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Reply #120 posted 01/18/07 12:38pm

dreamfactory31
3

NDRU said:

dreamfactory313 said:


This month in 1983, I was 3 years old.


you're just a child to me, and yet you're almost over the hill too! razz

Yeah, at the end of the decade, I'll be the BIG THREE OH! eek
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Reply #121 posted 01/18/07 12:38pm

minneapolisgen
ius

avatar

I'm trying to remember.... hmmm

But God do I feel old on this thread. lol










[Edited 1/19/07 8:20am]
"I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven
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Reply #122 posted 01/18/07 12:39pm

minneapolisgen
ius

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Christopher said:

CinisterCee said:



Portishead/Dummy








good drug album from 95 smile

SO true. lol
"I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven
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Reply #123 posted 01/18/07 12:43pm

Adisa

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1987-1988

SOTT
TTD's "Introducing the hardline..."
Public Enemy "It Takes a Nation..."
Eric B. & Rakim "Paid In Full"
Parade (didn't get it until fall '87)
[Edited 1/18/07 12:44pm]
I'm sick and tired of the Prince fans being sick and tired of the Prince fans that are sick and tired!
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Reply #124 posted 01/18/07 1:19pm

November

avatar

Mara said:

If you were black you listened to rap and R&B, PERIOD. Anything else, you were a fucking weirdo.



lol lol I felt the same way.

Around 14, I started to dig through my parents record collection, and started to really get into older music. When they thought that I hated oldies when riding in the car w/them.....in my room I was secretly bumping them in my walkman.

I would make tapes of my dad's Klymaxx, Prince, Jesse Johnson, SOS Band, Rick James, and Maze records afterschool before he came home from work. I would always record the Saturday night "Bluelights in the Basement" show off the radio.

While I listened to the current stuff (esp. hip-hop), I loved my old school too.
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Reply #125 posted 01/18/07 1:36pm

dreamfactory31
3

November said:

Mara said:

If you were black you listened to rap and R&B, PERIOD. Anything else, you were a fucking weirdo.



lol lol I felt the same way.

Around 14, I started to dig through my parents record collection, and started to really get into older music. When they thought that I hated oldies when riding in the car w/them.....in my room I was secretly bumping them in my walkman.

I would make tapes of my dad's Klymaxx, Prince, Jesse Johnson, SOS Band, Rick James, and Maze records afterschool before he came home from work. I would always record the Saturday night "Bluelights in the Basement" show off the radio.

While I listened to the current stuff (esp. hip-hop), I loved my old school too.

This was pretty much true for me too. I was raised listening to all kinds of music but around eight grade, everyone was listening to the same rap and r&b and if you strayed far away from that, you were pretty much labled a lame. When I got to highschool with a more diverse peer group, I felt more comfortable getting into some different things. All this happened at about 14 for me too.
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Reply #126 posted 01/18/07 2:23pm

sextonseven

avatar

dreamfactory313 said:

November said:




lol lol I felt the same way.

Around 14, I started to dig through my parents record collection, and started to really get into older music. When they thought that I hated oldies when riding in the car w/them.....in my room I was secretly bumping them in my walkman.

I would make tapes of my dad's Klymaxx, Prince, Jesse Johnson, SOS Band, Rick James, and Maze records afterschool before he came home from work. I would always record the Saturday night "Bluelights in the Basement" show off the radio.

While I listened to the current stuff (esp. hip-hop), I loved my old school too.

This was pretty much true for me too. I was raised listening to all kinds of music but around eight grade, everyone was listening to the same rap and r&b and if you strayed far away from that, you were pretty much labled a lame. When I got to highschool with a more diverse peer group, I felt more comfortable getting into some different things. All this happened at about 14 for me too.


When I was in 7th and 8th grade, kids didn't know what hip-hop was. Run-DMC's first album hadn't even come out yet! You either liked rock or disco and during lunch the boys would separate to different sides of the room based on what your preference was. Kids were stupid. lol
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Reply #127 posted 01/18/07 3:12pm

purplehippieon
the1







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Reply #128 posted 01/18/07 10:46pm

Abdul

dreamfactory313 said:

Abdul said:

I was in 8th grade from Sep92-Jun93 (CLASS OF 97 IN HERE!), here's the five joints that got played to death:


1.The Chronic - Dr. Dre
2.Backdafucup - Onyx
3.Talkin Shit - Martin Lawrence - I know it's not a music CD but it was funny as hell and still is IMO!
4.What's The 411? - Mary J. Blige
5.Nineteen Naughty Three - Naughty By Nature
[Edited 1/17/07 22:19pm]


Can u believe that we are celebrating our 10th year out of highschool this year? Time flies when youre having fun. Our lists are almost identical!

1.The Chronic - Dr. Dre
2.Srictly For My Niggaz - Tupac
3.janet. - Janet Jackson
4.Whats the 411? - Mary J. Blige
5.Nineteen Naughty Three - Naughty By Nature



These Ten years have flown by haven't they? I used to play that Tupac joint to death too and Janet's joint.Just think we'll be THIRTY soon.
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Reply #129 posted 01/18/07 10:54pm

GangstaFam

Mara said:

This is an AWESOME LIST. Go on, Gfam! DO IT.

Aww, shucks. redface
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Reply #130 posted 01/18/07 11:22pm

CinisterCee

Abdul said:

dreamfactory313 said:



Can u believe that we are celebrating our 10th year out of highschool this year? Time flies when youre having fun. Our lists are almost identical!

1.The Chronic - Dr. Dre
2.Srictly For My Niggaz - Tupac
3.janet. - Janet Jackson
4.Whats the 411? - Mary J. Blige
5.Nineteen Naughty Three - Naughty By Nature



These Ten years have flown by haven't they? I used to play that Tupac joint to death too and Janet's joint.Just think we'll be THIRTY soon.


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Reply #131 posted 01/19/07 5:52am

Anx

Mara said:

If you were black you listened to rap and R&B, PERIOD. Anything else, you were a fucking weirdo.


when i was in 8th grade, if you didn't listen to hair metal you were a homogay.

which, well, in my case they may have had a point, but i never understood what was particularly butch about bleach blonde men sporting teased hair and lip gloss. shrug
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Reply #132 posted 01/19/07 8:16am

minneapolisgen
ius

avatar

sextonseven said:

dreamfactory313 said:


This was pretty much true for me too. I was raised listening to all kinds of music but around eight grade, everyone was listening to the same rap and r&b and if you strayed far away from that, you were pretty much labled a lame. When I got to highschool with a more diverse peer group, I felt more comfortable getting into some different things. All this happened at about 14 for me too.


When I was in 7th and 8th grade, kids didn't know what hip-hop was. Run-DMC's first album hadn't even come out yet! You either liked rock or disco and during lunch the boys would separate to different sides of the room based on what your preference was. Kids were stupid. lol

lol disbelief
"I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven
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Reply #133 posted 01/19/07 8:18am

minneapolisgen
ius

avatar

whofarted

don't know what just happened here edit lol redface
[Edited 1/19/07 8:19am]
"I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven
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Reply #134 posted 01/19/07 8:23am

MendesCity

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REM Life's Rich Pageant
New Order Brotherhood
Housemartins London O Hull 5
The The Infected
Peter Gabriel So
XTC Skylarking
Billy Bragg Talking with the Taxman

That probably was the first year I started to listen to stuff that wasn't on top 40 radio, probably all thanks to "120 minutes" smile
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Reply #135 posted 01/19/07 3:11pm

sextonseven

avatar

minneapolisgenius said:

sextonseven said:



When I was in 7th and 8th grade, kids didn't know what hip-hop was. Run-DMC's first album hadn't even come out yet! You either liked rock or disco and during lunch the boys would separate to different sides of the room based on what your preference was. Kids were stupid. lol

lol disbelief


In 7th grade I didn't know anything about music, but I chose the disco side anyway. The only albums I owned at the time were The Jacksons' 'Destiny' and the 'Grease' soundtrack. lol
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Reply #136 posted 01/20/07 8:54am

minneapolisgen
ius

avatar

sextonseven said:

minneapolisgenius said:


lol disbelief


In 7th grade I didn't know anything about music, but I chose the disco side anyway. The only albums I owned at the time were The Jacksons' 'Destiny' and the 'Grease' soundtrack. lol

lol You were a late bloomer. biggrin
"I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven
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Reply #137 posted 01/21/07 1:57am

CinisterCee

HamsterHuey said:

jeeeeez.
Bleeding 1986.







You were bumpin' Miles?
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Reply #138 posted 01/21/07 3:38am

HamsterHuey

CinisterCee said:

HamsterHuey said:

jeeeeez.
Bleeding 1986.



You were bumpin' Miles?


Hell yeah. Saw the covers in the movie, then ran to the recordstore.

Full Nelson (what's in a name) has the White Girls thingie. I never knew who copied who there.
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Reply #139 posted 01/22/07 2:47pm

namepeace

November said:

Mara said:

If you were black you listened to rap and R&B, PERIOD. Anything else, you were a fucking weirdo.



lol lol I felt the same way.

Around 14, I started to dig through my parents record collection, and started to really get into older music. When they thought that I hated oldies when riding in the car w/them.....in my room I was secretly bumping them in my walkman.

I would make tapes of my dad's Klymaxx, Prince, Jesse Johnson, SOS Band, Rick James, and Maze records afterschool before he came home from work. I would always record the Saturday night "Bluelights in the Basement" show off the radio.

While I listened to the current stuff (esp. hip-hop), I loved my old school too.


I'll take issue with that, if only because MTV was the hottest thing out there back in the early to mid 80's. Videos were so new everyone was watching them, so even the black kids knew a lot of the "white" music. Now that doesn't mean that you wouldn't get looked at strange if you busted out a Police or REM record, but we knew a little more "white music" than we let on.
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #140 posted 01/22/07 2:49pm

vainandy

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If anyone saw "Soul Train" last Saturday, that's EXACTLY the kind of jams I was playing in the eighth grade.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #141 posted 01/22/07 3:34pm

paligap

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...

I know this is more than 5, but there was a lot in the air at the time, 78-79...







...
[Edited 1/22/07 15:50pm]
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #142 posted 01/22/07 3:55pm

thorntonmellon

Eighth Grade - 1985/86

1) I'll Be Your Friend - Precious Wilson
2) Sade - Promise
3) LL Cool J - Radio
4) BBoys - Girls
5) Stetsasonic - Just Say Stet
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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > 5 joints U played to death in grade 8