Now for something really catchy...the good ole `Barefoot'. *witches cackle insert*
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idupdqMD4Cs
Last edited by The_Shooman (2011-11-20 06:31:41)
Pavement, "Crooked Rain" reissue
After recent European football results, ''Joxer Goes to Stuttgart'' (Poland)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuK8WUW2k6Q&feature=related
Soy Campesino by ska cubano
Ho Hum
Now where did put my Daiquiri.......
Still in Taiwan. Recovering from hangover , at karaoke until 3am last night. Taiwan sake aud $6 a bottle. I'm too old for this.
Laying on couch sipping a Hoegarten beer @aud$2 bottle.
Flipping through Japanese mens clothes mook, called LEON Snap, vol 6. For the older gent.
Listening to "Blue Note does Jobim"
Just right.
Last edited by fxh (2011-11-24 03:53:21)
At now i listen Rocking and pop type of music because it help to keep my mind fresh and remove my stress.Music is the best way for me remove depression.
Louis Armstrong Plays W.C. Handy.
Last edited by Bob Loblaw (2011-12-03 15:07:46)
Buddha's chanting
lt's my main music now because i've given up all the other music. No classical, no rock, no metal, no nothing. Just chanting monks and shit in future.
The Dave Brubeck Quartet: Jazz Impressions of Eurasia.
Forget Time Out, this is a vastly superior album, full of wonderful exotic polyrhythms and a Pan Am aeroplane on the album cover.
You want to get into this Shooey, one glimpses Siddharta on the last track, Calcutta Blues. You can get deep meditations on this.
Art Pepper- under the guidance of 4F Hepcat.
Lubricated with Talisker DE
Here it comes...
Dr Dre, The Chronic 2001
Classic hip hop.
Uncle Tupelo, "No Depression."
Stephen Hough's superb new recording of the complete waltzes of Chopin.
Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers 'Ugetsu'.
An absolutely beautiful 10 CD box set of recordings Alan Lomax did for the Library of Congress in 1936-37, in Haiti simply entitled 'Haiti'.
Unique roots music reinforced with various booklets that will keep you engrossed for a week.
Not a bad career young Lomax cut for himself, totally pointless today though, as globalization has destroyed the uniqueness of regional differences in music.
http://soundprint.org/radio/display_show/ID/644/name/The+Intriguing+Theremin
The Intriguing Theremin
Produced by: Michele Ernsting
People fainted when the Theremin was first performed onstage in Paris in 1928. Its haunting sound resembled voices from beyond the grave. It was the first electronic instrument, and at that time, the only one which is played without actually touching it. Its ingenious maker, the charismatic Russian Leon Theremin, was in many ways as mysterious as his invention. Producer Michele Ernsting from Radio Netherlands brings us The Intriguing Theremin. This program airs as part of the international documentary exchange series, Crossing Boundaries.