Propinquity Ian Matthews
 
Songs To The Siren...Liz's life without Cocteau (4)
Dif Juz with Elizabeth Fraser - Love Insane
1985 - The delicate sound weaves of Dif Juz enriched by Liz's vocals. From "Extractions".
 
Sleaford Mods - Jolly F*cker In May, "All That Glue" will be released, an official collection featuring all the b-sides of Sleaford Mods from 2013 to 2019. Included in the tracklist is also this single from a few years ago.
 
Nordcorea, Kim si rivede in pubblico dopo tre settimane

What we cared most about at this moment.
 
Venom - Nightmare [1985] The last track that closes the golden phase (that is, the first three super albums).
 
 
Air - Venus

We really have to go extinct, this planet is expelling us...
 
Johannes Brahms - Symphony no.1, op.68 (complete) The Barbie movies, in their most cinematically questionable moments, sneak Brahms in on me, and it’s going to make me bipolar.
 
 
Fred Anderson - The bull

Fred Anderson - from "The Missing Link"
1984 (Nessa)

#jazzlegends
 
T-Bone Walker- Don't Throw Your Love On Me So Strong

Almost half a century ago, a stroke sent our Aaron Thibeaux Walker, also known as Oak Cliff T-Bone, to the Creator. He was one of the early pioneers of the electric guitar with a style that was more than unique, whether he played the guitar flat, behind his neck, or with his teeth—something that Jimi Hendrix knew all too well, as he would forever owe him.

He had Afro-Cherokee roots and in Oak Cliff County, south of Dallas in Texas, where his family moved, he had the opportunity to meet "Blind" Willie Johnson, from whom he learned the basics that he applied to his own way of playing the Blues.

At nineteen, he recorded his first 78 RPM, but it would be a dozen years before he broke through with the famous piece "Stormy Monday," of which there are several versions, not least that of the Allman Brothers Band—a piece that led Riley B. King (yes, that B.B.) to learn how to play the guitar, and nothing...
 
Ozzy Osbourne - Ordinary Man (Audio) ft. Elton John
A beautiful DeRece? Please, sir....