Whats on your turntable tonight?


For me its the first or very early LP's of:
Allman Brothers - "Allman Joys" "Idyllwild South"
Santana - "Santana" 200 g reissue
Emerson Lake and Palmer - "Emerson Lake and Palmer"
and,
Beethoven - "Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major" Rudolph Serkin/Ozawa/BSO
slipknot1

Exactly @slaw. I haven’t heard the first Section album (the only one I’ve heard and owned) since the 70’s; who knows, perhaps I would like it now. On the other hand, what I look for in music is pretty specific. I call my taste in music narrow and deep; I view that of some others as wide and shallow (not meant in the pejorative sense).

At the time I heard The Section album, it didn’t satisfy my musical appetite. But I was making a larger point: that any given group of musicians that one likes may not necessarily make music one also likes. That concept is timeless.

I like The Section as backing musicians, but I don’t (or at least didn’t) like the music they made on their own. I feel the same about their current incarnation, as The Immediate Family. I LOVED Ry Cooder, Jim Keltner, and Nick Lowe backing John Hiatt on the latter’s Bring The Family album, but when all four made an album as Little Village, I found it to be not very good.

For me, it’s all about "the song", and realizing it’s potential. Just like a movie script, the actors being the musicians. the director the producer.

I didn’t find The Section album's songs to be very good, the same for those of Little Village. Without a good song, I don’t care HOW good the musicians are. They are of value only in realizing the potential of the song. As Dylan said in Don’t Look Back, I’m a song & dance man (hold the dance ;-).
Try as I might, LiL Village might end up in the cull pile...

here is IMO a great song:

Bound for Glory - Neil Young - Old Ways

of course it might just be I drove the trans Canada with a GF in a Camaro....


Oh, and @slaw I agree with your opinion of Joan Osborne's Dylan songs album; not her forte, for some reason. LOVE her version of "What Becomes Of The Broken Hearted" though, that song (originally recorded by Jimmy Ruffin) being one of my three all-time favorites (the other two being "God Only Knows" and a third that varies depending on the day; some days "No Time To Cry" by Iris Dement, others "The Weight".).