Dude that had my T made a CD in the 90s, mostly blues type stuff. Was a good friend of my dad and a childhood hero. Died a shitty, shitty death 10 years ago and miraculously I was able to buy the T I remembered as a kid. First night I had it home, I listened to his CD, got slightly drunk and tried not to cry like a little girl. Otherwise, Dick Dale, Wedge Paradiso sums up what it was like to drive it for the first time.
Oldies station, ZZ Top, John Lee Hooker, 40's country , Hank Snow (Rocket 88), Hank Williams Sr., Jonny Cash, Ricky Skaggs, Marty Robins, Bob Wills, Smooth Jazz, Southern Gospel,(Charles Johnson and the Revivers) Trey Gowdy Podcast, and lately a lot of local preaching for HOPE.
Along that same line of thinking I am listening to my new heat/AC system humming along in my shop. Yesterday it was about 86 outside and 74 inside with 40% humidity. I don't think I will outlast the 10 year warranty but it surely is nice inside now.
WRR 101.1 Dallas. Chopin, Brahms, Rossini, the classics. In place of rock I have recording of garbage trucks unloading at the city land fill---sounds the same to me.
Depends, if what I'm doing requires thought or precision, some smooth jazz. Anything else gets 50's/60's Rock n Roll.
Hello, My wife and I grew up with rock and roll music in the late 50s and early 60s. But, our eyes opened up to some really rocking music during the hey days of the 1966-70 era. They still last today, to bring back some regularity to the pandemic woes for everyone. Listening to the music just seems to make things a little less hectic and slightly calming. But, how can some rocking music of the 90s compare? The sound quality was there with the upgraded speakers, blasting high power receiver and digital CD music. But, now that those are passe, our music is now locked into our mp3 digital playlists and broadcast over some Audioengine A2 speakers for the new quality sounds from our varied play lists. Jnaki In the late 60s, my wife and I used to dance around our small apartment with the rock and roll sounds blasting for just about everything. House cleaning, cooking, sitting around enjoying life, etc. Nothing was better than listening to music with someone you know well. So, we were both doing some mundane garage clean out of our now, "getting clogged" drawers and tall cabinets. I decided to play a folder called 1990s rock and out of this was a trio of sounds from one of our favorite 90s rock bands. https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=AxuTd9rwEHQ&list=RDAMVMAxuTd9rwEHQ Everlong Foo Fighters https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhzmNRtIp8k&list=PL0LnWnL-0hb59Gw9lOCauIJKci4Q2DSdA&index=5 Times Like These https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dwuzqF6huc Learn to Fly original We paused when the music playlist came on and stopped cleaning. We started to do some moves we used to do way back then. Throughout the laughter of the scene, it was fun and memorable. The music just made us move our old bones, like the old days. When we were finished, we came in and put on the You Tube channel on the big screen TV to see the actual videos. We ran across this wonderful display of Learn to Fly, not the original, but a gathering of a bunch of people all singing, rocking out, playing the musical instruments, and having a rollicking good time while doing it. Normally, we do not like cover versions of songs, but this one just made the mood really enjoyable. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JozAmXo2bDE 1000 rockers singing Learn To Fly
just listened again to a nice german band with a Carl Perkins alltime favourite: Cat Lee King and his Cocks You can do no wrong - YouTube
....and one more fantastic tune, one of my favourite swedish bands, the Playtones: Min gamla grammofon - YouTube