I believe that I did. But you cut it from the quote in your reply. I still like MOST of what I liked in '76. I still remember going to a consignment store in the late '80s, and buying a bunch of old K-Tel albums because they all contained songs that I just wasn't hearing on the radio at that time. A few years later, the '70s became "retro" and some of those songs returned to the airwaves, but I wasn't hearing them in the late '80s. I still have these K-Tel albums, so I have actually owned them longer than the original owners did! 8)michael hagerty said:I honestly don't know. I don't even know if I disagree with what you wrote above because you didn't answer my question.firepoint525 said:I'm sorry, are you going to disagree with EVERYTHING that I say?michael hagerty said:I'm sorry. Are you suggesting that, if not for peer pressure, everyone would like everything they hear always and forever?firepoint525 said:If late-night comics (among other people) would not mock the tastes of others, people would not develop "convenient amnesia" and forget them. It's a form of "peer pressure" that creates guilty pleasures and causes people to deny their own tastes in music.michael hagerty said:Perhaps you, Oldies76 and others don't forget them. Most people do.firepoint525 said:Radio may "forget" 45s, but we don't. Those usually go on to become "guilty pleasures" or something like that. ;D Back in the day, radio used to introduce us to those 45s that they would soon go on to "forget."
It's really easy to mock something once it's no longer in style. :![]()