Championship Vinyl Shop

è il negozio di dischi presente in "Alta fedeltà", il romanzo di Nick Hornby. L' habitat naturale per misantropi individui che si muovono agilmente su e giù per le scale del pentagramma, tra gli scaffali colmi e ben catalogati di "oro nero, lucido e circolare". Più semplicemente, il regno dei feticisti della seconda arte. Se vi sentite attratti da questo gruppo come una stella verso il buco nero, se parlando di cucina, meteorologia o del tubo del lavabo che si è rotto, arrivate sempre, inspiegabilmente a parlare di musica e, innanzitutto, se riuscite a riconoscere un'opera osservandola di notte, in una oscura galleria, con un palmo di polvere e coperta con un telo, questo è il gruppo che fa per voi, garantito.

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Aggiungetemi!
Peter Green (1997)

#unconcertoadi
 
"Happy Birthday Dear Syd!"

Here’s one of the most beautiful arpeggios ever, with acoustic guitar and organ introducing a melody that’s both celestial and languorous, sung by a particularly beautiful and unique voice.

A sound that is neither folk nor blues anymore, it is in the most noble sense of the term "pop," but very modern; bands like Pulp or Blur, etc. will draw heavily from this stuff...

Syd Barrett-Baby Lemonade

Roger Keith Barrett was born in Cambridge on January 6, '46.

Max, his father, was an anatomist who in his spare time cultivated mushrooms and painted, while Alan, his older brother, chose to dedicate himself to the saxophone.

After the age of fourteen, he bought his first musical instrument, which was a ukulele.

Music up until then took a back seat, as he preferred drawing and writing: he particularly focused on wordplay and other literary devices, like assonance and onomatopoeia; his literary hero was Edward Lear, the king of nonsense, and he too loved painting.

Anyway, just for the record, before switching to guitar, Roger Keith became interested in the banjo, then he started playing folk guitar with a friend (named John Gordon).

At this point, he began to get closer to music, becoming friends with a drummer named, uh, Sid Barrett.

Frequenters of various venues called them both "Sid," and to distinguish Roger Keith from the drummer, they replaced the 'i' in his nickname with a 'y', and nothing, since I’m tired of copy-pasting nonsense about good old Syd, I’ll sign off and go have dinner with boiled cabbage dressed with balsamic vinegar, e.v.o. oil, and some stracchino... oh wait, I almost forgot,
Syd wasn’t the only nickname given to Barrett; he became known at school as "Syd Knee," or "Syd the Beat," and also as "Sydernee." Only for Libby (his girlfriend from '61 to '64) did he remain simply Roger; in fact, to be precise, "Rog"...!!!
 
Very Very Hungry (2006 Digital Remaster)

erm, just to close the loop opened below!
 
The Jezebel Spirit (2006 Digital Remaster)

So much to make you understand...
 
One bis

Brian Eno & David Byrne - LOT (INTO THE SPIRIT WORLD)

Always from "My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts," which was recorded between '79 and '80 and was set to be released in the summer of '80, this track "Into the Spirit World" contained a radio recording of American Pentecostal healer Kathryn Kuhlman, who passed away a few years earlier.

The foundation she created, which was still active at the time, enforced the removal of the song and the release was blocked.

The removed track would later reappear under the title "Into the Spirit Womb" in the '92 bootleg "Ghosts."

Then Brian Eno and David Byrne returned to the recording studio in September '80 and replaced the track with "The Jezebel Spirit," where the percussive rhythm becomes bouncy and the guitar is much funkier.

The effect remains equally mysterious and disorienting; this track resembles the musical transposition of a primitive exorcistic ritual, let’s say a sort of cathartic dance to drive away evil spirits, all represented by the recitation of a shaman and his sardonic laughter.
 
Brian Eno & David Byrne - Qu'Ran

"Qu'ran," meaning Quran, which appeared on the original 1981 vinyl album, was replaced in the 1987 reissue with "Very, Very Hungry," and the reason for the replacement was due to protests from the English Islamic community.

"Very, Very Hungry" is a crooked, obsessively percussive score with a limping rhythm, featuring a voice that seems to come from a ghost in the woods, and its drumming is irregular and primitive, with a guitar that occasionally peeks through.

In the original 1981 version, there was instead "Qu'Ran," featuring drumming in odd time signatures where a hypnotic Middle Eastern melody unfolds, inviting a sort of Islamic Sufi practice in chanting a verse from the Quran.

Unfortunately (as stated above), the English Islamic community deemed this piece (included in "My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts") irreverent and had it replaced, and that's it... but I killed them!