Fall Out Boy (f)
Grateful Dead (m) x3
ACDC (f) x2
ACDC (m) x3
Blue Oyster Cult(m)
Wolfmother (m)
Velvet Revolver (m)
Bob Marley (f)
Misfits (m)
Corruption of Blood (m)
Nine Inch Nails (m) x2
Iron Maiden (m)
Skavenger (m)
Deftones (m)
Nirvana (f) x3
Nirvana (m) x4
Crime Scene (m)
Doors (m)
Doors (f)
Metallica (m)
Chimaira (m)
Ratt (m)
stones (f) x3 (1 tote bag)
Korn (m)
Flaming lips (m)
Tool (m)
The Darkness (m)
Linkin Park (m)
Ozzfest (m)
Dave Matthews (m)
Jimmy Buffet (m)
Tooth and Nail (m) (A record label?)
Zeppelin (m)
Skynyrd (m)
Lamb of God (m)
Megadeath (m)
Alice Cooper (f)
Miles Davis (f)
Under Oath (m) [With a gun for the r. Doesn't seem to be the Christian metal band)
Queen (m)
Insane Clown Posse (f)
Saves the day (f)
Motorcycle (f)
System of a Down (m)
Pantera (m)
Blink 182 (f)
Ben Kweller (f)
Cradle of Filth (m)
John Lennon (m)
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5 comments:
So, as Jim Morrison and Jimi Hendrix were to our generation as youngsters, so Kurt Cobain is to today's youth?
Looks that way. Of course Jim Morrison himself seems to be hanging on as a rock icon for youth. In general, a lot of these t-shirts are for artists who are really fucking old.
I wonder if I can earn cred with my students by telling them about the times I saw Nirvana before they got famous.
Also, don't forget Ratt! Another great contribution our generation has passed on to the next.
No, no. I must forget Ratt.
Also? No college student has any reason to wear a Jimmy Buffett shirt. What is he, like, 52?
He's 18 or 19.
My band-t-shirt-wearing 50-something student wore the Iron Maiden shirt.
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