Author Topic: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?  (Read 213150 times)

kenbass4

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1185 on: January 07, 2016, 01:35:06 PM »
Rock Concert movement number 4: The behind the head leg lift. Ready, GO!
 
LOVE BMG!!

cozmik_cowboy

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1186 on: January 07, 2016, 03:23:25 PM »
In fact, since it lacks piano hammers and he's hitting the strings, he is the hammer! (I wonder if the piano is difficult to keep it in tune?)
 
Kind of like Copley playing, eh?
 
Peter
"Is not Hypnocracy no other than the aspiration to discover the meaning of Hypnocracy?  Have you heard the one about the yellow dog yet?"
St. Dilbert

"If I could explain it in prose, i wouldn't have had to write the song."
Robt. Hunter

edwardofhuncote

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1187 on: January 08, 2016, 03:47:46 AM »
What else for today?  
 
8th of January, as played by Tony Rice, as heard by Clarence White, and played on (what's left of) his old Martin D-28 no less.  
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfjEdukk2kI
 
Poor old Tony's in rough shape these days, but man what an influential guy he's been.

David Houck

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1188 on: January 08, 2016, 05:12:57 PM »
The track was recorded live in the studio, with no overdubs.
 
I'm listening now, and I'm wondering if the vocals are all one take as well.  I suppose he could be using a harmonizer to get some of the vocal harmonies, and perhaps some of the other vocal sounds could be vocal patches on the keyboards.
 
I did hear the Herb Alpert reference, or what I think was it.  And I felt a very strong Return to Forever influence; and as well, Emerson Lake & Palmer.  Interestingly, Welcome Back My Friends was released around two months before Utopia; so it seems at least somewhat less than likely that Todd would have heard it prior to the recording date of this piece.
 
the best ending in rock music history
 
Such things are of course quite subjective, and depend significantly on one's own personal history.  Personally, I don't think this one comes close to, for instance, just off the top of my head, And You And I; but that's just me.  

elwoodblue

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1189 on: January 16, 2016, 08:27:22 PM »
Carl Perkins doing a Mathew Mcconaughey impression?! ;)
That's Alright Mama

ed_zeppelin

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1190 on: January 17, 2016, 03:15:55 AM »
quote:I'm wondering if the vocals are all one take as well. I suppose he could be using a harmonizer to get some of the vocal harmonies, and perhaps some of the other vocal sounds could be vocal patches on the keyboards.
 
I listened to it again, and I see (actually, hear) what you mean. Considering the album came out forty years ago (whoosh! what was that? Your life, son! Holy cow, that was quick!) details are sketchy.  
 
The liner notes say the album was recorded live at the Fox Theater in Atlanta, Georgia April 25th, 1974, but I remember an Interview with Todd at the time (Creem magazine, I think) where he said something about doing it live in the studio, in one take. Might have been one of the other songs (or the drugs  )
 
There were no harmonizers in 1974 (that I know of, anyway). Synths could only play one note at a time. The Polymoog and E-mu polyphonic synths were still years off (especially the legendary Prophet 5), so my guess is Todd used a Mellotron  
 
Mellotrons used tape loops (kinda like an Echoplex, with separate loops for each keyboard key) and could be set up with three voices, usually strings, horns and woodwinds (Strawberry Fields Forever, Nights In White Satin, Stairway To Heaven, etc.), but Rick Wakeman and the Moody Blues also opted for a vocal set, for that Mormon Tabernacle Choir vibe.
 
I turned up this interesting paragraph in a Rolling Stone bio of Todd
 
quote:By 1972 Rundgren had taken over production of Badfinger's Straight Up LP from George Harrison (who was involved with his Bangladesh concerts) and had engineered the Band's Stage Fright and Jesse Winchester's self-titled 1971 LP, as well as produced records by the Hello People, bluesman James Cotton, the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, and Half-nelson (who later became Sparks). In 1973 he would produce the New York Dolls' debut LP, Grand Funk Railroad's We're an American Band, and Fanny's Mother's Pride.
 
Busy boy, huh? It was three years before he produced Meat Loaf's Bat Out Of Hell, a fact that I didn't know until just now, while looking up this stuff. (The things I do for you people.)
 
Note this interesting tidbit:
 
quote:Recording started in late 1975 in Bearsville Studios, Woodstock, New York. Roy Bittan and Max Weinberg, the pianist and drummer from Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band played on the album, in addition to members of Rundgren's group Utopia: Kasim Sulton, Roger Powell and John Willie Wilcox. Edgar Winter played the saxophone on All Revved Up. Rundgren himself played guitar, including the motorcycle solo on Bat Out of Hell.
 
So I wouldn't be shocked if Todd sweetened things a little.

cozmik_cowboy

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1191 on: January 17, 2016, 08:26:24 PM »
Pentangle's eponymous debut.  just because it had been too long.
 
And a new one for me;  
 
Peter (Who's thinking Fairpot Convention or Steeleye Span for tomorrow)
"Is not Hypnocracy no other than the aspiration to discover the meaning of Hypnocracy?  Have you heard the one about the yellow dog yet?"
St. Dilbert

"If I could explain it in prose, i wouldn't have had to write the song."
Robt. Hunter

edwardofhuncote

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1192 on: January 19, 2016, 06:12:21 AM »
Remembering Glenn Frey today, and the glorious day we heard The Eagles had reunited after fifteen years. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3mFx2e5hAg

cozmik_cowboy

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1193 on: January 19, 2016, 09:19:25 AM »
Just got through Eagles' Greatest Hits; an old GF had & loved it.  In my younger days that album was the soundtrack for more.......well, anyway, so long Glenn & thanks!
 
Peter
"Is not Hypnocracy no other than the aspiration to discover the meaning of Hypnocracy?  Have you heard the one about the yellow dog yet?"
St. Dilbert

"If I could explain it in prose, i wouldn't have had to write the song."
Robt. Hunter

David Houck

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1194 on: January 19, 2016, 04:32:44 PM »
Peter mentioned Fairport Convention; here's one of my favorites, Fotheringay.  I've listened to it several times recently, and to different versions, old and new.  The one I've linked here is the original with the wonderful Sandy Denny.

sonicus

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1195 on: January 20, 2016, 08:44:53 PM »
To my EARS , this is SWELL ! ___Das ist GUT +  
This is how a good band plays . .........  
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Pa9x9fZBtY
 
Wolf
 
(Message edited by sonicus on January 20, 2016)

edwardofhuncote

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1196 on: January 21, 2016, 04:22:20 AM »
Wolf and I are in mind-meld... I was just listening to a Dire Straits compilation last night, as I'm revisiting the bass style of John Illsley, another one of those no-flash, but dead-on doin' the job kind of bass players. I really admire that quality, maybe because of my bluegrass/oldtyme roots.
 
Here's another of my all-time favorites from them... Romeo & Juliet Live from London, with the full symphonic intro.  
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o7GJgncybV8

sonicus

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1197 on: January 21, 2016, 02:04:58 PM »
Gregory , I liked that ; Romeo & Juliet Live from London, with the full symphonic intro.  Dire Straits live is always so enjoyable for me from so many aspects . The thing besides wonderfully mastery of their instruments that always makes me want more of them is the  level of communication going on in the moment . As with the  Dead as with a bunch of players that are really all on the same wave length of non -verbal  MIND -MELD  , in the moment , YES ! That when that is developed it is priceless . When that happens there is a special aspect that is irreplaceable with anything else.  
 
Wolf

cozmik_cowboy

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1198 on: January 21, 2016, 07:11:37 PM »
Nice!
The first Dire Straits album blasted into disco like  a cannon, reminding everybody what a guitar can do, and Making Movies was, IMHO, their peak - and R&J may well be Mark's best song.  That is a wnderful version!
 
Peter
p.s. - for anyone who was around the Chicago scene late '70s-early '80s; I never noticed until this vid, but does John not look like the lovechild of Tom Dundee & Pete Special??)
"Is not Hypnocracy no other than the aspiration to discover the meaning of Hypnocracy?  Have you heard the one about the yellow dog yet?"
St. Dilbert

"If I could explain it in prose, i wouldn't have had to write the song."
Robt. Hunter

edwardofhuncote

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Re: WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO NOW?
« Reply #1199 on: January 22, 2016, 05:43:02 AM »
Well, crap. I'm now officially stuck at work. Here in Virginia, or really the entire eastern U.S., there's an indeterminate amount of snow coming in the next 36 hours. I made it in to work before the deluge started, but looks like most either couldn't or bailed. Ordinarily I wouldn't care... just goes with the gig when you run the City's water plant, but man I sure wish I'd brought a guitar or something to play.  
 
In the spirit of trying to enjoy the majestic Winter spectacle, heeeere's Gordon!
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVG2eF40hzE
 
I saw him a couple years ago, and it was quite the show. Guy play two solid hours, and that was shortly after he'd practically come back from the dead. Incredible performer. And think about this - Rick Haynes (bassist) has had that gig since 1969, the year I was born. Dang.
 
Any of you that are in this storm's path - stay in if you can. Stay safe if you have to go out. Avoid the weather channel hysterics, 'cause it's just a freakin' snowstorm for pity's sake. Play a tune for me.