I feel bad for GenX'ers that missed out on the 60s and 70s.


I feel sad for GenX'ers and millennials that missed out on two of the greatest decades for music. The 60s and 70s. 

Our generation had Aretha Franklin, Etta James, James Brown, Beatles, Queen, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, Otis Redding, Sam Cooke, Jimi Hendrix, Donna Summer, Earth Wind and Fire, Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, The Kinks, The Stones, The Doors, Elton John, Velvet Underground and loads more

We saw these legends live during their peak, concert tickets were cheaper, music was the everything to youth culture, we actually brought album on a vinyl format (none of that crappy CDs or whatever the kids call it).

60s-70s were the greatest time to be a music fan.
michaelsherry59
"But you probably had to walk to school both ways uphill through the snow"

Yes, with only half a small banana for breakfast and rabid wolverines to fend off along the way. . .   
@jasonbourne52  I agree.  Classical covers many centuries of music.  Jazz 20th C. is close (love the 50's & 60's straight ahead and fusion type).  Pop music, musicals with singable melodies until the 1990s.  Sure, I like rock but from the 50s to the 80s.  Current rock rarely sounds like music to me.  Everything up to hip hop and rap can enthrall me.  Hearing music performed by great musicians of great music live in a great venue is the ultimate.  That's why classical and some jazz performances are still my preference with current rock having lost it's appeal. 
Born in '52. Loved what I heard in the 60s and 70s. Love what I hear today from Derek Trucks, Keb Mo, St. Paul and the Broken Bones, Amos Lee, Bela Fleck and Sierra Hull. Not a fan of rap or hip hop, but we live in an era of great musical diversity and great live studio recordings.

My sons are Gen X at ages 43 and 37 and they heard all of the 60s and 70s greats on our home stereo...and stood on the wings of Festival stages as kids watching David Grisman, Johnny Cash and Emmy Lou Harris.

In the day, they had an SA5500 II Pioneer system and Bose 601s in our 1980s household...and when they visit dead old dad now, the grand kids groove to my throwback pro audio rig made from AE Techron serviced Crown PS 200s (rescued out of local churches) driving a mellow medium room size array of Onkyo towers and a REL T5i sub on one floor...and a similar system on the other floor with a TEAC 400U managing the content into some throwback 1990 Cerwin Vega bookshelves and a high output connected plate amp powered Jensen sub.

Two generations behind us and they haven't missed a thing :)
Elvis, The Doors, Aretha Franklin, The Ramones, Drake. Who will remember who they are in 200 or 300 years?
Beethoven will sail through the centuries without missing a beat.
If you were born in 55’, as I was, it was a truly special time. Color TV and home computers had yet to be invented. Who remembers watching Gunsmoke on Sunday nights on a BW television. Much of the music created in my generation was dictated by the times. Frank Sinatra still crooned throughout the 60’s. If you were into Motown, and Jazz, as I was, you developed a special appreciation for the musicians of this period. Miles didn’t peak until BB in 1969. Coltrane was at his height in the early 60’s. There were so many musicians from RNR to Motown! Motown was created by a man who had the foresight to explore the best jazz artist’s performing in his communities nightlife and employ them to create an in house band like no other. Without them, there would not have been the success of Motown. And I enjoyed the musical ride from 1960, just before the Beatles arrived on the scene, through the wave upon wave of musicians with names like The Beach Boys, Lovin Spoonful, Janis Joplin, Otis Redding, on and on, and on. The music scene for a 17 year period was special and endless! It’s the finest musical period in history defined by one thing. Musical hits. We had hits. Besides the gifted Whitney Houston in the nineties there’s been no true hits. Music today has no such movement. And it’s not defined by the times in which we lived. Tower of Power, War, Santana. I could go on but what’s the point, you know who they were. We lived with a simple AM radio and listened to these hits, one after another. Carol King, Carly Simon, Aretha! It seems there were thousands of artists who created genuine hits. Today’s music, not so much.