THEE STASH - Selling Jeans For The USA
46 years of a life album, the first of a few, and if Billy Childish sings it to you, there’s even some ribbing involved.
 
Komeda Quintet - Astigmatic [Official Audio]
breakfasts & myopias (or astigmatisms?)
 
The Bo Weevils-Captain Nemo's secret garden

I didn't know them, so thank you Reverend. A bit of pure garage, a lot of definitely beautiful power-psyche pop... but beautiful...
 
Barry Lyndon, Bullingdon Duel Scene [Extended Cut]

"Barry Lyndon"
by Stanley Kubrick (1975)

#35mm
 
Rosewood - Woody Shaw

Woody Shaw (5 out of 10)
"Rosewood" from: Rosewood
1978 (Columbia)

#jazzlegends
 
La Palla n° 13 Buster Keaton 1924

"The Ball Number 13"
by Buster Keaton (1924)

#35mm
 
4. Katrina Ballerina - Woody Shaw

Woody Shaw (4 of 10)
"Katrina Ballerina" from: The Moontrane
1975 (Muse)

#jazzlegends
 
Music from Other Worlds (subtitle: 'Listen to a Fool)
Garifuna, Umalali Mérua
"...and so you stay among yourselves listening to Peruvian groups with the bagpipe that only a handful are listening to and that not even their relatives buy!" (quote)
HERE I AM! PRESENT! I, the conceited know-it-all, frequenting the most foul-smelling and hidden niches, saying "I will never be part of a majority," like that guy in that movie... I propose you listen to some of the most unimaginable stuff that has crossed my hands and ears over the years. You, listen to a fool, lose 5 minutes of your time listening (reading, watching, eating, smelling...) to the same things you already know how they are, which you are not risking; what simply happens is that your brain atrophies.
16) Umalali
Umalali is the musician/producer from Belize, Ivan Duran. Duran had an idea: to bring to light the songs of Garifuna women. The Garifuna are the descendants of shipwrecked African slaves who intermarried with Indigenous people and lived on the Caribbean island of St. Vincent in the 17th century.
In 1790, they were sent by British authorities to Roatán Island off the Central American coast, and soon created settlements in Honduras, Belize, Guatemala, and Nicaragua. The terms Zambo, Cafuzo, Lobo, and, of course, Garifuna were originally used to label people of African and Indigenous descent. They have since remained in common usage in Latin America, in more generic and often derogatory terms, to also designate anyone of African origin.
Duran recorded the songs of Garifuna women for 10 years; as he himself says: "The project has always been about the stories, the lives of these women, capturing the essence of their voices and putting them in a modern context. I was looking for songs that people around the world could appreciate for their musicality and melodies, not just on a purely intellectual level": The field recordings were then processed in the studio and the result, to me, seems very interesting.
 
Lontano, lontano

think about it, Dislo..
 
Matt Elliott 'Summertime' ...a summertime beyond any coordinates...
 
Overture Neurodeliri

Thrash/black avant la lettre. Year of Our Lord 1988. And it's Made in Italy.
 
The Argonauts
The Argonauts · Private Sector
 
The Stabs - Dead Wood they reminded me of the neurotics Jesus Lizard, we are in the 90s so let’s say they are next-door neighbors.
 
Poco - Magnolia
Another band that has been around for 15 years. There's bassist Timothy B. Schmit, long-haired in a Native American style, who will join the very last Eagles in The Long Run.
 
@[puntiniCAZpuntini] just discovered, I don’t know who they are, I don’t know if it’s their first album, I don’t know a damn thing about them but it doesn’t matter right now!! But they caught me instantly!! Do you know them president? The Crooked Whispers - Funeral Blues (Full Album) 2023 - Ripple Music
 
Flat Worms - Red Hot Sand 7" a glimpse into the future, We creators of chaos, of our end but also of a new beginning
 
Mirrorring - Foreign Body for those wondering if there will be a better tomorrow than today
 
The Doors - L'America #pezziminori ... the Blues album of the Doors ... great tracks inside (should I mention them?) ... but also fantastic "side pieces" like this one that opened side b and has always caught my attention!
 
Banks of the Nile
Banks of the Nile · Two banks of Four
 
#Obbligatorygestureaprophetic

Yo ung die those who are dear to the gods...

Nicholas Rodney "Nick" Drake (1948-1974) Singer-songwriter, guitarist. Little known during his lifetime, he is now regarded, posthumously, as one of the most influential British singer-songwriters, the author of lyrics permeated with pessimism and pain, in complete harmony with poignant melodies that are, let's say, sad, directly descending from folk themes in a nobly pop key.
He had absolutely no glory or notoriety while alive ("Ah, yes, the one from pincmuun...") but, especially starting from the 1980s, a considerable number of artists then en vogue cited him as one of their inspirations, contributing to create a ritual surrounding him, made of respect and emotion for the work of such a complete and mythologically unhappy artist.
The depressive condition he suffered from, along with the fact that no one knew of his associations with individuals of either his sex or the opposite, led him to express themes of clear renunciation of life and surrender to a possibly liberating death.
Cause of death: overdose (I know, you prefer "overdose," but the minister wishes to speak Italian when there is a word...) of a tricyclic antidepressant. At his funeral, a little over forty attendees, very few of whom knew each other, a clear sign of the isolated compartments in which Nick enclosed phases and places of his life.
His ashes are buried in the small cemetery of the church of Solihull, United Kingdom.

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Nick Drake- Riverman