What are you listening to?

Discussion in 'The Chatterbox' started by saltypete, May 14, 2009.

  1. Erik Redd

    Erik Redd Lizabeth, baby, I'm comin' to join ya.

    Thanks for this one, I haven't listened to Canned Heat in a long time. I found a used "The Best of Canned Heat" CD on Amazon for $4.35 and I'm listening to it now.

    P.S. - my kids think I'm nuts.
     
    Slipperyjoe likes this.
  2. Erik Redd

    Erik Redd Lizabeth, baby, I'm comin' to join ya.

    The last song on the CD is the Fried Hockey Boogie
     
  3. gorgo2

    gorgo2 geezerhood

  4. johnus

    johnus Well-Known Member

    Wife and daughter arguing over violin practice. Great.
     
    5Savages likes this.
  5. Erik Redd

    Erik Redd Lizabeth, baby, I'm comin' to join ya.

    Let me guess, your daughter wants to continue practicing and your wife wants her to stop? :signs002:
     
  6. crackstar

    crackstar Israeli Ambassador to TSD

    This awesome old song from Congo-Kinshasa called Maya.
     
  7. johnus

    johnus Well-Known Member

    Wrong!
     
  8. Erik Redd

    Erik Redd Lizabeth, baby, I'm comin' to join ya.

    I can't be wrong. I thought I was wrong once, but I was mistaken. :)
     
  9. toyman

    toyman Member

    I'm listening to The Fan at my desk, as I do each day. Sports banter to drone out the copy machine and hens cackling!!! (no offense to any hens here!)
     
  10. Monkeylord

    Monkeylord The Lather Lord

  11. JRod22

    JRod22 Well-Known Member

    I like this one a lot
     
  12. Duckster

    Duckster Wabbit Season!

  13. macaronus

    macaronus Sir Nice-a-Lot

    Philip Glass: The Illusionist Soundtrack.
    Saw the film two nights ago and immediately recognised the music is written by Glass. One of my favourite Komposers. :love029:

    Oh, and great film, by the way!
     
  14. Monkeylord

    Monkeylord The Lather Lord


    Nothing beats Led Zeppelin but I like this one too :)
     
    feeltheburn likes this.
  15. feeltheburn

    feeltheburn Well-Known Member

    I like Johnny Cash and Heavy Metal. Who knew they go together like peanut butter and chocolate?

     
    trader ron and Monkeylord like this.
  16. KLF

    KLF Doctorin

    Fun - Some Nights

     
  17. Bird Lives

    Bird Lives Future Root Beer King of Turkey

    This is Freddie Hubbard sitting in with Phil Woods' band...The story goes that he had sat in 3 months before and was kind of out of shape, and Phil's trumpet player Tom Harrell kind of wasted him...So Freddie was a little upset and left the stand and said I'll be back....3 months later Freddie shows up...Tom had left the band and was replaced by Hal Crook on tromebone. When Freddie got up Phil told Hal, "We'd better go sit down..."....Man, Freddy's playing sooo much horn here, he's got a serious 'Terminator' thing happening...I mean, he could have hurt somebody...lol...Here he's in unbelievable shape...The heavy-weight boxing champion of the world!! lol

     
    GDCarrington likes this.
  18. Monkeylord

    Monkeylord The Lather Lord

    One for a good night :)
     
  19. GDCarrington

    GDCarrington Burma Shave

    [​IMG]
    Teena Marie's Last Record - Beautiful

    http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/teena-maries-last-record-is-beautiful-album-premiere-20130114

    Genuine, generous and gifted with a down-to-the-bone level of soul: before there was a Duffy, an Adele or an Amy Winehouse, there was the incomparable Christine Marie Brockert, a.k.a. Teena Marie. A porcelain-complexioned, green-eyed wisp of a woman that drew shock, then lifelong street cred, for her undeniably urban aesthetic, Ms. Marie’s sumptuous soprano and her penchant for fiercely funky jams and powerfully passionate ballads cemented her status as an R&B icon. Although she was overlooked and underappreciated by the fickle world of mainstream pop (outside 1984’s “Lovergirl”), Teena’s fiercely loyal fanbase rewarded her virtuosity with three solidly-selling CDs in the mid and late 2000s (2004’s La Dona, 2006’s Sapphire and 2009’s Congo Square) that retained her reign as soul music royalty. Lady T’s untimely passing in late 2010 may have prevented her from riding out that well-deserved second wind into a new millenium, but her fourteenth and final studio CD, Beautiful, highlights her incomparable ease with melding modern trends and classically-arranged narratives to produce sophisticated, yet street-savvy grooves.

    As expected, Ms. Marie’s signature trill and prolific pen game is prominently displayed: with the exception of a Curtis Mayfield remake, the remaining eleven tracks were written or co-written by the California native and her vocals offer all of the expected trills. “Luv Letter” is a tantalizing throwback to her Motown years, tangy flirtations stretched over a bouncy beat, while “Love Starved” posits her as a woman finally able to feast, rather than nibble at, a full serving of adoration and affection: “Just like honeysuckle sweetness, in a candy store/you’re everything I want in a man and so much more/Stop, look, listen to your heart and what it’s saying/that’s the one to walk you down to Lovers Lane.”

    When placed alongside 2009’s Congo Square, listeners will notice that the texture and subject matter of Beautiful isn’t as varied, but that doesn’t mean Ms. Marie’s adeptness at interpreting multiple genres has dwindled. Ms. Marie’s “Maria Bonita (For My Mother)” is a steamy Latin number into which she delves with intricacy and aplomb, and the hip-hop twist served up in “Sweet Tooth,” the first of three tracks that feature her daughter, Alia Rose, sounds as effortless and organic as the sensuality that she serves up in the Quiet-Storm-ready “Wild Horses” and “The Perfect Feeling.” Listening to their other two collaborations, such as the glib re-tooling of “Give Me Your Love” and the undulating, irresistible club cut, “Rare Breed,” have the bittersweet effect of making fans cheer for Alia’s well-honed instincts and emerging talents while lamenting further duets between mother and daughter that will never be.

    When the light of a superstar dims before its time, it can be hard to cull a final release from what remains that will properly capture their essence, but Beautiful succeeds at doing just that, suspending in time the awe-inspiring range and trailblazing style that enabled the petite powerhouse to stand tall amongst her peers as a triple threat singer, songwriter and instrumentalist. As she crooned in a pair of autobiographical songs within the collection, Teena Marie will forever embody “The Definition of Down” and remain immortalized as a “Rare Breed” in an era that embraced mediocrity and marketing over true musicianship: “I’m a fine-tuned instrument Baby, it’s in my DNA” is not just a lyric, it’s her lifelong mission statement----and because of that truth, this final studio release from Lady T lives up to its name. Highly Recommended.

    By Melody Charles - Soul Tracks
    http://www.soultracks.com/review-teena-marie-beautiful
     
  20. Erik Redd

    Erik Redd Lizabeth, baby, I'm comin' to join ya.

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