Great little documentary, thanks for posting. Didn't realise Neneh Cherry was so instrumental in helping Massive Attack get off the ground. I loved Raw like Sushi when it came out, which was around the same time as 3 feet high and rising. Timeless albums to this day, along with Blue Lines
Nah ...just blessed I guess ...I'd likely left the club with a looker whilst you sere hanging around for the last dance and a well pissed minger that would find you marginally more appealing than a saveloy and a couple of pickled eggs
..think they've gone mate ...last seen they were arguing with a particularly ugly woman outside a chippy as she was eating a saveloy and a couple of pickled eggs...
Stone Roses Pearl Jam Foo Fighters Hendrix Beatles Tracy Chapman Bob Dylan Bush Counting Crows Eminem RATM Mumford & Sons Stereophonics (early stuff) Nirvana Even some of the crap the kids listen to. Just not drum and bass.
I've highlighted the ones that I like out of that list. Personally I'm into all sorts. I've read a few people saying that they have 'eclectic' music tastes, but it all seems fairly mainstream what they've posted. My musical tastes span from Fela Kuti to Elgar, via Mulatu Astake, Tito Puente, to Scott La Rock via Dizzy Gillespie and Maceo Parker, Jaco Pastorius via Ravi Shankar to Primus and back to Sun Ra. I'm not really bothered what genre it's in. Jazz, Rock, Blues, Metal, Latin, Afrobeat, Hip-Hop, Jungle, DnB, Classical, Indian sitar music, Funk. If it's good music or there's some craftmanship that I can appreciate, then I like it. What I have no time for is middle of the road, banal pop pap. It just doesn't interest me at all.