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Your most-hated song

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No. That isn't a song. That is some sort of demonic chant disguised as a children sing along.

No. NO. NOOOOO!!!
Just when my own kids had (mostly) outgrown it, now my nephew is singing it. First thing he says when he walks in the door is "Alexa Baby Shark!". :mad:
 
Some dumb ass country song, I think it's called Knocking Boots or some stupid crap. Heard it for the first time a couple of weeks ago at work and thought it was stupid, then later in the day when I heard it for the fifth time I truly hated it.
 
Led Zeppelin - D'yer Maker

I can appreciate them trying something different with that song and LZ is probably my favorite band, but that song is just brutal to listen to.
 
My baby rides the morning train.... most insipid crap ever conceived by mortals.
 
tough one, currently probably, cocaine - eric clapton.....i hate that sh!t.....still listen to it though ocasionally just so i can hate it more....
 
When i taste tequila...i actually accidentally ran a red light while attempting to change the station.

I too also have a strong hatred for that song. I took this screenshot a while back, when I was googling something completely unrelated. I feel somewhat vindicated.

51001616_1496343980496985_6824262794901192704_o.jpg
 
KISS is the most over rated band of all time.
Reption of a "hook" doesn't make a band. Nor does plugging in different "personalities" that fit the "image" . They were setup soley to make/market money not music.
Anything by Kiss, especially “I Wanna Rock ‘n’ Roll All Night”.

I read, somewhere, a few years ago that the most hated song in America was “It’s a Small World”.

You’re welcome. :D
 
tough one, currently probably, cocaine - eric clapton.....i hate that sh!t.....still listen to it though ocasionally just so i can hate it more....

Well, here's the original version of the song, which was written and recorded by JJ Cale. I do like this one better. How about you? Is it the song you don't like or Clapton singing it that bothers you?



BTW, JJ Cale also wrote and recorded the song After Midnight, which Clapton also covered.
 
Well, here's the original version of the song, which was written and recorded by JJ Cale. I do like this one better. How about you? Is it the song you don't like or Clapton singing it that bothers you?



BTW, JJ Cale also wrote and recorded the song After Midnight, which Clapton also covered.



i hate drug promoting music....i don't even like george thoroughgood, too many brand references...(strangely, i love drinking homebrew though)
 
I have moderately severe tinnitus and part of the brain's coping mechanism is endless, jukebox-like audio hallucinations. Its like a non-stop stream of earworms, and even hearing a song I like that I haven't heard in a while can get it stuck in an endless loop. My trick to silence the music is to envision a jukebox, then walk over to it and yank the cord out of the wall. Ahh, silence. That hasn't been working lately so I've been forcing the song to switch to something less 'sticky', and once I can get that looping it will slowly fade out. I also listen to the local jazz station or polish-language station since I dont know any of the songs and they are unlikely to stick.

My all-time worst ear worm tho is limelight by rush. I seriously hate geddy lee's vocal style.
 
Or Sugarland's Stuck Like Glue.

I was working at a grain elevator when that song was popular, we had a radio in the room that we'd stack seed in. I kept it on a country music station because even though I much prefer country music pre-2000 to country music post 2000, I still like most post-2000 country music more than most other music on the radio.

That awful song was on every half hour.

I'm still traumatized.
 
I have moderately severe tinnitus and part of the brain's coping mechanism is endless, jukebox-like audio hallucinations. Its like a non-stop stream of earworms, and even hearing a song I like that I haven't heard in a while can get it stuck in an endless loop. My trick to silence the music is to envision a jukebox, then walk over to it and yank the cord out of the wall. Ahh, silence. That hasn't been working lately so I've been forcing the song to switch to something less 'sticky', and once I can get that looping it will slowly fade out. I also listen to the local jazz station or polish-language station since I dont know any of the songs and they are unlikely to stick.

My all-time worst ear worm tho is limelight by rush. I seriously hate geddy lee's vocal style.
JayJay are you serious??? I have that same exact issue. For a few years I have had the looped jukebox playing in my head I cant sleep at night. I thought I was the only one with that problem. It seems to be the last song I heard during the day before bed.
 
Or Sugarland's Stuck Like Glue.

I was working at a grain elevator when that song was popular, we had a radio in the room that we'd stack seed in. I kept it on a country music station because even though I much prefer country music pre-2000 to country music post 2000, I still like most post-2000 country music more than most other music on the radio.

That awful song was on every half hour.

I'm still traumatized.
My wife loves that song...However the lead singer of Sugarland...I cant stand her voice. Seems shes drawing out the country twang too forcibly...just be real. I mean c'mon , who says Cowfy (coffee) ??
 
I don't dislike Sugarland like I do Rascal Flatts, but that song was bad, and it was played all the freaking time.
 
JayJay are you serious??? I have that same exact issue. For a few years I have had the looped jukebox playing in my head I cant sleep at night. I thought I was the only one with that problem. It seems to be the last song I heard during the day before bed.
Do you experience ringing in the ears too? I hear a couple of high-pitched frequencies all the time, though sometimes I only notice them when there is a sudden pitch change. I think it is caused by barometric changes or maybe stress levels. Anyway, I read somewhere that all of the human senses actively try to reorganize and filter the information sent to the brain in a process called "sensory information reduction"; in the case of tinnitus the brain is constantly bombarded by useless sound input (ringing) so your auditory meatus tries to compensate by synthesizing other frequencies to try and desensitize the brain and somehow it draws on sound memories to do so. Information reduction is why when you stare motionless at something and don't blink, your vision field will eventually grey out; its allowing you to react to the more important sensation of movement instead. This is also why people become 'scent blind' to constant smells, it allows them to focus on new or dynamic information, like a fart.
 
Put me on the severe tinnitus list too.
Funny... I love Pink Floyd upper range guitar, but any type of twangy fiddle, or Bob DYLAN'S harmonica makes me wanna chew nails.
 
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I have moderately severe tinnitus and part of the brain's coping mechanism is endless, jukebox-like audio hallucinations. Its like a non-stop stream of earworms, and even hearing a song I like that I haven't heard in a while can get it stuck in an endless loop. My trick to silence the music is to envision a jukebox, then walk over to it and yank the cord out of the wall. Ahh, silence. That hasn't been working lately so I've been forcing the song to switch to something less 'sticky', and once I can get that looping it will slowly fade out. I also listen to the local jazz station or polish-language station since I dont know any of the songs and they are unlikely to stick.

My all-time worst ear worm tho is limelight by rush. I seriously hate geddy lee's vocal style.

I have tinnitus, too. More in my left ear than the right, but it's there, 24/7. I get those earworms. Brain playing tricks to compensate for the noise, perhaps. If I hear a couple notes of something, the whole song will pop into my head, playing over and over. Even if it's not the actual song, but something that sounds close to part of the melody, it will trigger it. Yesterday I heard a 3-note chime in a store that matched the first three notes of the glockenspiel intro of Strawberry Letter 23. That song stuck around for hours, until the next one segued into the stream.
 
Do you experience ringing in the ears too? I hear a couple of high-pitched frequencies all the time, though sometimes I only notice them when there is a sudden pitch change. I think it is caused by barometric changes or maybe stress levels. Anyway, I read somewhere that all of the human senses actively try to reorganize and filter the information sent to the brain in a process called "sensory information reduction"; in the case of tinnitus the brain is constantly bombarded by useless sound input (ringing) so your auditory meatus tries to compensate by synthesizing other frequencies to try and desensitize the brain and somehow it draws on sound memories to do so. Information reduction is why when you stare motionless at something and don't blink, your vision field will eventually grey out; its allowing you to react to the more important sensation of movement instead. This is also why people become 'scent blind' to constant smells, it allows them to focus on new or dynamic information, like a fart.
Not all the time. I do get random ringing of the ears, reminds me of in beneath the planet of the apes when the one underground dude blasted taylor with high pitches in his brain. They come on sudden but only last a moment.
 
Do you experience ringing in the ears too? I hear a couple of high-pitched frequencies all the time, though sometimes I only notice them when there is a sudden pitch change. I think it is caused by barometric changes or maybe stress levels. Anyway, I read somewhere that all of the human senses actively try to reorganize and filter the information sent to the brain in a process called "sensory information reduction"; in the case of tinnitus the brain is constantly bombarded by useless sound input (ringing) so your auditory meatus tries to compensate by synthesizing other frequencies to try and desensitize the brain and somehow it draws on sound memories to do so. Information reduction is why when you stare motionless at something and don't blink, your vision field will eventually grey out; its allowing you to react to the more important sensation of movement instead. This is also why people become 'scent blind' to constant smells, it allows them to focus on new or dynamic information, like a fart.

Holy ****!
I have severe tinnitus and always wondered why I have the jukebox issue.
I always wake up with a dam song looping and most of the times it’s a real ****** one, sometimes it’s one I like and then can’t listen to for a month or more afterwards! **** changes randomly the whole time I’m awake.

God help me if I dream and there is some g&@amn commercial jingle involved!!!

“So easy you can do it in your underwear”
God I f$&kin hate Give me the Vin!!!!!!
 
Wow, seems like a lot of people here suffer from tinnitus.. Any of you notice that the ringing and the jukebox get significantly worse when hungover?
 
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