I grew up in New Jersey and you couldn't listen to the radio for 5 minutes without hearing Bon Jovi. I could live a thousand years without hearing Living on a Prayer again.
I haven't heard ND's original yet, but I agree the UB40 version is sooooo annoying. I had forgotten about it, but now I'm feeling quite negative and self-destructive thanks to you for bringing it up. I'll send you my therapy bill if I don't just go and cut dozens of slices into my arm right now for being reminded of that excuse of a song. I'll try to calm down now and count backwards from 100 to 1 while taking deep, slow breaths while also listening to "Awaken" by YES. Hell, even anything by Taylor Swift would be better than UB40's "Red, red wine", and I'm no Swiftie at all. I will never, ever, ever, listen to RRW by UB40 again.
@@chriskimmel7736 Exactly the opposite. For those of us that have really explored music beyond the rock and pop thing, even 10 seconds of Oasis is torture . It's pitiful that such a limited band could ever make it so big - that's not music, it's painfully bad, really bad. All that people bought into was an aggressive pose, an attitude. There is so much wonderful music out there in the world - truly - you really owe it to yourself to open up your soul and explore music properly.
I'm sorry but it must be said, the most overrated band of fools ever was the Beatles. Ugh, I hate when I hear people gush about them but can't name one of their simple, infantile song.
I really put some thought into my ten and I think I’ve came to a final list that I’m happy with ….. 1. Coldplay 2. Coldplay 3. Coldplay 4. Coldplay 5. Coldplay 6. Coldplay 7. Coldplay 8. Coldplay 9. Coldplay 10 U2
@@mikedonoghues4018 it was an agonising process and I did serious consider going in that direction and they have definitely done enough to warrant it so although I ultimately haven’t come to the same conclusion as you I certainly wouldn’t try to change your mind.
Then he kicked Butthead in the balls. I commend Beavis for standing up for what he likes but not his taste. Strange enough, the duo did introduce Led Zeppelin to me in high school, which feels like a long time ago.
@@will5150 - I always laughed every time their mate with the Winger t-shirt was in the show. I saw Kip Winger from Winger in a guitar magazine once and he looked completely bloody absurd.
Journey almost made Bon Jovi listenable, if that is even possible. The only reason any man would even pretend to listen to these bands would be because there were girls involved.
Correct, like Smashmouth, Limp Bizkit, Imagine Dragons, Staind.....etc. etc. Those are "bands" that make me want to plug ears with wet concrete.😵💫😵💫😵💫
the amount of attention they receive in UK media is hilarious. Tells you how shit corporate pop is today, that they all get hung up on a couple of mediocre hasbeens from 30 years ago.
Love Emerson, Lake and Palmer. The song Trilogy is absolutely out of this world, like my daughter said once she finished listening to it, "it's like they are playing all the notes all at the same time !" Is is just insanely good.
I loved their first two albums but didn't bother with any others. They did great covers of Rondo, Peter Gunn, Nutrocker, Fanfare For The Common Man and Jerusalem which they played in their own style.
How you feel about Bon Jovi is how I feel about Maroon 5 Songs About Jane was a great debut record and their next 2 albums were alright but then they became this obnoxious corporate product that feels like Adam Levine is more interested in dancing around the camera that making actual music
'Such a lovely place, such a lovely face'-now, whatcha gonna do? Just kidding, know where you are coming from 'and she said we are all prisoners here, of our own device'.
I agree on oasis. The nagging voice of Liam, the boring music that became their greatest hits (maaaybeeee, and after aaaalll you’re my wonderwaaaaallll) and the forever news about the quarrels between the brothers. I had to play the cello-part on wonderwall once. Yaaawn.
I don't like their voices in Oasis, the singing, it really grates on me with that Manc accent, I'm not a fan of this genre of music, but back then I always preferred Blur. I just felt that they were more imaginative or creative and looked like they were having way more fun that Oasis.
In order: 1) Oasis 2) Oasis 3) Oasis 4) Oasis 5) Oasis 6) Oasis 7) Oasis 8) Oasis 9) Oasis 10) The Gang of Four 11) Oasis 12) Oasis 13) Oasis 14) Oasis 15) Oasis 16) The bloody Police! Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne! It was about that time that I realised how hopelessly hyped and desperate the UK music scene had become. BBC Radio One played the Police to DEATH - aaaaaggggghhhhhh !!!
They started off well, edgy (no pun intended) rock with anthemic vocals. But "Rattle and Hum" showed a band believing it's own publicity, even though it had some great moments.
@@patricksexton702A big letdown after Atchung Baby.Strip away all the electronica elements and there are no decent songs but full marks for not making Atchung Baby part 2.
Describing Oasis as a modern-day Beatles in the 90's was probably one of the most funny jokes in a history of popular music. Definitely one of the most overrated rock bands ever.
I was 21 in 1996, from the North of England and an Indie fan. I know what you mean re Oasis! We are impoverished now, it’s so true. Marvellous food for thought and intelligent analysis. Great work!
@@wavesfromthedarksea What? I saw them live last year. It was great a really, really great show. Sure his voice has changed some. August and Everything is a great record too. extremely meaningful.
Ten, of many, on my list: Oasis Bon Jovi Jefferson Starship (but not Jefferson Airplane) Guns n Roses Nsync Backstreet Boys (or any similar boyband) Sherbet Hush Silverchair (in later years) The Bee Gees
I saw Guns and Roses in the early 90s when they played Wembley. I annoyed other audience members as I thought they were hilarious. I always read them as being like Spinal Tap. It is a good job I don't go to many concerts.
I've seen GnR on three occasions, once in Sydney in 1988 when they must have been strung out on substances, Milton Keynes Bowl in the early 90's sound was terrible and it rained, then I happened to be visiting my daughter in Tokyo a couple of years ago and we went to see them- they were excellent, Rose's voice doesn't quite have the range it used to have but Slash was absolutely on fire.
I was at the 91 wembley concert with skid row and nine inch nails, skid row got banned for life for playing get the f'k out after the local council wrote to them telling them not to play it.
I think the production was possibly the most polished of any record ever at the time it was recorded. I reckon they spent so much money producing some of the songs that they ran out of it for others, such as Ferry Cross the Mersey.
I've watched a few of your videos over the past few days so UA-cam did what UA-cam does and recommended another similar channel with similar lists of loves and hates and analysis. This guy certainly made me appreciate your approach, he is so bitter, whingy and insufferable. On the other hand, when you talk about stuff you don't like, or even "hate", you do it with the utmost respect to their humanity, and to their musical skill. I never finish one of your videos feeling negative or bitter. Its quite evident you are truly passionate music, and are adult enough to recognize that just because you don't like something, it does not entirely invalidate it. Thank you for that breath of fresh air. As an aside, I used to work in the music industry, and after meeting countless artists and bands, I realized that if I was going to continue being passionate about music I would have to firstly get out of the music industry, and second completely separate the music from the personalities of the bands and artists, because it's not just Oasis that are insufferable twats. It's an industry that caters to some of the more undesirable traits and tendencies a person can have. It made me laugh quite a lot when the "news" broke about Dave Grohl cheating on his wife. If people only knew. Cops and rockstars. Anyhow, thank you again!
@@Liam123-r8o I don't know ... maybe because they symbolize the coming of the END TIMES? You know ... the Fifth Horseman of the Apocalypse, the Beige Horseman, representing sloth, mediocrity and futility? Or maybe because they're stunningly overrated and their music totally blows? It's one of those anyway.
@@Liam123-r8o Admittedly I was only able to get through the first 8 or 9 songs before being forced to throw up and go to bed. One of the worst musical experiences of my life. But that's just me. Everybody's different.
As an Irishman who grew up in the late 70s/early 80s, U2 were a source of national pride when everything else in the country was going to shit. But even I got tired of them.For me, The Joshua Tree was their last good album. Rattle & Hum was passable and everything after that I couldn’t be bothered with. Not even Achtung Baby. I have a copy and I think I may have played it three times from start to finish. If I’m not hooked by the third play, then it’s not for me.
@@Gerry0866 but you had Thin Lizzy to provide pride … even the boomtown rats would have done it over u2 for me …. Did johnny Logan not make you proud for bringing Eurovision home ?
I agree with a lot you talked about. Crazy how Noel Gallagher has admitted he stole a lot of music and even called out his own fans for being idiots and eating it up ,making him tons of $$$.
Barry you will find that the first ELP and Trilogy is similar, I feel the polar ends of these albums are Tarkus and Brain Salad Surgery they are bombastic which I believe you dont like, I agree with most your choices Baz , U2 , Oasis, UB40, and Spandau Ballet who I saw in concert as I took a date who blew me ( I wish she did) out anyway !
All of the comments here expose one clear fact - everyone has different tastes and, rather than deride them, we should be thankful that there is such variety on offer. I'll get my coat.
True story (from Ireland - we never, ever tell lies ...) - after U2's "How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb" album came out - a friend of mine - totally fed up with that band - contacted RTE (the National Broadcaster) with the following message to a particular radio presenter: "Should U2's next album be called 'How to Dismantle Bono's Ego' ?" The message was never read out ......................................... ☺
Spandau Ballet had some good songs at the start but unfortunately became an over the hill boyband in the mid to late 80’s, luckily their white soul was overshadowed by the incredible limp wristed Wet Wet Wet whose only saving grace was that the band name described them perfectly.
"You are under the impression that hatred is more exhausting than love. Why should it be? And if it were, what difference would that make?" - George Orwell, 1984
Music is a very wonderful thing, one of mankind's most incredible and magical creations. Which doesn't stop the music industry promoting bands and artists who are truly dreadful, DIRE! Life is just too short for sh*te music.
Spot on as usual Barry. UB40 were the sound of an old man taking a slow piss in the night. They murdered Neil Diamond's Red Red Wine and turned it into a Whine. '70s reggae lacked the energy, vitality and bounce of the Trojan sound of the '60s. Give me Jimmy Cliff, Toots and the Maytals, and Desmond Dekker every time. I liked the ELP debut too but after that they were too often like three mad scientists in a laboratory. Oasis always sounded great, had some good songs, and plenty of rock and roll attitude. But the lyrics were all over the place. Two albums and they were done.
Back in the day a photographer friend was outside a club when a man staggers, almost falls out, wanders towards him and says "are you gonna take my picture?". "who are you?" came the reply. "I'm Jon Bon Jovi". "Never heard of you! Now piss off!"
as if nobody else in any other band in all of history has ever been drunk before. I can guarantee that members of your personal favorite band, whoever they might be, have had similar, if not worse, episodes.
Duran Duran and Spandau Ballet both seemed to me 'Thatcherism on vinyl', I was born in '83, and growing up they seemed to epitomise the glamorous luxury world of yachts and money, and if you were on the other side of "the divide" - tough shit Jack. Oasis and to some extent U2 at least seemed to have some grass roots, and inclusive lyrics. I didn't understand music until Oasis came along in those pivotal teenage years and drummed the basics into my thick skull with a comprehendible, straight forwards instrumentation template that by then was seemingly too simple and surpassed by the vast majority. Up until then, exposure to bubble gum pop music videos and general over enthusiasm had led me to believe that music was something for people who had no problem with feelings of shyness, embarrassment, reservedness, or self-consciousness - but Oasis helped me with decoupling music from dancing, as they seemingly adopted no stage gimmicks or antics. Anyway, fast forward to present day, all hope is lost, we're living in much more totalitarian times, the gap between rich and poor is insurmountable and lost all meaning and relevance, everyone's corrupt and all of a sudden I quite like Duran Duran (that bassline in Rio - wow!).
You don't seem to really f**king hate any of these bands. You seem to dislike rather than really like them. When you f**king hate a band you cannot find anything positive to say.
You forgot Fine Young Cannibals, who I always associate era-wise with Frankie. I remember a guy at work played it over and over until a co-worker took the CD outside and and stomped on it until it was dust.
It seems like it’s an unpopular opinion on the internet, but I do like U2 very much, up to and including All That You Can’t Leave Behind (though that one is already weaker than what came before). I really like what they were doing in the 90’s. Achtung Baby is my favorite of theirs, and Zooropa and Pop, while a bit flawed, still have a number of great songs. I like that they weren’t taking themselves that seriously back then, at least on their albums and videos (live, with preacher Bono, it was a different story). And their 80’s catalogue is almost universally great. After that, in the 2000s and 2010s, they lost it, I agree. All the recent stuff is so, so boring, and they’re now just a nostalgia act. Still, I did get to see them live in the Sphere last year and it was awesome.
I agree with you. U2 is one of my favorite bands, and I consider The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby to be their seminal albums. Zooropa was okay, but it seemed a little like rejected tracks for Achtung Baby, and Pop in retrospect was a little ahead of its time in trying to merge hard guitar sounds with electronic dance music. All That You Can't Leave Behind was their last fully decent album. How To Dismantle an Atomic Bomb was just meh, and everything from No Line on the Horizon and afterward was unlistenable. Oasis had some good songs, but they seemed to want to copy the Beatles, and I think people got sick of the sibling rivalry that upended their music. I get where someone may not like an artist like ELP. A friend of mine described how some artis are TPEE, which meant to them technically perfect but emotionally empty. I never listened to enough ELP tunes to make any judgment about them, but that's what Radiohead feels like to me.
I haven't heard much of their recent stuff, just what gets played on the radio. To me it's not bad, sounds like U2. Nothing groundbreaking but still solid tunes. I don't get all the internet hate for the band, guess it's just the cool thing to do. They had a lot of good stuff back in the 80's and 90's. The fact that the same 4 guys have stuck together for all these years is pretty amazing in itself.
I was in my late teens when Oasis appeared. I bought the first album (and to be fair to the band) I still have it thirty years later. The second album 'What's the Story Morning Glory' I bought upon its release, kept about three or four weeks, then took to my local second-hand record shop and part-exchanged it for a Kevin Ayers compilation album that had 19 songs on it. 17 of these 19 songs, I already had on other records in my collection. Two songs was the sum total of what I exchanged Oasis's second album for. Not much nuance in Oasis's sound, it has to be said.
Love Trilogy! And Brain Salad Surgery. Yet I can understand why a LOT of people hated them. Prog pomposity at its overblown pinnacle. It’s an acquired taste. I’m just relieved he didn’t include Gentle Giant in his list. 😅
@andrelambert7180 They did great covers as well. They all came from other bands that sold a lot of records and got into the charts. The Nice, King Crimson, and Atomic Rooster. When Greg Lake left King Crimson Bryan Ferry auditioned to take his place but failed so set up Roxy Music. Robert Fripp said he had talent but wasn't a good fit for King Crimson. He was too art rock and not heavy enough.
Can't believe you've left Simply Red out..My eldest bought me Stars as a Crissy present shortly after divorce..He said he asked mum what I would like..Nuff said !
Welcome to the Pleasuredome on the album is almost Prog. Whole side of an album, produced by Trevor Horn and even has Steve Howe playing on it. It’s a great track and I love all the extended 12 inches they did, but I’m a Trevor Horn fanboy. The rest I agree with 🤘
The worst thing to happen to human culture is the monetisation of social media. Anyone with basic equipment and the misguided belief that they have something worth saying can make money from any bollocks that they think people will click and comment on. Yes, like I just have.
Scathing review buddy, I do agree with your take on most of these bands. Big time respect for your opinion on Shmoasis! I’d like to see them crawl back under that Rock they’ve been under!
So true. As a great album as "Appetite for Destruction" was, the two "Use your Illusions" have become unlistenable over the decades. 12 servicable songs for sure, but 18 filler tracks like "The Garden", "The Garden of Eden", "Dead Horse", "Coma", "Estranged" etc are too long and frankly boring.
Seems like a very British list. I liked U2 at their inception. Bought some of the early stuff but lost interest quickly. ELP is the only thing I would not agree with. I guess it's because it's so familiar to me. I think I got a hand-me-down copy of Brain Salad Surgery in my pre-teens. Tarkus was another one I just know so well. Sometimes it's just a matter of personal experiences. If I feel like the world has gotten too strange for me, I can put on something like ELP that was made when I was in Kindergarten and feel comforted...even with their cold alienating sound.
I absolutely agree with your sentiments about reggae (except for the "I have respect for it" bit!). Reggae is one of the few genres of music that, upon hearing, instantly puts me in a foul mood. I can honestly & genuinely say that I would rather listen to factory noise than reggae.
4 місяці тому+3
I couldn't agree more with some of these. This applies particularly to the, 'flash in the pan', type bands who were famous and managed to chart highly for something like 18 months, (if that), before disappearing back into the obscurity they came from. 'Frankie Goes To Hollywood', being one such act, who rode along on the fame of having their first single banned by the BBC. Something George Formby was doing 50 years earlier. But, at least, his songs were satirical, if nothing else. They were the epitome of everything I hated about the mid 80's. I couldn't give a toss what, 'Frankie says.'
"Family" is a great band. Chapman is a great singer, nevertheless I can understand that his voice can be annoying. It's like liquorice roll, you like it or not. They have great great albums like "Anyway..." or "Bandstand". I love them. Fantastic musicianship.
@@paulcarew593 yes, Roger threw by accident a mic stand in Bill Graham's direction...so, in a silly way, they were blacklisted from the USA. Did they really care ? Nevermind, Family went its own way, didn't stop touring and it was fine.
Great list .. do have a soft spot for Blur though .. pre The great Escape' definitely have that cheeky chappie vibe but beyond that album they found a mature voice.
I’m born in 62 play in a rock band and have to play about 4 Bon Jovi songs a gig.The singer she loves them.And the songs go over well with punters.I just plonk on me bass and think about my model trains and the girl up the front with big boobs.
@woodybowen5362 Bon Jovy sucks . I graduated High School in 1984 and enlisted into the navy in 1985 . Nobody in the navy liked Bon Jovey . We rocked to Van Halen , Jethro Tull , and some country music music . The Kinks and Warren Zevon were popular in my work center in CIC ( Combat Information Center ) .
Born in '61, growing up listening the classic hard rock bands, the Notting Hill Underground , Electronic, Reggae early Punk and Krautrock. Bon Jovi, G&R and the rest always came over as over-produced, over marketed, dressed by a marketing consultant and aimed at particular audiences.
Bands I hate or overrated: 1. Lou Reed/ Velvet Underground 2. Rage Against the Machine 3. Peter Frampton 4. Prince 5. Wings 6. Hootie and the Blowfish 7. Huey Lewis 8. The Association 9. Cindy Lauper 10. Blink-182
A great list that I could have compiled myself -with one exception.FAMILEY.Roger Chapman's voice is unique (due to some earlier health problem I believe), and although it is an acquired taste, It gave the band a distinctive sound that made them stand out from the other 9 on this list.
I am totally with you,man: Family were an innovative Band somewhere in between Folk,Rock & Prog, Roger Chapmans voice is awesome, their albums quite underrated, Its only a movie is still my favourite and Part of the load still a Hammer Song!
I grew up in New Jersey and you couldn't listen to the radio for 5 minutes without hearing Bon Jovi. I could live a thousand years without hearing Living on a Prayer again.
Whoa. You're halfway there.
Tee hee
True but dry county is a classic
I never thought of Bon Jovi as being a real band. When I first heard them, I thought their music was a radio ad.
Can't stand BJ...eeesh!
Red, red wine by UB40. One of my most hated songs ever, whining and whining about wine. I'm so pleased to see someone else say it out loud!
It's a cover version
Lame song. Both Neil Diamond and UB40 versions.
I Got You Babe is just as annoying for me.
I haven't heard ND's original yet, but I agree the UB40 version is sooooo annoying. I had forgotten about it, but now I'm feeling quite negative and self-destructive thanks to you for bringing it up. I'll send you my therapy bill if I don't just go and cut dozens of slices into my arm right now for being reminded of that excuse of a song. I'll try to calm down now and count backwards from 100 to 1 while taking deep, slow breaths while also listening to "Awaken" by YES. Hell, even anything by Taylor Swift would be better than UB40's "Red, red wine", and I'm no Swiftie at all. I will never, ever, ever, listen to RRW by UB40 again.
#1 in my all time hated songs, I hear one bar of the tune and I'm enraged. Such tripe!
Oasis is the most overrated band of all time.
But they're the best band in the world.
According to Liam Gallagher
You saying that show you don't know anything about music
@@chriskimmel7736 you're right, whatever's selling big these days is the most overrated bs.
@@chriskimmel7736 Exactly the opposite. For those of us that have really explored music beyond the rock and pop thing, even 10 seconds of Oasis is torture . It's pitiful that such a limited band could ever make it so big - that's not music, it's painfully bad, really bad. All that people bought into was an aggressive pose, an attitude.
There is so much wonderful music out there in the world - truly - you really owe it to yourself to open up your soul and explore music properly.
I'm sorry but it must be said, the most overrated band of fools ever was the Beatles. Ugh, I hate when I hear people gush about them but can't name one of their simple, infantile song.
I really put some thought into my ten and I think I’ve came to a final list that I’m happy with …..
1. Coldplay
2. Coldplay
3. Coldplay
4. Coldplay
5. Coldplay
6. Coldplay
7. Coldplay
8. Coldplay
9. Coldplay
10 U2
good list!
Hard to argue with that thoroughly researched list.
I'd have put no2 first mind.
@@hughblack6831 I take your point and maybe I’ve been a little narrow minded. Thank you for giving me a different perspective ☺️
I’d find a place at number 10 for Coldplay.
@@mikedonoghues4018 it was an agonising process and I did serious consider going in that direction and they have definitely done enough to warrant it so although I ultimately haven’t come to the same conclusion as you I certainly wouldn’t try to change your mind.
Let's not forget how bad Green Day sucks. Because Green Day really really sucks.
Great live band, not a fan musically, but i've photographed them live, and they are consummate pro's.
GREEN DAY & THE FOO-FIGHTERS HAVE BOTH BEEN NAMED AS GOING TO THE DIDDY FREAK OFF PARTY'S.!!
Green Day does indeed suck.
Totally agree ,pretend punk
I don't like Emerson, Lake and Palmer, I love them.
I saw them in 1972
is this a subtle 10cc reference? 😁
@@arribaficationwineho32 Me too. Don't know about you, but I'm still having counselling...
@ I told my son that Carl Palmer hit the gong behind him with his head. That is my story and I am sticking with it
Brain Salad surgery is a stone cold classic, better than any Yes album (although Steve Howe and, especially, Chris Squire were always great).
I hate Imagine Dragons without ever hearing their music. 😂
If you actually took the time to listen to them, then you'd KNOW you hate them.
Whatever it taaakesss… 🎶🎵
If you have a daughter between the ages of 8 and 11 you gonna listen to these guys a lot 😂😂😂
Music that sounds like it was custom made to sell consumer electronics.
Why though? I mean I agree they suck, but you might miss out actual bands if you have that mindset
Butthead slapped Beavis in the face when he said, “Bonjovi is pretty good”. My sentiments exactly.
Then he kicked Butthead in the balls. I commend Beavis for standing up for what he likes but not his taste. Strange enough, the duo did introduce Led Zeppelin to me in high school, which feels like a long time ago.
W-I-N-G-E-R
@@will5150 - I always laughed every time their mate with the Winger t-shirt was in the show. I saw Kip Winger from Winger in a guitar magazine once and he looked completely bloody absurd.
@@will5150 Breakfast burrito
Agreed. When he sings it sounds like he has the dry heaves.
Great choices! Bon Jovi and Guns n' Roses would be at the top of my list.
Journey almost made Bon Jovi listenable, if that is even possible. The only reason any man would even pretend to listen to these bands would be because there were girls involved.
I would save "HATE" for bands that make blood shoot from your eyes when you hear their music. "Indifference" should be it's own video.
Algorithm though innit
How about "EXTREME indifference?"
Correct, like Smashmouth, Limp Bizkit, Imagine Dragons, Staind.....etc. etc. Those are "bands" that make me want to plug ears with wet concrete.😵💫😵💫😵💫
I really do hate all of these bands. Not a decent tune from any of 'em.
@@TreffBennett-g1h Limp Bizkit were very good for a time. Stained have always been amazing.
Red red wine and Livin on a Prayer are still getting shoved down our throats in the U.S..
JBJ gets a pass for his recent deed.
I’d rather hear about that on the radio than Livin on A Prayer
yeah. Sweet Child of Mine should be banned.
And in the UK
I guess the programmers didn’t want you to feel left out.😀
O U2 sucks to, Bono has a picture of himself in his wallet😂🤡🤮
They are demonic NWO sell-outs
🤣🤣🤣
(True story? I'd believe it)
🤣🤣🤣
'The Lighthouse Family' anyone?
haha, said that in his last vid... 'Lifted, lifted' Ahhhhh
Yep. Singer always sounded flat to me😂
Indeed, that lead singer had a voice like a wasps nest, just one
monotone drone.
Shitehouse family
Love a couple of their songs especially lifted.
Axl sounds like he’s straining to bust out a shit.
roflmao, he does.
No
Ever heard Brian Johnson? 😂
Axl Rose had a lot of different voices he played with.
@@tahamohammedi5898now he's Micky mouse. Although I do love appetite and some of the illusions.
I believe Oasis is the only crap I dislike greatly,not just the band but the Gallager Brothers in particular
the amount of attention they receive in UK media is hilarious. Tells you how shit corporate pop is today, that they all get hung up on a couple of mediocre hasbeens from 30 years ago.
video title: "10 bands I F***G HAAAAAAAATE"
first comment: "well I don't really hate them, it's more a slight unappreciation on rainy Sundays"
😄
It's quite British, innit?
“I hate them but this album they did is excellent” lol
LOL!!!
😄🗯️
Clickbait through hate!
Love Emerson, Lake and Palmer. The song Trilogy is absolutely out of this world, like my daughter said once she finished listening to it, "it's like they are playing all the notes all at the same time !" Is is just insanely good.
The Endless Enigma (Part 1), that pleading ...
Please, please please open your eyes
Please, please please don't give me lies
I loved their first two albums but didn't bother with any others. They did great covers of Rondo, Peter Gunn, Nutrocker, Fanfare For The Common Man and Jerusalem which they played in their own style.
@@olerocker3470I think of Owen Jones speaking at a protest rally when I hear this.
Yeah, hard disagree with him on this, but I agree with hum on U2, don't know enough about the others
Lucky Man
Coldplay is at the top of my list, boring sentimental drivel
Coldplay---music for bedwetters with a lead singer bursting to find some sort of personality but failing.
I don't get Coldplay, I don't get why or who, or in fact what it is that they do .
Concur
Listen to Parachutes. It's not boring or sentimental.
@@jakehammond12345 They make themselves a lotta, lotta money. Admittedly the lead singer has little or no stage presence.
U2 is the most evil band on the planet. Green day sucks as well
Exactly probably my two most hated bands Can’t stand them
Green Day are just Stiff Little Fingers wannabes
Green Day's even worse for the swarm of awful bands that have formed in their polluted wake.
@@mantislake4141 plastic punks mate
I bet every one in here never heard a full u2 album after pop
How you feel about Bon Jovi is how I feel about Maroon 5
Songs About Jane was a great debut record and their next 2 albums were alright but then they became this obnoxious corporate product that feels like Adam Levine is more interested in dancing around the camera that making actual music
Maroon 5 god awful band
@@garyhitchcock3828 Less like a band these days and more like Adam Levine and a bunch of people behind him
@@ohsoedgy6888the debut album was fantastic.
@@spencertherren6806A fine piece of Blue Eyed Soul and Funk!
@@ohsoedgy6888 You can actually listen to it from beginning to end. It's great. I have no idea what happened to them?
And if I hear ‘Hotel California’ one more time ….
'Such a lovely place, such a lovely face'-now, whatcha gonna do? Just kidding, know where you are coming from 'and she said we are all prisoners here, of our own device'.
UB40 are by far the worst here. Jesus, that whiny red red wine in a reggae stylee is painful.
Considering the ubiquitous whininess that is today's pop music UB40 was way ahead of it's time
If nothing else, CAN'T STAND their cover of The Way You Do The Things You Do!
They weren't bad when they first arrived. Then they turned from an edgy political band who wrote their own stuff into a pop heavy covers band.
one in ten was good first album i liked after that puke
I loved Present Arms and Signing Off but yes red red wine scarred me for life
I agree on oasis.
The nagging voice of Liam, the boring music that became their greatest hits (maaaybeeee, and after aaaalll you’re my wonderwaaaaallll) and the forever news about the quarrels between the brothers.
I had to play the cello-part on wonderwall once. Yaaawn.
By the way: nagging voice and quarrels made me hate GnR too.
@@erik5374 Axl's bandsaw impression is far preferable to Liam's one-note mancunian droning.
Third rate Beatles karaoke is my favourite description of those bores…
So you've only heard wonderwall😂
I don't like their voices in Oasis, the singing, it really grates on me with that Manc accent, I'm not a fan of this genre of music, but back then I always preferred Blur. I just felt that they were more imaginative or creative and looked like they were having way more fun that Oasis.
In order:
1) Oasis
2) Oasis
3) Oasis
4) Oasis
5) Oasis
6) Oasis
7) Oasis
8) Oasis
9) Oasis
10) The Gang of Four
11) Oasis
12) Oasis
13) Oasis
14) Oasis
15) Oasis
16) The bloody Police! Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne, Roxanne!
It was about that time that I realised how hopelessly hyped and desperate the UK music scene had become. BBC Radio One played the Police to DEATH - aaaaaggggghhhhhh !!!
10) But but but they were taught by a feminist professor at University!
Yes, I totally agree the police sucked and I DID hate them. However I do like some of Stings solo stuff.
@@joemccain5168 Every Breath I Take is a good song, sounds more like a Sting thing to my ears. I haven't a clue to be honest!
Wash your mouth out. Watch "Driven to Tears" live at Frejus. The Police were legends.
@@Ulrich_von_Jungingen 😅😅😅
U2's Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby are the only albums I'm into. After that they lost me completely. Bono now is pathetic.
The first 15 yrs were fantastic and excellent live. After that not to much
They started off well, edgy (no pun intended) rock with anthemic vocals. But "Rattle and Hum" showed a band believing it's own publicity, even though it had some great moments.
They lost me way before that. I liked their first two albums..... that few people listened to.
I like some stuff from War as well
@@markothwriter ultimate hipster challenge lol
'The prog equivalent of doing a tax return'.' Brilliant!
😂😂
Ouch.
I totally agree. Soulless. And it’s the same for Rush for me
I ❤ Rush and ELP.
Still, that really was a brilliant comment. I gotta retell that one.
Whistl wearing a Seconds Out t-shirt. The irony!
From a Kiss fan?
I'm 58 and never liked them. All imagery no music.
Level 42 anyone?
Yeah, i even know those guys on the album cover of Kiss Comes Alive. Kiss just never did it for me.
Your problem with U2 is you discovered them too late.
Achtung Baby was their last great album.
I agree
No Line on the Horizon is pretty good.
Zooropa? - 30 years ahead of its time
Achtung Baby the last great U2 album for sure
@@patricksexton702A big letdown after Atchung Baby.Strip away all the electronica elements and there are no decent songs but full marks for not making Atchung Baby part 2.
I agree with most of these, admire your turn of phrase, and wish to avoid living on a prayer ever again.
Describing Oasis as a modern-day Beatles in the 90's was probably one of the most funny jokes in a history of popular music. Definitely one of the most overrated rock bands ever.
@@lucasjankowski7117 and it’s that exact point is what makes them a modern day Beatles…..
They couldn't be modern Beatles even in their boldest dreams, since they don't possess even the 10% percent of the Fab Four talent.
I was 21 in 1996, from the North of England and an Indie fan.
I know what you mean re Oasis! We are impoverished now, it’s so true.
Marvellous food for thought and intelligent analysis.
Great work!
Another UB40 quip from the king....
Shed Seven! Still putting on cracking gigs and haven't changed a bit, stuck to their guns.
Hootie and the Blowfish, Counting Crows and their ilk. Give me strength….
I felt the same about Hootie, but now they're a guilty pleasure.
Right, well hopefully you’ll get better soon 😂😉
@@mariawesley7583I'm the same with Knickleback these days!
CC?
August and Everything After was a truly good album, only let down by one filler.
But that was it. And live they are just God-awful.
@@wavesfromthedarksea What? I saw them live last year. It was great a really, really great show. Sure his voice has changed some. August and Everything is a great record too. extremely meaningful.
Ten, of many, on my list:
Oasis
Bon Jovi
Jefferson Starship (but not Jefferson Airplane)
Guns n Roses
Nsync
Backstreet Boys (or any similar boyband)
Sherbet
Hush
Silverchair (in later years)
The Bee Gees
I saw Guns and Roses in the early 90s when they played Wembley. I annoyed other audience members as I thought they were hilarious. I always read them as being like Spinal Tap. It is a good job I don't go to many concerts.
I've seen GnR on three occasions, once in Sydney in 1988 when they must have been strung out on substances, Milton Keynes Bowl in the early 90's sound was terrible and it rained, then I happened to be visiting my daughter in Tokyo a couple of years ago and we went to see them- they were excellent, Rose's voice doesn't quite have the range it used to have but Slash was absolutely on fire.
Their version of Live and let Die is so funny I actually thought it was a spoof when I first heard it…perhaps it is, who can tell these days?
If that was Wembley ‘92 - support from Black Crowes, Soundgarden, FNM - I was there.
I think it was! What a small world!
I was at the 91 wembley concert with skid row and nine inch nails, skid row got banned for life for playing get the f'k out after the local council wrote to them telling them not to play it.
I have to admit I liked the FGTH singles more as they were Trevor Horn's masterclass in production.
Agreed. The 12'' version of Welcome to The Pleasuredome is an absolute production tour-de -force.
I think the production was possibly the most polished of any record ever at the time it was recorded. I reckon they spent so much money producing some of the songs that they ran out of it for others, such as Ferry Cross the Mersey.
I agree. I don’t rate FGTH non-singles at all, but Relax, Welcome & Two Tribes still sound magnificent to this day
Trevor Horns masterpiece of production is the debut album by SEAL.
Welcome to the Pleasuredome is still one of my favourite tracks.
I've watched a few of your videos over the past few days so UA-cam did what UA-cam does and recommended another similar channel with similar lists of loves and hates and analysis. This guy certainly made me appreciate your approach, he is so bitter, whingy and insufferable. On the other hand, when you talk about stuff you don't like, or even "hate", you do it with the utmost respect to their humanity, and to their musical skill. I never finish one of your videos feeling negative or bitter. Its quite evident you are truly passionate music, and are adult enough to recognize that just because you don't like something, it does not entirely invalidate it. Thank you for that breath of fresh air. As an aside, I used to work in the music industry, and after meeting countless artists and bands, I realized that if I was going to continue being passionate about music I would have to firstly get out of the music industry, and second completely separate the music from the personalities of the bands and artists, because it's not just Oasis that are insufferable twats. It's an industry that caters to some of the more undesirable traits and tendencies a person can have. It made me laugh quite a lot when the "news" broke about Dave Grohl cheating on his wife. If people only knew. Cops and rockstars. Anyhow, thank you again!
'I don't like reggae, I hate it'.
Nice
10cc's worst
O No!! : D.
I luvvit !
WAIT IN VAIN.
I Fookin' hate Bon Jovi as well.😉
They just seem like a girly pop band to me. About as edgy as the Bay City Rollers.
Yep. Headache "music".
Ten bands I f**king hate:
1. Oasis
2. Oasis
3. Oasis
4. Oasis
5. Guns N' Roses
6. Guns N' Roses
7. Guns N' Roses
8. Guns N' Roses
9. Bon Jovi
10. Bon Jovi
Why oasis?😮
@@Liam123-r8o I don't know ... maybe because they symbolize the coming of the END TIMES? You know ... the Fifth Horseman of the Apocalypse, the Beige Horseman, representing sloth, mediocrity and futility?
Or maybe because they're stunningly overrated and their music totally blows?
It's one of those anyway.
@@frankpentangeli7945 did you listen to the whole Definitely Maybe album?
@@Liam123-r8o Admittedly I was only able to get through the first 8 or 9 songs before being forced to throw up and go to bed. One of the worst musical experiences of my life. But that's just me. Everybody's different.
@@frankpentangeli7945 so what are some bands that you like?
As an Irishman who grew up in the late 70s/early 80s, U2 were a source of national pride when everything else in the country was going to shit. But even I got tired of them.For me, The Joshua Tree was their last good album. Rattle & Hum was passable and everything after that I couldn’t be bothered with. Not even Achtung Baby. I have a copy and I think I may have played it three times from start to finish. If I’m not hooked by the third play, then it’s not for me.
oh well, your loss
Yeah War is a superb album which I still listen to and it aged well...common thing is that earlier output of many bands was the best.
@@Gerry0866 but you had Thin Lizzy to provide pride … even the boomtown rats would have done it over u2 for me …. Did johnny Logan not make you proud for bringing Eurovision home ?
You must be forgetting Horslips because all the other Irish bands back then had to follow in their footsteps.
News just in: "Bloke wearing Genesis T-Shirt doesn't like reggae music".
Or britpop but he does like Jethro Tull after 1973 so what does he know?
@@hammerecordsMore than you I'd suspect
Reggae is shite.
@@jamesmcc5147 Absolutely, all of it. Complete and utter rubbish. All sounds the same. Anyone could play it.
@@hammerecords💀
If you have Japan and Talk Talk in your life, you don't really need Spandau Ballet.
I only know two of their songs, and one of them I don't know the name of.
“To Cut a Long Story Short” kicks ass.
Ghost is a fantastic song
Life's what you make it.... you know a quiet life.
Talk Talk are truly magnificent. Mark Hollis voice wonderful.
I agree with a lot you talked about. Crazy how Noel Gallagher has admitted he stole a lot of music and even called out his own fans for being idiots and eating it up ,making him tons of $$$.
Still lots of idiots paying £300 + for concert tickets …crazy!!!
It could have been his Gerald Ratner moment.
No such luck.
We’d all like a few of his prs cheques though wouldn’t we 😂
Possibly the worst band that ever recorded.
Listen to Trilogy by ELP and you might change your mind.
Barry you will find that the first ELP and Trilogy is similar, I feel the polar ends of these albums are Tarkus and Brain Salad Surgery they are bombastic which I believe you dont like, I agree with most your choices Baz , U2 , Oasis, UB40, and Spandau Ballet who I saw in concert as I took a date who blew me ( I wish she did) out anyway !
All of the comments here expose one clear fact - everyone has different tastes and, rather than deride them, we should be thankful that there is such variety on offer. I'll get my coat.
True story (from Ireland - we never, ever tell lies ...) - after U2's "How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb" album came out - a friend of mine - totally fed up with that band - contacted RTE (the National Broadcaster) with the following message to a particular radio presenter: "Should U2's next album be called 'How to Dismantle Bono's Ego' ?" The message was never read out ......................................... ☺
Bad joke dept.
Bono and the Edge walk into an Irish pub, the barman looks up and says "oh not U2 again".....🍀
@@anthonyclarke5579 🤣
@@anthonyclarke5579you forgot why did Bono fall off the stage he got too close to the edge
@@conshea7382 And round by the corner?
@@conshea7382 Amusingly enough the Edge actually did fall off the edge of the stage a couple of years back.
Spandau Ballet had some good songs at the start but unfortunately became an over the hill boyband in the mid to late 80’s, luckily their white soul was overshadowed by the incredible limp wristed Wet Wet Wet whose only saving grace was that the band name described them perfectly.
Limp Muffin
Disturd
Kid Rock
Motley Crue
Poison
Deaf Lepper
U2
GNR
Quiet Riot
Country Music from 1990 - today
Apart from ELP, it's not a bad list, since you've included U2.
Keith Emerson is God. I mean...he was God. No....he still IS God!
@@TheMisterGriswold Up to and including the Unforgettable Fire they were great but they felt they had to 'Go American' after that.
@Ruda-n4h Joshua Tree was a very good album too.
Blur? You've lost me there... try listening to 13
Thank you
Yeah, it's a bit lazy to suggest Blur are just Kinks copyists. They've been consistently excellent but other opinions are...etc
Blur suck. MASSIVELY!!!
Sorry, but can't agree with Blur. Damon Albarn is a fabulous songwriter and no 2 Blur albums sound the same.
Suede were probably the best brit pop era band. Underrated.
Shite!
Brilliant, but slightly below Blur, who started out as XTC knock-offs...
Briefly managed by Ricky Gervais no less shortly before they became famous,not a bad band at all, to be fair.
Dodgy
Dog man star is a classic album.
Easily the best album to come out of that whole scene.
Blur and Oasis are both total garbage.
"You are under the impression that hatred is more exhausting than love. Why should it be? And if it were, what difference would that make?" - George Orwell, 1984
Music is a very wonderful thing, one of mankind's most incredible and magical creations.
Which doesn't stop the music industry promoting bands and artists who are truly dreadful, DIRE! Life is just too short for sh*te music.
Spot on as usual Barry. UB40 were the sound of an old man taking a slow piss in the night. They murdered Neil Diamond's Red Red Wine and turned it into a Whine. '70s reggae lacked the energy, vitality and bounce of the Trojan sound of the '60s. Give me Jimmy Cliff, Toots and the Maytals, and Desmond Dekker every time. I liked the ELP debut too but after that they were too often like three mad scientists in a laboratory. Oasis always sounded great, had some good songs, and plenty of rock and roll attitude. But the lyrics were all over the place. Two albums and they were done.
Food for Thought and One in Ten were, are great songs.
@@dirkbogarde44That’s true, but besides those 2 they produced zilch.
This is very insightful criticism. I may still listen to many of these bands/songs, but your analysis is sound
Back in the day a photographer friend was outside a club when a man staggers, almost falls out, wanders towards him and says "are you gonna take my picture?". "who are you?" came the reply. "I'm Jon Bon Jovi". "Never heard of you! Now piss off!"
as if nobody else in any other band in all of history has ever been drunk before. I can guarantee that members of your personal favorite band, whoever they might be, have had similar, if not worse, episodes.
Duran Duran and Spandau Ballet both seemed to me 'Thatcherism on vinyl', I was born in '83, and growing up they seemed to epitomise the glamorous luxury world of yachts and money, and if you were on the other side of "the divide" - tough shit Jack. Oasis and to some extent U2 at least seemed to have some grass roots, and inclusive lyrics. I didn't understand music until Oasis came along in those pivotal teenage years and drummed the basics into my thick skull with a comprehendible, straight forwards instrumentation template that by then was seemingly too simple and surpassed by the vast majority. Up until then, exposure to bubble gum pop music videos and general over enthusiasm had led me to believe that music was something for people who had no problem with feelings of shyness, embarrassment, reservedness, or self-consciousness - but Oasis helped me with decoupling music from dancing, as they seemingly adopted no stage gimmicks or antics. Anyway, fast forward to present day, all hope is lost, we're living in much more totalitarian times, the gap between rich and poor is insurmountable and lost all meaning and relevance, everyone's corrupt and all of a sudden I quite like Duran Duran (that bassline in Rio - wow!).
You don't seem to really f**king hate any of these bands. You seem to dislike rather than really like them. When you f**king hate a band you cannot find anything positive to say.
You forgot Fine Young Cannibals, who I always associate era-wise with Frankie. I remember a guy at work played it over and over until a co-worker took the CD outside and and stomped on it until it was dust.
And their forerunner the Beat.
Fine Young Cannibals were after Frankie, though. And much worse.
@@cupidstunt5270English Beat. Great band but can’t match Paul Collin’s The Beat. They’re singular album is unmatched, then they was gone.
Did it drive him crazy?
lol The Raw And The Cooked and the smashed to bits.
It seems like it’s an unpopular opinion on the internet, but I do like U2 very much, up to and including All That You Can’t Leave Behind (though that one is already weaker than what came before). I really like what they were doing in the 90’s. Achtung Baby is my favorite of theirs, and Zooropa and Pop, while a bit flawed, still have a number of great songs. I like that they weren’t taking themselves that seriously back then, at least on their albums and videos (live, with preacher Bono, it was a different story). And their 80’s catalogue is almost universally great.
After that, in the 2000s and 2010s, they lost it, I agree. All the recent stuff is so, so boring, and they’re now just a nostalgia act. Still, I did get to see them live in the Sphere last year and it was awesome.
I agree with you. U2 is one of my favorite bands, and I consider The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby to be their seminal albums. Zooropa was okay, but it seemed a little like rejected tracks for Achtung Baby, and Pop in retrospect was a little ahead of its time in trying to merge hard guitar sounds with electronic dance music. All That You Can't Leave Behind was their last fully decent album. How To Dismantle an Atomic Bomb was just meh, and everything from No Line on the Horizon and afterward was unlistenable.
Oasis had some good songs, but they seemed to want to copy the Beatles, and I think people got sick of the sibling rivalry that upended their music. I get where someone may not like an artist like ELP. A friend of mine described how some artis are TPEE, which meant to them technically perfect but emotionally empty. I never listened to enough ELP tunes to make any judgment about them, but that's what Radiohead feels like to me.
Other than "New Year's Day", they have always put me to sleep.
I haven't heard much of their recent stuff, just what gets played on the radio. To me it's not bad, sounds like U2. Nothing groundbreaking but still solid tunes. I don't get all the internet hate for the band, guess it's just the cool thing to do. They had a lot of good stuff back in the 80's and 90's. The fact that the same 4 guys have stuck together for all these years is pretty amazing in itself.
"I think Bon Jovi are a perfect example of why grunge had to happen." EXACTLY!!! Thank you!
You can almost perfectly correlate U2's fall with their buddying with Bill Clinton, neo-liberalistic issues and tax dodging.
ELP Best album Trilogy. Give it another chance. The Nice Superb, too. Oasis are Shit.
I was in my late teens when Oasis appeared. I bought the first album (and to be fair to the band) I still have it thirty years later. The second album 'What's the Story Morning Glory' I bought upon its release, kept about three or four weeks, then took to my local second-hand record shop and part-exchanged it for a Kevin Ayers compilation album that had 19 songs on it. 17 of these 19 songs, I already had on other records in my collection. Two songs was the sum total of what I exchanged Oasis's second album for. Not much nuance in Oasis's sound, it has to be said.
Love Trilogy! And Brain Salad Surgery. Yet I can understand why a LOT of people hated them. Prog pomposity at its overblown pinnacle. It’s an acquired taste. I’m just relieved he didn’t include Gentle Giant in his list. 😅
@andrelambert7180 They did great covers as well. They all came from other bands that sold a lot of records and got into the charts. The Nice, King Crimson, and Atomic Rooster.
When Greg Lake left King Crimson Bryan Ferry auditioned to take his place but failed so set up Roxy Music. Robert Fripp said he had talent but wasn't a good fit for King Crimson. He was too art rock and not heavy enough.
I liked most of Tarkus.
Brain Salad Surgery greatest album ever made.
Anything with Phil Collins or Billy Joel is kryptonite for me............can't stand em
I detest Phil Collins, especially his voice but he did play drums on some of my favorite ENO albums.
Never got Genesis-always bored the hell out of me although Peter Gabriel had some really good solo stuff.
A few for me...ed sheeran...arctic monkeys...the libertines...weak, fabricated shite.
I agree
Can't believe you've left Simply Red out..My eldest bought me Stars as a Crissy present shortly after divorce..He said he asked mum what I would like..Nuff said !
Thats brutal! 😂
I think they are included in Part 1
😊
@atlasshrugged6435 the sing boring is apt for them
Picture Book (1985) and A New Flame (1989) are good albums in my opinion but I don't like their 90's albums starting with Stars precisely
100% correct about Oasis
I hate Red Hot Chilli Peppers - there, I said it!
Me too!!!!!
Anything by Kiss! Kiss is the most stupid band ever🤮
Yeah. Theatrics to cover up marginal musical ability and creativity. People bought into it, tho.
That was kind of their appeal. Their concerts were fun though-much better than a Clapton concert I was at that was boring as hell.
I agree with most of your choices. Especially GNR and Bon Jovi. Never understood the hype about them.
Honestly tried for over 45 years to try and get the Grateful dead but it's just not in my head
Never got em myself-kind of like Phish or Dream Theater without the musicianship.
Welcome to the Pleasuredome on the album is almost Prog. Whole side of an album, produced by Trevor Horn and even has Steve Howe playing on it. It’s a great track and I love all the extended 12 inches they did, but I’m a Trevor Horn fanboy. The rest I agree with 🤘
+that tinkmähn düdd vv
Ahh to find red red wine in the list makes the list. And reading the comments brings more joy.
Love this man, he's a class comedian 😂
I hate Tool. I hate Radiohead
The worst thing to happen to human culture is the monetisation of social media. Anyone with basic equipment and the misguided belief that they have something worth saying can make money from any bollocks that they think people will click and comment on. Yes, like I just have.
“The Joshua Tree” is a masterpiece..”Achtung”, almost..everything after, dreck..
Agree 100%
Yep after achtung they went moribund
precisely.
Achtung Baby is such a great album. I spend 55 minutes forgetting that I'm listening to U2. Cut-edge alt rock with amazing melody.
Zooropa and Pop have their moments but I would agree that Achtung Baby was their last great album.
"There's a paucity of good music nowadays" = "I heard Ariana Grande the other day and it sounded nothing like Van Der Graaf Generator". Try harder.
@@fletcher2311 There's a metric f+&k tonne of good music now from Gogo Penguin to Night Verses, but none of it sounds like Ariana Grande.
As always, you NAILED IT, man. Could've written it myself.
He hates Brit Pop. Message recieved😂
Edit: I love Brit Pop.😌
"Bon Jovi is a perfect example of why grunge had to happen "
Precisely.
Scathing review buddy, I do agree with your take on most of these bands. Big time respect for your opinion on Shmoasis! I’d like to see them crawl back under that Rock they’ve been under!
never cared for Guns and Roses. Never thought much of Slash as a guitar player but wow they have milked one great album for decades
So true. As a great album as "Appetite for Destruction" was, the two "Use your Illusions" have become unlistenable over the decades. 12 servicable songs for sure, but 18 filler tracks like "The Garden", "The Garden of Eden", "Dead Horse", "Coma", "Estranged" etc are too long and frankly boring.
Agreed. Axel sounds like a combination of Edith Bunker and Neil Young. In other words, terrible.
Ridiculous
Axl Rose has to be the worst rock singer of all time.
There are many cogent points here but I have to point out that the full-length Welcome to the Pleasuredome is magnificent.
Blimey! I actually found myself agreeing with most of this.
Excellent! "That much is true" indeed.
Seems like a very British list. I liked U2 at their inception. Bought some of the early stuff but lost interest quickly. ELP is the only thing I would not agree with. I guess it's because it's so familiar to me. I think I got a hand-me-down copy of Brain Salad Surgery in my pre-teens. Tarkus was another one I just know so well. Sometimes it's just a matter of personal experiences. If I feel like the world has gotten too strange for me, I can put on something like ELP that was made when I was in Kindergarten and feel comforted...even with their cold alienating sound.
Brain Salad Surgery is a great one, although I don't blame him for not liking ELP. Just saw Carl Palmer perform a month ago, and he was awesome.
I absolutely agree with your sentiments about reggae (except for the "I have respect for it" bit!). Reggae is one of the few genres of music that, upon hearing, instantly puts me in a foul mood. I can honestly & genuinely say that I would rather listen to factory noise than reggae.
I couldn't agree more with some of these. This applies particularly to the, 'flash in the pan', type bands who were famous and managed to chart highly for something like 18 months, (if that), before disappearing back into the obscurity they came from. 'Frankie Goes To Hollywood', being one such act, who rode along on the fame of having their first single banned by the BBC. Something George Formby was doing 50 years earlier. But, at least, his songs were satirical, if nothing else. They were the epitome of everything I hated about the mid 80's. I couldn't give a toss what, 'Frankie says.'
I don’t agree with all your opinions but I respect your views we all like and dislike different bands and artists and genres
Just found your channel. Yep, I agree with all 10 of your choices. Off to check PT1!
"Family" is a great band. Chapman is a great singer, nevertheless I can understand that his voice can be annoying. It's like liquorice roll, you like it or not. They have great great albums like "Anyway..." or "Bandstand". I love them. Fantastic musicianship.
Absolutely.
Agree. I like most of their records. Wish I still had them.
@@johnryan3913 yes. All seven albums are at least excellent. "Anyway..." is my favourite from them and my favourite album of the year 1970.
Family were wonderful and they are the sort of band that wouldn't care if no one liked them.
@@paulcarew593 yes, Roger threw by accident a mic stand in Bill Graham's direction...so, in a silly way, they were blacklisted from the USA. Did they really care ? Nevermind, Family went its own way, didn't stop touring and it was fine.
Great list .. do have a soft spot for Blur though .. pre The great Escape' definitely have that cheeky chappie vibe but beyond that album they found a mature voice.
I never got the Gorillaz either, very strange music and videos
Omigod this was indeed good for the soul! Bang on all the way mate.
Born in 62. I agree with all your takes. I never want to hear a BonJovi song again. I'd rather pierce my eardrum with a nail.
I’m born in 62 play in a rock band and have to play about 4 Bon Jovi songs a gig.The singer she loves them.And the songs go over well with punters.I just plonk on me bass and think about my model trains and the girl up the front with big boobs.
Born in 1960. Thought Bon Jovi sucked the first time I heard them & every time since.
@woodybowen5362 Bon Jovy sucks . I graduated High School in 1984 and enlisted into the navy in 1985 . Nobody in the navy liked Bon Jovey . We rocked to Van Halen , Jethro Tull , and some country music music . The Kinks and Warren Zevon were popular in my work center in CIC ( Combat Information Center ) .
That's how I feel about Nirvana, lol.
Born in '61, growing up listening the classic hard rock bands, the Notting Hill Underground , Electronic, Reggae early Punk and Krautrock. Bon Jovi, G&R and the rest always came over as over-produced, over marketed, dressed by a marketing consultant and aimed at particular audiences.
U2 was way overrated.
….. i loved their initial stuff but grew weary of anything after that
Bands I hate or overrated:
1. Lou Reed/ Velvet Underground
2. Rage Against the Machine
3. Peter Frampton
4. Prince
5. Wings
6. Hootie and the Blowfish
7. Huey Lewis
8. The Association
9. Cindy Lauper
10. Blink-182
💯
Watch "Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five" from One Hand Clapping and you'll change your opinion about Wings.
Your deadpan clinical delivery of those metaphors is brilliant. A bit like Basil Fawlty doing an album revue
John Cleese is a master of comedy
Oasis are even more overrated/ annoying now with everyone scrambling to buy reunion tickets😂
Outstanding criticism, with good reasons behind the displeasure. I cannot disagree with this.
A great list that I could have compiled myself -with one exception.FAMILEY.Roger Chapman's voice is unique (due to some earlier health problem I believe), and although it is an acquired taste, It gave the band a distinctive sound that made them stand out from the other 9 on this list.
I am totally with you,man: Family were an innovative Band somewhere in between Folk,Rock & Prog, Roger Chapmans voice is awesome, their albums quite underrated, Its only a movie is still my favourite and Part of the load still a Hammer Song!