- Joined
- 30 March 2005
- Posts
- 835
- Reactions
- 2
websman said:Dude, if you ever come over here, I could teach you to like country music. Sure, it's simple, but it really gets to your heart.
Besides we don't sing about cows. It's all about crying, loving, cheating, trains, pickup trucks, drinking, and getting out of prison...
Stan 101 said:One thing I never understood about life
was how whenever I tried to do right
things would go wrong
and people would end up...
Now that's a country song he he!
ghotib said:I'm just back from a singing summer school, so I'm listening to recordings from that. Not necessarily for enjoyment
I took away with me:
Autoharp Legacy (does anyone here know anything about the autoharp?)
Van Cliburn playing piano encore pieces, mostly romantics
Kathleen Battle and Jessie Norman singing spirituals
Joan Sutherland "Art of the Prima Donna" (Joan in her prime: goes directly to Heaven, do not pass Go...)
Fiddler on the Roof
Barbara Bonney singing Mozart
Barbara Bonney and Angelika Kirchschlager "First Encounter" (duets from Schumann, Dvorak, he and she Mendelssohns, Brahms)
I listened to Joan in the car, and nothing much during the school - worked much too hard and when there was a chance to relax only wanted quiet. It was a great week.
Ghoti
Duckman#72 said:Ditto Smurf1976!!
Very similar tastes. Obvious mid 80's influence. Era of the big hair stadium rock band! Poison, Guns n roses, Bon Jovi, Kiss. Great period for girl pop -Transvision Vamp was a nice reminder. Wendy James - how nice was she?
There is still good music out there - you just need to search through the crap! Gone are the days when you could sit and watch rage and actually see real bands playing their instruments in 9 out of 10 clips.
.
ghotib said:Hi Julia,
Can you put your finger on why you don't go for Fiddler on the Roof? I have some reservations about it, and I'd be interested to know if they match yours.
I thought some of the country music fans might know the autoharp; country and folk are where it's most often found - Dolly Parton plays one sometimes.
http://www.mikestrickland.net/autoharp/ Scroll down to Dolly
It's sometimes described as a chorded zither. Does that help? No?? It didn't help me either because now all I know about zithers is that they're something like autoharps. Ummmm...
The autoharp is a stringed instrument that can be strummed or plucked, like a guitar can. It has about 36 strings (which is a heck of a lot to tune). The automatic part is that it comes with a set of bars that have felts, like piano felts, which damp some of the strings to form chords. So to play in a particular chord, you just press a button and the bar goes down a silences the strings that don't belong. I got one because I wanted something portable and I thought it would be easy to learn. I like the sound of it very much on its own, and it's a lovely accompanying instrument for the voice.
Completely agree about the Pearl Fishers duet. It's right up there; almost enough to make me wish I could sing tenor
Cheers,
Ghoti
sandik17 said:Duckman#72....you made my day mentioning Wendy James, and Transvision Vamp. There was obviously someone special influencing your taste in music in those times...yes, I agree completely Wendy was nice. I think I even had a poster or 2.
An I just had to buy the album...Duckman#72 said:Hi Sandik
The prize was a vinyl picture disk of Transvision Vamp's album "Pop Art". The crowd at Smash Hits must have thought she was looney to because they gave the prize to her!
Duckman
Duckman#72 said:Hi Sandik
The prize was a vinyl picture disk of Transvision Vamp's album "Pop Art".
Duckman
phoenixrising said:After a diet of 70's rock ( Floyd, Zepplin, Stones, etc) I broadened my outlook
The most significant influence was discovering the Basement at Circular Quay.
Man, that place had talent there, especialy Basement's first incarnation.
Tommy and Phil Emanuel together, James Morrison, Vince Jones, Galapagos Duck, Crossfire and later band Supermarket, even Dizzy Gillespie. They are all in my CD collection. Just to name a few.
For harp lovers (not auto) Andreas wollenweider I like, saw at town hall late 80's or early 90's.
Julia said:Hi Ghoti...
Re my dislike of "Fiddler on the Roof": I think it's partly because I simply loathe the most well known song - "If I were a Rich Man" which has been played to death and often sung badly, and also that I find the whole thing just a bit too exaggeratedly Jewish and over the top. I don't even know who wrote the music or the lyrics.
Cheers
Julia
ghotib said:Hmmmm.. And if I were to say "Sunrise, Sunset"?
My problem is that the singing is hardly ever as good as the songs. There's one achingly lovely little number, sung by a daughter who's about to leave the village and all her family to join her fiance in a labor camp in Siberia. She's young - it can't sound heavy. But she's making this immense journey and in the song she's trying to make her adored and adoring father understand why she's going. She does need to sound strong, and miking up a thin little voice so it can be heard over an orchestra doesn't cut it IMO.
Same applies to most current productions of musicals written up to... say late 60s - before microphones got mobile enough to work with lots of movement (I vividly remember Jesus and Judas tossing mikes - complete with cables - to each other in Jesus Christ Superstar) and then to be unobtrusive. They were written for performers who knew how to sing over an orchestra.
End Old Fogy rant.
Ghoti
Julia said:I left one treasure off my list - the duet from "The Pearl Fishers" by Bizet.
Heard this again yesterday and it sends chills down my spine.
Julia
Julia said:I left one treasure off my list - the duet from "The Pearl Fishers" by Bizet.
Heard this again yesterday and it sends chills down my spine.
Julia
wayneL said:Just been listening to Amici Forever's version of this myself.
A nice album. Includes "Song to the Moon" from Dvorak's Rusalka which always leaves me gah gah.
Duckman#72 said:You want chills down your spine?
Go to your bedroom late at night, turn the lights off, and play Metallica's "The Unforgiven".
Shut your eyes and listen to James Hetfield growl "the old man then prepares - to die regretfully,
that old man there is me". That's powerful.
Come on lovers of rock - can't let Julia and Wayne have all the fun.
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