They didn't change labels until after Document, but beginning with Lifes Rich Pageant they changed direction and were clearly shooting for the stars, which I don't fault them for in the least. Their change in direction wasn't my cup of tea, but it sure worked out for them.
Neil Young After The Gold Rush. 50th anniversary which is just a reissue with two versions of Wonderin’ added on. Wearing this as I listen:
Another album that stood by me during a painful yet stimulating period of my life almost twenty years ago. Thanks, Neil.
Lots of things changed from 1998 to 2018. The entrenched straight-ahead swing is everything crowd was very very close minded 30 years ago. Hat ART records was considered peripheral by many and the attitude towards “out” music by many in the early days of jazz on line discussion was ignorant in pretty extreme ways. The response to many to what Misha did in his “solo” (he never really solos - he’s a true improvisor) in “Hot House” was mockery. They still don’t have a clue. They somehow couldn’t even understand what Bennink was doing with his *almost* over the top bluster. He swings harder than their “swinghard” heroes but they hadn’t a hope to hear it as their minds were all made up long before 1998. And Paul Smoker? Too fancy, I guess. And Joe Fonda is as good or better than any of their straight-ahead bass player heroes. He plays this stuff like he owns it. Braxton has always had incredible bassists and he’s one of them.
Could this album be even more 80s? Simple Minds, Once Upon A Time I've been listening to the Deluxe Edition on Snotify. This album came out after the single "Don't You Forget About Me,"(not sure if they're are parentheses in there). The two musicians who did the music for the movie The Breakfast Club were both Simple Minds fans, and they wrote the song for the band. They approached Simple Minds and they didn't want to do it. Then they asked Bryan Ferry, and he passed, and then they asked Cy Curnin (of the Fixx) to do it and he passed. Jim Kerr of Simple Minds was married to Chrissie Hynde at the time, and she convinced him to record it. They spent three hours in the studio with it, but they still weren't psyched about doing it. And it was their biggest hit in the U.S. I had mixed feelings about it at the time, because I liked the band, and it was awfully Hollywood commercial-y, but it was a decent tune. When they came out with this album, I considered that course correction. I liked this album at the time, and still do. It's so 80s, though. So 80s. Next I listened to the Doobie Bros., "The Doctor," Takin' It To The Streets," and "Real Love."
I'd say that Maiden is Metal's equivalent of the Dead based on longevity, but IM has remained far more physically vibrant, creatively engaged, and performance-crisp than the GOGD could ever have hoped to be in the latter career stages, which - though painful to confess - is due entirely to the selfishness of JG's personal foibles, weaknesses, and volitional choices. My inability to post media at this initial point of membership spares most of you the assault of both sound and iconic juvenalia. Still...
I wonder how many crimes of passion throughout Man's brutal history have been committed to a soundtrack excerpted from Wagner's Ring opus? This music just feels like it's blood-spattered by demonic furies. Or maybe the psychotic madness you (I?) hear is only mirrored from within. I'll have to contemplate that while I chop up my neighbours to Act 2:Scene 2 from Siegfried and stack them like cordwood on the back 40. Listening to my second favorite incarnation of the 9 partial and full cycles that grace my shelves (ya just cannae beat Furtwangler's '50&'53 performances)...
The Prelude/Introduction to Act III of Tristan und Isolde is one of the best pieces of music ever performed by anyone on any planet. As for the rest, I share Woody Allen's perspective.
Friday Frank (with the Mothers) . . . “There’s a big dilemma About my Big Leg Emma She was my steady date Until she put on weight” . . . 1967/2018 (FZ Official Release #2) Zappa Records – ZR 3835-1
Friday night Freddie . . . 1961/2010 Analogue Productions – AP-84073, Blue Note – ST-84073 The Blue Note Reissues – KPG&SH@ATM
. 55,OOO,OOO WAIT & SEE • • Led Zeppelin • • • You're Time is Gonna Come 1968 STUDIO RECORDING ORIGINALLY RELEASED ON THE 1969 ALBUM 'LED ZEPPELIN' • La La ❨ instrumental ❩ 1969 STUDIO RECORDING ORIGINALLY RELEASED ON THE 2O14 DELUXE REISSUE OF THE ALBUM 'LED ZEPPELIN ll' • Babe I'm Gonna Leave You 1968 STUDIO RECORDING ORIGINALLY RELEASED ON THE 1969 ALBUM 'LED ZEPPELIN' • Thank You RECORDED LIVE 1/4/71 PARIS THEATRE • That's the Way RECORDED LIVE 1/4/71 PARIS THEATRE • Bron-Yr-Aur ❨ J. Page instrumental ❩ 1969 STUDIO RECORDING ORIGINALLY RELEASED IN 1975 ON THE ALBUM 'PHYSICAL GRAFFITI' • I'm Gonna Crawl 1978 STUDIO RECORDING ORIGINALLY RELEASED ON THE 1979 ALBUM 'IN THROUGH THE OUT DOOR' .
Or "Lost Sailor" without "Saint of Circumstance", though I shouldn't have mentioned that here. It's too late now, my doom is sealed.