| Love it. I feel similarly about the quality (don't know what else to call it) of the many songs I listen to from that time, compared to similarly popular songs over the past decades. Though for me they're also nostalgic in a way which clouds my judgement: I was introduced to vast amounts by my dad in the 90s. I do think there's some selection bias when we sample tunes that already ran through the filter of their time and 50 to 60 more years of collective filtering. One group I still didn't know much about and I think many people still don't (paradoxically so) was the Beatles. When I was 18, a friend lent me every album from Revolver through Abbey Road. If you haven't listed to those all the way through, you may be in for a treat. Also, if you want to hear an incredible modern artist's own
version of a protest song, check out Sturgill Simpson's Sea Stories. Dude was in the navy and wrote it as part of a concept album dedicated to giving his first child life advice. |
I remember FM radio in LA in the early 70s, there weren't really a lot of mediocre songs in the playlists. It wasn't just Classic Rock as we refer to it now, but a bunch of BB King and other blues artists, along with some of what you'd today call Country Rock.
But the "Country" Rock was Allman Brothers, CCR, The Band, and later ZZ Top, etc. The Blues were BB King, John Mayall, Hendricks, etc. The rock was Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, The Who, on and on. There was just so much that you didn't really need to fill out the playlists. And all of these bands were cranking out an Album a year in that 5-6 year period.