Lipstick Killers - Sockman
Lipstick Killers - Hindu Gods (Of Love)
Lipstick Killers - Kingpin
#treperuno - So I was in the bathroom doing my usual post-lunch task, and amidst the many thoughts swirling in my mind like in a winning slot machine, this series of words came up. It’s a musical group; that's the only news about these words arranged in a certain order. Now, why did it come to my mind? Who knows! It popped into my head that it’s the title of a track by the N.Y. Dolls. Well! The mysteries born in the bathroom are the worst.
#garage #australia
 
Hurrah - I Would If I Could
Another great album...even the following one, The Beautiful, has delicious tracks like Wisdom waits, She said, Velveteen...
 
L'infinita CasaPagina del DeBaser

If you think that "The Infinite" is just one of the most famous poems from Giacomo Leopardi's Canti, let me tell you that you haven't understood a thing at all.

As usual.
 
 
Julia Michaels - Uh Huh

But why is it titled UH! Huh! when it clearly concerns a so-called Ah-ahn?

I am now seeking damages through my trusted legal representative: Bartolomea Pestalozza from Pinerolo (colloquially known as @[llawyer])
 
Shady Grove (Live) Mimi & Richard Fariña with Jean Ritchie. UH.
 
Hunters & Collectors - Lumps Of Lead
In the early days, they truly were the Australian Pop groups... echoes of Birthday Party, the more funky dark Clock DVA, the unmissable PIL... the Hunters were out of this world.
 
Well tuned to #radiocapish
This week on “The Baroque Mondays: At the Court of the Capish King,” we offer you the chance to listen to the Hexacordum Apollinis (1699) by the German composer and organist Johann Pachelbel (1653 - 1706), son of a wine merchant, organist to the Duke of Saxony, and close friend of Johann Sebastian Bach's father. The work, whose title translates to "the six strings of Apollo," consists of six simple airs, accompanied by a series of variations that allow ample space for the performer, according to a model that will unfold in the hands of J. S. Bach's Goldberg Variations.
On harpsichord: Huguette Gremy-Chauliac (FY, 1978).
Enjoy your listening.
J. Pachelbel - Hexachordum Apollinis (1699)
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