Johnny Hodges & Billy Strayhorn Orchestra

Jazz Legends - The Second Lines (16 of 100) Johnny Hodges
from "Johnny Hodges With Billy Strayhorn and the Orchestra" - 1962 (Verve)
 
Meat Puppets - Love Offering An album full of craziness, but only a few are worthy of being passed down to posterity: this one, "Reward," and "Meat Puppets." Then there's the sublime reimagining of the classic "Walking Boss." In short, an album that undoubtedly blows you away.
 
Blur - Garden Central 1992. One of the most interesting aspects of the EP "Popscene" (I posted the title track a few days ago) and the subsequent "Modern Life is Rubbish" is that it opened new paths that the four from Colchester would walk during their '90s, like in this obsessive and lysergic mantra: a 6-minute instrumental and hypnotic trip #musicismyradar (Best of Blur B-Sides)
 
Melvins- Oven "Ozma" is an album that starts off spectacularly with side A, that is, the first five tracks. If we want to talk as if we were listening to a vinyl, it picks up again at the end with "Revulsion/We Reach". The fact is, I find it to be almost on the same level as the debut and "Houdini," and perhaps even superior to "Bullhead," which modestly stands mostly on the boulder of "Boris."
 
Gentle Giant Why Not For me, they remain among the best composers ever in "Rock" music. Transitioning so effortlessly from powerful rock to a madrigal-like interlude, only to end with that astonishing finale overflowing with groove and, yes, immediate communicative impact, is the work of true champions. Forget about difficult music (and okay, that too), these guys made you move your ass.
 
Earl Hines & Pee Wee Russell Once Upon A Time

Jazz Legend - The Second Lines (15 out of 100) Earl Hines
from "Once Upon a Time! - 1966 (Impulse!)
 
 
The Young Gods - Gasoline Man
_______________

Avoid listening while driving your personal car:
when at minute 2.54 bassa-il-basso, you risk flipping over.
Even when stationary.
 
Felt - Birdmen (HD) And there you go!
 
Foetus - is that a line "Deaf," the stunning debut of Foetus (of which I discovered today the relationship he had with Lydia Lunch).
 
1956 HITS ARCHIVE: Heartbreak Hotel - Elvis Presley (#1 hit)
Elvis Presley - Heartbreak Hotel (1956)
 
#drogatevi (but a lot) Fausto Rossi - Sotto la pioggia al mattino "Full of drugs under the rain in the morning. I cry and feel alone. this universe doesn't exist let's get out of here"