What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Rock/Blues/Jazz/World/Folk/Country etc.
mcq
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by mcq »

DaveF wrote:a few more to add to my vinyl collection...

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This one also comes with a 7 inch EP of 'Bad Reputation' and 'Emerald'.

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I'll be very interested to hear your thoughts on the Tim Buckley records, Dave. Greetings from LA is his last great record and one of his most underappreciated offerings. There's a beautiful soulful groove running through the whole record. And one can I say about Starsailor other than I think it's an exceptionally adventurous album from one of the truly great talents of popular music. The title track, in particular, is deeply unsettling and an astonishing display of that six-octave voice. And, Song to the Siren is one of the very greatest songs I know. Haunting, harrowing and deeply powerful music. One of my desert island emotional touchstones - right up there with The Beach Boys' God Only Knows and Chet Baker's version of My Funny Valentine.
Gryphon Diablo 300, dCS Rossini (with matching clock), Kharma Exquisite Mini, Ansuz C2, Finite Elemente Master Reference.
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cybot
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by cybot »

mcq wrote:

I'll be very interested to hear your thoughts on the Tim Buckley records, Dave. Greetings from LA is his last great record and one of his most underappreciated offerings. There's a beautiful soulful groove running through the whole record. And one can I say about Starsailor other than I think it's an exceptionally adventurous album from one of the truly great talents of popular music. The title track, in particular, is deeply unsettling and an astonishing display of that six-octave voice. And, Song to the Siren is one of the very greatest songs I know. Haunting, harrowing and deeply powerful music. One of my desert island emotional touchstones - right up there with The Beach Boys' God Only Knows and Chet Baker's version of My Funny Valentine.[/quote]

What do you think of Elizabeth Fraser's version on the first This Mortal Coil album? Believe it or not I still haven't heard Tim's version yet?!?!? No excuse now...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pxvXI1i ... re=related: Starsailor version...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b49YfsjXw5E : Works in progress version...

Tim's version (my first sighting and I can't believe he was still doing
the business in his late period. I'll never believe what I read again. Beautiful and what I love Tim
for....



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mUmdR69nbM:

Elizabeths version.This is the first time I've ever seen this?!!?? God bless yt..
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cybot
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by cybot »

These very desirable items arrived at lunchtime (thanks Bubbles!)

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This has to be seen in the flesh.Amazing!!



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Isan's new one....
jadarin
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by jadarin »

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cybot
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by cybot »

Go on jad, fill us in the albums you got in the post....who are they??
jadarin
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by jadarin »

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Sleepy Sun – Fever
by James Dalrymple on 25. May, 2010 in Record Reviews



Californian acid rockers Sleepy Sun follow up last year’s Embrace with another serving of massive, sun-blasted riffs. On Fever, however, they subvert the dynamics of ostentatious heaviosity by adding some infectious boy-girl folk pop ( ‘Ooh Boy’, ‘Rigamaroo’) and some compelling sonic curveballs that keep the listener guessing to the finish. Far from a study of hairy rock esoterica, Sleepy Sun makes light work of what could have been an exercise in ear-punishing psych.

Opener ‘Marina’ swings between desert rawk - all rattlesnakes and dust-bowl harmonica - and blissful folksiness before a total flip of script arrives in the form of swampy tribal rhythms and chanting that sounds like a New Age take on gospel. Perhaps it shouldn’t work but somehow it does.

There is something faintly Espers about the folk pop of ‘Rigamaroo’, while ‘Wild Machines’ sets a slightly hokey scene by chucking in some Ennio Morricone whistling into a sonic mêlée that includes preposterously monstrous riffage. Elsewhere there is a desert sunrise comedown (the appropriately titled ‘Acid Love’), peyote-noir (’Open Eyes’) and a hint of protest on the scattershot rhythms of ‘Freedom Line’.

Yet the highlight of the album is surely ‘Desert God’, which shimmers into view like an improbable mirage. All heavily reverbed psyche-blues, it repeats the opening track’s total wind-change with a thumping harmonica breakbeat of sorts before some delightfully squiggly guitar solos.

Fans of, say, Spiritualised and Brightback Morning Light should enjoy Fever; it may even suit fans of My Morning Jacket’s expansive early albums, albeit relocated from humid Kentucky to breezier Laurel Canyon.
jadarin
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by jadarin »

[quote="jadarin"]Image
The Mother HipsPacific DustCamera
On the cover of The Mother Hips’ latest album, Pacific Dust, there’s a painting of a large group of people cordially interacting, some of them painting what can only be assumed to be the Pacific Ocean. This seems fitting for music that immediately conjures thoughts of a golden age in American culture and music: a time when masses of humanity set out on a pilgrimage to the west, called by the promise of new beginnings in makeshift hippie utopias. And though dripping with overtones from the ’60s and ’70s, there remains enough about Pacific Dust that’s rooted in the now, in the sonic tapestry of 2009, that may turn this album—the band’s seventh full length—into its break-through effort.
Throughout the 11 songs, the Mother Hips walk a line between new and old, now and then, capably melding sound elements from today with those of yesteryear. Album opener “White Falcon Fuzz,” could be straight off of a Weezer album, right down to the fuzzed out distortion coloring an awkwardly optimistic chord progression. But its softly slung lyrics and Jimmy Page-like riffing add enough dimensions to make the song a uniquely Mother Hips’ contraption. The same blend of contemporary and classic gets used again in “Jess OXOX,” a saccharin sweet love ballad that could easily share the stage with Fleetwood Mac or Dinosaur Jr.. “Third Floor Story” is the most deliberate in its efforts to recapture the age of classic rock, with angular, projecting guitar riffs that heavily share DNA with Lenny Kravitz’s sound and intent.
But more then their interesting experimentation with eras of sound, at the core of the Mother Hips are very well written songs so easy on the ear, they demand listening. Mid-album, the infectious ease of “One Way Out,” “Lion And The Bull,” and “All in Favor” compel a mindscape of sitting on a warm Cali beach, watching the waves slowly rolling in and out with no particular place to be, and no particular desire to be there. And yet, the deceptively simplistic song structures hide an overall instrumental virtuosity that resoundingly makes a comeback on “Pacific Dust.” Coy guitar licks informed by Robbie Robertson and powerful drumming a la Levon Helm, function to earn this song its rightful role as the title track, and the group rightful comparisons to The Band.
Founders Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono have been at this for two decades. In that time they’ve released numerous albums, and have become practiced at the art of writing irresistibly catchy tunes. Moreover, their vocal flexibility is remarkable, with neither faltering whether in need of a raging growl, or dulcet croon fit for lullaby. But even with so many formulas of success being used, Pacific Dust never feels formulaic. That is to say, there’s never a sense that the band employs gimmicks in their efforts to meld their contemporary sound with classic rock elements. Rather, it all takes place with a natural ease reminiscent of fellow time machines, the Black Keys and the White Stripes. But I suspect what’s much more important to the Mother Hips is that their music puts a smile on your face, which it will do quite often.
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cybot
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by cybot »

Thanks for the info on the two albums jad... BTW have you heard the Kevin Drumm stuff?
jadarin
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by jadarin »

Cybot,
I think i remember hearing an album of Kevin Drumm with Jim O' Rourke.Can't be sure maybe I was just reading about the record.
Any albums of him you would recommend as a good starting point?
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cybot
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Re: What music did you buy/get in the post today?

Post by cybot »

jadarin wrote:Cybot,
I think i remember hearing an album of Kevin Drumm with Jim O' Rourke.Can't be sure maybe I was just reading about the record.
Any albums of him you would recommend as a good starting point?
The one I got in the post from Boomkat the other day is the only one I have; and what an introduction!!!! I'm on the Touch at the moment (listening to Pelican!) so I can't post any links. All I can say is it's his first album from '97 released on vinyl for the first time. It's not easy listening by any means and you would probably be better off getting one of his current releases (read the reviews on Boomkat and have a listen to samples). He makes Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music sound like The Wombles!!! I'd honestly say it's the best real recording of an electric guitar I've ever heard! It's almost like you are inside the guitar - stunning!!

BTW what do you think of the Gastro Del Sol / David Grubbs stuff? I have everything they did and they're amazing! Incidently my avatar is from a GDS album! But you knew that anyway...and would you believe, I've also just found out that the only GDS album that Kevin Drumm guests on is.........the avator album?!?!? Synchronicity rules ok :-)

Also just noticed that all Kevin's CDs are sold out on the Boomkat site including the recent 5 Cd
set!!! If I had have only known :-((
Last edited by cybot on Thu Jun 10, 2010 11:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
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