Bruce Springsteen - There Goes My Miracle (Lyric Video) second excerpt from the new album; this one is very crooner.
 
Clutch - Electric Worry
What a jerk zooming past me at 100 km/h under a traffic light in the city, but then at the next one hightailing it like a rabbit... for a few minutes I was back to that embolism from years ago, damn it.
In love with this superlative album for tough people... I really needed this, thanks again President @[puntiniCAZpuntini]
 
Joy Division - 07 - Twenty Four Hours

Let's take a ride out, see what we can find, a valueless collection of hopes and past desires. RIP.
 
Hymn

Bob Mintzer - from "Hymn"
1991 (Owl)

#jazzlegends
 
Pigs On The Wing (Parts 1 & 2) - Pink Floyd (1977) Snowy White Guitar Solo

Se non ti importasse di quello che mi succede,
E io non mi importassi di te,
Ci muoveremmo a zig zag attraverso la noia e il dolore
Ogni tanto alzando lo sguardo attraverso la pioggia.
Ci chiedevamo chi dei bastardelli incolpare
E guardando i maiali in volo.

Sai che mi importa di quello che ti succede,
E so che ti importa di me.
Quindi non mi sento solo,
O il peso della pietra,
Ora che ho trovato un posto sicuro
Dove seppellire il mio osso.
E qualsiasi stupido sa che un cane ha bisogno di una casa,
Un riparo dai maiali in volo.
 
#discodellasettimana
C A Quintet Trip Thru Hell 1969 , Psychedelic Rock
A jump back to 1969, and believe me, it’s worth it.
One of the best works that defined the 60s music scene. Not a name on the lips of many, but if you take a look at 60s psychedelic music lists, you will find this mysterious name in almost all of them. Then go to YT, search for the album, and do yourself a favor by hitting play. If you love the genre, you’ll instantly understand why it’s one of the most revered works of the period, a visionary masterpiece to study in detail.
 
 
 
Comus - Diana The entire instrumental section is better than an orgasm, my goodness.
 
WARFORGED - Voice [Official Music Video 2019]
#thenewthatadvances
For all those who feast on death metal for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, I highly recommend this little bombshell from the land of stars and stripes. And if you enjoy fusion, know that you'll encounter black, prog, atmospheric elements, jazzy breaks, and much more.
FFO: Ulcerate, Opeth, Imperial Triumphant, etc...
You've been warned!
 
10+10 Pisces against the wind. 14) The Del Rubio Triplets. Whip It
The three Boyd sisters (Elena, Eadie, and Milly) were practically inseparable: "one body with three heads," they defined themselves. They were born in Ancón, Panama, in 1921 to a family that included a first lady (their great-aunt Edith Bolling Galt Wilson, who was married to Woodrow Wilson).
At 14, after a trip to Hollywood, they decided to dye all their hair blonde. That’s how the "Del Rubio Triplets" were born (rubio means blond in Spanish).
Between the 1940s and 1960s, the three sisters tried to break through as a musical trio and they managed to achieve something: they sang with Xavier Cugat and Bob Hope, performed concerts and shows, and also did some radio and TV appearances, but the "real" success didn’t come.
They were about to give up everything when, in 1965, their mother’s illness forced them to return to Panama. During those days, they sang and played for their mom until she passed away, and they realized they could bring joy in that place of sorrow.
They decided that this was their path.
Throughout the 1970s and part of the 1980s, they traveled America in their camper to perform in hospitals. Always dressed in their go-go boots, miniskirts, flashy makeup, and a sea of blonde hair. And with a repertoire of hundreds of songs, from jazz standards to rock music (even from punk and new wave bands).
Always together. "We can't find a husband. For each of us, God comes first, then the other two sisters, then music. A husband would have to settle for being in fourth place."
Then, in 1985, Alee Willis discovered them (who was not just anybody; she had already won two Grammy Awards).
Willis went crazy for the three Boyd sisters, took them everywhere, included them at high-profile parties, and had them perform wherever they were invited.
Thus, the Del Rubio Triplets recorded two albums and were booked for a number of shows on national TV.
Their biggest success would be this terrible version of "Whip It" by Devo ( @[noveccentrico] don't tell me you don't have this record!), but their repertoire included incredible stuff, from the Rolling Stones to Nirvana, from the Doors to Christmas carols!
Then, in 1996, Eadie passed away, and the story ended there. One body with three heads, remember? It didn’t make sense to continue without one of them.
Milly would be left alone in 2001 and would also pass away in 2011.
Alee Willis was close to them until the end.
 
EARFQUAKE ♄
 
IGOR'S THEME EARFQUAKE NEW MAGIC WAND WHAT'S GOOD GONE, GONE / THANK YOU

Wow...
I’ve been listening to this album nonstop since it came out on Spotify.
Finally, the good Tyler showcases all his influences and especially his great talent. This album is a journey! The strangest and most unique album he has ever composed, but at the same time the one I found most accessible from the very first listen… incredible.

"IGOR" feels like one of those albums that should be listened to "in one go," from start to finish.
OK, there are very beautiful moments that carve out their space and stand out throughout the album, but it’s taken as a whole that the album becomes something special.
"Flower Boy" is a fantastic album, my favorite album of 2017, but it’s too "summery," carefree, and pop-rap-centered, even though it also has a thousand influences.
"IGOR," on the other hand, is a collection of moments, of sounds, from funk to soul, from R&B to psychedelic pop. In 40 minutes, rap is almost entirely set aside, the features are not the focus; they are all pieces of that great mosaic which is the album.

For me, "IGOR" becomes the true MASTERPIECE of Tyler, The Creator.
 
Gavin Friday
He doesn’t need an introduction, but this work went unnoticed in its time. I bought it for a bargain price and it's a very valid piece.
Each Man Kills The Thing He Loves
@[Battlegods] do you know him? Far from Synth and similar, but given this singer's past, maybe you’ve come across him. A very beautiful album, the title inspired by O.W "Each Man Kills The Thing He Loves," produced by Hal Will, who from what little I know is a skilled arranger of small orchestrations with a retro flavor. We're in 1989.