Purple Haze
Literally Stimulated
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2000
- Posts
- 19,290
Do you ever watch these "documentaries" on VH1, you know the in-depth stories on anybody that ever made a record? Once in a while I'm drawn to it because a lot of the music makers featured here had hits during my formative years. I just wish they would showing such little snippets of things and maybe show like the whole concert sometime, instead of the constant interuptions from talking-head experts telling you why you're supposed to think they're so cool.
Sometimes it seems like all of these artists had the same story line. Band begins in the basement, band struggles for years, band gets record deal, band has hottest record of all time, band does cocaine, band spends all of its money, band is not hot anymore, band goes back to the car wash, band goes to rehab, band reunites, band is old and ugly and on the comeback. Insert different footage, photos and dialogue, but keep the same "experts" in the same chair, the same day, the same drama.
Meanwhile, I just wanna see the rest of that film of Heart in concert in the seventies.
Last night "Behind the Music" was all about "Saturday Night Fever" and it's sociological impact on everything from mood rings to Swiss cheese. I'll admit, I had the record, who didn't? I saw the movie, who didn't?
The younger generation watching these shows must think highly of us old codgers, according to this and other "documentaries" of yore:
1. Everybody had a closet full of Disco suits, it was cool.
2. Everybody wore eight-inch platforms, that's why cars were bigger.
3. We didn't walk, we did the "Hustle" all the way to our '73 Torino
4. We didn't have jobs, we did cocaine and had orgies.
5. We were overjoyed that radio stations played "You Light Up My Life" every hour on the hour.
6. "Happy Days" made us howl.
Sometimes it seems like all of these artists had the same story line. Band begins in the basement, band struggles for years, band gets record deal, band has hottest record of all time, band does cocaine, band spends all of its money, band is not hot anymore, band goes back to the car wash, band goes to rehab, band reunites, band is old and ugly and on the comeback. Insert different footage, photos and dialogue, but keep the same "experts" in the same chair, the same day, the same drama.
Meanwhile, I just wanna see the rest of that film of Heart in concert in the seventies.
Last night "Behind the Music" was all about "Saturday Night Fever" and it's sociological impact on everything from mood rings to Swiss cheese. I'll admit, I had the record, who didn't? I saw the movie, who didn't?
The younger generation watching these shows must think highly of us old codgers, according to this and other "documentaries" of yore:
1. Everybody had a closet full of Disco suits, it was cool.
2. Everybody wore eight-inch platforms, that's why cars were bigger.
3. We didn't walk, we did the "Hustle" all the way to our '73 Torino
4. We didn't have jobs, we did cocaine and had orgies.
5. We were overjoyed that radio stations played "You Light Up My Life" every hour on the hour.
6. "Happy Days" made us howl.