What is spinning?

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  • 02-15-2008, 09:22 PM
    Spancticles
    sharon jones and the dap-kings
    100 days 100 nights
  • 02-16-2008, 08:25 AM
    jrhymeammo
    Sonny Rollings - Work TIme with Ray Bryant and Max Roach.
  • 02-16-2008, 09:50 AM
    jonnyhambone
    just picked up some great cd's from the library...
    Besnard Lakes - are the Dark Horse
    love this after a few spins. kinda that wierd 70's AM radio thing that keeps surfacing these days.
    Richard Buckner - Meadow
    Mekons - Honky Tonkin' and So Good It Hurts
    one of the best bands ever imo!
    Buddy Holly - Gold
    Bonnie Prince Billy - the Letting Go
    Sufjan Stevens - Michigan
    Juana Molina - Son
    Caetano Veloso - Noites do Norte
    Tom Ze - best of on Luaka Bop
    Tom Ze is the oddest of the Brazilian Tropicalismo guys I know of. that Beatles melody-thing with dark flourishes and unexpected production tricks...has something of the 'Scratch Perry' thing to him.
    Capt. Beefheart - Doc at the Radar Station
  • 02-17-2008, 05:21 PM
    jrhymeammo
    Another masterpiece by CAN. This album is so good that it deserves a skillful Copy and Paste action...


    http://www.listal.com/image/products...uture-days.jpg

    After Ege Bamyasi, Can delivered one of their best albums, and my own personal favorite. You will invariably find descriptors like "spacy" and "airy" in reviews of this one, and the levels of undisturbed calm and bliss to be found here make it an inevitability.
    In staunch contrast to the wired "Pinch" which opened up their last album, the title track that begins this effort is like walking along a beach with waves of liquid trazodone lapping under your feet. Sedated Damo Suzuki croons muffled vocals and Jaki Liebezeit provides a gentle, calypso shuffle sliding against a mincing generator rhythm and Schmidt's barely audible polyphonic synths. The music softly builds in volume to a melodic climax, then cedes into the distance.
    "Spray" picks up the pace and edge, with much of the track given to the inimitable chunk-chunk interlocking of Czukay's bass and Liebezeit's daunting polyrhythmic activity, combined with the psychedelic squiggles of Schmidt's organ. Yet the overall nature remains open and expansive.
    Despite its title, "Moonshake" actually provides a brief, earthier break, with beat and vocals largely harkening back to the band's previous two albums. But before they allow you to get too used to it, the band soon catapults you back into the clouds with "Bel Air."
    This relaxed epic, one of the band's truly finest moments, always reminded me somewhat of Pink Floyd's "Echoes" in the way it takes it time and simply explores. The piece always struck me as classically structured, having a basic sonata form resemblance. We might call the exposition section the main theme in C Major that opens the album, countered about 4:30 minutes in by a second C Minor theme. Perhaps a foreshadowing, as this theme goes on, the reigns loosen considerably. We might broadly cast Suzuki's re-entrance around 10:15 as the opening of a development section, with the original vocal theme getting messed around with (e.g., played against static chords rather than its original descending pattern). Then, the music blasts off, getting progressively more intense and abstract, before simply going supernova around the late 17-minute mark. From here, we have an instrumental recapitulation of the original music of the exposition. I'm sure I'm probably inaccurate in my understanding of how this piece doesn't adhere to the form, but in any case, it's a neat thing to argue and discuss.
    But in any case, both the band's musicianship and their sense of construction is certainly in peak shape with this album. The sound is mature and focused, the production well-balanced so that you can hear the contributions of each participant pretty clearly, even when they are low in the mix. People talk about the rush of skydiving...as for me, I'll just put on Future Days. An atypical entry in the band's catalog, yes, but one of their master strokes.
  • 02-19-2008, 06:39 PM
    bobsticks
    NP: http://www.bandweblogs.com/jeffbuckley.jpg

    Jeff Buckley~So Real, Songs From:

    A remastering of some of Buckley's more ethereal work, culminating, of course, with "Hallelujah" and "Je N'en Conais Pas La Fin". A little heat in the upper-mids make it almost feel like JB is leaning into that mic stagelights aglow.

    Before that the new Raveonettes' Lust Lust Lust, a thoroughly punchy affair...sometimes plodding, occasionally more lively though never breakneck, loopy, dissonant, stream-of-thought kinda stuff if that's your bag.
  • 02-23-2008, 06:04 PM
    jrhymeammo
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by bobsticks
    Those are great albums Bernd, one and all. The Iron and Wine didn't take long to grow on me, and probably would have been on the Most Listened To of 2007 had it been released a few months earlier.

    Peace

    Finally found a copy today.

    Shepherd's Dog is rotating smoothly for the second straight time. Nice rec'.
    Also, there was a coupon for free mp3 DL of an entire album.

    Tonight, I'll be listening to:

    Nick Drake - Fruit Tree

    http://www.avclub.com/content/files/...fruit-tree.jpg

    Have a great weekend to all,

    JRA
  • 02-23-2008, 06:14 PM
    bobsticks
    1 Attachment(s)
    Lemme talk on this...
    I'm spinning Nobody's YEC 2007 and I'm diggin' it the most. What a great collection and Sir D does us proud with the pacing of the dealio...Just when after Sheena Is A Parasite has rended your face from your skull on comes the The Good, The Bad, and the Queen. Gracias, mi amigo.

    Before that was yet another spin of the new British Sea Power. I've heard comparisons to Arcade Fire and the word "churchlike" bandied about...and I'd agree except to say Church-like, as in The Church of Starfish fame...and mebbe The Libertines and some Interpol and, I swear to God, some Matt Johnson thrown in for good measure. Good stuff.


    Attachment 3361 http://worlds-fair.net/images/artist...kMusic_MED.jpg
  • 02-24-2008, 03:06 AM
    basite
    Jose James - The Dreamer,

    http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...bL._SS500_.jpg

    was playing last night...

    I can now happily recommend this album to everyone. He uses his voice like few others can. You could classify this under jazz, but he also does slight crossovers with soul/R&B...
    Exellent for late evenings...

    Keep them spinning,
    Bert.
  • 02-24-2008, 03:53 AM
    Brett A
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by jonnyhambone
    Mekons - Honky Tonkin' and So Good It Hurts
    one of the best bands ever imo!

    I'm with you on this one. I got to see the Mekons last autumn in Fall River Massachusetts. They did an all-acoustic show. They are an amazing collective, and friendly too. They staffed their own sales table!

    I love Beefheart and Bonnie Billy. (as well as others on your list) I have everything these two have put out---plus some. Far out.

    In my living room lately has been:
    • Freddy Cole -Music Maestro, Please
    • Kool Keith -Black Elvis/Lost in Space
    • Chet Baker Sings
    • Will Oldhan -Arise Therefore
    • Tom Waits -Foreign Affairs
    • Don Pullen -Montreux Concert
  • 02-24-2008, 07:47 PM
    bobsticks
    Welcome to the forums Brett A. Nice well rounded system ya got over there...and you're listening to some tunes too. Good stuff, keep 'em coming.

    The new project at work with a bare-bones skeleton crew and from the groundup...no computer feeds, so no tunage. Oh, the humanity...completely unacceptable working conditions...but fortunately there is home and hearth to soothe the raging beast. Tonight, a little Kenny Dorham Quiet Kenny (although I could do without the cover of "Mack The Knife") and Michael Hedges' Oracle courtesy of Hy-Fi. Mellow is the order of the day...

    http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...0L._AA240_.jpg [url] http://img.verycd.com/posts/0610/pos...1162172833.jpg
  • 02-25-2008, 06:08 AM
    Bernd
    1 Attachment(s)
    Some 20 years...
    ...ago, a member of my staff was going on and on about this record. How great it is and that he can't find it. He only ever heard it once. So through the years it sort of was at the back of my mind.
    So on my last trip to Berlin I stumbled into a second hand record shop and low and behold in the window there it was......the mysterious black disc.
    Played it just now for the first time and man it is good. Anybody knows anything about Triston Palma?

    Peace

    :16:
  • 02-27-2008, 07:44 PM
    bobsticks
    For the uninitiated, a little Blockhead album name of Uncle Tony's Coloring Book. Kinda hip-hop, kinda jazzy--a little hipper than the Verve projects, alot like Can meets Bootsie Collins with I Love Lucy samples...

    http://www.accesshiphop.com/images/covers/13831_b.jpg
  • 02-28-2008, 04:26 AM
    nobody
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by bobsticks
    I'm spinning Nobody's YEC 2007 and I'm diggin' it the most. What a great collection and Sir D does us proud with the pacing of the dealio...Just when after Sheena Is A Parasite has rended your face from your skull on comes the The Good, The Bad, and the Queen. Gracias, mi amigo.

    De nada. Glad you like it.

    That Blockhead thing looks interesting. I'm gonna hafta look that up.
  • 03-01-2008, 07:38 AM
    oatalay
    1 Attachment(s)
    May be one of the best CD records made ever.
    Fellow Audiophile Jon Iverson's Alternasia
    May be one of the best CD records made ever. By MA Recordings.
    You may see another 70 true audiophile selected albums at the following link

    link removed
  • 03-01-2008, 09:51 AM
    nobody
    http://images.trademe.co.nz/photoser...1/58790001.jpg
    Duke Ellington & Johnny Hodges: Blues Summit

    Vinyl reissue of both the Back to Back and the Side to Side albums Ellington recorded with his long time alto sax soloist. For these two records, Ellington turned over the reins and Hodges gets to lead the way with some small ensemble stuff, focused primarily on blues standards. Great mellow jazz hits the spot this morning.
  • 03-01-2008, 10:20 AM
    Brett A
    1 Attachment(s)
    Lamb Chop -Is a Woman perhaps the bast sounding CD in my collection. I almost always wind up listening to it beginning to end.


    I think now I am going to go listen to some Ken Nordine, probably Devout Catalyst.
  • 03-03-2008, 07:13 AM
    nobody
    http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov...64528etl6p.jpg
    Erykah Badu: New Amerykah, Pt. 1 (World War 4)

    New Badu and she comes pretty strong from the start. You get very little of her neo-soul stylings of the past here. This thing's all hip hop, mostly in the underground/experimental end of the spectrum. Lots of darkness and unusual beats all around. A little spotty in points and a bit convoluted, but some great tracks, like The Healer and others. The more you listen, the more its disjointed nature seems to fall together. I've played this a ton over the weekend, and it sounds better with passing plays. And, even if you're not into the whole heavy vibe of the record, she even tacked on a little r&b good time number in Honey at the end. The whole thing closes out with the promise of Amerykah Pt. 2 Return of the Ankh coming soon. I'm looking forward to it.
  • 03-03-2008, 05:12 PM
    Mr Peabody
    Nobody, did you get out to the record show Sunday? I was there briefly and managed to pick up 6 LP's and 3 discs. Last time I had about 30 LP's. There was a pretty big turn out.
  • 03-04-2008, 04:46 AM
    nobody
    Yeah, made it....grabbed this stuff...

    The Best of The Hep Tones (original studio 1 pressing)
    Yusef Lateef: The Gentle Giant
    Bashin' The Unprectible Jimmy Smith
    Al Green: Still in Love With You
    Teenage Head: Some Kinda Fun
    Al Green: Green Is Blues (German pressing I've never seen before)
    Fishbone (first ep)
    Malcolm McLaren: Swamp Thing
    Jimmy Rodgers: The Number One Ballads
    Louis Prima: The Wildest
    Fleetwood Mac: Rumors
    The Four Tops: Main Street People
    This Is Augustus Pablo
    The Return of the Marvelettes (with a great cover shot of them in western wear on horseback)

    Not a bad day, spent about 40 bucks and my turntable's been really busy ever since. What'd you end up with?

    And, yeah, big turnout. There was a line out the door when I got there a bit before 10. One of these times I gotta pay the early bird fee and get in there early just to see if it makes a big difference. Was gonna give that a shot this time, but overslept.
  • 03-04-2008, 07:11 AM
    Mr Peabody
    I got on disc:
    White Zombie - Superswingin Songs
    Nelly Fatado - Remember The Day (I think)
    Dwight Yoakum - There Was A Day

    LP:
    Bob James - Foxy
    Gladys Night & the Pips, not sure the title but not the one with Midnight Train
    Charlie - Lines
    Conway Twitty - Greatest, Vol. 1
    Buck Owens - Best of, this must just be for a certain label because it wasn't all inclusive by no means, I'll have to look at it closer.
    Freddie Fender - Before The Next Tear Drop Falls

    I have laying around a duplicate Jimmy Reed box set if you'd be interested. I have an idea but don't really know what he sounds like. I need to dig into one of them some day. I also have 60+ albums I've been procrastinating shipping off for consignment I'd sell reasonable to keep from shipping if any titles you can use. Most of them are Rock/Classic Rock. If this interests you at all, email me and we can try to get together one day.
  • 03-04-2008, 07:20 AM
    nobody
    Thanks. But, to be honest, classic rock really ain't much my thing. I'm not totally anti, and will occasionally grab a title, but generally never was a big KSHE guy or anything. That Gladys Night & the Pips should be fun. I don't get to the shows every time, but I'm always glad when I do. I rarely leave without some stuff I really like.
  • 03-04-2008, 07:56 AM
    Mr Peabody
    Same here, when going I don't really have much in mind to look for but usually find things that catch my interest.
  • 03-08-2008, 05:02 PM
    bobsticks
    I don't know how it is in anybody else's little corner of the world but 'round these parts we're getting the kind of snow usually reserved for Norman Rockwellesque Christmas panoramas...big, fluffy flakes lazily plodding to the ground. This Saturday night ain't for fighting,it's for hunkerin' down with some of the good stuff, which among other things includes 4 Generations of Miles.

    I'm not usually one for tribute compilations but Coleman, Stern, Carter, and Cobb? It's a nobrainer...especially considering it's from the Chesky label, able arbiters of both style and quality. A great live recording of Miles' 50's era material...

    http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...5L._AA240_.jpg
  • 03-09-2008, 06:48 AM
    nobody
    <img src="http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/drj800/j815/j81593a339a.jpg">
    <b>Autechre: Quaristice</b>

    Don't need no words on Sunday morning. Good, varied electronic weirdness from these fellas.
  • 03-09-2008, 09:00 AM
    audio amateur
    3 Attachment(s)
    These days, lots of and mosly...
    ... Amy Winehouse 'back in black'
    Attachment 3408

    Massive Attack 'Mezzanine'
    Attachment 3407

    & Portishead 'Portishead'
    Attachment 3406
    I can't wait for the third Portishead album, which comes out late April