Pick a song you will never get sick of listening to...

Started by 5 Sams, July 28, 2007, 07:42:38 PM

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5 Sams

60,61,68,91,94
The Aristocrat Years


charlieTully


charlieTully


5 Sams

#1564
Quote from: charlieTully on September 13, 2014, 08:10:53 PM
Quote from: 5 Sams on September 11, 2014, 09:55:55 PM
For the day thats in it. RIP Robert "Throb" Young.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YuAl6ie6UFQ

RIP, the guitar solo in moving on up is one of my favs.

Magnificent.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=peugq83Fv2c


The work of Andrew Innes. Pity Bobby couldn't sing.....then again he didn't have to when they produced music like that.
60,61,68,91,94
The Aristocrat Years

5 Sams

60,61,68,91,94
The Aristocrat Years

Sidney

Is there a way to embed a YouTube link, ie where there's the YouTube window appears within your post?

Primal Scream and Irvine Welsh's offering for Euro '96:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCWPGpI3GWE


charlieTully

Quote from: 5 Sams on September 13, 2014, 09:27:16 PM
Quote from: charlieTully on September 13, 2014, 08:10:53 PM
Quote from: 5 Sams on September 11, 2014, 09:55:55 PM
For the day thats in it. RIP Robert "Throb" Young.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YuAl6ie6UFQ

RIP, the guitar solo in moving on up is one of my favs.

Magnificent.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=peugq83Fv2c


The work of Andrew Innes. Pity Bobby couldn't sing.....then again he didn't have to when they produced music like that.

this may sound cheesy but screamadelica was a seminal album for me, remember clearly where i first heard it, it was was as close to a religious experinece as i have ever felt, spiritual it was, i honestly cant think of an album that touched me more than it.


5 Sams

Quote from: charlieTully on September 13, 2014, 10:46:45 PM
Quote from: 5 Sams on September 13, 2014, 09:27:16 PM
Quote from: charlieTully on September 13, 2014, 08:10:53 PM
Quote from: 5 Sams on September 11, 2014, 09:55:55 PM
For the day thats in it. RIP Robert "Throb" Young.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YuAl6ie6UFQ

RIP, the guitar solo in moving on up is one of my favs.

Magnificent.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=peugq83Fv2c


The work of Andrew Innes. Pity Bobby couldn't sing.....then again he didn't have to when they produced music like that.

this may sound cheesy but screamadelica was a seminal album for me, remember clearly where i first heard it, it was was as close to a religious experinece as i have ever felt, spiritual it was, i honestly cant think of an album that touched me more than it.

Jaysus Charlie that's heavy...but I know exactly what you are saying. I didn't discover it until a mate of mine recommended it to me 5 or 6 years after it was released...im a bit slow.
60,61,68,91,94
The Aristocrat Years

Sidney

Quote from: charlieTully on September 13, 2014, 10:46:45 PM
Quote from: 5 Sams on September 13, 2014, 09:27:16 PM
Quote from: charlieTully on September 13, 2014, 08:10:53 PM
Quote from: 5 Sams on September 11, 2014, 09:55:55 PM
For the day thats in it. RIP Robert "Throb" Young.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YuAl6ie6UFQ

RIP, the guitar solo in moving on up is one of my favs.

Magnificent.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=peugq83Fv2c


The work of Andrew Innes. Pity Bobby couldn't sing.....then again he didn't have to when they produced music like that.

this may sound cheesy but screamadelica was a seminal album for me, remember clearly where i first heard it, it was was as close to a religious experinece as i have ever felt, spiritual it was, i honestly cant think of an album that touched me more than it.
Screamadelica was the glorious climax of the years of Acid House culture which preceded it. I didn't hear it in full until 1999 when I was 19. By that stage club culture was but a pale shadow of what it was in the late 80s/early 90s, although anything here was always a pale shadow of anything that was happening in Britain. 1987-1992 (ish) were the best years for dance music and youth culture in general and everything these days seems deeply conservative by comparison.

5 Sams

I just posted a few links earlier to music from the exact time you're talking about Sidney. Combined with Jackie's army and Down beating the team that couldn't be beaten...plus a wild time in Crete those 2 summers...best days of my life.
60,61,68,91,94
The Aristocrat Years

Sidney

BBC used to use this on their Ulster Championship coverage back in the early 90s. I wondered for years what the name of it was until I stumbled across it on YouTube some years back.

Together - Hardcore Uproar

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYZiTQoSF9A

charlieTully

#1573
The late 80s early 90s were glory days music ways. Full on rave culture, nirvana, the stone roses, primal scream, the charlatans, then the Brit pop craic with oasis blur pulp etc, total crossover bands like the prodigy, underworld, leftfield  appealed to everyone, punks metal heads, ravers. Great times,

seafoid

Quote from: charlieTully on September 14, 2014, 01:38:57 AM
The late 80s early 90s were glory days music ways. Full on rave culture, nirvana, the stone roses, primal scream, the charlatans, then the Brit pop craic with oasis blur pulp etc, total crossover, bands like the prodigy, underworld, leftfield  appealed to everyone, punks metal heads, ravers. Great times,

It was a very creative period . There were others too like My Bloody Valentine, Fluke, Ride, Massive Attack. PJ Harvey, Mazzy Star, Portishead, Radiohead, Stereolab, the Dandy warhols etc



There will always be good music but there won't always be appropriate support so it can flourish

Stewart Lee in the FT last year


http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/bea2c458-14fd-11e1-a2a6-00144feabdc0.html#


He especially regrets the disappearance of the old "support networks", such as the unemployment and housing benefits, that enabled artists to live cheaply and find their way. "It's all over. There'll come a point when somebody will suddenly realise – there's loads and loads of Coldplay but there isn't a Radiohead, there's loads and loads of ITV1 sitcoms, and things with Robert Lindsay in a house, but there isn't a League of Gentlemen. Someone will be reading an embossed novel about a missing artefact, and they will suddenly think, 'Didn't there use to be books that were not just a list of events?' " (Lee's well-known parody of a typical Dan Brown sentence goes: "The famous man looked at the red cup.") In 40 years, he reckons, people will be saying, "Where's all that stuff gone that was ... good?"


"f**k it, just score"- Donaghy   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbxG2WwVRjU