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Throwback Thursday #37 – Discovering Your Musical Taste

A to Z is complete, so it is time to get back to our normal routine. This week we delve into the music of our lives. This should be one that everyone relates to in one way or another.

If you care to join us, it’s easy.

  • Write your own post sharing your memories and leave a pingback to this post in the comments.
  • You can use the photo above in your post to make it easier to find.
  • Tag it with #TBTMemory or #IRememberWhen.
  • If you do not wish to write your own post, feel free to tell your story in the comments below.

This week’s prompt is: Discovering Your Musical Taste

Let’s explore the music you were exposed to as a child and how you moved from those early experiences into developing a taste of your own.

You can respond to the following questions as they are, or you can use them to spark your own memories and write your own post.

  1. What music were you exposed to in your family home – genre, artist, or style.
  2. Did you enjoy that type of music or did you rebel against it?
  3. How did you listen to music in your childhood home? Radio? Record player? Television?
  4. Did you buy records, tapes, cassettes, 8-tracks or CDs?
  5. What performers were you drawn to most as an adolescent?
  6. Who did you go to see for your first concert? Who did you go with?
  7. What concert has been your favorite concert to date?
  8. When do you listen to music? In the car? At work? While studying or doing projects?
  9. Did the music you listened to affect your attitudes, way of dress, or view of the world?
  10. How has your choice of music changed over the years? What is your genre of choice at this phase of your life?
  11. Bonus Question: What band or group posters did you have hanging in your room? Extra extra bonus points if you can share a copy of it or a link to it.
  12. EXTRA EXTRA BONUS: Care to share a playlist from Spotify?

My post follows.


I don’t usually answer the questions, but I think I will break from tradition and do just that this week.

  1. What music were you exposed to in your family home – genre, artist, or style.
    • I grew up with my grandmother singing hymns while she worked. There was also Lawrence Welk, Sing Along with Mitch, and some bluegrass radio stations. My grandmother had a Victrola and had several 38 rpm records from the 30s and 40s.
  2. Did you enjoy that type of music or did you rebel against it?
    • I enjoyed the music. I was not a big fan of Lawrence Welk but I loved Sing Along with Mitch. Later, my parents had albums of Readers Digest records which I loved listening to. I was too young to rebel.
  3. How did you listen to music in your childhood home? Radio? Record player? Television?
    • As my older siblings aged, we eventually had record players. Radio music was limited because of our location. There were only one or two television stations, so that was limited too.
  4. Did you buy records, tapes, cassettes, 8-tracks or CDs?
    • As I got older, I bought 45s occasionally. Albums did not come until high school. My Dad bought 8-tracks and eventually I bought cassettes and cassette singles – remember those?
  5. What performers were you drawn to most as an adolescent?
    • I listened to a lot of my sisters’ music from the 50s. I grew up with Booby Vee, Bobby Vinton, Bobby Rydell, The Everly Brothers and others from that era. We had all their 45s. I loved early Sonny and Cher. I even wrote Cher a letter once. High school brought the music from the 70s.
  6. Who did you go to see for your first concert? Who did you go with?
    • When I lived in Ohio, we often went to Blossom Music Center to we some alternative bands. I cannot remember any of the band names, however. My first real concert was The Guess Who. The concert was at Kent State, and I went with a guy I knew from Civil Air Patrol named Steve. His Dad was a cop on campus and he drove us to the concert. This would have been the year before the shootings at Kent State.
  7. What concert has been your favorite concert to date?
    • I loved the Pointer Sisters. It was a small venue in Anchorage, Alaska. We all stood and danced and it was high energy and great fun.  But my favorite concert by far was when I saw The Highwaymen in Augusta, Maine. I cried when Johnny Cash sang “I Still Miss Someone”. I saw some legends that night.
  8. When do you listen to music? In the car? At work? While studying or doing projects?
    • I listen to music when I am cooking, doing housework or in the car mostly. In the car it is standard FM radio. At home, I usually stream Sirius XM or Pandora or Spotify. At night I stream some YouTube relaxation music to help me fall asleep. I cannot listen to music while writing or doing art unless it is classical. I love words and find them distracting if I am trying to concentrate on something else.
  9. Did the music you listened to affect your attitudes, way of dress, or view of the world?
    • I always cared about lyrics and in that way, the music helped me understand the broader world. I was a bit of a hippie child in the 70s and dressed accordingly. I was all about bell bottoms, paisley, peasant blouses, and long straight hair parted in the center.
  10. How has your choice of music changed over the years? What is your genre of choice at this phase of your life?
    • I have a deep appreciation for most music. I still love country, “oldies” from my generation, classical, jazz, Yacht Rock, standards, Beatles, Doobie Brothers, Indigo Girls, big band and  bluegrass. Some bluegrass grates on my nerves, but I appreciate the classics. I prefer a mix of music instead of all one genre when I listen. I love making playlists for that reason.
  11. Bonus Question: What band posters did you have hanging in your room? Extra extra bonus points if you can share a copy of it or a link to it.
    • Cher, The Monkees, the Association. In the Air Force I had one Chicago poster (from Live at Carnegie Hall) you can see here.
  12. EXTRA EXTRA BONUS: Care to share a playlist from Spotify? Sure. How about my “Gotta Move” playlist?

34 thoughts on “Throwback Thursday #37 – Discovering Your Musical Taste”

  1. Outside of hymns sung in ,Latin in church and singing songs in the one room schoolhouse, music wasn’t a part of my life until high school when teenagers suddenly had their own music on the radio. As far as a favorite concert, since I worked thousands and have so many that really stood out. Some that I always enjoyed was like our favorite, the Highwaymen.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Our backgrounds were similar, Don. I loved seeing The Highwaymen. It is easily (outside of family events) one of the top moments of my life.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. This was a fun prompt to do. I loved The Guess Who as a teen. It would have been great to see them. The Pointer Sisters too, although I didn’t discover them till much later I bet they put on a great show.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Here are my answers, Maggie.
    1) Big ballad singers, Jazz, 1930s torch songs, London wartime songs.
    2) I loved them all.
    3) A record player, then a fancy ‘Radiogram’.
    4) I bought all of those in time. But my dad was a sales manager for a big UK record company, so we had unlimited ‘free’ records until I was 19.
    5) Al Bowlly, Etta James, James Brown, Sarah Vaughan, Frankie Laine, Kay Starr, Mel Torme.
    6) I went to see Tony Bennett with the Count Basie Orchestra, in London. With my parents.
    7) Swing Out Sister at the Jazz Cafe in London. A small venue, and a wonderful evening.
    8) In my bedroom as a boy, with my family at parties, and then in the car once I was driving.
    9) When I got into Soul/Tamla we used to dress very smart, and were called ‘Soul Boys’.
    10) I embraced some opera, Van Morrison, David Bowie, and then US bands like Steely Dan, and Frank Zappa. Later on Amy Winehouse and Adele. It became much more varied.
    11) I never had posters in my room. That wasn’t cool for a London boy!
    12) I have never used Spotify! I still buy CDs. 🙂
    Best wishes, Pete.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. What is a radiogram?

      You listed some great performers, Pets. Al Bowly, Etta James, Kay Starr. All wonderful performers. Thanks for responding.

      Liked by 1 person

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