Wax Treasure (Vinyl)
-
@Aetas I'm with you 100% on that, some great albums there, I've got my eye on Space Funk 2 as my next purchase from them.
Check out Daptone Records if you get a chance, I've seen quite a few of there artists live over the years and they are so good (unfortunately a few - Sharon Jones, Charles Bradley, Naomi Shelton to name a few are no longer with us)
-
-
@Jett129 - oh dear. this album is the one that always got me. close, personal, Bruce being the great poet from the neighbourhood, anywhere, similar to the one i grew up. i'll watch the movie, but i'm not the optimist
-
@endo - ahhh pink flag. Such a fantastic album! Unbelievable songs for a debut. Songs like Ex Lion tamer will never get old
-
@endo said in Wax Treasure (Vinyl):
… a masterpiece, one of so many from 77!
Would agree with!
Now I’ve to look where my Television record is ;-). -
Today's listening pleasure - Jeremie Albino - Our time In The Sun. Soulful vocals featuring the brill guitar work of Barrie Cadogan (you may know him from the theme tune to Better Call Saul).
-
-
I'll agree with you both on '77 for my next listen this morning even though the sleeve is rough (record itself is unscathed)
https://open.spotify.com/album/6lU1MDxi3TqhKnYNQm555u?si=DrgWW4C-TJK_-JugMQgAsA
-
Never heard this @GraemeE
Gorgeous.
Brian Eno, the wizard of his time!“
With all that context, the most interesting thing about picking up Television's Marquee Moon-- today, for us folks who weren't old enough to buy the first edition vinyl-- is how ahistorical it sounds. If you listen to their original Brian Eno-produced demos, you hear a scragglier, faster band that's less confident and more... punk? If nothing else, the band at least sounded closer to the sometimes-sloppy Bowery clubrats Eno must have taken them for on those early tapes. Their sound on Marquee Moon, though, is clean, raw and simple!
“
️ Pitchfork