The just-released Rory Gallagher concert album, Check Shirt Wizard: Live in '77.
Sample: “Souped-Up Ford”
The just-released Rory Gallagher concert album, Check Shirt Wizard: Live in '77.
Sample: “Souped-Up Ford”
The Hotline Miami soundtrack. All electronic music, mostly aggressive but fairly standard EDM and hip-hop beats, but some pretty bizarre, psycho stuff too.
Im listening to my Spooky tooth record
(WIntness)
Current song: All sewn up
The first few Rolling Stones albums–when they were blues purists and Brian Jones was calling the shots–are the ones I paid no mind to when I was a teenager in the 70s. I thought there was something lazy about them doing mostly blues covers. Now, those three albums–Rolling Stones (UK), The Rolling Stones Now and 12x5–are about all I listen to. (Also Blue & Lonesome, but that has a slight by-the-numbers feel.)
Poi Dog Pondering live, doing a cover of a great Brian Eno/John Cale pop song,** Lay My Love**. Only 1,700 odd views.
Olivier Messiaen’s Quatour pour La fin du temps (Quartet for the End of Time) performed by the Gould Piano Trio plus Robert Plane on clarinet.
Messiaen composed it while incarcerated in a German POW camp. It was premiered in the camp in 1941, with Messiaen at the piano and fellow prisoners on violin, cello, and clarinet, and very decrepit instruments they were, too. Much later the composer recalled of the audience, comprised of about 400 prisoners and guards, “Never was I listened to with such rapt attention and comprehension.”
Reminded me, in an out-of-the-way connection, of “Un parfum de fin du monde” one of those awesome French songs. Google was frustrating, but I got the sense that it is a composition of Michel LaGrand so it is a “modern standard” so to speak.
Here is Natalie Choquette singing it - https://youtu.be/BW5X_c_lsiY
Lovely operatic soprano. Compulsive bass and piano. Could do without the swelling strings. Thank you!
Im listening to my BB KING record
(Indianola Mississippi Seeds)
Current song: Hummingbird
Some Beatles rough cuts: Golden Slumbers / Carry That Weight (Takes 1-3 / Medley) - YouTube
Greatest 20th century virtuoso Horowitz plays greatest 19th century virtuoso/composer Liszt (Hungarian Rhapsody #2). Stellar performance. Incredible cadenza.
Tom and Jerry are rolling in their graves.