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Soundtracks of Our Lives week ending 26 September 2020
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1001realapes
1001realapes
2386 posts

Soundtracks of Our Lives week ending 26 September 2020
Sep 27, 2020, 04:42
raison d'être- Reflections from the Time of Opening

Paul Weller - st

Opeth - Orchid

Culture - Two Sevens Clash

Forrest Fang - The Book of Wanderers

Shack - Time Machine The Best of Shack

Ozzy Osbourne - Diary of a Madman

Lee Morgan - Taru

Grateful Dead - Dick's Picks Volume Two, Columbus, Ohio 10/31/71

John Cameron with Frog - Psychomania OST
Fitter Stoke
Fitter Stoke
2608 posts

Re: Soundtracks of Our Lives week ending 26 September 2020
Sep 27, 2020, 09:14
Ry Cooder ‘Bop ’Til You Drop’ - apparently the first ever digital recording, but so what. What does matter is that it’s a fine, slick blues/pop album that hasn’t dated a jot in 41 years;
Ry Cooder S/T - much swampier and real than the above: in fact, it might as well be by a different artist altogether. And you know what - it sounds even better from a sonic perspective on my hifi than ‘Bop’;
Radiohead ‘The Bends’ - a timeless gem, powerful as owt and with sublime songs throughout. Not as experimental as what followed but my, does this deliver;
IDLES ‘Ultra Mono’ - their third album has hit me much harder on first hearing than their first two did. A bit samey from track to track (‘A Hymn’ excepted), but the aggression remains appealing. Love the way the album stops without warning;
John Otway ‘Where Did I Go Right’ - forgotten Willy-free album from ’79, produced by Neil Innes and featuring the ever-wonderful and long-lamented Ollie Halsall on guitar, this is actually well worth checking out if you can find it. At his best, as here, Otway conveys qualities of pathos and charm that outweigh his outward whimsy. I despise the long-abused term “national treasure”, but here I think it may just apply;
Robert Palmer ‘Clues’ - a couple of misguided covers aside, this is a decent album in spite of its of its time, over bright production;
John Martyn ‘The Tumbler’ - not representative of the innovative (and highly divisive) artist to be, but a pleasant, acoustic vibe nonetheless;
The Smiths ‘The Queen Is Dead’ - just the title track this week. Has the world changed, or have I changed?
Megadeth ‘Rust In Peace’ - Mustaine’s career high;
Grateful Dead ‘Aoxomoxoa’ - ‘What Becomes Of The Baby’ must be the freakiest Dead track ever, especially in the 1969 mix;
UFO ‘At the BBC’ (1975-77 disc) - much rawer and vibrant than their sometimes over-produced studio LPs;
Zounds ‘Can’t Cheat Karma’ EP - always loved this,
David Sylvian & Holger Czukay ‘Plight & Premonition’ - hard to define this: not quite kosmische nor ambient, but I like the sound these guys brew up together;
Luther Vandross S/T - the epitome of over-produced, smooth 80s blandness, but the guy’s sublime pipes sorta keep me keen;
John Coltrane ‘Giant Steps’ - Stuart Maconie’s Freakzone album of last Sunday persuaded me to dig this out after umpteen years and my, I’m glad he did. Caught on the tenuous cusp ‘twixt bebop and free jazz, this may just be Trane’s greatest half hour;
John Coltrane ’Sun Ship’ - one of the last sessions by Trane’s classic quartet is a much tougher nut to crack than ‘Giant Steps’ but thrills big time in places. The title track is a tour-de-force IMHO;
John Coltrane ‘Lush Life’ - much more accessible: Trane on autopilot in the late 50s. Super-sophisticated background music, and I don’t mean that to sound disparaging;
Miroslav Vitous ‘Journey’s End’ - beautiful, ethereal music from typical ECM lineup led by ex-Weather Report bassist;
Jan Garbarek ‘Paths, Prints’ - which shares that same autumnal ECM vibe with the above, this time with Eberhard Weber on bass;
Terje Rypdal ‘To Be Continued’ - more ECM, more Vitous, but much more electronic edge from the unsung guitar genius that is Rypdal;
John Taylor ‘Whirlpool’ - gorgeous piano jazz from much missed British player;
Charley Pride ‘A Sunshiny Day’ - typical, slick easy country from one of my favourite voices in any genre;
Haydn: Symphony no.80 (VSO/Scherchen) - slightly wayward rendition of one of Haydn’s lesser known symphonies;
Dvorak: Symphony no.7 (Concertgebouw/Haitink) - fine early (1959) recording by Haitink of a composer he rarely conducted after this. Shame;
Dvorak: Symphony no.8 & Ravel: Mother Goose (Concertgebouw/Giulini) - typically measured, lovingly phrased readings by this most aristocratic of conductors;
Dvorak: Symphony no.9 (Concertgebouw/Harnoncourt) - very exciting, if more Germanic than Slavonic;
Beethoven: Piano Concertos 1 & 4 (Helmchen/Berlin SRO/Manze) - not particularly distinctive, but beautifully performed and recorded renderings;
Beethoven: Symphony no.6 (New Philh/Giulini) - slow but smouldering with the love of nature, with a tremendously exciting storm;
Mozart: Symphony no.35 , Beethoven: Symphony no.9 & Brahms: Symphony no.4 (Columbia SO/Walter) - three great late recordings by a legendary conductor. His Choral never enjoyed critical favour but I beg to differ;
Mahler: Symphony no.1 (BRSO/Kubelik) - exciting live recording from 1979 from a natural Mahlerian;
Prokofiev: Symphony no.5 (Boston SO/Leinsdorf) - very good, but not as biting as Karajan or Ansermet in this work;
Franck: Grande Piece Symphonique, Op.17 (Eric Lebrun) - good, varied piece demonstrating the variety of dynamics and timbres of the modern church organ.

Thank God for booze and music. Rock and roll!!!!
flashbackcaruso
1054 posts

Re: Soundtracks of Our Lives week ending 26 September 2020
Sep 27, 2020, 10:09
Elvis Presley - You'll Never Walk Alone
Elvis Presley - C'mon Everybody
Elvis Presley - I Got Lucky
Elvis Presley - Elvis Now

Bobbie Gentry - Touch 'Em With Love
Bobbie Gentry - Fancy
Bobbie Gentry - Patchwork
Bobbie Gentry - Thunder In The Afternoon (1976-8 sessions)

The Rolling Stones - Singles 1963-1969
The Rolling Stones - Let It Bleed
The Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers
The Rolling Stones - Exile On Main Street
The Rolling Stones - Goats Head Soup

The Kinks - Sleepwalker
The Kinks - Misfits

Richard Swift - The Novelist/Walking Without Effort

The Kingsbury Manx - The Kingsbury Manx
The Kingsbury Manx - Let You Down

The Turtles - Golden Hits
The Turtles - The Battle Of The Bands
The Turtles - Chalon Road
The Turtles - Turtle Soup
The Turtles - Shell Shock

The Who - My Generation
The Who - A Quick One
The Who - Sell Out
The Who - Tommy

XTC - White Music
XTC - Go 2
XTC - Drums & Wires
XTC - Black Sea

Pet Shop Boys - Elysium

Juana Molina - Segundo

Micah P. Hinson - Micah P. Hinson & The Gospel of Progress

The Beatles - Skywriting By Word Of Mouth (soniclovenoize re-imagined 1980 album)
garerama
garerama
1110 posts

Re: Soundtracks of Our Lives week ending 26 September 2020
Sep 27, 2020, 11:00
Joshua Abrams - Represencing / Megnetoception

The Apostles - Equinox Screams / Cartography / The Other Operation

David Bowie - S/t (Space Oddity) / The Man Who Sold The World

Coil - How To Destroy Angels / Horse Rotorvator / A Thousand Lights In A Darkened Room / Moon's Milk / Musick To Play In The Dark 1 & 2 / The Remote Viewer

Ornette Coleman - Free Jazz

Julian Cope - Jehovahkill / Interpreter / John Balance Enters Valhalla
Dope - Black Math

The Cure - Seventeen Seconds / Faith

Astrud Gilberto - The Astrud Gilberto Album / The Shadow Of Your Smile (mono) / Look To The Rainbow / Beach Samba (mono)

Feed Your Head - The Return Of Noddy The Punk

Frankie Goes To Holywood - Welcome To The Pleasuredome

Future Sound Of London/ Amorphous Androgynous - Lifeforms / Tales Of Ephidria

Elton John - Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

Kaleidoscope - Forget About Tomorrow: The Singles

Ian Keary & Paul Wigan - The Golden Section

Neu! - Neu! / Neu! 2

Ozric Tentacles - Live Underslunky / Introducing ...

Panda Bear - Person Pitch

Psychic TV - Themes / Themes 2

Sonic Youth - Experimental Jet Set, Trash & No Star / Washing Machine / A Thousand Leaves / NYC Ghosts & Flowers

Bridget St John - Ask Me No Questions / Songs For The Gentle Man

The Stranglers - Feline / Aural Sculpture

Summerhill - S/t

The Sun Also Rises - S/t

Keith Tippett (related) - Dedicated To You But You Weren't Listening (by The Keith Tippett Group) / Septober Energy (by Centipede)
Fatalist
Fatalist
1123 posts

Edited Sep 27, 2020, 23:37
Re: Soundtracks of Our Lives week ending 26 September 2020
Sep 27, 2020, 23:35
Two weeks' worth here:

Frankie And The Witch Fingers – Monsters Eating People Eating Monsters… Liked this lot’s debut and the follow-up is similarly groovy, though their resemblance to a less punk Oh Sees is at times quite uncanny: https://frankieandthewitchfingers.bandcamp.com/

Kairon; ISRE! – Polysomn. Ludicrously named Finnish prog/shoegaze/space rock crew, but there’s some great stuff on this, such as: https://kaironirse.bandcamp.com/track/psionic-static

The Budos Band – Long In The Tooth

Garcia Peoples – Nightcap At Wits’ End

Polysun – Caterpillars Of Creation

Osees – Protean Threat

Gösta Berlings Saga – Konkret Musik

Magick Brother Mystic Sister – s/t

Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets – Live At The Roundhouse

Black Sabbath – Paranoid (50th anniversary edition)

VA – Living On The Hill
keith a
9572 posts

Edited Sep 28, 2020, 07:17
Re: Soundtracks of Our Lives week ending 26 September 2020
Sep 28, 2020, 07:17
Best Of... – Cilla Black
Red – Black Uhuru
Glassforms – Bruce Brubaker / Max Cooper
NWO (CDS) - Ministry
Close To The Glass – The Notwist
Hotspot – Pet Shop Boys
Connected – Stereo MC's
The Colours Started To Sing Again (CDS) - Transglobal Underground
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