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  • molly bloom
    replied
    Another from the City Of Angels- it has a strangely low-fi end of the 70s feel with a later '90s sound too... The Nights and 'Lonely Soul' :

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    Some American indie from Los Angeles. The Local Natives and 'Airplanes':



    This reminds me of another group or singer, but for the life of me I can't recall them...

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    Having survived St. Patrick's Day entirely unscathed, how about some English pastoral acid folk ?

    The Amazing Blondel and 'Cantus Firmus' :

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    And from a great film I watched yesterday, 'Rififi' or 'Du Rififi Chez Des Hommes' by Jules Dassin :

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    And now for something completely different. I've just this morning finished watching a boxed set of the black and white 'Miss Marple' films starring the truly wonderful Margaret Rutherford. The theme and incidental music were by Ron Goodwin, who like other composers in the 60s used old keyboard instruments in his compositions :



    Ronald Alfred Goodwin (17 February 1925 – 8 January 2003) was a British composer and conductor known for his film music. He scored over 70 films in a career lasting over fifty years. His most famous works included Where Eagles Dare, Battle of Britain, 633 Squadron and Operation Crossbow.
    Born in Plymouth, Devon, Goodwin learned to play the piano and trumpet from the age of five which allowed him to join the school band. When he was nine, the family moved to Harrow, London, where he attended Willesden County School and Pinner County Grammar School, in Middlesex. From there he went on to study the trumpet in London at the Guildhall School of Music.
    Whilst working as a copyist, he formed his own orchestra in his spare time and began arranging and conducting recordings for over fifty artists, which resulted in more than 100 chart successes. He wrote his first feature film score for Whirlpool, with screenplay by Lawrence P. Bachmann. After Bachmann became executive producer at MGM-British Studios in 1959, Goodwin composed and conducted the music for most of its productions, as well as working for other film studios.

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    Originally posted by Ecthy View Post
    close to 1,700 posts in a music thread alone. you're insane.

    GODWIN ALERT!!!! GODWIN ALERT!!!! GODWIN ALERT!!!! GODWIN ALERT!!!! GODWIN ALERT!!!! GODWIN ALERT!!!!

    Quite possibly. I have, however, never invaded Russia or gone to war on two fronts. Just because I Can, some Krautrock for you :

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  • Ecthy
    replied
    close to 1,700 posts in a music thread alone. you're insane.

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    And a nice bit of Sakamoto from the same album:

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    To show how ecumenical and even-handed I am, an extract from the soundtrack to 'Sheltering Sky', also one of Friday's purchases, and this is a tasty bit of Rai by Chaba Zahouania, 'Goulou Limma' :




    One of my favourites- went down well in the taxis in Morocco when I was on holiday there.

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    And an unusual one from Friday, although perhaps not so much considering it was a Jewish charity shop*. Radio recordings from the Six Day War:




    A surefire winner at discos....

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    * The All Aboard shop in Paddington, near the Tube station, in case anyone else wants to shop there....

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    One that got away on Friday. The cover was in good condition, the record had been used as an ice skating rink. Oh me oh my. Dusty Springfield, from 'It Begins Again' :

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    From Friday's purchases, the dour comic genius of Tony Hancock- on 'Pieces of Hancock'. This is 'The Threatening Letter' :

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    Monday Monday, so good to me. Or do I not like Mondays ? Perhaps they're too manic....

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    A jaunty piece by Leo Maguire :

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  • molly bloom
    replied
    Another purchase from Friday : John McLaughlin, Al Di Meola, Paco De Lucía ‎– 'Passion, Grace & Fire'- and this is 'Aspan', and just hearing this takes me miles away from a wet, windy grey Sunday afternoon in the East End...

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