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

Posted by: Tam on 06 June 2005

Anyway, to kick things off, I'm currently, and probably for most of the rest of this week, listening to Radio 3's Beethoven Experience. They're doing one of the piano concertos at the moment and (number 2 with Glenn Gould). Anyway, the experience thing probably needs its own thread, but, even on this cheapo radio it's proving fairly enjoyable.

So, what are you listening to right now?
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by SteveGa


Jackie Leven - Fairy Tales for Hard Men
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by fishski13
charlotte gainsbourg - 5:55.
PACE
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by ewemon
Jon Dee Graham- Summerland
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by fishski13

xtc - apple venus
PACE
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by BigH47
On CD:-
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Gianluigi Mazzorana
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by SteveGa


Jackie Leven - The Argyll Cycle
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Gianluigi Mazzorana
Some groovy stuff by Betty Everett


And some from The Earls


Interesting evening...................
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by BigH47
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by SteveGa


Christy Moore - Unfinished Revolution
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Gianluigi Mazzorana
The Flamingos!
Cool
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Gianluigi Mazzorana
Lets roll right down to great Percy Sledge


passing by Joe Simon


to Mr. Otis Spann who gave to Clapton, Mayall and Page a tip or two how to.... (1964/1965?)

Big Grin
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by SteveGa


Snakefarm - Songs From My Funeral
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Cyrene


The VME edition.
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Guido Fawkes
quote:
Originally posted by SteveGa:


Christy Moore - Unfinished Revolution


Brilliant choice.
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Stephen Tate
Rancho Texicano - The very best of ZZ Top.
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Gianluigi Mazzorana
And now, just like happy ending, some tracks from this


and some Billy Preston (not naked!)
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Guido Fawkes
quote:
Originally posted by Gianluigi Mazzorana:
And now, just like happy ending, some tracks from this


Where did you find that great record?
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Gianluigi Mazzorana
quote:
Originally posted by ROTF:
quote:
Originally posted by Gianluigi Mazzorana:
And now, just like happy ending, some tracks from this


Where did you find that great record?



Hi ROTF!
I do not have that record.
I used the sleeve image.
I have an old vinyl with
Bend me, Shape me
Gin house blues
Lost and found
High in the sky
Can't get used to losing you
I know
Something you got

which are in the original album.
I only have the inner sleeve and no signs of label on the vinyl.
Some old house stuff that i don't know where come out.
I guess my mother don't remember as well.................
Sorry for disappointment!
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Haim Ronen
[QUOTE]Originally posted by mtuttleb:
Haim,

There is already a slightly negative review of the Beethoven and Mozart on Amazon UK which I attach. I think considering the cost of some discs individually, the box set is good VFM even though the Beethoven and Mozart does not quite hit the mark. I look forward to receiving this early March.

Regards
Mark

Mark,

Thanks for all the info. I am definitely going to get his Debussy's Preludes, and I am going to listen to his Schumann and Schubert.
My guess would be that Michalengeli excells with those composers too.

Regards,

Haim
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Haim Ronen


In the car tonight: Metheny in the good company of Lyle Mays on piano, Eberhard Weber on bass and Dan Gottlieb on drums.

Haim
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Gianluigi Mazzorana
quote:
Originally posted by ROTF:
quote:
Originally posted by Gianluigi Mazzorana:
And now, just like happy ending, some tracks from this


Where did you find that great record?



PS: on the other side there are some Small Faces tracks.
It should come from a collection that came out in Italy in news stands.

The track list is the same.
http://win.murodelrock.com/il_muro_del_rock/enciclopedi...afia_amen_corner.htm
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by fishski13

this is one of the albums i brought when auditioning the nait5/intro2 i ended up buying a few years ago. i had my credit card out in no time flat - sublime music
PACE
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Haim Ronen
quote:
Originally posted by Haim Ronen:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by sjust:


Strange, but I don't seem to have seen discussions about this one, here...

Just at the very first seconds, here...

cheers
Stefan


Stefan,

Here is a review by Robert Levine who writes about classical music in Stereophile. He gave it *** (out of five) for performance and a * (out of five) for sound.
Haim

SONGS FROM THE LABYRINTH
Songs by John Dowland & Robert Johnson, including Can she excuse, Flow my tears, Come again, In darkness let me dwell, others

Sting (vocals, archlute); Edin Karamazov (lute, archlute)



Deutsche Grammophon- B0007220-02(CD)
Reference Recording - Scholl (Harmonia Mundi)


It makes perfect sense, doesn't it? Pop singer Sting is enormously popular, he's British, and he writes and sings songs about pain, sadness, and paranoia. He has tickled our fancies with such ditties as "King of Pain" and "Bring on the Night", and one song, "Every Breath You Take", is a veritable how-to of sexual neuroses. Someone gave him a lute. John Dowland (1563-1626) was enormously popular, British, sang and wrote songs, played the lute, and was one of his century's most melancholic and popular kvetches. He was paranoid about his position in the Elizabethan political and religious landscape and wrote a groveling, whiny letter to Sir Robert Cecil, then England's Secretary of State, from which Sting reads on this CD. "Semper Dowland, semper dolens," (always Dowland, always sad) was his motto; these two are soul brothers across the centuries if ever there were such things. Furthermore, Mr. Sting has studied Dowland's songs--their meanings, their double-entendres, their subtleties--and has even trained his voice to encompass an occasional upward melismatic piece of hoopla that comes with the music. And his rhythmic sense is as fine as you might expect and offers great vitality in some of the less downbeat songs.

But much is not right and can not be excused as "interpretive", "crossover", or pseudo-authentic. It isn't that the music is unsuitable or too difficult for a pop singer's voice; Dowland's music was sung in pubs and sitting rooms by the hoi polloi. Gripe number one: Sting opts to create harmonies by multi-tracking his own voice; it comes across as Dowland meets the Beach Boys and is silly, if not grotesque. Gripe number two: The open-throated, airy singing he adapts in intimate songs tires the ear. Gripe number three: In an attempt, I presume, to enunciate clearly, he does something to vowels that make him sound like he's on Quaaludes. Gripe number four: The mumbled recitation of the letter is not only in an entirely different acoustic that requires turning the volume up so much that any song that follows blows the listener out of the room, but it is accompanied by occasional quietly tolling bells, chirping birds(!), and, I think, falling rain, and it underlines the "Masterpiece Theater" quality of the whole undertaking. Final gripe: Sting's breath control can't handle many of the longer lines, and the phrasing becomes choppy and awkward (taking a breath between the word "the" and the noun that follows, as in "The lowest trees have tops", makes the text even harder to understand).

There are fine things about this disc, not least Sting's obvious sincerity and fondness for the music. His singing of "Come again" is witty and knowing without resorting to a "wink-wink, nudge-nudge" acknowledgment of the text's other meanings; "Come heavy sleep" is beautifully put across, sitting in just the right part of his voice; and while "In darkness let me dwell" suffers, as does the whole recording, from being so closely miked that we can practically hear his teeth, Sting's nasty emphases on the words "hellish" and "jarring" are masterly and effective. Robert Johnson's "Have you seen the bright lily grow" is nicely sung. Edin Karamazov's playing of lute and archlute is always a joy--virtuosic while not taking away from the voice's focus--and Sting's tinklings on the archlute are very nice as well.

The recording is so excruciatingly inappropriate to the music that I actually would like to hear the program (sans letter reading, please) performed live. The engineers, presumably with Sting's approval and assistance, have given his voice an acoustic familiar to pop music: compressed and hard-edged. Here, something folkier would have benefited the whole program. This is not to say it would have made the CD a grand success, but as it stands, the ambition and, yes, nobility, of the undertaking is sabotaged by the sound, and it's a project that needed as little sabotaging as possible. Dowland fans may be curious and somewhat intrigued, but those wanting to know more about this music would be wise to stick with the likes of Andreas Scholl and Emma Kirkby.


--Robert Levine
Posted on: 22 February 2007 by Haim Ronen


Bobo's music with dinner.

Haim