Dax Riggs - "Say Goodnight To The World" - HearYa Live Session 8/20/10 the first comment is absolutely right, if you don’t think so too, you either need to convert or you are extremely lucky old fossils.
 
Syd Barrett - Bob Dylan blues "I guess I make people sad, but I don't really care... since my stomach and my wallet are full"
 
Coil / Zos Kia - Transparent Cult album for industrial! The first three tracks (up to the 15-minute mark) are something shocking. The rest of the work gets a bit lost in frivolous noise. And here’s a very young John Balance!
 
#sudicisuicidi (8) "On a branch of madness a child hanged himself..." Ugolino; known for the carefree "what a beautiful day" or for "Sunday" had a dark side... Ugolino - Cappuccetto Nero
 
Tom Rogerson with Brian Eno - Motion in Field (Official Audio) the good Brian, accompanying pianist Tom Rogerson, seems to have gone back in time by about 35 years.
 
Goldie - Inner City Life (HD) Another epic step for the jungle/drum'n'bass section. And I tell you that these 3 minutes are 100 times better than the 20-minute "Timeless" version. After all, the same beat is repeated over and over :P
 
The #buzz review presents an episode that may be less experimental than others, but a record that, as always suggested by our @[ALFAMA], is definitely effective. We look again to Northern Europe, this time to Denmark.

Blue Sun - Blue Sun '73 (1973)

Another group from Northern Europe, and more specifically this time from Denmark. They are Blue Sun, a band active mainly in the early seventies, and whose iconic record is undoubtedly this eponymous album from 1973 (reissued in 1992). The progressive rock imprint is evident in the sound of this group, which then branches out into various genres, and in its more experimental jazz expressions, it is not far from the kraut-rock of Can (e.g., the title track 'Blue Sun', 'Bladene Falder'). But the most typical aspect concerns songs of true rock and roll in the style of Eric Burdon and the Animals, evoking American rhythm and blues like 'Son Af Solen', 'Ivalo Og Liza', not to mention the instrumentals 'Tareperseren', 'Efterar', 'Solhverv'. A record with triumphant tones; had they been American or English, we would consider them classics of rhythm and blues and major bands of the genre, but their geographical origin makes us think more of a blend of genres that elsewhere, in Germany, translated into more acid expressions (not to mention Sweden), while in this case, the sounds are generally 'warm' and characterized by that typical 'blues', however more institutional. But effective.

Blue Sun - Blue Sun 1973