What was your first music that you paid for?


In fifth grade I received a stereo for Christmas. What a mistake my parents made, I never stopped the hobby. My firat album was Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass with :What Now My Love" my first 45 was "Guitarzan by Ray Stevens and the first 8-track was Frijid Pink.

What was the first music you purchased?
jothompson
Bob Dylan's Highway 61 and the Temptations Greatest Hits (I think). Still a Dylan fan and am soon going to a reunion concert of the local R&B bands that played our high school dances. Some things never change.
Album: Jefferson Airplane " Takes Off " Still have it.
45 single: Tommy James and the Shondells " Cry Like A Baby "
Album: Simon And Garfunkle Wednesday Morning 3AM
45: Little Eva - Locomotion
But I was raised on my brothers Click Clack by Dikkie Do and the Donts! (that is really thier name)
First received a children's three-speed record player as a Christmas gift in 1962. Actually, I had the first LP devoted to music from the "Mickiey Mouse Club" television show in 1955, but never had anything to play it on. This album contained 26 songs from the show and featured Jimmie Dodd and a handful of Mouseketeers. Most of the songs featured Dodd and some backup adult vocalists, including Dodd's wife, Ruth Carrell Dodd. The album sold for $3.98 in 1955, not cheap by any means in those days. Still recall the album was purchased at "Crawford's Corndrs," a little department store in El Monte, California. The album survives today in good condition. Still sounds pretty good, too. There is a decent high fidelity quality about it.

Once the record player was in the house, my first album to go along with it was "The Alvin Show," featuring Ross "David Seville" Bagdasarian. Of course, the voices of Alvin, Simon and Theodore were also supplieed by Bagdasarian. His natural voice was sped up to twice the normal speed, thus creating the effect of Chipmunks. I am convinced many parents were driven batty by the Chipmunk records. Not so much by the voices of the Chipmunks, but by the sound of "David Seville" going postal at the end of each track.