What are you listening to?
Started by sean, Oct 03 2005 10:50 PM
2542 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 03 October 2005 - 10:50 PM
I am obsessed with this M83 album right now.
#2
Posted 04 October 2005 - 03:17 PM
Audioslave, NIN, Velvet Revolver, Weezer.
I need to go to Barnes and buy some new cd's this week.
I need to go to Barnes and buy some new cd's this week.
#3
Posted 06 October 2005 - 08:40 AM
"Eye of the awakening" import by Savatage
This is kind of a 'best of' album that was put together by some Swedish lover of their music and I must say...it's powerful stuff -musically speaking- here, of course.
"Somewhere in eternity" B side album by VAST (Visual Audio Sensory Theatre)
VAST has this sound that kind of echoes Trans Siberian Orchestra or Stabbing Westward or Beta Band styles they like to sweep you from diggin' the groove to crooning and then the very next moment you find yourself doing air guitar type moves with --get this-- drums!!! How does that happen?
I'm really stuck on some deep rockin music right now that takes me between different moods on the same track...there's some kind of hippy-crack to it that I'm going to give up trying to describe now....
I just keep it playing as I get my day job (or do I mean night?) responsibilities done. And the day goes by nicely, I may add.
Who wants to listen on some of these?? Or just a fun-endeavored sample??
PM TwoTrees and I'll ship something out that perhaps may grow on you if you listen in once or twice
hey! that's kinda neat...
well...
ok...
I think I may listen to it yet once more...
if ya want to get a listen, all I'm sayin is that I'd lend a tune.
(as it do ya, please; be it mp3 or music CD)
-Michelle
This is kind of a 'best of' album that was put together by some Swedish lover of their music and I must say...it's powerful stuff -musically speaking- here, of course.
"Somewhere in eternity" B side album by VAST (Visual Audio Sensory Theatre)
VAST has this sound that kind of echoes Trans Siberian Orchestra or Stabbing Westward or Beta Band styles they like to sweep you from diggin' the groove to crooning and then the very next moment you find yourself doing air guitar type moves with --get this-- drums!!! How does that happen?
I'm really stuck on some deep rockin music right now that takes me between different moods on the same track...there's some kind of hippy-crack to it that I'm going to give up trying to describe now....
Who wants to listen on some of these?? Or just a fun-endeavored sample??
PM TwoTrees and I'll ship something out that perhaps may grow on you if you listen in once or twice
I think I may listen to it yet once more...
if ya want to get a listen, all I'm sayin is that I'd lend a tune.
(as it do ya, please; be it mp3 or music CD)
-Michelle
Memories stolen but not forgotten;
the past swept away
beneath a rug of regrets;
yet in this room
lit by eternal brightness,
shadows delay leaving --
ghosts, like flames, flicker,
burning away the remnants
of misery and anger
until all that's left
... is you.
the past swept away
beneath a rug of regrets;
yet in this room
lit by eternal brightness,
shadows delay leaving --
ghosts, like flames, flicker,
burning away the remnants
of misery and anger
until all that's left
... is you.
#4
Posted 06 October 2005 - 11:21 PM
The wife says my taste in music really, really sucks. You be the judge
.
At the moment, I can't put down Finally Woken by Jem
At the moment, I can't put down Finally Woken by Jem
#5
Posted 13 October 2005 - 10:03 AM
Bach's "Goldberg Variations", played by Glenn Gould. This is on the cusp of Early Heaven - ordered brilliance on so many levels at once.
Mulatu Astatqe's "Ethiopiques 4: ethiopian jazz et musique instrumentale 1969-1974". Way cool music that makes me feel like I'm in a opium filled bar in Africa circa 1970. The theme music from Jim Jarmusch's latest movie "Broken Flowers" with Bill Murray.
Chris
Mulatu Astatqe's "Ethiopiques 4: ethiopian jazz et musique instrumentale 1969-1974". Way cool music that makes me feel like I'm in a opium filled bar in Africa circa 1970. The theme music from Jim Jarmusch's latest movie "Broken Flowers" with Bill Murray.
Chris
goal: Alive to myselves, skillful with all.
#7
Posted 10 November 2005 - 12:43 PM
One of my favorite videos of one of my favorite songs by one of my favorite artists: Windowlicker
#8
Posted 11 November 2005 - 12:19 PM
Del genero reggaeton:
Ven, bailalo - Angel y Khris
Scandalous -
Dile (Cuentalo) - Don Omar
La Doncella - Zion y Lenox
Ven, bailalo - Angel y Khris
Scandalous -
Dile (Cuentalo) - Don Omar
La Doncella - Zion y Lenox
#9
Posted 13 November 2005 - 09:29 PM
i've been into "spirit: a journey in dance, drum and song and bill miller lately. when i have time. workin too damn much.
#10
Posted 13 November 2005 - 11:49 PM
Cameo Hill, baby. Pages of Green CD on repeat. Good thing I live alone.
“We the willing, led by the unknowing, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful. We have done so much, with so little, for so long, we are now qualified to do anything, with nothing.” -Mother Teresa
DirtTime
DirtTime
#11
Posted 29 November 2005 - 03:58 PM
Michael Hedges. Unfortunately, he died in a car crash in '97 and I'm just now immersing myself in his music.
I had heard him peripherally since the '80's but didn't pick up on him because I didn't realize he was playing only ONE guitar instead of a few :-). I didn't get the full Michael Hedges experience until I also saw him in action. Rent the DVD "Windham Hill in Concert" which was made in '86, and skip everything else but Michael's set.
Will Ackerman said that seeing Michael for the first time "tore his head off" as he (Will) watched the guitar being reinvented.
Just the kind of experience we're all looking for, eh?
-Karen
I had heard him peripherally since the '80's but didn't pick up on him because I didn't realize he was playing only ONE guitar instead of a few :-). I didn't get the full Michael Hedges experience until I also saw him in action. Rent the DVD "Windham Hill in Concert" which was made in '86, and skip everything else but Michael's set.
Will Ackerman said that seeing Michael for the first time "tore his head off" as he (Will) watched the guitar being reinvented.
Just the kind of experience we're all looking for, eh?
-Karen
Consulting: Dynamic Regimen and Nutrition Counseling
Free e-book and resources: Guide for Self-Healing
Free e-book and resources: Guide for Self-Healing
#15
Posted 30 November 2005 - 02:29 AM
One of a very few, really good, edgy Japanese rock bands to make it out of the underground there, yet still criminally neglected outside of Japan, the talented and ecclectic Yura Yura Teikoku.
BTW - Not sure what's up with this bold red thing, I'm just going with it though.
BTW - Not sure what's up with this bold red thing, I'm just going with it though.
#16
Posted 30 November 2005 - 11:32 AM
If you hit a wall in your practice, go back to the basics.
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