What albums did you listen to today?...continued |
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Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 12 2011 Location: Melb, Australia Status: Offline Points: 7951 |
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I'm sure you'll dig it, Sam.
I sadly have been away from work with a kind of food poisoning, so all I have to offer is what I listened to on the way home from work last night: Steve Roach - Shadow of Time/This Place to Be and the first 20 minutes of `Cluster 2' this morning, before I pulled over in the car feeling my stomach churning and thinking `Nope, not risking this!' and drove back home! Edited by Aussie-Byrd-Brother - August 04 2016 at 03:46 |
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Meltdowner
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I'm intrigued, I'll give it a listen later
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Modrigue
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 14 2007 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 1127 |
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Simply one of the best soundtracks of Vangelis
Edited by Modrigue - August 04 2016 at 03:26 |
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Meltdowner
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Triumvirat - Illusions on a Double Dimple Fire! Orchestra - Ritual Happy The Man - Crafty Hands Eloy - Planets La Coscienza di Zeno - La Notte Anche di Giorno Nemo - Coma Michael Brückner - Naura
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Ozark Soundscape
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 20 2014 Location: not here Status: Offline Points: 2360 |
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Morphinist - "Giants"
Bernard Herrmann - "Psycho" |
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Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 12 2011 Location: Melb, Australia Status: Offline Points: 7951 |
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Awesome, mate, glad you dig it. That's one great thing about prog/krautrock, etc, there's always more albums that keep popping up or you accidently discover just waiting around the corner! |
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Aussie-Byrd-Brother
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Stunning album, one of his best! I love that early period of Vangelis where all his albums sounded completely different. |
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Modrigue
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 14 2007 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 1127 |
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These two albums are a tight choice for me, both are great! I recommend checking "Crescent" too.
Thanks! Vol 2. is worth the listen too Edited by Modrigue - August 03 2016 at 14:25 |
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ALotOfBottle
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 17 2016 Location: Lublin, Poland Status: Offline Points: 1990 |
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Weidorje - Weidorje. It's not as great as I thought it was during my first listen, when I fell in love with zeuhl for the very first time. However, don't be tricked by my first sentence. It's darn fine music. Phenomenal melodies, great, unorthodox arrangements, crispy, throbbing bass, and my favorite sound of all - Fender Rhodes.
Tim Blake - Blake's New Jerusalem. I didn't know a fusion like this was actually possible. The fantastic mixture of excellent electronica from Blake's first album and carefully-crafted post-hippie space-folk-pop gives really good, original results. The instrumental synth parts are what you come for, however. Blake knew how to dial in perfect sounds! Popol Vuh - In Den Garten Pharaos. A great continuation of what Mr. Fricke and company presented on their debut. A bit more of that classic "Popol Vuh" sound with ethnic influences - more percussion anyway as well as a wider variety of keyboards. It's overall more focused than their debut. Which is equally good! John Coltrane - My Favorite Things. Well, this is my second favorite thing from Coltrane, after Love Supreme. His playing is so tasty here. Only one musician so good could make a jazz-pop standard that "Summertime" is seem so cool, laidback. The title track is obviously a favorite and (fun fact) The Door's instrumental section on "Light My Fire" is based on the main progression from that. Gila - Free Electric Sound. I'm starting to like that one! At first listen, I thought it was quite boring and unoriginal, but I guess I just wasn't in the mood. This time I started appreciating how this puts distinctive jamming themes to the table with great variation in between them. Great organ and guitar solos! Klaus Schulze - Body Love. Thanks, Nico! Your review really made me want to check this one out. It was great! I really liked the overall stylistic o the album. It was very melodic (and had amazing synth timbres from Klaus), but also kept that very Schulzy integrity of slowly evolving soundscapes! Great, hope vol. 2 is nearly good! This was my day. |
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Magnum Vaeltaja
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 01 2015 Location: Out East Status: Offline Points: 6777 |
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Magma - M.D.K.
Magma - KA First time I've actually gotten around to listening to Magma and I've gotta say, they've won me over.
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when i was a kid a doller was worth ten dollers - now a doller couldnt even buy you fifty cents
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King Only
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 19 2013 Location: Tokyo, Japan Status: Offline Points: 554 |
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Yesterday and today: Simple Minds - Glittering Prize 81/92. Vangelis - L'Apocalypse Des Animaux.Peter Baumann - Machines Of Desire.
Placebo - Placebo (10th Anniversary Collector's Edition with extra tracks). Suzanne Vega - Days Of Open Hand. David Bowie - David Live 1974 (CD 1). Goldie presents Rufige Kru - Malice In Wonderland. Rapoon - Song From The End Of The World. Otomo Yoshihide, Bill Laswell and Yoshigaki Yasuhiro - Soup Live (CD 1). Boris Blank - Electrified (CD 2). |
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DeadSouls
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 28 2016 Location: Chile Status: Offline Points: 4255 |
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Joy Division - Closer Pink Floyd - Animals Camel - Mirage National Health - Of Queues and Cures Phil Miller / In Cahoots - Recent Discoveries Phil Miller / In Cahoots - Parallel
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
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Seconded. There's sadly nothing that sounds like the debut in his subsequent career, but if one is looking for meditative and slowly brooding atmospheric music, then Deuter is the man. He is often heralded as one of the very first "New Age" composers. |
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“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams |
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Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator Retired Admin Joined: January 22 2009 Location: Magic Theatre Status: Offline Points: 23104 |
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I had an absolute smashing day of listening yesterday:
Earth & Fire - Song Of The Marching Children (Revisit 1 of the day) Eberhard Weber - Yellow Fields (Revisit 2 sports the most velvety fusion almost akin to symph) Egg - s/t (Up down sideways and in between. More organ please!) Clivage - Mixtus Orbis (Saliva hits the floor) Geinoh Yamashirogumi - Osorezan (Possibly the most outrageous album in my collection) Gerard Manset - La Mort d'Orion (Ode to a planet) Hermeto Pascoal - Slave Mass (Fusion a la Miles meets Brazil) Herbert F Bairy - Traumspiel (1979 album that reeks of 1971 and acid and fumbling round in strange dark places.) Hiro Yanagida - Hirocosmos (Canterbury feels from Japan) Anna Själv Tredie - Tussilago Fanfara (Sweden's finest Berliner) |
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“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams |
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Meltdowner
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: June 25 2013 Location: Portugal Status: Offline Points: 10232 |
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^ It's very different from "D", basically a set of short meditative/psychedelic ideas with acoustic guitar, sitar and lots of percussion linked by sea and bird sounds. It's quite good if you're in the right mood.
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ALotOfBottle
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 17 2016 Location: Lublin, Poland Status: Offline Points: 1990 |
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I'll check out that Zanov album later on today. Glad to see you enjoyed The Polite Force. It might indeed be interpreted as more psychedelic, yet far more technical. I need to check out Aum, I really liked Deuter's D. |
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Meltdowner
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: June 25 2013 Location: Portugal Status: Offline Points: 10232 |
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I have "New Jerusalem" but never heard that one. I'll have to change that. Tangerine Dream - Poland (I only listened to this one once two years ago. It's really good, I'll have to get a copy of it someday) Egg - The Polite Force (This one seemed more psychedelic than the debut. Great stuff ) Siddhartha - Weltschmerz (Thanks for posting the video, Michael ) Psicomagia - s/t (An adrenaline shot...) Deuter - Aum (...followed by a sedative. This was a great idea, I can listen to aggressive music at night and also listen to a calm album without falling asleep ) |
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TeleStrat
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 27 2014 Location: Norwalk, CA Status: Offline Points: 9319 |
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Tuesday...
Domadora - The Violent Mystical Sukuma Abrahma - Reflections In The Bowels Of A Bird Electric Octopus - This Is Our Culture Balero - The Impossible Crusade Soul Thief - Cosmic Woman EP Bailjack - Show Me Your Heart
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Ozark Soundscape
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 20 2014 Location: not here Status: Offline Points: 2360 |
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Elvis Costello and the Attractions - "Get Happy!"
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ALotOfBottle
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 17 2016 Location: Lublin, Poland Status: Offline Points: 1990 |
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Magma - Mekanïk Destruktïẁ Kommandöh. Ok, it's not 1000°Centigrades, it's this one that's my favorite Magma work (duh, originality, as if saying that Close to the Edge is my favorite Yes album, which is not BTW). But really, I started enjoying MDK enormously recently. It's so well composed and so well performed. Vander really followed through on this one, everything is top-shelf here. I just realized how great the guitar is here with its tasty fills and how organ really works with Magma's music. Amazing!
Zanov - Green Ray. It's the first time I've ever listened to Zanov. First thing that came to mind was Klaus Schulze, obviously, but there is something very distinctive about his music. I feel it's much lighter and not as... massive, overwhelming (which does often work well for Klaus, but makes Zanov's work equally good). Not all that memorable, but good enough to make me want to explore the rest of his discography. Yatha Sidhra - A Meditation Mass. Wow, that's a good one. I've been wanting to listen to Yatha Sidhra's only album for a while now, but never actually got around to doing so. And how stupid were I! This feels like a spiritual journey into the imaginary realm of inner space. The Eastern influences work incredibly smooth and well. The instrument choice and performance is out of this world and the band build fantastic atmospheres! John Coltrane - A Love Supreme. A Love Supreme is probably my favorite Coltrane album (duh, originality, once again) along with My Favorite Things and maybe Meditation. The mixture of free, yet restricted modal improvisation on slow, hard-bop-esque rhythms combined with a healthy dose of mysticism really does it for me. Plus, because Coltrane is not playing ultra fast, like on some other records, you can cop some of his phrases. Eric Dolphy - Out To Lunch. I thought that while I'm at jazz that I like, I would listen to some Eric Dolphy from around the period. However, this was a much more experimental effort than A Love Supreme. But I like that vibe that's in the air in Eric's music - his use of bass clarinet, vibraphone, an upright bass with a bow. For most part, this is free jazz, sometimes even free-form, yet you can easily (or maybe not so easily) distinguish the progression. Arkham - Arkham. Again, Michael, many thanks for telling me about this band - it's so close to what I love in the music of Egg and Soft Machine. Arkham are such phenomenal musicians and really, what I like about Egg, I like about this band. Egg's music has a bit more in common and puts less emphasis on improvisation (I'm talking especially about The Polite Force, which was highly likely the one they were influenced by, considering this was recorded in 1971 and 1972, their debut features more improv). But really, the arrangements are so great and it actually uses Farfisa organ... WITH FUZZ! Tim Blake - Crystal Machine. THE KINGDOM OF THE ANALOG MODULAR. I really like Tim Blake's style. I think it's much different than that of his German and French contemporaries. His tones are so beautiful, mellow. I'm smelling a VCS3, right? And a Minimoog. Anyway, I'm looking forward to hearing Blake's New Jerusalem, as I enjoyed this one immensly. Also, a tiny part of Peter Frohmader's debut to complete my newest review on it. Today the music just "clicked." I think I made a great playlist. |
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