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
@Nutty,

I love "Out Go The Lights"! For me it brings back memories of Junior High School.

Just listened to Blues Around The World, from Putumayo World Music, and Sublime.
88 keys on his piano,
88 days since you broke my heart.

Thelonious Monk ~ Straight No Chaser (Monk in Tokyo)


Started out with The Alan Parsons Project, "One More River" then to "Can’t take It With You."

Then, from my memory: The Sydney Symphony Orchestra "1812 Overture", The Bolshoi, "Dance Of The Knights," The London Symphony, "The Polovtsian Dances," The Berlin Philharmonic, "Borodin’s Concerto No. 2 For Piano," and Berlin Symphony, "Also Sprach Zarathustra."
Evening Boxer!

Parachutes ..... Coldplay.


Can you believe I have never played this before......
Not unless it's one of your many new ones :-)

Bonnie Prince Billy / I see darkness
On my television system, Yo-Yo Ma's Silk Road Ensemble.  (B&W, Audire, Rotel)
     On Main system (Audire/B&W 803, Bryston/Peerless subs,  Onkyo Dx7555 CD): All Jamaica All Star Jazz Band.  Astonishing vocals on, Yes this is real, "Walk On By" and "My Boy Lollipop".     On Turntable: (Supex, Ariston, Signet, all old), Rosie O'Grady's (Aphex enhanced, seriously!) Good Time Jazz Band on Direct to Disc.  From the subtlety of a triangle and the astonishing tuba workout, with blaring but accurate dixieland instruments, on "When You're Smiling".
Clapton Chronicles.... The Best of Eric Clapton.

CD.

This issue is actually very good SQ, quite surprisingly.
👍
lots tonight, all new releases, just received in the past few weeks, so its friday and im enjoying peace.

all new releases...


exhorder
life of agony
drivin n cryin
angel witch
exumer
destruction
heavy load
saint vitus
possessed
sacred reich.

 
Hey U - is the Clapton Chronicles new? I’ll have to look around for it.

If you haven’t had occasion, check out his "From the Cradle". Great playing and excellent SQ.

Ha...just found it.  1999, so guess it's not so new.  No problem.  Later.
Ghost
As you found out not so new but a real nice job on production imho.
I have From the Cradle as well, not played it in a while though.
Tangerine Dream - Stratosfear (In Search of Hades box set)
Thomas Dolby - Astronauts and Heretics
Fanger and Shonwalder - Analog Overdose 4
Van Morrison - The Prophet Speaks
Sky Cries Mary - Seeds
Dang Boxer, I don’t post much, but we have about 80% correlation in musical tastes! Your the only other one I know that has Year of Meteors and Fakebook, among others. Plus I just ordered Larkin Grimm... only interesting stuff through my system lately would be:
Gudrun Gut
I Put a Record On
give it a listen. 
Teach Me Thy Statutes --- PaTRAM Institute Male Choir / Vladimir Gorbik  (Classical, Religious Choral)
Saint-Saëns: Symphony No. 3 "Organ" --- Michael Stern / Kansas City Symphony (Jan Kraybill, organ; Noah Geller, violin; Mark Gibbs, cello)
The Wigmore Hall Recital  ---  ANTÓNIO MENESES (Cello) and MARIA JOÃO PIRES (Piano)  [Classical Chamber]
Hello all!
Joanne Shaw Taylor, The Dirty Truth. Check out "Shiver and Sigh" it’s a great little tune.

https://youtu.be/Z_uxO-ddua

N



Validpoint, Thanks for the lead. I will check her out. Reading her bio, she was involved with  Einstürzende Neubauten which is another GREAT band. Should be interesting...

moe. / Wormwood 
Uber, Carnaval is really great.  I have it on CD, both the MCA and Amherst masters, which definitely differ from one another in terms of sonics.  

Spyro Gyra, especially on their early releases, seemed to craft loosely-themed concept albums, of which Carnaval is certainly one.  From the prog-lite of Catching the Sun to the funk-sprinkled Free Time, there was a unifying musical direction on each record.  And Jeremy Wall was at his compositional peak in those years.