Your Top 5
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When the mood strikes me, Tame Impala us a great listen
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1 - stealth arcs
2 - lined rear pockets
3 - crispy
4 - raw/unsanfordized
5 - medium rear rise. -
Oh I like this idea @mikebarhoot
I'll go with IH tops (no real order):
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Oh I like this idea @mikebarhoot
I'll go with IH tops (no real order):
Ah, your “top” 5. I see what you did there.
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@SKT:
I love this thread and I’m discovering so much new stuff to dig in to from everyone’s lists.
@xtcclassic Really enjoyed your list and of course I had to find and listen to Tilts. Damn fine rock n roll! Thanks giving me some new music to enjoy. Tame Impala too. My list has become “lists”. Tough to narrow it down
Glad you enjoyed them!
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Oh, another honourable mention…...
Greta Van Fleet - Anthem of the Peaceful Army
BUT, embarrassing admission, when @Alex put this on in the office, I said "wow, I love her voice"….
I got my coat......
Never heard this before but it sounds fantastic! Good recommendation!
Can't fault you for thinking it was a woman LOL!
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Whoever said Tool, fuck yeah. Never listened to them before, but they are so far up my alley, all you can see is the sols of their feet….
Enjoy
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They don't make better bands. Tool is a rabbit hole. Who else is writing the Fibonacci sequence into their songs?
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@Giles wow you have quite a daunting but amazing rabbit hole ahead of you, as others have mentioned. Their music is so dense and complex that you can listen to one of their songs for the hundredth time and still catch something new, but at the same time it’s very listenable and not overwhelming in its complexity. Such a great band.
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@jerkules yeah Danny’s an absolute monster
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I remember at a Tool show once Danny did a fill that made my friends and I just look at each other slack-jawed. Great skill, and his creativity is monumental too.
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Einstein's Dreams is great @SKT ; Alan Lightman fairly recently released another book, but I've not read it.
EDIT: And I think it's been discussed here, but Larry McMurtry's son James is an amazing singer-songwriter.
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@mclaincausey Einstein’s Dreams…I read it not long ago and was just blown away by the combination of prose/poetry/physics and the nature of time. I really loved it.
A lot of people know the movie “Winter’s Bone” based off Woodrell’s novel, which launched Jennifer Lawrence’s career. The book is fantastic and set pretty close to where I live now and where I grew up. There is a great Anthony Bourdain episode where he goes gigging for fish with Woodrell on some backwoods river in the Ozarks. And absolutely yes to James McMurtry…one of my songwriting heroes. His “Childish Things” record is a favorite
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Agreed 100% @SKT and what I also like about it is that it really captures the kinds of thought experiments (Gedankenexperiment, which he learned in primary school) that Einstein used to come up with the most monumental physical insight in human history (General Relativity ) among many other physical insights also ranking among the top. It feels like it puts you into his mind, which is pretty incredible.
Speaking of Einstein, Walter Isaacson's biography is also outstanding and well worth a read. Uncertainty by David Lindley is also an interesting account of Einstein and other players, though is more focused on quantum physics, Bohr, and Heisenberg.
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Thanks for the Einstein recommendations. The Lightman book really got me interested in learning more about his life and work. The concept of time became a focus for me as we experienced “Covid-time” during the pandemic. Erratic…speeding…crawling. I’ll find that Isaacson book and start there.