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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 18 2012 at 09:10
Looks like I'll be wrapping up the cycle this month.  Then I'll go back and do the new additions since I started this thread.  Next up:
Anderson, Jon    Olias of Sunhillow            3 - Jon's finest solo album.

Blackfield    Blackfield            9 - a little slip in ad for this one came with a PT album I had ordered became the first SW project I tried outside of PT.

Bowie, David    Black Tie, White Noise            10 - Brian Can't Dance, either, well not entirely true but it would have to be really silly.  Not bad for dance music.  I got the set with bonus DVD and bonus CD discs.

Eno, Brian    Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy            18 - much smoother album than his debut.

Glass, Phillip    Songs from Liquid Days            24 - Koyyannisquattsi turned me on to Glass.  Working with Laurie Anderson, David Byrne, and The Roches was totally unexpected.  Which reminds me, I really need to get at least one of theirs on CD.

Hackett, Steve    To Watch The Storms            26 - Darktown totally passed me by but I was aware of this one when it was released.  After several classical albums, which I got, it was nice to see Steve returning to prog rock.

Holdsworth, Allan    Metal Fatigue            28 - on of his better solo albums to be sure.

Manzanara, Phil    Diamond Head            33 - I might have had this in collection in LP form but it never turned up at used record stores, which is to say one his better solo albums.

Pere Ubu    Beach Boys See Dee +            39 - three live songs and a computer program I don't think I ever got to work.

Phillips, Anthony    Wise After the Event            42 - kind of a step down from Geese and Ghost.  Anthony was trying to be more commercially accessible.

Ponty, Jean-Luc    King Kong            45 - Ponty does Zappa in the early years.

Stereolab    Peng!            50 - still honing their act, one of two full length releases in 1992.

Tangerine Dream    Underwater Sunlight            52 - TD, one of the things that didn't suck in the '80's.

van't Hof, Jasper    Face to Face            53 - basic mellow modern acoustic jazz.

Various    Dali: The Endless Enigma            55 - the various are Robert Rich, Michael Sterns, Michel Huygen, Steve Roach, Walter Holland, Klaus Schulze, Djam Karet, Loren Nerell, Bo Tomlyn.  Progressive Electronic, really.



Edited by Slartibartfast - May 03 2012 at 13:13
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 14 2012 at 17:57
I generally only read a book once.

Ran through my last batch, working on the next set:
Anderson, Jon and Vangelis    Short Stories            4 - I was already a Vangelis fan when this album came out, heard if first on the radio.  Like it much better than Cairo.

Beck, Jeff    You Had It Coming            9 - not as good as most of his '70's stuff.  Jeff did get back on par with E & C.

Curved Air    Lovechild            17 - one of those long lost albums from the Jobson period this time with two of the original members.

Emerson, Lake, and Palmer    Return of Manticore, The Disc Four            19 - could scratch all the sappy love songs on this disc, but it is redeemed by Pirates.

Kansas    Leftoverture            37 - rightfully a highly regarded Kansas album although I think I've heard Carry On Wayward Son enough for a lifetime.  It's not bad for a commercially successful prog song.

Maserati    Inventions for the New Season            39 - my intro to this band was sampler CD included with an Explosions In The Sky Song.  I'd describe their music as more energetic.  Went to try and order a copy of the album but it hadn't been released yet.  I like Maserati better but like all post rock I've tried, nothing seems to distinguish one album from the other.

Metheny, Pat Group    Speaking Of Now            41 - another good album, but seems like after a string of really good albums, starting with the debut, they don't really have anything new to say.

Patterson, David    Selene            46 - David is or at least was a local guitarist, kind of crossover.  I was surprised to find this for sale on Amazon.

Porcupine Tree    in absentia            54 - the album that started it all for me as a PT fan.  It's weird mixture of heavy metal and prog rock, with some Crosby Stills and Nash like vocal parts here and there.  Just clicked.

Porcupine Tree    Stupid Dream (Remaster)            55 - I was trying to complete my PT catalog and this along with Lightbulb Sun were two that were out of print.  I found a new import version that I paid too much for and wouldn't you know it, the remaster was released shortly after.

Santana    Shaman            58 - I mostly like his guests albums that started with Supernatural.  Of course they are always a mixed bag.  I can't stand that song that opens up with the vocalist telling us to turn it up.  I usually turn that one down or hit skip.

Talking Heads    Little Creatures            62 - they peaked with Remain In Light for me.  I kept following them up until their demise, but nothing had the magic of that. 

Various Artists    Big Blue Ball            68 - kind of like what Santana was doing with his albums like Supernatural only not just primarily vocal collaborators.

Wyatt, Robert    mid-eighties            70 - Robert Wyatt: one of the things that didn't suck in the '80's. 

XTC    Homespun            71 - I don't think this was really worth getting but I was so thrilled that XTC had started making new albums again I had to have it.  I think a couple of listens for curiosities sake would have been enough.




Edited by Slartibartfast - April 18 2012 at 09:04
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 10 2012 at 11:15
I'll be ready for a "New Chataqua" soon.  I'm almost finished reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance -- for the sixth time.  I like to read it once a year just to keep my brain soft.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 10 2012 at 10:47

The High Llamas will finish out the last round today.  Time to load up 15 plus one for the truck.  And the lucky winners are:
Amos, Tori    Strange Little Girls            3 - I couldn't believe it when I saw that Adrian Belew was the guitarist for this album.  An album of covers.  Most notable for me are the deconstruction of Neil Young's Heart Of Gold and her version of Slayer's Raining Blood is absolutely chilling particularly considering it came out right after 9/11/2001

Beck, Jeff    Emotion & Commotion            10 - two words: Tal Wilkenfeld, spring for the version with the concert DVD.

Budd, Harold    Room, The            17 - I listened to this one while I was in one of my rooms.  One of his better ones.  Not that there are any I'd consider bad.

Bush, Kate    Sensual World, The            19 - this album was new out when my maternal grandmother died and it will always remind me of that fall season.

Carlos, Wendy    Digital Moonscapes            20 - after being wowed by The Beauty In The Beast, I found this one a bit of a disappointment, can't really quite put my finger on why other than the music on that one is just much more interesting.

Curved Air    Air Cut            22 - considering that all that was left of the original band was Sonja Kristina.  The beginning of Eddie Jobson stalking Darryl Way. LOL

De Grassi, Alex    World's Getting Loud, The            24 - Alex' claim to fame was his solo acoustical guitar work on Windham Hill label.  He put a band together for this album.

Happy the Man    Death's Crown            38 - One for the fans.  It's a concept album that precedes their first release on Arista.  The recording is demo quality for the time and many of the musical ideas would show up in their first official releases.

Hine, Rupert    Immunity            39 - this album came to the used bookstore I was working at.  I gave it a try because it had Phil Collins on it as a guest musician for two tracks.  It's a mix of crossover prog and synth pop.

Mahavishnu Orchestra    Inner Worlds            47 - probably my least favorites when stacked up against any of the albums that came before it yet it has one of the most beautiful songs John has ever done: Lotus Feet.

Metheny, Pat    New Chataqua            51 - did we really need a new Chakakahn?  Just a man and his guitar.  One Quiet Night did not turn out as well as this.

Phideaux    Doomsday Afternoon            60 - after I tried Fiendish, in 2007, I went on a raid and got five more titles including this fresh out one.  Certainly my favorite, but I really enjoy the others as well.

Porcupine Tree    Fear of a Blank Planet            66 - PT has yet to put out a bad album since I got on the train with In Absentia.  Same for those that came before.

Sutin, Paul with Steve Howe    Seraphim            75 - even though Steve got top billing, he doesn't play on all the songs so I logged it in with Paul's name first.  Kind of new-agey.

Wyatt, Robert    shleep            85 - my intro into Wyatt's solo work.  I was familiar with old Soft Machine, but there was a radio program on National Public Radio that I happened to tune into by chance and it was an interview and the discussion focused on this newly released album.  I was instantly hooked.  Still probably my favorite.

Zappa, Frank/Captain Beefheart/Mothers    Bongo Fury    - my first Zappa album and also introduced me to Beefheart.  Weird wild stuff.


Edited by Slartibartfast - April 14 2012 at 17:55
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2012 at 20:32
On a darker note, today I joined the ranks of the unemployed.  I don't know if the work will pick up where I was or like the dust that gathers all around me, I will find a new home.  I don't know if I'll get to listen to my music if I wind up at a new company.  Listening at work was my main outlet for cycling through my catalog.  However, between jobs and while seeking I will be setting aside about six hours a day to teach myself some software called Revit, so I will continue to listen to music while I learn and drive to interviews. 

But I digress, it's time for a new load of 12!!!

Byrne. David and Brian Eno    Everything That Happens Will Happen Today            20 - it's no My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts, which seemed to me to be more of a collaboration.  This sounds more like a standard Byrne album with Eno as a guest.

Fripp, Robert    Love Cannot Bear            35 - the best in the soundscapes series I've heard so far.

High Llamas, The    Cold and Bouncy            41 - I went on a bit of an HL collecting spree when I first got into them, there's a few albums in their discography that just uh, leave me cold without the bouncy.  I think we have about three fans on the band on this site and that probably includes me. LOL  For the uninitiated but curious, I can steer you to the good ones.

Holdsworth, Allan/ Gordon Beck    With a Heart in My Song            45 - one of those I found browsing used CDs, not particularly impressed

Jethro Tull    Songs from the Wood (Remaster)            48 - still as good as it ever was.  Doesn't really make me feel much better than I could know though.  All of the '70's albums are essential for me.

Jonas Hellborg    Art Metal            50 - one of those fairly new albums I can credit this site for making me aware of.  I've only scratched the surface of Hellborg's albums so far and have yet to be disappointed.

Mahavishnu Orchestra    Inner Mounting Flame (Remaster)            53 - one of the great debut albums of prog.  Seems like around this time a lot of bands took an album or two to really get their prog groove on.  Not so here.

Santana    all that I am            78 - kind of makes you wish Supernatural wasn't so commercially successful as this was the third in a series of assorted collaborations albums.  Still, the S man delivers up some instrumentals and I'd rather hear his commercial stuff that the dreck getting churned out these days.

Steely Dan    Citizen Steely Dan: 1972 -1980 Disc 2            81 - SD was around the house when I first got into prog, but I didn't really get into the music until I decided to get the box set.  Disc starts off with the most excellent King Of The World.

Summers, Andy    Mysterious Barricades            84 - Summers would take a more jazz rock/fusion approach to his later albums, this one's more like Eno or Fripp electronic ambient.

Sylvian, David & Robert Fripp    First Day, The            86 - my first Sylvian album I got in '03.  Not sure how I came to be interested in it.  Probably found it browsing used or looking up Fripp titles online.

Vangelis    Direct            92 - not bad for the '80's.  For some reason I had quit following Vangelis after the earlier '80's, found this browsing used CDs.




Edited by Slartibartfast - April 10 2012 at 10:46
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 20 2012 at 13:15
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,
 
Wish I could get out of listening to "Feast of Ashes" ... Djam Karet. (Burning the Hard City) ... I think I will wear down the CD player on the car ... and then worry about it! Before that it was the Girl from ... and Dagelbert's ... from Dance of the Flames by Guru Guru ... before that it was Riuichi Sakamoto's "Heartbeat" (specially the title cut ... 17 times in a row!) ... so there ... my mini-blog!


I've run through all the DK albums in this cycle including that one.  The rest I don't know.

By the way, why do you like to open up most of your posts with Hi?  If I'm not on perhaps it should be "Hello, hellllo, are you there?" LOL

I thought I'd rename the title just to fool people into thinking this is a new blog. Tongue
 
Riuichi Sakamoto only did an umpteen number of soundtracks, has an Oscar in his closet for writing the western music in a movie that David Byrne wrote the Eastern music, and on top of it also acted a lot and happened to be a fabulous keyboard wizard ... with ... Yellow Magic Orchestra!

Hang around here enough and you'll learn something new.  Big smile
My brother had a YMO album that I think was made of yellow vinyl....

It may have been magical but I cannot attest to that.


Edited by Slartibartfast - March 20 2012 at 13:16
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 20 2012 at 13:00
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,
 
Wish I could get out of listening to "Feast of Ashes" ... Djam Karet. (Burning the Hard City) ... I think I will wear down the CD player on the car ... and then worry about it! Before that it was the Girl from ... and Dagelbert's ... from Dance of the Flames by Guru Guru ... before that it was Riuichi Sakamoto's "Heartbeat" (specially the title cut ... 17 times in a row!) ... so there ... my mini-blog!


I've run through all the DK albums in this cycle including that one.  The rest I don't know.

By the way, why do you like to open up most of your posts with Hi?  If I'm not on perhaps it should be "Hello, hellllo, are you there?" LOL

I thought I'd rename the title just to fool people into thinking this is a new blog. Tongue
 
Riuichi Sakamoto only did an umpteen number of soundtracks, has an Oscar in his closet for writing the western music in a movie that David Byrne wrote the Eastern music, and on top of it also acted a lot and happened to be a fabulous keyboard wizard ... with ... Yellow Magic Orchestra!
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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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 19 2012 at 10:12
Bruford    Gradually Going Tornado            17 - Holdsworth is gone, singing is back courtesy Jeff Berlin.  He does a pretty good job, I just like the instrumentals on this album better.

Bubu    Anabelas            18 - an album I wouldn't know from boo if weren't for PA. 

Buckethead    Bucketheadland 2            19 - a little less shredding and more creepiness.

Frith, Fred    Cheap At Half the Price            39 - fun little politically oriented album.  Homemade with Frith accompanying himself a cheesy little Casio keyboard and borrowed drum bits.  Sampling before there was sampling.

Hackett, Steve    Cured            43 - hope I don't wake in the morning, trying to find you attempting pop...Has a few good moments, often the songs have a nice proggy intro and then fizzle when Steve starts to sing.

McDonald and Giles    McDonald and Giles            62 - I haven't had the CD for but a few years now.  It just doesn't really excite me.

McLaughlin, John    Floating Point            63 - speaking of albums that don't excite me.  It got a lot of really positive reviews on this site but.

Nice, The    Ars Longa Vita Brevis            68 - a little crazy a lot of moderized classical, I like it.

Residents, The    Animal Lover            84 - I saw it browsing and decided to give it a try.  My last was Wormwood.  This one's much better.

Scofield, John & Pat Metheny    I Can See Your House From Here            89 - another jazz rock album that fails to excite me.  Metheny has taken a decidedly negative view of the term jazz rock/fusion being applied to his music.  I think the PM Group album represent some of the best of that.  I think this album is one in which he runs away from that style.

Yes    Keystudio            109 - what might be the classic band lineup is on this one.  Sometimes I just fail to see the reason they kept making music.


Edited by Slartibartfast - April 05 2012 at 19:17
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 28 2012 at 07:15
It's weird, a lot of my few classical CDs have been turning up as I near the end of the cycle.

Well, there wasn't anything going on at work yesterday so I went home at lunch and I don't often listen to much at this computer (use it more for watching video music when I'm not killing time here).

Beefheart, Captain and the Magic Band    Doc at the Radar Station            12 - my first encounter with the Beef was on the Zappa album, Bongo Fury.  This was my second and I like it better than any of the other albums I've tried, which is not to say too many.

Bruford, Bill with Ralph Towner and Eddie Gomez    If Summer Had It's Ghosts            19 - I was surprised to see Bruford and Towner getting together on the DGM label.  Not a spectacular album but good mellow modern jazz.

De Lucia, Paco/Al DiMeola, John McLaughlin    Guitar Trio, The            31 - doesn't have the magic of San Francisco, still good.

Di Meola, Al    Infinite Desire, The            32 -  Al stretches out into mellow modern jazz.  Unless missed something it was his first departure from what had become a formula of sorts for his earlier solo albums.

Frith, Fred    Technology of Tears, The            44 - you can't dance to prog?  Exhibit 1.  You can, it just has to be really weird,

Grieg, Edvard Hagerup    Concerto in A Minor, Peer Gynt Suite 1&2, etc.            48 - the composer who had a piece of music stuck in my head but I didn't know who it was until college. 

Police, The    Zenyatta Mondatta            85 - this got the lowest ratings in a Police album poll.  Beats me. 

Porcupine Tree    Voyage 32            91 - this one has to go down as my least favorite PT album.  It was supposed to be all trippy but it doesn't work too well.  Kinda overdid the Gilmoresque guitar riff.

Premiata Forneria Marconi    L' Isola Di Niente            92 - I was a fan of The World Became The World for a long time despite my only copy being a really crappy pressing.  When the older PFM albums started showing up on CD, I was a happy guy

Residents, The    Wormwood - Curious Stories From The Bible            94 - ah we have this religious and non-religious album threads going on.  This is one more people should hear.  Very disturbing, but then it is The Residents.

Shadowfax    Shadowfax            100 - Shadowfax, Shadowfax.  After having disappeared for a few years after a spectacular debut album, they resurfaced on Windham Hill.  The heaviness is gone but the album is still good.



Edited by Slartibartfast - April 18 2012 at 09:02
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 23 2012 at 17:39
Drawn from the last 137 a set of 14 (I still have two to finish listening to from the last draw):
Emerson, Lake, and Palmer    Return of Manticore, The Disc One            35 -  The four disc set is a good sampling of the truly best of ELP.  Didn't really need a new version of Touch And Go or 21st Century Schizoid Man, but I did like their rework of Pictures At An Exhibition and Hang On To A Dream and Fire.

Genesis    Wind & Wuthering            47 - a really quite dreamy album when you think about so I decided to put on some headphones and give it a listen in bed before sleep.

Gentle Giant    Interview            48 - I think most people would agree that this the album where they started slipping.  Not a bad album but not as good as what they had done before.

Gismonti, Egberto    Sol Do Meio Dia            49 - Gismonti, Vasconcelos, Towner, Walcott, and Garbarek, say no more. Music dedicated to the Saipan and Xingu Indians.

Holst, Gustav    Planets, The            61 - had to get a copy of the original music although I liked what Tomita and Gleeson did with their synth interpertation.  From the same bargain bin classical series as the Williams album from the previous load.

Jackson, Joe    Night and Day (Deluxe Edition)            64 - probably didn't really need to get this one.  Didn't need Night and Day demo tracks, but I did get the Mike's Murder tracks so what the hell.

Jethro Tull    Little Light Music, A            65 - a nice collection of live mostly acoustic Tull.

King Crimson    In the Court of the Crimson King (Remaster)            71 - I could have sworn this one already came up the cycle.  I could really care less about the endless debates on this album: first prog, etc.  It's still a damn fine album.

Metheny, Pat Group    First Circle            80 - at some point I started to lose interest in getting all the Metheny I could whenever it came out.  This wasn't it.  Any Metheny fans drinking a beverage when the first track started probably spewed it out their nose.  Does humor belong in music, yes.

Oldfield, Mike    Killing Fields, The Original Film Soundtrack            87 - good movie, good soundtrack.

Oregon    Moon and Mind            88 - it's weird but I didn't start digging back too deep into Oregon's 70's catalog until recently.  Glad I did.  And what do you know?  Two albums with Walcott and Towner in one draw.

Phillips, Anthony    Sides            94 - continuing in path of related draws, another Genesis guy.  He'll never top Geese but it's OK for what it is.

Rutherford, Mike    Smallcreep's Day            109 - another Genesis guy.  Well I'm glad Banks and Rutherford managed to at least squeeze out one decent prog album each.  For some reason they got LP sides reversed on the CD, so I fixed it when I ripped it.

Yes    Symphonic Music of Yes            134 - Yes guys have a stronger presence on this one but I only got it because it was cheap used.  Not really necessary.

Loading today for tomorrow.

If anyone wants to for fun, see how many dots you can connect between these albums.


Edited by Slartibartfast - February 28 2012 at 13:16
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 23 2012 at 17:23
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,
 
Wish I could get out of listening to "Feast of Ashes" ... Djam Karet. (Burning the Hard City) ... I think I will wear down the CD player on the car ... and then worry about it! Before that it was the Girl from ... and Dagelbert's ... from Dance of the Flames by Guru Guru ... before that it was Riuichi Sakamoto's "Heartbeat" (specially the title cut ... 17 times in a row!) ... so there ... my mini-blog!


I've run through all the DK albums in this cycle including that one.  The rest I don't know.

By the way, why do you like to open up most of your posts with Hi?  If I'm not on perhaps it should be "Hello, hellllo, are you there?" LOL

I thought I'd rename the title just to fool people into thinking this is a new blog. Tongue


Edited by Slartibartfast - February 23 2012 at 17:29
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 23 2012 at 13:38
Hi,
 
Wish I could get out of listening to "Feast of Ashes" ... Djam Karet. (Burning the Hard City) ... I think I will wear down the CD player on the car ... and then worry about it! Before that it was the Girl from ... and Dagelbert's ... from Dance of the Flames by Guru Guru ... before that it was Riuichi Sakamoto's "Heartbeat" (specially the title cut ... 17 times in a row!) ... so there ... my mini-blog!
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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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2012 at 06:50
Not sure what you mean.  Anyone is welcome to make comments or pick favorites from a draw down.  I usually just post titles and then get my butt off to work, then add commentary later.


Edited by Slartibartfast - February 22 2012 at 06:51
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2012 at 06:32
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2012 at 06:25
Anderson, Jon and Vangelis    Friends of Mr. Cairo, The - this follow up to their debut album was rather disappointing, probably most likely for the title track.  I finally did get a copy though.

Blackfield    Blackfield II - hadn't listened to this one in a while.  Forgot how good it was.  Haven't gotten around to the third one yet.  Money is tight.

Caravan    In the Land of Grey and Pink - I think most canterbury experts would hold this one up as fairly representative but not being an expert on the scene I don't know for sure.  I've known about the band since the late '70's but they weren't one of those prog bands I took an interest in until they came to Atlanta on tour with Nektar.  Still only have two albums and one DVD, which I've only played once I think.  Should probably rectify it.

Focus    Focus Con Proby - back in my days of making CD assortments of bands I didn't include any of the vocal tracks off this album in my Focus tape.  Probably a good thing.  I think I've warmed up to them though probably because of that.

Genesis    Calling All Stations - what Genesis was doing had lost my interest before this album.  I got it because it was really cheap used.  It's not too bad but I'm glad I didn't pay full price.

Kansas    Monolith - popped out a review on this one today.  A band in decline but not too bad.

Oysterhead    Grand Pecking Order, The - more insanity from the pool of clay.  Interesting that it managed to get a listing on this site as an artist even though it's just one of the myriad of Les' non Primus side projects and so far was a one out thing.  Les needs to be added as an artist and all his wacky side projects gathered together.

Ozric Tentacles    Arborescence - this was my first OT album.  I went on a bit of an album binge but after it became painfully obvious that they all sound too much alike, I put the brakes on.

Ponty, Jean-Luc    Life Enigma - Ponty kind of returned to his '70's style with this one.  I made a DVD from the camcorder tapes of the honeymoon in Hawaii with my wife and used some of the music off of this for it.

Vaughan Williams/Edward Elgar/Benjamin Britten    Greensleeves,Fantasia/Intro&Allegro/Prelude & Fugue - don't have a heck of a lot of classical in my DVD collection.  From the bargain bin.



Edited by Slartibartfast - February 23 2012 at 17:21
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 15 2012 at 06:41
Anderson, Laurie    Bright Red - a rather dark offering from Laurie but it has one of my favorite lyrical lines: "O lovely pussy! Pussy my love! What a wonderful pussy you are."

Bruford    One of A Kind - the title is not an understatement.  The best of the Bruford albums.

Bush, Kate    Dreaming, The - Kate's most daring album.  I'd be highly surprised if she ever does anything quite like it again,

Fiji Mariners    Featuring Col. Bruce Hampton  - Nowhere Is Now Here so beware of The Pleasure Seeking Fiji Disco Women.

Hassell, Jon    City: Works of Fiction - this one hasn't caught on with me.  Jon's stuff can be a bit of hit or miss for me.

Medeski Martin and Wood    Uninvisible - oddly enough this one has a Bruce Hampton guest appearance.  One of those bands I like but haven't explored in depth.  I also have End Of The World Party.

Mitchell, Joni    For the Roses - zzzzzz.  Got it from a discount bin.

Nine Inch Nails    Broken - reviewed.  If he had stuck to music  like the debut, I wouldn't likely be a fan.  Nice prelude to Spiral.  (The Vangelis album not the NIN one Tongue)

Oldfield, Mike    Crisis - for being such a big fan of his '70's stuff I stayed away from his '80's stuff, but hey I finally got around to those albums with the remastered CDs.  Still can't top his earlier stuff but still not too shabby.

Projekct Two    Space Groove - reviewed this one this morning.  Another zzzz.



Edited by Slartibartfast - February 23 2012 at 17:05
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2012 at 16:13
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Anderson, Laurie    Live at Town Hall New York City September 19-20 2001

Djam Karet    New Dark Age - these guys passed me by when they were doing some great stuff because I don't live in or near the California area they hail from. 

Gabriel, Peter    Long Walk Home Music From The Rabbit-Proof Fence
Kansas    Somewhere to Elsewhere
Metheny, Pat Group    Imaginary Day
Nine Inch Nails    Y34RZ3R0R3M1X3D
Oldfield, Mike    Light + Shade
Porcupine Tree    Incident. The
Stereolab    Switched On
Vangelis    Heaven and Hell
Yes    Union

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2012 at 14:59
OMG, my LinkedIn reference has now surpassed my ProgArchives one in Google search.  I guess that counts for 30 minutes of fame in exchange for still being able to run but not being able to hide on the internet.
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 09 2012 at 18:25
I never pay much attention to production.  I thought it interesting that Todd worked with them at the time.  I also The Psychedelic Furs around the same time.  But anyway, you might give Skylarking a try again,  I pretty much regard all the albums from that era, however you define it, to be really good.

Thanks for your thoughts and reminded me of another connection in that draw, Rundgren as musician on one album and producer on another.


Edited by Slartibartfast - February 09 2012 at 18:33
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 09 2012 at 11:15
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Anderson, Laurie    United States Live (Disc Four) - this whole box set really endured me, I mean endeared me to the work of Laurie Anderson.  She did happen to do this box set in chronological order.  There is a condensed version of the whole box set if you'd rather sample.
 
I've always liked the literary side of this work, and of course that "Superman" piece.
 
It gives you an idea of how I was already looking at the music that was more adventurous and experimental at the time, than most "commercial music" (as Vangelis was already stating in various specials!), and you could no longer hear a lot of it, because FM radio was on its way to be just another AM station in America to play "hits" only ... except that here they called them "dots" with various colors, and you had to play so many blues and so many greens within the hour ... which really means that things like Laurie Anderson would never get played.
 
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:


Phillips, Anthony    Private Parts & Pieces VIII: New England - I can't comment on specific, but the PPP series has some great stuff in it and this is no exception
 
Always loved this series and had kept up with Anthony on the first 15 albums he had ... and I can not think of a single one that I have not enjoyed more than once or appreciated the beauty behind this man's work.
 
I also had the priviledge of having been given permission for using his music on the first (and only) audio issue of the Ygdrasil Journal of Poetic Arts some ten years ago.
 
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:


Porcupine Tree    Up the Downstair - the first PT album conceived as an album rather than more of a collection.  Never heard the original drum machine version.  Guess that must be a big ticket collector's item now.  Don't really need to as I like this one just fine.
 
I still like this album ... a lot!
 
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:


Rundgren, Todd    A Wizard, A True Star - For me it's no Utopia Utopia but he was headed in that direction.
 
Love this album ... but I will play the Wizard side 20 times before I play the other side!
 
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:


XTC    Skylarking - never a bad album made and after English Settlement a band that I never failed to get when they came out with something new. 
 
Of all the albums by this band I have, probably 15 or so, this one is not one of my favorites. I am not sure that they ever bettered the quality from "The Big Express" for my ears. Having Sodd Rungrin produce this, I think hurt a lot more than it helped. The guys in the band were fairly independent, which I think did not go well with Sodd's ideas of "producing" or how music should be presented, which, for my tastes, other than his Wizard/A True Star and a couple of the first Utopia albums.  In general, it was too much about "him" and while we came to learn how "eccentric" the folks were in XTC, and I believe this clashed with Sodd many times!
 
Ohh boy ... I'm going to have to do some listening ... I'm finding I don't even remember some things! The more popular ones are easy!
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