Quote: george roper @ August 12 2013, 11:34 PM BST
What are you listening to now? Page 1,005
Quote: Chappers @ August 12 2013, 7:02 PM BSTLove that song. Remember it from when I was at school but never got around to buying it.
I am pleased that you enjoyed the Congregation. Apparently the record was a Cook and Greenaway production but at the time it seemed very unusual. It still does - and it should be played more often.
Alison Krauss and Union Station - Paper Airplane
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-0drZqMdR4
(on vevo)
Karen Matheson and Capercaillie - Aodann Srath Bhain
Midlake - It Covers The Hillsides
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9aixvrvwiQ
Jesse Sykes and the Sweet Hereafter - Birds Over Water
Quote: Horseradish @ August 13 2013, 11:44 AM BSTMidlake - It Covers The Hillsides
Great stuff. Close your eyes and you think you're in the 70s.
London Bye Ta Ta - David Bowie:
Quote: Gordon Bennett @ August 13 2013, 11:48 AM BSTGreat stuff. Close your eyes and you think you're in the 70s.
Yes. Love the whole Van Occupanther CD.
RIP Jon Brookes - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-23682282
The Charlatans - Then
It Takes A lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry - Bloomfield/Kooper/Stills:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qz47XGsi2e0
I like this rather dynamic take on this Dylan classic.
Quote: Gordon Bennett @ August 13 2013, 2:23 PM BSTIt Takes A lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry - Bloomfield/Kooper/Stills:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qz47XGsi2e0
I like this rather dynamic take on this Dylan classic.
I'm on a time lag so comments are a bit sporadic. Like Peaches En Regalia and Machine Gun.
That Bowie track is fascinating. Hadn't heard it before. It says "original version". The official lyric says "The boys in the clothes shop sold me curry for a pound" but I think in your link it is "The poet and the blow job sold me curry for a pound". Could be why I've never heard it on the radio.
Quote: Horseradish @ August 13 2013, 2:36 PM BSTThat Bowie track is fascinating. Hadn't heard it before. It says "original version".
I didn't know there's is an "original" (studio) version either until today. The version I knew before is on this compilation:
Quote: Horseradish @ August 13 2013, 2:36 PM BST"The poet and the blow job sold me curry for a pound"
You're right. It sounds exactly like that.
Quote: Gordon Bennett @ August 13 2013, 2:44 PM BSTI didn't know there's is an "original" (studio) version either until today. The version I knew before is on this compilation:
That could be it then. Visconti again, of course.
It is in the vein of other tracks of his from that time but the Anthony Newley voice isn't so pronounced. It is a London song - I collect those in my head - and one which sounds like Carnaby Street.
His brother lived in the hospital where I worked one summer as a student. 1984. Sadly, he threw himself on a railway line just outside. I always tell people that our superstar was very afraid of the family illness but overcame that fear to visit him when alive. He would do so dressed in an ordinary suit and quietly, without the press. I've always had a lot of regard for him and believe that fans would like to know that side to him.
(I liked the Dylan cover version too)
Quote: Horseradish @ August 13 2013, 2:53 PM BSTHis brother lived in the hospital where I worked one summer as a student. 1984. Sadly, he threw himself on a railway line just outside. I always tell people that our superstar was very afraid of the family illness but overcame that fear to visit him when alive. He would do so dressed in an ordinary suit and quietly, without the press. I've always had a lot of regard for him and think that fans would like to know that side to him.
I think Bowie mentions his brother in the 93 song Jump They Say. He refers to him as "shaking man".
Quote: Gordon Bennett @ August 13 2013, 2:59 PM BSTI think Bowie mentions his brother in the 93 song Jump They Say. He refers to him as "shaking man".
Yes, he was his half brother and he lived there permanently. His mother spent time in there too as did Charlie Chaplin's mother earlier and also a relation of Michael Caine. Possibly mother again. It was one of the places on the boundary with Surrey where the troubled of inner South London were sent.
Actually, my Nan knew Chaplin as a shoeless child, wearing ragged clothes made from his mother's dresses, and laughed at, but that's another story. The hospital is featured, I think, on the original cover of The Man Who Sold The World. In cartoon form with a cowboy? I can't find it at the moment.
Ah, I have found it -
Quote: Horseradish @ August 13 2013, 4:12 AM BSTAlison Krauss and Union Station - Paper Airplane
Nice and soothing. Was feeling a bit stressed.
John Lee Hooker with Ry Cooder, live.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRCnLb4A4QM
Not the best audio, buzz in the background, but still cool.