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
So THATS what that button is for... ;) whenever I try to do that, I get this disconnected feeling. Having the music playing in the listening room and the TV in the family room has me not paying attention to either.
As one or two of you may have noticed (or not! :-), I've stopped posting to new threads for many months now. But Slipknot1's thread idea is something I had once thought of starting myself, right around the time I cut way back over here. So I feel justified in making this a semi-regular exception, and will enjoy doing so since it concerns music and not gear.

On the TT: British Invasion night with LP's from one-shots Ian & The Zodiacs, and a couple from two-shot'ers The Zombies. (No intentional "z" theme here, it just worked out that way.) Last week I saw The Zombies for the second time since Colin Blunstone and Rod Argent rejoined forces again about three years ago. They're currently out touring with Arthur Lee & Love (also the second time I've seen them in the past year), who I must say surpassed them as the opening act on a double bill right out of my grooviest 60's dreams.

In the CD (home and car): Art Blakey titles (The Big Beat, The Witch Doctor, Mosaic, Buhaina's Delight, Orgy in Rhythm [all Blue Note], & The Jazz Messengers [Impulse!] ) recently added to ever-growing AB collection are in constant rotation. Rudy van Gelder was a busy busy man. I grew up across the street from a friend whose father actually knew Bu, from back when he worked as maitre d' at a long-defunct NY club called the Cork & Bib where the Messengers used to gig. When he was alive he used to tell the story of how once when the band crashed at his pad for the night they were so bleary-eyed, they left the next morning having neglected to pack AB's drums in the van; after they got a couple hours away they realized their blunder and had to double all the way the back again to retrieve them. Nothing but the posh life for those beboppers in the 50's folks. C'mon now: how cool is it to be able to say, "I remember the time Art Blakey left his drums at my house"? Fagedaboudit!
Zaikesman, glad to see you joining this ongoing conversation! I, too, look forward to more discussion of MUSIC and recordings. Love the story you shared. :-)

Joe, we're just going to have to get you a little 15-incher on a cart with wheels...
Rush,
I need to figure out how to get my DirecTV feed onto my notebook PC. That way, I can be in the listening room, posting what LP's are playing, AND watching the game without sound.
20/20 - (self titled, Portrait 1979). The opening cut, "Yellow Pills", went on to become something of a touchstone of the burgeoning West Coast power pop movement, eventually lending its title to a compilation series and a fanzine devoted to the genre. I had dinner the other night with a friend who had moved out to LA back then to be a part of this scene and he mentioned this band, so it's been on my mind.

"Performance" (soundtrack, Warner 1970). Mostly Jack Nitsche and Ry Cooder stuff, best known for Jagger & Richards' "Memo From Turner", plus apearances from Randy Newman, Buffy Stainte-Marie on 'mouth bow', and The Last Poets' immortal "Wake Up Niggers". Skipped the Merry Clayton cuts...

Davie Allan - "Old Neck and New Strings" (Dionysus, 1990). The 60's biker-flick fuzz-guitar instro king returns. Strong as hell.

In the car CD during the day: The Duke, Jazz Party and Far East Suite.