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What are you listening to?

Everything else, basically.

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  • Jeff Offline
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Post by Jeff »

I like the agate the girl is wearing around her neck, and that I can see her nipples. I like their music, too. You really called the vocal delivery. Also, thanks for accidentally leading me to a new Jarboe record I didn't know about.

http://www.dustedmagazine.com/reviews/4132
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Post by HerrHerr »

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Sometimes it's a form of love just to talk to somebody that you have nothing in common with and still be fascinated by their presence.
--David Byrne
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Post by scook »

The Microphones - Live in Japan, February 19th, 21st & 22nd, 2003

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http://www.myspace.com/goldbergsthe

The Goldbergs will frame you for murder.
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Post by mcnichol »

rockin out to

Thee Oh Sees - The Master's Bedroom is Worth Spending a Night In [2008] (so addictive, such a good album)
Nation of Ulysses - live audio and video [1991-1992] (i miss these guys)
Lee Hazlewood - Cowboy in Sweden [1971] (he knew how funny he was, right?)
The Contents Are - Through You [1967/2007] (pretty amazing for a bunch of high school nobodies from the Quad Cities)
Darondo - Let My People Go [1971/2006] (thanks for the tip Mike!)
Lilys - Better Can't Make Your Life Better [1996]
Lilys - A Brief History of Amazing Letdowns [1994] (nostalgia central)
Meth Teeth 7" (wow wow wow better w every listen)

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Post by TexasImprovMassacre »

I met Cedric Bixler-Zavala of the Mars Volta once, and he had really bad meth teeth.
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Post by Lants »

Meth Teeth and Thee Oh Sees should trade album covers
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Post by Jeff »

The Liars
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Post by bradisntclever »

The Brigadier wrote:The Liars
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Nice. I suppose you've heard that they're opening for Radiohead when they swing through Texas?
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Post by mcnichol »

so much

Eat Skull - Seeing Things 7"
Eat Skull - Dead Families 7"
Los Llamarada - The Very Next Moment 7"
Life Is A Problem compilation LP (electric guitar gospel music -- this shit is amazing)
Meneguar - The In Hour LP
Blank Dogs - On Two Sides cassette

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listen!
eat skull - seeing things
rev. utah smith - i'm free (from Life Is A Problem)
Last edited by mcnichol on September 27th, 2008, 11:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Miggy »

Miles Davis: Get Up With It - Most folks, jazz fans or not, are familiar with Miles through "Kind of Blue". Maybe some more are familiar with "Sketches of Spain" and "Bitches Brew" or a handful of other albums that are indicative of his different periods. I don't get the sense that this record generally bubbles up to the top in his sizable oeuvre, though it rightfully should. It's like a smoothed out Bitches Brew that just hits you in the face like a satin bulldozer. I picked it up on a lark just to get a little more comfortable with some more of his albums but wow was I impressed! The sound was hip and timeless.
Helios: Eingaya If you're a fan of "The Album Leaf" or "Dead Texan", etc... this album is right up your alley. It's super-chilled out but not too slacker in its presentation. Nice and tight and one of my favourite in the genre.
Alva Noto: Vol 1. Xerrox Very hard to find or expensive (at least for this amateur), his albums are well worth it. He deftly takes white noise and turns it into someting really clean and compelling.
Frank Bretschneider: Rhythm As the title suggests, it has rhythm, but it's in a more minimalist variety. It's kind of like lower case hip-hop if that makes sense.
Mad Lib: Beat Konducta Vol 3-4: In India - remixed and reimagined Bollywood source material. It took me a couple of listens before I could get into it - but it's pretty amazing and original stuff.
Raekwon: Only Built 4 Cuban Linx - I didn't grow up listening to Wu-Tang and it's been hard (for me) to go backwards in time to appreciate some of their earlier work. I have enjoyed some of the more recent offerings from those rappers and this one in particular really impressed me.
Panama! Latin, Calypso and Funk on the Isthmus 1965-75 Another Sound Way collection, this time it relies heavily on a band called the Exciters. It's not as good as the Columbia! disc but it still has an eclectic mix of some really unique and funky Latin music.
Cesaria Evora: The Very Best of I'm kicking myself for buying a 'best of' album. I try and avoid it whenever possible...but this is the CD I bought. Now I wish that I tried to assemble more of her catalogue on my own. Evora, who is from Cape Verde, is fairly popular in the world music scene, but hasn't broken through to pop consciousness. I recommend her music to friends whom I know play the same Gypsy Kings CD at every wine and cheese party they throw.
Django Reinhardt: Swing De Paris - this is a best of collection I don't regret. It's four discs of almost everything early that Django did. The recordings are...um...of their time...which I kind of like. Old radio-style recordings but that include such priceless moments as his yelps while playing a particularly hot version of "minor swing." If you're not familiar with Django, he was a legendary gypsy guitarist who was sort of the Glen Miller-esque band leader of occupied Paris. Despite or because of his high profile he never got sent away by the Nazi's. His unique style is much imitated and I'm told that at Django conventions people tape up their fingers to simulate the technique he used with his fire-damaged hand.
Dexter Gordon: One Flight Up I previously bought "ballads" without realizing it was a collection. I am now slowly building up most of his albums and this is my favourite to date. At 6'5", he was known as the tower of power, but is actually capable of great subtlety. From reading up on him, he apparently influenced and learned from Coltrane and vice versa throughout their career. Many of his albums feature the same backing band as appeared on Coltrane's more famous albums. Really quite interesting stuff. Small piece of trivia - he's also Lars Ulrich of Metallica's Godfather due to a stint of living in Denmark and befriending his parents. Odd, huh?
Evelyn Glennie & Fred Frith: The Sugar Factory Recorded, not surprisingly, in a sugar factory. An abandoned one in East Germany to be exact. This is the soundtrack to a documentry on Glennie called "Touch the Sound" by the same director who gave us "Rivers and Tides: the art of Andy Goldsworthy" (with music by Fred Frith - see how it all ties together?) Anyway - Glennie's story is an amazing one - she's deaf. She's also the world's most sought after percussionist. She has tought herself to hear through her sense of feeling - pitch, volume, etc... I recommend watching the movie first (and Rivers & Tides before that if you haven't seen it) but the music is both noisy and musical, ethereal and in your face. It's really grown on me.
Nick Cave: And No More Shall We Part - this is in my car right now. I really love this album. Stylistically, it's a shade apart from Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds' other work but I feel as though it's some of the best songwriting and lyrics of his career. (that may be a controversial statement to big Nick Cave fans - not sure).

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Post by shando »

Listened to many many things since I last posted here, so I'll just tell you what I'm listening to TODAY! Holy Christ I love this band. Listened to Ponytail's new album Ice Cream Spiritual 4 times today. I think it officialy comes out next week. You can listen to the whole thing streaming over here:

http://www.paperthinwalls.com/listening ... ndex?id=79

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Post by TexasImprovMassacre »

I just started listening to Andrew Jackson Jihad this weekend...i've got a few of the songs from this album floating around on endless repeat in my head. Anyone else into him?

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Post by Marc Majcher »

Camille:

http://camille-uk.emi-artistes.biz/CAMI ... ameset.htm

Almost kind of a French Bjork, heard her on the radio yesterday, and had to grab it all. Also, she has a fun web site.
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Post by scook »

Other than "Alice Practice" I hadn't listened to this album until this past week:

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and

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The Goldbergs will frame you for murder.
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Post by Lants »

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