The truth is that most people love the music that was playing five years plus or minus from the time they first got laid.
The truth is that most people love the music that was playing five years plus or minus from the time they first got laid.
I came home to visit my Mom, and she was dating this radio DJ. And I was like, she's allowed to have a guy, but this guy is a dick.
And he was the one who first told me that opening sentence.
And I'm a) a counter-example, and b) a 21yo can't believe my Mom likes you.
But he was right.
*Most* people love the music that was playing +-5 years from when they first got laid.
Oooooo, but "most" isn't "all".
I do dearly love some of the music +-5 years from when I first got laid, in 1977.
I allow that it might be over-represented in my library.
But I love *so* much more music than just that stretch. And I wanted -- dude, he was bonin' my mom -- to feel that I was part of the most.
I wasn't. I am not.
I'm one of the not-all.
@GeePawHill
I mean, most of the music I love was before I was born. 1955 to 1975, Miles, Coltrane, Mingus, Monk, Beatles, Stones, Bill Withers, Jazz Fusion, Bluegrass, Soul, Funk... so its definitely not right. I'm not even that big a fan of 90s music. and I love Jazz continuing through to now, but man pop music stopped being good in about 1990 and never recovered. data analysis shows thats when instruments began a crash, and vocals became the bulk of pop music. And fine but its not for me.