Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
a similar guitar riff overwhelmed by the wails of three theremins.
My favorite use of the riff is Ike Turner's piano on Howlin' Wolf's "How Many More Years," which Led Zeppelin copped for their first album. With Robert Plant starring as two of the three theremins and Jimmy Page's arco guitar impersonating the third.
Speaking of theremins, look at the second picture and check out its last caption. Saw it (the caption) & thought of you, Jon. Not to pigeonhole you or anything.
look at the second picture
My employer is blocking it. Bah!
My employer is blocking it. Bah!
I just sent it to your profile address.
It's the thirtieth anniversary of the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald (about twenty nine and a half for "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"). And now I'm earwormed with the John Valby version, which I am not sending to Buffistarawk but which is available on emusic for those so inclined (i.e., for those who find filthy filking, offensive in pretty much every way, funny. Like I do.) I may be his target audience but I'm not going to enable your preversions. </Col. Bat Guano> I'm going to hell. Which wouldn't be so bad if the current administration weren't sure to join me.
Got it Joe. Thanks. Cute!
Michele, your Mountain Goats mix is rocking my world. Thanks! Now I have to go back and read your liner notes again.
Whoo, horns are up! Glad you're liking it, Kate.
Joe, I'm going to reiterate here that you ought to download "My Favorite Things" from that mix. Don't make me have to come over there.
My Powerbook has stopped recognizing my iPod, so I'm on the list to see a "genius" this evening. I feel certain, somehow, that this will all end with my rationalizing the purchase of a nano.
I'd really like to pick up the new Neil Diamond, but it's one of the dreaded Sony copy-protected discs that put evil things on your computer, so I'd prefer not to give them one red cent of my money.
I know I could buy it and just not play it on my computer, but that's not what I want to do these days. Or I could just download it from iTunes, but I like having the actual CD and packaging.
Sony can kiss my rosy red ass, damn it.
The local "classic rock" station (WARW, for those of you in the DC area) is doing a "cool covers" weekend, which is part "huh, didn't know they covered that" and part "dear God why?". (with an occasional "WTF?" like the Aztec Camera cover of Van Halen's "Jump" a la "Sweet Jane")
with an occasional "WTF?" like the Aztec Camera cover of Van Halen's "Jump"
There was a short version of that and a long version. The long version tagged on a ridiculous feedbacky guitar thing at the end that added a whole other layer of hilarity to it.
I only pop into this thread a few times a year--I really should threadsuck everything and copy-and-paste all the great recs y'all post. (BTW, thanks for sending me the buffistarawk info, Hec! I'll be checking into it this weekend.)
Before I start with the threadsucking, though, can anyone recommend an interesting/good/favorite Christmas album? Anything from classical to classic holiday music is welcome. My current favorite Xmas albums are the Roches We Three Kings and the ever-popular Time-Life set.