How eclectic is your taste in music?


Most, if not all, of my best friends in life have embraced different forms/styles/types of music.  

The music ranged from Jazz to Classical to some Rock and others...even some more classic, early country. 

Do you enjoy various music styles or are you more focused on a type or two?....And how/where does the 
music of this season fit in?  I find Nat Cole doing Mel Torme's  "The Christmas Song" comes very close to nearly everything I love about music. 

And I have gotten over people thinking the title to that song is "Chestnuts Roasting"....I no longer have the urge to burn down their tree...mostly. 



whatjd
I tend to go deep into certain areas that tickle my fancy. When I was a kid the electric blues led me to the rural blues, most of which was cut on 78s so I relied on 33LP transcriptions and compilations. Some electric blues from the period (Chicago; early UK on the cusp of psych) still turns me on--I’m a big fan of Kossoff, especially Free’s first album, where Guy Stevens was given free rein on the production. Subsequently, Chris Blackwell stepped in, and the band has a more produced sound.
Another area that caught my interest a few years ago was so-called "spiritual jazz" which is now very hot as a marketplace commodity-- it borders on free jazz, modal, post-bop and soul, often recorded on private or small independent labels, but the musicians are consummate players (most of them could not get work in the early ’70s once jazz was no longer a mainstream medium and worked largely as sidemen). There are some brilliant performances by some known (Cecil McBee) and unknown (Milt Ward) artists.
I also like heavy early rock, which has now been rebranded as proto-metal. It’s the stuff that coincides with early Sabbath, sometimes earlier, and anticipates heavy metal but doesn’t have shredded guitars (hate that with my carrots too) or Cookie Monster vocals. Leaf Hound’s Growers of Mushroom is probably the most famous. But there are many, many more-- bands you never heard of that had that Zepp-ish, Sabbathy, Purple-ish sound. Another famous one might be the German first pressing of Lucifier’s Friend- s/t.
I’ll listen to anything once. I’m not much for opera largely out of ignorance. I have a vast trove of high quality classical records that I rarely listen to these days, but every once in a while, I’ll pull one out.
Otherwise, it could be Eddie Hazel, or Cressida's Asylum. Go figure. 
I’m all over the map of genres depending on my mood. For me, I know a song is timelessly beautiful if I get that tingling down my spine. If it happens once it will happen every time. I’m getting that feeling as I type this listening to the 36 minutes version of the Grateful Dead’s Dark Star on “Celebrating Jerry Garcia and the Days In Between”. I get that tingle every time I hear “shall we go, you and I while we can...throooooough the transitive nightfall of diamonds” (“Live Albums Collection”, “Live Dead” as I’ve always known it, has my favorite version, though, where the engineer is best balanced. Funny to think it was an afterthought album because they had to make a contractual obligation last minute). Sweet musical bliss. Transcendence.
@three_easy_payments 

Couldn't agree more. Variety is the best thing about it.
Tool, LP, Ronstadt, Coltrane, Puccini. As long as it is recorded well, it's all good.

“One more, once!” (Count Basie) :

**** There are only two kinds of music, good music and the other kind ****

 -  Duke Ellington
If the music is made with heart and skill, I really don't care what the genre is.  From opera to chamber music to punk to pop to soul to jazz to MOR to hip-hop, etc., etc., etc., if the delivery is compelling enough I can't help but listen.  My music collection covers all genres. Love show tunes, too.
Well, if you can take a joke....there was a lady DJ that said in a deep Southern accent...

"we play both kinds of music, we play your country and your western"

My father was a self taught Guitar player and was a fan of Hank senior.  I went to many Rock concerts, and many live Jazz concerts and from Summerfest in Milwaukee to The Rainbow Room in NYC and others around the U.S. and some other countries. 

As the Danes would spell it, Kobenhavn is a great place for American Jazz. 

As I look over my CD/SACD collection, it does seem to be dominated by some of the great female singers in American history that do mainly standards, Jazz and songs that are...a bit, romantic. 
  


Fairly, I guess?

Various subgenres of jazz, blues, and rock.  Folk.  Americana.  Choral.  Opera.  Some classical.  Some country.

Not many things just leave me completely cold.  I've never found any metal that appeals to me.  Fusion sounds like bad jazz and worse rock, to me, but I do like some jazz-folk fusion (Bela Fleck, Goat Rodeo).  I'll go as far as In A Quiet Way, and that's about it.  Those are about the only ones I can think of.
I dont have now preference for jazz, classical or any other styles...

The main important factor is the musician....Or some instruments....

I dont listen classic or jazz , instead i listen musician x on instrument z....Or the singer voicing....

Why?

Because the truest musical experience is not confined in a genre or style at all....And that include all cultures for me....

I must confess that i hate musical styles that are more a genre with no historical roots than a way to create great music by great grounded musicians tough.... I will not offend anyone with naming some....
I like everything from north Mississippi hill country blues to Hank Sr to 50s/60s jazz (bop, free, modal, experimental) to psych rock to classic rock to indie to alt country to prog to Radiohead to Morphine to 80s alternative to shoegaze to folk to Fugazi to Americana to George Jones.  There's only two kinds of music - good and bad.