me neither. I'm currently on a John Cale - Hobo Sapiens trip
wolfsong
i have that too
wolfsong is very eclectic
yllona is listening to Just Like You Said by Seal from Human Being (1998) (0:14 / 4:14)
wolfsong is listening to Lhasa - J'arrive � la Ville [from The Living Road (2004)]
loves Seal
nikki_
eek
yllona
he's a hottie :)
wolfsong
although it took me a while to go crazy
nikki_
why is that à capitalised?
wolfsong
Sparkle was what originally got my attention
and because of that his first album stayed in my tape deck and CD player probably for a year straight
i never got tired of listening to violet or whirlpool
cretwit
which reminds me that I need to go check out keziah jones
yllona
wolfsong: hee, i got to listen to his original acoustic demo. i think the stuff Trevor Horn is over produced. seal is best in an acoustic setting.
wolfsong
nikki_: not sure
probably because the script didn't catch it
that album is in 3 languages
Spanish, French and English
cretwit
yllona: There should be some kind of acoustic gig recorded in a church out there. should be very good
wolfsong scampers off to fix
wolfsong has an acoustic EP release after the first album and the versions from the Best of
yllona
wolf: trevor horn tried to give seal an old skool production with full orchestration. he doesn't have the "pipes" (style) for that... he's a brit after all :)
wolfsong
they have the oddest relationship
yllona
here's an example of old skool R & B
yllona is listening to A Song For You by Donny Hathaway from In Performance (1980) (2:32 / 5:54)
wolfsong
he switches producers after every album and then goes back to Trev
yllona
this is perfection.... seal could never achieve this. he doesn't have the gospel roots
this is donny solo voice & piano, in alive setting. seal and donny sing n the same key & timbre, altho donny has far more range and nuance
nechto13
yllona: so an artist needs gospel roots to sing old skool r & b?
wolfsong admits to not having a single donny hathaway recording
i love old r & b, by the way
yllona
nechto13: : it certainly helps.
wolfsong
yllona: what's a good starter for him?
i have all 3 of Layla's
yllona
donny hathaway? any of the "live" albums
wolfsong
k
nechto13
what about, dusty springfield, i don't think she had any gospel roots or does she not qualify?
yllona
those are best, he was a wonderful, incredible performer
g0llum has quit
wolfsong
although many brits "get" r&b the gospel doesn't really exist in their voices
Lisa Stansfield is a good example
yllona
dusty is cool, she had the best producers in the business, plus her classic albums were wee recorded at muscle shoals, which did double duty as a gospel recording studio
i.e. the staff musicians were seasoned gospel/blues artists
wolfsong
and generally the only white americans who get that grew up in the south or philly or detroit
or someplace similar
lauri joined the channel
yllona
yep
wolfsong
nikki_: that Lhasa track is right on MB
i'm playing FLAC files right now :-(
nikki_
what's wrong with flacs?
lauri
Could one of the style gurus help me out with an album name?
wolfsong
can't tag them
nikki_
cues?
wolfsong
i'm using flac+cue
SenRepus
im sure one of us can, lauri
yllona
nechto13: muscle shoals is part of the fame msuic group and has gone back to its gospel roots: http://www.fame2.com/
note, the "Willie Nelson" bit of the cover could in fact be interpreted as part of the album name
well, yes, and no
nikki_
wolfsong: it looks horrible to me
wolfsong
nechto13: without them argueably Aretha would not have become the Queen of Soul
nikki_: sorry
lauri
he got a bunch of friends together, they did a concert, all singing his songs
so it's a cover charity "lots of people singing willie songs" thing (which, if I include the Austin -> Asia bit, gives it like three levels of title)
nikki_
it reads as "I arrive In the Town" in english, I think.
wolfsong
all of Aretha's early albums were pretty much ignored
SenRepus
do you know what it says onthe sidespine?
yllona
wolf: not in the black community :)
cretwit
I'd say that his name isn't a part of title. Title being the Austin -> part
lauri
heh, no, because I actually have the DVD not the CD
wolfsong
yllona: true
she wasn't a success until Atlantic sent her to record with them
lauri
which says "Willie Nelson Songs for Tsunami Relief Austin to South Asia"
which is why although my instinct is to call it "Songs for....: Austin to...", I wonder if I shouldn't in fact add the Willie bit
wolfsong
their arrangements unleashed her gospel roots but remained commercially accessible
yllona
wolf: yes, if you mean "success" as cross over to the mainstream audience (white audience)
wolfsong
yes i do
yllona
ah, okay
lauri
I hunted it down on a few cd stores, where it's listed starting with Songs... but credits to Willie Nelson (well, he sings on a few of the songs himself)
wolf: yes, that's very true, but you've got to understand that until the mid-'60s we had "race music", ie music that was never marketed outside the black community
wolfsong
yes i'm old enough 2 understand
;-)
SenRepus
lauri, i guess i agree with your instinct
yllona
wolf: there are still black artists that never cross'd over that still sell millions of records
wolfsong
well yes
SenRepus
do the add album and include notes about the title, that way you can get more opinions
yllona
frankie beverly & maze would be a perfect example
lauri
oh geeze, do I remember my amg password
SenRepus
heh
wolfsong
but i would say acceptance on white radio was a bigger achievement
she was one of the first to do it without sounding white
the tendancy during the early 60s being to have a homogenized sound for radio
lauri
well, they call it that too, so I guess that's what it is going to be
yllona
wolf: and i would strongly disagree, because to cross over, many many compromises are required (thus the trend for plastic surgery and drastic weight loss)
wolfsong
now or then?
yllona
wolf now and then. the first to cross over without sounding white was sam cooke ) and even the isley brothers (and they're still topping the R & B charts)
the isley brothers have been dropping hits since teh '50s
and the o'jays too
wolfsong
and Sam was one of her idols
i seem to recall that was one of the reasons she changed her sound
yllona
yeah, sam is everyones idol. for an number of reasons. he was the first black "pop" to secure all his licensing
the recently late, great lou rawls & sam cooke were childhood friends and sang together for years
wolfsong
yeah
nechto13
would Kansas be considered south? i always though of it as more of midwestern state.
yllona
do you know brook benton? he crossed over in the '50s and retained a true R & B sound as well
err, wolf do you you know brook benton?
wolfsong is listening to Nellie McKay - Sari [from Get Away From Me (disc 1) (2004)]
wolfsong stil/me is listening to Nellie McKay - Sari [from Get Away From Me (disc 1) (2004)]
wolfsong still bummed she got dumped
kansas is the mid west technically..
wolfsong
nechto13: midwest
SenRepus
wolfsong, that /me line makes it sound like you are a girl who got dumped
yllona notes that C& W and old skool R&B and inexorably merged
wolfsong
something that r&b and c&w share
or borrow from might be a better expression
wolfsong is listening to Oleta Adams - Don't Look Too Closely [from Circle of One (1990)]
speaking of Kansas...
Brandon_72 joined the channel
yllona
nechto13, wolfsong this is a perfect example: Ray Charles "modern sounds in country and western music" http://tinyurl.com/c3qoz
and let's not forget al green
wolfsong
totally
nechto13
wait, al green has c&w albums?
no way
i actually don't like country, but i love old r&b, blues, gospel and that type of music. there are exeptions to my dislike of country though like johnny cash, or when it's folk influenced country or other way around