Mine too.Part of my world died today!
I’ve got it on vinyl bought it second hand.I was 13 when my best friend bought Paranoid on 8-track. Changed my musical life, even more when Master of Reality came out.
Not even for Sammy when it happens?As much as I liked Ozzy and Sabbath, I can't say I shed a tear. Didn't know the man and really don't get worked up over celebrities that I don't know when they pass. Is it a sad day for Rock and Roll? Yes. Will I shed a tear? Naw, he lived a big life and entertained many. I was a huge, and I mean HUGE, Eddie Van Halen fan. To the point that whenever a magazine came out that had him in it I would buy it, cut the article or photo out and hang it in my room. Did I shed a tear for his passing? Nope. Was I sad to see a legend like him pass? Yea, but never knew the man so it did not affect me all that much. I get it that some feel they "know" the person, but to me, it is like anyone else who passes. Am I sad, yes. I feel for the family and hope they all have some comfort knowing he is not in pain anymore and has moved on to meet up with Ronnie James, Randy and others to form one hell of a rock band in either Heaven or Hell LOL OK, now flame me if you will. I know it is coming. Rock On!!!!!!!
Lol. Nope. I enjoy his music but don't know the man. Seems like a good guy but it won't cause a tear.Not even for Sammy when it happens?
I do agree he lived a good long life, went out celebrated, surrounded with family and fans and on his own terms. He had a hard painful road ahead of him. And he left a huge legacy no reason to shed a tear for him.Lol. Nope. I enjoy his music but don't know the man. Seems like a good guy but it won't cause a tear.
I agree with you regarding Petty, but will argue that the others went out by their own doing and did not go "before their time was up". I was not a huge fan of the grunge era, so Staley and Cornell didn't even fall on my radar. But Prince I thought was a talent that was capable of legendary status.RIP he went out on his own terms
I do agree he lived a good long life, went out celebrated, surrounded with family and fans and on his own terms. He had a hard painful road ahead of him. And he left a huge legacy no reason to shed a tear for him.
The ones that get me are the ones who go before their time is up. Tom Petty, Prince, Chris Cornell, Layne Staley. Those are sad.
This from the Prince of Darkness!
It's a little known fact that Ozzy was fluent in Klingon.Great quote, but my favorite has got to be...
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I would say the last three on that list went out on their own terms. Ozzy would probably have just kept on going doing what he loved if he could. Dude was a machine.RIP he went out on his own terms
I do agree he lived a good long life, went out celebrated, surrounded with family and fans and on his own terms. He had a hard painful road ahead of him. And he left a huge legacy no reason to shed a tear for him.
The ones that get me are the ones who go before their time is up. Tom Petty, Prince, Chris Cornell, Layne Staley. Those are sad.
Yeah, listening to anything on 8-track changes a persons musical life.I was 13 when my best friend bought Paranoid on 8-track. Changed my musical life, even more when Master of Reality came out.
Ya work with what ya got.Yeah, listening to anything on 8-track changes a persons musical life.
It reminded me of a first time listening to a tape, really getting into a song then the track switches. Ah, the memories! I still have a non used Pioneer 8-track player and one tape.Ya work with what ya got.
The changes in music playing sure has a evolved in our lifetime! I was lucky to skip on the 8-track in favor of cassettes. Sort of like the beta versus VHS.I actually owned an 8-track recording deck when I was in college.
I did too.I actually owned an 8-track recording deck when I was in college.
When I get down to the brewery I'll get a picture of mine, I bet it's the same.I did as well, it was a Pioneer desktop model. My father's brother was the first USA importer for Pioneer and we could get lots of hardware cheap...
You might be missing out on some nostalgia!I don't even know if I still have mine. If I do, it's buried under a mountain of other crap in my attic.
I remember that gizmo. In the late sixties early seventies I delivered TV's for a place, one guys had a fancy 8-track in his junky car. The player was worth more. That player was state of art.Well, I am almost positive I didn't keep any tapes. I also used to have a little doo-dad that you could insert into an 8-track deck to play cassettes.
Pioneer made great equipment back then. Not sure anymore.My Pioneer looked very similar but yours is a higher spec model.
I had a full Pioneer component suite with separate amp, receiver, 8-track recorder and turntable, all sharing the same design style...
Cheers!