Why 70s music is the best




















And they smile while doing it. Can you guess which ones go over best with a crowd and get requested at shows?

Wonder why? My thought is that these songs evoke a different and older era. There is something retro and Motown and human to these hits. People love it. No doubt we have to give credit to the producers of these tunes for understanding a few things: We want real drums or at least the perception of them , real voices, great back-up vocals, hand claps, and great performances. There are. In fact, I think the melodies happening right now are some of the catchiest ever.

We want to hear people singing along, dancing in the street, clapping, and playing a part. We want real accessibility. Not the type of accessibility that sounds like everything else. We want imagination and exploration and imperfection and grit. Human accessibility. The kind where we take into account all of our differences and we adore them, and we still find common ground. Not even close. But we can learn something from the ones that do break into the spotlight more often.

They feel like all the songs that get requested from previous eras. And that should tell us something. There is music in our past that felt so real that people still crave it.

We listened to Oasis , whose prime selling point was an arrogant belief that they were the new Beatles. I bought purple-tinted John Lennon sunglasses. Not that it was just the Beatles. View Iframe URL. We may have left our capacity for full-on, monocultural nostalgia trips in the last century, when it was still possible for any non-sports TV program to attract an audience of 40 million.

As Hepworth notes, they were just one sign of a record industry that had matured enough to effectively cash in on its own history. With more styles came more voices. Post-Punk Where do you go when you feel like everything has been destroyed? Even further out, seemingly, in the case of post-punk artists like Suicide, Throbbing Gristle, and The Slits.

The best post-punk songs of the 70s threw away all the rules and emerged with some of the most vital music of the decade. Perhaps just as important, it was some of the most inspiring music of the decade.

Underneath the surface of the mainstream industry, the outlaw country movement was beginning to surface, with Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings ensuring that mammas would never feel comfortable letting their babies grow up to be cowboys. Elsewhere, experiments with country and folk sounds continued, with Leo Kottke and John Fahey proving just how strange and wonderful the guitar could sound. The best disco songs of the 70s, though? The partnership between Donna Summer and Giorgio Moroder delivered some of the finest disco of the decade.

While so many styles of music went big and loud, Neu! In the process, they created an entirely new language that has influenced generations of musicians in Germany and beyond. The best singer-songwriters of the 70s, however, had very different concerns.

It was simple representation for Helen Reddy. John Lennon , meanwhile, just wanted you to imagine a different world. Whatever the message, the songs below are some of the very finest of the decade. Or the intro to the Bond classic Diamonds Are Forever?

Film composers were also producing some of the most iconic music of the decade as well. Sometimes both. As Detroit's answer to Bob Dylan, Sixto Rodriguez was a genius urban poet who produced his entire body of work in the 70s but went largely unnoticed in the United States during that period. In a bizarre scheme of events and with the aid of bootlegging, however, he unwittingly rose to eminence in South Africa, where his music found relevance as a countercultural voice in the backdrop of the apartheid regime.

After playing a number of sold out live shows in South Africa upon being re-discovered in and his unbelievable life story having been the subject of a critically acclaimed documentary titled "Searching for Sugar Man" in , his career has recently undergone a much called for revitalization. The experimental duo laid down the stylistic and musical foundations that led to the subsequent global recognition and development of electronic music in years to come.

In the words of Jude Rogers of The Guardian , "Kraftwerk's fusion of art, beats and electronics has become a template copied by musicians everywhere" and "no other band since the Beatles has given so much to pop culture. Craig Gillespie directed this true story about "the most daring rescue mission in the history of the U.

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