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-   -   15 Songs That Defined the Boomer Generation. (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/talk-music-337/15-songs-defined-boomer-generation-158037/)

chuckinca 07-20-2015 07:51 PM

"Various authors have delimited the baby boom period differently. The United States Census Bureau considers a baby boomer to be someone born during the demographic birth boom between 1946 and 1964.[11] Landon Jones, in his book Great Expectations: America and the Baby Boom Generation (1980), defined the span of the baby-boom generation as extending from 1943 through 1960, when annual births increased over 4,000,000. Authors William Strauss and Neil Howe, well known for their generational theory, define the social generation of Boomers as the cohorts born from 1943 to 1960, who were too young to have any personal memory of World War II, but old enough to remember the postwar American High.[12]"

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CathyandSteveG 07-20-2015 09:22 PM

I was born in 55...and none of these songs would be on my list

Chi-Town 07-20-2015 09:34 PM

Louie Louie by the Kingsmen would have to be in my baby boomer list.

Laurie2 07-21-2015 06:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Taltarzac725 (Post 1088539)
The 15 Songs That Defined the Boomer Generation - Next Avenue

Born on 2-24-1959, so I guess I am a boomer? :welcome:


The list is fun to think about.

I had never heard of the site nextavenue.org and found lots of interesting things there. Thank you.

queasy27 07-21-2015 10:41 AM

Well, I know the first LP I ever bought on my own was In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida by Iron Butterfly.

My personal defining list would lean a lot more towards songs from Cream, Moody Blues, CSN, Buffalo Springfield, Jefferson Airplane, Cat Stevens, Rita Coolidge, etc.

Also Beatles, but I think of those songs more as the soundtrack of my teenybopper years and mooning over John in fan magazines. (Sorry Dr. Boogie).

Jima64 07-21-2015 10:48 AM

Born in 50
 
The late 50's to through them60's was such a great time for music to me. Early 70's I was licing in San Francisco and can't get any better than that for music.

JerryLBell 07-22-2015 08:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dr Winston O Boogie jr (Post 1089294)
One of the few lists that I agree with. Of course, we all might have our favorites or songs that mean more to us, but this is a pretty good list.

The one I'd leave off is Marvin Gaye's "What Going On". It meant nothing to me and my crowd, but then again, I was a white kid from a Boston suburb. I'm sure that it meant a lot to a lot of other people.

I was a white kid from a rural area in Michigan and I found "What's Going On" to be one of the truly great songs of that era. I can still listen to it and be transported. It's a slice of audio heaven. That said, I'm sure I can look at the list and pick out songs that make me wonder "What were they thinking when they included this one?"

Lists like this don't tell you as much about the music as they do about the person making the list. It's just way too subjective.

Walt. 08-02-2015 01:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dr Winston O Boogie jr (Post 1089294)
One of the few lists that I agree with. Of course, we all might have our favorites or songs that mean more to us, but this is a pretty good list.

The one I'd leave off is Marvin Gaye's "What Going On". It meant nothing to me and my crowd, but then again, I was a white kid from a Boston suburb. I'm sure that it meant a lot to a lot of other people.

That's exactly what I thought as I went down the list... yep.. yep... yep... how did that get in there?

I think instead of "What's Going On" they should have included either Del Shannon's "Runaway" or perhaps The Four Seasons' "Big Girls Don't Cry." How about "The Sounds of Silence"
I think WGO may have been a somewhat "insincere" inclusion...

l2ridehd 08-02-2015 01:42 PM

And how could they leave off "My Girl by the Temptations? That song was rated the number one song of the 60's several times.

mike1921 09-22-2015 02:27 PM

I think this is why it is so hard to define a generation in just 15 songs. I agree with ugotme. I would take a lot more songs to do this. There are many ways to define the boomer generation. We could define it just by the music that moves us as many here choose to. Or we could consider the boomer generations participation in the social and political changes that took place in the last part of the 1900's. Music had a great impact on that as well as all of the festivals and concerts that they participated in. If we do that, then songs like "What's Going On" and "Time" take a place on the list as well as well as many many more.

luvmagic2 09-22-2015 02:47 PM

Two I have to add would be: "War" by Edwin Starr with lyrics of "War, huh, yeah
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing, uh-huh, uh-huh" and "If You're Going to San Francisco" with lyrics like "All across the nation
Such a strange vibration
People in motion
There's a whole generation
With a new explanation
People in motion
People in motion"

golfing eagles 09-22-2015 02:54 PM

Over the last 20 or 25 years, when I've heard an oldies station do a top 500 of all time on a holiday weekend, consistently the number one song is "In the Still of the Night"

manaboutown 09-22-2015 05:34 PM

The first R&R song I remember is "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley and his Comets, 1954, I think. Kids were jitterbugging/swing dancing to it. Sometime after that the dancing changed from contact to just get out there and jump around however you want. When the Beattles went on the Ed Sullivan show their sound changed R&R. Of course Elvis the Pelvis going on the same show years earlier surely changed things at that time.

My tongue in cheek favorites were "Purple People Eater", Alley Oop" and "Party Doll".

big guy 09-22-2015 06:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by manaboutown (Post 1118058)
The first R&R song I remember is "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley and his Comets, 1954, I think. Kids were jitterbugging/swing dancing to it. Sometime after that the dancing changed from contact to just get out there and jump around however you want. When the Beattles went on the Ed Sullivan show their sound changed R&R. Of course Elvis the Pelvis going on the same show years earlier surely changed things at that time.

My tongue in cheek favorites were "Purple People Eater", Alley Oop" and "Party Doll".

I agree about "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley and his Comets. First rock n roll song I ever heard and it drove me wild! There was a movie by the name of Blackboard Jungle, with Rock Around the Clock & Jailhouse Rock as theme songs, about a school in New York (I think Brooklyn). I was never a fan of Elvis but Bill Haley recorded "Jailhouse Rock" before Elvis.

scot_atc 09-22-2015 08:04 PM

Baby Boomers are a huge group over maybe too large a time span for lists like these. I was born in 1960 and fall in this group, but by the time I'm turning 10 even the Beatles are calling it quits. I'm a BTO, Aerosmith, Ted Nugent era guy. Won't be hearing much of that in the squares any time soon. Me and my iPod and drumset are on our own.


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