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Peter Griffin
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Post by Peter Griffin »

Steal This Album - System of a Down

Music for the Jilted Generation - The Prodigy

The Best of Faith No More


Yeah ok, it's nothing new but so what?
Coles should sponsor Essendon because they're down and staying down!
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David
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Post by David »

Still listening to Gareth Liddiard. Do yourself a favour and check him out, I love his work.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
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HAL
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Post by HAL »

Which Beatles song is your favourite?
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David
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Post by David »

My brother's starting to pick up a few gigs here in Melbourne and up in Newcastle with his experimental music. Not sure it's my thing, but there's no doubt he's good at what he does:

http://paulheslin.com.au
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
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Pies4shaw
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Post by Pies4shaw »

MG, you will recognise the song Maxy sang to GivesmetheKoschitskes just before the bounce in the GF rematch:

"Let me tell you how it will be: one touch for you, 19 for me,
'Cause I'm the Backman, yeah I'm the Backman...."


On a more useful note, for anyone who may be interested, I bought a Rolling Stone special issue mag at the newsagent on the weekend on the Beatles' "100 Greatest songs". I don't normally buy magazines and I haven't read Rolling Stone since it gave a poor review to Cheap Thrills in 1968. But this book is a fantastic read (although I disagree with the list and the order in which the mag ranks many of the songs) and has great photos. A bit like "Cakewalk", really.

I can never decide which is my favourite Beatles' song. My daughter insists that "I'm Looking Through You" (from Rubber Soul) is the best by miles. I don't think it made Rolling Stone's "top 100" but then again neither did George's "The Inner Light", which is one of my personal favourites (B-side of "Lady Madonna", I think).
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John Wren
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Post by John Wren »

ministry of sound - the annual 2011. sounds awfully alot like stuff from the early 90s. have things come full circle.
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sharrod_theiceman
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Post by sharrod_theiceman »

I've been in a bit of an indie/alt rock phase at the moment. These are the albums that i've had on high rotation.

Titus Andronicus - The Monitor (angry american "punks" with a strange springsteen influence)
My pick/Track to download: A more perfect union

The Radio Dept. - Clinging to a Scheme (poppy electronic/indie, only 34 mins long but a great album)
My pick/Track to download: Heavens on fire

Harlem - Hippies (an album that seems like it's 40 odd years late, only small doses of this for me though)
My pick/Track to download: Tila and I

Free Energy - Stuck on Nothing (a great simple pop/indie album)
My pick/Track to download: Dream City

Spoon - Transference (probably the odd album out here, a bit bluesy, off beat a sort of organised chaos)
My pick/Track to download: Written in reverse/got nuffin


A few others in the rotation from other genres

Michael Franti & Spearhead - Sound of Sunshine (typical Franti release, will be on high rotation during summer)
My pick/Track to download: The Thing that helps me get trough

John Legend & The Roots - Wake Up! (put the voice of john legend together with the producing skills of the roots, great album)
My pick/Track to download:Our Generation

Christian Scott - Yesterday You Said Tomorrow (new orleans jazz album, the guy is only 26 and has already got some great stuff out there)
My pick/Track to download: none really, listen to it as an album

Them Crooked Vultures - Them Crooked Vultures
(dave grohl from the foo fighters and josh homme from queens of the stone age together)
My pick/Track to download: Mind eraser, no chaser

Tim Buckley - Greetings from L.A
(and oldie but a goodie, classic album.)
My pick/Track to download: Get on top:

Greenday - Dookie (see above)
My pick/Track to download: Longview
"I spent a lot of my money on booze, birds and fast cars...the rest I just squandered." - George Best
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David
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Post by David »

David wrote:My brother's starting to pick up a few gigs here in Melbourne and up in Newcastle with his experimental music. Not sure it's my thing, but there's no doubt he's good at what he does:

http://paulheslin.com.au
Can I just plug this again? This album is amazing. And I'm not just saying that. :P

http://lifeisnoise.com/2011/02/12/paul- ... bernecker/
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
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Yarra Falls End
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Post by Yarra Falls End »

Don't listen to much new music nowadays but like the folky sounds of Mumford and Sons.
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stui magpie
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Post by stui magpie »

Yarra Falls End wrote:Don't listen to much new music nowadays but like the folky sounds of Mumford and Sons.
You might like some of these guys stuff. The recordings are a little dated, I've seen them live recently and they kick arse. My cuz is their new bass player.

http://www.youtube.com/user/betweenthewarsau
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Donny
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Post by Donny »

The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra playing Queen.

Excellent backing tracks to practice my soloing over. Well, for a start, no Brian May to compete with. :)
Donny.

It's a game. Enjoy it. :D
watt price tully
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Post by watt price tully »

Bought 2 CD's today:

Supertramp: "Crime of the Century" brilliant album. I have it on LP vinyl but don't use the turntable as much as I would like these days.

James Brown A collection of his tracks on CD.
“I even went as far as becoming a Southern Baptist until I realised they didn’t keep ‘em under long enough” Kinky Friedman
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Pies4shaw
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Post by Pies4shaw »

watt price tully wrote:Bought 2 CD's today:

Supertramp: "Crime of the Century" brilliant album. I have it on LP vinyl but don't use the turntable as much as I would like these days.

James Brown A collection of his tracks on CD.
WPT,what it is that you like about (a)? This is not a put-down - I am genuinely asking, so feel free to "wax lyrical". I never took to Supertramp - but then I remember being grumpy that decade and it may be time to re-evaluate them.

As for me, this very instant it's Song with Orange from "Mingus Dynasty" by Charles Mingus.

This morning, it was "Leon Russell and the Shelter People". Since Leon is coming out to Australia (without Elton John, thank God) in April and it is the 40th anniversary of the recording of the last bunch of tracks on this splendid album, I have been annoying much of inner-Melbourne with it this morning. I love Of Thee I Sing. Leon's gospel piano was never hotter than this, Carl Radle's bass is as driving as it ever was and Leon's vocals are, as usual, barely listenable. :) But the real stars are Claudia Lennear and Kathi McDonald doing the "backing" vocals. For anyone interested (no, I fully appreciate that no-one reads this thread), Claudia was one of the "Raelettes" (Ray Charles' soul backing singers), at one time, but Leon signed her up around the time of the "Mad Dogs & Englishmen" Tour (you may remember her splendid, typically quirky, Leon arrangement of Let It Be in the film) and she stayed on with him for his first couple of solo albums. Kathi McDonald is one of the great unsung blues shouters (I mean that in the strict sense, not as a criticism) of the second half of the 20th Century. If you can get hold of it, her 1974 album "Insane Asylum" is a gem (brilliant covers of "To Love Somebody", with the Pointers before they went disco, and Insane Asylum, with Sly Stone, and some great session players - Aynsley Dunbar, Nils Lofgren, Ronnie Montrose, John Cippolina and Ronnie Montrose). Chris Wilson, if you read this, you can have your copy of "Insane Asylum" back when you return my copy of "Thirty Seconds Over Winterland".
watt price tully
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Post by watt price tully »

^^ They are not my favourite band let me say that from the outset. I like a wide & eclectic range of music. Over the last 20 yrs or so its been mostly blues, Dr John, Prof Longhair, Mose Alison, Jimmy Smith, Frank Zappa, Pat Metheny Band, David Bromberg band, Talking Heads, Brian Eno, 801, Stomu Yomashta, Chris Hinze, Dinah Washington, the Nylons the list goes on...etc.

However there are some brilliantly produced albums that sound so good on the turntable. I've got a modern valve amp & when that warms up the sound of some albums over others makes it quite magical to the senses. These albums include but not confined to:

Joni Mitchells "Blue"
Genesis Live
Crime of the Century
Ricky Lee Jones's self titled Album

As for Crime of the Century I like the vocals, 12 string guitar, piano, clarinet & organ rather than synthesizer - particularly for side two of the album. This climaxes with the last song the title track - beautiful guitar work, emotional in that it it has brought me to tears on a good few occasions

Supertamp is not one of my favourite bands per se, their other Albums are not as good compared to this - but this album is brilliant - a really good combination of voice, lyric, guitar, piano etc. Basically it just sounds great & strikes an emotional chord with me!

I'd just spent money on my daughters car getting the pre existing car audio reparied ( another story) but the sound system is brilliant for her 1993 Honda (previously owned by an audiophile). So I've been driving it & thought Crime of the Century would sound so good on her classy system!

I was listening to Chris Wilson on 3 RRR being interviewd last saturday morning (even though I'm a PBS subsrciber).
“I even went as far as becoming a Southern Baptist until I realised they didn’t keep ‘em under long enough” Kinky Friedman
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Pies4shaw
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Post by Pies4shaw »

Thanks, WPT. I'll give the Supertramp a listen - you make a persuasive case for it.

And the Dr and the Professor at the head of a great list! Love their work. And on "Crawfish Fiesta", the pair of them together in actual hi-fi.

Funny you mention Jimmy Smith. I was listening to "The Sermon" recently. The Hammond - a very special sound: almost big enough on that album to match Lee Morgan's trumpet.
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