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Your tastes in arts (film, novels, music, TV....)

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    Posted: March 12 2019 at 13:47
Instant Family 7/10

Thoight it would be a typical comedy but it was much more than that. Really good performances from Rose Byrne and Mark Walberg.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote GreysOlive Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2019 at 10:28
The Possession of Hannah Grace.
Not many films make me jump but this one did on a few occasions. I really enjoyed it.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Snicolette Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2019 at 22:18
Will check it out, thank you

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2019 at 19:38
Originally posted by Snicolette Snicolette wrote:

   Renaissance (and Annie Haslam solo), 




Pretty late getting to this but do drop by if you like at the Renaissance Zone:

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote MortSahlFan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2019 at 18:04
I've enjoyed reading all these, and hope this bump might enable others to contribute.
https://www.youtube.com/c/LoyalOpposition

https://www.scribd.com/document/382737647/MortSahlFan-Song-List
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote micky Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2019 at 17:52
ehh...  literature and movies were easy .. it was music that was the hard one.  Then again Pedro I'd suspect you'd disagree with me on the artistic qualities of music. sure it exists.. but that really isn't what music is about. never has been.. never will be. sure it is great to see musicians try to bring all that high brow intellectual sh*t into music.. but ever since the dawn of time music has been not about artistic expression.. it isn't about stimulating the mind or the senses... but about emotional relation..  relating your emotions to the music..

that is why for me the music list was so hard..   I love so much music.. of so many styles.. and its artistic merits mean jack f**king sh*t to me.. it is all about how they related to me and my particular emotonal state..  it is like I said.. emtional reinforcemnt..  you want to get hot and revved up for a night out on the town.. do you put Rock Bottom on..   hell no.. unless you are a first class prog egghead.. for most normal people.  Music is all their emotional state of mind..  music they can relate to based on what they are feeling..
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2019 at 17:39
Hi,

I was worried about the listing for Literature, and then music, since you all pretty much know my tastes in music, although some folks do not seem to understand, or get an idea that my tastes are so universal that it throws off folks that tend to list more "well known" stuff due to their fame, or pop/hit music levels.

Cervantes, would be in it, so would some Shakespeare and even Boccaccio ... not to mention Goethe and Hesse, and at least one French, and one of my favorites is Moliere, and his social and _______ commentaries everywhere. But then, there is one that is not usually mentioned, but the Marquis de Sade, is actually a very good writer, even if some think it is sad and sick! Doris Lessing is a novelist that I love to read also. Some of her works are just ... not only well written, they are the kind of stuff that you remember a long time.

A lot of the literature I like happens to be in theater ... Peter Weiss MARAT/SADE is probably the play I consider the best, and one that was quoted by the Beatles, Bonzo Dog Band, and many others, which kinda explains its incredible upheaval when it opened in London, and how shocking it was, and became. It was sort of pure psychedelia in the middle of all the rest. And you didn't need dope to appreciate it, although many people will get highly upset at the political and social commentaries in there. (paraphrasing ... I am a revolutionary with a vision ... and the reply is ... no you are not. You are another man with an idiotic vision that thinks he's better than anyone else!)(... and the acting, in the play ... a total wow!). Let's see ... Michel de Ghelderode is a fantastic playwright. Sam Sheppard is also a far out playwright. And there are some things from Japan that are also amazing ... and some films were made of many of them, and they deserve the mention and attention.


Edited by moshkito - March 07 2019 at 17:42
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote omphaloskepsis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2019 at 09:22

I'm freaked by how many novels I have in common with you guys.

In common with Logan-
- The Thee Stigmata of Palmer Eldtritch (Philip K. Dick)
- Mother Night (Kurt Vonnegut)
- Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert A. Heinlein)
- The Tin Drum (Günter Grass)
- Crime and Punishment (Fyodor Dostoyevsky)
- Infinite Jest (David Foster Wallace)
- Island (Aldous Huxley)
- Oryx and Crake (Margaret Atwood)
- 1984 (George Orwell)
- The Road (Cormac McCarthy)

All but two in common with Dark Elf
The Once and Future King - T.H. White
The Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco
The Lord of the Rings/The Hobbit/The Silmarillion - J.R.R. Tolkien
Midnight's Children - Salman Rushdie
Ulysses - James Joyce
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain
I, Claudius - Robert Graves  ( Livia- favorite evil woman ever)
David Copperfield - Charles Dickens
The Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck
To Kill A Mockingbird - Harper Lee
Watership Down - Richard Adams
Dune - Frank Herbert

All but two in common with Exitthelemming
-
the Rabbit series - John Updike
the Trial - Franz Kafka
a Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man - James Joyce
the Outsider - Albert Camus
a Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess
the Catcher in the Rye - JD Salinger
Lord of the Flies - William Golding
Trainspotting - Irvine Welsh
Foucault's Pendulum - Umberto Eco

A few other Novels
Everything by Cormac McCarthy, Kurt Vonnegut,  Aldous Huxley, Virginia Wolfe, Joseph Conrad,
 DH Lawerance and and Joseph Heller

Kristin Lavransdatter by Sigrid Undset
Tom Jones by Henry Fielding
The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
Native Son by Richard Wright
Studs Lonigan by James T Farrell
Bend in the River by V.S. Naipaul
all the Hyperion novels by Dan Simmons





Edited by omphaloskepsis - March 07 2019 at 09:24
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Barbu Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2019 at 08:42
Movie: My Cousin Vinny

Book: Les Aventures de Michel Risque

TV: La Petite Vie

Music: Phish
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2019 at 07:37
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

 
micky, did you also read the Mahabharata? If so, curious what kind of impression, if any, it left on you.

Never did Madan..   the Ramayana was the gateway, my introduction...  but I had the Gita recommended to me after that (for obvious reasons I suppose).  After that I studied the Upanishads.. but never did make it to the Mahabarata in full as my life hit the wall about 90mph soon after and I suppose I never fully found all the pieces that wreck scattered about. 

I really should finally do that... especially as life has finally found a bit of peace and quiet and can fully digest it.

Cool, was just very curious to see Ramayana mentioned without a mention of Mahabharata because people usually go on to read it as well after Ramayana.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote micky Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 06 2019 at 18:01
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

 
micky, did you also read the Mahabharata? If so, curious what kind of impression, if any, it left on you.

Never did Madan..   the Ramayana was the gateway, my introduction...  but I had the Gita recommended to me after that (for obvious reasons I suppose).  After that I studied the Upanishads.. but never did make it to the Mahabarata in full as my life hit the wall about 90mph soon after and I suppose I never fully found all the pieces that wreck scattered about. 

I really should finally do that... especially as life has finally found a bit of peace and quiet and can fully digest it.


Edited by micky - March 06 2019 at 18:02
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote micky Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 06 2019 at 17:47
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:



oh man.. a big omission on my list...   how could I forget this one. Thanks Pedro for reminding me .. I owe you a Q of good high quality dope whenever we finally get a chance to meet.. and god help the town if that ever happens..

classic...



should have been ranked #3...  sorry Raymond..  but no Drew you were.. god almighty that might have been the funniest show EVER ...



not to mention the greatest show opening EVER!!!

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Argo2112 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 06 2019 at 12:25
Films
  Clockwork Orange
  Pulp Fiction 
  Spartacus
  The Godfather
  Silence of the Lambs
  Blade Runner
  The Great Escape
  Alien/ Aliens 
  The Martian
  Inception  
  Apocalypse Now
  Monty Python & the Holy Grail

Music
  Yes
  Beatles
  Rush
  Allman Brothers
  Al Di Meola
  Genesis
  Zappa
  Grateful Dead
  Pink Floyd
  Rolling Stones
  Porcupine Tree
  Dire Straights
  The Who
  Police/ Sting
  Clapton (Cream/Blind Faith...)

T. V.
  Breaking Bad
  The West Wing
  Sons of Anarchy
  Game Of Thrones
  Shamless
  All in the Family
  Sopranos
  Dexter
  Star Trek
  Twilight Zone
  MASH
  Black Mirror
  
  
 


Edited by Argo2112 - March 06 2019 at 13:17
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 06 2019 at 09:42
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

...
Movies

1. Doctor Zhivago  (1965) David Lean

good God almighty has there been a more perfect movie ever made..   no there has not. It had it all..

2. Blade Runner (1982) Ridley Scott

like many I rate this so very highly..   in large part to the final scene with Rudger Hauer which is IMO one of the the more powerful and soulful cinematic moments. If you can't relate to that.. you have no soul.

3. The Wild Bunch (1969) Sam ‘the f**king Man’ Peckinpah

speaking of art..  art can take many forms... here the master takes it where no one really had before..the beauty of violence ...the beauty of death. However while the film is canonized for its beginning and end.. you actually had a interesting morality tale in between the extreme (even to this day) cinematic violence that bookends it.

8.  The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert (1994) Stephan Elliot

oh my God...  we are talking art right...  well here we go... what a visually stunning movie and so good even the Spawn of Satan and I both loved this one.LOL

9. Deer Hunter (1978) Michael Cimino

so much to say about this one...  I'd need several paragraphs 

...


Nice listing. THE WILD BUNCH is, likely one of the best "westerns" ever done. And the character definitions in it are amazing (Ernest Borgnine anyone?) 

Priscilla .... "ohh, wow ... my tits have fallen off!" And you go out laughing even more!

Cimino ... I also liked his HEAVEN'S GATE, and the DVD on it, seems to show/suggest that is stuff in there that is badly cut up, taking away the long bits that he had in DEERHUNTER and also on this film. The government corruption in the film's last part, is toned down by the cutting ... and I think the last line in the film is sad (probably not in the original script I bet!) ... excusing the genocide, and obvious murder attempt.

There are too many films in my listing ... and I love many of them for different reasons ... it's hard to not like Sven Nykvist, who made Ingmar Bergman look good, and later went on to gain an OSCAR. Visual clarity like no other. I love the way music is used in DR. ZHIVAGO, although he never really duplicated it in later films. The writing, in many of the Luis Bunuel films is fantastic ... THE DISCREET CHARM OF THE BOURGEOISIE ... is a perfect example as the film makes a loop through everyone's "head" ... and then the earlier stuff is just full of amazing stuff. Even his ROBINSON CRUSOE makes the remake a la Tom Hanks look silly, while Bunuel's was sort of ... wait a minute ... things don't happen that way ... VIRIDIANA, with the famous scene towards the end, and how things get that far ... is crazy ... as are many of the small bits and pieces in LOS OLVIDADOS ... things that you do not forget. Jean-Luc Godard, because he shows you how the Hollywood camera puts you to sleep with their mechanical shots and lack of "continuity" in a visual medium. Shots that don't make sense, like the shot/crossshot of a conversation ... how many people are you watching this? But the best of all is the pendulum shot in the bar, going away from the lovers ... it's exactly what you do in a bar!!!!!!! If that's not enough, try the backwards stuff in Weekend.

Stuff like this makes it hard to choose ... the nature of it all is so lively and real, that one is not seduced by the colorful background with the angled shot to make the face look better, kind of thing ... that for me, always appear to not be as "true" and helpful in terms of "accepting a story ..." like a book and such.
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 06 2019 at 09:23
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

^ Call me prescient.

Cheap psychic ... you had no details!

WinkTongue
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote presdoug Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 06 2019 at 05:44
Books 

George Orwell-Animal Farm
Aldous Huxley-The Human Situation
Bruno Walter-Theme and Variations
Sir Thomas Beecham-A Mingled Chime
Michael Kater-The Twisted Muse
Erik Ryding and Rebecca Pechefsky-Bruno Walter-A World Elsewhere
Fred K. Preiburg-Trial Of Strength
Harvey Sachs-Toscanini

Film

Amadeus
Planet Of The Apes (1968)
Beneath The Planet Of The Apes
The Pianist
The Shawshank Redemption
Downfall
Logan's Run (1975)
2001-A Space Odyssey

Music

Triumvirat
Giger Lenz Marron
Dzyan
Colosseum
Passport
Anton Bruckner 
Hector Berlioz
Richard Strauss 
Gustav Mahler
Beethoven
Arnold Schoenberg
Pytor Tchaikovsky

TV

One Step Beyond
Star Trek (TOS)
Star Trek Continues
The Twilight Zone (original)
Whiz Quiz
The Beverly Hillbilies
Get Smart
Dragnet (original 50s)
Northwest Passage

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote jamesbaldwin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 05 2019 at 21:05
I begin now the list of my tastes.

Film director.

Italians:

1) Pasolini
2) Fellini
3) Rossellini
----
4) Elio Petri
5) Luchino Visconti
6) Gillo Pontecorvo
7) Francesco Rosi
8) Bernardo Bertolucci
9) Vittorio De Sica
10) Sergio Leone
----------------------------
11) Ermanno Olmi
12) Nanni Moretti
13) Matteo Garrone
14) Paolo Sorrentino
15) Giuseppe Tornatore
16) Marco Tullio Giordana
17) Paolo e Vittorio Taviani.
18) Michelangelo Antonioni
19) Liliana Cavani
20) Mario Monicelli
23) Paolo Virzì
24) Carlo Verdone
25) Francesca Archibugi.




Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 05 2019 at 06:50
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

man I struggled with mine.... for a good reason.

Books movies... easy that sh*t is art.  Music though... ehhh.. not so fast.  Books and movies can entertain but they are best when the provoke you to think...  where i break with some/many, especially on this site, is music is not about stimulating the mind, it is about the heart and soul? Is that art?  Perhaps..   that is why I struggled with my list.  As such much more than with the other categories it really isn't a list of favories..  oh they are favorites of course.. but only when I feel the need or desire to have my heart and soul stimulated.. or more precisely refilled..  most of the time music for me is about emotional reinforcement.. 

if I am feeling pissed and angry...   my tastes will be far different and much less artistic than when I am feeling pensive or introspective.. if I am wanting something to get hot and jazzed up my tastes again will be far different ..

so sticking with the artistic theme here..  going with the pieces of music I do consider art.. they might not stimulate the mind.. I read f**king books when I want that.. but they do one thing much better than any other medium can do.. stimulate one's soul.. so I went with my favorites in that.. and went with specific pieces.. not merely groups or even albums.

<p ="msonormal"="">Books.


<p ="msonormal"="">1. The Foundation Trilogy - Issac Asimov

<p ="msonormal"="">if there has been any book(s) that intellectually stimulated me.. it was reading these as a child.  


<p ="msonormal"="">2. This Side of Paradise - F. Scott Fitzgerald

<p ="msonormal"="">my bible as a lost 20 something after the Gulf War


<p ="msonormal"="">3. The Road - Cormac McCarthy

<p ="msonormal"="">the single most gut wrenching, powerful, and painful reading experience I've ever had. Only read it once... but it was enough.. but I will never EVER forget it or the feelings it provoked.  Amazing ...


<p ="msonormal"="">4. World War Z - Clive Brooks

<p ="msonormal"="">forget all the zombie bullsh*t..  the intellectual subtexts Brooks went into with this book and the various cultures were fascinating


<p ="msonormal"="">5. The Stand - Stephen King

<p ="msonormal"="">as Greg notes.. yeah perhaps a slight bend to the morbid and dark.. but god damn if this wasn't a fascinating read. The literary equivalent of Peckinpah it was (see below)


<p ="msonormal"="">6.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes">  </span>The Ramayana -
Valmiki

<p ="msonormal"="">next to the Foundation series.. no book has made more of a life impression and even influenced my life more than this one did.


<p ="msonormal"="">7. <span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>To Kill A
Mockingbird - Harper Lee

<p ="msonormal"="">I love me southern literary works.. and you get into race.. oh yeah. One of the few mandatory readings we all had that really made an impression especially for me as I already had a strong passion and interest in racial inequalities.


<p ="msonormal"="">8. Cross of Iron - Willie Heinrich

<p ="msonormal"="">one of the very few books I have always had a copy of, since I first read it back in the 70's, replacing as need be when fallen apart or tossed into fireplaces by vindictive redheaded women.  Probably read it hundreds of times over the last 40 years.. and still never fails to make an impression. Much as the film (also see below) one of the most powerful anti-war novels ever written.


<p ="msonormal"="">9. O Pioneers!- Willa Cather

<p ="msonormal"="">a powerful portrait of frontier life in turn of the century America. Highly highly recommended if you haven't read it.  A portal back in time so to speak....


<p ="msonormal"="">10. Starship Troopers - Robert Heinlein

<p ="msonormal"="">Big smile


<p ="msonormal"=""><o:p> </o:p>


<p ="msonormal"=""><o:p> </o:p>


<p ="msonormal"="">Movies


<p ="msonormal"="">1. Doctor Zhivago<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> 
</span>(1965) David Lean

<p ="msonormal"="">good God almighty has there been a more perfect movie ever made..   no there has not. It had it all..


<p ="msonormal"="">2. Blade Runner (1982) Ridley Scott

<p ="msonormal"="">like many I rate this so very highly..   in large part to the final scene with Rudger Hauer which is IMO one of the the more powerful and soulful cinematic moments. If you can't relate to that.. you have no soul.


<p ="msonormal"="">3. The Wild Bunch (1969) Sam ‘the f**king Man’ Peckinpah

<p ="msonormal"="">speaking of art..  art can take many forms... here the master takes it where no one really had before..the beauty of violence ...the beauty of death. However while the film is canonized for its beginning and end.. you actually had a interesting morality tale in between the extreme (even to this day) cinematic violence that bookends it.


<p ="msonormal"="">4. Melancholia (2011) Lars Van Trier

<p ="msonormal"="">this movie...  simply blew me away from the first time I saw it.. which is a story in itself.. A WTF moment..  a personal movie that speaks to me on many levels.


<p ="msonormal"="">5. The Thing (1982) John Carpenter

<p ="msonormal"="">bah... perhaps no art here..  but can't not be a list of Mick movies..  'you have to be f**king kidding me' that scene alone gets you into the Mick top 5...


<p ="msonormal"="">6. Once Upon a Time in America (1984) Sergio Leone

<p ="msonormal"="">much as Cather's novel hit a nerve with a part of our history I have strong interest and affintiy towards.. so this gem which was such a vivid window into the world of early 20th century immigrants in America. 


<p ="msonormal"="">7.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes">  </span>Cross of Iron
(1977) Sam ‘you bet your sweet ass I made this list twice’ Peckinpah

<p ="msonormal"="">'the best war film about the common ordinary enlisted man since All Quiet of the Eastern Front' Orson Wells

<p ="msonormal"="">much different than the book.. but obviously packs more of punch visually in typical extreme violence Peckinpah style.. he might have only done one war film.. but the one the master did was one of the greatest and most powerful anti-war flims ever..


<p ="msonormal"="">8. <span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>The Adventures of Priscilla
Queen of the Desert (1994) Stephan Elliot

<p ="msonormal"="">oh my God...  we are talking art right...  well here we go... what a visually stunning movie and so good even the Spawn of Satan and I both loved this one.LOL


<p ="msonormal"="">9. Deer Hunter (1978) Michael Cimino

<p ="msonormal"="">so much to say about this one...  I'd need several paragraphs 


<p ="msonormal"="">10. Leaving Los Vegas (1995) Mike Figgis


<p ="msonormal"=""><o:p> the cinematic version of The Road...  umm hmmm...</o:p>


<p ="msonormal"=""><o:p> </o:p>


<p ="msonormal"="">Music


<p ="msonormal"="">1. Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini - Sergei Rachmaninoff

<p ="msonormal"="">so much to say about this one.. but I'll stick to ... '18th variation'.. perhaps the single most beautiful melody that human kind has ever created...  I listend to this last night while working up the list. .and goddamend... I went from crying tears of pure joy and emotion to nearly breaking my wrists pounding the table playing air piano like only Rachmaninoff can inspire


<p ="msonormal"="">2. Dreams - The Allman Brothers

<p ="msonormal"="">that guitar solo is hands down the single most breathtaking and emotional I've ever heard.  An emotional sauve.. that is what this song is for me


<p ="msonormal"="">3. Cours d’Amours - Carl Orff

<p ="msonormal"="">dear God...  ranking a close 2nd to #1 as perhaps the most beautiful melodies ever created by humankind... another one that if you have a dry eye after listening to it..  

<p ="msonormal"="">you are soulless...


<p ="msonormal"="">4. Sequenze e Frequenze - Franco Battiato

<p ="msonormal"="">unlike the first 3 that are purely emotional experiences for me.. this one hit me so hard for being more introspective.. as I once said.. the best piece of music EVER for rainy days and Mondays haha


<p ="msonormal"="">5. In Memory of Elizabeth Reed - The Allman Brothers Band

<p ="msonormal"="">not just the best thing the Allmans ever did.. but the perfect fusion of rock and jazz. Instead of playing rock in a jazz format as so many did.. the ABB reversed the flow and did something that few attempted to do..and none did so well... playing jazz in a rock format. 


<p ="msonormal"="">6. Glad -Traffic

<p ="msonormal"="">a piece of music that has, ever since I first heard it, spoken directly to me in its dual themes.


<p ="msonormal"="">7. Piano Concerto in Am Op. 16 - Edward Grieg

<p ="msonormal"="">while I love the 2nd Rach..  for personal reasons and bad personal memories I associated with it...  this one might be my second favorite piano concerto. That opening...   blow thy speakers man...


<p ="msonormal"="">8. Toccata - ELP

<p ="msonormal"="">this is a prog site.. and I sort of hang out here and occasionally enjoy listening to it.. LOL so tossing a bone to the classic prog.  While Tales might be the pinacle of prog from an album standpoint..  Toccata was from a purely song standpoint...  


<p ="msonormal"="">9. <span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>Say What - Miles
Davis

<p ="msonormal"="">another piece of emotional art from me..


<p ="msonormal"="">10. Chain Reaction/Quantum Physics - Can

<p ="msonormal"="">and this one unlike most has not been a part of me for many years, many since I was a child but more a recent addition .. but much like the Battiato entry.. it is a incredible journey not into the heart and soul but a deeper place .. into the recesses of one mind and senses...


<p ="msonormal"=""><o:p> </o:p>


<p ="msonormal"="">T.V


<p ="msonormal"="">1. NYMFingPD Blue

<p ="msonormal"="">Sipowicz..  'nuff said. The greatest TV show character.. EVER!!!!!!


<p ="msonormal"="">2. MASH

<p ="msonormal"="">I mean really...  if Doctor Zhivago had it all on the big screen... MASH had it all on the small screen..  well.. expect for Sipowicz.. which is why you are #2 haha


<p ="msonormal"="">3. Frasier

<p ="msonormal"="">one word.. Niles...


<p ="msonormal"="">4. Sopranos

<p ="msonormal"="">one word.. Tony


<p ="msonormal"="">5. 3rd Rock From the Sun

<p ="msonormal"="">one word.. John


<p ="msonormal"="">6. Taxi

<p ="msonormal"="">one word..  hahahhah


<p ="msonormal"="">7. The Rockford Files

<p ="msonormal"="">one word..  James


<p ="msonormal"="">8. Dallas

<p ="msonormal"="">one word..  J.f**king.R


<p ="msonormal"="">9. Cheers

<p ="msonormal"="">one word... CLIFF!!!


<p ="msonormal"="">10 . Everybody Loves Raymond

<p ="msonormal"="">not sure why .. but damnit.. I loved this show..






micky, did you also read the Mahabharata? If so, curious what kind of impression, if any, it left on you.
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Logan View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Logan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 05 2019 at 06:19
It was worth the wait, thanks Micky, and thanks to everyone so far who has participated (I'd been hoping to do something with this data).
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Snicolette Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2019 at 21:18
Well thought out, as usual, Micky.  You never disappoint.  And reminded me of a couple of things I have to go back and add in.  
"Into every rain, a little life must fall." ~Tom Rapp
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