Music to make models go by
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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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Bump for all those who love dance music I just ran across the 538 DanceDepartement Podcast site, amazing music by amazing artists:
http://radio538.nl/538/xml/rss/dancedepartment.jsp
Special recommendation for Ivica
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Shinedown, Breaking Benjamin, Seether, Staind, Tool, Flyleaf, Foo Fighters, Prime Circle, Metallica, 30 Seconds to Mars etc...
Pretty much all alternative and modern rock! -
Rabih Abou-Khalil, shora (malval), Bonobo, Converge, Hakan, Lettuce, Meshuggah, Thomas Dybdahl, Poison the well, tool, Magma, Brian Blade, Peter Erskine, The brecker brothers, etc...
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@unknownuser said:
What music helps you model faster or inspires you to create?
Steve Vai, Joe Satriani . . . then, sometimes I make my own music by picking up one of the axes and playing it through headphones using a Korg PX-3 - I paid $60 for a used, abused and totally trashed axe & keep it next to my desk at work - the neck is in great shape - it's a tele-clone . . . when nobody's around, or when I close the door, I usually play through the crummy computer speakers (yechhh) . . . rock on! -
hehehe
well i like instrumental and simphonical music
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