Agent Orange - Bloodstains (StudioVersion) I am so thrilled to have discovered this band that today they are crossing the streets doing flips and wheelies from one sidewalk to another.
 
Patty Pravo - Pensiero stupendo.flv (And you
And us
And her
Between us
I would like
I don't know
If she, or not
The hands
The ones) #softporn (2)
 
An interesting composer of neo-classical and minimal electronic music.

#buzz

Ryan Teague - Field Drawings (Village Green, February 20, 2012)

I wasn't familiar with Ryan Teague, and it's interesting that I listened to him for the first time during the same days as the release of Nils Frahm's latest album, with whom he likely shares similar attitudes. The album in question is titled "Field Drawings" and was released in 2012 on Village Green. Composed, performed, and produced entirely by the multi-instrumentalist from Bristol (UK), "Field Drawings" is an album of compositions that fall within the neo-classical genre, primarily composed for piano and featuring the use of minimal electronic instrumentation, as well as the typical utilization of strings, which play a central role in some pieces within the grand scheme: "Cadastral Survey," "Games for Two," "Cell Cycle," "Anesidora," "Tetrametry"... Teague's approach is clearly cinematic and visual; his compositions serve as an ideal soundtrack, characterized by solemn yet minimal tones that are almost emotionally glacial, cold, as if they were calibrated and definitively calculated within a three-dimensional schematic dimension, where the notes bounce and oscillate as if programmed within a prism rotating in the empty space. Evocative and simultaneously beautiful.

#minimalism #neoclassical #ryanteague

Ryan Teague - Tetramery
 
Branduardi - Vecchioni: Samarcanda Video I didn't know. Funny.
 
Mars - 3E/Scorn "Mother said I don't like the way you always want to stay in bed"
 
DISCORSO DI MUSSOLINI A TRIESTE-1938
speechless, or maybe not!
 
Teenage Jesus And The Jerks - I Woke Up Dreaming (1978) From today I have another love, in addition to "The Closet" and "Orphans".
 
no Anna I can't put you among the hundredcities. I create #softporn (1) Anna Oxa (video 1981-versione del 45 giri) Toledo (push that blade down more/until I can feel you more/push that blade down more/because I want to have you more, push that blade down more/until I can die more!)
 
Officer! Shrug / Good A record that I'm slowly falling in love with. I would define it P.I.O., an acronym that reflects the soul of the work, absolute freedom, pop jazz dissonances lo-Fi and a certain indecipherability that makes the dish quite appetizing, to be devoured with your hands. Recommended for those who choose records solely by intuition and delight in finding an U.F.O that few know, which somehow drives you to continue exploring strictly unidentified sound objects. I believe this is the great "Mystery" of music. Try it with spicy sauces and lick your fingers.
 
Kid Loves Led Zeppelin - English Subtitles - Bambino preferisce i Led Zeppelin allo Zecchino d'oro
Father and son number one pur moi, watch it all and if anyone from Rome knows him, send my noble greetings ahahahahahahah
 
Wilburn Burchette - Guitar Grimoire (1973) - FULL ALBUM Music of complete abandonment, mysterious images lost in electric shadows, very minimal in its progression. In my opinion, a work that could fit into dark post-rock figures and lots of incense with a psycho flavor. Very evocative if you're in the mood to explore unsettling landscapes, a calamity for sound explorers.
 
#hundredcities (37) Juri Camisasca - Il carmelo di Echt - 1991 (The May mornings
filled the air
the scents in the cloisters
of the Carmelite order in Echt.
Within the enclosure
someone passing by
selected the angels.
And in your desire for heaven
a voice was heard in the air:
the Jews are not human.
And on a truck
or a motorcycle, whichever it was
they took you to Auschwitz. [1991]
Juri Camisasca) A song about Edith Stein, doctor of philosophy and Catholic religious of Jewish origin.
To protect her from racial persecution, the Carmelite order transferred her to Echt, in the Netherlands, in 1938. The German invasion extended the racial legislation and deportations to the Netherlands as well. The population and the religious authorities did not endure this without resistance: on July 20, 1942, the Dutch bishops' conference had a statement read in all churches condemning the racist policies of the invader. A week later, the Germans responded by tightening repression and began deporting even the so-called "discriminated," like Edith Stein and her sister, who were interned first in Westerbork and then in Auschwitz, where Edith was killed on August 9, 1942.