The Blue Nile - Let's Go Out Tonight (Official Audio)
Today this masterpiece turns thirty-five years old...
 
The Road to Cairo
The Los Angeles Freaks with Buckley and Van Dyke Parks
 
Figlio Di Un Re

My skeleton in the closet is Cremonini... I absurdly like many of his songs and he's not too much of a nuisance to me... then I read that he's not exactly okay... alright then, Cesarino...
 
Music Emporium - Velvet Sunsets
Their perfect track, along with Gentle Thursday (basically a kind of Pale Saints before their time)
 
Curve - Horror Head
Curve - SuperBlaster (Video)
BEAUTIFUL AND BRAVE, THE LIST IS LONG
 
Cranes - Everywhere (Video)
Cranes - Tomorrow's Tears
BEAUTIFUL FROM AN IMPOSSIBLE VOICE
SWEET GOTHIC
 
As @[JonatanCoe] wrote here on March 1st last year:

"The Pikes In Panic experienced the arc of a single, great, thrilling season..."

"And you almost feel like dancing to 'Sunday Love', a latent surge that has always resided in your body and now, suddenly, seems unable to wait another single minute."

"Let's do something: take out Keep It Cool And Dry and gently place it on the turntable. Silence your phone... Lower the arm and lend an ear... It's garage rock, and it burns fast, less than three minutes a piece, so I advise you to hold off on that bathroom break; otherwise, you might miss one, and that would be a shame. Once, you knew these things well, but time has gathered dust in your memory and incontinence in your bladder..." and nothing but today, I preferred it! Pikes in Panic - Keep It Cool And Dry (1987)

#unalbumalgiornolevailmedicoditorno
 
LINN SONDEK LP12 "THE TURNTABLE"

Scottish Ivor Tiefenbrun revolutionized the world of Hi-Fi in the 1970s by claiming a fundamental role for the turntable-arm-cartridge chain in the audio system, and he did so with great determination (mistaken for arrogance) and, above all, with a scientific method. His turntable, the Linn Sondek LP12, completely upended the concepts of audio system composition and at that point became the standard-bearer of the British Sound, forcefully entering the Hi-End Audio (also known as Esoteric Audio or Audiophile) scene. Ivor's revolution propelled the entire British audio industry, which effectively dominated during those years. The setup was: Linn Sondek LP12 turntable, Ittok arm, and Troika cartridge. This configuration has continuously evolved over the years, especially in terms of power supplies with various Lingo, Cirkus, Keel, Trampolin, and Radikal updates. The change that Tiefenbrun required was radical; it undermined all the foundations of the audio electronics of the time, ranging from the absolute prohibition of washing records because the stylus would clean the grooves with its precision diamond cut, to the requirement that the stylus be cleaned with fine sandpaper, even banning any form of blowing on it, as even breathing on it could damage the adhesives (aeronautical in origin) used to assemble the cartridge. I bought my Linn Sondek LP12/Ittok IV/Troika in London in 1988; I was there for work and spent a lot of time testing it in combination with the other components (also British Sound) that I intended to purchase. Ivor Tiefenbrun's second revolution came with the advent of the CD (the digital format) because he surprised everyone by becoming one of the best manufacturers of A/D D/A converters in the world, supplying what were at the time the best and most technologically advanced recording studios, such as Peter Gabriel's Real World. Listening to vinyl with the Linn is still a wonderfully psychoacoustic experience.

Now you might ask, what does this have to do with listening experiences? It matters because over time, Linn has also become a record label and has produced albums for the BLUE NILE, a Scottish band that is a true cult among enthusiasts of music and esoteric audio (hi-end). They don’t perform concerts, they don’t do interviews, they take years between albums; they are a true mystery of splendid nighttime music, produced by that genius Ivor Tiefenbrun. In particular, their album Hats was used to test the quality of hi-fi systems, and the review on Ondarock begins like this: "The story of the Blue Nile is the story of a cult band. Indeed, the cult band par excellence."

P.S. The turntable existed in only two variants, black base or natural base; the one I photographed today is my turntable in the natural version.

Ingrandisci questa immagine

Ingrandisci questa immagine

Pagina non trovata
 
Rome
Rome
Regarding the post from a few days ago about Roma capoccia