Just walk away from the eternal drummer battle, boys. Don't have "A" drummer.
I think MCR will be okay, but I've gotta say drummers do more to define a band than people suspect.
After John Bonham died Zeppelin just quit.
After Moon died, the Who sucked.
The one album the Velvet Underground did without Mo just sounds like a Lou Reed solo album.
R.E.M. only did one good album after Bill Berry quit.
Even Smashing Pumpkins crapped out without Jimmy Chamberlain.
Once you get big you can always find a
better
drummer, but it's really hard to find the right drummer.
I don't know any great band that had an established sound that bounced back with a new drummer.
yeah, we dont' really give a shit about every drummer in every rock band ever. we just miss bob
who was already their second drummer so they bounced fine on that one
The one album the Velvet Underground did without Mo just sounds like a Lou Reed solo album.
Hey!
Ok, that's true.
I like her album
Life in Exile After Abdication.
Has she done anything else good?
In another muscial genre: RIP Eddie Fisher.
What songs would you put on a interviewing for jobs playlist?
Most of my work songs are take this job and shove it/working on the chain gang type songs, which I'm thinking aren't quite right.
What songs would you put on a interviewing for jobs playlist?
"Cool" from the West Side Story soundtrack.
What songs would you put on a interviewing for jobs playlist?
"You Make My Dreams" Hall & Oates
Maybe "The Company Way" or "A Secretary Is Not a Toy" from the soundtrack of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying?
Country music has a whole subgenre of songs celebrating work, mostly blue-collar. I'm pretty fond of Dave Dudley's "Six Days on the Road," but you could probably come up with a good playlist just from truckdriver songs. (And Jody Miller's "Queen of the House" celebrates the homemaker.)
And I may be getting the titles wrong, but either Monty Python's "I'm a Lumberjack and I'm Okay" or Weird Al Yankovic's "Drivin' a Truck." But not both.