonym, Thursday, 6 March 2003 20:20 (twenty-three years ago)

He's right.

ONE TWO THREE FOUR
Hello Darkness, my old friend (janga janga janga janga)
I've come to talk with you again, (janga joonga janga janga
Because a vision softly creeping, (janga janga janga janga)
Left its seeds while I was sleeping, (janga joonga janga janga)

This could TOTALLY be Conor Oberst...

Lord Custos Epsilon (Lord Custos Epsilon), Thursday, 6 March 2003 20:28 (twenty-three years ago)


considering that the hated covered "i am a rock" points back in time pretty well...

and the fact that conor oberst could be s&g makes him worthless to me.

blech,
m.

msp, Thursday, 6 March 2003 20:37 (twenty-three years ago)

http://while1.org/~xm/misc/emo.jpg

Jon Williams (ex machina), Thursday, 6 March 2003 20:40 (twenty-three years ago)

wow it's Shawnee Smith and Mo Rocca

Neudonym, Thursday, 6 March 2003 20:44 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm taking this to mean a top 10 I'd compile now using only recordings I owned in Gr 9 ('92/'93):

1 Jimi Hendrix - Electric Ladyland
2 fourth Led Zeppelin
3 Classic Yes
4 an Ed Bickert Quartet concert taped off the CBC
5 a Howlin' Wolf mix tape
6 Rush - Moving Pictures
7 REM - Out Of Time (I haven't listened to this in ages)
8 The Who - Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy (Haven't had this in ages but I think it was good.)
9 an Oliver Jones concert taped off the CBC
10 Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger (Am tempted to list Queensryche - Empire but haven't actually heard that in almost a decade.)

sundar subramanian (sundar), Thursday, 6 March 2003 22:30 (twenty-three years ago)

Gr 10 was much more interesting. I started paying more attention to contemporary rock and discovered college radio in a big way.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Thursday, 6 March 2003 22:32 (twenty-three years ago)

Now you know why I want Gier Hongro destroyed for saying 87-91 was the Dark Ages.

That 1990 World Party album was quite great anyway... :-)

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 6 March 2003 22:33 (twenty-three years ago)

I can't remember what I was listening to when

Dave Brubeck -- Time Further Out
Guess Who -- Canned Wheat
Bob Dylan -- Self Portrait
Judas Preist -- Screaming For Vengence
Dire Straights -- Love Over Gold
Van Halen -- Women and Children First
Blood Sweat and Tears -- B.O.
Sly and the Family Stone -- There's a Riot Goin' On
Hank Williams Jr. -- Whiskey Bent and Hellbound
ZZ Top -- Tres Hombres

christoff (christoff), Thursday, 6 March 2003 22:42 (twenty-three years ago)

i took this to mean "what albums that you liked in 9th grade do you now think DON'T totally suck"

Same here. For instance, if asked back then, I would probably have listed Culture Club's "Waking Up With The House On Fire" and Limahl's "Don't Suppose" among my definite favourite albums of all time. I wouldn't even dream of doing that now.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 6 March 2003 22:47 (twenty-three years ago)

Actually if "recording" can = a single track on tape, then Lenny Breau's "Mercy Mercy" should be on there.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Thursday, 6 March 2003 22:50 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think I still own any of the albums that I dug when I was in Grade 9. That would be back in 1985, and without an older brother or sister to give me some guidance, I only had a handful of badly dubbed cassette tapes, mostly stuff recorded from the radio, Styx's "Kilroy Was Here", Def Leppard's "Pyromania", Duran Duran's "Arena" and maybe a copy of Steve Miller Band's "Greatest Hits."
All my dad listened to was jazz, which didn't have much of an appeal when I was 13. My mom was content with whatever was on the local E-Z rock station.
Thusly, I cannot make a list.
A couple of years later, I really started to pay attention.

Bruce Urquhart (Bruce Urquhart), Thursday, 6 March 2003 23:01 (twenty-three years ago)

atari teenage riot- burn berlin burn
front 242- front by front
kmfdm- xtort
sebadoh- harmacy
sex pistols- never mind....
underworld- second toughest in the infants


thats all i remember

todd swiss (eliti), Thursday, 6 March 2003 23:56 (twenty-three years ago)

Most of you bastards ended up with better selections than I and I hate you. There.
Ned if it makes you feel any better, the only other electronic CDs I had besides FSOL and Aphex Twin were the first Deep Forest and Engima albums. There I said it! ;-)

Aaron Grossman (aajjgg), Friday, 7 March 2003 02:13 (twenty-three years ago)

Led Zeppelin I
Led Zeppelin II
Led Zeppelin III
Led Zeppelin IV
Led Zeppelin Houses of the Holy
Led Zeppelin Physical Graffiti
Led Zeppelin Presence
Led Zeppelin The Song Remains the Same
Led Zeppelin In Through the Out Door
Led Zeppelin Coda

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Friday, 7 March 2003 02:48 (twenty-three years ago)

one year passes...
(i like the looks of this thread)

Freshman year of high school...1996-1997...St. Ignatius High School, Cleveland, Ohio...The Indians lost to the Orioles in the first round, despite having won 99 games that season...Art Modell broke the hearts of millions of Browns fans and relocated the team to Baltimore...My first concert was The Smashing Pumpkins (opener: Garbage).

1. Smashing Pumpkins, Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness
2. Smashing Pumpkins, Siamese Dream
3. Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon
4. Pink Floyd, The Final Cut
5. Creedence Clearwater Revival, Chronicle 1
6. The Beatles, The Beatles (The White Album)
7. RUSH, Chronicles
8. Bruce Springsteen, Greatest Hits (i got started on Bruce late)
9. Pink Floyd, The Wall
10. Smashing Pumpkins,

PB, Tuesday, 15 February 2005 03:57 (twenty-one years ago)

Freshman year, 2000-2001, I was knee deep in getting into hardcore and metal the wrong way (local bands, the awful metalcore of that period, etc.) and renouncing everything I liked before save most of my hip hop records, thank god.

Notorious B.I.G. - Ready To Die
Wu-Tang Clan - Enter The Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers
Smashing Pumpkins - Siamese Dream
At The Gates - Slaughter Of The Soul
Slayer - Reign In Blood
Metallica - Master Of Puppets
Eminem - The Marshall Mathers LP
John Coltrane - My Favorite Things
Nirvana - In Utero
Minor Threat - Complete Discography

greg ginn thought neubauten was bullshit, why don't you? (smile), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 04:13 (twenty-one years ago)

oh dear god, fuck all you 14-year-old hipsters.

1. batman forever soundtrack
2. philadelphia soundtrack
3. arrested development - (whatever it was called)
4. david lanz - return to the heart
5. counting crows - august and everything after
6. pearl jam - vitalogy (no, i didn't ever own ten)
7. smashing pumpkins - mellon collie
8. enigma - the cross of changes
9. spin doctors - the one with 'pocket full of kryptonite' on it
10. bush - sixteen stone

funny thing -- 'philadelphia' soundtrack was the first recording of any sort i bought with my own money because i loved the springsteen track. during my post-grunge shit years, i thought it was k-lame, then i found it in a corner about five years ago, was familiar with all of the artists by then (i hadn't even known who neil young was at the time), and decided i'd keep it, as much for a few good songs as for the nostalgia.

when i was nine or ten, i heard a nirvana song on the radio, thought it was too harsh and evil sounding. mind you, i was raised mormon. now i like darkthrone and emperor.

i win for most unpredictable progression.

fauxhemian (fauxhemian), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 04:30 (twenty-one years ago)

i credit radiohead -> sonic youth

fauxhemian (fauxhemian), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 04:31 (twenty-one years ago)

oops.

10. Smashing Pumpkins, Live at Reading (import bootleg...The recording of "Mayonaise" is amazing.)

And i'll stand by this music till the day i die or go deaf (preferably the same day).

PB, Tuesday, 15 February 2005 04:32 (twenty-one years ago)

untitled - Throwing Muses
The Real Ramona - Throwing Muses
The Very Best of Aretha Franklin - hmm
'60s Girl Power - V/A
Meat Puppets II - Meat Puppets
New Day Rising - Hüsker Dü
Star - Belly
Doolittle - the Pixies
Unplugged - Nirvana
I think the Wipers box-set was a 10th grade purchase...um...um...
Twice Upon a Time - Siouxsie & the Banshees


aww, I was so college-rock.

babyalive (babyalive), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 04:42 (twenty-one years ago)

There were really only three CDs I loved when I was in 9th grade:

Digable Planets, Reachin': A New Refutation of Time and Space
Arrested Development, 3 Years, 5 Months, and 2 Days in the Life of...
P.M. Dawn, Of the Heart, of the Soul, and of the Cross: The Utopian Experience

Other CDs I owned:

TLC, Ooooooh ... on the TLC Tip
Bobby Brown, Bobby
East Coast Family, East Coast Family, Vol. 1
Sounds of Blackness, The Evolution of Gospel
Mary J. Blige, What's the 411?
Danny Elfman, Nightbreed soundtrack

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 05:35 (twenty-one years ago)

De La Soul, 3 Feet High & Rising
Prince, Sign 'O' the Times, 1999
The Beatles, Revolver, Rubber Soul
Lisa Stansfield, Affection
Al Green's Greatest Hits
Public Enemy, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back
Parliament, Mothership Connection, Funkentelechy vs. the Placebo Syndrome (two sides of the same cassette)

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 05:38 (twenty-one years ago)

I wasn't (still?) ain't as cool as some of you....

1989-1990

U2 - The Joshua Tree
Depeche Mode - Speak & Spell
Depeche Mode - A Broken Frame
Depeche Mode - Black Celebration
Depeche Mode - Music For the Masses
B52's - Cosmic Thing
Erasure - The Innocents
They Might Be Giants - Lincoln (I can't believe I had this!!)
Bobby Brown - Don't Be Cruel
Milli Vanilli - Girl You Know It's True

Favorite Song : Prince "Batdance"

kickitcricket (kickitcricket), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 05:45 (twenty-one years ago)

Nirvana, Unplugged in New York
Beatles, Rubber Soul & Sgt. Peppers
Boards of Canada, Music has the Right to Children
Aphex Twin, Richard D. James Album
Offspring, Smash
Beck, Midnite Vultures
Antonio Carlos Jobim, Compact Jazz
Weird Al, COMPLETE DISCOGRAPHY

poortheatre (poortheatre), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 05:54 (twenty-one years ago)

"Art Modell broke the hearts of millions of Browns fans and relocated the team to Baltimore"

PB - speaking of Art Modell (totally off topic)...I hung out with his son and wife at a TV On The Radio gig at the Echo in LA last year. Cool guy. He's a some kind of musician/producer out here. Was wearing a gargantuan Baltimore Ravens Super Bowl ring (that's how I came to find out he was Art Modell's son).

kickitcricket (kickitcricket), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 05:56 (twenty-one years ago)

that one Black Box album
C&C Music Factory
Def Leppard - Hysteria
Guns n Roses - Appetite for Destruction
U2 - Rattle and Hum
some Janet Jackson album
Thriller
some Dokken crap
Cinderella
Peter Brotzmann

Riot Gear! (Gear!), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 06:16 (twenty-one years ago)

U2 Achtung Baby
Pavement Crooked Rain Crooked Rain
Pavement Slanted & Enchanted
R.E.M. Green
R.E.M. Document
R.E.M. Automatic For The People
R.E.M. Monster
Sonic Youth Daydream Nation
Liz Phair Whip Smart
Nirvana In Utero
The Smashing Pumpkins Siamese Dream

Matthew C Perpetua (inca), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 06:26 (twenty-one years ago)

this was my top 10 then (uh, 1990 if memory serves), and as far as compiling a top 10 now of those albums, I kind of think I'd keep it the way it is, y'know? I kind of like my roots...cheese and all.

Motley Crue, Dr Feelgood
Def Leppard, Hysteria
Faith No More, The Real Thing
Prince, Batman soundtrack
Warrant, Cherry Pie
Guns N Roses, Appetite For Destruction
Paula Abdul - Forever Your Girl
Madonna - Like A Prayer + Immaculate Collection
Janet Jackson - Rhythym Nation 1814
Aerosmith - Pump
plus: Skid Row - 18 And Life cassingle that I listened to repeatedly

VegemiteGrrl (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 06:36 (twenty-one years ago)

In 9th grade, I beleived that the following ten artists:

Nirvana
Led Zeppelin
The Beatles
Pink Floyd
Black Sabbath
Jimi Hendrix
The Rolling Stones
Radiohead
Bob Dylan
U2

were without question, the ten best bands of all-time. There was no doubt in my mind whatsoever, nothing else even came close.

The Good Dr. Bill (The Good Dr. Bill), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 06:38 (twenty-one years ago)

89-90
I entered high school young, in my defense.

George Michael - Faith
VA - La Bamba Strk
Run DMC - Raising Hell
U2 - Joshua Tree
Digital Underground - This is an EP Release
Don Henley - End of the Innocence
Paul Simon - Rhythm of the Saints
Young MC - Stone Cold Rhyming
Jackie Wilson - Reet Petite! Best of
Harry Connick Jr. - We Are in Love
Quincy Jones - Back on the Block (actually just the one song w/ Tevin Campbell but I think that exhausts my album collection anyway)

favorite song if asked: probably "Jam on It". It was my white whale since I couldn't get reception on the local rap station(KDAY!!!)


tremendoid (tremendoid), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 06:56 (twenty-one years ago)

14-15 (secondary 4th year, 1987-88, more '88 really) was when I got into the Smiths, but I was also listening to stuff like Prince, Public Enemy and still some Peter Gabriel and dodgy AOR like Robert Palmer and Stevie Winwood from my previous year's phase. I still liked my Madness records too.

Madness - Complete Madness
Madness - The Rise & Fall
The Smiths - The Smiths
The Smiths - Meat Is Murder
The Smiths - The Queen Is Dead
The Smiths - Strangeways Here We Come
The Smiths - Hatful Of Hollow
The Smiths - Louder Than Bombs
Morrissey - Viva Hate
Public Enemy - It Takes A Nation Of Millions...

lots of singles too, I guess. And stuff from my parents too, though I didn't really own that.


Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:01 (twenty-one years ago)

Oh, I got 'Nation of Millions' came out in the summer holidays between 4th and 5th year, so I don't know if that counts. If not, then stick in one of my early singles like 'The Model/Computer Love' or a 'Penny Lane/Strawberry Fields' reissue.

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:09 (twenty-one years ago)

The Chameleons - Script Of The Bridge
The Chameleons - What Does Anything Mean Basically?
Joy Division - Still
The Sound - Shock Of Daylight
New Order - Power Corruption and Lies
Echo & The Bunnymen - Heaven Up Here
Magazine - After The Fact
Simple Minds - Sons & Fascination
Bauhaus - Singles comp
The Cure - Head On The Door

NickB (NickB), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:22 (twenty-one years ago)

What years were you 14/15 in, Nick?

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:32 (twenty-one years ago)

1985

NickB (NickB), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:34 (twenty-one years ago)

Around 94-95 I think

Blur - Parklife
Prodigy - Music For A Jilted Generation
Nirvana - Nevermind
Offspring - Smash
Green Day - Dookie
Oasis - What's The Story (Morning Glory)
Boo Radleys - Wake Up!
Smashing Pumpkins - Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness
Garbage - Garbage
Black Grape - It's Great When You're Straight (Yeah!)

dog latin (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:47 (twenty-one years ago)

I don't have you down as still liking Green Day and Offspring, dog latin! (or have I misunderstood the thread?)

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:49 (twenty-one years ago)

I was 15 in 1977. I saw the Pistols in December of that year, hence the number one choice.

My ten :

Sex Pistols : Never Mind The Bollocks
Ramones - 1st
Bowie - Ziggy
Bowie - Diamond Dogs
Pink Floyd - Meddle
The Story of The Who
Beatles - Red and Blue albums
Stevie Wonder - Songs In The Key Of Life
The Jam - In The City
The Clash - 1st

I was listening to a lot of disco, motown and glam singles too.

Dr. C (Dr. C), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:52 (twenty-one years ago)

I thought Jon wasn't asking what your top 10 then was, but "From the record collection you had were 14/15, what do you like best now?")

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:57 (twenty-one years ago)

in the first month of ninth grade (september 1995) i recieved a huge box of cassettes in the mail from a summer camp counciler, who was in her mid twenties and moving across the country. this package was a godsend and shot me light years forward in musical education. i still listen to many of the tapes regularly today...
some of them:
sleep chamber- w on w
souixise- peepshow
black flag- first four years
napalm death -scum
the cure- disintegration
men without hats - rhthym of youth
laibach- i forget but it was a cassette single
sugarcubes

other stuff i discovered that year:
master musicians of jajouka- pipes of pan at jajouka
lydia lunch-hysterie
the orb and a bunch of other ambient techno on the radio, which i found a tape of recently and have been loving.
big audio dynamite
etc

moral of the story: pass on unwanted tapes to impressionable 14 year olds and blow their minds. my whole musical worldview was changed in the afternoon i recieved those cassettes.

deru, Tuesday, 15 February 2005 11:57 (twenty-one years ago)

That was 1977/78 then. To be honest I would hardly ever listen to any of this stuff again. Except the first two maybe. The best of the lot:

Genesis - Nursery Cryme
Pink Floyd - Animals
Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
Genesis - Selling England by the Pound
Manfred Mann's Earth Band - Nightingales and Bombers
Genesis - Trespass
Supertramp - Crime of the Century
Manfred Mann's Earth Bad - The Roaring Silence
Supertramp - Crisis What Crisis?
Kiss - Destroyer

alex in mainhattan (alex63), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 12:17 (twenty-one years ago)

September 76 to July 77, in rough chronological order:

Graham Parker & The Rumour - Heat Treatment
Dr Feelgood - Stupidity
Eddie & The Hot Rods - Live At The Marquee EP
Eddie & The Hot Rods - Teenage Depression
Buzzcocks - Spiral Scratch EP
Ramones - Ramones
The Damned - Damned Damned Damned
The Clash - The Clash
Generation X - first Peel session
XTC - first Peel session

mike t-diva (mike t-diva), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 12:18 (twenty-one years ago)

Alba - I hearted Green Day and Offspring muchly back when I was 14. Not a huge fan now although I think I could get back into Green Day in a nostalgic way.

dog latin (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 12:21 (twenty-one years ago)

Oh hang on - maybe I missed the point of the question - Black Grape ugh no!!!!

dog latin (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 12:21 (twenty-one years ago)

I think that WAS my music collection when I was 14/15 actually so yeh that's about it.

dog latin (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 12:23 (twenty-one years ago)

From what I owned in 1987ish:

Dexy's Midnight Runners- Searching For The Young Soul Rebels
Microdisney- Crooked Mile
Deacon Blue- Raintown
The Smiths- The Queen Is Dead
Lloyd Cole & The Commotions- Rattlesnakes
The The- Soul Mining
U2- The Joshua Tree
Japan- Quiet Life
A-ha- Scoundrel Days
Dexy's Midnight Runners- Don't Stand Me Down

Those were my favourites at the time, really. But the probably still stand with hindsight.

Buffalo Stan (Buffalo Stan), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 12:46 (twenty-one years ago)

I didn't buy my first album until I was 18.

peepee (peepee), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 14:23 (twenty-one years ago)

Singles? Taped copies from family or friends?

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 14:29 (twenty-one years ago)

72/73
1. Hot Rocks Rolling Stones
2. Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits
3. After the Gold Rush Neil Young
4. Layla Derek & the Dominos
5. XOSO Led Zeppelin
6. Idlewild South Allman Brothers Band
7. All the Young Dudes Mott the Hoople
8. Fragile Yes
9. Machine Head Deep Purple
10. Elton John Elton John

lovebug starski (lovebug starski), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 14:37 (twenty-one years ago)

I took "current" in the question to mean recordings I still rank highly...hence the abscence of Uriah Heep, Wishbone Ash, Grand Funk.

lovebug starski (lovebug starski), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 14:40 (twenty-one years ago)

At the time, I had just decided I was too mature for Alice Cooper!

lovebug starski (lovebug starski), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 14:46 (twenty-one years ago)

sibelius and eartha kitt!

-- mark s (mar...), February 15th, 2005 3:21 PM. (mark s) (admin)
------------------------------------------------------------------------

also tim rice and andrew lloyd-webber!!

-- mark s (mar...), February 15th, 2005 3:22 PM. (mark s) (admin)

mark s (mark s), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 15:23 (twenty-one years ago)

ok that latter may not have quite survived into my current to pten possibly

mark s (mark s), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 15:23 (twenty-one years ago)

T.Rex: Electric Warrior
Sparks: Propaganda
Black Sabbath: Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
The Allman Brothers Band: The Road Goes On Forever
The Rolling Stones: Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass)
Wings: Venus and Mars
Sweet: Desolation Boulevard
Deep Purple: Come Taste The Band
David Essex: All The Fun Of The Fair
UFO: No Heavy Petting

At present, I still have quite fond memories of most of them - though I haven't listened to the full albums (with the exception of Sabbath) for a long, long time.

t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 15:35 (twenty-one years ago)

just Radiohead and Joy Division

Nic de Teardrop (Nicholas), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 15:38 (twenty-one years ago)

i had no one handing me down anything. i was alone. confused. and i enjoyed listening to...

a shitload of oldies radio (and taping it while away and then listening to the tape to see if my faves were on there)
a shitload of pop radio (and the taping it thing again)
dr. demento on sunday nights
bargain best-of Beach Boys cassette
bargain best-of Jan & Dean cassette
David Meece, Candle in the Rain
Michael W. Smith, The Big Picture
Iron Maiden, Somewhere in Time
Fat Boys, Fat Boys
Run DMC, Raising Hell

andrew m. (andrewmorgan), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 17:01 (twenty-one years ago)

'86-'87 school year, btw

andrew m. (andrewmorgan), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 17:01 (twenty-one years ago)

oh and my 9th grade was 74-75 ...and somehow a whole part of my post there went missing (prolly by some fault of my own, i guess)

anyhoo mine 10 were not "grade 9 records", more like the first ten pop records i ever purchased, starting in 9th grade sometime...

t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 17:39 (twenty-one years ago)

92-93
The Afghan Whigs: Gentlemen
The Jayhawks: Hollywood Town Hall
Bob Marley: Songs of Freedom (box)
Liz Phair: Exile in Guyville
The Pharcyde: Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde
John Prine: Great Days (anthology)
R.E.M.: Automatic for the People
Bruce Springsteen: Lucky Town
Uncle Tupelo: Anodyne
Tom Waits: Bone Machine

asl, Tuesday, 15 February 2005 18:00 (twenty-one years ago)

I was listening to lots of radio in '88-'89 (It was another year before I discovered the Cure, Morrissey, hip-hop). These are the only recores I remember buying:

Roy Orbison - Mystery Girl
R.E.M. - Green
Traveling Wilburys - Volue One
George MIchael - Faith
Robert Palmer - Heavy Nova

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 15 February 2005 18:08 (twenty-one years ago)

92-93 (This one goes up to eleven)

Rollins Band - "The End of Silence"
Godflesh - "Pure"
Liz Phair - "Exile in Guyville"
Black Flag - "Damaged"
Bullet Lavolta - "The Gift"
Black Flag - "Wasted Again"
V/A - "Altered States of America" )
V/A - "The Sound of Mob Culture" } Lime Lizard comps
V/A - "Subpop" )
Frank Black - "Frank Black"
Pixies - "Bossanova"

Ben Dot (1977), Wednesday, 16 February 2005 02:20 (twenty-one years ago)

1986:

king crimson: beat
genesis: selling england by the pound
peter gabriel: IV/So
kate bush: hounds of love
pink floyd: piper at the gates of dawn
the beatles: revolver
talking heads: remain in light
REM: fables of the reconstruction
golden palominos: visions of excess (NO SHIT)
the smiths: meat is murder

uh, probably some other stuff but this is all that comes to mind as stuff I listened . that smiths album led me to joy division about three months later. I still listen to all of these albums all the fucking time.

kyle (akmonday), Wednesday, 16 February 2005 02:29 (twenty-one years ago)

Frighteningly easy to remember:

Sgt. Pepper
Kinks - Greatest Hits
Doors
Jimi Hendrix - Are You Experienced?
Cream - Disraeli Gears
Buffalo Springfield
Donovan - Greatest Hits
Procol Harem
Rolling Stones - High Tide and Green Grass
Box Tops - Super Hits

jim wentworth (wench), Wednesday, 16 February 2005 03:49 (twenty-one years ago)

Whoops! That would be '67 - '68

also-rans:

Steppenwolf
Lovin' Spoonful
Beach Boys
Turtles

jim wentworth (wench), Wednesday, 16 February 2005 03:52 (twenty-one years ago)

Some of the above seem glossed up.

89-90

Zeppelin II
Yes--Close to the Edge
Yes--The Yes Album
Yes--Fragile
Yes--90125
Yes--Drama
Pink Floyd--The Wall
Pink Floyd--Dark Side of the Moon
U2--War
REM--Murmur
REM--Green
Duran Duran--Rio
Jethro Tull--Aqualung
The Who--Who's Next
The Cure--Staring at the Sea: The Singles
New Order--Substance
Dead Kennedys--Fesh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables
Run DMC--Raising Hell

St. Harolumbos, Wednesday, 16 February 2005 04:00 (twenty-one years ago)

I want to say, that I wish I knew this Carey person in the 9th grade, I needed serious help. It was 1984 and there was no internet and no cool punk rock kids to tell me stuff.

This is Carey's list from way up thread. (Sorry, don't know html for itals). But then again, she probably wasn't born in 1984, and neither was Liz Phair. Christ, I'm old.
REM - Murmur
Stone Roses - S/t
Liz Phair - Exile in Guyville
Velvet Underground - Best of
Replacements - Tim
Suede - s/t
Cure - Boys Don't Cry
Red House Painters - (roller coaster one)
Television - Marquee Moon
Pogues - If I Should Fall from the Grace of God
-- Carey (flembac...), March 6th, 2003.

In 1984, my top 10 was probably something like, and this is the best I could remember:
Michael Jackson, "Thriller"
Prince, "Purple Rain."
Duran Duran, "Rio"
Eurythmics, "Sweet Dreams"
Cyndi Lauper, "She's So Unusual"
Flashdance soundtrack
Footloose soundtrack
Kim Wilde's "Kids in America" single
anything from Pat Benatar
--loads of suburban new wave, freak-zoid-al R&B, and probably whatever Rush album was out that year because I was in love with a prog rock boy

Sara Sherr, Wednesday, 16 February 2005 05:18 (twenty-one years ago)

DMX, a bunch of novelty songs I got off Napster, Less than Jake and NOFX. I didn't get really interested in music until the summer AFTER freshman year.

David Allen (David Allen), Wednesday, 16 February 2005 17:30 (twenty-one years ago)

1987/1988 - a boarding school in the middle of Scotland. No particular order, and probably not wholly representative, but the first 10 that came to mind.

London 0, Hull 4 - The Housemartins
Love - Aztec Camera
Darklands - Jesus and Mary Chain
Raintown - Deacon Blue
In Visible Silence - Art of Noise
Scoundrel Days - a-ha
Infected - The The
True Blue - Madonna
Meet Danny Wilson - Danny Wilson
Parade - Prince

ailsa (ailsa), Wednesday, 16 February 2005 21:08 (twenty-one years ago)

The Cure - Disintegration
The Creatures - Boomerang
Siouxsie & The Banshees - Peepshow
Cocteau Twins - Heaven Or Las Vegas
New Order - Technique
Depeche Mode - Violator
The Smiths - Louder Than Bombs
Bauhaus - Swing The Heartache (The BBC Sessions)
Shelleyan Orphan - Century Flower
Butthole Surfers - Rembrandt Pussyhorse
Ultra Vivid Scene - UVS

and I'd be lying if I didn't include REM's Eponymous, cos they were my hometown boys

rentboy (rentboy), Wednesday, 16 February 2005 21:19 (twenty-one years ago)

jesuit high 97-98. in no particular order
smashing pumpkins-siamese dream
smashing pumpkins-mcis
smashing pumpkins-pisces iscariot
smashing pumpkins-aeroplane flies high
smashing pumpkins-adore
hole-live through this
hole-pretty on the inside
nirvana-in utero
nine inch nails-downward spiral
depeche mode-violator

Felonious Drunk (Felcher), Wednesday, 16 February 2005 22:16 (twenty-one years ago)

The Rolling Stones Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass)
The Rolling Stones Beggars Banquet
The Best of the Animals
The Beatles Second Album*
Meet the Beatles*
The Beatles Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
The Beatles Rubber Soul
The Bee Gees 1st
The Kingston Trio Encore
The Kingston Trio At Large
Simon & Garfunkel Parsley Sage Rosemary and Thyme
Gordon Lightfoot [Don't remember the album title; had the Canadian Railroad Trilogy on it]
*Don't think I actually owned these two, merely had borrowed them and was slow slow slow about returning them. So I'm including the S&G and the Lightfoot, to fill the extra two slots and so that you'll learn the truth from me rather than hearing it first from someone else.

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Thursday, 17 February 2005 06:46 (twenty-one years ago)

Public Enemy - It Takes a Nation of Millions...
De La Soul - 3 Feet High and Rising
Slick Rick - The Great Adventures of
The Cactus Album - 3rd Bass
Kraftwerk - Computer World
Steely Dan - Aja
Jungle Brothers - Straight out the Jungle
Kool DJ Red Alert - We Can Do This
NWA - NWA & The Posse
Eric B & Rakim - Paid in Full

mucho, Thursday, 17 February 2005 17:11 (twenty-one years ago)

Frank, you're an honest man.

Canadian RR trilogy appeared on "The Way I Feel" circa 1967. I also seem to remember Home From The Forest being on that one.

Man, I have 7 of those albums, but I didn't own them all back in the day.

jim wentworth (wench), Friday, 18 February 2005 02:04 (twenty-one years ago)

two months pass...
I know you Jack Cole

jack handy, Monday, 25 April 2005 23:26 (twenty-one years ago)

I hadn't had a record player long in the 9th grade, so I might as well just list my first ten records.

Beatles - White Album (white vinyl)
Beatles - 1967-1970 (blue vinyl)
Steve Martin - A Wild and Crazy Guy
Steve Martin - Let's Get Small
Fleetwood Mac - Tusk
David Bowie - Stage
Frank Zappa - Sheik Yerbouti
Woody Allen - Standup Comic
Led Zeppelin - In Through the Out Door
The Who - Who's Next

Curious George (1/6 Scale Model) (Rock Hardy), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 00:00 (twenty-one years ago)

probably would have had a vandenberg album, ratt, queensryche's 'the warning', iron maiden 'number of the beast', judas priest, duran duran 'seven and the ragged tiger'. the next year i would discover the smiths and the cure and echo and the bunnymen.

keith m (keithmcl), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 00:04 (twenty-one years ago)

i pretty much gave up on music between 12 and 16 after being given an Ocean Colour Scene album. this is true.

elwisty (elwisty), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 00:12 (twenty-one years ago)

These were probably my favourites in 1981-82, listed more-or-less chronologically:

1.Beatles, 1967-70
2.Iron Butterfly, In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida
3.Woodstock ost
4.Led Zeppelin, Presence
5.Stevie Wonder, Songs In The Key Of Life
6.The Ramones, Rocket To Russia
7.The Cars
8.various, Red Hot Disco Express! (I *think* that was the title)
9.Donna Summer, Bad Girls
10.B-52's, Wild Planet

Myonga Von Bontee (Myonga Von Bontee), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 03:39 (twenty-one years ago)

1. Velvet Underground, White Light/White Heat
2. Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Rust Never Sleeps
3. The Modern Lovers, The Modern Lovers
4. Neil Young, Decade
5. Feelies, Crazy Rhythms
6. Johnny Cash, The Sun Years
7. Velvet Underground, Velvet Underground & Nico
8. B-52's, Cosmic Thing
9. Elvis Costello & The Attractions, This Year's Model
10. Weezer, Weezer

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 03:44 (twenty-one years ago)

Indie fuxx.

Sundar (sundar), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 03:54 (twenty-one years ago)

(I meant "fuxx" in the singular form, just to be clear.)

Sundar (sundar), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 03:58 (twenty-one years ago)

haha guilty as charged!

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 04:17 (twenty-one years ago)

most of my records were hand me downs from my parents and my uncle. the collection of albums I ended up with was:
1. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
2. Elton John - Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
3. Whitney Houston - Whitney
4. Al Green - Greatest Hits
5. Stryper - To Hell With The Devil
6. Kate Bush - The Whole Story
7. Flip Wilson - The Devil Made Me Do It
8. Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
9. Django Reinhardt - Hot Club Of France (this should explain where my name came from.....I have a bad feeling my parents played this album when they....:{ well, you know..)
10. Harry Nilsson - The Point

I think that about sums me up, whether i like it or not.

Also, I had some weird Christian musical called 'High-Tops'...any one remeber this at all?

django (django), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 04:19 (twenty-one years ago)

uhh - you were all waaaaay cooler than me. i mean, i had all the REM albums, green day, weezer's first, um. a bunch of beatles and stones stuff. but miccio had CRAZY RHYTHMS. what the fuck?

peter smith (plsmith), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 04:33 (twenty-one years ago)

Ninth grade? Big changes, man. Lots of great classic rock was acquired in 7th and 8th grade thanks to "Lillian Roxon's Rock Encyclopedia." In 9th I was hanging out alot with cats in their 20s and 30s at used record stores, learning about '60s rock and stuff and hearing blues and jazz constantly. By tenth grade I was deep into the SST scene, art-punk, and discovering free jazz. Started my first 'zine in 9th grade though, a xeroxed thing that talked almost exclusively about old '60s records! Hah. It was dreadful.

1. "Velvet Underground & Nico"
2. "The Who Sell Out"
3. "Music From Big Pink"
4. "Forever Changes"
5. "Bitches Brew"
6. "Not So Quiet on the Western Front"
7. "After Bathing at Baxter's"
8. "Axis: Bold As Love"
9. "Swordfishtrombones"
10. "Murmur"

Michael J McGonigal (mike mcgonigal), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 05:39 (twenty-one years ago)

I do remember when I was 14 I had the names of my three favorite bands on the back of a school poetry book (didnt write down what my fave albums were cos I poss. felt I hadn't heard enough)...

Jimi Hendrix
Nirvana
The Cure

I'm fairly sure I was into The Smiths by the time I was 15, I kinda found them by accident after discovering 'Hatful of hollow' on the other side of a tape which had Guns N' Roses 'Lies' of all things on it. Then, my brother came back from college in England (with all his stuff, Pixies, JAMC, Silverfish, Carter USM, more Smiths, loads of old punk) and remarked who owned all the cool music (I definitely had SY's 'Dirty' on tape then too, which he said he was just about to get himself). There was this supplement called 'Noise of The Nineties' which came free with Metal Hammer which was a great for getting me into a lot of music at the time, I'm pretty sure it came out in '92 when I was 15. Any UK ilxors remember that, by any chance?

Michael B, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 06:30 (twenty-one years ago)

I was in 9th grade in 1992-93.

1. U2, "Achtung Baby"
2. Bob Dylan, "Greatest Hits, Vol. 1"
3. Nirvana, "Nevermind"
4. R.E.M, "Out of Time"
5. Indigo Girls, "Rites of Passage"

I can't remember much else I listened to, other than some tacky pop music and a little hair metal. I didn't really get into music until 10th grade.

Lyra Jane (Lyra Jane), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 16:38 (twenty-one years ago)

Boy howdy does this take me back. 1984-1985. Miami Vice premiered the fall I started 9th grade, and Reagan won his lopsided victory over Mondale. Didn't matter, I had a stereo (all-in-one by Fisher), and I was in my own little world. Which I shared with, in alphabetical order...

The Alarm - Declaration
Big Country - Steeltown
> Up Labour!
Billy Idol - Rebel Yell
Bruce Springsteen - Born In The USA
> Both inescapable that year, and my dad primed me on Born To Run. But I think Rebel Yell holds up better.
Eurythmics - Be Yourself Tonight
> Still great
Prince - Purple Rain
> pizwned 1984
Psychedelic Furs - Forever Now
> go on, get Tarzan, go on, get Jane... God I loved this album
REM - Chronic Town
> I still remember riding my bike home in the rain from Fantasy Records in Rochester, NY with Chronic Town balanced between the handlebars. That was seventh grade. By ninth grade Murmur and Reckoning were both out. But when push came to shove, it was still Chronic Town for me.
Tina Turner - Private Dancer
> I saw this dancer work Tina's Can't Stand The Rain at Jumbo's Clown Room in Hollywood. It was really, really hot.
U2 - The Unforgettable Fire
> And suddenly, some of the cooler jocks were listening to U2. WTF? You could feel the wave building.

rogermexico (rogermexico), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:12 (twenty-one years ago)

but miccio had CRAZY RHYTHMS. what the fuck?

J.D. Considine's four-star review of the album in the '92 rolling stone album guide (which I got the christmas of that year - age 13) described the album as having the strone-drum "chink-chink-chink-chink" of the Velvets' "I'm Waiting For The Man," so when I found a used cassette of the album my freshman year of high school I snapped it up fast.

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:16 (twenty-one years ago)

actually over half of those albums I owned originally on cassette.

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:17 (twenty-one years ago)

haha drone-strum, not strone-drum.

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 17:18 (twenty-one years ago)

1970-71

By and large, the records I liked best then I still like (although rarely listen to); I listened to them so much at the time.

The Grateful Dead -- Live/Dead
Workingman's Dead
The Band -- The Band
Quicksilver Messenger Service -- Happy Trails
Jimi Hendrix -- Electric Ladyland
Band of Gypsies
The Rolling Stones -- Beggar's Banquet
(not so much Sticky Fingers at the time)
Miles Davis -- Bitches Brew
The MC5 -- Kick Out The Jams
Bob Dylan -- Greatest Hits (Vol. 1)
Delaney & Bonnie & Friends -- On Tour With Eric Clapton

The following might have qualified to be in my top 10 then, but I lost the records somewhere along the way so they can't qualify now:

The Who -- Tommy
Cream -- Greatest Hits
The Rolling Stones -- Let It Bleed (definitely)

I can't remember exactly what I thought at the time about Steppenwolf and The Doors, both of whom I had loved to distraction a few years earlier. I had a bunch of Beatles records, but didn't listen to them much. Led Zeppelin II and Sweet Baby James were very popular, and I liked them, but I never owned either because everyone else did. All the girls were in love with Tapestry; Joni Mitchell's Blue really belongs to the next year.

Vornado (Vornado), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 18:24 (twenty-one years ago)

9th Grade; 1991-92; Parkside Junior High School; Jackson, MI

1. My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
2. Teenage Fanclub - Bandwagonesque
*Note - both of the above were purchased on the same trip to the record store on a blind hunch. Sometimes you just get lucky.
3. New Order - Technique
4. Stone Roses - st
5. The Velvet Underground - Another View
6. Echo & the Bunnymen - st
7. Godflesh - Streetcleaner
8. Public Enemy - Fear of a Black Planet
9. Spacemen 3 - Recurring
10. The Wedding Present - Bizarro

Steve Gertz (sgertz), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 18:56 (twenty-one years ago)

9th grade...83-84...hmmm...mostly stuff from the Canon, I guess -- The Clash, assorted Ramones records, Rubber Soul -- plus Big Country, U2 (up through War), Heaven 17, I don't honestly remember what I bought when. Oh, I liked Freeze Frame a lot. Still do.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:04 (twenty-one years ago)

and the Police, how could I forget? They were my official Favorite Band. Even given the sad subsequent state of Sting, I still rate their 2nd, 3rd and 4th albums pretty well, plus half or so of the 1st and last.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:11 (twenty-one years ago)

1987:
1. The Smiths - Louder than Bombs
2. The Smiths - The Queen is Dead
3. The Smiths - Meat is Murder
4. Camper Van Beethoven - Telephone Free Landslide Victory
5. The Cult - Love
6. REM - Fables of the Reconstruction
7. Talking Heads - Stop Making Sense
8. Depeche Mode - People are People
9. The Cure - Standing on the Beach
10. Pink Floyd - The Wall

The Sensational Sulk (sexyDancer), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:11 (twenty-one years ago)

1. Thompson Twins: Quick Step And Sidekick
2. Alphaville: Forever Young
3. Knutsen og Ludvigsen: Juba Juba
4. Knutsen og Ludvigsen: Fiskepudding Lakrisbåter
5. ELO: Time
6. Duran Duran: Seven And The Ragged Tiger
7. Thompson Twins: Into The Gap
8. Yazoo: Upstairs At Eric's
9. Kiss: Music From The Elder
10.Thompson Twins: Here's To Future Days

Hmmm. Seems my musical taste has developed somewhat since I was 14 and a half years old. :)

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:18 (twenty-one years ago)

speed limit 180 bpm+ : london hardcore techno
black sabbath - paranoid
michael jackson - thriller
beastie boys - paul's boutique
aural ecstasy : the best of techno
metallica - master of puppets
megadeth - hangar 18
metallica - ride the lightning
santana - lotus
bjork - debut

vahid (vahid), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:22 (twenty-one years ago)

Big Black - Songs About Fucking
Bad Brains - I against I
Bad Brains - Rock For Light
Butthole Surfers - Hairway To Steven
Butthole Surfers - Psychic, Powerless...
Jane's Addiction - Nothing's Shocking
Soundgarden - Louder Than Love
Pixies - (um, the short one with "Levitate Me")
Black Sabbath - Paranoid
Misfits - Static Age

Lemonade Salesman (Eleventy-Twelve), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:22 (twenty-one years ago)

It went like this, Sept thru May.

Quiet Riot - Metal Health
Black Sabbath - Born Again
Saxon - Crusader
Ozzy Osbourne - Bark at the Moon
Ratt - Out of the Cellar
Fastway - Fastway
Riot - Restless Breed
Mercyful Fate - Melissa
Slayer - Show No Mercy
Metallica - Kill 'Em All

Ian Christe (Ian Christe), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:24 (twenty-one years ago)

Quick Step & Side Kick - Thompson Twins (probably the only one that would make my current Top 100)

Hey! Geir! You didn't own that one in mid 1985! Not until later!

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:24 (twenty-one years ago)

lemonade's list would have been my list junior year, plus a bit of Sonic Youth

The Sensational Sulk (sexyDancer), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:25 (twenty-one years ago)

september 1999!

1) sonic youth - evol
2) pixies - surfer rosa
3) fugazi - 13 songs
4) husker du - zen arcade
5) neutral milk hotel - in the aeroplane over the sea
6) pixies - doolittle
7) bikini kill - pussy whipped
8) pj harvey - rid of me
9) guided by voices - alien lanes
10) flaming lips - the soft bulletin

(i only like about 3 or 4 of these now)

joseph (joseph), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:28 (twenty-one years ago)

I was in 9th grade in 1985 -- a big trasitional year for me in terms of musical taste. I started off the year listening to the following on high rotation:

Def Leppard - Pyromania
U2 - The Unforgetable Fire
every Genesis album, obsessively (though Invisible Touch in 1986 cured me real quick)

but by the end of the school year it was:
-Dead Milkmen - Big Lizard In My Backyard
-Kate Bush - Hounds of Love
-every album by The Police, obsessively


Randy Reiss (undeadsinatra), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:28 (twenty-one years ago)

(I did not discover Sonic Youth until junior year myself)

Lemonade Salesman (Eleventy-Twelve), Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:30 (twenty-one years ago)

Is this just to expose our age?

9th Grade = 87/88 Florida

LL Cool J - Bigger and Deffer
Eric B & Rakim - Paid in Full
Dana Dane - DD with Fame
Ice T - Rhyme Pays
Gucci Crew II - So Def, So...
2 Live Crew - Move Somethin'
MC ADE - Just Somethin' to Do
MC Cool Rock & MC Chaszey Chess - Boot the Booty
M-4 Sers - I am a Star
Beach Boys - Endless Summer

"We got both kinds of music: Hip-Hop AND Miami Bass!"

During 9th grade, I heard MARRS's single, and right after, I heard PE's Rebel Without a Puse, and the world started to open up...

PappaWheelie, Tuesday, 26 April 2005 19:30 (twenty-one years ago)

one year passes...
Stumbled across this, and I just have to say I find it hard to believe of all the people who were around my age, no one listed the first Violent Femmes album. That was the quintessential 9th grader album in '83-'84!

1 Violent Femmes
2 U2 - War
3 Iron Maiden - Piece Of Mind
4 Echo & the Bunnymen - Ocean Rain
5 Rush - Grace Under Pressure
6 Los Lobos - How Will the Wolf Survive?
7 Talking Heads - Speaking In Tongues
8 Motley Crue - Shout At The Devil
9 The Fixx - Reach the Beach
10 ELO - Secret Messages

It was definitely a transition time. I'd been listening to KUNI, a great college station from University of Northern Iowa, transmitted throughout Iowa, and I was getting exposed to the likes of Run-DMC, R.E.M., the Replacements, Husker Du, Minutemen, X and Big Black, but I didn't have access to the albums. I was still getting Yes, Asia, ZZ Top and Styx through the record club, but didn't listen to them much. By the following summer I started getting dubbed tapes of the albums I really wanted.

Fastnbulbous (Fastnbulbous), Thursday, 10 August 2006 03:11 (nineteen years ago)

Not so long ago. Fall of '99. No particular order.

Kill the Man Who Questions- Sugar Industry
Big Black- Songs About Fucking
Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds- Murder Ballads
Radiohead- OK Computer
Black Star
Sonic Youth- Goo
The Sound of Failure EP
Spazz- (7"s, all of them)
Belle & Sebastian- Boy With the Arab Strap
Dylan's Greatest Hits


Don't really listen to most of these actively any longer. But I'd say Goo and Songs About Fucking are among my favorite records by those artists. And the only B & S album I can listen to is Boy w/ the Arab Strap. Also, lots more hardcore and grindcore, but my obsession with the stuff ended around then, too.

trees (treesessplode), Thursday, 10 August 2006 04:49 (nineteen years ago)

oh, dear. give it another year and i discovered bowie and iggy and techno and everything changed. not that there's anything wrong with a lot of this list...

1. bob dylan - freewheelin' bob dylan
2. led zeppelin - 4
3. led zeppelin - houses of the holy
4. bob marley - exodus
5. dave matthews band - under the table and dreaming
6. ani difranco - living in clip
7. nine inch nails - the downward spiral
8. radiohead - the bends
9. bush - sixteen stone
10. tori amos - boys for pele

Emily B (Emily B), Thursday, 10 August 2006 05:04 (nineteen years ago)

1975

Stupidity - Dr. Feelgood (saw them that year)
Elite Hotel - Emmylou Harris
First Velvets
Sailin' Shoes
Countdown to Ecstacy
Ol Number 1 - Guy Clark
Liege and Lief - Fairports
Please to see the King - Steeleye Span

sonofstan (sonofstan), Thursday, 10 August 2006 05:42 (nineteen years ago)

Ultravox, Vienna
Japan, Gentlemen Take Polaroids (the only Japan album I owned at the time)
Duran Duran, Rio
David Bowie, Ziggy Stardust & the Spiders from Mars
Human League, Dare
ABC, Lexicon Of Love
Depeche Mode, Construction Time Again
Talk Talk, The Party's Over
Roxy Music, Street Life
Various Artists, Just Can't Get Enough vol. 13

Contrary to the appearance virtually all of this list might give, I was in 9th grade from 1994 - 1995. And I am not the least bit ashamed of anything on this list.

Phoenix Dancing (krushsister), Thursday, 10 August 2006 05:46 (nineteen years ago)

1983 - I had all these on cassette:

Adam Ant - Friend or Foe
J. Geils Band - Freeze Frame
J. Geils Band - Showtime!
J. Geils Band - Love Stinks
Police - Synchronicity
Police - Zenyatta Mondatta
Fleetwood Mac - the one with "Hold Me" on it
R.E.M. - Murmur
R.E.M. - Chronic Town
The Jam - The Gift

Maltodextrin (Maltodextrin), Thursday, 10 August 2006 07:07 (nineteen years ago)

Smiths - Meat Is Murder
New Order - Substance
The Cure - Boys Don't Cry
Aphex Twin - I Care Because You Do
Air - Moon Safari
Bauhaus - Crackle
Portishead - Portishead
Bjork - Post
Sisters of Mercy - First and Last and Always
Depeche Mode - Violator

And I thought I was the shit because I didn't listen to emo or the Dave Matthews Band.

Miki (Miki), Thursday, 10 August 2006 07:10 (nineteen years ago)

Fuck! That I still have? From NINTH grade? I didn't even get into "good music" until 10th :-( What do I even still have?

Le Tigre - Le Tigre
Radiohead - The Bends
Phish - Farmhouse
Dave Matthews Band - Under the Table and Dreaming (and I still love it)
Jane's Addiction - Nothing's Shocking
Beastie Boys - Paul's Botique
Basement Jaxx - Rooty (but I never actually listened to the whole thing until...... well actually it was 12 hours ago, no joke)
Smashing Pumpkins - Siamese Dream
Smashing Pumpkins - Machina II: Friends and Enemies of Modern Music
Refused - The Shape of Punk to Come


I cannot BELIEVE I actually remember 10 CDs I had in ninth grade...


less-than three's Christiane F. (drowned in milk), Thursday, 10 August 2006 07:15 (nineteen years ago)

Oh and Dark Side of the Moon. We can swap that in forrrrr Machina II

less-than three's Christiane F. (drowned in milk), Thursday, 10 August 2006 07:17 (nineteen years ago)

Contrary to the appearance virtually all of this list might give, I was in 9th grade from 1994 - 1995. And I am not the least bit ashamed of anything on this list.

Must have seemed pretty weird in 1994-95 though. I mean, these days, those early 80s synthpop/new romantic styles are bach in fashion, but they hardly were in the mid 90s.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 10 August 2006 13:59 (nineteen years ago)

Blur - Parklife
Nirvana - In Utero
Nirvana - Nevermind
Soundgarden - Superunknown
Rage Against The Machine s/t
Alice In Chains - Jar Of Flies
Black Grape - It's Great When You're Straight... Yeah
Biohazard - State of The World Address
Portishead - Dummy
Bomb The Bass - Clear

I was down with pretty much everything on Dog Latin's top 10 though. Oh, Select magazine :(

DJ Mencap (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 10 August 2006 14:13 (nineteen years ago)

HOLY SHIT. I forgot about my obsession with New Order that started exactly at the beginning of 9th grade. The beginnings...

trees (treesessplode), Thursday, 10 August 2006 14:17 (nineteen years ago)

six Dylan records, four Velvet Underground albums

shookout (shookout), Thursday, 10 August 2006 14:30 (nineteen years ago)

Are people answering this thread right? It's not supposed to be what your favorite 10 records were then, I don't think (though that seems to be how most people are answering); it's your top ten now among records you owned then, right? Anyway, I don't mean to nitpick. For me it's hard, because I'm not sure I owned ten records in ninth grade. So my list is primarily from records I liked, in ninth grade, or earlier, though I gave extra points to the ones that I definitely know I had copies of. Some of these I haven't heard in years. So my list is even wronger than yours is.

1. Sweet "Ballroom Blitz" (summer between 9th & 10th grade actually)
2. Elton John, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
3. Labelle, "Lady Marmalade"
4. Zager and Evans, "In the Year 2525"
5. Bobby Russell, "Saturday Morning Confusion"
6. Sha Na Na, Hot Sox
7. Robert Klein, Child of the '50s
8. George Carlin, Class Clown
9. Cheech & Chong, Los Cachinos
10. Cheech & Chong, Big Bambu

xhuxk (xheddy), Thursday, 10 August 2006 14:32 (nineteen years ago)

Or I dunno, maybe the American Graffiti soundtrack should be on the top of the list, since I liked all the songs in the movie. And I remember "Rock On" by David Essex sounding great at the bus stop, though I'm not sure I actually knew what it was. Either way, wow, did I wish the early '70s were the '50s, or what?

xhuxk (xheddy), Thursday, 10 August 2006 14:51 (nineteen years ago)

OK well if we push forward a year to 18 months this will be fun and a piece of piss for me, but I didn't have a record player or any experience of punk/hardcore aged 14 to 15. I currently own less than half the album I listed :(

DJ Mencap (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 10 August 2006 15:03 (nineteen years ago)

I think this was in 1991-92. Ninth grade was the one year I spent in exile from connecticut -- we moved to long island, where I was fairly miserable and reclusive. Also, the year I started smoking!!!

I think I had only just started to pay attention to music at this point, unlike some of you bastards who were apparently born hipsters.

1. INXS - The Swing
2. Nirvana - Nevermind
3. Public Enemy - Fear of a Black Planet
4. Beastie Boys - Paul's Boutique
5. Fugazi - Steady Diet of Nothing
6. U2 - Achtung Baby
7. Ned's Atomic Dustbin - God Fodder
8. Red Hot Chili Peppers -Blood Sugar Sex Magik
9. Matthew Sweet - Girlfriend
10. I don't know, really. I guess Bleach or Listen Like Thieves or something

NB - though I bought Steady Diet of Nothing in ninth grade, I thought it was awful. I only realized how great it was in college.

askance johnson (sdownes), Thursday, 10 August 2006 15:47 (nineteen years ago)

Amazingly, most of those are really really good albums.

askance johnson (sdownes), Thursday, 10 August 2006 15:48 (nineteen years ago)

9th grade, 1986-87:

Replacements: Let It Be
Replacements: Tim
The Jam: Snap
Rolling Stones: Sticky Fingers
Rolling Stones: Aftermath
Bruce Springsteen: Born To Run
REM: Murmur
REM: Reckoning
Velvet Underground & Nico
U2: The Unforgettable Fire

kornrulez6969 (TCBeing), Thursday, 10 August 2006 19:17 (nineteen years ago)

All on tape apart from the Curve 12":

Pixies - Doolittle
Cure - Boys Don't Cry
Smiths - The Queen Is Dead
New Order - Substance
Depeche Mode - Violator
Curve - Blindfold EP
Madness - One Step Beyond
Stranglers - Greatest Hits
Talk Talk - Best of
Coldcut - What's That Noise

This was '90/1. Didn't really get into music til the next year though! I still have all of these apart from Coldcut which I sold along with most of my other old house tapes when I was about 16.

Colonel Poo (Colonel Poo), Thursday, 10 August 2006 20:34 (nineteen years ago)

God... everyone's all "oh yeah, 86/87" or "94/95".....

I was in ninth grade five years ago. I'm still such a baby!

less-than three's Christiane F. (drowned in milk), Thursday, 10 August 2006 20:49 (nineteen years ago)

I think this might be the only ten cds I owned in the 9th grade. I had some older tapes:

Pearl Jam, Ten
Nirvana, Incesticide
Various Artists, Boomerang OST
Various Artists, Singles OST
Metallica, And Justice For All
Bjork, Debut
Das EFX, Straight Up Sewaside
Megadeth, Countdown to Extinction
Weird Al, Off the Deep End
Tears for Fears, The Seeds of Love

polyphonic (polyphonic), Thursday, 10 August 2006 20:53 (nineteen years ago)

Or I dunno, maybe the American Graffiti soundtrack should be on the top of the list, since I liked all the songs in the movie. And I remember "Rock On" by David Essex sounding great at the bus stop, though I'm not sure I actually knew what it was. Either way, wow, did I wish the early '70s were the '50s, or what?

I cite this as a definition of my chilhood pre-Jr. high

Sir Dr. Rev. PappaWheelie Jr. II of The Third Kind (PappaWheelie 2), Thursday, 10 August 2006 21:10 (nineteen years ago)

My 9th grade:

The Cure - Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me
The Cure - Standing On A Beach (the cassette with all the unavailable b-sides!)
The Sugarcubes - Life's Too Good
Sinéad O'Connor - The Lion and The Cobra
Pet Shop Boys - Actually
Depeche Mode - Music For The Masses
The Smiths - Strangeways, Here We Come
Indochine - 7000 Danses
Les Rita Mitsouko - Marc & Robert
Guns & Roses - Appetite For Destruction

LeRooLeRoo (Seb), Thursday, 10 August 2006 21:28 (nineteen years ago)

Must have seemed pretty weird in 1994-95 though. I mean, these days, those early 80s synthpop/new romantic styles are bach in fashion, but they hardly were in the mid 90s.

I'm a pretty weird gal. But yes, I was absolutely out of step with what most of my fellow contemporaries were listening to, though funnily enough the norm wasn't with any kind of "alternative" music but with '90s R&B/hiphop and rap. You were more likely to find Dr. Dre fans than Blur or Pearl Jam fans at my high school. The next most popular genre was American alternative or "grunge"-like music. And looking back at what I'd answered, I misspoke when I mentioned Vol. 13 of the Just Can't Get Enough series. I purchased that the summer between my HS freshman (9th grade) and sophomore (10th grade) years. I should've said Vol. 7 of that series, which I did indeed acquire in the middle of my 9th grade year, as a birthday present.

Phoenix Dancing (krushsister), Thursday, 10 August 2006 21:44 (nineteen years ago)

The Cure - Standing On A Beach (the cassette with all the unavailable b-sides!)

Oh, I should've remembered that one. I got that the summer between my 7th and 8th grades, and it was my introduction to The Cure. I think that one will go as my "honorable mention".

Phoenix Dancing (krushsister), Thursday, 10 August 2006 21:46 (nineteen years ago)

1989-1990 - from good to bad to ugly (aka i wish i had better taste at that age)
Talking Heads '77
Pet Shop Boys Actually
Rolling Stones Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass)
Beatles - A Hard Day's Night
REM - Green
Paul Simon - Graceland
Billy Joel - Storm Front (the horror)
Sting - Soul Cages (oh the horror)
More Dirty Dancing Soundtrack (more horror)
Cocktail soundtrack - (please kill me now for my crimes against music).

Jacobo Rock (jacobo rock), Friday, 11 August 2006 03:17 (nineteen years ago)

Dude, both "Storm Front" and More Dirty Dancing were big albums for me when I was a kid. Actually, whipping out the latter a few years ago induced me to buy some otis redding which ain't the worst thing in the world.

I haven't listed to "Storm Front" in well over a decade. I don't even know if I still have it (on tape, natch). BUT THE DOWNEASTER ALEXA!!!

askance johnson (sdownes), Friday, 11 August 2006 03:40 (nineteen years ago)

sonic youth - daydream nation
buzzcocks - singles going steady
dinosaur jr - you're living all over me
pixies - doolittle
pavement - crooked rain, crooked rain
nirvana - in utero
the raincoats - s/t
iggy & the stooges - raw power
husker du - zen arcade
half japanese - greatest hits

spastic heritage (spastic heritage), Friday, 11 August 2006 04:18 (nineteen years ago)

1992-1993: These are pretty much all of the albums I owned back then, half of them were dubbed from my older brother's collection.

Nirvana - Nevermind
Descendants - Milo Goes to College
Dead Milkmen - Big Lizard in My Backyard
Sonic Youth - Dirty
Beatles - White Album
Beatles - Sgt. Pepper's
Black Sabbath - Paranoid
Led Zeppelin - III
Public Enemy - Fear of a Black Planet
AC/DC - High Voltage

Matt Golden (goldmatt), Friday, 11 August 2006 06:19 (nineteen years ago)


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