Anselm_Weinberg wrote:This manages to be so soothing and intense at the same time
Cassiber - O Cure Me
https://youtube.com/watch?v=doTOhMJNrvs
netzerkaiser wrote:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9QZhLSKEps
Squeeze - Black Coffee in Bed
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:netzerkaiser wrote:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9QZhLSKEps
Squeeze - Black Coffee in Bed
Similar era but hits quite differently
Sad Lovers And Giants - On Another Day
https://youtube.com/watch?v=_-ZIcApE8RE
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:I have to say I am a sucker for various types of synth music, though I must say the more commercialised and "lowest common denominator" logic that was enabled by its forthcoming can be bad. But for me it's not about the tools, but how you use them. Of course the rest is a matter of taste and there's no accounting for that. But I would say it's a shame new technologies often don't get used in the music industry to further develop originality or discover stunning new sounds but rather to streamline it and churn out generic piece after piece which then reflects in the further and further degeneration of chart music. I feel honored to have been the one to have introduced you to Sandy Denny voice, I'd always figured you had already known about her before
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:More power to you, must be quite a big deal to be able to still find oneself going for such a degree in parallel to work at this stage of life, if one may put it that way.
I love folk for it has, at its core, this magical ability to transport a great deal of experiences, legends, stories and of course generally folklore, time and time rearranged and rewritten to suit the times but yet always retaining that original essence. It's timeless. It also helps to get you interested in a language to deciper all of these qualities and vice versa, I am for example very big on Kurdish folk music and hope that someday I shall find the time and courage to finally learn the Kurmanji dialect of Kurdish to be able to appreciate it even more. I've already got the books lying around after all
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:More power to you, must be quite a big deal to be able to still find oneself going for such a degree in parallel to work at this stage of life, if one may put it that way.
I love folk for it has, at its core, this magical ability to transport a great deal of experiences, legends, stories and of course generally folklore, time and time rearranged and rewritten to suit the times but yet always retaining that original essence. It's timeless. It also helps to get you interested in a language to deciper all of these qualities and vice versa, I am for example very big on Kurdish folk music and hope that someday I shall find the time and courage to finally learn the Kurmanji dialect of Kurdish to be able to appreciate it even more. I've already got the books lying around after all
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:It's interesting that you should bring up Armenia. One of the most prolific Kurdish language singers is actually an Armenian called Aram Tigran. Interesting how these things go.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=go9V123cE0M
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:Fred Åkerström - Jag ger dig min morgon
https://youtube.com/watch?v=vBHXQYNTDZ8
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:Pero Nikolin - Tekla voda Karašica
https://youtube.com/watch?v=FQJpfJTWfP0
Slavonian/Croatian folk song.
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:Some of these have also been my jam ever since I started learning Spanish when I hardly had any dealings with the language before.
As for Spanish civil war music in the broader sense, I am by no means an anarchist but do enjoy this one immensely.
https://youtube.com/wqtch?v=_Fbz2A2u1hs
netzerkaiser wrote:never really bought the Lennon myth
but this is beautiful:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8poht52GAs
we've all had these 3 AM moments when you wake up & nothing makes sense, but it all does.
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:Nice songs. You know, it's moments such as these I am reminded that I don't know anything about Ringo and what he'd been up to after the Beatles parted ways. Is there anything?
I guess this song is a little obvious but it must have been my most listened to, though, not necessarily favourite song of Lennon over the years.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=UaiGABTj0aA
Anselm_Weinberg wrote:Late XTC often gets overlooked. Both from their Apple Venus album. I think in some respects they were the true heirs to the Beatles.
XTC - Easter Theatre
https://youtube.com/watch?v=HN9wm__LWF8
XTC - Your Dictionary
https://youtube.com/watch?v=v5nWm8f27Tw
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