154
by Me Again_Archive
A very Boomer-centric setlist being played by what sounds like a live band across the way. I could tolerate it for about four or five songs (even putting up with "Don't Stop Believing"), but had to cut short the cigar break as it became a bit much. To their credit, the band seemed to be hitting most of the notes, but the overall sound was too mild for these ears.It's odd, I mostly enjoy older, kinda "feel-good" music these days -- we just picked up the Deutsche Grammophone boxset of Bach's organ works, after I spent many hours listening to the abridged version on Spotify. But the stuff I like, it has some kind of "edge" or "pull" a lot of the time that I think gets disregarded by many people who like or even play "oldies," as well as detractors who dismiss these sort of things as "wimpy" or unflatteringly dated somehow.It might sound like a silly tangent, but I think being into punk music in my teens and twenties and so on shaped the kind of soul and funk (and even "classical") music I gravitate toward. There's a kind of intensity behind the best of it, where the singers and players are really "going for it," and it has a lot of presence and staying power even if a lot of people think of it as old hat or "soft." Kinda hard to put a finger on, but I know it when I hear it.