Did Hippies Hurt or Help American Music?

Musical topics not directly related to steel guitar

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Mike Winter
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Post by Mike Winter »

:)
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b0b
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Post by b0b »

One of the odd things about hippie music was that people with no vocal chops at all had the audacity to sing. It really drove our parents nuts. :P
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David L. Donald
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Post by David L. Donald »

b0b wrote:It really drove our parents nuts. :P
Wasn't THAT part of the idea?
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Post by David Doggett »

b0b wrote:One of the odd things about hippie music was that people with no vocal chops at all had the audacity to sing. It really drove our parents nuts. :P
True, and this no-vocal-chops tradition is still alive and well among singer-songwriters and college radio. However, the hippies did inherit some respect for playing instruments from early rock'n'roll, country, bluegrass, R&B, the beat jazzers, and folkies. Most were not old enough to be real masters, but you were expected to be able to play at least up to the standards of a late teen who practiced for a few years. It took anti-hippie punkers of the '70s to bring instrument chops down to beginner and drunk-junkie level. Not that I'm complaining. The raw energy of punk was refreshing at first. Thirty years later, not so much.:?
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Mike Winter
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Post by Mike Winter »

I remember reading somewhere that Jimi Hendrix figured he'd try singing after he heard Bob Dylan. Glad he did. :)
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Post by Theresa Galbraith »

I don't care for Bob Dylan's voice! :)
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Post by Mat Rhodes »

I don't care for Bob Dylan's voice!
Ditto for my feelings about Neil Young's voice. He's the Hippie equivalent of a cat when its tail is pulled.

But Jimi was definitely a triple threat. Not many could/can both sing AND play at his level. But everyone knows that.
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Post by Theresa Galbraith »

I was a hippie, but this topic is getting old. JMO :)
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Jim Cohen
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Post by Jim Cohen »

YOU were a hippy, Theresa? We want photographic proof! C'mon, let's see 'em! :)
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Post by Edward Meisse »

Theresa, if you were really a hippie, you would have posted 3 of these :lol: . :D
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Post by P Gleespen »

Thanks for all the recommendations on the Dead stuff guys. I appreciate it. :)

I went down to the local library and got "Workingman's Dead" and "American Beauty" to check out.
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Post by David L. Donald »

Good call, enjoy.
Give them both some time, they grow on you.
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Post by Kevin Hatton »

Knock, knock. Who is it? Its me Dave. Open up man,I got the stuff (whispered). Who? Its me Dave! Open the door. (Long pause). Dave's not home!
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Post by Kevin Hatton »

Open the door. I think the cops saw me come in.
Who? Dave! Dave's not here.
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Post by Kevin Hatton »

No, you idiot! Its me Dave. Open the #@$$! door. I got the stuff. Who? Dave! (Long pause). Dave's not here.
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Post by Webb Kline »

And here all along I thought it was some dull Indian movie! :eek:
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Post by Mike Winter »

Ha! I saw Cheech and Chong back in 1972, at the Inglewood Forum in Los Angeles, with Santana and the Stones. Pretty sure it was a benefit for the Nicaragua earthquake...back when Mick was married to Bianca.
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Post by David L. Donald »

Mike Winter wrote:...back when Mick was married to Bianca.
The pliestioceane age then?
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Mike Winter
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Post by Mike Winter »

No, that was too far back. It actually was during the Nixonian Age, before the Watergate Flood... :)
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Post by Mike Perlowin »

Mike Winter wrote: the Nixonian Age, before the Watergate Flood... :)
Speaking of which, the Watergate comedy "DICK" starring Kirsten Dunst is an absolute laugh riot. You have to remember Watergate to appreciate it, and the under 30 crowd didn't support the movie when it first came out, but it's on cable now.

The premise of the film is that "deep throat" was 2 clueless 15 year old girls who set the whole scandal in motion when they snuck out of the hotel to mail a fan letter to Bobby Sherman.

With such comic actors as Will Farrell, Harry Shearer and Dan Hedaya as Nixon, the film manages to mention every known fact about Watergate (at the time it was made,) and still be absolutely hilarious.
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Post by David L. Donald »

Yeah DICK is a hoot.
The music is of course perfect time and place too.
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Real happiness has no strings attached.
But pedal steels have many!
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Mike Winter
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Post by Mike Winter »

Aw man, ya done burst my bubble...I thought Forrest Gump blew the whistle. :)

To keep it on track, the Forrest Gump soundtrack is pretty cool.
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Post by Jim Cohen »

Damn hippies ('specially that one second from left; he's nuthin' but trubble)...
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Post by Theresa Galbraith »

Vince Gill, you hippie! :)
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Post by David L. Donald »

Jimbeaux that looks post hippie, pre-hair metal.

The Final Net sales have yet to go up.

Except 1 or 2 of The Statler Brothers snuck into the pic! ;)
DLD, Chili farmer. Plus bananas and papaya too.

Real happiness has no strings attached.
But pedal steels have many!
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