Music to make models go by
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I am currently listening to the "Glory of Gabrieli" Empire Brass 2006.
It is really charging me up and getting me going.
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"Boomer Radio" (Internet), Smooth Jazz, all day long. Drives the kids crazy.
TR
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Right now:
Alice Cooper, "Killer", 1976
Posted by Lewis Wadsworth
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Boomer might have some nice music but I just clicked on all the stations and only one was playing music, all the others were commercials, no thanks.
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@unknownuser said:
@unknownuser said:
Right now:
Alice Cooper, "Killer", 1976
A classic!
Yeah! This was way before he went Republican and started playing golf with country western performers!
Posted by Lewis Wadsworth
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OK METAL HEADS! I got the best lost in your work what happened to my day tunes....Ready for this?
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart! That's right......I experiment with clients. what plays during the meetings seems to have a big effect on the meeting and what is accomplished. Sometimes the clients are more cooperative too. Another great guitar cd I have is Norman Kraft he is a smooth classical Italian acoustic player. -
I also have the Requiem on my 'pod. Of course, it's a rather shocking shuffle to go from that to "Under My Wheels."
Posted by Lewis Wadsworth
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one song on repeat.
Fergaliscious
Thats all I need. Ever.
Okay, I may be kidding, I listen to a lot of the Tragically Hip, Reel Big Fish, Breaking Benjamin, Benny Benassi, Tiesto, Techno, and rock in general!
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To be honest Guys,
I haven't heard a lot of the stuff mentioned.
But I do like quality music [with a capital Q].
When I'm busy doing a groovy SU model I often put on a disk of Lawrence Welk's Greatest Hits [volume5]...or even The Best of Mantovani.
If you want to listen to something a bit more modern and hip-hop [as it were], you cant go past Richard Clayderman!Stu
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okay, well hopefully everyone has heard of Tatu, a teen russian ... band and ... show ahahah
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Seeing those Kompressor tubes reminded me of the truly great Nash The Slash, who had a cult following in the early 1980's. I've just enjoyed watching a number of his performances.
Regards, Ross
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@ross macintosh said:
Seeing those Kompressor tubes reminded me of the truly great Nash The Slash, who had a cult following in the early 1980's. I've just enjoyed watching a number of his performances.
Regards, Ross
Nash was definitely a bit more polished than Kompressor, but you are right...there is a certain insane shared aesthetic...or maybe it's just the masks!
Is Nash really covering Astronomy Domine on an electric ukulele in one of those videos?
Thanks for bringing him to my attention.
--Lewis
Posted by Lewis Wadsworth
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@unknownuser said:
I also have the Requiem on my 'pod. Of course, it's a rather shocking shuffle to go from that to "Under My Wheels."
Better that than "Dead Babies".
Heard Mendelssohn's Elijah performed at Frank Gehry's Pritzker the other night. Might have to add that to the playlist at work. Very good pice of music at an outstanding outdoor theater.
http://www.millenniumpark.org/artandarchitecture/jay_pritzker_pavilion.html
Opera is also a good music for late nights at the computer. Carmina Burana comes to mind, although I'm not sure that it technically qualifies as opera.
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I do have both the Orff version of Carmina and Philip Pickett's "medieval" interpretation of the poems on my Ipod, too. Of course, Fortuna, Imperatrix Mundi does not encourage model making. Rather, on listening I find myself fighting the urge to put on polished plate armor, mount a warhorse, and ride through a grove of flowering fruit trees to almost certain death in battle against the forces of evil.
Oh, wait...no, that's a flashback from Excalibur.
Posted by Lewis Wadsworth
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@unknownuser said:
I do have both the Orff version of Carmina and Philip Pickett's "medieval" interpretation of the poems on my Ipod, too. Of course, Fortuna, Imperatrix Mundi does not encourage model making. Rather, on listening I find myself fighting the urge to put on polished plate armor, mount a warhorse, and ride through a grove of flowering fruit trees to almost certain death in battle against the forces of evil.
Oh, wait...no, that's a flashback from Excalibur.
Orff makes me thirsty.
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The band i'm really into at the moment is a Uk unsigned band called Glamour of the Kill.
Here is their my space
http://myspace.com/glamourofthekillCheck them out
Toby
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Have you guys heard of Hevia?
http://www.hevia.es/Interesting to hear Bagpipes from Spain. Good stuff though.
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Blue Man Group! - it's amazing what they do with PVC
If I need a laugh break, They Might Be Giants, Weird Al, or David Petete will do the job - I especially like David's "I'm Just a Kidney Stone (I'll soon be passing through)".P&W can also help me focus and Classical music gets the creative juices flowing - it's amazing that the genius of Bach or Mozart can be somewhat contagious (even if only temporarily).
Oh, and I really liked the title of this thread - a takeoff on a classic crooner's song...
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Currently: Nash the Slash, "Children of the Night". I bought the album off of ITunes.
What a find! Thanks, Ross. To think that I've lived within an hour or two of the Canadian border for twenty years, and I'd never heard of this guy! And I've even listened to Numan, and somehow missed that he hung out for a while with this crazed mandolin player who performs with his face entirely covered by surgical gauze...
I emailed the YouTube clip of Nash doing "Wolf/Glass Eye" to a friend of mine who works for Gehry. She really liked it as well. So just imagine: there's a distinct possibility that in the office of the World's Most Famous Architect, someone is currently "rocking down" to the tunes of "thee ee-lick-troneek" Nash the Slash.
Posted by Lewis Wadsworth
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