|
|
This is the 2006 edition of the tedious, yet popular, item for listing what music you are listening to as you cruise through the Music conference. No cheating, now! To keep things interesting, try to write a line or two about the album or song you are naming, especially if it is at all obscure.
55 responses total.
Nustrat Fateh Ali Khan -- "Mustt Mustt" The track is off a $0.99 promo sampler CD called "10 out of 10", (probably out of print now, I bought it years ago in Ann Arbor) which (as the name implies) presents 10 tracks from 10 artists, all of whom were recorded by Peter Gabriel's "Real World" label. Nusrat is (was, I guess) a Pakistani singer who was one of the greatest masters of the Qawwali style of Sufi devotional songs. This particular track is mixed with a modern western beat and works extremely well as a merger of east and west, something many artists and DJs shoot for but which, judging from results, must be tricky to achieve.
A live performance by singer Mary Gauthier, playing a lunchtime hour show on KUT in Austin. Usually these shows turn up on the http://kut.org website for replay, so there is a chance you could get to hear it later.
A recording of the Milan Area Schools Collage Concert, December 2000. (You won't be able to find a copy anywhere, unless possibly at a yard sale.) Quality -- of musicianship and of recording -- is not high, but there's a few songs I don't have recordings of anywhere else, and the nostalgia factor is high -- this was my eighth grade year, and I think my last concert before my voice started changing. I'm listening to this at the moment because I'm producing a list for my own use of what the songs are.
Playing at the moment, The Band, performing "I Shall Be Released", courtesy of the film "Festival Express", a documentary of a late 60's rock-and-roll tour across Canada featuring many of the most famous artists of the day.
"Crash," a preview track from an upcoming Croft No. 5 album, from BBC Radio Scotland. Have not been able to find anything on the web about when this might be released, argh. Croft No. 5 go into a pigeonhole I describe as "folk-techno," though that probably isn't the best definition.
Playing (or, rather, just finished, with its replacement waiting until I finish entering this response) now: a MIDI version of Britten's "Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra." One of my favorite pieces of music, but unfortunately my computer isn't quite up to compiling something, sshing into Grex, and playing it at the same time, so it got behind.
Now playing (and actually playing, this time): The Earle of Oxford's March by William Byrd, played by (IIRC) the Austin Symphonic Band.
nick drake bryter later
The Armenian Navy Band, a brass band thingie getting some promo push on the BBC. Apparently a nominee for one of their World Music awards. The programme is Celtic Connections on BBC Radio Scotland, with a guest host this week because Mary Ann Kennedy was off in Austin.
(A converted MIDI file, but still ...) John Rutter's "What Sweeter Music." Rutter is my favorite living composer, and I can't think of anything of his that I don't like. This is one of my favorites among his pieces.
Again, a MIDI version. This time, it's the Vivaldi _Gloria_, a series of pieces setting the text of the Gloria section of the Mass. I've sung the "Gloria in excelsis," the first part, and fell in love with the whole thing. However, the sound files have now gotten past the point where I can recognize the text from the tune.
The House Band's cover of Richard Thompson's song "Pharaoh", from a mix mini-disc I made Leslie, wow, we can't remember how long ago. Actually it started life as a mix cassette...
Some Mozart symphonies, conducted by Bernstein.
Elgar, Enigma Variations.
(Again, a MIDI converted to OGG.) A tune called "When I'm 64." (Originally by the Beatles, I believe, though I've heard it at dulcimer jams enough times ...)
A song called "The Lines of my Earth" by Sixpence None The Richer. Some lines from the refrain: "This is the last song that I write / 'Til you tell me otherwise. / And it's because I just don't feel it." This could be a depressing song if one were happy when listening to it, but when one is feeling sad, apathetic, <insert negative emotion here>, it's nice to know that one is not the only one to go through it.
Whirling Pope Joan, SPIN. This was a one-shot project from Nigel Eaton of Blowzabella on hurdy gurdy, and Julie Murphy on vocals. My vague recollection is that this 1994 recording was Julie Murphy's debut.
Track #9 -Just Another Day- from Eno's Another day on earth. First time listening, picked it up at the library. Pretty good quality, multi tracked, etc. Typical Eno.
television: adventure
I haven't listened to it yet, but Eno produced Paul Simon's latest album. I'm not sure whether I think that's a good idea or not..
Eileen Farrell, PUCCINI ARIAS. American singer who was most active in the 1950s and 1960s but who continued recording pop songs and standards until her recent death.
Peter Gabriel, SO. Gack, a 20 year old CD! (both the music, and my copy of it)
You could have a steam train If youd just lay down your tracks You could have an aeroplane flying If you bring your blue sky back
Chip Taylor & Carrie Rodriguez, "Let's Leave This Town." Austin-based (I think?) country-flavored singer-songwriters, nice harmonies.
Toumani Diabate's Symmetric Orchestra, BOULEVARD DE L'INDEPENDENCE. Review upcoming I hope, but in short this is the most enjoyable African album I have heard in some time.
Zero 7- "The Bizarre" The whole album sounds like an electronica group covering hits from the 70's. It's kind of bizarre. Har har.
MOUTH MUSIC, the first album from 1990, by Martin Swan and Talitha MacKenzie, who had quite a noisy falling-out.
Patrick Street, "Music for a Found Harmonium," via the Mike Harding BBC radio show.
Kadril & Alumea, LA PALOMA NEGRA. I've been excavating in a few boxes. This is a gem I'd forgotten about. Kadril is (mostly) a bunch of Belgian instrumentalists, and Alumea is a band of Spanish women singers and tambourine players (panditeiras). So far as I know this album is the only collaboration.
Talking Heads, MORE SONGS ABOUT BUILDINGS AND FOOD
Runrig, a best-of collection, right now the song "Alba." Playing a lot of old music loud this afternoon, since Leslie is out.
Bits and pieces of Remain in Light have been popping into my head lately. I really need to get the CD.
James Gang, "Rides Again"
An opera compilation, "Pavarotti's Opera Made Easy - My Favorite Moments." I'm a sucker for packages like this. Wonder if Mr. Pavarotti really picked the tracks... This is part of a series of about 20 budget CDs.
February 2007 edition of FRoots Radio, a world music hour from the magazine which I have followed for 22 years. Streams at a quite respectable 64K Real Audio, so the sound is better than all those BBC shows. http://www.frootsmag.com and look for the Radio link.
On the radio (WBLU, Blue Lake Public Radio's transmitter in Grand Rapids), the Faure Requiem.
Makam, ALMANACH. Rather good Hungarian band playing music from around the Balkans, with an exceptional singer, Szilvia Bognar.
BBC Radio Derby, the FOLKWAVES show, which has become one of my favorites.
Wow, nobody listened to anything in March? :) I'm currently playing Ketil Bjornstad, a Norwegian pianist, playing incredible *live* musical settings of the poetry of John Donne. I wish I knew the name of the female vocalist. It's just the two of them, recorded a the 2002 London Jazz Festival --- truly a gem of a performance from the early days of my (and krj's) BBC listening on the 'Net --- rather a good capture, as well, at 192Kbps encoding.
|
|
- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss