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favorite beat happening song
the this many boyfriends club is mine.
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Nancy Sin
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Wow. I don't know. But I'm now inspired to go listen to all my Beat Happening stuff.
I'll get back to ya. The Beat were freaking great! And nobody better dare call them twee pop either!! They were grunge, man. |
Maybe it's obvious, but Indian Summer. It's the first song I ever heard by them, and I fucking love it.
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fortune cookie prize!
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Probably Bewitched. I like the stalkerish nature of the lyrics.
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"Bad Seeds", everything else (and I love most of it) was kind of trying to get there again.
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"Sea Hunt" is my favorite.
Then again, it's the only Beat Happening song I like. Actually, it's the only Beat Happening song that doesn't send me into a fit of rage about how annoying Beat Happening are and how harmful their influence has been to "independent music" occurring in their wake. But "Sea Hunt" is a pretty good song, yeah. |
i never liked them much, just always sounded like a less spastic/good half japanese, but the song "i let him get to me" on the s/t record is phenomenal.
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I'm glad we have this point of divergence. While I agree that the twee imitators are deserving of a special concentration camp with crayons and kool aid provided, Beat Happening were one of the most subversive punk bands of all time. The were a beautiful "fuck you" in the face of the hardcore machismo that surrounded the indie/punk world of their day, and the best part was that they did it by being polite. They were also quite influential on quite a few bands that didn't suck and didn't try to cop their schtick, from Unwound to Godheadsilo. Anybody who actually "got" Beat Happening wouldn't try to sound like them, though there was something to be learned from the spirit and the refusal to blindly accept conventions be they rock, punk, indie, grunge, or whatever the fuck. |
Foggy Eyes at the moment.
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"Our Secret"
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yeah i never called them twee and i like a little bit twee pop. i always called them a punk band. |
Our Secret & What's Important
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I can see that. Because they came out of the Seattle/Portland scene, I always associated them with the grunge scene. Back in their day, though, I also heard them associated with the "lo-fi" tag. |
Beat Happening reek "twee" not that it's necessarily a bad thing. I really don't hear a punk side to them, save for very few songs.
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they were punk in spirit and not sound. |
teenage caveman
hot chocolate boy drive car girl midnight a go-go ask me and i feel like "the this many boyfriends club" has potential to be another favorite, just juding by how fucking awesome the title is. but ive never actually heard it, so cant say for sure. |
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Absolutely. When they opened for Black Flag in the '80s, Henry Rollins went in the crowd during their set and reached up and grabbed Calvin's crotch. Calvin just calmly responded with, "Didn't your mother ever teach you any manners?" and kept on singing. |
You know that's kind of funny? Before this thread, as you can see from my above comment, I wasn't a fan of Beat Happening at all. I always kind of viewed them as doing the same things Half Japanese did but not as good and 8 or so years later. After seeing all you're responses, I realized maybe I unfairly judged them. I then downloaded some of thier live stuff and "Jamboree", and realized what an idiot I am for not having loved them for all these years. This is the type of thing that I love; extremly lo-fi Punk music with melodies buried underneath tons of poor production. The songs on "Jamboree" sound so honest, and the music so basic and elemental, it's a record one could listen to a thousand times and not get sick of. So, I am glad to say I'm not a fan of Beat Happening, partly because of this thread. Times like these make me realize why I post on message boards in the first place (besides the fact I'm a huge nerd).
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