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Re: Miscellaneous Music That Isn't Rock
Posted: Sat Jan 11, 2025 6:19 am
by grayman
And now, a musical interlude.
Deep Purple [Concerto For Group And Orchestra 1969] - Third Movement (Vivace - Presto) HD
https://youtu.be/jGuxfcHt268?si=x0xyzYGmpQ0xq0_4
Re: Miscellaneous Music That Isn't Rock
Posted: Sat Jan 11, 2025 3:34 pm
by President Bush
I owned that album when I was 15-16 years old.
Re: Miscellaneous Music That Isn't Rock
Posted: Sat Jan 11, 2025 9:09 pm
by arthwollipot
I thought this thread was about music that isn't rock. Deep Purple have an album literally titled "In Rock".
Re: Miscellaneous Music That Isn't Rock
Posted: Sun Jan 12, 2025 1:28 am
by grayman
arthwollipot wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2025 9:09 pm
I thought this thread was about music that
isn't rock. Deep Purple have an album literally titled "In Rock".
True, but I didn't know where else to put it.
Re: Miscellaneous Music That Isn't Rock
Posted: Sun Jan 12, 2025 4:19 am
by President Bush
arthwollipot wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2025 9:09 pm
I thought this thread was about music that
isn't rock. Deep Purple have an album literally titled "In Rock".
i but tis wiill mak moore cents
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb_RENu ... jb5l2BKKsd
Re: Miscellaneous Music That Isn't Rock
Posted: Sun Jan 12, 2025 3:20 pm
by grayman
My mind immediately went to
Easyrider.
Re: Miscellaneous Music That Isn't Rock
Posted: Mon Jan 13, 2025 5:12 am
by President Bush
Re: Miscellaneous Music That Isn't Rock
Posted: Wed Jan 15, 2025 12:43 am
by President Bush
Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood - Some Velvet Morning
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJ_b9FIjgKI
When I met him in 2002, the 72-year-old was a cranky raconteur with a taste for gruff one-liners. I asked him what inspired him to enter the music business. "Poverty," he growled, lighting a Marlboro. "I had a couple a dozen jobs in my life and I didn't like any of 'em."
Born in 1929, the son of an itinerant Oklahoma oilman, Hazlewood made a small fortune as a songwriter and producer for Duane Eddy before Frank Sinatra cajoled him into relaunching his daughter Nancy's flatlining career. Thanks in part to Hazlewood's unorthodox vocal coaching ("Sing like a 14-year-old girl who fucks truck-drivers"), 1966's These Boots Are Made for Walkin' was a colossal hit, earning Hazlewood the lasting gratitude of Frank and a generous offer from Decca: his own label, no strings attached. "Lee was great at taking advantage of situations, especially when they involved getting free money," says Suzi Jane Hokom, his colleague and lover throughout the label's lifetime.
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/ ... sychedelia