User:Juand.1974
Hey, how are you doing? My name's Juan and I'm a 20 year old, seventh semester History student. For a Digital Humanities class, I had to edit a Wikipedia article as part of an assignment, which helped me realize how accessible and simple it was to do. Since then, I've been hooked, editing and collaborating on articles related to my interests. These are mostly music-related, as I'm what you might call a "melomaniac." Although most of my edits focus on album-related articles, I hope to contribute to other topics based on my other passions and the skills I'm developing at university, as well as those I'll continue to develop as a historian.
I'm still new to Wikipedia and I'm constantly learning. I find being an editor to be very satisfying and even therapeutic. Editing Wikipedia articles has become one of my favorite hobbies.
About me
[edit]My name's Juan David. I was born in Bogotá, Colombia, on July 19, 2004, where I've lived most of my life. On two separate occasions, due to my father's job, I lived in the U.S. The first time was when I was around 8, in Columbus, Georgia, and the second was when I was around 14, in McLean, Virginia, where I experienced both middle and high school. We returned to Colombia in 2019, and I graduated from high school in June 2021. I started college shortly after, in the month following graduation, to pursue a degree in History (my first day of classes happened to coincide with my birthday). Although I'd like to say I always knew History was what I wanted to study, I was unsure at the time and worried about regretting my choice or not finding my passion. Now, however, I can confidently say it was the right decision, and I can't imagine majoring in anything else (something that makes me forget how uncertain I once was). I live with my mother and have a pet cat I adore. I love history, music, sitcoms and action shows, cleaning and organizing, and now, editing Wikipedia articles.
I started university in July 2021, technically at 16 years old. My first semester was rough due to various personal issues, which were worsened by the fact that classes were online. Each semester after that has been better, and they continue to be great. I've learned, grown, and challenged myself a lot.
Music
[edit]Music is one of the most important aspects of my life. It is with me daily, from the moment I wake up to the moment I go to bed. It wasn't always this way, though. I’d say I found my passion for music during my first semester of university. It was a very rough time for me, both socially and personally, and music became a coping mechanism that helped me get through it and improve. It saved me then, just as it has many other since.
Looking back, until the second half of 2021, music had never been an important part of my life. As a child, I remember periods of time when, once in a while, I would listen to or watch the video of a catchy, popular song. During 5th or 6th grade, I vaguely remember having a playlist. Listening to it wouldn't be very frequently. Still, I always seemed to have an affinity for older music. Whether it was because of what my mother and uncle sometimes played when I was growing up, a random innate attraction, or some other reason I’m unaware of—or perhaps a mix of these—I can't say. But no matter what, older music always spoke to me.
My love for music really only started in the last months of 11th grade (our senior year here in Colombia). For some odd reason, I had "Mamma Mia" by ABBA stuck in my head. I distinctly remember watching the song's music video on YouTube (the main and only way I consumed music back then) and clicking on the one for "Waterloo" out of curiosity. That moment marks the official beginning of my passion and craze for music. From what I remember, it got stuck in my head, and I kept re-watching it. This led me to explore more of their other hits (I already knew songs like "Dancing Queen" and "Chiquitita," of course), and I slowly became obsessed. I don’t seem to be one for moderation or happy mediums, but rather for extremes: I went from someone who could care less about listening to music and who wondered how people could say they couldn’t live without it, to someone completely immersed in it.
Music was a cure I found for the isolation I felt and put myself in during that first semester. It was the time when I really got into it. ABBA was my jam (and still is), but I was obsessed. For about a year, I listened to their entire discography nonstop and learned the lyrics to all their songs. I read about them a lot, too. This process later included Frida and Agnetha's English solo work, which garnered the same level of obsession and time. I created a Spotify account, an app I’ve used daily ever since, and my main playlist was, of course, an ABBA one, which at the time didn’t allow me to listen to other artists. During this period, however, I remember listening to artists like Cyndi Lauper and Stevie Wonder, though I had no real way to listen to them consistently—something I didn’t really care for at the time.
My ABBA-only era lasted until 2023. The start of the year saw me get into the Bee Gees, since I considered them a similar group to ABBA and figured I’d like them. I did. The problem was that I kept using the same obsessive methodology and didn’t have any mixed or large playlists. All of them were divided by artist and included the songs and albums I considered "finished," which involved listening to an album a good number of times until I felt familiar enough with its songs and style to "approve" it. Since then, I’ve gone through many phases, or what I call specific content consumption periods, which do not entail a linear evolution or the forgetting and discarding of previous ones. It is more of a cumulative effort in which any "old songs" (ones that I listened to and focused on longer ago) ferment and age; my appreciation for them keeps growing.
Around February of the same year (part of my Bee Gees phase happened to coincide with my driving course in January), I decided to create a comprehensive playlist that included all '70s and '80s songs that I liked and could remember, all the way back to my childhood. At the time, I was very selective and didn’t care much for the '60s or '90s, and even less for any songs past the 2000s. I named it Das Musikal, themed around Marxist imagery, with a description that read, "Artists of the world, unite," a clear parody of Das Kapital and "Workers of the world, unite!". It remains my pride and joy and is the playlist I use most today, featuring more than 2,100 songs as of writing (2,355 as of the newest edit). Along with Das Musikal, I decided to create a list on my Notes app. Along with the playlist, I decided to create a list in my Notes app. It initially consisted of about 10 to 15 artists I wanted to explore more. Now, it contains over 300 artists and includes many other categories. It’s not very organized, to say the least, and definitely requires some filtering by year, decade, region, etc. The creation of the playlist and list is what I consider the start of my "melomaniac journey," marking a shift from obsessively exploring certain artists to wanting to explore as many as I can, from a varied range of genres and places. From that point on, my life has continued to change, thanks to the many music phases I’ve experienced and the special artists with whom I’ve truly connected.
Favorite artists / bands
[edit]Among all the artists and bands I have explored, my favorites, based on what they mean to me and to my life at a particular time and in no particular order, are:
Juan "approved" albums
[edit]List of albums I can say I've really listened to. Approval is based on the amount of times I've played them, how familiar I am with them, and how much they keep growing on me, like fine wine.
# | Title | Artist(s) | Year |
---|---|---|---|
1 | A | Agnetha Fältskog | 2013 |
2 | ABBA | ABBA | 1975 |
3 | ABBA: The Album | ABBA | 1977 |
4 | After Dark | Andy Gibb | 1980 |
5 | Arrival | ABBA | 1976 |
6 | Chess (remastered deluxe edition) | Various | 1984 |
7 | Children of the World | Bee Gees | 1976 |
8 | Christine McVie | Christine McVie | 1984 |
9 | E.S.P. | Bee Gees | 1987 |
10 | Escape | Journey | 1981 |
11 | Eyes of a Woman | Agnetha Fältskog | 1985 |
12 | Flowing Rivers | Andy Gibb | 1977 |
13 | Footloose (soundtrack) | Various | 1984 |
14 | I Stand Alone | Agnetha Fältskog | 1987 |
15 | Knee Deep in the Hoopla | Starship | 1985 |
16 | Living Eyes | Bee Gees | 1981 |
17 | Love Among the Cannibals | Starship | 1989 |
18 | Main Course | Bee Gees | 1975 |
19 | My Colouring Book | Agnetha Fältskog | 2004 |
20 | No Protection | Starship | 1987 |
21 | Now and Forever | Air Supply | 1982 |
22 | Ring Ring | ABBA | 1973 |
23 | Rumours | Fleetwood Mac | 1977 |
24 | Saturday Night Fever (soundtrack) | Bee Gees, various | 1977 |
25 | Shadow Dancing | Andy Gibb | 1978 |
26 | Shine | Frida | 1984 |
27 | Something's Going On | Frida | 1982 |
28 | Spirits Having Flown | Bee Gees | 1979 |
29 | Staying Alive (soundtrack) | Bee Gees, various | 1983 |
30 | Super Trouper | ABBA | 1980 |
31 | Tango in the Night | Fleetwood Mac | 1987 |
32 | The Breakfast Club (soundtrack) | Various | 1985 |
33 | The Dark Side of the Moon | Pink Floyd | 1973 |
34 | The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess | Chappell Roan | 2023 |
35 | The Visitors | ABBA | 1981 |
36 | Top Gun (soundtrack) | Various | 1986 |
37 | Toto | TOTO | 1978 |
38 | Toto IV | TOTO | 1982 |
39 | Voyage | ABBA | 2021 |
40 | Waterloo | ABBA | 1974 |
41 | Wish You Were Here | Pink Floyd | 1975 |
42 | Wrap Your Arms Around Me | Agnetha Fältskog | 1983 |
43 | Xanadu (soundtrack) | Olivia Newton-John and Electric Light Orchestra | 1980 |