dkeage
3 years ago

I think you mean Music From Big Pink...circa 1968.

frankj1 wrote:


LEAVE STEVE ALONE!!!


Joe Satriani. “Surfing with the Alien “

rockmiesterr
3 years ago


Yeah,,that's it Big Pink.....

Thanks frankj1......


Thanks my Big Bro Kip)))

The album In City Dreams.......Robin Trower
dkeage
3 years ago
Iron Maiden. Killers. 🍺
Sunoverbeach
3 years ago
Ooh, that's a good'un! Gonna gave to dig that out
dkeage
3 years ago

Ooh, that's a good'un! Gonna gave to dig that out

Sunoverbeach wrote:




dkeage
3 years ago
Motörhead. Overkill.


🥃
izonfire
3 years ago
Robin Trower - What Lies Beneath

Give a listen with a drink and a smoke,
And let it carry you away…

And if you don’t enjoy it, you have shi.tty taste. 🤒
DrMaddVibe
3 years ago
El Ten Eleven - Valley of Fire

"New Year's Day"

DrMaddVibe
3 years ago
The Stranglers - Dark Matters

"This Song"

tonygraz
3 years ago
Rainbow in the Dark - Dio ---on the car radio.
DrMaddVibe
3 years ago
Rush - Test For Echo

"Half The World"

DrMaddVibe
3 years ago
Jesse Malin - Sad and Beautiful World

"Backstabbers"


DrMaddVibe
3 years ago
Cream - Fresh Cream

"N.S.U."

tonygraz
3 years ago
Rainbow - Stargazer
Palama
3 years ago
Hall & Oates - Our Kind of Soul

Loved this duo well before they hit it big in the '80s. A bit of a lull in the '90s and beyond but got hooked on "Live from Daryl's House" a few years ago. Anyway, recently decided to explore their "newer" catalog and came across this album. Interesting interpretations of Daryl's and John's favorite r&b / soul songs. Cracked up to their version of Barry White's "Can't Get Enough of Your Love"!
Palama
3 years ago
Rolling Stones - compilation CDs of my favorites from 1964 to 1997

Fun to listen to the development and musical maturity of one of, if not THE greatest rock n’ roll band. One of the first 45s I bought was “Paint it Black”, many, many moons ago.

74F / 81% RH / 7 mph winds with gusts up to 10, big rain yesterday, respite today but another storm is expected to hit us tomorrow or so
DrMaddVibe
3 years ago
Rhinoceros - Self-Titled

"Apricot Brandy"

DrMaddVibe
3 years ago

Fun to listen to the development and musical maturity of one of, if not THE greatest rock n’ roll band. One of the first 45s I bought was “Paint it Black”, many, many moons ago.

Palama wrote:



Definitely one of the pillars holding up the roof of Rock N' Roll.

One of my faves as well and there's so much to delve in and find because their library is massive. Reading Keef and Mick's biographies are must reads for fans. The 2 bookends that make up the Glimmer Twins couldn't be more different yet can clash in the middle to deliver material that still makes them relevant. They were one of a handful of bands that I really wished had used the Covid Shutdown to make new music. I already have 3.11 gigs of it and am always looking for more.

The song you mentioned is in my Top 10 for them. It is a real dark brooding song of the times, but they were only telling the truth. Something that they're not afraid to do, have done and by touring...still do. I don't think I'll go to see them live anymore because the pinnacle was seeing them with 1,999 other fans for a very intimate show that was a warm up for the Steel Wheels tour in Lansing,MI. I won tickets to it on the radio.

Loved the early years with Brian and the psychedelic ending it ran from Blues covers to the early beginnings of Prog with him. The sweet spot for me are the Mick Taylor years. I love all of that. My personal fave is the gritty Bluesy tattle-tale song "Stray Cat Blues". To me, that defines them. I know Mick is singing from his perspective, but the old saying the Beatles were the band you brought home to mum and dad, but the Stones are who you were with on Friday and Saturday nights is captured in that one song. I can't recall a Beatles song that dared to tread where this cancel culture anthem goes. From the opening riff to the ending solo. Once Ronnie joined he enjoyed making them a touring band and they stayed on the road. Rumors of George Thorogood waiting in the wings because Ronnie was coked out and his playing diminishing quietly disappeared with the years after "Some Girls" through the debacle that was "Dirty Work". Oh, I can still find good stuff there too, but not great. The later releases "Steel Wheels" through "A Bigger Bang" were just putting material out there for the sake of it. I wish they had a "Let It Bleed" or "Some Girls" album in that era but they just don't have a full release where every song you want to hear. With the passing of Charlie it's impossible for them to do that as he was the anchor to that rudderless ship. The friends I talk music with are curious and clamoring for now get this...The Rolling Stones are missing their bassist (even though he's alive he wants NOTHING to do with them!) and their drummer...Sir Paul and Ringo are still out and about. Now THAT ticket...I would pay to see. Think of the material they could cover, especially when you have solo material to drag in as well.
Palama
3 years ago

Definitely one of the pillars holding up the roof of Rock N' Roll.

One of my faves as well and there's so much to delve in and find because their library is massive. Reading Keef and Mick's biographies are must reads for fans. The 2 bookends that make up the Glimmer Twins couldn't be more different yet can clash in the middle to deliver material that still makes them relevant. They were one of a handful of bands that I really wished had used the Covid Shutdown to make new music. I already have 3.11 gigs of it and am always looking for more.

The song you mentioned is in my Top 10 for them. It is a real dark brooding song of the times, but they were only telling the truth. Something that they're not afraid to do, have done and by touring...still do. I don't think I'll go to see them live anymore because the pinnacle was seeing them with 1,999 other fans for a very intimate show that was a warm up for the Steel Wheels tour in Lansing,MI. I won tickets to it on the radio.

Loved the early years with Brian and the psychedelic ending it ran from Blues covers to the early beginnings of Prog with him. The sweet spot for me are the Mick Taylor years. I love all of that. My personal fave is the gritty Bluesy tattle-tale song "Stray Cat Blues". To me, that defines them. I know Mick is singing from his perspective, but the old saying the Beatles were the band you brought home to mum and dad, but the Stones are who you were with on Friday and Saturday nights is captured in that one song. I can't recall a Beatles song that dared to tread where this cancel culture anthem goes. From the opening riff to the ending solo. Once Ronnie joined he enjoyed making them a touring band and they stayed on the road. Rumors of George Thorogood waiting in the wings because Ronnie was coked out and his playing diminishing quietly disappeared with the years after "Some Girls" through the debacle that was "Dirty Work". Oh, I can still find good stuff there too, but not great. The later releases "Steel Wheels" through "A Bigger Bang" were just putting material out there for the sake of it. I wish they had a "Let It Bleed" or "Some Girls" album in that era but they just don't have a full release where every song you want to hear. With the passing of Charlie it's impossible for them to do that as he was the anchor to that rudderless ship. The friends I talk music with are curious and clamoring for now get this...The Rolling Stones are missing their bassist (even though he's alive he wants NOTHING to do with them!) and their drummer...Sir Paul and Ringo are still out and about. Now THAT ticket...I would pay to see. Think of the material they could cover, especially when you have solo material to drag in as well.

DrMaddVibe wrote:



Well said! =d>

Read “Life” a ways back but gonna add Mick’s biography to my “Books to Read Before I Die” list. Too bad there isn’t a true autobiography.
Palama
3 years ago

Hall & Oates - Our Kind of Soul

Loved this duo well before they hit it big in the '80s. A bit of a lull in the '90s and beyond but got hooked on "Live from Daryl's House" a few years ago. Anyway, recently decided to explore their "newer" catalog and came across this album. Interesting interpretations of Daryl's and John's favorite r&b / soul songs. Cracked up to their version of Barry White's "Can't Get Enough of Your Love"!

Palama wrote:



Listened to the album again but this time read the liner notes and the comments about each song as the CD was playing. Gained a lot more insight this time around. Still chuckled at their treatment of Barry’s song.
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