Anyone not taping their feet after the is a lost cause
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Happy you enjoyed Ian. Dancefloor favourites from my soul music DJ days 60s/70s. Robert Parker's barefootin' album one of my all time favourites.St Jabbo
I have never heard of any of these groups. It is fascinating to hear what was happening in NO in the 1960s. Although NO is associated with jazz, there is something of a pop music scene running alongside and in parallel. You keep on hearing names of musicians like George Porter and bands like The Meters which have a massive amount of traction with jazz musicians yet you rarely hear this stuff n the radio. I saw Dr John at Basingstoke Anvil many years ago and was a little disappointed as the band was a bit too rock-orientated for my tastes. However, I have heard quite a bit of his music in a more jazz-orientated context and loved what he was doing.
It is really interesting to explore music that is right outside of the mainstream. I am always staggered by what you can manage to turn up.
Found this and loved it... need to go a long way in (7 mins or so) for the stones to join in
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(Vinyl nerd mode on)
I bought a Garrard AT60 Mk2 deck off ebay some months ago, despite my careful advice on packing it arrived in several bits. I did get my £ back and the buyer said dump the remains. Then this little Autoslim changer chassis came up for £6. I used the plinth from the broken deck to house it and after the usual clean of fossilized grease I squeezed an old pickering cartridge in there. Sound pretty good actually, great fun to use an autochanger again, that ruddy arm moves with real determination and speed when changing 45s!
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Encouraged me to play a few neglected singles here's a couple which are currently rotating at Green Towers.
The Nice - America (may include knives).
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John Kongos - Tokoloshe Man (later used by the Happy Mondays).
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Extending that vinyl nerd mode just for a while, I felt the twinge of pain when I read your description of the Garrard AT60 Mk2 postage disaster. But that little Garrard Autoslim is a cutie. Makes me want to go off and look for a Garrard 4HF turntable [the biscuit tin player] again. But I'll never devote enough funds for a decent one, as their value has gone through the roof.
My interest in 1950s, 60s, 70s hi-fi has just taken a major upswing. A dear old friend of mine is in a nursing home at present, and sadly is unlikely to make it. A few years ago he bequeathed me his late 1960's Celestion Ditton 44 Mk1 speakers, after he'd obtained them from a charity shop and thought they were ok to keep. He really had no idea what they were or how respected they still are in hifi circles, but I was able to clue him in. I recently brought them home to look after for him, as otherwise they would have been in a mouldy old shed, as he has given up his home. They are in remarkble condition considering, but I have yet to test them as I have been short of a spare amplifier. So I bought a fully functioning old [1973] Leak 2000 receiver off ebay the other day, and with my Goldring GL75 sitting doing nothing at present, I'm going to clear a room to get them all going. Vintage kit can be such fun, and I bet the sound quality is going to be really good.
The GL75 is a nice TT. A good example of an affordable Idler table which can still shame many hi-fi efforts from today.
I find shouting at people a lot, on a regular basis, clears a room.

Quite pleasant, but a complete absence of balls, even with Dave Grohl himself present. Here’s the original, which is in my opinion superior in every way.So I've bought the Live Lounge Allstars version of the Foo Fighters hit Times Like These which they performed on the Big Night In on Thursday. I don't know the original, but I liked it so I thought I'd buy it especially as the money (100% of it!) goes to charity and it's kinda mellow (and mellow is always good) but also one day, in 5, 10 years time I can listen to hear it think back of that time when the world ground to a halt (for the most part), sport vanished, people gathered together to applaud the NHS every Thursday, and I personally went 18 days and counting without leaving my house (except for one 5 minute walk 9 days ago as I needed to clear my head) and remember those who were lost. And hopefully, when I listen to this song in 5 years times after this I'll still be able to look upon the mundane banalities of every day life with a newfound appreciation gained while normal life disappeared, just being able to go to the cinema, having a meal at a restaurant, walking in crowds of people without worrying about whether they're 2 metres from you or not. Heck, even the local pub which I've been to many times and is kinda dingy I'll have a new found appreciation for after this.
Anyhow, in case you missed the song, here it is here:
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Quite pleasant, but a complete absence of balls, even with Dave Grohl himself present. Here’s the original, which is in my opinion superior in every way.
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Very 'Foo Fighters'. Not bad, although my favourite Foo song remains Learn to Fly.
Though on the subject of covers, I'll often find the version I heard first is the version I prefer whether it's a cover or not. For example, Landslide by Dagny (which is a cover of a Fleetwood Mac song), I absolutely love. It's so mellow, so ethereal even
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The original is pretty good, but I feel like this cover really makes it its own and gives it a completely different feel.
Nothing touches Stevie's sense of vunerability in the original which is the crux of the song (which is beautiful and one of my all time favourites).
That version appears soulless in comparison IMO..
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Agree 100% SA. Unless you understand the background to the Rumours album which contextualise the heartbreaking nature of songs like Stevie’s Landslide, Lindsey’s Go Your Own Way, and Christine’s Songbird, you can’t grasp what those songs are about.Nothing touches Stevie's sense of vunerability in the original which is the crux of the song (which is beautiful and one of my all time favourites).
That version appears soulless in comparison IMO..
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Agree 100% SA. Unless you understand the background to the Rumours album which contextualise the heartbreaking nature of songs like Stevie’s Landslide, Lindsey’s Go Your Own Way, and Christine’s Songbird, you can’t grasp what those songs are about.
Pretty tunes just aren’t enough.