If I had to pick out one Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers LP, it would have to be his debut, love the raw sound and the lack of slickness that exudes from the grooves...
Tom Petty was his own man, RIP Tom!
Rock - what are you listening to?
Re: Rock - what are you listening to?
The official vinyl version finally seeing the light of day soon.....
Re: Rock - what are you listening to?
These hairy guys passed me by despite intriguing me with their appearance on TOTP. Wind on nearly half a century straight to an article in HFN about the band and a vinyl reissue of DWBY. To watch their progress from polite to hellish on the YouTube clips is astonishing. But I still don't get the Black Sabbath comparisons. Unfortunately life wasn't too kind to them as both Vincent and John passed on. Incidentally Back Street Luv by Curved Air bears an uncanny resemblance to Tomorrow Night......Oh and dig that guitar paint job :)
Re: Rock - what are you listening to?
Which reminds me, what Budgie...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54H3EUAzpVg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHQ2cQDH0OU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54H3EUAzpVg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHQ2cQDH0OU
Re: Rock - what are you listening to?
Cyndale wrote: ↑Thu Oct 12, 2017 10:27 pm Which reminds me, what Budgie...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54H3EUAzpVg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHQ2cQDH0OU
Perfect!
Re: Rock - what are you listening to?
Really liking this,a definite grower. On cd though. Vinyl price a real p*** take!
Re: Rock - what are you listening to?
Listening tonight to Tim Buckley's timeless Lorca, an album that literally rocked me back on my heels when I first heard it almost 30 years ago. It is a record of two halves, side one showcasing a wild new artistic tangent of Buckley's, at once raw and primitive , and side two seamlessly extending the musical development that began with Happy/Sad and eased into Blue Afternoon.
Side one still surprises and I distinctly recall the difficulty I had with this music when I first heard it. Many people consider Starsailor as Buckley's most difficult album but my first listen to Lorca's title track and Anonymous Proposition was a far more unsettling affair. There is a primitivism in Buckley's response to traditional folk musics here that is comparable to Captain Beefheart's assimilation of early blues on his masterpieces, Trout Mask Replica and Lick My Decals Off Baby. This was strange, restless, unsettling music to my ears, wildly different to Buckley's earlier music, infused by a primal urgency that saw the man actively responding in the moment not only to the imagistic lyrics but also to the improvisational sounds that his musicians were making. Poets utilise vocables whereby words are weighted not just by their meanings but also by their sounds and there is a similar concept at work here where Buckley trembles, shrieks, wails and hollers to shimmering, dizzying effect producing a sonic picture that intuitively completes our understanding of the elliptical lyrics.
This is brave, intensely original music, posessed of a a breathless urgency and given creative voice by a man whose restless interest in modern classical music and avant-garde jazz liberated him from a musical cul-de-sac of the backbeat and provoked him into producing something as furiously original as Lorca, a record that seethes with an unquenchable maverick vision which remains undimmed by time.
Side one still surprises and I distinctly recall the difficulty I had with this music when I first heard it. Many people consider Starsailor as Buckley's most difficult album but my first listen to Lorca's title track and Anonymous Proposition was a far more unsettling affair. There is a primitivism in Buckley's response to traditional folk musics here that is comparable to Captain Beefheart's assimilation of early blues on his masterpieces, Trout Mask Replica and Lick My Decals Off Baby. This was strange, restless, unsettling music to my ears, wildly different to Buckley's earlier music, infused by a primal urgency that saw the man actively responding in the moment not only to the imagistic lyrics but also to the improvisational sounds that his musicians were making. Poets utilise vocables whereby words are weighted not just by their meanings but also by their sounds and there is a similar concept at work here where Buckley trembles, shrieks, wails and hollers to shimmering, dizzying effect producing a sonic picture that intuitively completes our understanding of the elliptical lyrics.
This is brave, intensely original music, posessed of a a breathless urgency and given creative voice by a man whose restless interest in modern classical music and avant-garde jazz liberated him from a musical cul-de-sac of the backbeat and provoked him into producing something as furiously original as Lorca, a record that seethes with an unquenchable maverick vision which remains undimmed by time.
Gryphon Diablo 300, dCS Rossini (with matching clock), Kharma Exquisite Mini, Ansuz C2, Finite Elemente Master Reference.
Re: Rock - what are you listening to?
Thanks for taking the time out to air your views on Lorca. There's a few gaps in my Tim Buckley collection which sorely need to be filled. Lorca will definitely close one of them....