With that said, the last question came from Samantha, who asked:
What was the first record album you bought?Now I could answer that question directly, but it wouldn't reveal too much about me as there wasn't a great story behind why that album. There's data and then there's evidence, after all. So let me try to expand the question a bit.
So first, some back story. I really didn't start buying music until college. I'm a middle child of the Mtv (when it was music videos) generation so for a few reasons, I didn't need to buy much. The first was that I had an older sister who loved music and who was generally ahead of the musical curve. She was the Jimmy Rabbitte of our neighborhood: she knew when a band was just coming on (imagine Duran Duran just days before "Rio" hit) and she knew when they had outlived their welcome (think Duran Duran right around the time they recorded "A View to a Kill" straight up to today). And so I was able to poach her albums when she wasn't around or occasionally blackmail her into letting me borrow them when she was. And of course, there were some musical hand-me-downs, too. And for those things neither of us had, there was Mtv.
It'd probably also be worth thinking about this in terms of format. I'm old enough that I've lived through more than a few generations of musical technology. So I could talk about - and maybe you could infer some things from - the particular albums and formats I bought them in. And just for kicks, I'll throw a couple of other musical touchstones in there.
And before we dig in, a confession, an apology, and grounds for further inquiry all rolled into one: I am unapologetic about even my worst tastes in music. And so I offer no apologies and will feel not one ounce of remorse for what's about to be said, revealed, and/or thought about. I own a lot of albums, and I've only ever gotten rid of two of them in my time. I'm a bit like Rob in "High Fidelity" on that one. You can chart me musically, but you can't shame me. So, with that caveat, let's dive in...
First Vinyl: J. Geils Band "Freeze Frame"

First Cassette Tape: Run D.M.C. "King of Rock"

I went through two copies of this and one vice principal in about seven months with this. It was that good.
First CD: U2 "Rattle and Hum"

I don't have a whole lot else to say about this time period or those purchases except that it was right around the start of college, and music took on a whole different meaning then. This was also pretty close to the time where I discovered the joys of the mix tape.
With that, here's some bonus musical knowledge for you.
The First Album Someone Else Bought Me: Joan Jett and the Blackhearts "I Love Rock and Roll"

Best Mix Tape: Jen T.
Jen is, more or less, the one who got away (and I was, sadly, the one who needed to be gotten away from). But she did mix tapes right. This one had a cover with a penguin photo, and it got lost in a move someplace which seems somehow so tragically metaphorical that emo kids would shake their fingers and tell me to get a life. I can only remember about half the set list today, but this is the mix tape that all the mixes I've ever made for people aspire to be. Standouts from the mix include Tori Amos' "Winter," His Name is Alive's "Is This The Way the Tigers Do" and Meryn Cadell's "The Sweater."
The First Album I Bought That Wasn't Just About the Music: Thelonious Monk "Straight, No Chaser"

I struggled with Monk like a good theory. I struggled with his music the way I still struggle with the idea that being literal in an argument with a girlfriend isn't the same as being rational. I struggled with it the way I struggle with the idea that people who say they're Christian can vote against welfare. I struggled far more than I needed to for such a class. And I still didn't get it until the instructor finally told me to stop thinking about it so much and just listen. Right there in his office, we sat down and put a song on, and every time I tried to say something, the instructor shushed me. And we listened.
And there, underneath all that confusion that Monk had invented just to trample me, there was something else happening. All that stuff that seemed like discord, all those bits that seemed out of place? They were doing something else - something related, but different. There was almost a second song hovering there. It was so big and simple a revelation that I left his office and went to my local record store and ordered the disc right then.
It was, as moments go, near transcendent. And it's the reason today that I'm nervous telling students not to take courses just because they fit their schedule. Who knows what you might find, right?
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3 Responses to “Your Questions Answered, the Conclusion”
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Now THAT's a response! :-) Thank you for sharing all of that.
November 23, 2007 at 9:46 PMI admire your complete lack of musical-taste shame ... even though I am shameless about some of my past musical history, there is even more that I have hidden deep in my dark and forgotten past. And I like all your stuff listed here (tho, to be honest, rattle and hum is the U2 album I like the absolute least).
November 23, 2007 at 11:43 PMGot any live-show stories then?
My live concert stories aren't great; I've seen some great shows but have rarely had that big moment that some people seem to have (I've got a friend who wound up backstage with Neil Young and Peter Buck a few weeks back, for example).
November 24, 2007 at 7:20 PMAbout as close as I get is having sat outside in 113 degree weather with no cover for Pearl Jam or having stumbled into four row center seats for Wilco/R.E.M. at Red Rocks, which incidentally got down into the 30s so that they had to bring out heating lamps for the band. Now that I think about it, maybe climate problems are what happens at shows since when I saw the Foos, it was in an unair-conditioned venue that probably hit the upper 90s during the show.
Those aside, I could talk about the best shows I've seen (or the worst).
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