
rsm
Well-known member
Eric Clapton. With the exception of some Cream. Slash
Never thought Slash was anything special for all the attention he gets. Satriani - never warmed to him (I like Vai though). I tend to listen to who I like, and ignore those I don't like though I may listen to them on occasion. I don't like "new metal" either (I'm fitting into my theory described below). For the last few years, I'm going back to my earliest music experiences: The Beatles, early Stones, early Floyd, '70s Yes, Small Faces / Faces, Humble Pie, ELP...early rock, early prog rock, '60s / '70s pop, '70s boogie rock...
I liked U2's earlier work probably up to the Joshua Tree or around that time, I saw them during the earlier days around War, maybe before. I like early VH too, I saw them open for the original Black Sabbath in'78 on the Never Say Die tour - amazing, DLR's aerial splits, Ed running up his amp, doing a backflip running toward the audience and sliding to home plate all while playing. Ed's work was groundbreaking back in the day - I experienced it first hand, certainly more than someone like Slash.
I have a theory though...
It seems to me if you experience music while its happening its much easier to get into (and for most people, while they are in their teens/early 20s). If it was before your time or after, it seems to be much more difficult to like or get into. One example, in my teens we were into the new British Metal (Priest, Maiden) and older stuff like Sabbath, Deep Purple, Aerosmith, Nugent, of course Led Zep. I was playing in bands, and a few of my friends did as well, we got into Accept,UFO, eventually Metallica, Slayer and later bands...my friends that didn't play seemed to have stopped listening to new music in their mid 20s, and would tell me they hated Metallica, etc., and other "new" metal was crap compared to the "good" or "real" metal they liked! Just a theory... 

I liked U2's earlier work probably up to the Joshua Tree or around that time, I saw them during the earlier days around War, maybe before. I like early VH too, I saw them open for the original Black Sabbath in'78 on the Never Say Die tour - amazing, DLR's aerial splits, Ed running up his amp, doing a backflip running toward the audience and sliding to home plate all while playing. Ed's work was groundbreaking back in the day - I experienced it first hand, certainly more than someone like Slash.
I have a theory though...

