#Late 1960s music
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thespliffbunker · 17 days ago
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popculturebaby · 11 months ago
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Janis Joplin in the lobby of the Chelsea Hotel, NYC, March 3 1969 ✨
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wh0-is-lily · 5 months ago
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Twiggy Lashes by Yardley London, 1960s
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fart-boys-blog · 6 months ago
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what do yall know about the humanization of 1960s rock polycules
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syxn · 5 months ago
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Val Kilmer as Jim Morrison in The Doors, 1991
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sincerethoughtsblog · 9 days ago
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Funny girl (1968)
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pasta-pardner · 2 years ago
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Butch and Sundance have shared quite a ride together. They're going down-- guns blazing and side-by-side.
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logankisseswade · 1 year ago
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Touch Me-The Doors
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vintagemqcca · 1 year ago
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happy EXTREMELY late birthday john! i will post more im sorry :/
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kulturegroupie · 2 years ago
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⋆ ˚。⋆୨୧˚Jimmy Page in the late 60's˚୨୧⋆。˚ ⋆
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openyoureyestothesun · 8 days ago
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Never Too Late (2024)
Hello, dear friends. I went and saw Elton John's 'Never Too Late' in the cinema last night! I loved it so incredibly much. I couldn't sit still! If I had the means to, I'd watch it every single day. But, alas, I must wait until December. Bummer. I need the entire Madison Square Garden segment on YouTube! I loved that part. It felt like you were actually there with the surround sound of the cinema. There's also a photograph in it that I can't seem to find anywhere! I love the photo. Maybe I could snag a photo once it's on streaming. I hope there's a DVD release. I'd recommend watching it. As much as I am passionate for Elton and his music, I may be a tad biased. But goodness it's wonderful.
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popculturebaby · 1 year ago
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Jimi Hendrix getting his hair styled in 1968 ❤️
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thespliffbunker · 17 days ago
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ritualvirtuality · 4 months ago
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please do look it up if you dont know the date bc there may be at least an approximate answer and otherwise the last option will completely dominate and this poll will be boring.
and dont be like 'but i cant sing'... just answer the earliest tune you know well enough that you COULD sing it
periods of western classical music provided only for reference
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presumablystrange · 2 months ago
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random girl at a Rolling Stones concert, 1969
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doyoulikethissong-poll · 4 months ago
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The Cranberries - Zombie 1994
"Zombie" is a protest song by Irish alternative rockband the Cranberries. It was written by the lead singer, Dolores O'Riordan, about the young victims of a bombing in Warrington, England, during the Troubles in Northern Ireland. The song was released on 19 September 1994 as the lead single from the Cranberries' second studio album, No Need to Argue. While the record label feared releasing a too controversial and politically charged song as a single, "Zombie" reached number 1 on the charts of Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, and Iceland, and spent nine consecutive weeks at number 1 on the French SNEP Top 100. It reached number 2 on the Ö3 Austria Top 40, where it stayed for eight weeks. The song did not chart on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart as it wasn't released as a single there, but it reached number 1 on the US Billboard Alternative Airplay chart. Listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J voted it number 1 on the 1994 Triple J Hottest 100 chart, and it won the Best Song Award at the 1995 MTV Europe Music Awards.
The Troubles were a conflict in Northern Ireland from the late 1960s to 1998. The Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), an Irish republican paramilitary organisation, waged an armed campaign to end British rule in Northern Ireland and unite the region with the Republic of Ireland. Republican and Unionist paramilitaries killed more than 3,500 people, many from thousands of bomb attacks. One of the bombings happened on 30 March 1993, as two IRA improvised explosive devices hidden in litter bins were detonated in a shopping street in Warrington, England. Two people; Johnathan Ball, aged 3, and Tim Parry, aged 12, were killed in the attack. 56 people were injured. Ball died at the scene of the bombing as a result of his shrapnel-inflicted injuries, and five days later, Parry lost his life in a hospital as a result of head injuries. O'Riordan decided to write a song that reflected upon the event and the children's deaths after visiting the town: "We were on a tour bus and I was near the location where it happened, so it really struck me hard – I remember being devastated about the innocent children being pulled into that kind of thing. So I suppose that's why I was saying, 'It's not me' – that even though I'm Irish it wasn't me, I didn't do it. Because being Irish, it was quite hard, especially in the UK when there was so much tension." The song was re-popularised in 2023 after it was played after Ireland games at the 2023 Rugby World Cup. It was picked up by fans of the Irish team, with videos of fans singing the song in chorus accumulating hundreds of thousands of views on social media. This offended other Irishmen, who identified it as an "anti-IRA" anthem, and said that that the lyrics failed to consider their experience during the Troubles.
The music video, directed by Samuel Bayer, was filmed in Belfast, Northern Ireland, in the heart of the Troubles with real footage, and in Dublin. To record video footage of murals, children and British Army soldiers on patrol, he had a false pretext, with a cover story about making a documentary about the peace-keeping efforts in Ireland. Bayer stated that a shot in the video where an SA80 rifle is pointed directly at the camera is a suspicious British soldier asking him to leave, and that the IRA were keeping a close look at the shoot, given "the British Army come in with fake film crews, getting people on camera.” While "Zombie" received heavy rotation on MTV Europe and was A-listed on Germany's VIVA, the music video was banned by the BBC because of its "violent images", and by the RTÉ, Ireland's national broadcaster. Instead, both the BBC and the RTÉ opted to broadcast an edited version focusing on footage of the band in a live performance, a version that the Cranberries essentially disowned. Despite their efforts to maintain the original video "out of view from the public", some of the initial footage prevailed, with scenes of children holding guns. In March 2003, on the eve of the outbreak of the Iraq War, the British Government and the Independent Television Commission issued a statement saying ITC's Programme Code would temporarily remove from broadcast songs and music videos featuring "sensitive material", including "Zombie". Numerous media groups complied with the decision to avoid "offending public feeling", along with MTV Europe. Since it violated the ITC guidelines, "Zombie" was placed on a blacklist of songs, targeting its official music video. The censorship was lifted once the war had ended. In April 2020, it became the first song by an Irish group to surpass one billion views on Youtube.
"Zombie" received a total of 91% yes votes!
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