Wednesday, 30 June 2021
Pop Singer Lani Hall from 1972 to 1980
Monday, 28 June 2021
Silenzi Osceni - Live In Roccella Jonica 1986 with Palle Mikkelborg by request, plus the 1984 Live Roccella Jonica
A one-off from this particular grouping of luminaries of humanity, see the credits:
Bass, Cello – Paolo Damiani
Drums – Tony Oxley
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Palle Mikkelborg
Vocals – Tiziana Ghiglioni
Mostly written by P. Damiani, with a contribution from Oxley and a raga from someone else. So there's no voice for our old fave, Mikkelborg, except in his improvs.
Although there are great composed beginnings to these tracks, they inevitably get bogged down in the long improvisations I've mentioned before I find tedious and unnecessary.
The start of side b has a song with lyrics which are printed in both Italian and English on the inner record sleeve, a poem that I conclude Paolo was quite proud of:
Saturday, 26 June 2021
Thonk's Earth Vision Impact, by request
This is imitation seventies prog rock, with all that this implies. The group only made one album, way back in 2001. For example some tracks are very similar to Atlas (the Swedish band I mean famed for the brilliant Bla Vardag), or I guess people could say Anekdoten. Those later 'symphonic' prog bands to me all sound the same, and they lack the invention that I love so much from the classic stuff, even though all the trappings are there, with the odd time signatures, the hammond organs, synthesizers, etc., etc. It's as if the older prog was always simplified down to its basics. Then again here and there, some original brilliant artists come up with outta the ballpark stuff more recently, like the Zopp I recently posted, or the Brazilian Ramo that I always use as a point of comparison and that I've reuploaded a million times.
For ex., Square Root:
Friday, 25 June 2021
Jim Marks' Touching Your Feelings 1974 [review only]
You just might casually notice the album is selling for 3000 dollars currently...
I recommend you first have a listen, which you can do today.
Anyone know what's up with this item?
Basically, the guy is talking over relatively generic music but his spoken words are quite the distraction.
What a shock coming off the wonderful sound of Jo Grinage too.
On some tracks they didn't even bother writing music, there's just a bit of percussion here and there. Title track:
Wednesday, 23 June 2021
Jo Grinage's Ode To Kim from 1976 [limited time lossless]
Something by her was requested in the past, I think a couple of times.
Definitely she sounds very much like Nina Simone in her later (seventies) days, an artist whom I absolutely adored back in the days when I was 'into' American jazz. Long before she became cool on Starbucks playlists.
She made two albums only, the first of which is pricey while this one, which I think might be superior, is not at all expensive. That's such a typical circumstance in old LPs isn't it: 20 buck masterpiece, versus overpriced garbage. You can observe that it's mostly made up cover versions, including the abhorrent Autumn Leaves, and the somewhat less so though still nauseatingly overplayed Eleanor Rigby.
On the other hand, there are some hit-it-out-of-the-ballpark tracks, like the Ode to Kim:
Another original track, called Rain:
One more, Mother How I Miss You, very emotional in the spiritual sense:
Reminds me too of the brilliant Roberta Flack, whose misfortune like so many others was to become 'too famous' for the one song First Time ever I saw Your Face, when in her older (first 2) albums there were such incredibly tender compositions.


















