Our Wall of Fame |
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Wirebender
Forum Newbie Joined: December 10 2016 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 36 |
Topic: Our Wall of Fame Posted: December 12 2016 at 11:03 |
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My wife and I have a ritual. We dedicate one night a week to discovering new music. We enjoy all types and genres. Once In awhile, we come across an album that stands out beyond all others. The most recent was Night by Gazpacho.
Those standout albums make our wall of fame. An "Our Wall of Fame" album need not be a "classic" masterpiece. An "Our Wall of Fame" album is about the personal experience that only comes along once in a long while and is only rarely repeated. It's an internal, intimate connection with a composition that cannot be defined, nor requires justification. It just is. What album(s) are on Your Wall of Fame? Show your strength. Show your courage. This thread is not about conformity, it is about celebrating individuality. |
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Watchmaker
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 02 2016 Location: Greece Status: Offline Points: 170 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 11:13 | |
I have talked about it before, but here it is again. Departure Songs by We Lost the Sea. Read my review if you want, but it's an experience after all, so no words can do it justice.
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cstack3
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: July 20 2009 Location: Tucson, AZ USA Status: Offline Points: 7401 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 11:13 | |
You have a wife who likes Prog? Amazing, she belongs at the top of your Wall of Fame!!
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Magnum Vaeltaja
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 01 2015 Location: Out East Status: Offline Points: 6777 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 11:23 | |
"Wall of fame". Huh, I like that.
If I were to start my own up, here are some of the prog albums that would be on it, based solely on personal, intimate, nostalgic enjoyment:
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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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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 36722 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 11:31 | |
My wife dislikes most of the music I listen to, although we happily share a like of Simon and Garfunkle, ABBA and the Carpenters, some Alan Parson Project and ELO as well as various disco songs.
Mine would be a long list, but the first one included in Prog Archives that came to my mind was Franco Leprino's Integrati ... Disintegrati. That album says a lot about my personality and tastes. I commonly favour quite gentle and pastoral music, and music that is somewhat icy and reserved, but not always, it really depends on my mood. Edited by Logan - December 12 2016 at 11:31 |
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Kingsnake
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 03 2006 Location: Rockpommelland Status: Offline Points: 1578 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 11:38 | |
I can't for the love of god explain why but my favorite albums ever are:
Saga - Behaviour, wich is just bland pop, but it just perfect to me. Barclay James Harvest - Octoberon, which is just everything I want in music and Jethro Tull - Thick as a Brick, because well because... Newer albums include: Uzva - Uoma, wich is the most perfect album ever made, period. Susanne Sundfør - The Silicone Veil, an unique and unequalled album My Brightest Diamond - This is My Hand, another perfect album, wich just is perfect. Maybe the list can be augmented, with a Camel, Moody Blues or Queen album, maybe not. Oh and I don't know why, but Free Hand by Gentle Giant is just wow, wow....
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Kingsnake
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 03 2006 Location: Rockpommelland Status: Offline Points: 1578 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 11:39 | |
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Wirebender
Forum Newbie Joined: December 10 2016 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 36 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 11:55 | |
I'm a lucky man. My wife and I have very similar tastes in music. Another one of our albums that would make the wall is: The Doors. Their first album is groundbreaking and it has become a bit of a time machine ride for us.
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 36722 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 12:07 | |
You are lucky. When my wife and I met I was mostly into classical music and playing the music with her not feeling anything put me off playing music for a while. When I felt music was sublime and she just felt nothing, and expressed that she felt nothing, I found it off-putting. I've always been more of an instrumental person, whereas she prefers music with lyrics that she can relate to. On the other hand, we did both share a love of international so-called "art house" cinema, so we had that in common (but she never was so into the soundtracks themselves as I was). .When it came to music and film, in a way I reverted back to my childhood interests by largely going back to sci-fi and "prog" and leaving a lot of more serious music and film behind me, and she watches her Korean dramas. That said, she introduced me to what became some of my favourite novels (such as The Road and Never Let Me Go), so we do still have some common interests in the arts (plus our mutual love of museums).
Edited by Logan - December 12 2016 at 12:12 |
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JD
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 07 2009 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 18446 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 12:08 | |
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Thank you for supporting independently produced music
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timothy leary
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 29 2005 Location: Lilliwaup, Wa. Status: Offline Points: 5319 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 12:11 | |
My wife cannot escape the music I like while in our vehicle. She claims to like some of it......Camel, Porcupne tree, Gazpacho. RIO she does not like.
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Tapfret
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: August 12 2007 Location: Bryant, Wa Status: Offline Points: 8602 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 12:21 | |
My wife attended a Magma show with me this year and rather enjoyed it. She tends to listen to music from the 30's and 40's otherwise.
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DeadSouls
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 28 2016 Location: Chile Status: Offline Points: 4255 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 12:44 | |
Null
Edited by DeadSouls - November 12 2017 at 14:20 |
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mechanicalflattery
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 08 2016 Location: Seattle Status: Offline Points: 1056 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 13:31 | |
Going neither with favorites nor with the best albums I've listened to, but merely the ones to which I attach some nostalgia or emotional significance outside of the quality of the album (most of these are great anyway, a couple are still favorites).
Pink Floyd - Atom Heart Mother Van Der Graaf Generator - Godbluff David Bowie - The Man Who Sold The World David Bowie - Low Nine Inch Nails - The Downward Spiral Camel - Moonmadness Electric Wizard - Dopethrone Pallbearer - Sorrow and Extinction Low - I Could Live in Hope (recent discovery, but I keep coming back to it) Most of these I first heard around the same general period of time, in a particularly dark period of my life. I don't tend to attach intense emotional significance to music I've heard since then, even including those albums that have become my favorites. Edited by mechanicalflattery - December 12 2016 at 13:59 |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 36722 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 14:03 | |
My wife and I also attended a Magma concert, though it was last year. I think she rather enjoyed the experience considerably more than I did. I loved Magma (especially the first two albums), but the concert was too loud and too rock for me. It didn't help that the venue had a poor sound system so that it was like a wall of noise sometimes lacking in any subtlety, and even for me who likes the hypnotic qualities of repetition, the music became too repetitive. The biggest problem for me, though, was that I was consistently worrying about her reaction to the music. It was an interesting experience for me, as I've been to many classical and jazz concerts, but not a lot of rock ones. I got very nervous when I saw that they were selling ear plugs, and I've seen Spinal Tap in concert ("the world's loudest rock band" -- not really the loudest...). |
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micky
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 02 2005 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 46838 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 16:09 | |
hard to say... I've become a humorless jaded bitter a****le in my advancing years..... the only album in many years that has really knocked me over under sideways down upon the first listen would be.. Ut Gret -Ancestor's Tale amazing album man Edited by micky - December 12 2016 at 16:10 |
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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doompaul
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 02 2015 Location: boise id Status: Offline Points: 414 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 16:32 | |
Flower Travellin' Band - Satori
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Wirebender
Forum Newbie Joined: December 10 2016 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 36 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 17:10 | |
That is by far the most ringing endorsement on the thread! Ut Gret -- Ancestor's Tale is first in line for our music night! Thanks Micky, looking forward to it. |
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micky
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 02 2005 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 46838 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 17:28 | |
cool..... I'll expect a report back from you and from her. I don't often recommend albums, tastes are so individual but you asked .. and this album was one that fit what you described.
it was both my wife and I's album of the year in 2014. In fact my wife, sweeter than me by far, but as jaded and bitter as me said it best. I could (and certainly would) ignore albums and groups I didn't like...expect for the small matter of my better half.... for a good spell she was a designated reviewer for some labels and (we) had to sit through a LOT of stuff.... some good.. some not so good.. but few.. well.. in her words... In my years as a reviewer, it has rarely happened for an album to make such an impression that – barely halfway through my first listening – I felt inclined to claim that it was one of the best I had heard in a long time. Listening to the apparently endless series of releases filed under the ever-growing “progressive” umbrella tends to make one a bit jaded, so that even albums received enthusiastically rarely make it to the status of regular presences in a reviewer’s CD player. However, my very first exposure to Ut Gret’s latest effort, Ancestor’s Tale – their first release for AltrOck Productions – was one of those moments in which the sheer beauty of the sounds coming out of the speakers caught me by surprise, and elicited superlatives that I normally use very sparingly. Founded in 1981 by multi-instrumentalist Joee Conroy, a native of Louisville (Kentucky) while living in California, Ut Gret went through different incarnations before Conroy moved back to Louisville and teamed up with former collaborator Steve Roberts (founder of Avant-Prog outfit French TV), where the band’s debut album, Time of the Grets, was released in 1990. The band is currently a five-piece, augmented by a number of guest artists, and all of its members have an impressive amount of experience in a wide-ranging array of musical genres. With a distinctive handle combining the medieval name for the C (or Do) note with the name of a fictitious tribe of barbarian invaders, Ut Gret label their output as “pan-idiomatic music” – a definition borne out by the eclectic, often markedly experimental nature of their musical pursuits in the course of the past three decades, and which at the same time niftily dispenses with the often pesky “progressive” tag. Their variegated history is also reflected by their recordings, with a 3-CD archival box set of mostly experimental material (including a live performance of Terry Riley’s “In C”) titled Recent Fossils released in 2006, followed by Radical Symmetry in 2011. While there is progressiveness aplenty on display on Ancestor’s Tale, the music is also surprisingly accessible: multilayered and eclectic, yet consistently melodic, it might well be tagged as “Canterbury by way of Louisville, KY.” The influence of the seminal movement is openly acknowledged in the mind-blowingly intricate but appealingly fluid “Hopperknockity Tune”, a tribute to Soft Machine bassist Hugh Hopper (though Conroy’s glissando guitar also nods to Gong’s Daevid Allen), but is quite evident on most of the album, not least in the quirky yet literate song titles. On the other hand, the band’s origins notwithstanding, there is very little, if anything, suggesting traditional American genres such as blues, country, or Kentucky’s own bluegrass; while the weird, improvisational duet between Gregory Acker’s sax and didgeridoo and Gary Pahler’s drums in “The Departure” provides almost the only instance of the “difficult” music generally identified with the Avant-Prog tag. While featuring all the traditional rock staples (not to mention a mellotron), the rich instrumentation emphasizes the woodwinds, according a starring role to Steve Good’s clarinets and Jackie Royce’s bassoon and contra-bassoon (the undisputed protagonists of the dramatic, expressive “An Elephant in Berlin”, a piece strongly suggestive of late 19th century classical/chamber music). Both sets of instruments also come into their own in the three final tracks, which together form almost one half of the album’s 58-minute running time. Low-key moments and flares of intensity alternate in the 9-minute “The Grotesque Pageant of Dying Empires”, whose middle section also showcases some gorgeously atmospheric six-string action from Conroy. The mellotron-drenched “Zodiac” pays homage to Robert Fripp and early King Crimson, with hints of Maurice Ravel in the subtly tense build-up. while album closer “Walk the Plank” begins with a swaying, nostalgic waltz-like pace, then suddenly veers into Univers Zéro territory with a somber, riveting tone in which guitar, flute, vibraphone and eerie, bird-like effects interweave on a solemn mellotron backdrop. Besides the effortless complexity of the instrumental parts, much of Ancestor’s Tale’s unique charm resides in Cheyenne Mize’s star turn on the four tracks with vocals. The Louisville-based, indie folk singer-songwriter’s sublime pipes will cause jaws to drop right from the opening of the title-track – her voice gliding smoothly and caressing the ear like warm honey, crystal-clear but with a haunting note of sensuality, and not a hint of the stilted theatrics so frequent in so many female prog singers. Never domineering, though not submissive, Mize’s voice blends with the instrumentation and sets the mood: whimsical yet somewhat pensive in the multifaceted “Selves Unmade”; sober and wistful in the stately “The Raw, The Cooked and The Overeasy”, where Royce’s puffing bassoon offers her a perfect foil; more upbeat in the title-track, though with a hint of torch-song flavour in the song’s second half; and, again, sedate and melancholy in the heavy, oddly cinematic “Dinosaur on the Floor”, which also features a spectacular contra-bassoon solo. While my reviews always convey my own personal enjoyment of an album, I rarely wax lyrical as other writers are wont to do. Ancestor’s Tale, however, is one of the very few albums released in recent years that deserve to be called perfect. From the quirky, Oriental-inspired cover artwork (titled “Moby of the Orient”) and lavishly illustrated, detail-rich booklet to the astonishingly accomplished performances of all the musicians involved, the album is a joy from start to finish, and one of the most rewarding listening experiences I have had for quite a while. Moreover, it is one of those rare albums that, in spite of its complexity and sky-high technical quotient, can be enjoyed by anyone with an interest in great music – regardless of labels. |
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The Pedro and Micky Experience - When one no longer requires psychotropics to trip
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BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 02 2005 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 10266 |
Posted: December 12 2016 at 17:59 | |
Here are some of mine. Music that fascinated me when I was a little kid listening to all that strange music my brother, who is ten years older than I am and whom I idolized as a kid, listened to with his friends. It fascinated me immensely.
Hawkwind - Warrior on the Edge of Time, Space Ritual Edgar Froese - Aqua, Epsilon in Malaysian Pale Ash Ra Tempel - Join Inn, Starring Rosi Genesis - Nursery Cryme, Live Christian Boulé - Photo Musik Magma - Üdü Wüdü Gong - Angel's Egg, Live etc. Mother Gong - Fairy Tales Nik Turner - Xitintoday Gentle Giant - s/t, Octopus, In a Glass House Atlantis - Live at Fabrik (not in the archives) Tangerine Dream - Alpha Centauri, Atem, Phaedra, Rubycon Klaus Schulze - Picture Music, Mirage, Moondawn Uriah Heep - Salisbury, The Magician's Birthday Deep Purple - In Rock, Live in Japan, Stormbringer Wishbone Ash - New England, There's the Rub, Live Dates Popol Vuh - Affenstunde, Einsjäger und Siebenjäger, Hosianna Mantra These are some (but by no means all) of the albums that impressed the little girl named Friederike deeply. Edited by BaldFriede - December 17 2016 at 03:53 |
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue. |
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