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Beverly Hills Teens? Now you lost me - they didn't cover "September Gurls", did they? :confused: |
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Well that's just perverse. |
"I can't listen to this song ["Beautiful Child"] without crying so I don't listen to it often. But there isn't a more beautiful or appropriate song to play us out of the seventies. There's a sense of loss and saying goodbye, but it's a sparse and restrained culmination of the studio techniques honed throughout the decade, many of which broke ground on Rumours, the seminal seventies record. 'Beautiful Child' takes all they learned about vocal overdubs and harmonies, and applies those techniques in the most light-handed way that is just so heartbreakingly beautiful. Despite the lushness, the vocal harmonies still manage to convey a deep loneliness, and it sounds to me like every vocal performance in the mix was performed in isolation. Every player and singer on the song sounds like they were standing a mile apart, like the drums were played across the freeway, the piano recorded with the lights off." —Joanna Newsom on her favorite songs from the '70s "On 'Get Yr Life Back', sensual memories of a lover are inextricably tangled with the products of the present-day wellness industry: 'And you smell like dark chocolate cocoa butter'. While plastic signs advertise 'Get your life back yoga', experience becomes user-generated content: 'Take out the voiceover/The Fleetwood Mac song/The clomping is too loud'. This clomping is famously the sound of lamb chops, tissue boxes and a marching band, and the Fleetwood Mac song is that favourite of millennials (and music critic Simon Reynolds), 'Tusk', right? 'Yeah.' Does she like the song herself? 'I do. I just hear Fleetwood Mac everywhere right now. I mean, I love and relate to Fleetwood Mac. As a teenager I was into them but then really didn't pay any attention to [Tusk], then nine or ten years ago Bill [Nace] and I both discovered the album and would listen to it every day. It's weird how at the time it was such a hated record and now people love it. And now I've been consulting on this TV show based on a book called Daisy Jones & The Six, which is a fake oral history of a big band from the 70s that's supposed to be like Fleetwood Mac. So I've been reading about them. What a weird band they were. Really weird.'" —from The Wire's "The World Of Kim Gordon" special |
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Various Artist - Strain Crack & Break: Music From The Nurse With Wound List (Volume One)
After years of mythology, misinterpretation and procrastination Nurse With Wound’s Steven Stapleton finally chooses Finders Keepers Records as the ideal collaborators to release “the right tracks” from his uber-legendary psych/prog/punk peculiarity shopping list known as The Nurse With Wound List, commencing with a French specific Volume One of this authentically titled Strain Crack Break series. Featuring some Finders Keepers’ regulars amongst galactic Gallic rarities (previously presumed to be imaginary red herrings) this deluxe double vinyl dossier demystifies some of the essential French free jazz and Parisian prog inclusions from the alphabetical “dedication” inventory as printed the anti-bands 1979 industrial milestone debut. |
Cause I had "Get Up" stuck in my head lately. |
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You could even skip the traditionals, I often do, and only listen to tracks 2, 4, 7 and 8. Yeah, I even skip Just Like Christmas. It's too snowy. |
Dans Dans on the white vinyl |
im listening to a bunch of led zeppelin from an online playlist
sure, they incurred some excesses, which were of their time, and perhaps at times pandered, but a lot of what that band made is very fucking hard to beat |
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I see your point, but I generally try to eschew overtly christmassy things. No matter how much I like the artist/band. Christmas albums are like a personal pet peeve of mine. I can't really relate to them. Maybe I'll give those four a listen though. Let's see. |
Something wintery though ...
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pretenders (1980)
yes yes, you might have heard a couple of singles on your pop-pop’s AM radio, but this is a great little album as a whole. (ok, maybe a couple of duds in there, but the a-side is great) |
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Okay, how did this album ever get to be as revered as it is? I just sat through close to an hour of running time, of which I only really enjoyed about 5 minutes or so (that would be the second track "Wild"). The closer "Irene" was okay too, but it didn't quite win me over. But the rest just sounded like lethargic drivel to me. There are little glimpses of interesting melodies that are immediately drowned in the pale, metallic sound, the awful penchant for overdoing the reverb and the less than excited vocals. *Shrugs* |
Ha! The gaze server I'm on circlejerks that album completely, and I'd never listened to it. Glad to know that I shouldn't bother.
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I don’t know, it’s like a really basic version of all the great shoegaze and dream pop we grew up with, but people either don’t seem to know that or don’t seem to care. |
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Ana Frango Elétrico - Little Electric Chicken Heart Two songs in. Lovely, really lovely. |
The perfect Christmas album :p |
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presentism/lack of perspective |
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Kind of a snoozer for me so far |
Exit In Darkness, the new collaboration EP from MONO & A.A.Williams. Digital release out now, physical release out January 24 via Pelagic Records! |
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