The Rewind Button: Ramones

Ramones - Ramones

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them.

Have you ever been told to drink water or eat salad to cleanse your palate between dishes? Ramones is my palate cleanser. After weeks of albums that have been so-so for me, the Ramones offer me refreshment with their debut album. In fact, I’d rather just have it for a full meal.

While a lot of the artists reviewed in this project have presented great examples of expanding what an artist can do with pop/rock music, the three-chords-and-the-truth of the Ramones is more appealing to me than making an artistic statement. Okay, okay, sure,  they were making a statement when they chose this route. I’ll admit that. And I’ll admit that I prefer it over seven-minute Dylan songs, no matter how great the poetry is in his lyrics. I’d rather slam-dance than sit around in a circle discussing the ins-and-outs of a line.

Usually, I’m not that way. I often prefer debates and great talks deep into the evening about literature. So, what is it about Ramones that makes me prefer it over much of what we’ve reviewed from the late 1960s and earlys 1970s? It’s possible that I’ve become bored with what we’ve been listening to for this project. The Ramones offer a change of pace, something that gets my dopamine flowing. That’s exactly why this album is on the Rolling Stone list, because it shook people out of their serious stupor.

I wish more albums of this caliber were on the Rolling Stone top 40 list, because I think it would have given it variety and added some excitement to the mix. Even if the magazine doesn’t list this as a top 10 all-time album, I’m tempted to do that. Question is, do I place it above other artists’ albums that I think are better, but have been influenced by it (anyone else notice the stoner-rock rifts that come in during “Now I Wanna to Sniff Glue”?), or do I put the original influence first? It’s a question that I will think about as I get closer to the end of the list and contemplate my own rearrangement of it.

Please visit these other blogs participating in The Rewind Button project:

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Posted in <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/music/" rel="category tag">music</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/rewind-button/" rel="category tag">Rewind Button</a> Tagged <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/1970s/" rel="tag">1970s</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/1976/" rel="tag">1976</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/music/" rel="tag">music</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/new-york/" rel="tag">New York</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/punk/" rel="tag">punk</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/ramones/" rel="tag">Ramones</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/rewind-button/" rel="tag">Rewind Button</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/rock/" rel="tag">rock</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/rolling-stone/" rel="tag">Rolling Stone</a> 1 Comment

The Rewind Button: Nevermind

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them. There will be a new album and review each Thursday (or there about).

Nirvana NevermindI attended Tarleton State University in Stephenville, Texas, in 1991. As any red-blooded American male, I was away from home and on the make. It was a Saturday in October, and I had two options. Drive all the way to Dallas to see some show at Trees or stay in Stephenville and go to a party out in a field. Option one featured a long drive and a crowded venue. Option two featured free beer and the opportunity to meet girls. My friend and I debated the options, and since we only knew the teen spirit song by Nirvana, I talked my friend into staying and attending the party with me.

I didn’t get laid that night. In fact, the party was pretty much all guys. Guys in a field drinking beer. Come to find out, though, I missed one of the most notorious Nirvana shows of all time, one in which Kurt Cobain got in a fight with a bouncer. The show was a crazy mess, but one I’m sure I would have enjoyed more than free beer. I’m definitely sure I would have enjoyed it more. But that’s hindsight. At the time, the slight chance to meet a girl was greater than the latest rock music revolution.

One couldn’t ignore Nirvana very much that year. They were the defibrillation to an industry whose heart was clogged full of crap. And like any good change-makers, they altered fashion as well. There are still pictures out there somewhere with me in all my flannel glory.

I’ve noticed that flannel is making a comeback. I think that’s more to do with a wish for a new rock revolution. But I’m not sure if that’s possible now, because of technology. In 1991, society consumed products through a pipe, just as it was always done. Every now and then, though, someone would come along and either widen the pipe or shatter it all together. Today, the Internet, that “series of tubes,” helps spread consumption. There’s really nothing to break anymore, because if you want to do something revolutionary, you just create another pipe or site or tube for people to find you. And people like that. I know I do. But it doesn’t make very many people superstars, or if they are stars, they’re short-lived.

Kurt Cobain died in 1994, a year before commercialization of the Internet. By then, Nirvana was commercialized, too. The band thrived at an optimal time, because there is no way they would have had the same impact on culture if they came on the scene today.

I finally saw Nirvana in December 1993. It was a crowded show, but tame compared to what others witnessed at Trees two years earlier. I regret missing that specific show, but thanks to the Internet, we can all see it now. It’s not the same as being there. But Nevermind, too, isn’t the same as when released. Its edges have soften. Its spikes have dulled a bit. It’s still a great album and warrants higher placement than No. 17 on Rolling Stone‘s list. Still, listening to it fills me with regret at choices made, both personally and as part of society’s larger decisions. For all the good technology has brought us, I sometimes still long for the days when our gods weren’t so easily available or forgettable.

Please visit these other blogs participating in The Rewind Button project:

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Posted in <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/music/" rel="category tag">music</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/rewind-button/" rel="category tag">Rewind Button</a> Tagged <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/1990s/" rel="tag">1990s</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/1991/" rel="tag">1991</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/dallas/" rel="tag">Dallas</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/grunge/" rel="tag">grunge</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/music/" rel="tag">music</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/nirvana/" rel="tag">Nirvana</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/punk/" rel="tag">punk</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/rewind-button/" rel="tag">Rewind Button</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/rolling-stone/" rel="tag">Rolling Stone</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/seattle/" rel="tag">Seattle</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/stephenville/" rel="tag">Stephenville</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/tarleton/" rel="tag">Tarleton</a> 4 Comments

The Rewind Button: London Calling

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them. There will be a new album and review each Thursday.

The Clash London CallingLondon Calling
33-year-old male
London, England
seeking males and females, 17-64

Have Kids: No

Want Kids: No

Ethnicity: White

Body Type: Skinny

Height: Tall

Religion: No comment

Smoke: All the time

Drink: All the time

Favorite Hot Spots: The Black Swan, Dingwalls, various pubs around London

Favorite Things: Rockabilly, ska, reggae, punk music, drugs, football, talking politics

Last Book Read: I read newspapers all the time, more so than books.

For Fun: I love to rebel-rouse. All my friends would call me the life of the party. And music. Oh my god, music is my life. Well, that, and playing football. When I’m out at the pub–I go there a lot–people say I’m pretty surly. I’m not really. I just come across that way because, you know, there’s so much wrong in the world and I feel people should do more to correct it. I seem to just take it upon myself, and that makes me a little sour toward people. I think people should be allowed to be themselves, but society constantly pushes them into the cubes and tries to form them into blocks that they can stack one on top of the other. I’m want to topple that stack. I want to throw a beanbag into and bring it all down. That’s how I know I’m winning in this world, that’s how I know I’m somebody. But, man, it’s so hard. So most of the time, I just chill in my room with beers and friends and we listen to some music. We don’t care what kind. If we enjoy it, we listen to it. That’s why people call me a punk, because I don’t give a fuck. But I do in a way. It’s weird, I only care because I want to care, not because someone tells me to care. That’s what’s fun to me. Doing things my way and not boxing myself in. If you’re cool with that, write me.

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Posted in <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/music/" rel="category tag">music</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/rewind-button/" rel="category tag">Rewind Button</a> Tagged <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/1979/" rel="tag">1979</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/british/" rel="tag">British</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/london/" rel="tag">London</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/music/" rel="tag">music</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/punk/" rel="tag">punk</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/reggae/" rel="tag">reggae</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/rewind-button/" rel="tag">Rewind Button</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/rolling-stone/" rel="tag">Rolling Stone</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/ska/" rel="tag">ska</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/the-clash/" rel="tag">The Clash</a> 4 Comments