What are you listening to right now? (VOL III)

Posted by: Adam Meredith on 09 October 2008

VOL II - http://forums.naim-audio.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/38019385/m/3112927317

VOL I - http://forums.naim-audio.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/38019385/m/6532968996
Posted on: 28 December 2008 by MilesSmiles
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
quote:
Originally posted by munch:
But Opeth is to much Thrash Metal for me.


Stuart - there is NO metal at all on the Damnation album. It is all acoustic and melodic. You should give it a listen.
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
Finally arrived from the US. Big expectations after hearing good things on it from Jeff and Huw Winker
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
Food (Ian Ballamy, Arve Henriksen, Thomas Stronen, Mats Eilertsen) - Last Supper
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by BigH47
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by MilesSmiles
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Mario
Oliver, you were so right about this, love "speak your heart"

I've been a bit busy so was very happy to discover this one.

Thanks
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Mario


I know this is a dvd, but I'm listening through a blu ray player in stereo and the quality is fantastic.

Mario
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by RichardM
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by RichardM
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by patk
My Morning Jacket - Acoustic Citsuoca: Live at the Startime Pavilion



Jonatha Brooke - The Works
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by patk
Ben Harper & The Innocent Criminals - Lifeline
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by megholm
Eno and Byrne:My Life in the Bush of Ghosts

If you got PRAT, you will love it. Otherwise it will probably bore you.
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Huwge
Black Mountain - In the future, sneaking grungily into the '08 top 10. Not late night, low volume listening - should appeal to several forum members methinks

Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
quote:
Originally posted by Mario:
Oliver, you were so right about this, love "speak your heart"

I've been a bit busy so was very happy to discover this one.

Thanks


Hi Mario - nice to see you round here. If you like this, you'll also like this. Think we might have played this once on one of our listening sessions. Cheers
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
Wolfgang Muthspiel - Real Book Stories with Marc Johnson and Brian Blade.
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Voltaire
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
Wolfgang Muthspiel - Solo
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
Food - Molecular Gastronomy
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Voltaire
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Voltaire
quote:
Originally posted by Lontano:
Wolfgang Muthspiel - Real Book Stories with Marc Johnson and Brian Blade.


I'd be interested to know a little more about this? Is this the 'if you like Jan Garbarek you'll like this?'.

Gordon
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Voltaire
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Paper Plane
Stranglers - Rattus Norvegicus

steve
Posted on: 29 December 2008 by Lontano
quote:
Originally posted by Voltaire:
quote:
Originally posted by Lontano:
Wolfgang Muthspiel - Real Book Stories with Marc Johnson and Brian Blade.


I'd be interested to know a little more about this? Is this the 'if you like Jan Garbarek you'll like this?'.

Gordon


Gordon - this is not the album where I said that on Garbarek but there will be plenty of Garbarek fans who would like this. This is just a very high quality guitar trio with lovely bass from Marc Johnson and Brian Blade on drums.
i have borrowed these words from a 5 star review in the Guardian back in 2003.

"Muthspiel comes to London's Vortex on Tuesday with the power trio that is featured on Real Book Stories: a pedigree ensemble featuring the former Bill Evans bassist Marc Johnson and the formidable, Tony Williams-like drummer Brian Blade. Real Book Stories is devoted to standards, and though the spikier and more abstract aspects of the guitarist are largely banished by the familiar formalities of the setting, Muthspiel's lithe Pat Metheny-like fluency and terse John Scofield phrasing flourishes within a vivacious group. JJ Johnson's Lament immediately establishes Muthspiel's slow-build shaping of a narrative: a quick, nonchalantly struck burst of notes at the end of his first solo is the only virtuosic departure from a dreamy, Bill Evans-like overlaying of chords. As the pace picks up, his second break adopts a bright, ringing sound, like Django Reinhardt's acoustic intonation.

The players' ease and eloquence with each other is plain on an uptempo All the Things You Are, and Muthspiel duets inventively with Blade's off-centre bass-drum figures and hissing brushes on I Hear a Rhapsody before Johnson arrives with an emphatically wayward counter-melody. The famous chord-maze Giant Steps is treated rather warily, but something of Metheny's singing melody lines warms the mood of Horace Silver's Peace. The American's whoopy uptempo manner is also audible over Blade's declamatory rimshots on a headlong account of Solar. A little genteel at times perhaps, but high-quality with a contemporary feel."

The album I said was like Garbarek was by Bendik Hofseth - Metamorphoses - hard to find these days but is very good. Released back in 95, there is one copy on Amazon at the moment for £21. Shoot me a mail if you want a listen.

Cheers