View Full Version : When Did You Get Old?
Ksyrup
07-07-2009, 10:45 PM
Interesting article/theory. Look at the list below and determine the first song you can't remember the melody of - that's when you got old.
Reader Mike Carniello sent me a list several years ago of top summer songs of each year going back.
He maintained that by "using this list, you can pinpoint exactly when middle age kicked in" by identifying the first song on the list for which you can't kind of hum the melody. His choice to list the most popular song in August struck me as apt, as August tends to be the idlest, most radio listenin' month.
I expanded and updated his list, and invite you to take the test:
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August 1958 -- "Poor Little Fool" --Ricky Nelson
August 1959 --"A Big Hunk o' Love" --Elvis Presley
August 1960 -- "It's Now or Never" -- Elvis Presley
August 1961 --"Tossin' and Turnin'" -- Bobby Lewis
August 1962 -- "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" Neil Sedaka
August 1963 -- "Fingertips Pt. 2" Little Stevie Wonder
August 1964 -- "A Hard Day's Night" The Beatles
August 1965 -- "I Got You Babe" Sonny & Cher
August 1966 -- "Summer in the City" -- The Lovin' Spoonful
August 1967 "Light My Fire" -- The Doors
August 1968 -- "People Got to Be Free" The Rascals
August 1969 -- "In the Year 2525" Zager and Evans
August 1970 --- "(They Long to Be) Close to You" -- The Carpenters
August 1971 -- "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart?" -- Bee Gees
August 1972 -- "Alone Again (Naturally)" -- Gilbert O' Sullivan
August 1973 -- "The Morning After" -- Maureen McGovern
August 1974: "(You're) Having My Baby" -- Paul Anka with Odia Coates
August 1975: "Jive Talkin'" -- the Bee Gees
August 1976: "Don't Go Breaking My Heart" -- Elton John & Kiki Dee
August 1977: "I Just Want to Be Your Everything" --Andy Gibb
August 1978: "Miss You" -- Rolling Stones
August 1979: "My Sharona" -- the Knack
August 1980: "Magic" -- Olivia Newton-John
August 1981-- "Jessie's Girl" -- Rick Springfield
August 1982 -- "Eye Of The Tiger" -- Survivor
August 1983: "Every Breath You Take" -- the Police
August 1984: "Ghostbusters" -- Ray Parker Jr.
August 1985: "The Power of Love" -- Huey Lewis & the News
August 1986: "Papa Don't Preach" -- Madonna
August 1987: "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" -- U2
August 1988: "Roll With It" -- Steve Winwood
August 1989: "Right Here Waiting" -- Richard Marx
August 1990: "Vision of Love" -- Mariah Carey
August 1991: "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" --Bryan Adams
August 1992: "Baby Got Back" -- Sir Mix-A-Lot
August 1993: "(I Can't Help) Falling in Love With You --UB40
August 1994: "Stay (I Missed You)" -- Lisa Loeb & Nine Stories
August 1995: "Waterfalls" -- TLC
August 1996: "Macarena" -- Los Del Rio
August 1997: "I'll Be Missing You" -- Puff Daddy & Faith Evans
August 1998: "The Boy Is Mine" -- Brandy & Monica
August 1999: "Genie in a Bottle" -- Christina Aguilera
August 2000: "It's Gonna Be Me" -- 'N Sync
August 2001: "Bootylicious" -- Destiny's Child
August 2002: "Hot In Herre" -- Nelly
August 2003: "Crazy In Love -- Beyonce featuring Jay-Z
August 2004: "Confessions Part II" -- Usher
August 2005: "We Belong Together" -- Mariah Carey
August 2006: "Promiscuous" -- Nelly Furtado featuring Timbaland
August 2007: "Big Girls Don't Cry" -- Fergie
August 2008: "Leavin'" -- Jesse McCartney
---
It worked for me, identifying 1988, the year I turned 30.
Does it work for you?
(Commenter Steve below points out that "the flaw in this method is that it omits the influence of having kids. When kids get to middle school age, that's when they start liking pop music and wanting the car radio on when you're driving them to their endless soccer games, ballet classes, etc." This is very true, but the idea is that there will be a fairly sharp dividing line...yes, there may be one or two songs you didn't avoid -- "Macarena," to wit) and then a middle-school rebound effect. But disregard those)
[url="http://blogs.chicagotribune.com/news_columnists_ezorn/2009/07/take-the-musical-test-when-did-you-get-old.html"]Take the musical test -- when did you get old? | Change of Subject (http://operationsports.com/fofc/)
My first inclination was to go with that Mariah Carey song from 1990, but I know all the songs for several years before and after it, so I'm throwing it out. For me, I guess it is August 1995 (I was 24 then). Starting with that Lisa Loeb song the year before - which I remember being popular and seeing the video a ton, but couldn't hum the melody if my life depended on it - the only song I know from August 1995 until present is The Macarena. In fact, I'm fairly certain I've never even heard a single one of those songs, let alone remember the melodies to them.
Mustang
07-07-2009, 11:03 PM
According to that, when I was 26.
Fonzie
07-07-2009, 11:07 PM
Evidently I became old when I turned 20.
Is that even technically possible? Can one be "old" before being able to drink legally?
JeeberD
07-07-2009, 11:16 PM
According to that, when I was 26.
Same here, though there were a couple of songs before then that I didn't know...
lungs
07-07-2009, 11:17 PM
Ignoring the musical aspect, I got old when I couldn't polish off a bottle of Old Thompson Whiskey in one sitting without pissing myself.
MikeVic
07-07-2009, 11:23 PM
Uhh, August 1988 when I was four.
BigDawg
07-07-2009, 11:24 PM
August 1989: "Right Here Waiting" -- Richard Marx
26 years old
hoopsguy
07-07-2009, 11:42 PM
32 years old - sounds about right. Usher did me in.
path12
07-07-2009, 11:44 PM
I don't know any of those after Macarena. I was 34 then.
JonInMiddleGA
07-07-2009, 11:54 PM
LOL, I'll be damned if that ain't pretty good.
I recognize, and only that in the vaguest sense, only one song from 2000-2008.
Meaning I was 32 to hit middle age by this test.
There are a couple of strays I don't know earlier than that but that seems to be where it suddenly becomes "WTF is that"
Gary Gorski
07-07-2009, 11:54 PM
I'm going to vote for "kind of" old right now at 30. I know who Jesse McCartney is and I might recognize "Leavin" if I heard it but I honestly couldn't hum the melody
sterlingice
07-08-2009, 12:01 AM
Apparently, I got old in 1994 at the age of... 14?
SI
sabotai
07-08-2009, 12:02 AM
Woohoo, I ain't old yet!
Matthean
07-08-2009, 12:08 AM
32 years old - sounds about right. Usher did me in.
Same, but I bet I can instantly recognize it and I can do ones following that. "Leavin" by Jesse McCartney is the first one that really makes me shake my head though. I thought he was near pure Disney anyway. I mean, I went to youtube to even hear the song and an ad for some Disney album came up. I don't care if it was number one for August. Disney crap is disqualified, or at least let it be Hannah Montana. I would probably fail that as well, but at least there's a chance of getting it right. :lol: <input id="gwProxy" type="hidden"><!--Session data--><input onclick="jsCall();" id="jsProxy" type="hidden"><input id="gwProxy" type="hidden"><!--Session data--><input onclick="jsCall();" id="jsProxy" type="hidden">
Pumpy Tudors
07-08-2009, 12:50 AM
I guess I got old in 1958 when I was -18.
I suppose I don't quite get this.
SackAttack
07-08-2009, 01:24 AM
The problem I see is that it's mostly rock/pop on there. Which is fine if those're your musical influences, but I was a guy who was mostly country/oldies from the time I can remember actively seeking music until my freshman year of college.
Even then, the rock music I've been exposed to since would probably fall into the 'oldies' group now, where they wouldn't have when I was 14.
So...I guess since I've never been a 'hard rock hallelujah' kinda guy, I've always been an old fart. Oops.
Schmidty
07-08-2009, 02:03 AM
This list is stupid. I don't recognize a lot of these songs. Perhaps that's because I haven't listened to Casey Kasem or watched MTV since like 1990.
I'm still not old, and all of those shits that actually listen to pop and think that that's all there is are douchebags.
stevew
07-08-2009, 03:29 AM
I think that you should probably start with the year you turn 18 and go from there.
I get a bit hazy at 98, but after another listen, "The Boy Is Mine" by Brandy/Monica really didn't have very much of a hummable chorus in the first place.
I'm fine thru 2001, get maybe stumped by "Bootylicious" just cause every Beyonce song is oversung and they start to overlap each other. I dunno if that counts. I hate beyonce, so whatever.
I know everything from that point though.
Karlifornia
07-08-2009, 03:32 AM
I became old at 22, as I have no recollection of that Nelly song.
stevew
07-08-2009, 03:32 AM
32 years old - sounds about right. Usher did me in.
Darn, you missed out. It was a great song about the girl you're fucking on the side getting knocked up, and trying to explain to your main girlfriend how she's still the one you want to be with even though the other girl is having your baby.
a pop classic, dare I say.
Dutch
07-08-2009, 03:46 AM
August 1998: "The Boy Is Mine" -- Brandy & Monica
August 1999: "Genie in a Bottle" -- Christina Aguilera
August 2000: "It's Gonna Be Me" -- 'N Sync
August 2001: "Bootylicious" -- Destiny's Child
August 2002: "Hot In Herre" -- Nelly
August 2003: "Crazy In Love -- Beyonce featuring Jay-Z
August 2004: "Confessions Part II" -- Usher
August 2005: "We Belong Together" -- Mariah Carey
August 2006: "Promiscuous" -- Nelly Furtado featuring Timbaland
August 2007: "Big Girls Don't Cry" -- Fergie
August 2008: "Leavin'" -- Jesse McCartney
I know I was old at this point, because outside of "Hot in Here" I can't even remember any of these songs by their title much less hum them.
So at 27 I either became old or pop music really started to suck.
wade moore
07-08-2009, 05:24 AM
LOL, I'll be damned if that ain't pretty good.
I recognize, and only that in the vaguest sense, only one song from 2000-2008.
Meaning I was 32 to hit middle age by this test.
There are a couple of strays I don't know earlier than that but that seems to be where it suddenly becomes "WTF is that"
I'm with Jon, except that I was 21 ;).
This list is stupid. I don't recognize a lot of these songs. Perhaps that's because I haven't listened to Casey Kasem or watched MTV since like 1990.
I'm still not old, and all of those shits that actually listen to pop and think that that's all there is are douchebags.
Um, Schmidty, I think you just proved the point of this exercise.
I don't know a song from Aug. '97-'08 except 'Crazy in love' because it was played over and over and over again on a dance music channel my toddler liked (that line about having kids was pretty good!) So age 22 was when I got old.
Passacaglia
07-08-2009, 06:11 AM
This list is stupid. I don't recognize a lot of these songs. Perhaps that's because I haven't listened to Casey Kasem or watched MTV since like 1990.
I'm still not old, and all of those shits that actually listen to pop and think that that's all there is are douchebags.
I still listen to Casey Kasem. American Top 40: The 80's every Saturday morning that I'm at the computer. They play most of a random old episode from the 80's every week. http://radiotime.com/options/p_154285/American_Top_40_-_The_80s.aspx
Anyway, mine was 2000, when I was 23. Although 1997 would have done me in if "I'll Be Missin' You" weren't a ripoff of "Every Breath You Take" and 1998 probably should count as having done me in, since I'm only assuming that "The Boy Is Mine" is a ripoff of "The Girl Is Mine."
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 06:57 AM
Should have realized a Puffy song was just a rip of another, more popular song. The Black Sinatra, indeed! :lol:
And yeah, Schmidty, you did prove the point of this exercise. Regardless of what you think of these songs/artists, that's what was big among young people at the time. If you don't know it, then you were likely no longer impressionable and following trends, and no longer "young." I mean, I listened to nothing but hard rock and metal through most of the 80s and into the 90s, but I was still in tune with what was popular back then to know all of the songs on the list through about 1994.
I'm familiar with Jesse McCartney but not that particular song. He had a bigger hit, I thought, a few years back that I can't recall. But with my oldest daughter turning 10 this year, I'm close to the hitting the "middle school rebound effect" the guy mentions. For instance, there's no way I'd ever know who the hell Taylor Swift is if not for my girls.
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 06:59 AM
And for the record, my non-music way of knowing when I got old is when I'd walk through the mall with some of my law school buddies and we'd see some hot chicks, and they'd see us looking at them and react aas if we were dirty old men. And that was about the same age (24-25) as I identified by this test.
clemsonfan
07-08-2009, 07:25 AM
2001 when I was 25.
Mustang
07-08-2009, 07:26 AM
Although, seems like there is a pretty wide variety of music and artists from the start to around 1997 and then it is just all the same type.
Then again, might be all the same type because I'm getting old. :)
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 07:36 AM
Although, seems like there is a pretty wide variety of music and artists from the start to around 1997 and then it is just all the same type.
Then again, might be all the same type because I'm getting old. :)
Very true. On the board I got this from, the discussion has turned to the fact that R&B/hip hop/rap absolutely dominates from about 1995 on. Throwing out the Macarena, the only pure pop I see is Jesse McCartney, Christina Aguilera, and N'Sync. And nothing even coming near pop/rock. Pre-1995, although there are far fewer black artists (particularly before 1984), there is at least a nice mix of styles/genres.
This kinda dovetails into another discussion on that board about how Michael Jackson might be the last pop artist to transcend genres/fanbases as far as popularity. Everything these days is so pigeon-holed into a specific genre, and fans of one rarely venture across to other genres, that we may never see someone with that kind of widespread popularity again. In fact, if you look at the mid-80s, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen and MJ were huge among nearly all music fans. I don't think you'll ever see something like that again.
Flasch186
07-08-2009, 08:01 AM
<-----28
Bobble
07-08-2009, 08:09 AM
This list is stupid. I don't recognize a lot of these songs. Perhaps that's because I haven't listened to Casey Kasem or watched MTV since like 1990.
I'm still not old, and all of those shits that actually listen to pop and think that that's all there is are douchebags.
...up hill, BOTH WAYS! ... too darn LOUD ... get off my lawn!
Coffee Warlord
07-08-2009, 08:38 AM
Apparently I got old at like age 9.
Buccaneer
07-08-2009, 08:41 AM
32 (after 1991), which makes sense knowing how much I listened to 80s music and almost none after that.
SteveMax58
07-08-2009, 08:47 AM
Outliers aside (The Boy is Mine???WTF???)...28 yrs old in 2004.
Kodos
07-08-2009, 08:47 AM
August 1998: "The Boy Is Mine" -- Brandy & Monica
No idea about anything including this song and the years to follow. So 27 I guess.
I. J. Reilly
07-08-2009, 09:34 AM
August 1998: "The Boy Is Mine" -- Brandy & Monica
This is made up, right? I'm pretty sure this song never existed; which means I'm still young, so I got that going for me.
Pumpy Tudors
07-08-2009, 09:39 AM
Seriously, how does this work? What year am I supposed to start from? The year I was born? Please explain this exercise to me. I'm not very bright. I'm not going to let this go.
cuervo72
07-08-2009, 09:42 AM
August 1995: "Waterfalls" -- TLC
At 22 then, summer after graduating from college.
MikeVic
07-08-2009, 09:44 AM
Seriously, how does this work? What year am I supposed to start from? The year I was born? Please explain this exercise to me. I'm not very bright. I'm not going to let this go.
Yeah I started from the year I was born, but it didn't work well.
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 09:46 AM
Start from when you became musically aware or certainly by junior high/high school age. I can go from 1975 to 1995 and know each song. I do not want to have Paul Anka's baby, no matter how good that song might be.
path12
07-08-2009, 09:57 AM
Start from when you became musically aware or certainly by junior high/high school age. I can go from 1975 to 1995 and know each song. I do not want to have Paul Anka's baby, no matter how good that song might be.
I've got a pretty good memory of everything from 1969 until whenever I mentioned before. So that's from 7 to 34.
Sun Tzu
07-08-2009, 09:59 AM
Who the hell is Beyonce?
Sun Tzu
07-08-2009, 10:02 AM
Dola
This reminds me of something that happened to my wife a couple years back. She was in the car with one of our cousins who was 14/15 years old at the time. UB40 came on the radio...Red Red Wine of course. The kid recognized the song immediately and then turned to her and said "oh I love Bob Marley!"
sigh
Matthean
07-08-2009, 10:07 AM
Since this tripped up a number of you...
YouTube - Brandy - The Boy Is Mine featuring Monica (1998) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Va1Y6uAgNJY)
I remember it because I though Monica was rather attractive. :lol:<input id="gwProxy" type="hidden"><!--Session data--><input onclick="jsCall();" id="jsProxy" type="hidden">
DanGarion
07-08-2009, 10:26 AM
Well according to this then I either got old in 1997 (at 21) or 1998 (22) or 2000 (24). Or maybe I just have better taste in music then the shit this list has on it the last 12 years?
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 10:44 AM
Or maybe I just have better taste in music then the shit this list has on it the last 12 years?
I was tempted to make the same observation, but objectively, I don't have much good to say about the entries for 1984, 1986, 1989, 1991, and 1992, either. And a few of the others are pushing it, too, but I'll admit that I liked several of those songs way back then. So I think it probably has more to do with getting old and the popularity of certain genres than the songs being any good.
DanGarion
07-08-2009, 10:47 AM
I was tempted to make the same observation, but objectively, I don't have much good to say about the entries for 1984, 1986, 1989, 1991, and 1992, either. And a few of the others are pushing it, too, but I'll admit that I liked several of those songs way back then. So I think it probably has more to do with getting old and the popularity of certain genres than the songs being any good.
Well if I went with the last song on the list that I liked it looks like it would be 1994 the year I graduated. Mmmmm Lisa Loeb, yum.
Karlifornia
07-08-2009, 11:34 AM
Well according to this then I either got old in 1997 (at 21) or 1998 (22) or 2000 (24). Or maybe I just have better taste in music then the shit this list has on it the last 12 years?
Yup. You're putting the nails into your own coffin with a statement like this.
DanGarion
07-08-2009, 11:42 AM
Yup. You're putting the nails into your own coffin with a statement like this.
So what you are trying to say, is once people get taste they are old? Once they stop following the herd and beating their own drum?
JediKooter
07-08-2009, 11:46 AM
25 for me. I probably would have heard of the songs, at the very least, had MTV or some other 'music' channel actually had music on them for the songs listed from 2008 thru 1997. And the only reason I heard of the Macarena is because they played that all the time at baseball games.
Music died around 96ish, but, I'm still livin'!!!
Passacaglia
07-08-2009, 11:47 AM
It's interesting that no one has said they're not old based on this.
B & B
07-08-2009, 11:52 AM
23?
sterlingice
07-08-2009, 12:09 PM
It's interesting that no one has said they're not old based on this.
I think that was what was implied by those of us who were saying things like "Seriously, I was old at 16?" ;)
SI
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 12:28 PM
So what you are trying to say, is once people get taste they are old? Once they stop following the herd and beating their own drum?
I look at it as being out of touch more than anything. Like I posted earlier, I didn't necessarily like most of the songs on that list that I could identify, but I damn sure heard them all the time and knew them, regardless if I wanted to or not. Since around 1995 for me, I have been out of touch with what's popular (not just in music, but other things I'm sure) and that is a pretty good sign that I was "old" at that point.
I have also cited (here as well as other places, I'm sure) the movie Clueless as being my first indication that I was getting old. And funny enough, that movie came out in 1995. The depiction of high school might as well have been 20 years beyond when I graduated (1989). The fact that I was 6 years removed from high school floored me. I had never seen a cell phone at school, and every kid in that movie had one, not to mention the slang they used was almost completely foreign to me (as a couple of examples).
Passacaglia
07-08-2009, 12:32 PM
I think that was what was implied by those of us who were saying things like "Seriously, I was old at 16?" ;)
SI
What I mean is that no one on here has said anything to the effect of, "yeah, I know all the songs in the 2000s, so I'm not old at all"
stevew
07-08-2009, 12:32 PM
Since this tripped up a number of you...
YouTube - Brandy - The Boy Is Mine featuring Monica (1998) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Va1Y6uAgNJY)
I remember it because I though Monica was rather attractive. :lol:<input id="gwProxy" type="hidden"><!--Session data--><input onclick="jsCall();" id="jsProxy" type="hidden">
I remember the song, I don't think it had a particularly catchy chorus or anything. Not really a standard summer type song.
Passacaglia
07-08-2009, 12:34 PM
I look at it as being out of touch more than anything. Like I posted earlier, I didn't necessarily like most of the songs on that list that I could identify, but I damn sure heard them all the time and knew them, regardless if I wanted to or not. Since around 1995 for me, I have been out of touch with what's popular (not just in music, but other things I'm sure) and that is a pretty good sign that I was "old" at that point.
I have also cited (here as well as other places, I'm sure) the movie Clueless as being my first indication that I was getting old. And funny enough, that movie came out in 1995. The depiction of high school might as well have been 20 years beyond when I graduated (1989). The fact that I was 6 years removed from high school floored me. I had never seen a cell phone at school, and every kid in that movie had one, not to mention the slang they used was almost completely foreign to me (as a couple of examples).
FYI, that movie is not supposed to be realistic, and hardly anyone had cell phones in high school in 1995.
Sun Tzu
07-08-2009, 12:56 PM
Yeah, that wasn't until 1998.
DanGarion
07-08-2009, 01:10 PM
I look at it as being out of touch more than anything. Like I posted earlier, I didn't necessarily like most of the songs on that list that I could identify, but I damn sure heard them all the time and knew them, regardless if I wanted to or not. Since around 1995 for me, I have been out of touch with what's popular (not just in music, but other things I'm sure) and that is a pretty good sign that I was "old" at that point.
I have also cited (here as well as other places, I'm sure) the movie Clueless as being my first indication that I was getting old. And funny enough, that movie came out in 1995. The depiction of high school might as well have been 20 years beyond when I graduated (1989). The fact that I was 6 years removed from high school floored me. I had never seen a cell phone at school, and every kid in that movie had one, not to mention the slang they used was almost completely foreign to me (as a couple of examples).
But at the same time not being able to hum them doesn't mean that I wouldn't recognize them if they were played. Would I know what the song was? No, but that's more because I don't like that type of music then anything else. I think the problem with the qualifying of what makes you old is that the person that wrote the article expects you to know the name of the song and the artist just by name alone...
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 01:16 PM
But at the same time not being able to hum them doesn't mean that I wouldn't recognize them if they were played. Would I know what the song was? No, but that's more because I don't like that type of music then anything else. I think the problem with the qualifying of what makes you old is that the person that wrote the article expects you to know the name of the song and the artist just by name alone...
Being able to hum the melody means you are intimately familiar with the song; have heard it over and over. I could probably tell you what Waterfalls was if I heard an R&B song with that word in the chorus, but that doesn't mean I should include that as a song I know from this list. Or even if I heard it and said, "Oh yeah, I've heard that song once or twice," it still doesn't qualify, IMO.
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 01:19 PM
FYI, that movie is not supposed to be realistic, and hardly anyone had cell phones in high school in 1995.
My brother graduated high school in 1993, and while not everyone had cell phones, a surprising number of kids did. OTOH, I believe we had a few people with beepers at my high school between 1986 and 1989, and those were the known/suspected drug dealers.
All I know is, my soon-to-be wife and I sat in that theater with a bunch of high school kids watching that movie and came out incredibly depressed about how old we felt.
DanGarion
07-08-2009, 01:20 PM
Being able to hum the melody means you are intimately familiar with the song; have heard it over and over. I could probably tell you what Waterfalls was if I heard an R&B song with that word in the chorus, but that doesn't mean I should include that as a song I know from this list. Or even if I heard it and said, "Oh yeah, I've heard that song once or twice," it still doesn't qualify, IMO.
Once again though, just because I don't recognize the name doesn't mean I can't hum it...
DanGarion
07-08-2009, 01:22 PM
My brother graduated high school in 1993, and while not everyone had cell phones, a surprising number of kids did. OTOH, I believe we had a few people with beepers at my high school between 1986 and 1989, and those were the known/suspected drug dealers.
Wow really? I graduated in 1994 and don't remember anyone having a cell phone, and I just about knew and got along with everyone at school. There were a number of people with pagers (me included). Where did you grow up West Beverly High? ;)
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 01:25 PM
Once again though, just because I don't recognize the name doesn't mean I can't hum it...
I'd say you should be able to instantly recognize a song on this list both by name and/or artist and melody. The only song of those I "recognize" that I can say I don't remember the melody to is that Lisa Loeb song. But I have enough of a recollection of that song - the video mostly, I guess, as well as how many times I remember hearing/seeing it - that I will include it as one I know. I jsut haven't heard it since...1994 probably! There aren't any songs on that list that I would include as a song I know where if I heard the song, I would realize that I know it and could hum the melody.
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 01:27 PM
Wow really? I graduated in 1994 and don't remember anyone having a cell phone, and I just about knew and got along with everyone at school. There were a number of people with pagers (me included). Where did you grow up West Beverly High? ;)
I went to high school in Georgia. He went to high school in South Florida (Extreme East-West Beverly High). :)
path12
07-08-2009, 01:29 PM
So what you are trying to say, is once people get taste they are old? Once they stop following the herd and beating their own drum?
I think it's more that top-40 music is more relevant to most of us in our teen and young adult years. I know my taste has changed dramatically over the years and continues to, which is the main reason I don't recognize the later stuff on that list despite being pretty tuned into the indie/electronic genre.
DanGarion
07-08-2009, 01:30 PM
I'd say you should be able to instantly recognize a song on this list both by name and/or artist and melody. The only song of those I "recognize" that I can say I don't remember the melody to is that Lisa Loeb song. But I have enough of a recollection of that song - the video mostly, I guess, as well as how many times I remember hearing/seeing it - that I will include it as one I know. I jsut haven't heard it since...1994 probably! There aren't any songs on that list that I would include as a song I know where if I heard the song, I would realize that I know it and could hum the melody.
I don't even know 90% of the song names of my favorite band though. I guess I'm just not a song name type of person.
I'm much better at being able to listen to the first part of a song I've never heard and recognizing that it is most likely on the same album as another song that I've heard... If that makes any sense. Much easier to do with real music then the programmed stuff...
sterlingice
07-08-2009, 01:41 PM
Wow really? I graduated in 1994 and don't remember anyone having a cell phone, and I just about knew and got along with everyone at school. There were a number of people with pagers (me included). Where did you grow up West Beverly High? ;)
I graduated in 1997 and I remember my early high school years- 1994/1995 that beepers were becoming the craze and that continued on through when I graduated. At that point, you started seeing a few- like 1 in 100, maybe 1 in 10 few- people with cell phones.
SI
Radii
07-08-2009, 01:51 PM
I have also cited (here as well as other places, I'm sure) the movie Clueless as being my first indication that I was getting old. And funny enough, that movie came out in 1995. The depiction of high school might as well have been 20 years beyond when I graduated (1989). The fact that I was 6 years removed from high school floored me. I had never seen a cell phone at school, and every kid in that movie had one, not to mention the slang they used was almost completely foreign to me (as a couple of examples).
I graduated from high school in 1995. I did not know a single student with a cell phone.
Ksyrup
07-08-2009, 01:56 PM
I remember my brother wanting one because a bunch of kids at his school had just gotten them. Fast forward 15+ yearrs, and now 8 year olds are begging for them like 16 year olds used to.
Autumn
07-08-2009, 02:21 PM
That's a pretty good idea. I don't quite agree with the song selections they used (doesn't quite make sense to use a UB40 cover of an older song, for example). But it's a good indicator. I always used to tell myself I'd keep listening to new music even when I was "old" but things don't work that way.
I was 24 when I got old I guess.
Autumn
07-08-2009, 02:22 PM
I graduated from high school in 1995. I did not know a single student with a cell phone.
Yeah, I think that was probably the sort of thing that was bigger in Beverly Hills than elsewhere. None at my school in '93.
Logan
07-08-2009, 05:33 PM
August 1995: "Waterfalls" -- TLC
At 22 then, summer after graduating from college.
I'd be amazed if you didn't recognize the video...it was pretty awesome effects-wise.
Zelig
07-08-2009, 05:58 PM
29 - but I was with a 17 year old then so I didn't feel very old.
cuervo72
07-08-2009, 06:39 PM
I'd be amazed if you didn't recognize the video...it was pretty awesome effects-wise.
Well, prepare to be amazed then.
I looked it up on YouTube today and I did not recognize the video or the song. I didn't have cable during college (91-95...dorms and other campus-owned housing didn't have it), so I didn't watch a lot of videos from that period. Or afterwards, for that matter.
CamEdwards
07-08-2009, 06:47 PM
30 for me. Looking back at the events that year (birth of twins, new job, etc.) probably caused me to pay less attention to frivolous shit.
JonInMiddleGA
07-08-2009, 07:19 PM
Or maybe I just have better taste in music then the shit this list has on it the last 12 years?
I don't think whether or not you liked the song has all that much to do with whether it was popular enough to have penetrated your consciousness. I think the gap between even the most remote "like" or even "found tolerable for what it was" versus "recognizable enough that I'm pretty sure I know the melody well enough to at least fake humming it" was 13 years for me. And I suspect that's a fairly normal situation, if not the size of the gap then at least the existence of it.
But boy, once I hit the wall I really hit it. I have only the slightest awareness of the existence by title of only 3 of the last 9 songs, much less having no clue how to hum any of them.
Cringer
07-08-2009, 08:28 PM
OK, so I don't think this works for me, or I was old at 3 or 4.
August 1977: "I Just Want to Be Your Everything" --Andy Gibb
August 1978: "Miss You" -- Rolling Stones
August 1979: "My Sharona" -- the Knack Yes - and I was 2
August 1980: "Magic" -- Olivia Newton-John
August 1981-- "Jessie's Girl" -- Rick Springfield Yes
August 1982 -- "Eye Of The Tiger" -- Survivor Yes
August 1983: "Every Breath You Take" -- the Police Yes
August 1984: "Ghostbusters" -- Ray Parker Jr. Yes
August 1985: "The Power of Love" -- Huey Lewis & the News Yes
August 1986: "Papa Don't Preach" -- Madonna Yes
August 1987: "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" -- U2
August 1988: "Roll With It" -- Steve Winwood
August 1989: "Right Here Waiting" -- Richard Marx
August 1990: "Vision of Love" -- Mariah Carey
August 1991: "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" --Bryan Adams Yes
August 1992: "Baby Got Back" -- Sir Mix-A-Lot Yes
August 1993: "(I Can't Help) Falling in Love With You --UB40
August 1994: "Stay (I Missed You)" -- Lisa Loeb & Nine Stories Yes
August 1995: "Waterfalls" -- TLC Yes
August 1996: "Macarena" -- Los Del Rio Yes
August 1997: "I'll Be Missing You" -- Puff Daddy & Faith Evans
August 1998: "The Boy Is Mine" -- Brandy & Monica
August 1999: "Genie in a Bottle" -- Christina Aguilera Yes
August 2000: "It's Gonna Be Me" -- 'N Sync
August 2001: "Bootylicious" -- Destiny's Child
August 2002: "Hot In Herre" -- Nelly Yes
August 2003: "Crazy In Love -- Beyonce featuring Jay-Z
August 2004: "Confessions Part II" -- Usher
August 2005: "We Belong Together" -- Mariah Carey
August 2006: "Promiscuous" -- Nelly Furtado featuring Timbaland
August 2007: "Big Girls Don't Cry" -- Fergie
August 2008: "Leavin'" -- Jesse McCartney
So if you go by groupings of Yes (I know the song) then I either became old in 1987 at the age of 10, or 1997 at the age of 20. I prefer to think I became old when I first started yelling at people for being in my yard or around my house, which was at about 28.
OK, so I don't think this works for me, or I was old at 3 or 4.
August 1983: "Every Breath You Take" -- the Police Yes
August 1997: "I'll Be Missing You" -- Puff Daddy & Faith Evans
Even if you think you don't know it, you actually do.
stevew
07-08-2009, 09:29 PM
lol. Good catch Voo
stevew
07-08-2009, 09:38 PM
What I mean is that no one on here has said anything to the effect of, "yeah, I know all the songs in the 2000s, so I'm not old at all"
I could pretty much sing anything on the list except Vision of Love and would have struggled with the brandy but I remember the silly part from the opening
I never have been one to listen to anything but the radio in the car. Those who listen to CDs could have easily missed most of the garbage on this list. A lot of these songs were impossible to miss on top 40 radio.
Wolfpack
07-08-2009, 10:14 PM
I also apparently "got old" at 22 in 1998, which was when I graduated from college and also about the time IMO that the world of music went plunging into the toilet never to recover (I have bought maybe a dozen CDs this decade, pretty much all from artists/bands that existed prior to 2000).
Actually, I think my first sign that I was getting old was when I became older than a Playboy Playmate, which I think was in 1995 (of course, the playmate was 18, if I recall correctly). Since then I think my "get off my lawn" moments have climbed exponentially....
Grammaticus
07-08-2009, 10:55 PM
Since this tripped up a number of you...
YouTube - Brandy - The Boy Is Mine featuring Monica (1998) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Va1Y6uAgNJY)
I remember it because I though Monica was rather attractive. :lol:<input id="gwProxy" type="hidden"><!--Session data--><input onclick="jsCall();" id="jsProxy" type="hidden">
That's not Brandy, it's Moesha.
1997 for me. I'm 23. There are some songs after '97 that I recognize, but not more than one in a row. Some of those songs I've heard of but can't hum the melody.
Apparently I was old at the age of 11.
Or I just developed a taste of music and used the internet instead of the radio to find new artists and guide my listening.
Ksyrup
07-09-2009, 06:56 AM
I'd be amazed if you didn't recognize the video...it was pretty awesome effects-wise.
By 1995, I don't think I was watching videos anymore. MTV certainly wasn't showing them much. And by then, I think I had pretty much stopped watching MTV. Last time I can recall watching MTV for more than a fleeting glimpse of some show that happened to be on was the Real World season when Pedro had AIDS. When was that - 93, 94, maybe? I don't think I've watched anything on MTV since then.
It's interesting how everything for me is pointing to 1995, not just this list of songs.
cuervo72
07-09-2009, 08:28 AM
Actually, I think my first sign that I was getting old was when I became older than a Playboy Playmate, which I think was in 1995 (of course, the playmate was 18, if I recall correctly). Since then I think my "get off my lawn" moments have climbed exponentially....
That's an interesting gauge - and one that could be spun different ways.
1. First Playmate you're older than (Jan '93 - Echo Johnson, January 11, 1974)
2. Last Playmate you're younger than (Jan '03 - Rebecca Ramos, August 26, 1967)*
3. First Playmate to be born after you could legally buy Playboy - TBD :)
* eh, she's an outlier that kind of messes this up. Kind of like Kathy Shower and Susie Owens did in the '80s. Ah well.
1998 or 1999 - when I was 27-28, pretty much accurate, I'd say
RendeR
07-09-2009, 09:47 AM
Ignoring the musical aspect, I got old when I couldn't polish off a bottle of Old Thompson Whiskey in one sitting without pissing myself.
No that has nothing to do with age and everything to do with hitting the "perfectly preserved" stage of life...
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