Annoice-Remmings
Annoice-Remmings
Something new to listen to then.. why not shouldn't be complete crap, catchy over played, and re-done songs are always fun to listen to.. haha.
wow! i think i just talked about ever 2nd or 3rd album by every new band in the past 20 years.
It's enjoyable, it doesn't grab you right away but I think it will grow on me. Plus I have barely began to appreciate it lyrically which is important with albums like this.
Kind For a Day, Fool for a Lifetime - Faith No More
Katy Lied-Steely Dan. What a great album.
The final mix is done far as i know so it should be out like soon..
Love the cover though! :love: But I can tell it's not something I would be into. The music, that is.
Few more things since yesterday...
The Budos Band - The Budos Band EP
Unwound - The Future of What
Unwound - Challenge for a Civilized Society
It's funny how banRAB can grow on you. I bought Unwound's A Single History compilation probably 6 years ago, but never really got into it. I thought it was mostly sloppy with a few nice moments. I shelved it. Then last year or earlier this year I checked out New Plastic Ideas and it has been growing on me with each listen. I've also played Leaves Turn Inside You a few times but haven't really gotten into that style. Having gone in a more post-rock direction with that release, it's more of a grower if anything. So anyway I'm finally getting around to picking up some of their older albums, closer in style to New Plastic Ideas. Playing Fake Train right now for the first time and I'm really liking it.
i just want to kill all of them. Especially the girl on the right :bringit: I f*cking just hope it's ironic
These are albums that aren't sh*t by REAL (probably hairy) men from the 1970's with a sense of humour. Both are musical outsiders I think. Props to Jackhammer for the links
Ivor Cutler was Scottish and played a little accordion thing and wrote plenty of classic folk ditties like 'I Believe In Bugs', the sort of music you could have an ale to at a village fete. He was a top-class poet and storyteller above all and a very funny man, his albums are just collages of his rustic wisdom
Robert Wyatt was the drummer/singer/founder of Soft Machine for their first four classic albums and he left before they disappeared up their own arses; he subsequently got pissed and fell out of a hotel window leaving him paralysed from the waist down. This is his first of several acclaimed solo albums from the 70's and was coincidentally recorded with his mate Mr. Cutler. There are 6 tracks which I would classify as abstract underwater-prog-jazz. A bit weird
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks