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When did you start listening?
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 7:52 am
by KEVIN OWENS
The full title is "When did you start listening to and liking country music?"
Just a little research question.
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 8:28 am
by RJP
I started listening in 1997.
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Ron Plichta, former headbanger and PSG player in training.
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Posted: 24 Oct 2000 8:37 am
by Tyler Baum
Thursday.
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 8:50 am
by Ray Jenkins
Hearing probally in 1943,listning in 1951 when I met "Thumbs" Carlile in Baumholder Germany when I was 11 years old.He taught me the open chords on a six string.(not the way he played though)Ray
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Steeling is still legal in Arizona
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 9:03 am
by David Pennybaker
Somewhere around 1980 or so (pre- "Urban Cowboy", but just barely).
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The Unofficial Photographer of The Wilkinsons
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 10:11 am
by Smiley Roberts
I remember listening to a country show on the radio,the day they announced that Hank Williams had passed away.
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Posted: 24 Oct 2000 10:25 am
by Jack Stoner
I guess the question is for the converts or those who recently started listening to "country".
I started listening to country music probably around 1944, or at least that's my first rememberance of it.
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 11:12 am
by Anne Marie O Keeffe
It was there as I grew up but it was my parents who listened to it. I think I discovered it for myself when my then boyfriend (now husband) played a George Jones album for me. He had just discovered it too. That was April 1983. EUREKA!!!!
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 12:25 pm
by Martin Abend
I guess I started with Uncle Tupelo in... 1996? Discovered Hank and the Anthology in '98. But I was never really interested in trad. country. Too much clichés.
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Posted: 24 Oct 2000 1:52 pm
by Donny Hinson
Started listening in the early '50s, and got real serious about 1963. Had my first steel in '63, and my first pedal guitar in '65. I never stopped listening to other stuff, but Country was what I was playing most of the time. It's been a hoot!
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 3:00 pm
by Janice Brooks
Country music has always been in my backround. My early vinyl gifts and purchases were the likes of Johnny Cash and Roger Miller. I also have an uncle who had albums of Hank Williams and Marty Robbins.
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Janice "Busgal" Brooks
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Posted: 24 Oct 2000 3:15 pm
by erik
I was a Southern Rocker until the radio formats changed to New Wave around '81. Then i found Country.
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 4:48 pm
by Andy Alford
1959
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 6:40 pm
by Bob Anderson
Donny Hinson ...you wrote word for word what I was going to say. WOW!
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 6:58 pm
by Fred Murphy
I started listening to the Eddie Arnold show on radio in the 40's. He always started the show with Cattle Call.<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Fred Murphy on 24 October 2000 at 07:59 PM.]</p></FONT>
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 7:30 pm
by Les Green
around 1946 or 1947
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 8:42 pm
by Kenny Dail
Aug. 10, 1929
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kd...and the beat goes on...
Posted: 24 Oct 2000 9:24 pm
by Bob Mainwaring
Round about a couple of years after old Hank passed away, I was wowed by that wierd sound, I knew it was a steel guitar as we had friends of the family who "messed" with them.
I got started myself when I heard "Lonnie Donnegan" sing Rock Island Line back in 1956 and was instantly taken by the whole scene back then which kinda` jived with R&R coming out.
When I first came to these shores in 1967 I was "knocked-rotten" with the sounds that Buck Owens was getting with a certain - Mr Tom Brumley who was wowing us all about that time with those never to be forgotten sounds.
Bob Mainwaring Z.Bs. and other weird things.
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Posted: 24 Oct 2000 10:31 pm
by BJ Bailey
I guess I'm still a new convert of the hardcore country .
I just love those's clich'es.
I got into it alittle late in life tho,somewhere around 1943.
I began to sing hardrock early to,but only when that trusty razorstrap was put to my back side.
I though I had the meaness Momma in the world but she did teach me to dance early
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BJ Bailey
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by BJ Bailey on 24 October 2000 at 11:34 PM.]</p></FONT>
Posted: 25 Oct 2000 1:08 am
by Jude James Shiels
I've always liked country music but this is what got me hooked. About 7 years ago I was listening to plenty of Bob Dylan, then when I heard Hank Williams after hearing Bob Dylan it all began to make a lot more sense. I understood the debt Bob and many other songwriters owed him.
I suppose when you are around 15 or 16 in Ireland you don't want to admit to liking country, but Hank Williams and Merle Haggard changed all that for me.
You gotta admit many of Bob Dylan, Neil Young and others of that ilk best records were the ones that featured plenty of steel guitar.....
Posted: 25 Oct 2000 3:50 am
by P Gleespen
Well, if you don't count Hank, (which I won't in this case, since his music appeals to so many "non-country" folks, which is kind of weird, since he's so darn country...but I digress...) right after I started playing steel about 2 years ago, at the tender age of 30.
Before that, I never listened to country on purpose.
(...unless you think Uncle Tupelo is country. In which case, I'll have to say 1990 when they released the "No Depression" album.)<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by P Gleespen on 25 October 2000 at 04:58 AM.]</p></FONT>
Posted: 25 Oct 2000 4:21 am
by Dean Brown
I was a rocker throughout the sixties, but the merge into country started around 79/70.
Posted: 25 Oct 2000 6:25 am
by Richard Sinkler
Although I was exposed to it earlier because of my Dad, I seriously started listening around 68. I too, was a rocker at the time and continued to be a rocker as well as a country lover. I was a drummer at the time. Our band played everything from Led Zepplin to Merle Haggard. Great Variety.
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Posted: 25 Oct 2000 7:12 am
by JB Arnold
Around 1969-The Dead came out with the live skull and roses album, recorded at the Fillmore, and they had a version of Mama Tried on it. Got me looking for Merle.
John
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