You can only take 5 albums to a deserted Island...


But there is a world class system there for your use.  Leaving many favorites behind but I must have:

Yes - Close to the Edge
Rolling Stones - Beggars Banquet
Robin Trower - Bridge of Sighs
Neil Young - Everybody Knows this is Nowhere
John Lee Hooker - Mr. Lucky



pops
  • Barry Wordsworth and the New Queen's Hall Orchestra: Ralph Vaughan Williams,   Orchestral Works
  • Mark Knopfler: Sailing to Philadelphia
  • Charles Mingus: Three or Four Shades of Blue
  • Marcin Wasilewski Trio with Joakim Milder: Spark of Life
  • Mary Chapin Carpenter: Come On, Come On
Baslmg good one!  NY on the beach.  I'll be spinning that one tonight.  

Thom and Martykl would love to hear you guys play.  As Neil says "live music is better, bumper stickers should be issued."

For you guys hoping for Ginger and Mary Ann, don't forget about Mrs. Howell!



Thom,

Funny thing about Teles (and the variants thereon)...

I own several really outstanding boutique variations, but I end up playing my good old, modestly priced Fender American Standard (tho it's been modded with Barden pups) more than any of em.  If anyone can top the original tho, Jason might be the guy.  

Jason's take on the LP is IMO downright fantastic and his quirkier designs - including a variation of the Turner Model 1 - are pretty tempting.  He's an outstanding luthier for sure.

The other "go-to" in my electric collection is a Henman-Bevilacqua that combines a bolt-on neck and long scale with humbuckers to make a cool Gibson/Fender hybrid (definitely more Gibson flavored, tho).

if we get another couple of axes on our Island, the Fender and the H-B are coming along, for sure.
Excuse me if this is known by everyone, but A bit of social history about "Desert Island Discs". I do'nt know about similar programmes around the world, but the original "D I D", was a BBC creation, I believe in the 1930's and it has run, more or less continuosly on BBC Radio 4, or the Home Service as it was back in the day, since then. In fact, I believe it is the longest running radio show in the world. The mention of 5 discs, suggest you may have a US version, but the original, I assure you, is from the Beeb and allowed 8 discs.

 Devised and presented for decades by Roy Plomley, it was a brilliantly simple idea. Interview a new celebrity weekly, Politician, Film Star, Poet, Sports Star etc, very gently, about their lives and play excerpts from each disc. There were always questions about how they'd cope with loneliness, how practical they were, would they try to escape etc. At the end, they are allowed a book, always getting the Bible and Shakespeare as well and a Luxury item, so not a tent, box of matches etc.

 Apologies again if this is all old news to you, but as no one has mentioned it, I thought it might be news to some of you.