1. Hello Guest. You have limited privileges and you can't "SEARCH" the forums. Please "Log In" or "Sign Up" for additional functionality. Click HERE to proceed.

Preferred Tunes!

Discussion in 'Hangout Lounge' started by Gabriel, Oct 7, 2011.

  1. Gabriel

    Gabriel Member

    Messages:
    33
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    Plano, TX
    Alright...so I know you cats have good taste in bikes, which means you MUST have good taste in music.

    What are your preferred tunes when you're on your xj...or anywhere, for that matter?
     
  2. Jasonmcgill

    Jasonmcgill Member

    Messages:
    45
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    St George Utah
    I'm a younger riding so excuse my ignorance, bands : thrice, la dispute, the dear hunter, Manchester orchestra, gas light anthem, angels and airwaves, august burns red, the Beatles , cold war kids.
     
  3. Gabriel

    Gabriel Member

    Messages:
    33
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    Plano, TX
    Awesome!
     
  4. Gabriel

    Gabriel Member

    Messages:
    33
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    Plano, TX
    I like to jam Talking Heads (especially Remain in Light), any and all Collins era Genesis, Peter Gabriel (only sans-Genesis), Electric Light Orchestra's "TIme," King Crimson's "Discipline," all Doobie Bros. (including the Michael Mcdonald years), Terry Reid "Seed of Memory" --- Just to name a few...
     
  5. Hasersys

    Hasersys Member

    Messages:
    346
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    16
    Location:
    Sebastian and Tampa Florida / Chicago Il
    Every time I had tried listening to music while riding I feel like I can't hear when a vehicle is coming up on me, or if some one is near me.. Idk, I just feel uneasy about it. You guys don't get that?
     
  6. Jasonmcgill

    Jasonmcgill Member

    Messages:
    45
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    St George Utah
    Nope, I blast my music. Haha. I'm usually the one doing the passing though.
     
  7. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

    Messages:
    21,283
    Likes Received:
    418
    Trophy Points:
    83
    Location:
    Rural SE Michigan 60 miles N of Motown
    Listening to music while riding in city traffic would be a death sentence.

    It's actually a bad idea anywhere; you HAVE to remain in "fighter pilot mode" (full situational awareness at all times) or DIE.

    IN THE CAGE, however, or elsewhere:

    Jefferson Airplane
    Cream
    The first King Crimson album (I said "album" there's a clue)
    MC5
    Midnight Oil
    Moody Blues
    Jimi Hendrix
    The Who
    Pretenders
    Stan Rogers
    Flogging Molly.

    Fitz=old. And on two wheels, my music comes from my motor. (That's one way to get to actually BE old.)
     
  8. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

    Messages:
    21,283
    Likes Received:
    418
    Trophy Points:
    83
    Location:
    Rural SE Michigan 60 miles N of Motown
    Yeah. NOT cool.

    You've been riding HOW LONG? On the street how long?

    I've been doing it for over 43 years; could be I know a little something about surviving on two wheels.

    You're WAY not experienced enough to be "processing" a distraction like that if the situation suddenly goes all pear-shaped; you'll get hurt, or worse. Despite what you may think, you're not invincible.

    Leave the iPod at home for a couple of YEARS, or 10,000 miles. Whichever comes first.

    I STILL won't listen to music on the bike; but then again, I'm still around.

    Think about it.
     
  9. streetbrawler750

    streetbrawler750 Member

    Messages:
    608
    Likes Received:
    3
    Trophy Points:
    18
    Location:
    Minnesota
    Flogging Molly fitz, thats cool- drop kick murphys, too?

    I dig the Misfits, Nekromantix, Rancid, Social D, and of course the Irish punk
     
  10. Polock

    Polock Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    9,751
    Likes Received:
    2,096
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Location:
    Beaver Falls, PA
    ear plugs, so i can talk to myself
     
  11. Jasonmcgill

    Jasonmcgill Member

    Messages:
    45
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    St George Utah
    I appreciate it fitz, honestly. I agree completely. what my post didn't include was where I ride with music, I don't always. I only ride with music when I ride from farm to farm. Not a whole ton of cars, just lots of farm equipment. I wouldn't ever ride on the free way with music. Especially cause I have only been riding street bikes for 2 months. Dirt bikes is another story. Honestly I thank you for looking out for other riders, it's pretty cool I look up to that. Is my excuse a good one? Nah, but eh it's my life. I'm just 21 and still bullet proof in my head. But thanks for the comment I'll think about it when I hop on my bike next time. :)
     
  12. Gabriel

    Gabriel Member

    Messages:
    33
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    Plano, TX
    Yeah Fitz, that first crimson album is the most bada$$, but there's something about Adrian Belew that just takes it over the top for me. If you haven't heard that album, Discipline, you should check it out. Tony Levin plays bass on it, too. That man is a genius.
     
  13. andrewlong

    andrewlong Member

    Messages:
    643
    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    18
    Location:
    Cumming, GA
    Riding a motorcycle is all about how much risk you want to take. Where you ride, how fast, how you maintain your vehicle, what gear you do or do not ride with --- and riding with music is no different. Depends on your state of mind, skill, and level of awareness, and how much of a lucky punk you feel like.

    Sometimes I'll ride with music, but never with in-ear buds (those stupid canal ones that molest your eardrum), and only at a level to where it compliments the ride, not drowns out all other sounds. I'd still be able to hear someone talking to me, and my music device has a volume knobule that is easily accessible.

    Anyways, I've always been musically eclectic. Most times I'll just turn on Pandora and quick mix it. This should tell you everything you need to know...
     
  14. xRedemptionx

    xRedemptionx Member

    Messages:
    133
    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    18
    Location:
    Cleveland, Ohio
    I go anywhere in the spectrum depending on my mood.... i range from:
    Classical, my favorites being cello suites by bach
    rock-n-roll, anything like gaslight anthem(+1 Jason), bruce, the nightwatchmen,
    old school outlaw country, merl haggard, cash et al.
    punk-rock, the unseen, the decendants, anti-flag, pennywise, rise against etc
    hardcore, blood for blood, first blood, madball, etc.
    ska, less than jake, streetlight manifesto, etc.
    hahahahah or anything else that tickles my fancy
    i like my tunes for nighttime riding most of all, and i listen almost every time i go out, but i keep it to a lower volume in town, i have a nice little controller for my head phones that i clip into the bottom of my ipod... i actually like the in canal buds, because they function as ear plugs when i dont have music...
     
  15. azman857

    azman857 Member

    Messages:
    40
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    Tucson AZ
    60's- present minus the hip hop rap crap. Some modern country is OK . The 80's rocked! I listen to the radio a lot when wrenching. I tried earbuds when rideing and it had to be loud to hear anything and gave it up. I agree, the best bike stereo is the twin pipes. 4-1's are cool too.
     
  16. Ravenz07

    Ravenz07 Member

    Messages:
    723
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    16
    No way! Fitz listens to MC5 and steps into the court of the Crimson King??? I would have never guessed.

    Listen to Budgie, Warhorse, or Uriah Heep?
     
  17. bluesdog

    bluesdog Member

    Messages:
    44
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    6
    Location:
    Similkameen BC Canada
    On longer rides, I use earplugs to protect (what remains of) my hearing from the wind noise.

    On shorter, <20 minute rides, I sometimes don't bother, although I really should

    I've tried earbuds, and back in the day I grafted a pair of headphone speakers into a helmet, but I find the experience somehow detracts from, rather than enhances, my ride.

    Hell, I rarely listen to music when in the cage!

    I guess I'm happier with the music of the road, the wind, and the engine

    At home I blast the Allman Brothers, Pink Floyd, maybe some Led Zep, AC/DC, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Steely Dan, various blues, and sometimes mellow vocals like Norah Jones, from my old school Kenwood/JBL setup.
     
  18. Hasersys

    Hasersys Member

    Messages:
    346
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    16
    Location:
    Sebastian and Tampa Florida / Chicago Il
    I have seen the unseen, they are seeable.
     
  19. Hasersys

    Hasersys Member

    Messages:
    346
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    16
    Location:
    Sebastian and Tampa Florida / Chicago Il
    I have the same issue, it almost henders me. I love music, but I have to hear my bike. I am uneasy if I can't hear things around me or the engine.
     
  20. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

    Messages:
    21,283
    Likes Received:
    418
    Trophy Points:
    83
    Location:
    Rural SE Michigan 60 miles N of Motown
    Dude; I grew up in the Detroit area. You know the album cover from the first MC5 album, with the pics of the band superimposed over the audience, a bunch of still relatively clean-cut suburban neo-hippies? That picture was taken when the recording was made, at the Grande Ballroom in Detroit, Halloween 1968. I'm one of those kids sitting on the floor.

    The MC5 is a permanent part of my psyche. I have TWO copies of the original M*F* version of that album, with the unedited album cover as well. They pulled the record three days after it was released and re-released the cleaned-up version. They removed all the inflammatory political rhetoric from the inside of the album jacket too. The original's a hoot.

    And as for Uriah Heep, only the early stuff was any good; but it was GREAT. Then they tried to get "commercial" and that was that.
     

Share This Page