Well, 'cat has reawakening my appriciation of Simple Minds so:
An earlier album '82 recorded before they went all stadium rock, post Don't You.
Simple Minds: New Gold Dream.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IDgVYJGKPHQ
Factoid: Herbie Hancock plaid keyboard on one of the tracks from this album.
I am listening to Sheela ki Jawani an indian movie song of the movie Tees Maar Khan.
Its interesting - I rarely, if ever, play a Stones song these days, except for "research" although to be fair I do like most of them I hear on the radio. I'm always surprised by how I like "Gimme Shelter" and how good it really is.
A while back I got the 33 1/3 book on Exile. I must say I did enjoy it all over again, this time on CD and MP3 whilst reading
http://33third.blogspot.com/p/complete-list-of-33-13-series_27.html
I have far too many of the 33/1/3 books - but the great majority of them are well worth the money - brings a whole new enjoyment to listening, thinking and imagining.
It's a bit like when an old dog gets introduced to a friendly new puppy - they both learn stuff and the old one gets re-vitalised.
Simply the best classically trained trombone player i've ever heard (big call for me).
Playing `annie laurie variations' here in 1965:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kzhNjtr6W-M
maxie - I had great hopes for Living Colour at one stage - what went wrong? I haven't kept up.
GnR I never got
and yes Stones have had the odd adequate song by their standards since EoMS. The sad part was there was no need for them to be mediocre, they had enough blues foundations and rock chops to age bloody beautifully. I always blamed Mick* for being lazy and not knowing how to grow old with dignity or wisdom or disdain.
If only he could have learnt like you or me.
* I forgive Keith 'cos he's cute and cheeky, and musically good and according to his autobiography he never believed his own bullshit anyway. He claims no one could have lived life like the "fictional " or public Keith.
Charlie of course is simply a musical and sartorial god.
My favourite quote almost of all time is from Watts
"You don't think I take this seriously do you? - Its just a fuckin' rock n roll band"
Last edited by fxh (2010-12-07 01:58:54)
Nov 27, 2010 12:10 PM EST
Willie Nelson was arrested yesterday at a border patrol checkpoint in Sierra Blanca, Texas after agents reportedly found 6 ounces of marijuana on his tour bus. Mickey Raphael, Nelson’s longtime harmonica player, tells Rolling Stone that the singer, who posted a $2,500 bond was freed by 1:30 p.m. yesterday, is in good spirits. "He said he feels great — he lost six ounces."
Raphael says Nelson, 77, was traveling without his band from California, where he spent the Thanksgiving holiday, to Austin, TX, where he owns a ranch. The El Paso Times reports that agents at a checkpoint searched his bus, called the Honeysuckle Rose III, at 9 a.m. Nelson admitted the pot was his and was taken to the local Hudspeth County jail.
"It's kind of surprising, but I mean we treat him like anybody else," Hudspeth County Sherriff Arvin West told the newspaper. "He could get 180 days in county jail," the sheriff added. "If he does, I'm going to make him cook and clean."
Nelson’s publicist had no comment.
The singer has long advocated for the legalization of marijuana. "It’s a matter of time, a matter of education, a matter of people finding out what cannabis, marijuana is for, why it grows out of the ground and why it’s prescribed as one of the greatest stress medicines on the planet," he said in 2008.
In January, six of Nelson’s band members were issued citations in North Carolina for reportedly possessing moonshine and marijuana. In 2006, Nelson and four others on his bus were issued citations at a traffic stop in St. Martin Parish, Louisiana after authorities seized nearly 1.5 pounds of marijuana and 3 ounces of hallucinogenic mushrooms. Nelson and tour manager David Anderson both paid a $1,024 fine and served six months of probation. "Both bus drivers were over fifty years old," Nelson said at the time. "The other guys were 60 years old. My sister is 75, I’m 73, so it’s like they busted an old folks home."
Last edited by fxh (2010-12-07 02:33:04)
Last edited by Maximilien de Robespierre (2010-12-07 02:45:43)
I picked up the reissue of Robert Fripp's "Exposure" (1979). It's held up pretty well. The second disc has some of the same songs sung by Darryl Hall. I've ordered the second Peter Gabriel album (aka "Scratch") and Hall's "Sacred Songs." Put those three together with Bowie's "Heroes" and you have a pretty weird series of rock records. Not easily classified, and for the most part not especially easy listening.
Southern Rock.
Cajun music.
"Fear of Music," more so than anything by the Sex Pistols or the Ramones, shaped my musical direction the last two years of high school.