7 of your most listened to acts over the last year |
Post Reply | Page <123> |
Author | ||
suitkees
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 19 2020 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 9050 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
|
So, you're mixing Gin & Tonic with Whiskey and Water... Be careful! |
||
The razamataz is a pain in the bum |
||
Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35950 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
|
^ A gin and and tonic water can be deadly. Usually I prefer my booze not to be watered down, with tonic water, glacier water, distilled water and shark and piranha infested water.
|
||
Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14754 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
This is a great idea and at some point I'll take the time to listen to all of these. (There's the summer poll still to go through... too much going on at the same time, but that's of course better than nothing going on.) In the meantime thanks for your comments!
|
||
mathman0806
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 06 2014 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 6427 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
Ha ha! I didn't realize how black and white my selections were. And the second track by Black String. I imagine that the Tea Club serves up a selection of black, white, and even green tea. Maybe some Earl Grey. |
||
Nogbad_The_Bad
Forum & Site Admin Group RIO/Avant/Zeuhl & Eclectic Team Joined: March 16 2007 Location: Boston Status: Offline Points: 20870 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
This is very hard as I spent a lot of listening time exploring so don't tend to focus on any bands on a year to year basis. It's more likely that I've dived in to sub-genre and explored a bunch of stuff. Oh well here goes
The Muffins - I got the Cuneiform boxset in the last year and have been trying to absorb that monster so they are probably top of the list. I'll probably go with Zoom Resume from 185. Electric Masada - I've been to the last 2 Big Ears Festivals & both have heavily feature John Zorn so been listening to a bunch of his stuff, will probably go with Kedem black midi - continue to be one of my favorite modern bands, still getting plenty of listening, I'll go with John L from Cavalcade Squid - similarly I've been exploring a lot of post punk recently and these guys resonate. Boy Racer from Bright Green Field. The Comet Is Coming - still my favorite modern afrobeat jazz band, saw them live this year, favorite track - Summon The Fire from Trust In The Lifeforce Of The Deep Mystery Schnellertollermeier - from some reason I just keep coming back to their version of brutal minimalist math rock - Rights from Rights Melt Yourself Down - another bouncy afrobeat London band heavily into this stuff at the moment - Fix My Life from Melt Yourself Down |
||
Ian
Host of the Post-Avant Jazzcore Happy Hour on Progrock.com https://podcasts.progrock.com/post-avant-jazzcore-happy-hour/ |
||
Jared
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 06 2005 Location: Hereford, UK Status: Offline Points: 19333 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
Thank you Greg, your comments are much appreciated. I'm not naturally one for detailed essays, but make an exception for you occasionally, because I know you always read what I say and often give responses, more meaningful and detailed than my observations deserve... What I would say, is that I answered your question honestly.... these WERE my personal most listened to acts of the last 12 months. Although I'm not in the position to give you music quite as obscure as many of the other contributors to this thread, I could have given you a list of more recent artists who would have naturally had a smaller fanbase, but they wouldn't have fulfilled your requested criteria! There is a reason for this... over the past 12 months or more, I have taken time out to become more familiar with or at least re-acquaint myself with many of the important foundation bands of 70's Prog... these have fallen into several annoying, inconsistent categories, which I have become determined to straighten out in my mind... a) Some are bands which I grew up with and was familiar with all or most of their prime discography, but for some reason, I just haven't listened to for years.... BJH, Moody Blues, Sky, Alan Parsons, ELP, Eloy, Kansas, early Hawkwind.. b) Some are bands who I have known since a teenager, but my collection was more patchy, knowing some of their albums well, but others vaguely and still a few more of their less popular works, not at all.... Pink Floyd, Renaissance, Focus, Greenslade, Tangerine Dream, Camel, Jethro Tull, Supertramp & Mike Oldfield are all here.... and I have been determined to fill in the gaps and give their discographies the time, repeated listens and understanding they all deserve.. c) A few are bands who I really should have paid more attention to when I was younger and I'm ashamed to say I didn't, for whatever reason... I knew some tracks but not whole albums, which I've now been determined to put right... in particular, I would highlight Caravan and Curved Air. Why I haven't paid more attention to Caravan before is a shameful mystery I'm afraid. Gentle Giant also fall into this category, and they will be up very soon for a detailed listen. d) VDGG stand out in the fact that I've long been familiar with much of their pre 1978 stuff (Pawn Hearts has long been a favourite), but I have never bothered with much of their post 2005 material (other priorities), but Interference Patterns has had quite a bashing since I bought it, however I think I'll always be more fond of them up to 1978, in a similar way to being more fond of King Crimson, up to USA, than beyond... e) Concerning 'traditional' bands I have listened to throughout my life without stopping? To my shame, I'm afraid I can only list Genesis, Yes & Rush here... It would be fair to say that I will move on into pastures new in time, expanding my repertoire, but having significantly increased my appreciation and understanding of the foundation bands beforehand.
Edited by Jared - August 04 2023 at 02:47 |
||
Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
|
||
Grumpyprogfan
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 09 2019 Location: Kansas City Status: Offline Points: 11636 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
These are the songs that stood out for me. Thanks to all for sharing.
Logan - We live in different musical worlds. The music you posted in this thread is mostly dark and gloomy. Not my pint of brew. That's why I enjoyed Boards of Canada, it has a cool groove, and 'Orange' is not dark. Saperlipopette! - Dig the Sibylee Baier, an exquisite haunting voice, she nails this song. Joni is great also. Gazz - Nothing But Thieves - Hell yeah! Fierce jam (although sounds familiar) with a great singer, kinda Mars Volta vibe. Suitekees - Le procès du temps - A spicy jazzy number. The dog steals the show. Lewian - Mammal Hands - Big sound for that tiny sax. Kong is also groovy yet repetitive. Jared - Going with Tull, VDGG next in line. mathman0806 - Sonor. |
||
Stressed Cheese
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 16 2022 Location: The Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 540 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
Here's my 7:
-Frank Zappa: He's always there, since he's my favorite artist, and he's got a boatload of music. Finally listened to (and watched) 200 Motels in full this year, but other than that mostly listening a lot to the same albums I always return to (OSFA, Joe's Garage, Orchestral Favorites, etc.). He's got so much stuff that I more get into phases of a specific era of his career instead of just a Zappa phase. Anyway, my favorite Zappa song by far is The Adventures of Greggery Peccary from Studio Tan/Läther. It's in fact my favorite song of all time. https://youtu.be/aymj5wcIhiY -King Crimson: I first heard ITCOTCK, Lark's Tongues and Red ages ago, but it wasn't until earlier this year that I actually started collecting KC and getting acquainted with some of their other albums. I got their first 7 now, and it's hard to pick a favorite. ITCOTCK and Red have the highest points, but In The Wake of Poseidon might be the most consistently good, as in, it's the only one without any below average moments. Cat Food is an underrated song (from In The Wake Of Poseidon). https://youtu.be/VmnqX4iNBpI -Ozric Tentacles: Slowly going through their discography. If you like one album, you'll like them all, so there's plenty to collect. Erpland is my favorite so far, and A Gift Of Wings from that album is one of the many highlights so far. https://youtu.be/uJqPVARfzfk -King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard: I've mentioned this band a lot on this forum already, but I've gone through about half of their discography so far, in the span of about a year. Which is really fast for my standards for a band, but they have so much variety that it doesn't really get boring, and I'd like to be up-to-date at some point so I can get excited for their new releases instead of getting stressed out by them. My favorite KGLW track was already mentioned (Crumbling Castle), so I'm gonna go for a favorite from an underrated album, Honey from K.G. https://youtu.be/ADj2jDqT4uY -Brand X: Only heard their first 3 albums so far (2 studio and Livestock), but I already love this band. Born Ugly from my favorite album so far, Unorthodox Behavior, might be their best one I've heard yet. https://youtu.be/_wkSi-ZlOH8 -Todd Rundgren: Another artist I'm slowly going through at the moment. A Wizard, A True Star is the best one I've heard so far, though Something/Anything? and Hermit Of Mink Hollow are also brilliant. I have the boxset that covers his albums until 1982, and I'm saving some of the proggier albums for last. I guess I'd have to be unoriginal and pick I Saw The Light as my favorite track so far. https://youtu.be/N5V5HktI4Kg -Pink Floyd: I'm kind of (again, slowly - I go through artists slowly...) going through my Pink Floyd collection again, listening to some albums I hadn't heard (in full) for years. My favorite Floyd era is of course the 70's, but as I'm listening to their 60's stuff a lot lately, I'll single out the Ummagumma version of A Saucerful Of Secrets. https://youtu.be/WcM0q1VIl7Q I'll try to listen to the other selections offered so far later this weekend, but there's a lot of them and I am a bit busy, so...
|
||
richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28075 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
Big Big Train
Everything covering the Dave Longdon years, Folklore is my favourite for sure but I can easily take The Underfall Yard through to Ingenious Devices as 'block' Emerson, Lake and Palmer I am as predictable as the day is long. Easily Welcome Back My Friends but also Live At Mar Y Sol with that shorter punchier version of Pictures at and Exhibition. 'Norwegian Prog' a bit of a cheat but I've created a massive playlist for streaming inc the likes of Wobbler, Motorpsycho, Seven Imale and Elephant 9 and will never be bored! IQ Frequency especially is never that far away from my listening Dave Kerzner Still not getting bored of his 2hr 20 minute rock opera New World (Deluxe Edition) Steve Hackett Great recent albums inc At The Edge Of Light. Soulful and expansive prog PFM I adore the first 3 albums, okay so if pressed will go for L'isola Di Niente. If im ever uncertain of what to listen to then its easy, just pop this little beauty on. |
||
Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35950 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
|
- Kees: I thought my last response to you might have come across as a bit too cheap. I had noticed the similarities in tracks but I am prone to muddled thinking (faulty wiring, but the plumbing is passable), and as it is two boozy tracks, one liquor with regular water and one with tonic water.... Not only have I worked as a cocktail bartender (mixing drinks) and a nightclub DJ (mixing music) in my youth, but things get more mixed up with me in my older years, which makes me a Mixologist of sorts.
- Christian: Thanks so much. I appreciate everyone here for taking the time, and for me it is nice to have a diversion right now. - George: As Michael Jackson tells us, it doesn't matter if you're black or white. Your colorful post made me smile. :) - Ian (Nogbad the Bad) : Thanks for that. I could not find the first one on youtube, but here it is on bandcamp: The Muffins - Zoom Resume (off 185, from 1981) https://cuneiformrecords.bandcamp.com/track/zoom-resume-2 By the way, I used be very into The Muffins' Chronometers, but have not heard it in too many years. I could not find Electric Masada's Kedem on youtube and I did not find it on bandcamp. I like Electric Masada and a lot of Zorn music as well. black midi's Cavalcade is what really got me into the band. John L is a very good opener, but it was the last track, Ascending Forth, that most got under my skin. There are some album closers that when it comes to them I want them on repeat, this was one of them. black midi has been one of my most listened to over the past six months and easily could have been listed by me (I knew others would anyway if this topic got any traction). Squid's Bright Green Field is an album I really like. I would not be surprised if Boy Racers is the particularly obvious standout for many, although G.S.K. is the one that first made big impression on me. Love it. I checked out The Comet is Coming before, because of you, or perhaps maybe George? (please excuse the poor memory), very good stuff. Summon the Fire is one I really liked. I very much enjoyed Schnellertollermeier's Rights. The album is called Brutal Prog (I genre which often doesn't seem that brutal to me), but this track is actually super-pleasant to my ears. I like this kind of math-rocky music. Melt Yourself Down's Fix My Life... I liked this a lot too (I could imagine a great collaboration with Urban Sax). I may like gloomy/ down-beat atmospheric music (find it cathartic), but this is really hitting the spot right now. - Jared: I really appreciate your words. I like to write (but not read what I write) but I also have been told that it's nearly impossible to understand a word I say and so I all the more appreciate people trying to respond -- I think the words themselves are mostly fine, it's the way the words are combined that is the real problem. Anyway, I genuinely do like to read what others write, especially if I have asked a question or presented an idea. And of course nothing wrong with listening to more traditional bands. Those are all classics that stood the test of time. I loved listening though your choices. And despite being big names, there were some really happy discoveries for this guy who is lacking in knowledge when it comes to many classics that others take for granted. - Will: Glad you liked the Boards of Canada track. I love to listen to that when driving and cleaning -- it's got such groove and I love groove... Yeah, that's right. It's fun and gets me moving. I do find lots of dark and gloomy music, tv shows, movies, books to particularly resonate with me, which is kind of sad I guess. I find it can be cathartic. That said, like I said, I found that Rascal Reporters track to be excellent. I love it and other music you posted. I've said it before in so many words, but different musical worlds largely but they also intersect because a lot of the kind of music I would associate with Zappa and friends we both like. Hearing Peaches en Regalia on the radio was revelatory to me and had a big effect on my music direction. I like Frogg Cafe, French TV and many others that I find positively jaunty. I have noticed that a lot of music I actually find quite uplifting and life-affirming others just find plain depressing. I'm organising a funeral now and I still get a weird pleasure out of music that some have claimed they would rather perform vile acts on their bodies than to listen to, and/or that it would drive them to self-destruction to have to listen to it. To each their own psyches and tolerance levels, not to mention hyperbolic claims. I have wanted to respond that much as I like the music, I would enjoy testing that proposition rather like in A Clockwork Orange even more. But I digress. - Ian (Stressed Cheese) : Yeah, it's a lot. It's easier for me because I am taking some time from things other than there is lot of stuff to organise which I need some distraction from and I'm happy to take a bit of a break from the music I have most been into of late and delve into some others. In your case I had heard almost all of those before. Really enjoyed hearing that Zappa (such a great track) and the Floyd again. I have not been as into King Gizzard.... (KG&TLW) as I sometimes have felt I should be. I mean I do like plenty of King Gizz music, and probably it has something to do with how prolific the band is. I wanted to say that I really enjoyed the track you posted. - Richard: I love PFM's L'isola di niente. And the jazzy and quite bombastic last track on it, "Via Lumière" is one of my all-time faves. What a fantastic way to end such a great era for PFM imo. Thanks all. Edited by Logan - August 04 2023 at 23:37 |
||
moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17529 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
Hi,
I can't say that I have listened to some things more than others, since I listen to so many different things ... besides keeping up with the threads by Andrea and Damo. The only thing I can say I have done, is pick up a few of the Klaus Schulze CD's that were released from his early WORKS series, and in getting 5 or 6 of those CD's to add to my list has been quite lovely, and special. It's almost unbelievable that someone can do so many interesting things and still come out with far out stuff with different folks ... a tremendous feat. Other than that, maybe some Tangerine Dream, redoes and remakes in the various series they have ... it seems different and it always satisfies. I'm not much into the "pop culture" that we often find in many works listed here, although I will state that many of them are super nice and very enjoyable.
|
||
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
||
The Dark Elf
Forum Senior Member VIP Member Joined: February 01 2011 Location: Michigan Status: Offline Points: 13065 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
I can't account for what I've been listening to over the last year, it's quite varied; however, recently I've been on a blues kick, among other things:
1. The first 6 albums of John Lee Hooker from the 50s and early 60s. 2. Johnny Winter's discography from 1968 through 1973. 3. Select anthologies of Skip James from his Paramount years in the 1930s. 4. Albums from Ali Farka Touré and Toumani Diabaté together and separately.5. Billy Strings' first 3 albums. |
||
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology... |
||
Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Offline Points: 11696 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
|
|
||
Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35950 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
|
Sorry, I know this was addressed to Pedro, but I thought he might not respond, and wanted to try to look for the correlations for a pop culture that is represented by much of the music that has been mentioned. I do favour going into very specific examples rather than generalising often. I think Pedro tends to favour a sort of deductive thinking whereas I am more inductive (not that I am anywhere near as adept at logical reasoning as I would like to be). Of course there are pop veins running though this, and rock and pop intertwine (and folk etc.) As someone who has checked out most of the music in the playlist, there is such variety that has been mentioned. If pop culture is that significant, then I would say pop cultures. The audience of, say, a K-pop artist might be very different from an audience that listens to avant-garde jazz, experimental rock, neoclassical, Zolo. But actually I think it shows that our PA culture, if it is thought of as a kind of subculture, is into very diverse music. I guess my choices would tend to appeal to a certain more hipster alternative art pop crowd. I love lots of music that gets classified as pop. From really popular classic ones like ABBA and the Carpenters to a lot of music deemed art pop, chamber pop, avant-pop.... From my selection, Weyes Blood would be the most obviously considered to make pop (as genre) music I would think, but Anna von Hausswolff and Chelsea Wolfe also make a kind of art pop. Portishead has been hugely popular and part of pop culture, and Boards of Canada. Lingua Ignota I also put into art pop/ folk pop realms. And Swans has made mainstream sounding folk music and even covered "Can't Find My Way Home" on what I have seen at least person call its sell-out album.. Now TheGazzardian spoke specifically about K-pop girls bands as something he can enjoy with his wife and daughter (my wife has been most hooked on Korean dramas for many years). By the way, Weyes Blood is music, in part, that I have played very often because my wife really likes it and my eldest likes it. It is my most played music in the car when driving with my wife. Most of what I listen to would not be appreciated by my wife. Instead of focusing on the genre tags (from rateyourmusic) of the tracks themselves, here are the albums that contain the tracks for the youtube track playlist choices, or an album that was mentioned as a fave even if a track off a different album was chosen, and for those who mentioned albums but not specific tracks) -- I did not make it that far as it was more effort and time-consuming than I anticipated. So this is just a small sample from the first few people to post, and so not enough to come to good conclusions... whatever conclusion that might be (and one may not like the labels). Logan: - Swans - Soundtracks for the Blind (Experimental Rock, Post-Rock, Experimental. Drone, Dark Ambient, Field Recordings, Spoken Word, Sound Collage, Industrial, Post-Industrial) - Boards of Canada - Music Has the Right to Children (IDM, Downtempo. Ambient, Trip Hop) - Weyes Blood - Front Row Seat to Earth ( Baroque Pop, Psychedelic Folk. Chamber Folk, Ambient Pop, Psychedelic Pop, Art Pop, Psychedelic Folk, Singer-Songwriter) - Portishead - Third (Electronic, Experimental Rock. Krautrock, Post-Industrial, Post-Rock, Trip Hop) - Anna von Hausswolff - Dead Magic (Neoclassical Darkwave. Ethereal Wave, Drone, Ambient, Experimental Rock) - Lingua Ignota - Caligula (Neoclassical Darkwave, Death Industrial. Black Noise) - Chelsea Wolfe - Pain Is Beauty (Darkwave, Ethereal Wave. Gothic Rock) Saperlipopette!: - The Necks - Unfold (Avant-Garde Jazz, Free Improvisation. Post-Minimalism, Ambient) - Greg Foat - The Mage (Cool Jazz, Avant-Garde Jazz, Soul Jazz. Jazz-Funk, Downtempo, Library Music) - black midi - Hellfire (Avant-Prog, Brutal Prog. Jazz-Rock, Art Rock, Vaudeville) - King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - Polygondwanaland (Progressive Rock, Psychedelic Rock. Space Rock) - Sibylle Baier - Colour Green (Singer-Songwriter, Contemporary Folk) - Joni Mitchell - Hejira (Singer-Songwriter, Folk Rock. Jazz Fusion, Vocal Jazz, Progressive Folk) - Ahmad Jamal - Extensions (Cool Jazz, Avant-Garde Jazz. Post-Bop) TheGazzardian: - Mamamoo - Waw (K-Pop) - Dreamcatcher (K-pop, Pop-Rock...) - Torres - Thirstier (Alternative Rock, Indie Rock. Post-Punk Revival, New Wave) - Nothing But Thieves - Moral Panic (Alternative Rock. Pop Rock, Alt-Pop) - Devin Townsend - Empath (Progressive Metal, Avant-Garde Metal. Symphonic Metal, Progressive Rock, Orchestral) - Major Parkinson - Valesa - Chapter I: Velvet Prison (Progressive Pop, Synthpop, Electropop. Synthwave, Progressive Rock, Rock Opera) Grumpyprogfan: - Polyphia - Remember That You Will Die (Math Rock, Trap [EDM]. Math Pop, Jazz Fusion, Flamenco nuevo) - Haken - Fauna (Progressive Metal, Progressive Rock. Djent) - Marco Minnemann - Their Colors Fade (Progressive Rock, Experimental Rock, Jazz Fusion, Jazz-Rock, Art Rock for his general discography) - Wippy Bonstack - 22 (Progressive Pop, Math Pop, Art Rock. Indie Rock, Progressive Rock, Art Pop) - Rascal Reporters - The Strainge Case of Steve (Avant-Prog, Zolo, Progressive Rock for the general discography) I love lots of Zolo, which I should have mentioned in comparing our worlds before as THE key word. I like to recognise the differences while finding, exploring and appreciating the similarities - Eyeless Owl - Murmurations (Progressive Rock. Canterbury Scene, Math Rock, Jazz-Rock, Avant-Prog) - Mike Keneally - The Thing That Knowledge Can't Eat (Art Rock, Progressive Pop. Progressive Rock) Stopping there at least for now cause there is so much listed and this albums approach was not a good one as it is taking me so long... I wanted to try to see if I could grok it more on my own based on the rateyourmusic genre labels to find the commonalities in regards to a pop culture (otherwise it's more vague impressions). Progressive Rock, diverse thought it is, might be seen as a kind of pop, and as a Prog community we might be seen as a pop culture. Lots of bands in PA made popular music, and it is common for bands at PA to make music that is associated with styles of pop. Of course some music included in PA is much more academic, esoteric, has less pop genre attributes and would be considered much less pop than others. And that goes for the music listed in this topic too, be it Prog or not. Edited by Logan - August 05 2023 at 15:12 |
||
mathman0806
Forum Senior Member Joined: June 06 2014 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 6427 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
I have gone through about half the playlist, mostly listening as I worked, so not completely active. The Tindersticks track does not play for me and stalls out the playlist.
All in and all, not a bad track, with of course, some that aren't to my tastes but that's expected. I appreciate everyone who has shared. I like being exposed to different music. Some select comments. Of Greg's tracks, I think I have heard all of these before and my favorites are Swans, Boards of Canada, and Anna von Hauswolff. From Saperlipopette, I really enjoyed the Necks track. That was the standout for me. I am already familiar with King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard. Greg Foat and Joni stood out as well. From The Gazzardian, while not in my wheelhouse, I liked the K-pop, though I wouldn't go out and search for it out. They fit in with the playlist. I've heard both the Devin Townshend and Major Parkinson before and those are good. I agree that the recent Major Parkinson album overall doesn't hold up as well as their previous albums. Of Grumpyprogfan's selection, I have heard a good number of tracks because of posting elsewhere, which is good. I should listen to more Marco Minnemann as I do enjoy his stuff overall. The only album of his many that I have is My Sister. Enjoyed it when it came out, but haven't really listened to it much since. My favorites were the Eyeless Owl and Mike Keneally (another artist who I should listen more of - I have a few of his albums). Then with Suitkees, I enjoyed the La Theorie Des Cordes track, and you already convinced me on 4U-9525 and I had just purchased it digitally on yesterday's Bandcamp Friday. And on De Staat, I really like them. I still recall The Witch Doctor from a distant Interactive Poll. A fun sound and I liked this one. The Phil Manzanera stood out as well. Then stalled out with the Tindersticks. Must be imported whiskey. I did listen to them on the Amazon "cloud" just now. I'll have to pick up on the rest of the playlist starting with Luc Ferrari. Edited by mathman0806 - August 06 2023 at 05:38 |
||
moshkito
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 04 2007 Location: Grok City Status: Offline Points: 17529 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
|
Hi, It's not meant to sound bad, since I love many of those things listed. I think my thoughts were that I spend more time listening to new and different things, than things that would otherwise be better known and previously heard. The only thing that "gets me" in many of those, is how familiar some of the things done are, or not. The ones I can not relate to anything, usually, are the ones I like the best. I guess that I like the "improvisational" material a lot more than the other material, a sort of going back to the original force behind "krautrock" which was a free form that also took place in SF, and other places, but we do not have a name for it ... except, many times "psychedelic" and quite often, it is not as psychedelic as it is just simple great work of companionship within a band, and appreciation for the "moment" ... which is not mechanical, or redone, as is the case in many things that might be more pop/rock oriented. Thus, my listening is less commanded by suggestions, and more on the look out for the new experiences, that one does not know or feel, which are difficult for me, when some bands are so repetitive in their own music design ... a format, so to speak. Sort of the less format, the more "person" you can see, instead of concentrating on the mechanics that we might think make this or that better known and appreciated. At this point, more or less, for me, a lot of the music is less about the person than it is an idealistic view of the music and its design. Thus, you can see how something that is improvisation is more interesting than something that tends to repeat itself. AND, often making you believe that this is meaningful. In the "improvised" and free form material there is no telling what it means, and this is very attractive to my imagination. But, it might differ way too much depending on each persons likes and dislikes. I'm used to a lot of different things ... most of them different, not similar in idea and design. This is a by-product of having lived in a house with 40K books of Portuguese, Brazilian and Spanish Literature ... and you gotta see and understand, that almost none of them are anywhere near the other in exposition. And it is the "difference" that makes them attractive. Edited by moshkito - August 05 2023 at 20:27 |
||
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
||
Octopus II
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 21 2023 Location: UK Status: Offline Points: 10489 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
Gentle Giant
Arena IQ Pendragon Galahad Big Big Train The Flower Kings
Edited by Octopus II - August 06 2023 at 00:39 |
||
Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35950 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
|
^^ Mosh, seems I was quite off-base in my approach to your comment of "pop culture". Never-the-less, I think there is so much variety here. I guess you already are familiar with The Necks, but Unfold (labelled as Avant-Garde Jazz, Free Improvisation. Post-Minimalism, Ambient) is one I would think you would like.
------------------------------------ General comment: It's not a requirement, but it would be great if everyone would highlight some key music (albums, tracks) from the bands/artists that they mention. I would like to add a track from each for the playlist and check it out, and it's interesting to me to see which specific music is particularly appealing to people. Gentle Giant is an old fave of mine, and I always favoured the early albums. I mentioned "The Moon is Down" as a particular favourite recently in another topic from what is I think a really great album. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qEUTPwgKKdI Here is the playlist for those who might have missed it. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4LJBMAZAJBGiJDTO0CoMoQz I am tempted to offer another seven with a track from each and make an additional playlist for that. And I invite those who already listed seven to mention more. One album I was listening to a lot over this last year is Fishmans' Long Season. I had meant to include it before. I adore this: I also got more Into Natural Snow Buildings, especially with Daughter of Darkness. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hiy3Qbw-oFo Definitely one that I have been biggest on this last year is Cocteau Twins. I really like all of its albums up to and including Leaving Las Vegas (great album), but Head Over Heels and Treasure got the most play in the past few months. Again a track I have shared several times, and yes, it is an embed, but I adore this (it's "In The Gold Dust Rush" off Head Over Heels): I also have been very into Godspeed You! Black Emperor this last year (favourite album remains Lift Your Skinny Fists, black midi, still very into Stereolab (love the albums Dots and Loops and Emperor Tomato Ketchup), Broadcast, Pram, and Air (as usual), and Uboa. And I have been very into Dead can Dance, Radiohead (really got into Kid A this last year, already loved especially A Moon Shaped Pool and OK Computer) , Bjork, and Susanne Sundfør (especially The Silicone Veil). That seven criterion seems kind of silly to me, why limit? Except that I thought we might get inundated with what I call laundry lists instead of people maybe focusing on those that have really meant the most this past year. There are dozens that have meant a huge amount to me over the past 12 months. PS. I know all of these tracks I have been sharing in this topic I have shared before in other topics, and that indicates how special they have been to me. Edited by Logan - August 06 2023 at 17:11 |
||
I prophesy disaster
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 31 2017 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 4801 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
I've been listening to Van der Graaf Generator, Peter Hammill, The Residents, and Snakefinger a lot lately, but below are more recent acquisitions that I've been listening to a lot in recent times. The tracks below are highlights from their respective albums. French TV - Mail Order Quarks iNFiNiEN - Ascent Birth - Cosmic Tears Notopia - Inspire Arachnoid - Toutes Ces Images / Segami Sec Setout Lost Crowns - Sound As Colour Nektar - A Tab In The Ocean Edited by I prophesy disaster - August 12 2023 at 17:05 |
||
No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.
|
||
David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15135 |
Post Options
Thanks(1)
|
|
"7 of your most listened to acts over the last year" That would not least be my last purchases which are: Universal Totem Orchestra - Mathematical Mother Voivod - Nothingface Swans - To Be Kind Aesma Daeva - The Eros of Frigid Beauty Goat - Commune De De Lind - Io Non So Da dove Vengo.... Mutantes - Tudo Foi Feito Pelo |
||
quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
|
||
Post Reply | Page <123> |
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |