"Closer" -- Nine Inch Nails
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"Closer" -- Nine Inch Nails
"[I]It's Been a Long, Long Time[/I]" - Harry James & His Orchestra,
vocals by Kitty Kallen[SIZE=1] (1945)
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[B]Songs That Got Us Through WW2[/B][SIZE=1] (various artists)[/SIZE][/indent]
"[I]The Nearness of You[/I]" - Keely Smith w/Nelson Riddle Orchestra[SIZE=1]
(recorded December 2nd, 1958)
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[B]Stardust: Capitol Sings Hoagy Carmichael[/B][SIZE=1] (various artists)[/SIZE][/indent]
"Baby, What You Want Me to Do" -- Neil Young, with Crazy Horse
"God Gave Rock 'N' Roll to You II" -- KISS
Riot - *[I]Sons Of Society* (2017 Reissue) - "Time To Bleed"
"[I]I'll Be Seeing You[/I]" - Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra,
vocals by Frank Sinatra[SIZE=1] (May 1944)
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[B]Songs That Got Us Through WW2[/B][SIZE=1] (various artists)[/SIZE][/indent]
"American Idiot" -- Green Day
"Murder Scene" -- Arch Enemy
"[I]G.I. Jive[/I]" - Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five[SIZE=1] (1944)
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[B]G.I. Jukebox: Songs from World War II[/B][/indent]
"Welcome to Paradise" -- Green Day
"[I](There'll Be a) Hot Time in the Town of Berlin (When the Yanks Go Marching In)[/I]"
- Bing Crosby & the Andrews Sisters[SIZE=1] (September 1944)
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[B]G.I. Jukebox: Songs from World War II[/B]
[SIZE=1](various artists)[/SIZE][/indent]
Some really, REALLY early Pink Floyd...before they were even called Pink Floyd. At this point, they sound more the typical mid-60s British R&B band than they do the psychedelic pop and progressive rock band they would later become.
[video=youtube;6b1Dws2u_0Y]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6b1Dws2u_0Y[/video]
I've long known that the early Floyd had a phase like this, but until now, I'd never heard any samples of it.
[color=red]Buried Alien (The Fastest Post Alive!)[/color]
[QUOTE=Buried Alien;3665816]Some really, REALLY early Pink Floyd...before they were even called Pink Floyd. At this point, they sound more the typical mid-60s British R&B band than they do the later psychedelic pop or progressive rock band they would later become.[/quote]Have you also listened to any of Fleetwood Mac's earlier pre-Lindsey Buckingham & Stevie Nicks music?
That group also was more in the British blues camp before reaching the pop charts in the mid-1970s.
"Rapture" -- Blondie