Jidenna - Long Live the Chief whoever made this beat deserves the trash cans every Christmas.
 
Snakefinger - Bring Back Reality I know you're not done with the Snake Finger yet. Check out this crazy dance (highlight from "Manuals Of Errors," along with the fabulous "Yeti What Are You").
 
 
Chico Hamilton - Voice In The Night

Jazz Legends - The Second Lines (3 of 100) Chico Hamilton
from "A Different Journey" - 1963 (Reprise)
 
Blur - All your Life 1997: The Blur, with that masterpiece of the self-titled album, enter their third phase. As always, alongside the production that ends up on studio albums, they create countless undiscovered gems like this one, which, included as a B-side on the "Beetlebum" EP, would have been perfect as a single as well #musicismyradar (Best of Blur B-Sides)
 
Matia Bazar - Stasera che sera (Live-RSI 1981) - Il meglio della musica Italiana

The unmissable event De La Musica DeDentro returns on Radio Tandem 98.400 – il velocipede con l'antenna in streaming for the whole wide world.
At 21:00 UTC+1 (CET – Central European Time) @[zig] @[tam] @[turkish]
To participate: @[heartshapedbox] +39 0471 970084 You will hear some amazing things.
Have I said it all?
 
A superclassico della musica folk-psichedelica bursts into the #buzz showcase and among the latest offerings from @ALFAMA that I've noted down and have been revisiting lately.

Magnet & Paul Giovanni - The Wicker Man (soundtrack) (Trunk Records, 1998)

There are certain works of art that are timeless. I must say that I don't consider myself a great connoisseur or expert in any field. If you talk to me about cinema, I might mention Truffaut or Tarkovsky, but I’ll tell you that I once watched “Stalker” and fell asleep. So I didn’t really see it, and anyway, I couldn’t care less. But what about “The Wicker Man” by Robyn Hardy (1973)? This is not just a film; it’s a work whose content has not only been influential in the history of cinema but also has spiritual and psychological, aesthetic content that taps into the roots of human history. Just like the film, the soundtrack by Paul Giovanni with the Magnet (a group put together by the "responsible" Gary Carpenter for the occasion along with Peter Brewis, Michael Cole, Andrew Tompkins, Ian Cutler, Bernard Murray) beautifully surrounds every image, describing them, as the songs intertwine with the scenes, becoming one with them. Ancestral folk, Canterbury scene, arrangements balancing between Gaelic traditions and sophisticated elegance, psychedelic tendencies and obsessive visions. The standout track? Clearly, "Williw's Song." One of the most beautiful things you could ever listen to in your lifetime. Before being burned alive.

#folk #psychedelia #thewickerman

Willow's Song
 
Motörhead - Peel Session 1978
A trio of lovable good-for-nothings with an unabashed alcohol level in a youthful state of DeGrazia.
 
Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis - Afro-Jaws

Jazz Legends - The Second Lines (2) Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis
from "Afro-Jaws" - 1961 (Riverside)
 
Lou Harrison: Suite for Percussion (1940)
Because @[noveccentrico] is someone who knows, knows...
 
 
YouTube video non trovato845Yg7qH-R4...It seems like yesterday, but it's been 15 days..