Whats playing on your system today?


Today I decided to listen to two of my favorite rock guitar heros and one great vocalist. Guitarist' Robin Trower, Ronnie Montrose and vocalist Davey Pattison.

I listened to Trower songs:
Bridge of sighs, Stitch in time, The fool and me, my personal favorite- Too rolling stoned and others.....

Then I pulled out "Gamma". 
I listened to: Razor King, Wish I was and Skin and bone and others.....

Davey Pattison hooked has also up with Michael Shenker also. I really enjoyed my day so far. Anybody else heard anything good?

N

 




nutty
@uberwaltz

Abba?

We might have to take away your music card for a couple hours of ‘time out‘ period.

;-D
Maazel conducts Respighi & Rimsky-Korsakov. The Cleveland Orchestra. Box set ‘Maazel, The Cleveland Years, Complete Recordings’. Disc #3. Decca, released 2014

CD
This should amuse you....

Abba ... The Album.

Cassette.

I have vivid memories of Abba slaughtering the competition on the Eurovision Song Contest with Waterloo.
I also remember my mother being outraged when the girls whipped off each other's wraps.....LMAO.
This was prudent England mid 70s.
Maazel conducts Glinka, Rimsky-Korsakov, & Scriabin. The Cleveland Orchestra. Box set ‘Maazel, The Cleveland Years, Complete Recordings’. Disc #5. Decca, released 2014

CD
George Szell conducts Schubert. Symphony #8 ‘unfinished’, & Symphony #9 ‘The Great’. The Cleveland Orchestra. Sony Essential Classic series. Reissue /Released 1992.

CD
Had an urge to play some Eels today. 

Eels - Blinking Lights and other Revelations. Vagrant 2005 2 CD set

CD
Gatti conducts Berg. 3 Orchesterstücke & Lulu Suite. Royal Concertgebouw. RCO 2008. Recorded to tape.

Cassette
The Fiery Furnaces / Bitter tea 
Indie rock with a lot of time/chord changes
Tanakh / Dieu Deuil 
Indie music with strings. This is one of my all time favorite indie bands. Very creative & beautiful music IMO 
Getting to some freebies from @uberwaltz

John Cougar Mellencamp - Scarecrow. RIVA 1985

Cassette

Never bought a Mellencamp album before, albeit I kinda liked some I used to hear on the radio, or MTV back in the day. I think this tape is fine, but the engineering and recording technique of this album leaves a bit to be desired. Very ‘hallow’, poor SQ, and amateurish production vs some of the songs and music that deserved better. I don’t think quality recording was a concern here.....just ‘get it out there’. Probably sounded fine on most car radios. A shame really.
stereo5,

In case you are still roaming this thread, my Wish You Were Here SBM CD arrived today. I agree with your assessment and prefer it to SACD version although not dramatically.

Thanks for the hint/recommendation.

@n80, I actually listen to Classical a lot (especially the Baroque era), but don't usually comment on it here. While fairly knowledgeable about Popular (non-Classical) music, I can be viewed as a dilettante in regard to the serious stuff.

The title I posted about is not just the 9th, but all nine of Beethoven's symphonies, in a little boxset. Listening to them all back-to-back is interesting: one becomes more aware of the composer's "tricks" (not said in the pejorative sense ;-); the frequent use of dynamic swells leading to a staccato chord punctuation. I actually prefer Mozart as a symphony composer; his are more different from one another, and he wrote far more of them.

But to me, J.S. Bach is THE composer's composer. I am of course not alone in holding that opinion. I was introduced to JSB by a songwriter I was recording with in '74-'75, the only genius I've known. He was a music major first at San Jose State College and then The University of California at Riverside, and possessed perfect pitch. Learning to sing a Fugue---as I was required to do in our work---was the hardest thing I've ever done. It also instilled in me a low tolerance for "flat" singing, and out-of-tune guitars. Both are far more common than you would think!

@bdp24 I did not have you pegged as a classical guy. Of course anyone should be able to enjoy Beethoven's 9th. In my meager experience with classical I see the 9th as possibly the greatest symphony ever.
Beethoven 9 Symphonies, John Gardiner conducting Orchestre Revolutionnaire Et Romantique. Archiv 439 900-2.
Bridge to Babylon .... The Rolling Stones.

I started playing this from my server this afternoon but got interrupted.

So put the actual CD in the Esoteric tonight and woah....

This must be the best sounding Stones album I have heard, very well recorded.
And some pretty good songs to boot.
@uberwaltz 

Funk #49 ... James Gang.

Oh man, one of my favs as a kid. Especially as Joe and the boys were from Cleveland. 
Glad the tapes are working out ok so far Brian! Enjoy!!

Double Vision .... Foreigner.

Cassette
I saw Robin Trower with Peter Frampton about 20 years ago. Bridge of Sighs live was one off the bucket list. Today I bought and listened to Chris Tea, Tower of Power, Steely Dan, Rikki Lee Jones and Weather Report.
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers - Long After Dark. MCA 1982

Cassette

Thanks Uber
bkeske, Have you heard "Yellow Shark" from Frank Zappa? Picked it up this week & really enjoyed it. 

Babybird / There's something going on
Indie rock 
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