BARRACUDA BLUE

DeRank : 4,37 • DeAge™ : 4909 days

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  • Here since 9 february 2012
Web: I spider
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
A spectacular album steeped in mystery: an R'n'B band transformed by the immense Dave Lawson into a Prog-Act with a dark and enveloping sound, laced with Jazz and the Dark Sound so characteristic of the 1970s. An underground gem.
  • GIANLUIGI67
    20 nov 13
    I really like this album; by the way, I have a non-original CD with a cover that has no band name or title, a mystery... you happened to come across it like a match made in heaven.
  • BARRACUDA BLUE
    20 nov 13
    Many years ago, having given up on vinyl pressings, which were too expensive, I got my first CD pressing, a Japanese one, immediately realizing that it had been mastered from vinyl, and I kept it. If you aren't familiar with the only album by the Samurai, which follows this one and features the same line-up, I highly recommend it.
  • GIANLUIGI67
    20 nov 13
    I don't know him, is he a namesake?
  • BARRACUDA BLUE
    20 nov 13
    Yes, a bit more upbeat and with shorter tracks, but at a high level. All the style that Lawson will later bring to Greenslade.
Wire: 154
Vinile I have it ★★★★★
If in 1979 Syd Barrett had recorded an album with these sounds and these lyrics to counter The Wall, we definitely would have had a better world. Strange that Harvest also had Wire in their roster, don't you think?
  • SilasLang
    27 jun 12
    I've always thought of this album as a hypothetical version of Pink Floyd in '79 if Barrett hadn't lost his mind! A masterpiece of disco. Personally, I prefer Pink Flag, though.
  • SilasLang
    27 jun 12
    THE BRAIN, fuck
  • BARRACUDA BLUE
    28 jun 12
    I like all three of them, Pink Flag is from '77 and reflects the punk scene they belonged to anyway. I think exactly like you, I've seen Barrett in every track of the album and in the lyrics for more than 30 years... An evening of funny in a metropolis of your dream...
  • cappio al pollo
    28 jun 12
    I don’t hear a damn thing of the Barrett Floyd, rather I sense the Gilmour Floyd in the "bridge" of "A Mutual Friend." In any case, the Wire are among my favorites, and when it comes to the late seventies trilogy, I really couldn't choose a better chapter; I see it more as a whole, a sort of bible of the evolution of "rock" music, its divine comedy, hell, purgatory, and paradise, a bridge between yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
  • imasoulman
    28 jun 12
    imaginative and interesting hypothesis, although for me the Wire are those who in semiotics are defined as "primitives," those who are defined only by themselves. Wandering in these territories, I always think of how among the first punk heroes: 1 - John Lydon idolized people like Kevin Coyne and Peter Hammill. 2 - The Damned would have wanted Syd Barrett to produce their "Music for Pleasure" (they had to settle for Nick Mason, and it wasn't the same thing, what do you say?...)
  • BARRACUDA BLUE
    28 jun 12
    Music for Pleasure was perhaps a hurriedly made record, and Mason couldn't do much with it. Early punks were divided between Bowie-Bolan addicts and people with a more substantial listening background: just think of the tracklist of Through the Looking Glass, that beautiful cover album that the Banshees released later in the '80s, which speaks volumes in this regard. Additionally, we shouldn't underestimate Mike Thorne's production on the Wire albums and the first Colin Newman, which is ideally a continuation of 154. At the time, he was signed with Harvest and produced quite different stuff like Treason, the last album by Gryphon, a great record. After the Wire era, he continued producing great material, Non Stop Erotic Cabaret above all.
XTC: Skylarking
Vinile I have it ★★★★★
Andy Partridge and Todd Rundgren: the meeting of two geniuses. At times they clash, but the result is magnificent.
Yellow Magic Orchestra: BGM
Vinile I have it ★★★★★
In '81 they dared to rap over a Fairlight base, adding manipulated fluttering Japanese melodies. Ballet remains one of the finest examples of SynthPop, Mass a TV jingle and a universal anthem at the same time. To say they were 10 years ahead is almost silly and superfluous.
  • GIANLUIGI67
    4 sep 13
    My brother, who is now 49, listened to them a lot; I've only recently started appreciating them and I'm 39. That must mean something!
  • BARRACUDA BLUE
    4 sep 13
    I’m also 49 years old... tough that class of '64! ;-)
  • GIANLUIGI67
    4 sep 13
    Sure, I have two brothers, one is 49, the other is 46, and then there's GIANLUIGI born in '67, who is not me. They are great music listeners, they've overwhelmed me with music since I was a child. Now they are out for work and have left me all their records. Many of their records I've never even heard.
  • BARRACUDA BLUE
    4 sep 13
    My best friend is from '67, two collectors of records with guts. Your parents gave you a great gift, keep that flag high and enjoy all the new discoveries, record after record. ;-)
  • ranofornace
    5 sep 13
    Yellow M.O. definitely contribute to redefining the sound that, from Silver Apple to Residents to Stomu Yamashta, will bring music to contemporary synth-ambient-pop, Great Ryuichi Sakamoto, of course!
  • ALFAMA
    20 apr 19
    Anyway, I am not @[GIANLUIGI67]
  • ALFAMA
    20 apr 19
    I don't remember who it could be, someone in the studio but many years ago. Who knows?
Yoko Ono: Fly
Vinile I have it ★★★★★
Mind Train is the most psychedelic and underrated suite I know. The sweet couple and their sessioner friends had gotten their hands on top-notch stuff, and the results can overwhelm you like an acidic tsunami. Hirake sees herself as the protagonist of her own nightmares....OPEN YOUR BOX:::
  • hellraiser
    7 nov 14
    I have never listened to the album in question, but the mere thought of this woman repulses me from the bottom of my soul. I only needed to hear her in the live Toronto performance paired with Lennon, and I took the record and hid it at the back of my collection. That doesn't change the fact that, as a great connoisseur of music that you are, this is an excellent listen.
  • BARRACUDA BLUE
    7 nov 14
    As the English say, "She's an acquired taste."
  • SilasLang
    7 nov 14
    I got it. When she opens her mouth, it's all bad news. Not in a good way. Anyway, maybe the only work of hers that I've managed to appreciate a bit more.
  • BARRACUDA BLUE
    7 nov 14
    In my circle of musician friends, this album is considered a kind of holy grail; there's not one of them who doesn't own it in double vinyl after seeing and listening to mine. If you step out from under the veil of prejudice, it's a work of absolute freedom like few others.
  • SilasLang
    7 nov 14
    Double vinyl for me too. Musician here as well. Zero prejudices (just yesterday I was defending 'Filosofem' by Burzum on these pages) and musically cool album. But his voice... I can't stand it.
  • Lao Tze
    7 nov 14
    allergic to any sound emitted by this woman's vocal cords. 'Mind Train' is one thing, as I say, "for certain moments" and in those moments it even works, despite everything - and of course, far from prejudices and witch hunts from Beatles fans, I am not a fanatic of the Beatles and neither of Lennon. However, I hardly ever listen to the album - in its entirety.
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