Spyke
sh.itjust.works

Jimmy Buffett

  • Released over 30 albums since the early 1970s, of which nine were multi-platinum
  • Worth over $500m when he died in 2023
  • To the best of my knowledge, never even on the radar in the UK or Europe.

I grew up in the UK in the 80s & 90s, which seems to be the period he was really becoming huge in the US, and I had never heard of him until he died a couple of years ago.

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spearzreply
lemmy.world

Correct. Never heard of him. Sounds like a fat man at a wedding.

9

You’re not far off. His true draw was getting drunk at the massive tailgate parties in the parking lot. I barely remember the few actual concerts I went into.

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tetris11reply
lemmy.ml

Same with Willie Nelson.

Know the name, know roughly what he looks like through parodies, no idea about his music

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tetris11reply
lemmy.ml

Wow, TIL! Thanks for this, I was so sure you were mistaken

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4amreply
lemm.ee

Not according to them

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4amreply

gestures broadly at Brexit

It’s a joke, mate

1

According to who? The UK, and I live in Wales btw, is part of the European continent. The myopic, bigoted people of the UK voted to leave the EU which is a political institution not to be confused with Europe as a continent.

7

They are not a part of the European union oké Zwitserland and Norway but they are a part of Europe.

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watsonreply
sopuli.xyz

You aren't missing anything. He made a bunch of really idiotic music.

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lemmy.world

I had never heard of the (frankly horrible) band "Train" until recently.

15

Train was (is still?) quite big in Netherlands at least. Drops of Jupiter and Hey, Soul Sister topped the charts

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willreply
lemm.ee

It’s hard to imagine stoner bands not doing well in Europe. Maybe it’s just because they’d start heading across the pond, get distracted, and turn around?

4

I guess we had enough of our own stoner bands (or stoned-friendly bands) with the likes of Pink Floyd; Yes; Jethro Tull; Hawkwind; Ozric Tentacles; Emerson, Lake & Palmer, etc.

Though American acts like Frank Zappa and Canadian acts like Rush made inroads.

1

I’d heard of them but hadn’t ever heard any of their music before I lived in the US for a bit.

1

In the Netherlands they are well known. They played on Pinkpop festival in the mid 90s.

5

As a European: I was asked to play wagon wheel for a small party recently. . I didn’t know the song and I learned that would’ve been pretty unlikely in the USA.

0
lemmy.world

I think the U.S. exports a fair amount of media and personalities involved in it, while other countries don't necessarily do as much. RRR or Ne Zha 2 might have been box office monsters in India or China (respectively) but not nearly as much here, while Avengers and the like do absolute numbers the world over. Kpop has started to gain international appeal (e.g. BTS) but thats about it.

I think a fair amount of country likely doesn't escape the states. Or at least I haven't heard of a big chunk of folks rockin out to Shania Twain or whatev.

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lemmy.dbzer0.com

Unfortunately I can report that Shania Twain scored a couple of big hits this side of the pond

6

King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard

they play HUGE venues over there

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sh.itjust.works

Country artists. Even Dolly Parton and Johnny Cash are unknown to most of Europe.

3

That is taking it a bit too far. Dolly Parton and Johnny Cash are definitely known, especially because they kinda crossed over into over genres than straight country, but 99% of other country artists aren't.

7

Dolly Parton and Johnny Cash certainly are known.
They don't make ridiculous hillbilly garbage.

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lemmy.world

There's a lot of musicians who are huge in Europe, but not in the US

Is that true?

2

Oasis, Blur, Pulp, Primal Scream, Queen, The Jam, Status Quo, ABBA, Cliff Richard, Mando Diao, Manic Street Preachers, Take That, The Libertines….

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You reached the end