Dr Doran
My Mail is Forwarded Here
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Starius said:I think I can be both a product of my times and have a deep rooted appreciation for things not of my time. I don't feel much of a conflict in that regard.
A fine attitude. I feel the same. I suppose that for me, as with so many things in my aesthetic, I am defined by what I hate sometimes even more than what I love. I cannot stand the aspects of modern culture that the film Idiocracy lampoons so well. But there are plenty of modern things I like too.
reetpleat said:I agree about Sinatra. My way has a certain appeal, even if part of it is kind of the cheesiness, kind of like William Shatner. ... But his later persona, the "saloon singer" he always talks about is way too pompous, arrogant, macho and full of himself to be taken seriously. The whole "phrasing" he is considered so great at comes off as contrived sappy emoting to me.
I have always hated Sinatra, but I thought I was the only one; certainly the only one on the Lounge. I am glad that other people find him as insincere as I do! I have not heard the earliest recordings, though. He was much better as an actor in the film Suddenly than as a singer in any song I have ever heard.
olive bleu said:...about a whole life time ago, on my very first day at college in winnipeg, i met a girl fresh from Jamaica, bundled in about 15 layers of sweaters and freezing to death.She was terribly homesick and caught a bad cold the first week.We became best friends and she introduced me to reggae.She was a singer herself and played the piano, but her family was too poor to afford one.she lived down the street from Jimmy Cliff, who let her come over from time to time to play.I have been a diehard fan ever since.
That is a nice way to get introduced to a genre. For me it was the hippies in my high school and they were all suburban white dorks. Although I have not heard the entire canon, of what I have heard the music was banal, the vocals always high and childlike, and the lyrics always either:
1. Vague exhortations for revolution which, if heeded, would lead only to bloodshed and no improvement, or
2. Vague exhortations to "feel" and emote, or
3. Vague exhortations to love either romantically or (certain segments of) the human race, or
3. Concrete and highly specific exhortations to take drugs, as though anyone needs more encouragement to (mis/ab)use stupefactants.
Bertie Wooster said:... I don't drive a car, have a TV set, ipod or i-anything, no microwave, deep fat fryer, coffee machine or any other mod cons save for our oven, refrigerator and freezer. ... I am with the great Professor Tolkien in the view that the modern age is full of nasty, noisy mechanical devices which, whilst "labour saving" remove some humanity from day to day tasks. Sometimes I wish I had been born in his day.
I don't drive either. No ipod here. I hate microwaves and in fact distrust them, but it's more that I think they stink and make food gross than any theories about brain damage. I never liked Tolkien but I agree that with that sentiment. Reminds me of a marvelous episode of Twilight Zone with BUSTER KEATON (seriously) in which he is transported from the 1890s to the 1960s and cannot stand the noise and is shocked at the high prices.
Plenty of "retro-future" lovers on the Lounge! Brazil, Blade Runner, Gattaca ... plenty of people here love those films.vintage68 said:The most un-vintage thing about me is my love of science fiction and gadgets. Then I saw Bladerunner with its homage to noir and it all came together for me.