Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) Review



This is a great soundtrack as others have stated.

However, the version of Black Sheep contained in the album isn't the one used in the film. This is the original version by Metric, not the cover song by the actress for Envy in the movie. I will not speak ill of Metric, but because this is a movie soundtrack, I quite disappointed the movie version of Black Sheep isn't on this album, including all those, "Oh, yeahs."




Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) Overview


Original soundtrack to the 2010 motion picture features four new songs by Beck under the guise of Sex Bob-omb and two versions of a totally new Beck track. Also on the soundtrack are tracks by indie heroes Broken Social Scene, Beachwood Sparks and Frank Black - alongside classic Rock anthems from stalwarts Rolling Stones and T.Rex plus a stellar inclusion from Britpop kings The Bluetones.


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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Palance

Palance Review



It was a real pleasure to hear this album again after so many years. I was pretty much a novice engineer when I recorded this album in 1970. I remember being very nervous about working with such a famous person but he immediately put me at ease. He really was such a nice guy and a gentleman. I was greatly surprised to find that he had a very nice singing voice, something I did not always find in other actor/movie star types that I worked with. After listening again to this album after so many years I was pleasantly surprised that it turned out pretty danged good for a relatively new engineer.




Palance Overview


Best known as a legendary actor, Jack Palance did record an album in 1969 for Warner Bros. that recalls the wacky country-rock music vibe of Lee Hazelwood's albums of the same time period. Recorded in Nashville with the usual studio cats, the album is a playful country-rock romp not unlike other late 60's Nashville recordings. Fans of Lee Hazelwood, Johnny Cash and Scott Walker will love this album. Featuring Palance's self penned classic song 'The Meanest Guy That Ever Lived'. A 20 page booklet with new and detailed liner notes (and rare photos) is included. 11 remastered tracks. Water. 2003.


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Best of Word Jazz 1

Best of Word Jazz 1 Review



Haunting me since I was a preschooler in the late `50's, from the sound of Ken Nordine's booming, string bass voice to his funny and frightening stories, right down to its paper collage cover, the original LP WORD JAZZ has lodged permanently in my psyche. I was delighted when the recording resurfaced in 1990, even if only in parts, on this compilation CD. At first I only revisited my old favorites, "Hunger Is From," a description of a sleepless, midnight raid on the refrigerator, complete with munching sound effects, "The Vidiot," a forecast, unfortunately, of the television addict I would become, "The Sound Museum," a dreamlike, wonderfully evocative "tour" of a series of aural exhibits and the artists who have created them, "Flibberty Jib," an immensely creepy portrait of religious zeal that reminds me of every facilitator of mass hysteria from Adolf Hitler to Jim Jones, and "Looks Like It's Going to Rain," in which the narrator invites the listener in to visit the noisy chambers of his brain. All of this is accompanied by the strains of cool jazz, with a tinkling piano here, noodling woodwinds there, and in several key places, some experimental electronic sounds and tape loops. Then I began to explore the other tracks on this CD, most of them new to my ears. My favorite of these previously unknown gems is "Faces In The Jazzmatazz," which I have listened to dozens of times now. Somehow it is so nostalgic that I have developed a false memory of having heard it before, somewhere in my distant past -- maybe I did, but I don't think so. Although the material on THE BEST OF WORD JAZZ, VOL. 1 is spoken, there is something so musical about Nordine's voice that, for me at least, I hear these pieces as songs, and can revisit them from time to time just as I can other favored music. The pleasure I derive from this album is so personal, and so connected to my childhood, that I don't know if I can recommend it to the uninitiated. One thing that anyone over the age of say, 30, might latch on to is Nordine's mellifluous baritone: it has been heard on more than just novelty recordings, as he has had a long career in voiceovers and narration on radio and television. So Ken Nordine will sound familiar even to those who have never heard his name.

I hope there's a Vol. 2 (may not happen, given the time that has elapsed since this CD was first released), and that it will include "Roger," a funny little nightmare scenario about a piano teacher that still gives me shivers when I hear it on my scratched up vinyl copy of WORD JAZZ.




Best of Word Jazz 1 Overview


You've heard Ken Nordine before, his immediate baritone resonating like the voice of God in countless radio and TV commercials, hawking everything from Taster's Choice to Murine. In the late 1950s, though, Nordine created "word jazz"--a combination of storytelling, sound painting, and pre-beat improvisation--as a less commercial, more personal outlet for his natural speaking talents. Best gathers the brightest of his four initial albums--material that found him somewhere between the prosody of Jack Kerouac and the arch satire of Nichols & May. As the title suggests, there's a light jazz backing behind Nordine's incantations--ranging from the lighthearted "Hunger Is From" to the disturbing, absurd scenario "Flibberty Jib" to the harrowing memoir "Confessions of 349-18-5171." Good, curious stuff. --Michael Ruby


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Jerry Goldsmith: 40 Years of Film Music

Jerry Goldsmith: 40 Years of Film Music Review



There have been so many times when I thoroughly enjoyed the soundtrack of a movie I had gone to seen and checked to see who the composer was, I found the name of Jerry Goldsmith. I remember often thinking that guy could really compose some good music. Therefore, I got excited when I found this music compilation and couldn't wait to order it from Amazon.com. What I got was pretty much what I expected: over 280 minutes of great theme music from the movies and TV, some of which I remembered, but some completely new to me.

In all music from some 53 movies and television series is represented. In some cases, we get a musical suite or two or more selections from a given score but sometimes we must make do with only the main theme music. I would like to have heard more from the award winning or nominated Chinatown, Patton, Basic Instinct and Planet of the Apes (not included in this set) and perhaps less from The Blue Max, In Harm's Way, The Boys from Brazil or Star Trek®: Nemesis suites. Even so, there is plenty of good music. I would say 75 or 80 percent is thoroughly enjoyable and worth listening to again and again.

Highlights for me include stirring suites from The Wind and the Lion, Emmy winning QB VII, Star Trek®: The Motion Picture, Under Fire, The Sum of all Fears and Oscar® winning The Omen, as well as the main theme music from Basic Instinct, Capricorn One, Total Recall, The Waltons and Police Story. After years of wishing for it, I was finally able to add a representative Jerry Goldsmith album to my music library.




Jerry Goldsmith: 40 Years of Film Music Overview


Jerry Goldsmith's death in 2004 marked the end of one of the greatest careers in film composing. This lavish 57 track 4 CD set traces the path of his astonishing achievements and includes recordings conducted by Goldsmith himself. Featuring The City Of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra, The Philharmonia Orchestra, The National Philharmonic Orchestra, and The Daniel Caine Orchestra. Includes over 280 minutes of music.


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It's Christmas Time

It's Christmas Time Review



I've owned this CD for years and play it every single Christmas. Don't buy it if all you are interested in is sound quality. This CD is for people who appreciate the authentic feel of what these artists sounded like over live radio broadcasts as received in living rooms all over the world via cranky Philco radios in the 1940s. No, the sound quality is isn't the overproduced sterilized flawless versions of these timeless classics we've become accustomed to. I give it five stars because it was everything I expected it would be when I bought it. For those with some imagination, it's easy to be transported by these broadcasts to another time when these recordings were the main holiday entertainment for troops overseas and their families at home. It's a piece of history.




It's Christmas Time Overview


No Description Available.
Genre: Christmas Music
Media Format: Compact Disk
Rating:
Release Date: 7-NOV-1995


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Monday, September 20, 2010

Orient - Occident

Orient - Occident Review



This had been 'suggested' to me for so long I was sick of seeing it. Also, how good could a collection covering 1300-1800 really be? Secumbing to curiosity at last, I found musical treasure! The Occidental pieces come from the early part of that time frame while the Oriental pieces come from the entire range, thus there really is a peculiar unity to the album which delights and surprises every time I listen to it. The Orient here is mostly the Jewish and Muslim world and after listening to Hesperion XX/XXI for so long, this seems very familiar turf. It works and it works well. Guest artists help make this a musical trip to remember.





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Tago Mago (Reis)

Tago Mago (Reis) Review



In 1971 Can released their third studio album (without counting the 1968 recordings "Delay") titled "Tago Mago" and it marked the debut of Japanese vocalist Damo Suzuki. The four remaining members stayed the same with Michael Karoli on guitar, Holger Czukay on bass, Jaki Liebezeit on drums, and Irmin Schmidt on keyboards.

The first song "Paperhouse" runs for seven minutes and a half displaying a prog-rock feel in the first section somewhat similar to something that Pink Floyd could have done but the distinctive vocals of Suzuki are already in place. Before long, the mood changes and Jaki's tribal drumming dominates while Karoli throws some lead guitar lines plus Suzuki's strange whisperings. In the coda, some tremolo-laden keyboard notes are repeated making for a great ending. Without warning, the next song out "Mushroom" comes in; a composition dominated by a great drum beat from Liebezeit featuring a metallic snare drum sound with a lot of reverb. Suzuki shines also here providing some simple catchy vocal lines. Karoli pulls out the violin to play a slightly dissonant note here and there but the thing to really pay attention here is the keyboard work from Schmidt. This is a great example of his textural style of playing!
After the fade-out, the sound of thunder and rain is heard. Soon, a cool drum beat kicks in plus the trade-mark atmospheric keyboard work. Damo's vocals are played backwards making for a dark and mysterious vibe. Towards the end the main structure shifts somewhat and Karoli delivers some mean bluesy licks till the fad-out. Excellent! The longest song clocking at 18:32 follows and it's called "Halleluhwah". Here, the band brings forward a psychedelic funk-rock sound with a killer drum rhythm that repeats nearly throughout its whole length. Listen carefully about four minutes into it... the drumming fades away and you'll hear a cool, short bridge with some nice piano runs before it goes back to the main pattern. This could be described as early trance-rock! Simply awesome!
From now on, things gets more avant-garde and abstract with "Aumgn", a seventeen-minute structure-less composition filled for the most part with experimental and strange electronic effects. Listen carefully during the first two minutes though...you'll hear a cool dark melody on guitar from Karoli! This is where he might have invented the post-punk style of guitar playing! Keyboardist Schmidt chants the song's title over and over in a droning manner and towards the end Liebezeit plays some tribal drumming. Great experiment!
The experimentation continues in "Peking O", another long composition (11:35) which puts Suzuki on the front singing some eastern inspired chants in the intro. This track is notable for the use of a primitive electronic drum machine. Some apparently Chinese inspired melodies follow and soon Suzuki comes in to do this wild scat singing! The first time I heard this, it made me laugh! But wait! Towards the end the whole thing sounds like it's going to collapse! The vocals get more manic and in addition, there's some dissonant keyboard lines and some screeching violin as well...or is it a guitar? Well, I'm not sure!
The last piece "Bring Me Coffee or Tea" closes the LP in a much more accessible fashion. The vocals are more melodic/controlled and the textural keyboard work really shines here. Karoli plays some cool lead guitar too throughout this nearly seven-minute jam. A great LP ending!

Can is essential listening for those who enjoy the experimental nature of Kraut-Rock and I'd say "Tago Mago" is a good place to start!
Thanks for taking the time to read!
Later...





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