hummingwolf (
hummingwolf) wrote2004-11-17 08:39 pm
(no subject)
If people ask me what was the first album I ever acquired, I usually answer with The Carpenters' Ticket To Ride, which I won at a school fair in the fifth grade when the people running the cakewalk ran out of cakes and decided to give away records instead. While I did have other records to listen to when I was small, they were Disney read-along things and LPs specially made for kids, not music I still listen to today.
If I'm asked about the first album I ever bought, I say Nik Kershaw's Human Racing, which I simply had to get after my friend Jenny told me it was impossible to find. (Okay, the fact that I loved the six Nik Kershaw songs she'd forced me to hear had some influence as well.)
But by some quirk of the mind, a word in another person's LJ post triggered a memory of going with my parents to Amway conventions when I was a child (yes, really), which reminded me of going to this ranch the summer before seventh grade. The ranch was (and is) run by Skip Ross, who was an Amway Crown Direct (rich guy, in other words) and still is a motivational speaker. Now that I remember, he was also the first person I ever bought an album by, though I can no longer tell you which one of these it was. (Why do they have no CDs on that page? Cassettes? What century are they living in?) Yes, my first music album purchase was by a motivational speaker. Scary, isn't it?
For the record, the first record (non-album) I ever bought was the 7" single of Carole King singing "Pierre" and "Chicken Soup with Rice," with lyrics and cover art by Maurice Sendak.
If I'm asked about the first album I ever bought, I say Nik Kershaw's Human Racing, which I simply had to get after my friend Jenny told me it was impossible to find. (Okay, the fact that I loved the six Nik Kershaw songs she'd forced me to hear had some influence as well.)
But by some quirk of the mind, a word in another person's LJ post triggered a memory of going with my parents to Amway conventions when I was a child (yes, really), which reminded me of going to this ranch the summer before seventh grade. The ranch was (and is) run by Skip Ross, who was an Amway Crown Direct (rich guy, in other words) and still is a motivational speaker. Now that I remember, he was also the first person I ever bought an album by, though I can no longer tell you which one of these it was. (Why do they have no CDs on that page? Cassettes? What century are they living in?) Yes, my first music album purchase was by a motivational speaker. Scary, isn't it?
For the record, the first record (non-album) I ever bought was the 7" single of Carole King singing "Pierre" and "Chicken Soup with Rice," with lyrics and cover art by Maurice Sendak.

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As for myself, I usually opted for my parents' Beatles and Beach Boys albums when I was little.
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When I was little, I mostly did not interfere with my mother's listening habits, so I learned all about mutilated versions of pop standards. Later, I started getting into top 40. And then in about tenth grade, I made it my mission in life to get to know every single radio station from the Washington DC and Baltimore markets which we could get in at our home. And then I got my first shortwave radio and started listening to hit music from all over the world. Every time I got my allowance, I would buy another LP, CD, or collection of singles--and I'd make people (mostly Dad) take me to record conventions so I could find more obscure things.
Music is fun. :-)
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I *loved* Chicken Soup with Rice, and for years people had me convinced it didn't actually exist, that I had imagined the whole thing. But I knew it did exist, and eventually proved it to the doubters. *g*
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In November's gusty gale I will flop my flippy tail
And spout hot soup. I'll be a whale!
Spouting once, spouting twice, spouting chicken soup with rice.
In December I will be a baubled, baubled Christmas tree
with soup bowls draped all over me.
Merry once, merry twice, merry chicken soup with rice.
Nik
(Anonymous) 2004-11-18 08:00 pm (UTC)(link)Hugs from Jenny
Re: Nik
Honestly, I have no idea where you might find RM on CD for a reasonable price. And yes, The Works was put out on CD--that was late enough in the '80s that the album may never have come out on LP, for all I know. (There was a joke somewhere that Nik's first two albums went platinum, Radio Musicola went gold, and The Works went cardboard.)
Erm, anyway. If you can't find them elsewhere and you have access to a CD burner, I might let you borrow my CDs to copy. :-)
Re: Nik
(Anonymous) 2004-11-19 05:56 pm (UTC)(link)Huggies!!!!!!!!!!!!!