Music: What are you listening to today?
In the spirit of the books and movies threads, here's one to talk about what you're listening to lately and what you have discovered. Tell us if you like it, what it reminds you of, anything you like, short or not, simple or not.
Like the books thread, I'd ask that we keep it mostly to stuff we are listening to or going to listen to soon, or have just finished listening to (that is, like a log more than a resume).
Below is my first entry.
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Bonnie Raitt, by Bonnie Raitt.
My understanding is that this was her first record, which she made when she was 21. Nine out of the eleven songs are covers; the two she wrote are "Thank You" and "Finest Loving Man," and both are good.
I really liked this album. Bonnie's voice is much sweeter here than I've heard her before, and very warm, traveling between notes more fluently, and not yet as raspy sounding as it became. (Which I also like in its own way.) Despite the sweetness of her voice she manages to put some heart into the bluesy material, and sings with what sounds like a real love for the lyrics. It's great to hear someone who doesn't just walk through lyrics. She sounds like she really thought and felt her way through the songs. Many of the most gifted and popular singers out there don't, winding up leaving a lot of a song's power still on the table, so to speak.*
From an Amazon.com review:
Bonnie wrote two of the songs here (Thank you, Finest loving man) but relied mainly on covers, beginning with a cover of Bluebird (written by Stephen Stills, famous as a member first of Buffalo Springfield then of Crosby Stills and Nash). One of Bonnie's major influences, Sippie Wallace, is represented by two songs (Mighty tight woman, Women be wise) while Bonnie also covers Any day woman (Paul Siebel), Walking blues (Robert Johnson) and Since I fell for you (Bud Johnson) among others.
I really enjoyed Walking Blues a lot and wanted to hear it immediately again, but decided to let the rest of the album play out instead of interrupting its flow. The album is good enough that I think I'm going to listen to it again.
By the way, it's in the Rhapsody's catalogue, if you have that service. It's also at Amazon, and the MP3 256kbps download is on sale there for $2.99. You can listen to samples there too.
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*This reminds me of a biography of John Denver that I saw on PBS the other day. I'm not a big Denver fan, but the biography was so good that this is the second time I felt compelled to watch it. Anyway, in it his manager said that at a particular concert Denver sounded exceptionally good, and it seemed like the audience noticed it. His manager recalls saying something like, "Your voice was incredible today. How did you do it?" Denver replied that he was trying to do what he learned from Placido Domingo when they worked together. He said he was amazed by how deep Domingo's art was; he didn't just sing a line, but put the right emotion into it word by word. If he was going to sing about a piece of steel, his voice would sound like steel. Every line was emotionally full, clear, and precise.
I got a bit of a feeling of that in this Raitt album. Raitt very much inhabited those songs when she sang. Unlike some spoiled divas, the newly emergent Raitt got across the feeling that she was glad to be there.
I was old enough to see these guys on MTV during their peak but not old enough to have gone to one of their concerts:
does anyone have a TR from one of their concerts back in the early 1980s?
I saw devo ~1980ish at the old Austin collisium, a venue originally designed for rodeos, wrasslin and gun shows. The only thing I remember is that they used lip syncing and pre-recorded music for some of their numbers. That was a first for me. I didn't get it, but was unsure if there was something to get.
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I am doing a comparison of Kraftwerk (1970) and Depeche Mode (1980)...
I've been struggling with Syamali for about a week now.
Youtube keeps pushing her into my feed and I absolutely understand why - she's got a fantastic voice and the profile fits right into what I usually enjoy. (Also, she's obviously a very comely lass, but that's neither here nor there...)
But these songs just aren't that good no matter how many times I listen to them, so I've concluded that while she's awesome, she needs better song-writers.
I had no idea American Idiot had its 20th anniversary back in September
I remember getting the CD for Christmas in like 03/04
Trump's threat today:
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This is such an outrageous brag that someone needs to call Red out on it. Next he'll be telling us that it had bucket seats with fold down arm rests and that crazy roof that came out in sections
believe me it had none of that fancy stuff
grill emblem only mattered in the hood
ten years later it was the vehicle for a failed teenage driving test
almost impossible parallel parking land yachts after power steering pumps blow