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Your 1st listening experience

Mine was thanks to an older brother of a friend of mine who had a massive record collection
I was about 11 at the time and he said \\\\\\\"What do you like? I said Rock & he put on Dazed & Confused Led Zep
I was transformed What about you?

Re: Your 1st listening experience

Other than Noddy or Pinky & Perky records on my Fisher Price wind-up kiddie's record player when I was a nipper in the early 1960s, it would be my parents record collection. They had a strange mix of post r'n'r but pre-Beatles pop along with early Stones, Beatles etc LPs and 45s. Len Barry's '1-2-3', Dorothy Squires 'Say it With Flowers', Doris Day's 'Move Over Darling', The Vernon's Girls 'Lover Please'and all The Shadows 45s, but best of all, an LP my uncle had bought them, 'Duanne Eddy & His Twangy Guitar', neat!

After progessing through a taudry array of MFP (Music For Pleasure) sound-a-like Top 20 albums in the budget bins of Woolworths, my first proper record that I bought myself was T Rex - 'Solid Gold, Easy Action' (in Jan 1973)at the age of 13. Growing up in Brighton, a hip town then as now, in the 1970s, every third shop sold records new or second-hand, so I got a great muscial education pretty cheaply after that!

At the risk of sounding like an old fart, I am really pleased I got it that way through crate digging, exchanging records and twiddling radio dials for far-off stations, rather than being able to have anything I want at the click of a button like nowadays, though I'm glad I now have that as well in my dotage!

PM

Re: Your 1st listening experience

My first album was Aqualung and my dear late Mum hated the lyrics to the title track, which probably made me play it even more.

Re: Your 1st listening experience

I was aged 10 in 1964 so I was lucky enough to hear all those great 45s which were around at the time. my first long player was best of cream. have not stopped since.

Re: Your 1st listening experience

my first vinyl record play was Jailhouse Rock by Elvis which was my sisters

Re: Your 1st listening experience

My first real listening experience was Serge Gainsbourg's Melody Nelson while under a strong psychedelic LSD trip. Wow.

Re: Your 1st listening experience

Difficult to remember the first one but my mother listened to Radio Luxembourg with a lot of french "variétés" (MOR music) which are my first musical emotions. She also had EPs by Charles Aznavour and Les Compagnons de la Chanson (a 9 male vocal band who backed Edith Piaf in the 40's and had success in France until the 70's) that I listened a lot with her.
My father was a Presley fan (I already have his first french EP I listened 1 000 times...). This was my first experience with beat songs... Then he bought LPs of Jacques Brel, Georges Brassens, Serge Reggiani (what is called "chanson française"), with the best place given to lyrics.
And, when I was a kid, the older people (as old as 14...) organized parties in the basement of the building I lived and, instead of closing the door, they let us childs come in with the promise to be quiet. I listened there to the Beatles, Equals, Sylvie Vartan, Jacques Dutronc, Brigitte Bardot and of course Johnny Hallyday, the french idol.
So no revelation but a long practice of mixed influences.
The first single I bought was "My year is a day" by Les Irrésistibles, an American band based in Paris who had a hit with this title. And my first LP was Johnny Hallyday's ST (1969) with the Small Faces as backing-band.
Long ago...

Re: Your 1st listening experience

Hi Philippe. I'm very into french chanson, especially late 60s and early 70s stuff, so I'd be very interested to hear any recommendations you may have.

I've listed to some of the Jacque Dutronc and I'd recommend some people on here listen to it because it's quite in keeping with the psych-pop music at the time I think. Some of his songs are great, some less so. Have you heard the late-60s stuff from Gerard Manset, Serge Gainsbourg, Nino Ferrer (half-Italian) and Michel Polnareff. It's all good-very good psych pop in my opinion.

I tried that Johnny Halliday album and didn't like it very much.

Have you heard the Pretty Things album for Philippe Debarge (your namesake)?

Re: Your 1st listening experience

Hi Skip,

I appreciate artists you mention but there is more and I'll do a topic about french pop in a few days not to disturb this one.

Just a word about Johnny Hallyday: he never produced a whole good album in his long career but a comp of his 60's hits is enjoyable. The 1969 album is not good, I agree, but the hard rock music and the lyrics (as bad as they are) were fascinating for the little boy I was. And it was my first LP...

See you in the new topic.

Re: Your 1st listening experience

Thanks Philippe, I'll look forward to that new thread. I've only heard that one album by Hallyday so I'll definitely listen to the singles someday.. We all remember out first albums because they quite often shape musical tastes in the future. Mine was Phil Collins' But Seriously which, although it's not his best album, made me really like Phil Collins to this day! I'm been a big music fan ever since.

Re: Your 1st listening experience

Hi guys,theres a Johnny Hallyday collection released by RPM titled"Le Roi De France 1966-1969"which is very worthwhile getting,some fabulous stuff on it and a lot written by State of Micky and Tommy aka Micky Jones and Tommy Brown.As for the self titled 69 album,i've got to disagree with you guys,i like this album,i think its a good rocking and at times psych album,any album that features 3 tracks featuring The Small Faces as backing band cant be all bad.......I too Philippe look forward to your postings on French music from the 60s and early 70s!!

Re: Your 1st listening experience

It will take some times because I have to put in order what I think is interesting when you don't speak french, then... write it in english. I'll do my best.

Re: Your 1st listening experience

My Dad introduced me to music so my earliest musical memories are blues, ribetika, & folk (what would be called world music) 78s, high brow classical (I hated the opera he played), & bands like Tully, Electric Prunes, Beatles, Stones, Floyd, Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, & solo acts like Piaf, Joni M, Joan B, Hendrix, Ian A Anderson, etc
Obviously had no influence on me at all
Downside, he used to liberate my vinyl if he took a shine to it.

Re: Your 1st listening experience

I've got very fond memories of my late Mim singing Somewhere Over The Rainbow when I was in bed at night.