Dead Can Dance- Xavier Taaaah Zaaaah Paaaah (Did I convey the impact of this piece well?)
I sink. Vortex. Immensity.
 
 
The Psychedelic Schafferson Jetplane - Selftitled (Full Album) A nice relaxing track suitable for a wide range of very different tastes.
 
 
 
 
Disco Inferno - D.I. Go Pop (1994) [Full Album] A memorable page from that novel titled "Post Rock," believe me when I say we are at stratospheric levels here.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
a bag of colorful psychopop candies (2) Piccadilly Line - Emily Small (1967)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Marshall Crenshaw - Someday, Someway (HQ)
The Roy Orbison of the '80s.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The debut album seems pretty nice to me Tusks - London Thunder
 
 
The Body & Full of Hell - Farewell, Man (Official Music Video)

The next episode (therefore the first of twenty-eighteen-nearly nineteen) of "La Musica DeDentro"© will have to focus on these bucolic-naturalist Pop tracks like this one.
Otherwise, I’ll come there to the studio and make a forty-eight (almost forty-nine).
Keep that in mind!
@[tam]
@[G]
@[turkish]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Since this is the #zot2016 review, today we present a usual album released in 2016 that we didn’t listen to last year but have now revisited, more or less beneficially.

Kyle Craft, born in 1989, is one of the emerging names on the roster of the popular label Sub Pop Records. With his second album set to be released soon (the first songs are already circulating), I suggest his debut album ('Dolls of Highland') which came out in April 2016. Clearly inspired by the sounds of the sixties and seventies, particularly the glam rock of Marc Bolan, a certain Elton John, David Bowie, and some shades of the more polished Lou Reed and derivatives (like New York Dolls), not to mention some southern rock inflections (he’s American) and a few Bob Dylan pretensions... Kyle Craft is undoubtedly one of the catchiest and most convincing newcomers in the pop-rock scene, and perhaps with his next album, he could become so 'hype' that he might completely overshadow the garage revival of Ty Segall as the most considered mood in the indie scene which evidently now desires music that’s different to chew on. As far as I’m concerned, the thing about this guy is that he’s perhaps too talented, and for that reason, he kind of gets on my nerves, but his songs are undeniably too listenable not to enjoy.

3.5-4/5 for principle.

Kyle Craft - Full Performance (Live on KEXP)
 
 
The Pretty Things "Old Man Going" This piece is pre everything. Pre Black Sabbath, pre stoner, pre noise, pre doom.
 
 
Soft Cell "Tainted Love" rare demo 1980 (STEREO)

SOFT CELL WEEK: Come on, I'll take the initiative and I'll post Tainted Love... Someone had to do it...
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
GARYBALDI - Moretto da Brescia-Goffredo From an instrumental standpoint, this album is a masterpiece, on par with the great Italian works. Bambi's voice, well, conveys the "Genovese school," very close to the Trolls, as are the Nuova Idea. The strength lies in the exquisite interplay of the instruments.
 
 
LMD 08 - La Musica Dentro con Debaser (La Musica DeDentro 2) by La Musica Dentro (radio show) | Mixcloud
here it is, the most anticipated episode of the year of the most beloved series by everyone. Forget about Game of Thrones... pfft!
 
 
"Jelly Roll" Morton (real name: Ferdinand Joseph LaMothe; 1885-1941) ferried ragtime into a new music that was just beginning to emerge: Jazz. Experts say that this "Jelly Roll Blues" (1915) is the first jazz piece for piano ever published. Jelly Roll Morton - The Original Jelly Roll Blues
 
 
 
 
 
 
love me now - until the end of time... a not so memorable album, but this one is really beautiful...
Peter Murphy "Let Me Love You"
 
 
Blow Up - tennis

- memorable scenes (43) -