Songs that Changed Your Perception of an Artist...
Posted: Wed November 20, 2013 10:27 am
I suppose this is a bit of a spin-off of the 180 thread, but these don't have to be 180s. Random songs that, upon hearing, changed your perception of an artist, or made you realize that there was more to them than what the general public's idea of them contained. I figure you guys probably have some good ones...
This song changed Simple Minds for me in a big way. Before this, my perception of them was as a watered down U2 with a few good anthemic tunes here and there. I had no idea that from 1980-1984 (before Derek Forbes left and they decided they wanted to be U2) they were staggeringly great. This entire album (Empires & Dance) is actually brilliant and psychotic and claustrophobic and unabashedly European in all the best ways (it also has my favorite album cover of all-time). The first side of the record (I Travel - Today I Died Again - Celebrate - This Fear of Gods) is as good as any album side of its era. The three albums that followed this one (and the one before it to an extent) make for a very impressive run by any standards...
I kinda just thought the Bee Gees were soulless 70's pop at its most cynical until a few years ago when someone played me this song from their first international release. My jaw dropped and it kinda dawned on me for the first time that the Gibb brothers were actually pretty fucking brilliant at one point. This whole album is worth listening to, but this song is the one that made me say "WAIT. The Bee Gees were...good?" Just some awesome baroque, psychedelic pop.
I don't give a shit about Simply Red, but I really randomly came across this a few years ago. Apparently before it was terrible, adult contemporary, blue-eyed soul turd, Mick Hucknall's previous band released Holding Back the Years as a mopey, post-punk, almost Joy Division-esque ballad. It makes the Simply Red version even more unbearable than before, but man do I fucking love this version. It makes me wonder if Mick Hucknall actually could've been something not completely terrible...
This song changed Simple Minds for me in a big way. Before this, my perception of them was as a watered down U2 with a few good anthemic tunes here and there. I had no idea that from 1980-1984 (before Derek Forbes left and they decided they wanted to be U2) they were staggeringly great. This entire album (Empires & Dance) is actually brilliant and psychotic and claustrophobic and unabashedly European in all the best ways (it also has my favorite album cover of all-time). The first side of the record (I Travel - Today I Died Again - Celebrate - This Fear of Gods) is as good as any album side of its era. The three albums that followed this one (and the one before it to an extent) make for a very impressive run by any standards...
I kinda just thought the Bee Gees were soulless 70's pop at its most cynical until a few years ago when someone played me this song from their first international release. My jaw dropped and it kinda dawned on me for the first time that the Gibb brothers were actually pretty fucking brilliant at one point. This whole album is worth listening to, but this song is the one that made me say "WAIT. The Bee Gees were...good?" Just some awesome baroque, psychedelic pop.
I don't give a shit about Simply Red, but I really randomly came across this a few years ago. Apparently before it was terrible, adult contemporary, blue-eyed soul turd, Mick Hucknall's previous band released Holding Back the Years as a mopey, post-punk, almost Joy Division-esque ballad. It makes the Simply Red version even more unbearable than before, but man do I fucking love this version. It makes me wonder if Mick Hucknall actually could've been something not completely terrible...