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What have you been listening to?

Started by Allhallowsday, May 03, 2007, 02:08:57 AM

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Torgo

"There is no way out of here. It'll be dark soon. There is no way out of here."

zombie no.one


redsneaker

Juno - Soundtrack
Hedwig and the Angry Inch
Gackt-Diabolos
Bugsy Malone- Soundtrack
Queensryche - old stuff
"Strange and unexplained events are occuring."

HappyGilmore

Quote from: Allhallowsday on March 24, 2008, 03:05:33 PM
Quote from: HappyGilmore on March 24, 2008, 08:55:34 AM
I watched the film Godspell yesterday, the first time I've seen it.  Good flick, and it was kinda cool seeing a young Lynne Thigpin before she became known as an actress. 
I saw a bit of it, too.  Please note that the film soundtrack is altered from the original off-broadway show, with a new song added, and at least one original song protracted. 

STOOGES Raw Power; I listen to this just about everyday, which is saying a lot:

I was reading about that, with the soundtrack and the missing song.  Never saw it on Broadway or anything, but felt the movie was good.
"The path to Heaven runs through miles of clouded Hell."

Don't get too close, it's dark inside.
It's where my demons hide, it's where my demons hide.

Rev. Powell

Quote from: Allhallowsday on March 22, 2008, 08:36:37 PM
Quote from: Rev. Powell on March 22, 2008, 08:28:37 PM
I almost never end up liking dissonant free jazz, but every now and then I try a new album, thinking this time will be different.
Maybe next time.
Rev. Powell, I rarely have that opportunity anymore; if I pick it up, I know what it is.  Don't even have time but to pursue the many corridors of what I already love.  However, it is true that I have a stack of found CDs in my garage nearly as high as my head that I pick from occasionally, and those are mostly unknown or uninteresting artists to me... but y'never know, do you? 

For me this syndrome comes from the way digital downloading has changed the way I explore music.  I rarely buy CDs anymore.  I can sample almost everything on the Internet, download or preview a track or 2.  Nowadays I explore stuff I never would have been able to hear on the radio in the olden days (meaning the 1990s).  Free jazz, in particular, is something that tends to sound great to me in 30 second previews, and seems like a value because the tracks are so long.  Yet it always seems to disappoint when I hear the entire piece.  Still, I'm not out a load of cash as if I paid for a full CD.

I take many more chances on new music now, and listen to much more obscure stuff than I used to when I was a CD collector!  Sometimes I fear I'm neglecting the classics, and the major label releases.  But they don't need my patronage. 

For example, today I listened to



Jenny Scheinman - 12 Songs

Sample: The Buoy Song

Recommended by a friend, and the album was available to stream for free on last.fm.  It's on an experimental jazz label, but it's highly composed rather than improvised.  Very nice, mostly violin, guitar, clarinet and percussion, and reminiscent of attempts of American composers to capture the feel of American folk songs in light classical style.       
I'll take you places the hand of man has not yet set foot...

Allhallowsday

Quote from: Rev. Powell on March 24, 2008, 09:16:49 PM
For me this syndrome comes from the way digital downloading has changed the way I explore music.  I rarely buy CDs anymore.  I can sample almost everything on the Internet, download or preview a track or 2.  Nowadays I explore stuff I never would have been able to hear on the radio in the olden days (meaning the 1990s).  Free jazz, in particular, is something that tends to sound great to me in 30 second previews, and seems like a value because the tracks are so long.  Yet it always seems to disappoint when I hear the entire piece.  Still, I'm not out a load of cash as if I paid for a full CD.
Sounds like a great way to explore.  I'm not against it for myself except in the sense I'm a bit anti-tech and was an old long-time LP buyer.  Now, with the CDs, it's about obscurity in many cases and replacing LPs (since most of the CDs I own I bought many years ago before downloading) but also about liner notes, if you can believe that.  Notation is sometimes carried along and not edited from original issues, which is always of interest to me. 

Quote from: Rev. Powell on March 24, 2008, 09:16:49 PM
...Jenny Scheinman - 12 Songs... Very nice, mostly violin, guitar, clarinet and percussion, and reminiscent of attempts of American composers to capture the feel of American folk songs in light classical style. 
I think I heard some of JENNY SCHEINMAN on one of our satellite stations thru DirecTV.  Violin is unusual in Jazz, and one of the few contexts for that instrument that I love
Do you listen to the West Coast Cool School (my caps) type of jazz...?  See if you can sample MODERN JAZZ QUARTET
I just put on MJQ Django
If you want to view paradise . . . simply look around and view it!

HappyGilmore

"The path to Heaven runs through miles of clouded Hell."

Don't get too close, it's dark inside.
It's where my demons hide, it's where my demons hide.

KYGOTC

"I'm a man too, you know! I go pee-pee standing up!"

Allhallowsday

Listening to the best springtime album that I know, probably FRANK SINATRA's best, Only The Lonely 
If you want to view paradise . . . simply look around and view it!

Torgo

"There is no way out of here. It'll be dark soon. There is no way out of here."

Allhallowsday

NEIL YOUNG Decade... this is a great place to start with NEIL or to get most of his best early songs all in one package (it's 35 tracks). 
If you want to view paradise . . . simply look around and view it!

Rev. Powell

Quote from: Allhallowsday on March 24, 2008, 10:09:45 PM
Now, with the CDs, it's about obscurity in many cases and replacing LPs (since most of the CDs I own I bought many years ago before downloading) but also about liner notes, if you can believe that.  Notation is sometimes carried along and not edited from original issues, which is always of interest to me. 

Yeah, liner notes are the one thing I miss from physical CDs/LPs.  (I miss extensive album art from LPs, as well, but I can do without it).  Some things I will buy a physical copy of just because I want the notes. 

Quote from: Allhallowsday on March 24, 2008, 10:09:45 PM
Do you listen to the West Coast Cool School (my caps) type of jazz...?  See if you can sample MODERN JAZZ QUARTET

I love West Coast jazz, especially Dave Brubeck.  Also love the MJQ, although I don't have as much from them as I should. 

In a totally different vein, though, now listening to



David Kilgour - A Feather in the Engine

Sample: Today is Gonna Be Mine
I'll take you places the hand of man has not yet set foot...

Allhallowsday

JUDY GARLAND That Old Feeling; JUDY's never not good...to keep my own quote from being stolen somewhere: "She's the artist who keeps giving." 
If you want to view paradise . . . simply look around and view it!

Allhallowsday

Quote from: Rev. Powell on March 25, 2008, 08:33:43 PM
I love West Coast jazz, especially Dave Brubeck. 
Again urge SAMMY DAVIS Sings, LAURINDO ALMEIDA Plays and JUNE CHRISTY (particularly Something Cool and This Time Of Year, the latter her best record, hands down.) 
If you want to view paradise . . . simply look around and view it!

Brother Ragnarok

Currently in my CD case:
Oakhelm - "Betwixt and Between"  Ignoring the silly title, a fantastic folk/Viking/black metal band from, surprisingly enough, the U.S.

Murder By Death - "Red of Tooth and Claw" Imagine Nick Cave by way of Johnny Cash doing  rockabilly and sea shanties.  Introduced to them on the most recent Clutch tour.  Fantastic.

Melechesh - "Djinn" The sophomore release from the lords of Middle Eastern black metal.  One of my favorite bands of all time.

Tanglefoot - "Saturday Night in Hardwood Lake" Second major release from a fairly prolific Canadian folk band.  Another of my all-time favorites, and a blast to see live.

Behemoth - "Demigod"  Ever wonder what pure hatred would sound like if it were music?  This is it.

Devin Townsend Band - "Accelerated Evolution"  Devin Townsend is talented on an inhuman level.  Another prog-metal masterpiece from his amazing catalog.

Korpiklaani - "Tervaskanto"  The soundtrack to a Viking barfight, complete with fiddles, flutes, and yoiking.

Nile - "Annihilation of the Wicked" Ridiculously fast and heavy technical death metal meets the History Channel.  Frontman/guitarist/songwriter Karl Sanders is an Egyptology buff, and the lyrics are all based in the history and mythology of that land.  One of the few metal bands you can actually learn something from.
There are only two important things in life - monsters and hot chicks.
    - Rob Zombie
Rape is just cause for murdering.
    - Strapping Young Lad