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.

  • Tipo: Pubblico
  • Assegna due menzioni
 Podium  Fetish
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • avatar
  • +25

Aggiungetemi!
Try Some Buy Some - George Harrison

Besides being a friend, David Bowie was a great admirer of George Harrison, as shown by his inclusion of this track in his 2003 album "Reality" and by performing it live during the album's promotional tour, and nothing...
 
Dazed And Confused - Led Zeppelin HQ (with lyrics) It wasn't just the torrents of notes, or the sensual moans, nor even the wild energy of Bonzo. The underlying concept was to try to capture the emotion of the moment in order to communicate it. The sound of the environment. That is the fundamental point. That's what the microphones placed at various distances, the skins lined with tin foil, the violin bow were for. Simple, yet effective tricks that changed rock. Distance is depth. And the Devil runs in between.
 
ABC - Poison Arrow
From the 4th episode of TOP(PA) 100
Love has its own lexicon made up of expressions, words, glances, and music. The ABC have written their personal handbook, knowledgeable and experienced in the subject like few others. The unparalleled romanticism and sophistication of the Sheffield quartet spreads across the dancefloors of half of Europe with an unprecedented orchestral, innovative sound, shining in the reflections of sequins and in the sequined jackets of the handsome and damned Martin Fry, supreme dandy of the new romantic movement. In clear contrast to the contemporary post-punk and the electronic scene that emerged right in their own city, the ABC know their craft well.
Artistically very skilled and under the watchful eye of the ZTT label (what else is there to say about this label?), they write and compose "The Lexicon of Love" with the awareness of those who are about to sign their name in bold letters in the history of music. The beautiful cover, which reproduces an ideal, tragic (Fry is about to shoot) final take from a Hollywood set, is prophetic and prescient. After the splendor of their dazzling debut, the band embarks on a slow downward trajectory (they will never again reach the sales of that stunning debut) that leads them to break up and reunite several times, though without the figure of the creative guitarist/keyboardist Mark White, who permanently leaves the band in 1991. Only Martin Fry remains, with his blonde tuft that has hypnotized an entire generation.
 
The incredible world of audiophile records. (3)
Dimostrazione stereo ed effetti sonori - Parte I (1963)
To go back in history...
It all began in 1932, when the American Harvey Fletcher recorded the first stereophonic disc in history (Blumlein, in England – who some credit with the same primacy – would only arrive a year later). However, it wasn’t until 1957 that the small label Audio Fidelity published the first mass-produced stereo record.
It was a success: between the late 1950s and early 1960s, the new toy became more and more popular and beloved.
Thus, a series of records were created to showcase the incredible possibilities of the new technology; it was the dawn of high fidelity.
This record is the Italian version (1963) of the same disc recorded the year before in America and is a delightful gem.
For those who wish to know more, you can read the delicious review found on that fantastic site "orrore a 33 giri."
 
The incredible world of audiophile records. (1)
Sara K - Miles Away (Official Audio)
Dear little friends, if you frequent CVS, you are vinyl fetishists (like myself) and, therefore, you cannot help but be drawn to the "FANTASTIC WORLD OF AUDIOPHILE RECORDS"!
There exists - for those who don't know - a market of records and labels whose value (beyond the specific value of the music) is determined by the attention given to the "audiophile" quality of the medium in question.
Labels like Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (the first and - for me - the best), Telarc, Sheffield Lab, Nautilus, etc. etc. reissued and pressed certain titles using equipment and techniques that were supposed to enhance and preserve their sonic performance.
In Italy, they arrived after (just to change things up) the main European and non-European markets and, also due to the usual - reckless - bizarre pricing policy enforced by record companies, they had very little success.
Nevertheless, the techniques used were often incredible, esoteric, imaginative, magical...
From the weight of the vinyl (strictly 180 grams - although I know of experiments at 230 grams), to the recording speed, from the chemical quality of the vinyl to the equipment used to "perfectly flatten" them. Imagine that some of these treated CDs "cryogenically"...
In short, there is an entire subculture of records whose value, more than strictly musical, is "audiophile". They are sought after by collectors and enthusiasts, played at exhibitions, in stores, and in the homes of audiophiles wanting to show what their setups are capable of...
I'll present a few to you.
I’ll start with this "Closer than they appear" by Sara K, from 1992 (if I remember correctly...), on Chesky Records, a decent jazz artist, an album featuring direct-to-disc recordings of vocals and acoustic instruments, stunning for their naturalness, imaging, and realism.
One of the most played records at hi-fi shows.
 
Genesis - The Musical Box
From the 3rd episode of TOP(PA) 100.
The materialization of a dream dreamed in the realm of dreams. One of the highest representations of the musical universe, sweet yet brutal, macabre like few others, starting with a title that is an alteration of the term "nursery rhymes," famous children's rhymes widely circulated in the lands of Albion at the time. The contrast between sweetness and cruelty permeates the entire work. A significant example is the stunning suite "The Musical Box" where a girl decapitates her peer while they play croquet. And then there's incest, pedophilia, sadism in a context of disarming childhood innocence that renders the atmosphere of the entire album surreal and grotesque. There's not much more to add to an album that has been extensively dissected, praised, and imitated for over 45 years. "Nursery Cryme" is a must by vocation, among the masterpieces that have forever changed progressive rock.
 
The Chain (2004 Remaster)
Rumors is the work that marks and legitimizes Fleetwood Mac's musical shift to the world.
The band leaves behind two-thirds of the old blues-rock sound, which was left aside after Peter Green's departure from the group, and decisively heads towards more appropriate shores for the era, in the sand of a burgeoning pop rock scene. The shift also features new recruits Lindsey Buckingham and his then-partner Stevie Nicks. Refinement, sound clarity, and originality dominate this masterpiece, which, beyond all expectations, reaches the top positions in charts in various countries and sells forty million copies worldwide. Typically, music charts are lists of albums to avoid except for a few exceptions. Rumors is one of those.
 
Sanremo 1985 - Frankie Goes To Hollywood - The power of love
It’s 1985, and the artistic direction of the Sanremo Festival recruits Frankie Goes To Hollywood as guest artists for its thirty-fifth edition. This is enough to unleash a great uproar. The Liverpool quintet, riding the wave of global success with "Relax," amplified by the massive advertising campaign from their eclectic label, revivals Paul Morley and Trevor Horn (who doesn’t remember the t-shirts with the slogan "Frankie Says No More"!), is on everyone’s lips. But what causes the most scandal in public opinion is the music video for the aforementioned song. The lyrics, repeatedly censored by radio and TV for some undeniably provocative and shocking passages, have drawn the ire of conservatives and the upright, astonished by the band’s explicit boldness. The images paired with the song complete the picture: men in provocative and scanty latex outfits, homosexual winks (we are in the Thatcher era; this is a blatant affront to the establishment), simulations of sexual acts, and so much, so much ostentatious perversion.

In Italy, Catholic associations, fierce mothers’ collectives, and ordinary people mobilize to drive away the demon about to arrive from across the Channel and to convince the festival's management to backtrack, but every opposition is futile; it is already decided.
February 9, 1985. The third and final evening of the festival. Pippo Baudo introduces F.G.T.H., extending birthday wishes to Holly Johnson, adorned with an unusual fur hat à la Davy Crockett, who turns 25 that day. The formalities and tributes come to an end, and it’s time for the song announcement. It is precisely at this moment that astonishment floods the prestigious stage. Everyone awaits the opening of "Relax." Instead, love arrives, the heart-wrenching, universal feeling sung with a passion that only a few can deliver. And the words are caressing: "I will protect you from the hooded claw, I will keep the vampires from your door," and Johnson is tender as he throws red roses to the audience. A passionate, moving anthem to love, one of those songs destined to be remembered forever from their very inception.

Holly Johnson later said: "I have always felt The Power Of Love as the record that would save my life. There’s a biblical aspect to its spirituality and passion, the fact that love is the only thing that matters in the end."
 
The Doors - The Soft Parade (Soundstage Performances)

That is, "The bizarre and varied humanity that populated Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, California, day and night," termed by Jim Morrison as "The soft parade."

This composition is structured in 4 sections divided into 3 movements (Adagio, Andante, and Allegro) following the lines of a classic sonata for piano.

Formation:
James Douglas "Jim" Morrison on Vocals
Robert Alan "Robby" Krieger on Guitar
Raymond Daniel "Ray" Manczarek Jr on Keys
John Paul Densmore on Drums
Harvey Goldstein, a.k.a. Harvey Brooks on Bass (in the eponymous album from '69)

Genres: Psychedelic rock, Acid rock, Blues rock & Symphonic rock.

«You CANNOT petition the Lord with prayer!»
 
GUN CLUB - COOL DRINK WATER
From the 1st episode of TOP(PA) 100.
Add some West Coast punk-rock, blues, psychobilly, and a generous sprinkle of noir that never hurts, and the game is on.
Jeffrey Lee's infernal machine is hypnotic and shocking, and in 1981 it reaches its wicked perfection with
"Fire Of Love." 11 piercing tracks that will etch the 'gun club' into the list of cult bands and those damned souls sent to hell. An essential album.
 
Sinto - Rome (Right On Brother) 1972

This is the second track from the album "Right On Brother," recorded in the studio in 1972 by this (somewhat obscure, totally at least for me) German band of what we might call progressive/kraut/rock, whose lineup was as follows:
- Hannes Beckmann: amplified violin, acoustic bass, percussion, vocals (German composer and violinist, he was a jazz violin professor in Belgrade, born on August 24, '50 in Bielefeld, and passed away on March 17, 2016 in Munich, Germany.)
- Cotch Black: congas, lead percussion, laughter and vocals (whose real name is Cottrell Black, percussionist made in the USA.)
- Ralph Fischer: bass, percussion, vocals (singer, bassist, and multi-instrumentalist who performed in Munich in the late '60s and early '70s. He started as a folk singer, joined "Embryo" for their debut album "Opal," and briefly collaborated with "Xhol Caravan," better known as "Soul Caravan.)
- Abu Dram: drums, percussion, vocals (...?)
- Peter Holzwig: piano, organ, marimbaphone, percussion, vocals (...??)
- Alfred Jones: guitar, percussion, vocals (...???)

And that's it... or rather, the more you know, the more you add!
 
George Thorogood & The Destroyers - Bad To The Bone

Wilmington is the most populous city in Delaware, with just over seventy-two thousand residents, and it is also twinned with Olévano sul Tusciano, an Italian municipality of about six thousand seven hundred souls scattered in the province of Salerno in Campania (and where else..., in Val D'Aosta?), whose newspaper/magazine is "La Nuova Graticola"... (and who cares, we would say!)
But here’s the catch: it is incredibly famous for having given birth—not Easter—to Mr. George Lawrence Thorogood, guitarist and singer of the "Destroyers," also known as the "Delaware Destroyers" (wonder why...), which also included the co-founder in '62 of the "Rolling Stones" (who would have thought?) Ian Andrew Robert Stewart on keyboards and Robert "Waddy" Wachtel on guitar, who also performed (and this is where the circle closes) in his time with the Rolling Stones and that’s it...
 
We kindly inform our esteemed customers that the owner Rob Gordon, aka @[G], has provided us with two new mentions: "podium" and "fetisc." The first is to label listens, choices, or insights that stand out for their historical and popular significance. The second is the mention par excellence for the patrons of this shop, those with refined and detailed listening tastes, who know more about a track than the authors themselves! Make good use of it!
 
Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac - The Green Manalishi (With The Two Prong Crown)

The Green Manalishi (With the Two-Prong Crown) is a song written by Peter Green and recorded by Fleetwood Mac. It was released as a single in England in May 1970 and reached number ten on the UK charts.

The song was written during the last days of PG's time with FM, in a period when everyone was indulging excessively in LSD and according to many who know better, the "Green Manalishi" would be a type of "acid" quite common in the '70s, but the disheveled PG has always denied this, stating that the song is about money, which in this case represents "the devil's dung" and nothing, nada...
 
FRANK ZAPPA 'Dirty Love'

Here’s a piece extracted from the album Over-Nite Sensation (the 17th) recorded with the "Mothers of Invention," to which Tina Turner and the Ikettes added backing vocals, much to the chagrin of that eminent prick named Isaac Wister "Ike" Turner (her ex-husband), in the spring of that long-ago '73, and released in the following autumn by the record label that Uncle Frank founded that very same year, namely "DiscReet Records," and that's it...
 
Ufo robot SIGLA COMPLETA + TESTO

Cempionscip Vainil Sciop, exhibitor no. 124.547