Music
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@goosehd Many,Many years ago I went to audition for a band,and I’m in the waiting room with another drummer and we’re chatting and he says even if I get this gig I’m not going to take it,and I said why not,and he says because I’m going to play for this guy Billy Joel,I had never heard of him,and he goes before me and he’s really great,way better than me. So I go in after him and I say to the guys,don’t you really want that guy? To which they respond NO! I Ask why not,and one of the says because he’s too fucking ugly. It was Liberty DeVito. Many,Many years later Liberty would take Billy Joel to court because the Ack,Ack,Ack in Moving Out was his idea,and he thought he deserved to be included in the writing credits and get royalties. He lost,Bilt fired him,and it was around this time that I saw Billy Joel at an event and recounted the story of when I met Liberty and he got a kick out of it. Sorry for the long post. I wasn’t their second choice,but 3 months later they called and offered me the gig. This was the band.
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I don’t know that I could possibly love music any more than I do. I’m kind of out of touch with who the current mainstream bands are,but having said that,I would guess it’s harder than ever to reach the point where you’re considered mainstream. I really like and listen to,predominantly, music that I grew up with…Doors/Hendrix/Who etc.,then theirs stuff like AC/DC/Kiss/Van Halen. I love a band called The Bodeans,huge Cheap Trick fan. As far as a band that continues to totally blow me away with their talent,Cream(no pun intended)takes the cake. The curse is that I have zero fucking tolerance for crappy wedding bands,and I’m a complete drag to be around at those events because anyone that knows me knows that I’m not enjoying it. I can often be heard saying things like the band should be arrested for killing that song. On another note a drummer that absolutely blows me away is JD Beck.
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I can hear a bit of a Pearl Jam in these guys.
Bit of Tyler, Sturgill and Zach as well!
Ole 60 -
ha!
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My favourite album of 2024 so far.
Very much captures the essence of the current British Post Punk revival, vocalist reminds of a 2007 Alex Turner but with an edgier, more poetic cadence.
Penultimate track Blackpool Illuminations almost had me in tears...
From my memory of last year's Music League game, @jerkules would probably appreciate this one :
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It's been a minute, forgot how beautiful this record was...
Floating in catharsis right now listening to this after a dinner with a woman I wanna be with, but for now, the stars aren't aligned..
I'll share some words from my personal music journal I wrote when this album was released.
Looking back, they're especially poignant now after the passing of Pharaoh Sanders..
'Although seemingly mismatched on paper, the parties involved in creating this singular, 47 minute piece of music gel together as if part of the same mind.
Throughout its 9 movements, the listener is taken through a journey of what I interpret to be a sonic representation of life and death.
The recurring keyboard motif that persists throughout the majority of the record's runtime stands to represent the inexorable passage of time, whilst Sanders' seemingly improvisational Saxophony majestically dances around it, weaving a breathtaking tapestry of sounds that is only deepened upon the arrival of the LSO.
I hear Sanders' opening solo as wise and beautiful, but also tired and tinged with sadness...
After a while it seems to gain strength, clarity and a sense of hope, as if reminiscent of an aged mind experiencing a brief spark of lucidity before experiencing its final thoughts...
The depth bought by the LSO brings upon feelings of transcendence, an ascent to a higher plane of existence so to speak...
And then, Nothing...
After every trace of the music is abruptly cut off, you are left in a deathly silence. Bolstered by the reoccurring motif, all that came before had become an integral part of you throughout your time with the record, a part of you is missing...
And then, something stirs as sound begins to swell up out of the silence, the passage of time hasn't quite begun again yet, but you have no doubt of its inevitability.'