Breaking Up With Your Favourite Band

i'm a loyal motherfucker

once i like something, i stick with it

same can be said about friendships and food
 
This is hard for me to say, as the wound is still very fresh... but I've recently realized that my relationship with the Magnetic Fields is completely and totally over... I guess it started with i, but Distortion really made me feel betrayed. I can only listen to a few 69 Love Songs now without dying to push the next button.

I'm very loyal to Interpol. VERY VERY LOYAL. And it pains me to say this, but they mayyyyybe are going downhill. Just a little bit, after Paul Banks lost his beer gut and cocaine nose.

Other bands I've broken up with as a pre-teen: Backstreet Boys, NSNYNC, Soul Decision, and a very painful breakup with the Spice Girl. They just weren't the same when Ginger left. :(
 
^ if they have changed their music, I totally understand, but if culture has change to where their music is now mainstream, isn't that a good thing???

to clarify- i totally understand people feeling like their favorite bands "sold out" and changed their style to sell more records, but once in a while a band doesn't change, but gets embraced anyways, and they are still making good music, they just might dress different and market themselves better now that they realized culture is buying what they are, does this make sense? I mean, fuck, if someone was going to pay me millions of dollars to play the music I've been playing and all I had to do was dye my hair black and wear tight pants, of course I would. I don't know many who wouldn't.

That would make sense if they were just doing their own thing, while a fan base organically built itself around the sound. But what usually ends up happening is that a band gains the attention of someone with an eye for profit, the band gets sucked in and compromises their work by meeting the perceived expectations of their target audience half-way, and as a result their music becomes stilted so they lose their core audience.

I think any good artist is going to stay ahead of the curve and naturally turn off your average non-discriminating listener. This is why I still have some respect for Radiohead, because even though they lost me after Kid A, they pretty much kept doing their own thing, which is what's really important; not whether or not I keep liking their sound.

This is going to make me come off shitty, but I can't say I've ever had a music love affair that I regret. I look back on most of it with fondness even though 90s trance was mostly the drugs and MGMT made that album that everyone (including me) loved for a week and felt mildly embarrassed about a month later. Hell, I still know all the lyrics to Wu Tang's 36 Chambers - but it takes a lot for me to really, really commit to an artist and only in the last five years have I even found people who have impressed me at a level where I start to become a little obsessive.
 
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i'm a loyal motherfucker

once i like something, i stick with it

same can be said about friendships and food

Ha, I'm very similar. Once I like something, it's hard for me to switch around. And come on, even if A Perfect Circle's eMOTIVe was a bit silly, Tool has stayed pretty damn consistent over the years. I won't judge a band based on side projects. Which is why I still adore Reznor and Nine Inch Nails even though How to Destroy Angels is absolute shit. And yeah, King of Limbs wasn't wonderful, but it wasn't awful. And I really liked In Rainbows. Also, Thom Yorke's solo effort was brilliant - I saw him perform it live two years ago, and was fucking blown away.

That said, my one big musical break-up was 30 Seconds to Mars. God, I was head-over-heels in love with them in junior high and for much of high school. Their first album was brilliant, and their second album was good at times, but their last album didn't do it for me. But apart from that, the attitude of the band just really pisses me off. They NEVER play any of their first album live, and seem to function under the delusion that it never fucking happened, which really alienated their earlier fans, myself obviously included. Jared Leto is a pompous ass. Not that I wouldn't still jump his bones in a second if I could XD but he's still become a self-important douchebag. If a band changes their sound to something I don't like, that's all right, given that they've retained their integrity. It's the sell-outs that really anger me.
 
i'm sorry, if you don't love this album, you were never in a relationship with bowie to begin with:

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Good choice!
 
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My biggest break-up has been to, gulp, Radiohead. :( TEARS
Me too : ( at some point that awkward phase of teenage angst has to end. Their new stuff is less angsty tho, a bit more "mature" in a way.

It's like we broke up didn't have contact for a few years but now we are very cordial if we see one another at an event for a mutually friend... Weird
 
ah yeah, i'll join in on tool. aenima was my absolute favorite album during my teenage years but well...
another one was machine head. i absolute fucking loved burn my eyes and the more things change. still consider them really solid metal albums. then they released the utterly horrible the burning red, jumping onto the nu-metal train. my god, even thinking about that album revolts me.
 
one thing everyone can agree on is that you can always listen to The Clash albums cover-to-cover.


Count me in. I agree. With enough red wine and marijuana I can even listen to and enjoy Cut the Crap. The thing is... I know Sandinista! is a very imperfect record. But I still fucking love it. London Calling of course is their (or should I say Guy Stevens') best record but still I love Combat Rock and have a special affinity to that jungle monsoon feel. Give 'Em Enough Rope is a bit too wall of guitar for me but even then it has some good tracks. I've been obsessed with the Clash for some time.
 
Tool fucking sucks, but not as bad as The Smashing Pumpkins.

Siamese Dream was awesome and I fell in love, Melancholy was OK - maybe I thought they were a little less interested in me, but I was still OK. Then it all went downhill and I couldn't cut and run fast enough. By the time they toured last year, it was like seeing that one ex you used to date who's new boyfriend is a fat, balding, 42 year old, and is addicted to disgusting plastic surgery.

It's Mellon Collie. Hehe. And it is a phenomenal album album from my point of view. Billie crafted it like a genius and how many records did they sell again? almost 10 million. Zero, Tonight Tonight, Bodies, Stumbeline, Thirty-Three, Bullet with Butterfly Wings. Fucking amazing album. I was 10 when my dad bought it for me, I remember we searched all around town for it and finally found one place that had it locked in a drawer. What band with a sound like that can sell that many records today? Back when big studio albums made by big record companies didn't mostly all suck. I remember thinking James Iha was a hot girl in the album booklet for disc 1. Have always wanted a Zero shirt. Could not pull it off tho.

just read this on wiki:
The album is expected to be reissued in 2012, which is expected to include 75 unreleased tracks from the recording sessions, packaged within a 6 disc deluxe set
 
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For me, it was Tool. Even typing the word makes me want to vomit in my mouth. Sophmore year in high school, getting stoned in the parking lot, listening to Tool and A Perfect Circle. I swooned, I owned a velvet cape, I had lots of different lipstick tubes and pipes. I finally realized the romance was over when A Perfect Circle released eMotive. I was horrified. Don't even get me started on Puscifer. I was suddenly exhausted by everything Maynard James Keenan, even though I still love his voice. The romance was over.

Tell me, who did you break up with? What happened? Share your heart ache.

Thankfully I got into Tool a little later and can still enjoy them. A Perfect Circle is decent but pretty mediocre rock, but I still enjoy listening to them - as you said, gotta love Maynard's pipes, the man can really scream... As well as convey emotions (mostly anger, disgust, but a range of others too) as though the things he's singing about are actually there before his eyes during recording. Puscifer is mostly awful, but there's a few gems to be found there IMO.

For me, it was metal as a genre in general. I abandoned a lot of cheesy power metal bands soon after I started getting into thrash/death/black metal, but perhaps the flagship would be Iron Maiden. They're the band that got me into metal (and playing bass) in the first place, when I'd bought all their studio albums that was about 30% of my entire record collection at that time, and my first big rock concert was Maiden in Helsinki in 2005 (Eddie Rips Up the World Tour, material exclusively from the first four albums - awesome).

I don't know if anything that serious happened that made me upset with the band as such; sure, they put out a bunch of crap albums in the 2000s (with what should, on paper, be their best line-up - the frontman from most of their albums, and all 3 guitarists), and released unnecessary amounts of collections, DVDs and whatnot that reek of record label cash grabs, but I've grown to accept that if a rock band has been going for 20 years, they either retire, spend their time nostalgia touring, or attempt to release new material which is awful in 80% of the cases and makes you miss the old material in 100%. Hell, Snoop Dogg has been collaborating with the terrorists responsible for the state of rap music today for years, and I haven't broken up with Snoop - I just don't listen to his new material.

With Maiden, I just... Got bored of it. Noticed I only ever listened to them for nostalgic reasons, and that was the only kick I got out of the music. Much of the same applies for most metal bands, though; the only ones I listen to with any kind of regularity are Tool, Exodus, Electric Wizard, Reverend Bizarre, Pantera, and Vio-Lence... Got bored of a lot of the cheesier aspects of metal, but also the aggressive side. After the honeymoon phase I began to listen mostly to thrash/death/black metal with relentless drumming onslaughts and "Cookie Monster vocals" as some people refer to them, but at some point I started getting sick of it - and when I did come back to listen to metal, it was rarely the extreme kind (if so, it was thrash - hardly ever death or black). As a teenager aggressive music was a way for me to let off steam without physically doing anything more violent than air guitaring. I guess that as I grew older I had no need for such an outlet anymore... and more need for music to make me go "Ooh" on drugs.

I used to be a walking metal encyclopedia but now I notice that bands I used to listen to have put out 4 albums I've never heard of and changed half their lineup. I still enjoy the music if I'm in the right mood, but I completely abandoned the metalhead that I was.

and funnily enough, this didn't cross my mind earlier, but Bruce Dickinson - I still listen to the Iron Maiden front man's solo albums quite frequently, but Maiden I don't think I've listened to in at least 2 years. Might do so now, in fact.
 
i saw maiden at the end of june and they were fucking awesome, but they are sort of a nostalgia act. i don't really care though, i had a blast.

Yeah. Had I not seen them when I was still a fanboy, I would probably pay to see them once - the live albums and DVDs would suggest that they're a really tight live band, and being at the show confirmed this. At the ticket prices they fetch these days, though, I wouldn't fork out the cash again. They're great live, but not worth the price tag.
 
Let's see, I kinda broke up w/ everything, but namely Tool, Smashing Pumpkins, and the grunge bands when I discovered Black Flag and punk music in general. As cliche as it sounds: it was like I'd been waiting for it through all the other stuff and it was ground zero from there.

Metallica when they released the Black Album. Black Album on is insufferable. And Justice for All is basically shit all also.

NIN is another one w/ which I've been in and out. They were a favorite in 6th grade, and they were kind of replaced by Tool, but then Tool has that dirgy, cock-heavy metal sound I now think is laughable, whereas NIN skulks around those elements - if that makes any sense.

Modest Mouse I was into until their recent releases, but I still would see them live again. Interpol is another one I haven't cared for since their first album. The Strokes, always overrated I thought, but got progressively worse from their first two albums. I guess those aren't favorites, but since 16 years old my favorite band has been The Clash, and I just don't fucken see that changing.

If I were a Muse fan I'd leave them for going dubstep.
 
Yeah. Had I not seen them when I was still a fanboy, I would probably pay to see them once - the live albums and DVDs would suggest that they're a really tight live band, and being at the show confirmed this. At the ticket prices they fetch these days, though, I wouldn't fork out the cash again. They're great live, but not worth the price tag.

it's funny you say that, because i cheaped out on my ticket and i think if/when they come next time i am probably willing to pay double what i did for a better view of the show.

as it were, their show here fell on my birthday, which was pretty cool.
 
NIN is another one w/ which I've been in and out. They were a favorite in 6th grade, and they were kind of replaced by Tool, but then Tool has that dirgy, cock-heavy metal sound I now think is laughable, whereas NIN skulks around those elements - if that makes any sense.

Yeah I got really into NIN at the start of high school and then finally saw them live in 2006 (With Teeth) and it was...not very exciting, despite Twiggy being there. I've basically given up NIN for Trent Reznor's soundtracks.

Interpol is another one I haven't cared for since their first album. The Strokes, always overrated I thought, but got progressively worse from their first two albums. I guess those aren't favorites, but since 16 years old my favorite band has been The Clash, and I just don't fucken see that changing.

I really like Turn Out the Bright Lights but past that I'm just like blergh. It's sad that they couldn't really grow more than that. Lights already sounds like someone's third album, so it was kind of over before it even started. I still listen to Is This It by the Strokes often, because that album is perfect top to bottom (it was also the first album i bought by myself for myself) and it absolutely shocked the shit out of me when I first listened to it. I had never heard anything like that, ever. I would not see them live now. they are all married and lay around and watch sex in the city boxsets with their new york cunt wives and just...bored. they aren't the 21 year old spotty mulleted boys i fell in love with :(
 
i think NIN is the classical teen-angst band. i listened to downward spiral and fragile a lot in that age.
when i hear NIN now it's not that i dislike them particularly, it's just that they don't evoke any kind of emotion in me. unless i'm maudlin drunk.
edit: also, when it came out, i really loved marylin manson's mechanical animals. jesus fucking christ.
 
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Pendulum...


one day ( 2007 ) I turned up MTV to see if the pimp my ride is going on... there was playing some pop dnb tune with beach and ufo.I was thinking thats one of nicer commercial bullshits I heard in my life,I listened it to the end when I saw it.It was made by Pendulum,those people got me into dnb...


I didnt know what to do sooner... punch tv in rage? curl & cry? It was hard to believe that what I considered best underground producents changed their style from extremly complex,technicaly state of art audio engineers to emo wannabe rockstars.And that was nothing compared to what happened in next years...


Pendulum before 2007... bunch of normal fresh looking young people
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Pendulum after 2007... bunch of emo
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notice how DJ Hornet from Pendulum is in absolute back of the photo even when he is one of original trio and their best dj,he got fat and dont have the looks to be in front becose it would not be cool for their new image.Also notice how rob swire dyed his goatee in black,I bet he done that with his pussy fur too :D

That reminds me of Papa Roach. They changed both their physical appearance and their music style.

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Their newer image is painful to watch and is so far from what they were originally about. 'Scars' was the final nail in the coffin for them with me, and even then I'm being generous.

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One of the bands that I really liked that I had to break up with was Chevelle. The Wonder What's Next album is what got me into them, but the album This Type of Thinking (Could Do Us In) really sucked me in, and I listened to it just about everyday. It never left my cars CD changer until I got rid of that car. Well once I saw the music video for the song "Well Enough Alone" off of their next album I couldn't continue to be a fan. Listening back it wasn't that bad, especially considering what other music was being put out around that time, but since I was such a big fan of them it was all or nothing, and right now I choose nothing.
 
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