Who R U?


A while back Garfish mentioned he lked the idea of getting to know some of us better.As no one has started a thread like this before I will take the plunge.I have been involved in and read many heated exchanges here in AudioGon.I hope no one attacks me for this thread saying "who cares about you,this is audio" Anyway,Im 45 and live in W.N.Y.I have never been married but have a music loving 11 year old daughter who lives with me.I have been a nurse for 20 years.Before that I was a Navy Corpsman for several years.I recently became engaged (first time) to a beautiful 30 year old music loving woman.At my age a 30 year old is a keeper and I have never been happier!! My other interests??Im into vinyl,who has time for anything else??
david99
I R: a 37y.o. single but well-attached guy, no kids, from DC area who gets his $ for records and gear from a succession of sales jobs (not a "career", I fear), including stints in the audio hardware and software retail bizzes. I currently work for a local cabinetry company as a designer/estimator/salesguy, and have done designs for custom audio harware and software storage (not the majority of our work, however). I have 2-3 years worth of college coursework taken at various times, but am just a HS grad.
I've played the guitar since 11y.o., and still play in local rock bands, in a retro/punk bag. As a player, my primary stylistic touchstones are post-war electric blues, 50's rhythm & blues, rockabilly, rock and roll, 60's British invasion, surf, instrumental, soul, garage punk, folk rock, baroque pop, mod, ska, psychedelic, 70's proto punk, glam, power pop, reggae, new wave, punk rock, funk and 80's harDCore punk and indie rock. I'm also very influenced by jazz, but can't say that I'm good enough to really play it, just try to incorporate a swinging feel and the odd passing note or chord substitution.
I was conscious of quality audio as a kid through my father, who was a music lover, not an audiophile or hobbyist. He had thousands of LP's, 90% classical, most of the rest jazz. His last system was assembled in the 70's, Dual TT, MacIntosh SS receiver and Allison speakers. He added CD fairly early on in the mid-80's and has thousands of them, too. I never liked classical as a kid or young adult, but have begun to get into certain kinds in last several years, mostly early and modern, rather than the 18th-19th century standards Dad mostly listened to.
I have a several thousand record collection myself, including lots of 45's and some 78's, and a few hundred CD's. Most of the stuff is rock, jazz, and blues from the 50's, 60's, and 70's, much of it pretty obscure, but I don't consider myself a serious collector, just an opportunistic accumulator. I also listen to a lot of classical radio through my system, but mostly NPR talk or sports in the car.
I used to be the co-owner of a local independent record label that was active in the 80's releasing area punk-related bands on vinyl, and sold over 10,000 pieces nationally and around the world. I learned a lot about the technical side of recording in the studio, though I'm no wonk (anyway, digital came in after I mostly stopped producing). I still try to see rock bands live in clubs, but there isn't as much I want to attend these days.
In the last few years, I think I've spent as much on my system as on music, a trend that somewhat alarms me. For the record, the main components are: c-j PV-8 tube pre, MV-55 tube amp, modded Technics 1200 TT with B-M Glider M2, Theta Basic IIIa/Pearl digital separates, Audiolab 8000t tuner, HHB CD-R burner, NAD 6300 cassette, a vintage Sony Esprit 3-band full parametric EQ for dubbing touch-ups, Sennheiser HD600/MF X-Cans v.2 headphone combo (I've never been completely satisfied with any headphone setup I've tried, and am still not), all Cardas Cross wire, through Thiel CS2.2 floorstanding 3-ways. Next step possibilities: a turntable/arm upgrade, remote pre, separate phono pre, more amp power. I never see myself as aspiring to state-of-the-art system status, but I've already spent more time and money on the darn thing than I ever used to think I could be lured into, or am proud of, to be truthful. I bought most of the stuff used though, and stay away from high-end stereo shops like the plague, in addition to having no audio buddies and not attending the shows. So there!
zaikesman: yep, u b welcome here. nice post. i particularly like your listing of "primary stylistic touchstones." are there any others? -cfb
You know, I've never really understood what ska is, though I like the name, and now I have to figure out "glam." What on earth is that?
cfb, Paulwp - Don't want to pull thread off-topic, so real quicklike: Whazzamatta, cfb, that wasn't enuff for ya? E-mail me direct if you want to chat about any particular styles you're interested in. Paul, ska was an early-to-mid 60's Jamaican percursor to reggae, epitomized by the band The Skatellites, still active (though key original members have died). Mostly unknown in America at the time, some ska-influenced hits did infiltrate the top 40 - Millie Small's "My Boy Lollipop", Lee Dorsey's "Working In A Coalmine", Desmond Dekker's "The Israelites". Ska's signature rhythm sounds sort of like a double-time reggae with horns, more of a dance music. It experienced a British revival as the post-punk "Two-Tone" movement around 1980, producing bands like The Specials and The English Beat (spawning in turn a less-significant American revival in mid-90's). Lots of the biggest name reggae artists and producers of the 70's, including Bob Marley and The Wailers, got their starts in ska.
"Glam" = glam-rock, as in "glamour". Early 70's movement hugely popular in England, not so much in the 'States, at least while still at its short-lived peak. Prime practitioners included David Bowie (who moved on, as he always does), Marc Bolan/T. Rex, Slade, Gary Glitter, and many other less durable acts. It was also an influence on acts like Queen, The Sweet, The New York Dolls, Alice Cooper, Elton John, Kiss, and lots more. Generally speaking, glam incorporated melodic hard rock and bubblegum influences into a catchy, singles-oriented form that featured lots of repetitive riffs, chant-like rhythms, vocal harmonies and deliberately odd or goofy lyrics with gimmicky production. It was a very visually-focused genre, extremely androgynous with flashy makeup, platform boots, outrageously tight, shiny and sparkly costumes, colored or strangely-cut hairdo's, oversized collars, buttons and buckles, and often with sci-fi or mystical imagery. Not as earthy as the psychedelic hippie look before it; not as dark as the heavy metal, as slick as the disco, or as cold as the new wave looks that came after. Bands from Parliament to Sonic Youth to pre-grunge hair-metal acts all owe something to the spacy-comic look. Perhaps the best-known musical remnant of the style today is Gary Glitter's "Rock and Roll Part 2" (you know, the one with the lyrics that consist of nothing but the chanted word "hey"), blared through P.A.'s at team sports events everywhere. (Apologies to David99!)
So I've heard ska but didnt know what it was. I certainly remember My Boy Lollipop. And I like reggae. Enough for this thread, thanks.