i watched this movie a few weeks ago and wasnt nearly prepared enough to pay it the attention it requires, but it was visually stunning and the soundtrack was great so i bought it imemdiately
Re: What's Everyone Listening to?
Posted: Wed Jan 10, 2018 1:43 pm
by cortez the killer
Re: What's Everyone Listening to?
Posted: Wed Jan 10, 2018 2:00 pm
by whatwouldcooleydo?
Re: What's Everyone Listening to?
Posted: Wed Jan 10, 2018 5:09 pm
by TW_2.0
cortez the killer wrote:
Been listening to this a lot lately.
I really enjoy it.
Caused me to dig into his discography, as I have never really paid him any attention. And I dig it.
Re: What's Everyone Listening to?
Posted: Wed Jan 10, 2018 7:04 pm
by tinnitus photography
dogstar wrote:
Beebs wrote:
tinnitus photography wrote:this is pretty excellent.
Different album, I know. But came across this curiosity today.
Apparently Radiohead have noticed too (although maybe they haven't)
Jack Rabid's post last night:
oh for f***s sake, doesn't rolling stone employ any factcheckers? albert hammond and mike hazelwood didn't 'write "the air that i breathe" for the hollies.' it was the third version of the song released! hammond's own version appeared in 1972 on his own album "it never rains in california" (featuring his blockbuster hit title song), and the second version was done by phil everly on his 1973 "star spangled banner" LP. the hollies #6 u.s. hit followed in 1974, the hollies being about the biggest everly brother fans that ever lived (total nobodies graham nash and allen clarke once spent hours in the rain as teenagers, long before the hollies formed, hoping to meet the Everlys at a downtown manchester hotel the pair weren't even sure the brothers were staying at... and miraculously they did end up meeting them and chatting for 10 minutes or so.) and in fact the site soundonsound confirms, to no one's surprise, that the hollies came across the song via's everly's version thanks to their usual producer ron richards: "It was the Everly version that producer Ron Richards, the man who'd signed the Hollies to EMI back in 1963, then brought into EMI Studios at Abbey Road for the band to work from."
Caused me to dig into his discography, as I have never really paid him any attention. And I dig it.
I've never really spent any time with LCD Soundsystem. I was going back and listening to stuff from last year that received acclaim. Like you, I was pleasantly surprised by American Dream.