Movies We've Just Watched discussion
LISTS, LISTS, AND MORE LISTS
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Stuff We've Just Listened To

Our band does a more straightforward vocal driven, yet faster, version of this song--largely copying Ella Fitzgerald's, with drum breaks in the second- time-around- verses..kinda boring in comparison to these!
Love the sweet and low Lester.


thanks for the link to the story ... i'll check it out. i've pretty much loved everything i've read by the man. the film was quite good too, although his sexuality was "conveniently" not discussed, which was pretty lame.

thanks for the link to the story ... i'll check it out. i've pretty much loved everything i've read by the man. the film was quite good too, although his sexu..."
I think maybe you're gonna write it?
Your post just made me think of it, is all..and it does have a strangely musical structure.

i've got the first three discs now and they're all quite different. the first is uber anxiety-ridden ADD style drum and bass - the second has a lot more jazz influence with players like herbie hancock on board - but the new one is more ambient and relaxed, fusing the nerdy/geeky with sublime/chic in ways that i can't describe. the first listen brought that feeling that you get sometimes when something seems really new - you're just not sure if you like it or not because you can't quite take it all in - but on successive listenings i find i really like it. there is a density in the writing that exists even on the more relaxed cuts.
here's a link to his website - there's a video with a track from the new album, which again sounds like he's heading in new directions.
check the video for CORONUS, THE TERMINATOR ...
http://www.flying-lotus.com/


I have: The Greatest, Moon Pix, what would the Community Think?, and You Are Free. My hub's the big fan, but she's pretty interesting. For some reason she puts me in mind of that New Orleans duo that featured on Treme. I like her better than Tori Amos, who kind of is more famous for occupying the same niche.
The Greatest may possibly be exceptional.

i find chan's voice much more appealing, and her musical direction seems lazier - in a good way - not heading into the realm of over-produced, like ms amos. i liked that she hired a band to back her on THE GREATEST, i like bands that sound like bands, not collections of hot players. the only other cat power stuff i've heard is just her and an acoustic (nylon string) guitar.

i find chan's voice much more appealing, and her musical direction seems lazier - in..."
Yeah. I think I meant she and Tori Amos kinda both do the dark side of singer/songwiter females.
Nothing I've heard Tori do pulls me towards her music in anyway, although it is different/interesting/intelligent, I suppose. I guess I just need more than that. A good number of my old female students were fans.
I do like Cat's lazy production, as you call it. I think I like Moon Pix more than What Would the Community Think? Maybe I'm just always tired of her by the time I get to that one, but I don't think so--it sorta feels a bit overwrought to me. And maybe accounts for my reservations for her in total. Plus it was the first one I heard, which probably colored my perceptions.

HARLEQUIN - for solo clarinet
ENTFUHRUNG KNABE DUETT
AMOUR
IN FREUNDSHAFT
PICCOLO ... all various works for saxophone (some solo, some w other instruments)
MICROPHONIE I - for 2 microphones, gong, and 2 percussionists
MICROPHONIE II - for microphone, choir and organ
TELEMUZIK ... electronic music
and
HYMNEN - a 2-hour work of electronic music that could stand as a kind of encyclopedia of the genre .. i can't think of a work that i like more.
just been doing some research into the great german composer, ordering some scores that go with the saxophone works and i'll probably order the score for HARLEQUIN next year.

I downloaded it on the spot. Deelish. The first half, IN MEMORY OF A SUMMER DAY, was a permanent fixture in my earliest Walkman days. I don't know how many tapes of it I wore out. It's this big lush ecstatic setting of a prelude poem to THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS, and seems to sum up Carroll's feelings for that dear child, ecstatic but with more than a touch of the awareness of mortality -- "we are but older children, dear, who fret to find our bedtime near." This is a new recording, and it's pretty good, but I miss the foregrounded percussion sounds of the original recording.
I like the first half so much, it's so terribly familiar to me that I'm having a harder time with the second half, which I'm hearing for the first time in thirty years. It's a setting of the poem "All In The Golden Afternoon." I'm sure I'll get more into it with repeat listenings, hopefully with a copy of the poem handy so I can make out the words.
Edit for clarity -- the first half, IN MEMORY OF A SUMMER DAY, was recorded soon after it was first performed and I listened to it a lot. The second half was never recorded until just recently, when I found it while idly surfing iTunes looking for cool stuff.

My wrath will be Olympian when Greenwood loses the Oscar for Best Score to that simpering archly twee nonsense DeSplat did for that fish movie. Greenwood leaves better music in his Kleenex.



The score sounds pretty distinctly 20th Century to my admittedly musically uneducated ears, like the score to a Sirk movie that had dropped some acid somehow. Lushly gorgeous and yet somehow just a bit too much in some weird way.
And those end credits included a reference to "Puck Beaverton's Necktie" which indicates a little bit of recycling from the INHERENT VICE soundtrack.

The score sounds pretty distinctly 2..."
ha-I listened to that today too!

that's funny. it is likely a melody he wrote and re-orchestrated. nice.
i'm going to try to get back to the theater and see it again before it leaves town.

the early records are really something - JAZZ ADVANCE is one of those turning point records. i know a lot of folks like these early ones because he's clearly still in the jazz idiom, but he's twisting it in new ways (ways that were new in the mid and late 50's). his solo LPS from the late 60's and early 70's have been getting a lot of airplay these past few days, in fact, i'm about to listen to INDENT again. the larger groups that recorded in new york and europe in the 80's are cool, but NEFERTITI, THE BEAUTIFUL ONE HAS COME (1967, i think) has to be my all time favorite from the "later" period - just a trio of saxophone (with jimmy lyons, who i was lucky to get a lesson with in the 80's) cecil, and the great sunny murray (who also passed away not too long ago). their interplay is really something on this.

i love gruppen - have a few nice recordings of it - will dig into this. and i really like simon rattle conducting - saw him conduct WOZZECK with los angeles once - went two nights - mind blown.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p06c..."
this is a fantastic recording - simon rattle really brings out the gems. and the binaural sound is striking when listening on headphones.
speaking of stockhausen, a friend just sent this link to a site that this guitarist from nyc has been compiling for years .... a sort of encyclopedia of the composer's work ... if anyone out there is interested in learning more about the works, what they are scored for - images from the scores and sound files, seek no further than here:
http://stockhausenspace.blogspot.com/

i've been listening to his records all afternoon.
RIP



Listened to a small bit of that online--another great one, it seems.

Oh, I dunno, how much if any, he worked on for Jonny Greenwood's? I'm thinking guilt by association. Of course, Radiohead's music has been in soundtracks. I had the link: will post. \/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkZ2r...
Almost perfect October music.

a belated RIP to larnie fox, long time leader of this group who insisted on anonymity. now i can utter his name.


a belated RIP to larnie..."
Phillip -- You mean Hardy Fox. Larnie is still with us!

"i make many mistakes"
.... can anyone site the film that quote comes from?

"i make many mistakes"
.... can anyone site the film that quote comes from?"
"cite" - and, yes :D
so - from you tube, i found, and perhaps you will too, these remarkable recordings by
lee konitz and warne marsh (!!!) - 1955
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMkH5...
dexter gordon (from live in monmarte) - 1962
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D3IGe...
sonny rollins - live in denmark - 1965
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TGcsI...
and the master, lester young recorded in los angeles in 1952
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2wr9...
it's possible these are in order of how influential these guys have been for me.