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Joined: April 11 2014
Location: Kyiv In Spirit
Status: Offline
Points: 20243
Posted: October 19 2014 at 13:38
presdoug wrote:
SteveG wrote:
presdoug wrote:
I like a lot of early symphony recordings made by the older giants of conducting done in the 1930s-1950s. There are several dozen conductors from that era that I collect.
Wonderful to hear people enjoying classical! Who is your favorite composer PD?
Anton Bruckner
Yes Bruckner is amazing. After seeing the movie Amadeus in 1984, I became enchanted with the Classics and started listening to composers alphabetically starting with Bach. I borrowed many Symphonic works from my library, some were the same symphonies but the quality of the music varied drastically. That's when I realized how important the conductor is regardless of how good the orchestra is. It's been a 30 year learning experience for me as I'm now up to Tchaikowsky!
Edited by SteveG - October 19 2014 at 13:40
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Joined: January 24 2010
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 8046
Posted: October 19 2014 at 16:23
SteveG wrote:
presdoug wrote:
SteveG wrote:
presdoug wrote:
I like a lot of early symphony recordings made by the older giants of conducting done in the 1930s-1950s. There are several dozen conductors from that era that I collect.
Wonderful to hear people enjoying classical! Who is your favorite composer PD?
Anton Bruckner
Yes Bruckner is amazing. After seeing the movie Amadeus in 1984, I became enchanted with the Classics and started listening to composers alphabetically starting with Bach. I borrowed many Symphonic works from my library, some were the same symphonies but the quality of the music varied drastically. That's when I realized how important the conductor is regardless of how good the orchestra is. It's been a 30 year learning experience for me as I'm now up to Tchaikowsky!
Hey, cool, Steve! For me, as well, it was after seeing the movie Amadeus that I became enchanted with the Classics-I saw Amadeus in the spring of 1985.
Joined: April 01 2009
Location: Atlanta
Status: Offline
Points: 26133
Posted: October 19 2014 at 17:29
The earliest music I truly enjoy is the Beatles. I've heard some old blues stuff that's pretty neat too, but I've never really connected with the blues in the same way. Orchestral ("classical") composers likewise occasionally push my pleasure buttons, but I RARELY look to them for real entertainment.
I honestly think there is more great music coming out today than ever before - not prog-wise, but in more experimental forms of pop and rock. Not because people are magically more creative now than they were before, but because so many more people have access to the means to produce their own music. Even I have 2 albums publicly released, and I'm a nobody. Enough people like me around and some of them are bound to be great.
Edited by HolyMoly - October 19 2014 at 17:30
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It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle if it is lightly greased.
Joined: August 30 2014
Location: Poole, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 246
Posted: October 20 2014 at 03:46
Dire Straits, yes, take this Private Investigations piece as a nice example. When it comes to personal tastes, I actually love their whole On Every Street album. Amy Winehouse's Back to Black, perhaps? ABBA (geniuses!), Brothers Gibb sometimes, Faith No More (great band's name, innit), bits from Pet Shop Boys (surely West End Girls, but how about This Couldn't Happen Here too? Lovely, moody piece). Queen (purely progressive, symphonic Innuendo), Deep Purple (Child in Time, Perfect Stranger - sweet), Led Zeppelin (Kashmir, no need to say more) - they all might already be considered quite proggy, so maybe there is not even any need to mention them here. Pretenders. The Pretenders. Chemical Brothers, Prince by all means, why not The Smiths? Public Service Broadcasting, Goldfrapp.. It feels sometimes you may find progressive reminiscences nearly everywhere.
Writing about truth is a little bit like getting your dick out in public and hoping no one laughs (Steve Hogarth)
Joined: September 03 2013
Location: Rio de Janeiro
Status: Offline
Points: 1607
Posted: October 20 2014 at 07:28
^Why no one have mentioned The Doors? What an impressive style they had! Impressed also with some Jim Morrison's live performances that I watched some times. 'Strange Days' and 'When The Music Is Over' are amongst my favourites, btw I think 'Strange Days' could have fit perfectly as one of the soundtracks of that stunning film 'Pulp Fiction' , even better than that other famous track I knew when watched this film but don't recall its name.
"Music is a higher revelation than all wisdom and philosophy." LvB
Joined: April 11 2014
Location: Kyiv In Spirit
Status: Offline
Points: 20243
Posted: October 20 2014 at 09:33
^No doubt the Doors were great but they are listed as Proto prog in PA, so people like me might be giving them a pass and going on to other nonlisted groups.
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Joined: April 11 2014
Location: Kyiv In Spirit
Status: Offline
Points: 20243
Posted: October 20 2014 at 13:30
Darious wrote:
Dire Straits, yes, take this Private Investigations piece as a nice example. When it comes to personal tastes, I actually love their whole On Every Street album. Amy Winehouse's Back to Black, perhaps? ABBA (geniuses!), Brothers Gibb sometimes, Faith No More (great band's name, innit), bits from Pet Shop Boys (surely West End Girls, but how about This Couldn't Happen Here too? Lovely, moody piece). Queen (purely progressive, symphonic Innuendo), Deep Purple (Child in Time, Perfect Stranger - sweet), Led Zeppelin (Kashmir, no need to say more) - they all might already be considered quite proggy, so maybe there is not even any need to mention them here. Pretenders. The Pretenders. Chemical Brothers, Prince by all means, why not The Smiths? Public Service Broadcasting, Goldfrapp.. It feels sometimes you may find progressive reminiscences nearly everywhere.
Great list Darious. No doubt a lot of our tastes run toward more proggy material, but it would not surprise me if some early rap groups are going to be mentioned also.
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Joined: August 22 2010
Location: Indiana
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Points: 20449
Posted: October 22 2014 at 08:57
SteveG wrote:
^Awesome! Time to start digging out my Beck collection. Thanks Doc.
You are welcome....saw Beck in 1974-75 (?) in Chicago with BOC opening up for him. Then around 2000 also with Santana on the same ticket. Always fun to watch him play his guitar.
I used to listen to a good deal of Traffic, Neil Young , Steely Dan, Nick Drake, BOC, among many others.
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone. Haquin
Joined: April 11 2014
Location: Kyiv In Spirit
Status: Offline
Points: 20243
Posted: October 22 2014 at 10:15
^Absolutely true! Beck is one of the true "better seen live" performers that I've had the pleasure to witness in a small venue. I've had a quick chat with him about his early albums and he seems really sincere and humble, too.
Edited by SteveG - October 22 2014 at 15:06
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Joined: September 03 2013
Location: Rio de Janeiro
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Points: 1607
Posted: November 23 2014 at 13:50
Rick Robson wrote:
I alway thought there are some Dire Straits songs that are pretty sensual, 'Down to the Waterline' is the one I recall right now but 'cause its my favourite of theirs, besides Sultans of Swing of course
Oh... just listened to the lovely Dire Straits' Love Over Gold, yeah I forgot to mention it as one of my favourites of them, but especially the track from the album 'Alchemy'(that famous live concert from the year 1984) as it is rather more intensely played. Btw that show features some amazing guitar melody passages, which I dare to say are amongst my favourites - one of the major climax of that show begins for me right at the minute 9:45 of the song Tunnel of Love, when an awesome guitar melody takes the main role, beginning with a delicate arpeggios in such a romantic atmosphere! Mark Knopfler is indeed a helluva composer! And he plays even better in the live shows.
Unfortunately I wasn't fortunate to find it in YouTube, found only this other version of the same excerpt, but clearly doesn't equate with the above mentioned that was released in the CD 2 of the album Alchemy. Anyway it's obviously interesting to check out these two different performances of the same excerpt of Tunnel Of Love, perhaps it's just a matter of different tastes to prefer one over the other.
"Music is a higher revelation than all wisdom and philosophy." LvB
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