Re: Dubious musical taste.
Vibes don't get enough love.
Not quite the same, and the marimba probably gets even less love than vibes, but....
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Vibes don't get enough love.
Not quite the same, and the marimba probably gets even less love than vibes, but....
Propagandhi is heavier than my usual, but their lyrics are great and this song in particular is appropriate to today's occasion.
Got turned onto Tiny Vipers by one Alex Ruger—had to settle into liking her stuff (very stripped-down, cyclical neofolk), but the atmosphere is truly haunting and some of the lyrics are just beautiful.
Last edited by Abbie (2018-10-16 18:31:16)
I'm so glad you dig her! She's incredible. Unfortunately music that really requires you to just sit and *listen,* not doing anything else, is often passed over nowadays. She seems to have retired for whatever reason -- maybe that one -- which is a shame, but at the same time it makes this album seem all the more precious. Her two other albums are great, but in a different way, and don't really approach the near holy quality of Life On Earth. It really feels like a high water mark, standing alone.
I forget -- when did I turn you on to her?
You tweeted about how great this album was earlier this year, and, you being the musical authority 'round these here parts, I duly looked her up. Looking at my post I suppose my phrasing implied more mutual agency than actually existed, but hey, we're retroactively having the conversation now
I always love it when an artist has an album like that—something that's just clearly in a realm the rest of their still-very-good material doesn't reach. I have that exact same feeling about Rilo Kiley—their first three albums are various degrees of great, but The Execution of All Things is just this monolith of emotional catharsis that the others can't touch.
Last edited by Abbie (2018-10-16 19:11:38)
It's the holiday season, which means it's time for listening to liturgical music in an effort to dredge up the ol' religious feelings. (Flippancy aside, these pieces and others like them are about the closest I'll ever get to believing in something divine again.)
Thanks for these. This is a treat.
This is another haunting one, if you've got a free hour:
Last edited by Abbie (2018-12-01 18:51:18)
The only thing better than tongue-in-cheek 80s lesbian honky-tonk
is the same band doing an utterly ethereal cover of "Sweet Jane."
Last edited by Abbie (2018-12-12 22:24:41)
Been getting into some funk-inspired jazz lately—the Hammond organ/electric guitar combo is just ear candy.
*clicks play on first video*
*waits nine seconds*
*is fully into it*
Oof. Themz some bloody snazzy tracks.
I don't often listen to music. It's not that I don't like it, it's just that I...don't like it. It just doesn't often occur to me to put something on, and it's usually an orchestral soundtrack when I do happen to get the urge.
So my musical taste is perhaps the most dubious of all
Anywho, here's a band I was exposed to quite on accident this past weekend (short story, not short enough). They sound really good live.
Sawyer
https://open.spotify.com/album/4ulwAiKLIFWUnX5g7uwdKO
This EP is fun as hell, particularly The Last Thing.
It can take a little while getting used to that guy's voice, though he's softened it a bit over the years. He's been compared a lot to Bob Dylan (though Dylan was never Swedish, as far as I know!).
Love Is All is his one song I always come back to. It's sad and very powerful.
(it's also a great guitar exercise )
Last edited by Saniss (2019-01-18 15:54:09)
With the Oscar nominees announced today, thought I'd take the opportunity to share bits of my favorite movie scores from the last year.
Jonny Greenwood, Phantom Thread
Nicholas Britell, If Beale Street Could Talk
Carter Burwell, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs
Ben Salisbury and Geoff Barrow, Annihilation
Last edited by Abbie (2019-01-22 18:58:41)
Phantom Thread is awesome. I had the pleasure of seeing it played live to picture -- while sitting about 3 feet away from Greenwood and PTA. They smelled good.
Fantastic score, fantastic movie, and both don't get enough credit. I feel like they flew under the radar too much, so thanks for posting it.
I am SO FUCKING JEALOUS right now, that's amazing. Still bummed the Minneapolis area didn't get either that option or one of the 70mm prints.
We did get Ready Player One on 70mm, because the universe is mocking me.
Still can't believe the score lost the Oscar to Desplat for Shape of Water. Don't get me wrong, Desplat is great and his wasn't a bad score by any stretch of the imagination, but Greenwood wrote my favorite movie music of at least the last decade.
Last edited by Abbie (2019-01-25 05:11:25)
BDA putting the Dubious in 'Dubious musical taste'...
(language warning nsfw)
Someone sent me this guy a few days ago, and his entire album is equally delightful.
https://open.spotify.com/album/0sPURcvc … Z-NRmnS_Og
@BDA, if you dig that you might like this track by Emilie Autumn; not necessarily a fan of hers in general but this particular song is black-comic period perfection.
In other news, god this recording is gorgeous.
@BDA, if you dig that you might like this track by Emilie Autumn; not necessarily a fan of hers in general but this particular song is black-comic period perfection.
It's funny, I got SUPER into Emilie Autumn for like a week after the first time I watched Devil's Carnival (So, like, 2013 maybe?), and then just stopped, it had ran it's course and I don't think I've actually listened to any of her stuff since.
But indeed, this one is pretty fantastic.
Yeah, she and Amanda Palmer share the same "manageable in small doses but really obnoxious if you listen to them for too long" vibe for me, but both have highlights that I'll revisit periodically.
Watched Scorsese's The Age of Innocence for the first time last night; Elmer Bernstein's score is so pretty.
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