I think the newest music on my computer is the Sweeney Todd soundtrack (and that's from a 1979 musical). Speaking of which, either 1979 or 2007 still puts it on the new end of my collection. Yeah, I'm not kidding. LOL.
Well, I do have every song every played or referenced in Buffy, the Vampire Slayer and Angel: the Series, which takes me up to 2004! That's an achievement! Granted, the songs I tend to play from that are the oldies and '90s Bronze stuff.
The two biggest folders on my computer (that aren't video) are Elvis Presley and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart .mp3s.
The rest of my collection is various soundtrack material with a heavy load of John Williams (Star Wars and Indiana Jones), Danny Elfman (Sleepy Hollow, Edward Scissorhands, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Beetlejuice and Batman Returns), Judy Garland, Desi Arnaz, numerous Disney film and ride soundtracks (oh, yeah, the sounds of Disneyland!), The Partridge Family, The Sound of Music soundtrack, the Hocus Pocus soundtrack, the Evita soundtrack, the Popeye soundtrack, the Willy Wonka soundtrack, the Pete's Dragon soundtrack, Pirates of the Caribbean soundtracks, The Wrath of Khan soundtrack (mostly for that Amazing Grace instrumental), the Anastasia soundtrack, Lara's Theme, the What A Wonderful World instrumental from Meet Joe Black, the Unchained Melody instrumental from Ghost, One Last Wish from Casper, etc...
In other words, 2007's Sweeney Todd is truly the newest thing on my computer as far as music goes. Second newest would be PotC3. PotC and Sweeney aside, even my soundtracks are getting old.
The '90s were the last decade that I remotely kept up with pop-culture (movies that I saw as a kid and pop music that I was subjected to). And it still seems new to me!
Almost every song that I've heard from the last 10 years was probably on a fanvid that I watched on YouTube.
I've never heard any of these Lady Gaga people. Really. I'm only 22 years old, too. I even get upset that the oldies station doesn't play old enough music. ROFLMAO. Damn the new oldies radio trend of post-mid-'60s only. And I rupture a blood vessel every time the oldies radio station plays something that doesn't qualify as "golden oldies". Certain genres and eras should never invade that category.
Well, I do have every song every played or referenced in Buffy, the Vampire Slayer and Angel: the Series, which takes me up to 2004! That's an achievement! Granted, the songs I tend to play from that are the oldies and '90s Bronze stuff.
The two biggest folders on my computer (that aren't video) are Elvis Presley and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart .mp3s.
The rest of my collection is various soundtrack material with a heavy load of John Williams (Star Wars and Indiana Jones), Danny Elfman (Sleepy Hollow, Edward Scissorhands, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Beetlejuice and Batman Returns), Judy Garland, Desi Arnaz, numerous Disney film and ride soundtracks (oh, yeah, the sounds of Disneyland!), The Partridge Family, The Sound of Music soundtrack, the Hocus Pocus soundtrack, the Evita soundtrack, the Popeye soundtrack, the Willy Wonka soundtrack, the Pete's Dragon soundtrack, Pirates of the Caribbean soundtracks, The Wrath of Khan soundtrack (mostly for that Amazing Grace instrumental), the Anastasia soundtrack, Lara's Theme, the What A Wonderful World instrumental from Meet Joe Black, the Unchained Melody instrumental from Ghost, One Last Wish from Casper, etc...
In other words, 2007's Sweeney Todd is truly the newest thing on my computer as far as music goes. Second newest would be PotC3. PotC and Sweeney aside, even my soundtracks are getting old.
The '90s were the last decade that I remotely kept up with pop-culture (movies that I saw as a kid and pop music that I was subjected to). And it still seems new to me!
Almost every song that I've heard from the last 10 years was probably on a fanvid that I watched on YouTube.
I've never heard any of these Lady Gaga people. Really. I'm only 22 years old, too. I even get upset that the oldies station doesn't play old enough music. ROFLMAO. Damn the new oldies radio trend of post-mid-'60s only. And I rupture a blood vessel every time the oldies radio station plays something that doesn't qualify as "golden oldies". Certain genres and eras should never invade that category.