What are you listening to, right now................
-
Nice Paekakboyz, a M4L pre-rugby staple that one.<br />
<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;LRt3PIDER94]
As the Dazed & Confused soundtrack is a current favourite<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;r4OhIU-PmB8] <br />
Reliving my highschool days<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;IcsaBKoK9-o] <br />
Topical, and so very awesome. Cliff Burton was awesome. -
Right now - Anjelique Kigjo <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;nM10bm-Elvg]
<br />
Last year or so I have really been getting into music from the Putumayo label.<br />
<br />
Otherwise A Cordial Collision by Barry Charles and Haggis MaGuiness (I think its me walks in front of the camera <img src='http://www.daimenhutchison.com/invision/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smile.png' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=';)' /> )<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;GubQCyK7AW4] <br />
<br />
and Kniki and Mike Beale<br />
<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;dQLL1XtdFSA] <br />
<br />
<br />
who saw at BOI Blues and Jazz Fest back in July are on a fair bit.<br />
<br />
I spent about 20 years not really listening to much music but in the last 2 years have converted 100 Gig og my old vinyl tape and CD's into mp3 formats and have been really enjying rediscovering all manner of artists from Blues, Classical, Prog Rock, Jazz, Dub, Electro, Hard Rock you name it. -
Listening to some Shuggie on the way to work this morning. Clips of the man playing live are very few and far between and of poor quality but if you don't have this album already and like some blues ghee-tar then it's a must. Even more amazing that he was only 14 years old at the time of recording this.<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;RhwyEdTh634] -
Loving your work men but loving M4Ls work the most ! <br />
<br />
Splendid stuff indeed. Les Claypool ? Bass legend. Also Deep Purples Richie Blackmore is probably my favouritist axeman...<br />
<br />
Speaking of Bass legends it's James Jamerson playing the licks on this funky number.....<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;GQDwYsfinkw] -
Gotta love James Jamerson. Changed the whole use of the Bass as an instrument in modern music. Some of his lines are incredible. i think that there is one Stevie Wonder song he played on where he doesn't repeat at all in the whole song. Just one extremely long riff. Not just A Bass Legend but The Bass Legend.
-
[quote name='Crucial']Gotta love James Jamerson. Changed the whole use of the Bass as an instrument in modern music. Some of his lines are incredible. i think that there is one Stevie Wonder song he played on where he doesn't repeat at all in the whole song. Just one extremely long riff. Not just A Bass Legend but The Bass Legend.[/QUOTE]<br />
<br />
ONE OF the Bass legends. He was smoother than smooth in his lines. Depends what you're looking for really ( its been discussed on here before but fuck it lets do it again ! ) but it can't be denied what an amazing player this guy was. <br />
<br />
I always like a good slapper ( and someone who plays funky bass too) so guys like Flea, Robert Trujillo, Larry Graham, Louis Johnson etc will always be held in great esteem by me.
-
You forgot to mention Mark King <img src='http://www.daimenhutchison.com/invision/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/wink.png' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=';)' /><br />
<br />
Yeah there have been other pioneers in styles (and plenty of imitators). Bootsy Collins would have to rank highly on my all time Bass players list. There's a clip on YouTube of Flea and Bootsy plaing together at a RHCP gig but some dumb woman does a voiceover right over the top of it. -
In a taxi with the iPhone browsing the fern and listening to Musiq and Ne-yo
-
[URL]http://www.residentadvisor.net/podcast-episode.aspx?id=230[/URL]<br />
<br />
[QUOTE]John Carpenter's frequent soundtrack collaborator embraces the darkness in advance of Halloween.<br />
<br />
You may not know the name Alan Howarth, but you'll surely have heard his music before. He's been involved with the sound design of movies like [I]Raiders of the Lost Ark[/I], [I]Poltergeist[/I] and all of the [I]Star Trek[/I] movies.[B] Some of his finest work, though, has come in collaboration with John Carpenter, whose soundtrack to [I]Escape from New York[/I] has been beloved, rinsed and re-edited by countless DJs.[/B] Renowned for his murky and unstable atmospheres, Howarth's work is perfect for this time of year, which is exactly why we asked him to delve into his archives to provide a special Halloween mix in honor of his performances at this year's [URL="http://www.residentadvisor.net/event.aspx?157336"]Unsound festival[/URL].[/QUOTE][URL]http://ra4.residentadvisor.net/audio/RA230_101025_Alan-Howarth-residentadvisor.net.mp3[/URL] -
errrr<br />
<br />
<br />
I was just on you tube and watched.. Katy Perry, waking up in vegas.. followed by Def Leppard- Pour some suger on me, followed by Vilent Femmes, I hear the rain... followed by ELO, last train to London....<br />
<br />
Yeah I am not exactly proud of my eclectic taste, I am not as all musically cool.<br />
<br />
<br />
[video=youtube;1-pUaogoX5o]
<br />
[video=youtube;iVxiHC9AJQw] <br />
<br />
[video=youtube;NWUA7Ub1IXQ] <br />
<br />
[video=youtube;3v6MBHpzZg8]