Music you HATE the most but once you LOVED it


Too young to die, too old to rock and roll.

When I was young I loved some music that, right now, I can not stand it anymore, like:

Mahavishnu Orchestra
Emerson, Lake and Palmer
Jeff Beck: "Blow by Blow" and "Wired". Curiosly, I still listen to the Jeff Beck Group.

I hear ya folks.
jesusa0
I didn’t actually love these two guys, just liked them. But boy do I dislike them now. Elton John and Tom Petty.
I got it! I hate it so much that I actually blocked it in my mind! 
Coldplay. 
Albums in my "garbage music" box, the guy actually fouled my love to "shoegazing" style. What a whore! 
I may be offending quite a few folks but, hey, you asked for Hate!...
Hate? No!, Zero, Nada, Not a single One! Does it make me a spineless coelacanth? I guess. I never liked Fleetwood Mac, or Jefferson Airplane, or ELP, or Dylan and still don't listen to 'em (but have the albums) Loved Uriah Heep, TD, Deep Purple, still listen to them... sometimes... not very often... well, maybe once every few years ;-)
Listened to the Side B of Abbey Road non-stop 40 years ago, haven't pulled this new 180g LP out in years, never even bothered to break the seal on Beatles Japanese stereo CD box set. Does it make me a Hater? NO, i guess, I just do not care any more... Which is even worse, maybe
Two categories that I like less:  artsy/psychedelic stuff like later Yes (think Topographic Oceans) or Strawberry Alarm Clock, Electric Prunes (yes, I had albums by both of those bands)
or rock bands recycling styles that were better done the first time, such as blues, bluegrass or earlier rock and roll.  Some Yardbirds and some Grateful Dead material comes to mind.  There's still a lot of stuff I like by both those bands.  In the blues category I have no problem with the original Fleetwood Mac.  I can still take Cream doing blues but I'd rather hear Cream doing SWLABR and Howling Wolf doing Spoonful, FWIW.

Also, I no longer like later Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna (with Papa John Creach) that I used to enjoy.  I still like the earlier stuff.
My taste changed radically in 1969 (my teen-combo opened for The New Buffalo---the remnants of Buffalo Springfield. Watching and listening to Dewey Martin play my drumset, with Bobby's brother Randy Fuller on bass, I had an epiphany. Just like "THAT"---the timeless finger-snap---I now "got" The Band. Finally!). I'm embarrassed to name some of the stuff I loved before it did, but will anyway. Nothing as bad as, say, Blue Cheer (perhaps the worst Band of all-time), but not that different, really. Iron Butterfly (oy!), Vanilla Fudge (yee gads!), Cream even, and yes, Jimi Hendrix. Okay, abhor is too strong a term for him. But not the others.

Alice Cooper, Aerosmith, Procol Harum have become hard to listen to.

Never did and still don't like James Taylor.

Used to be a huge KISS fan but now I'm down to listening to Dressed to Kill about twice a year and maybe Rock and Roll Over every other year. 

Used to be a Ted Nugent fan but good god I can't stand anything from him, can barely tolerate Great White Buffalo and that's a great tune!
NPR Newshour just had a segment with Virginia voters about the presidential election.. It was held in someone's house and on a bookcase in the rear of the room were vinyl records.  You could very clearly see Jeff Beck's "Wired". 

Just another reason to love America!
There's a painfully long list, which Alan Parsons Project stands at the top of. Pablo Cruise. Rick Wakeman. Dan Fogleberg. Tim Weisberg.

Ack, I though I could do this but it hurts too much to continue. Some things really are best forgotten.
Best example: MTV. I used to enjoy MTV as a source of new music. Late night shows like "120 Minutes" were great in the 80's. Today, the emphasis seems to be on reality shows about people with little or no redeeming value or rap artists who will not be remembered 6 months from now because they will be in prison. Do you really want to hang out with Snookie? It used to be about music.
Okay, as already said, "hate" would be a little strong for any of this, but...

Doobie Brothers -- loved tunes like "One Step Closer" when I was in high school...
ELP -- yes and no. Just cued up Tarkus on vinyl for the first time in many moons and it sounded great. Still like a lot of "Trilogy." Brain Salad Surgery's become unlistenable for me, though.
Al Jarreau...
Okay, as already said, "hate" would be a little strong for any of this, but...

Doobie Brothers -- loved tunes like "One Step Closer" when I was in high school...
ELP -- yes and no. Just cued up Tarkus on vinyl for the first time in many moons and it sounded great. Still like a lot of "Trilogy." Brain Salad Surgery's become unlistenable for me, though.
Al Jarreau...
I think you all really hate these groups like you've come to hate being married.
Okay, I gotta defend Bob.

Ain't no way you can hate any album that has "One Too Many Mornings" on it.

Period.
-ELP had big skill but may have been a bit McClassical and heavy on the cheese.
-Still have enough brain left to know that the 1st two Mahavishnu Orchestra albums suffer no similar defects and are solid inspired works that dwarf nearly every rock or electric jazz recording ever made.
-Never was in love w/ the 80's King Crimson or Genesis stuff, but like it less now than I did when it first came out.
-On last hearing, Herbie Hancock /Future Shock seemed pretty weak and way inferior to the record I thought it was.
Led Zeppelin's Stairway to Heaven. Had my first french kiss with my future ex-wife at a dance during the song. Heard it so many times that I can't stand it anymore. Whenever I hear it on radio, I change stations.
Doobie Brothers, ELO, Wings (all McCartney post Beatles), U2, Boston. Listen to all the dead guys now from the jazz and classical catalogs!
Did any of you love Vanilla Fudge when they first broke on the scene? I tried to listen to their first album a while ago and couldn't believe how terrible they were! I remember thinking that they were really "heavy" back then, must have been stoned! LOL!!
I like YES and did not mean to speak badly of their musical ability or their creativity. They are VERY good, but they tend to be hit or miss in their catalogue IMO.
actually, i think chris squires bass often imparted a unique flavor of soul into a good bit of yes' music.
Don't get me wrong, YES is an awesome band, and they are members of the great Pantheon. I think what I should have said is that they tend to be hit or miss for me, with their strong songs being damn good and their weaker ones being...well, weak.
Leave Yes alone. My all time Progressive rock favorite. Wish the "Yessongs" remaster was better quality. It will always be a one of a kind great to me. True their music had no soul, but soulless? That's just not fair. They were musical virtuosos.
"YES, OTOH, is on my list of music that I loved when I was younger but sounds a bit soulless to me now"

News flash:

Yes never had any soul to start with.

Well, maybe with "owner Of A Lonely Heart", but even that's a stretch.

I've seen them 5 times in concert and still consider them to be classic and worth fresh listens though.
Man, I probably wore out at least 5 Cat Stevens albums; and by wore out, I mean I smoothed them grooves. Now, maybe a couple of times a year I'll toss in "Tea for the Tillerman" if I'm feeling kind of nostalgic or something. Out of nothing more than pure stubbornness, I might make it through 4 or 5 songs. Too bad really, I was just coming into adulthood when TFT came out and Cat served as philosopher most high to many of us back then. It's the same way with the "The Graduate". I might actually of set some kind of record for most viewings of a movie if it weren't for my buddy Frank and "Billy Jack".
Has2be i can agree more, i love all the music i loved then, and still do, music takes me to where i was at the time, and the memories. ow can i hate any of it, and i an old man 60, but i still dig Peter , Paul @ Mary. LOL
Bowie is stone classic and IMO never gets old. YES, OTOH, is on my list of music that I loved when I was younger but sounds a bit soulless to me now.
"What did the Deadhead say when he ran out of drugs?"

"Man, this band sucks!"
Lloydc

That's pretty funny Lloyd,mind if I use it?Hell,I'm gonna use it anyway,sue me!!!!
Sounds like a mid life crisis to me! I can't and won't go as far as hating music I once loved to listen to. That to me would be likened to hating or ignoring periods of your own life. It,s nice once and a while to rediscover some of it as much as its nice to discover new. Cheers
BTW I was down on ELP for a long time but came back around a few years ago.

How could I have been so foolish?
Welcome back, my friends, to the thread that never ends ...
Come inside, the show's about to start!
I predict you guys who liked but now hate ELP will regret it someday!

You might need a better stereo to appreciate it.

That or try some of the special conditioning you might have applied back then when you liked them again and see if that helps.

Zing!!!
"Another Side of Bob Dylan," "The Times They Are a-Changin'," and most of Mr. Zimmerman's catalogue post "Blood on the Tracks."
I think that as youthful idealism fades out with age, musical tastes for things like Jackson Browne and Cat Stevens and a lot of old hippy-like ideals tends to fade as well.

Its something worth trying to hold onto though. Idealism beats cynicism any day in my book! After all, not all hippies turned out to be superficial phonies, right?

A little cynicism to temper the idealism is usually a good idea too.

So no reason to categorically reject any kind of music in my mind. We need it all, like yin and yang.

Peace!

Glad nobody has listed "The Moody Blues", at least not yet.

Love Alan Parson's more than ever!
Well, you made things interesting by asking about "music that I now hate, that I used to love". (With the "used to love" bit making it pretty impossible for me to think of any music that falls into that category. If I loved some music before, I still at least like it, or tolerate it in the very worst cases. And any music that I actually hate, I don't think I ever liked, but perhaps I tolerated it. (i.e. Tolerating meaning that I wouldn't turn it off if it came on the radio.)

However, if you had said music that I now dislike, that I used to like, I can think of a few examples, including:

Foreigner
Styx
Jackson Browne
(Basically any of those bland '70s and '80's bands)

PS So Tan43,
Since you mentioned that you now hate "Disco", (which given the question means that you used to "LOVE" it), I am afraid that as a member of the Audiophile Police, we are hereby revoking your membership in the Audiophile community.
Sorry, but you gave us no choice!
Please turn in your turntable at the door on your way out!
;-)
Seals & Croft

I'll second Cat Stevens and Alan Parsons.

On the other hand, I've grown more fond of KC and the Sunshine Band, Nina Simone and Funkadelic (Maggot Brain). Ha!
Jeff
I can certainly relate to "Puerto", as I too listened to Oldies and Countrry music. All my country cd's I sold, and even tho I have hundreds of oldies, rarely do I listen to them. I am now into Classical, Smooth Jazz and Opera. What a change! My age must be showing!
Add to those already astutely listed:

Tangerine Dream
Roxy Music

"What did the Deadhead say when he ran out of drugs?"

"Man, this band sucks!"
Post removed 
Boston: limited catalog and way overplayed.

Gotta say Fleetwood Mac stock overall is down for me of late but still love a lot of their stuff and Lindsey Buckingham in particular.

Other than that I like most everything better today than before because my system is better and everything sounds better and even new and fresh in many ways. Especially the case with nicely remastered older R&R and R&B tunes.

Remastered Chuck Berry sounds absolutely kick-a-- these days. Never thought that before though I knew the tunes were classics.

I struggle with Miles Davis surprisingly sometimes these days, but have not given up there.

I'm also rediscovering a lot of tasty tidbits from that era that I used to think to be largely lost musically, the 80's.

And Duke Ellington is still a motherlode for me that I have only touched upon to-date.

"Most of the music from the 60's, 70's and 80's, it's all old news now! "

So is Bach, Mozart and Beethoven.

Still classic music though!
Not Hate, but...
Katrina & the Waves
The Go Go's
The Knack
Lena Lovich
and most of this genre during this time period.
Maybe we just "grow out" of certain music genres. I used to love the Oldies but Goodies - grew up with them - but now, even though there is a ton of them in my library, they rarely get listened to. Now it is some Classical (which I "hated" growing up) and easy listening jazz. We change! That's the beauty of music, it accommodates our ever evolving preferences for music.