Non-Classical Music Listening Thread!

Started by SonicMan46, April 06, 2007, 07:07:55 AM

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Pohjolas Daughter

Some tracks from George Harrison's "Live in Japan".  Including While My Guitar Gently Weeps...a moving rendition of a great song.

SimonNZ


AnotherSpin


Peter Power Pop


Pohjolas Daughter

Richard Thompson:  Acoustic Classics

So many classics.  His talent and intelligence...what can I say.

Henk

'To listen to music decently, if being in a state of boredom, sitting it out is required as a preparation. In these times however man doesn't even notice being bored.'

Henk

'To listen to music decently, if being in a state of boredom, sitting it out is required as a preparation. In these times however man doesn't even notice being bored.'

SimonNZ



Jessie Buckley and Bernard Butler - For All Our Days That Tear The Heart (2022)

Jessie Buckley is the actress who played Prince Andre's sister in the BBC War And Peace and the pregnant woman who spent too much time in her firefighter husband's hospital room in Chernobyl - and comes from a singing background.

Bernard Butler is the former guitarist with Suade

I was very impressed by this. At times sounding like David Sylvian's Spirit Of The Beehive, at other times like Heather Nova's Oyster (both albums I love).


Karl Henning

Karl Henning, Ph.D.
Composer & Clarinetist
Boston MA
http://www.karlhenning.com/
[Matisse] was interested neither in fending off opposition,
nor in competing for the favor of wayward friends.
His only competition was with himself. — Françoise Gilot

brewski

#30349
Quite off my usual beat: Firas Zreik & Ensemble, in a program called New Journeys in Arabic Music, live from Roulette in NYC. Liking it a lot.

Zreik is a virtuoso at the qanun, or zither, and the musicians in his group are great, too.


-Bruce
"I set down a beautiful chord on paper—and suddenly it rusts."
—Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998)

AnotherSpin

"1914" is the name of the death metal band from Lviv, Ukraine.


AnotherSpin

Lal Shahbaz Qalandar's content adapted for western ears.


71 dB

I am a 2020s hater. I hate what the World has become. This is the first decade in my life when I feel I don't belong to this reality at all (I have always felt I'm living on the wrong planet because of my personality/neurotype, but before this decade I felt I can connect to the World at least in some ways). I have almost nothing to offer the World and vice versa. Almost all the stuff that is good in the World is stuff that existed before. Sunshine on my face still feel nice. Pop music from 2010-12 sounds still cool. Recently I say the movie "Day of the Jackal" from 1973 and it was surprisingly good! This decade don't get credit for those things.

In order to cope with the misery of 2020s I have been listening to certain type of music from 1990-92 that feel nostalgic. I have been buying that kind of music online on CD. This has helped a lot. I now understand why older people live in the past. I was born in 1971. The World has become too "modern" for me. I am not against advancements in technology, but so much good has been destroyed as a side effect. Artificial Intelligent is cool, but the cost will be insane: a lot of people will be unemployed living in poverty while the profits go to ultra rich people. We are losing humanity. We are losing so much. Somehow we are creating a World were most people do nothing but struggle to survive instead of technology creating us ALL a paradise. So, that's why I rather live in the past while acknowledging only the best things of today. So, I listen to music such as this (a side project of Saint Etienne from 1991):


For me it is totally irrelevant if this kind of music is objectively bad or crap for somebody else. This music means surprisingly much to me.

Spatial distortion is a serious problem deteriorating headphone listening.
Crossfeeders reduce spatial distortion and make the sound more natural
and less tiresome in headphone listening.

My Sound Cloud page <-- NEW Jan. 2024 "Harpeggiator"

AnotherSpin

Yungchen Lhamo - Tibet, Tibet


AnotherSpin

Quote from: 71 dB on April 24, 2024, 12:07:56 AMI am a 2020s hater. I hate what the World has become. This is the first decade in my life when I feel I don't belong to this reality at all (I have always felt I'm living on the wrong planet because of my personality/neurotype, but before this decade I felt I can connect to the World at least in some ways). I have almost nothing to offer the World and vice versa. Almost all the stuff that is good in the World is stuff that existed before. Sunshine on my face still feel nice. Pop music from 2010-12 sounds still cool. Recently I say the movie "Day of the Jackal" from 1973 and it was surprisingly good! This decade don't get credit for those things.

In order to cope with the misery of 2020s I have been listening to certain type of music from 1990-92 that feel nostalgic. I have been buying that kind of music online on CD. This has helped a lot. I now understand why older people live in the past. I was born in 1971. The World has become too "modern" for me. I am not against advancements in technology, but so much good has been destroyed as a side effect. Artificial Intelligent is cool, but the cost will be insane: a lot of people will be unemployed living in poverty while the profits go to ultra rich people. We are losing humanity. We are losing so much. Somehow we are creating a World were most people do nothing but struggle to survive instead of technology creating us ALL a paradise. So, that's why I rather live in the past while acknowledging only the best things of today. So, I listen to music such as this (a side project of Saint Etienne from 1991):


For me it is totally irrelevant if this kind of music is objectively bad or crap for somebody else. This music means surprisingly much to me.



You don't belong to this reality illusion at all. You are reality.


SimonNZ

Quote from: AnotherSpin on April 23, 2024, 12:03:02 PMLal Shahbaz Qalandar's content adapted for western ears.



I remember "Tracery", "Fault Lines" and "Avenue" being favorites from that.
Would that all such crossover albums were so interesting.

SimonNZ

#30356
Quote from: AnotherSpin on April 24, 2024, 12:41:22 AMYungchen Lhamo - Tibet, Tibet



I once traded a copy of Tim Buckley's Starsailor album (the one that has the original "Song To The Siren") with a friend for his copy of Yungchen Lhamo's Coming Home album. No regrets.

AnotherSpin

Quote from: SimonNZ on April 24, 2024, 03:48:41 AMI once traded a copy of Tim Buckley's Starsailor album (the one that has the original "Song To The Siren") with a friend for his copy of Yungchen Lhamo's Coming Home album. No regrets.

I was a big fan of Real World releases 20 or so years ago. Didn't listen for years, and now it sounds fresh again :)

steve ridgway

Quote from: 71 dB on April 24, 2024, 12:07:56 AMI have almost nothing to offer the World and vice versa.

Just don't confuse the World with the human race ::) .

drogulus

    I'm listening to some music from the Rolling Stones, Beach Boys, Cream and the Super Session album with Stills, Kooper and Bloomfield. The files are.dsf played on......WINAMP!!

    I realize a normal person would just DL foobar and the SACD plugin, but that wasn't good enough for me, ohhh nooo.....
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:126.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/126.0
      
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:109.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/115.0