July 21, 200916 yr Author Which ones are you missing? I'll have to check, I have the ones I need bookmarked. That's just from my recent order. Some day I'll get all my music nice and organized
July 21, 200916 yr It would probably help if I had all mine in one place. I guess I should have put the word, "stack", in air quotes.
July 21, 200916 yr Author lol @ transit & living stereo stack juxtaposition No lols at my anti-vibration device
July 22, 200916 yr Stacey Kent - The Boy Next Door Melody Gardot - Worrisome Heart Jem - Down To Earth
August 15, 200916 yr From this back to this Picked up the Blue Note Music Matters series of issues to date. Who says procrastination harms you. Edited August 15, 200916 yr by Augsburger
August 16, 200916 yr From this back to this Picked up the Blue Note Music Matters series of issues to date. Who says procrastination harms you. That's cool, but did somebody sell you their set? The first ones -- including Big Beat -- are OOP.
August 16, 200916 yr Yep, my contact (and new BFF) ordered two of everything and decided he only needed one set so I get the second set. I had been kicking myself for the past couple of months for not getting in on the set from the beginning so now I have been given a second chance. I guess I lucked out this time. Oh, and JP#s is my enabler too.
August 16, 200916 yr Redbook CDs (most of these were acquired for RMAF - and will be acquiring more next month) AC/DC - Back in Black Dream Theater - Awake Eric Clapton - Unplugged Esthero - Breath From Another Imogen Heap - Speak For Yourself Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin IV [ZOSA] Miles Davis - Kind of Blue Mogwai - Mr. Beast Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon Smashing Pumpkins - Siamese Dream Smoke City - Flying Away (trip-hop) Soundgarden - Superunknown Steely Dan - Aja The Blue Nile - Hats (pop/rock) The Clash - London Calling Thelonious Monk & John Coltrane - At Carnegie Hall Tool - Lateralus If anyone has any recs for mainstream & highly popular metal or industrial bands btw, I'm all ears (I'm only familiar with Type O Negative). Or blues or soul for that matter. So far I've only dug into rock and jazz. eMusic Downloads (last set - will be cancelling my membership now) (all electronica as usual) Atrium Carceri - Souyuan Circular - Nanotopia James Bernard - New Life Lusine ICL - Freak EP Lusine ICL - Language Barrier Mind Soup - Love Songs For Gifted Children Peace Orchestra - Peace Orchestra Sounds From The Ground - Thru The Ages Thomas Fehlmann - Lowflow
September 9, 200916 yr CD batch #2 (of 3) mostly for RMAF: A Fine Frenzy - Bomb in a Birdcage Allen Toussaint - The Bright Mississippi Andre Cluytens & Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra - Beethoven: Les 9 Symphonies Charles Mackerras & Scottish Chamber Orchestra - Schubert: Symphony No. 9 "The Great" & Symphony No. 8 "Unfinished" Georg Solti & Wiener Philharmonic Orchestra - Mozart: Requiem K626 John Coltrane - Blue Train Seiji Ozawa & Boston Symphony Orchestra - Vivaldi: The Four Seasons The Beatles - Abbey Road (2009 Stereo Remaster) The Beatles - Revolver (2009 Stereo Remaster) The Beatles - The White Album (2009 Stereo Remaster) Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra - Johann Strauss: The Best of Vienna [Maazel/Boskovsky/Bohm/Karajan/Abbado]
September 11, 200916 yr Highly popular mainstream metal or industrial albums: Slayer - Reign in Blood, South of Heaven, Seasons in the Abyss Pantera - Vulgar Display of Power, Far Beyond Driven Ministry - Psalms 69 (The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs) NIN - Broken, The Downward Spiral Metallica - all through s/t, skip to Death Magnetic Megadeth - all through Countdown to Extinction Sepultura - all through Chaos A.D. to me "mainstream" industrial ended with The Downward Spiral, and most of the good "mainstream" metal was 80s / 90s. the above is a horrendously incomplete list, am on iPhone. not sure if I consider current contemporary favs mainstream. Opeth, Mastodon, etc.
September 11, 200916 yr NIN - Broken, The Downward Spiral You're just now getting to these? These are like H.C. staples, man.
September 11, 200916 yr You're just now getting to these? These are like H.C. staples, man. oh no sir, you misunderstand! I was responding to Asr's above request for popular mainstream metal/industrial releases. I've had all those albums forever.
September 11, 200916 yr If anyone has any recs for mainstream & highly popular metal or industrial bands btw, I'm all ears (I'm only familiar with Type O Negative). Or blues or soul for that matter. So far I've only dug into rock and jazz. I dunno what you already have, so sorry if these are too obvious. Black Sabbath - Paranoid, S/T, (or any of their first 6 albums really) Heaven & Hell, The Mob Rules (these are both with Dio, which is different but equally awesome) Iron Maiden - Number Of The Beast, Powerslave Dio - Holy Diver I think Sabbath is even more important than most people realize... it's amazing how many of their songs have seemingly spawned entire subgenres of metal,
September 11, 200916 yr oh no sir, you misunderstand! I was responding to Asr's above request for popular mainstream metal/industrial releases. I've had all those albums forever.Good catch, I didn't even see that part of the post. Could probably make this a whole separate thread, but I won't unless there are enough posts to merit it. The definitive electro-industrial album to have, if you have no other -- I have to agree with Dark Angel about this -- is Skinny Puppy, Singles Collect. I think it's no coincidence that this is one of my top 3 favorite groups of all time. Yes, really, even with the brapping. Metal Industrial Crossover -- Nine Inch Nails, Broken is a good place to start -- also Pretty Hate Machine was a launching point for a lot of us at the time. I also really dig The Mind is a Terrible Thing to Taste by Ministry (as well as Land of Rape and Honey). "Industrial" will always garner arguments, as there are at least 3 different styles with that name. There's the Wax Traxy dance industrial done all on synthesizers and sequencers -- and Skinny Puppy; there's the metal industrial crossover stuff, and there's the old school (early Einsturzende Neubauten, Throbbing Gristle, etc.). There was even a metal label who called a lot of their acts as "industrial", though it didn't really sound machine-like to my ears at all. So after you listen to some, tell us which you really like and want to hear more of. Will post about metal later.
September 14, 200916 yr Jean Michel Jarre - [url=http://rateyourmusic.com/release/album/jean_michel_jarre/les_chants_magnetiques/]Les chants magn
September 14, 200916 yr Thanks for the music recs postjack, hungrych, & Dusty, much appreciated. I'll check all those out at some point. And CD batch #3 of 3 for RMAF (mostly, a few exceptions). Whew. I think I have all my bases covered now. I'll eat my shirt if anyone shows up that can't find something to listen to. Dave Brubeck - Time Out [50th Anniversary Legacy Edition] Diana Krall - Live in Paris Eva Cassidy - Live at Blues Alley Jethro Tull - Aqualung Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin I Linda Ronstadt - Prisoner in Disguise [MFSL] Marvin Gaye - What's Going On Miles Davis - Kind of Blue [Legacy Edition] (should've noticed the Legacy Edition before ) Patricia Barber - Cafe Blue [Audio Fidelity Gold] Pristina - Stars and Sirens Porcupine Tree - The Incident The Ditty Bops - Moon Over The Freeway (got this one awhile back, cool stuff for anyone into alt/indie-pop) Yes - Fragile [MFSL]
September 25, 200916 yr Anyone know bands similar to Apocalytpica? Preferably resembling most of their music (in other words, instrumental)? Recommendations if any, please.
September 25, 200916 yr Rasputina? Not instrumental, though, and only one cellist (I think), but it is front and center. I mean, the short answer is no, not really, there aren't any other bands that (a) consist entirely of cellists, and ( rock/rawk.
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