Agitated performed by Die Electric Eels
|
| |
|
Baoba performed by Claudia
|
|
|
| | : Yes! I picked up a Claudia compilation LP recently in Brazil. It was all great stuff, but this was really the standout track.
|
|
|
Cash and Carry performed by Michel LeGrand
|
| |
|
Chanson D'O performed by Francoise Hardy
|
|
|
| | : this album's a favorite of mine, too. I also really like her album "Soliel" of a couple years earlier. The interesting thing about this album is that the Brazilian female guitarist Tuca (just one name) backed her on this as she did on Nara Leao's gorgeous tribute to Bossa Nova (recorded in France), "Dez Anos Depois." If you listen to these albums side by side you can clearly here the similarities, not to say they sound identical. And doesn't Fracoise look stunning on the b&w album cover?
|
|
|
Close to You performed by The Renaissance
|
|
|
| | : That's a delightful little sample. I've also heard their wonderful rendition of "Always Something There to Remind Me" -- somebody's gotta put that album out on CD!
|
|
|
Coffee Talk - Yukihiro Fukutomi Remix performed by Jazzanova
|
| |
|
Diesel Raven performed by Chris Clark
|
| |
|
different samples from the LP performed by Los Brasilios
|
|
|
|
dry drunk emperor performed by TV on the Radio
|
| |
|
Elijah performed by Donald Byrd
|
|
|
|
Elle a... elle a pas... performed by Michel Legrand
|
|
|
|
Garra performed by Marcos Valle
|
|
|
|
How High The Moon performed by June Christy
|
|
|
|
Just What I’ve Been Looking For performed by The Vogues
|
|
|
|
Kee-ka-roo performed by Walter Wanderley and Luiz Henrique
|
|
|
|
Last Night performed by Vitamin C
|
| |
| | : oh come on unathanthium, I iike your style, Last Nite, is a great song but it is a very obvious sub motown parody...and Dr. Feelgood- She Does It Right does it a milllion times better : Sub motown,I love sub motown.Parody,I love that too.And if Dr.Feelgood do it better,congratulations to them.A million times better,though,hm,that's an awful lot of noughts.And I don't think we need a pub rock revival.
|
|
|
Listen To Me performed by Luiz Henrique w / Sivuca
|
|
|
|
Mandato performed by Osmar Milito e Quarteto Forma
|
|
|
|
Middle Of The Road performed by Denim
|
|
|
|
Mother we just can't get enough performed by New Radicals
|
|
|
|
Pense à moi performed by France Gall
|
|
|
| | : most of france gall's 60's output from her yeh yeh bubble pop to the NOW sounds is excellent and highly recommended by moi. her compilation poupee de son is a great place to start for anyone new to the charms of france and her lovely songs. her later 70's records are not so wonderfull but then thats only my opinion, some of us may feel different. happy listening everyone. : Great song, this. I find much of her mid-60s output highly enjoyable, however throwaway they were supposed to be. 'Laisse tomber les filles' from around the same time is great too.
|
|
|
Ride The Wind (live) performed by The Youngbloods
|
| |
| | : I went to a concert in longmont Colorado on a June Night in 1970 in the Full Moon Light, where I heard Ride the Wind and Sunlight and On Sir Francis Drake, and Banana's Fender Rhodes with the picture of Elephant Mountain painted on the front could be seen for miles. The CD i recently found these treasures on is One Way # OW 34535, available through Amazon, GET IT ! It has some of the most amazing music you ever heard if you are a Youngbloods fan. It is also demarcated BMG Specialty Products DRC11575. Whatever your music is, people, enjoy it , sometimes it is all you have. And everybody learn to play. Maybe we could have a battle of the guitars instead of the guns!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
|
|
|
Sailors Song performed by Fairport Convention
|
| |
|
Satan performed by Jon Lucien
|
| |
|
Scatta performed by Skrillex
|
| |
|
Scatterbrain (As Dead As Leaves) performed by Radiohead
|
| |
|
Scattered performed by Nedry
|
| |
|
Sugartown performed by Les Miladys
|
|
|
|
Suzy performed by Caravan Palace
|
| |
|
Te Caliente performed by Patsy Gallant
|
| |
| | : This track never really stood out for me the first few times I heard it. It wasn't that I didn't like it, but, for the life of me, I can't work out how I overlooked it for so long. It is absolutely brilliant. You can't help but feel the pleasure of the song, which, from start to finish, is a relentless celebration for the ears. Recent, cheap imitation cover versions do it little justice.
|
|
|
The Charles C. Leary performed by Devendra Banhart
|
| |
| | : I know exactly what you're talking about. I have that album as well and there's something - although I don't know what - that makes me keep putting it back on. It must be that voice. For the longest time, I couldn't even tell if Devendra was a guy or girl.
|
|
|
Trampoline performed by The Greenberry Woods
|
| |
| | : Sugar by Stretch Princess IS VERY VERY VERRRRRY similar to There She Goes by the La's. A similar high-pitch vocal with an addictive hit chorus:
"Sugar Sugar
sticking me to my babe
Sugar Sugar
sticking me to my babe
Sticking up to my babe
sticking up to my babe
sticking up to my babe"
Beautifully sung, I can't stop listening to it.
|
|
|
Trzeba Wracać performed by Novi Singers
|
| |
| | : just to reiterate, this IS the best song ever!
|
|
|
Wantin’ Ain’t Gettin’ performed by The Association
|
| |
| | : Alright! I've compiled this one before too. I think the sitar/drum break at the top has been sampled more than a few times. The tune almost sounds like a tribute to Ravi Shankar & The Lovin' Spoonful simultaneously...Right On! : This was a song written by my father, Michael Deasy Sr - who played guitar on most of the Association's stuff. He did a couple of psychedelic albums, Friar Tuck and his Psychedelic Guitar and Tanyet - both cutting edge classics. This song was an interesting exploration for the Association guys.
|
|
|
Without a Doubt performed by My Dad is Dead
|
|
|
| | : Mark Edwards is one of the unsung heros of midwestern post-punk. His influence is often kept secret, as if to protect the pearls contained within from pop-poachers and indie-plagerists. His Homestead stuff is worth hunting down, particularly "Let's Skip The Details" & "The Taller You Are,The Shorter You Get". His self-effacing wisdom, and ironic poetics are the stuff of legend, as well as his no-nonsense approach to guitar, which much like mr. D, I had practiced in my solitude many times before. A rare recommendation indeed!
|
|
|