soph (
sophia_sol) wrote2011-08-21 02:52 pm
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Audience participation
It seems clear of late that I am capable of enjoying music that I wouldn't have expected of myself. Which means there is a whole wide world of music out there that I could be enjoying but am not (yet). SO. This is where you come in!
I am sure that you, Dear Readers, listen to music, and have opinions about the music you listen to. I am sure you have musicians or singers or bands that you particularly like. And it is entirely possible you enjoy proselytizing on behalf of these music groups. If that is you, then, well! I have a request!
Please tell me the name of a musician/band that you think I should listen to (no matter how well-known or not)*, what CD of theirs I should start with, and, for in case it's a style of music I'm not very experienced at listening to yet, which one song from that CD I should listen to several times on repeat so I can learn how to like it before tackling the whole CD.
Please don't load up a comment with tons of recs, because then I will just get overwhelmed! Stick to one a person (mmmmmaaaaaybe two), and we'll all be happy.
And do not hesitate even if you are a lurker or don't talk to me very often or whatever. My journal is always open!
And then, over the course of however long it takes me, I WILL give a good honest try to the things I get recced in this post, even if it's something I'm skeptical about, because if you like it then it must have something about it worth liking. And then it is entirely possible (nay, probable, given my tendency towards verbosity WHICH YOU MAY HAVE NOTICED *COUGH*) that I will write up posts on my opinions.
Okay? Okay!
*And make no assumptions about what I must already know. I mean, yes, I'm familiar with the Beatles, but ANYTHING ELSE is fair game. My friends are always laughing at me for how utterly clueless I am about popular stuff.
I am sure that you, Dear Readers, listen to music, and have opinions about the music you listen to. I am sure you have musicians or singers or bands that you particularly like. And it is entirely possible you enjoy proselytizing on behalf of these music groups. If that is you, then, well! I have a request!
Please tell me the name of a musician/band that you think I should listen to (no matter how well-known or not)*, what CD of theirs I should start with, and, for in case it's a style of music I'm not very experienced at listening to yet, which one song from that CD I should listen to several times on repeat so I can learn how to like it before tackling the whole CD.
Please don't load up a comment with tons of recs, because then I will just get overwhelmed! Stick to one a person (mmmmmaaaaaybe two), and we'll all be happy.
And do not hesitate even if you are a lurker or don't talk to me very often or whatever. My journal is always open!
And then, over the course of however long it takes me, I WILL give a good honest try to the things I get recced in this post, even if it's something I'm skeptical about, because if you like it then it must have something about it worth liking. And then it is entirely possible (nay, probable, given my tendency towards verbosity WHICH YOU MAY HAVE NOTICED *COUGH*) that I will write up posts on my opinions.
Okay? Okay!
*And make no assumptions about what I must already know. I mean, yes, I'm familiar with the Beatles, but ANYTHING ELSE is fair game. My friends are always laughing at me for how utterly clueless I am about popular stuff.
no subject
Learning obscure history via folk songs is the best! Are you familiar with Tanglefoot? They're a fantastic Canadian folk group that occasionally does songs about Canadian history -- for instance, there's a great one about Laura Secord (although that's not exactly obscure...).
Lock-Keeper -- yyyyeah, gorgeous and wibbly and impossible to keep track of the characters. *sigh* Proof that Stan Rogers wasn't perfect, I guess?
no subject
I'm glad it's not just me. I think there's too many 'you's. Dialogue is hard in song form (I've tried to piece it together from the written lyrics and still couldn't get it).
oh yes! Tanglefoot! Buxton gives me chills. And "watch your footsteps, don't fall in the forest, keep your head down and don't make a sound." Fire and Guns I think?
This isn't a rec
not yet at least, it's just a question: Ian Tamblyn?no subject
I (alas) don't have all the Tanglefoot albums yet, so I'm not familiar with Buxton. But YES, Fire and Guns is fantastic. I saw Tanglefoot perform live once, and it was pretty much the highlight of my year. It makes me so sad that they're no longer together as a band.
Ian Tamblyn I have not heard of!
no subject
Ian Tamblyn is more Canadian folk, I can pretty confidently say that you'll love him ('Voice in the wilderness' lived in my CD player for weeks).
(I have realized all the artists I've mentioned have been male. I have lots of awesome women singers to! I'm just trying hard to be good... :P)
no subject
no subject
I am not familiar with Moxy Fruvous. What are they?
And you know what, SCREW being good while talking about folk music -- because folk music is not about stretching my boundaries at all, it is about HAVING A GOOD TIME. So feel free to talk to me about awesome folk musicians all you want! I shall definitely check out Ian Tamblyn.
And in terms of female Canadian folk singers, are you familiar with Eileen McGann? She's one of my favourites; I could happily listen to her foreverrrrrr. And how about Marie Lynn Hammond? Both her solo stuff and back when she was with the group Stringband?
no subject
Folk music is so much about having a good time! It's frequently about having a good time just to spite everyone else :D
Moxy Fruvous are another Canadian group, folk-pop. If you listen to CBC, the person who does Q was the drummer.
They did King of Spain, you might have heard that one?
Recs for Fruvous! Bargainville is a good start. River Valley, maybe as the one I had to pick. Though King of Spain is much more fun :)
Other songs that I love:
The drinking song
Gulf War Song
Down from Above (creepy!)
Fly
Awesome women recs:
Fruit: http://www.fruit.on.net/home1.php though the website doesn't work for me. I have their album Burn, it's fantastic (I haven't heard the others, I'm sure they're fantastic too!)
Dala: http://dalagirls.com/music/ I've only heard "This moment in a flash" Listened to "Count to Ten" endlessly when I worked at the Folk Festival office
(And I just remembered Hevia, who is not female, but who is a spanish bagpiper, With not scottish pipes so there's no drone, but its very cool.)
No, I haven't heard of either of those! I'll look them up!
no subject
Ditto with adding your awesome women recs! And ooh, I think Essie listens to Dala, actually! I shall have to ask her what she recommends too.
Okay, in terms of recs and sources, then, here goes:
-Eileen McGann: here on her website you can listen to seven of her songs. I particularly recommend Kassandra -- I listened to that song on repeat a RIDICULOUS amount. Requiem For The Giants, and Wisdom Guide Me, are also particularly awesome. Of her cds, I only have two (Journeys and Beyond the Storm), but both are amazing and I assume her other cds would be too.
-Marie-Lynn Hammond (solo): on her website you can click on each of the cds and find short sound clips for a few songs from each. I only have two of her cds as well (Pegasus and Vignettes) -- I like both a great deal, but Vignettes is my favourite of the two. And probably my favourite songs on it are Flying/Spring of '44, and La jeune mariee, which handily enough both have a sound-clip.
-Stringband: Their website is pretty sparse, alas. I only have Stringband Live! and National Melodies, but both are fantastic.