Cesare Cremonini - Figlio di un Re (live)

My skeleton in the closet is Cesarino Cremonini. I like many of his songs, and I don't even dislike him on a personal level... considering that most people annoy me...
 
 
 
 
#new This Day Is The Same Day
K.Leimer "A Figure Of Loss"
 
 
I discover today that the great @[G] no longer cares for me... I am saddened as well as bewildered...
 
 
Steppenwolf "None Of Your Doing" (Enhanced Audio)
These Nobles are remembered for their famously heavy tracks when in reality their rock often has southern, folk, and country roots. Kay's solos are very soft and acoustic.

#illupodellasteppa (7)
 
 
Emerson Lake & Palmer _ Toccata (An Adaption of Ginastera's '1st Piano Concerto, 4th Movement; Live 1974; 2016 - Remaster)
Album with divine versions of Tarkus, Karn Evil 9, and Hoedown (done at triple speed).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Given the valuable feedback received last time, I am proposing another one of my pieces.
Scarabeo - Derya
 
 
Jethro Tull - Heavy Horses (2003 Remaster)
My favorite track from the post-Ministrel in the Gallery phase, along with Songs from the Wood. I expected more from the other tracks on Songs and Heavy, especially from Stormwatch and Too Old to Rock and Roll, where I can't find even one piece that lives up to the standard... too conventionally folk.
 
 
 
 
Well tuned in to #radiocapish

Today's listening takes us straight to the dawn of the blues. More than creating the blues (whose roots, as is known, are lost in the centuries and in the routes of slaves between Africa and the New World), William Christopher Handy (1873 – 1958) is one of the first to have cleaned the blues from the mud and dust from which it arose, giving it a veneer of acceptability to those who really didn't want to see that mud and that lament. The classic we propose today is the version of Handy's pieces by Louis Armstrong, released in 1954 for Columbia.
Credits:
Bass – Arvell Shaw
Clarinet – Barney Bigard
Drums – Barrett Deems
Piano – Billy Kyle
Trombone – Trummy Young
Trumpet, Vocals – Louis Armstrong
Vocals – Velma Middleton

For more in-depth information, I recommend the great page by @[odradek] on Delta blues, from which Handy drew abundantly: Founder Of The Delta Blues 1929-34 - Charlie Patton - Recensione di odradek

Enjoy listening.

Louis Armstrong - Louis Armstrong Plays W.C. Handy ( Full Album )
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Slow Attack Ensemble ‎– Music For Turntable, Guitars and Sampled Instruments (2020 - Album) in my opinion a great ambient/electronic work, no wonder it’s currently among my favorite works of 2020
 
 
Se non cantassi sarei nessuno-Enzo Carella

For the more obsessed... the Odyssey of Panella-Carella has been found.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
a corner of Brescia that many Brescians do not know. nice fess! #bresciafaschifo (4) 18ª Puntata: San Faustino in riposo
 
 
 
 
 
 
hurdy mellow gurdy yellow, or the child Donovan (11)... The Lullaby Of Spring
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
September Song - Chet Baker
 
 
I've always preferred the more '80s version over the pure '70s one. Pesci nelle orecchie - Roberto Vecchioni
 
 
 
 
Led Zeppelin - Whole Lotta Love (1997 Promo)
Uncle pig whore infested filthy let me venttttttttt
With the little countess in the car someone zooms past me in downtown Reggio then throws the cigarette butt out the window... at the traffic light I yell at the jerk, he gives me the middle finger...
lucky/unlucky that my little one was there...
Riffraff and human waste...
Madooooooooooooooooo what nerves!!!
 
 
 
 
That Old Inn - Immagini Sfocate
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
'Tales From Monographic Oceans': a journey adrift in a stretch of sea, cutting through the isthmuses of some discographies (Al Green 28, 14)
Between demon and holiness, music for the soul that has never been so carnal: the soul that purifies by fornicating from the Reverend Al Green (if our Churches were filled with Reverends like this, it would be a bit more enjoyable to attend them, wouldn’t you agree?)
Al Green - All the Time