Such a great, great record. Yeah we throw that word around too much, I realize that, but this one deserves it. Actually gets better with time and it started out amazing.
I don't know if anyone actually "throws it around" undeservedly, but you may be onto something TC. I find myself wondering why I dip so light into all the wonderful recommendations here and think it;s because everything is so damned great.
There's such a high concentration of great music in this thread, evangelized by folks who's tastes and opinions I hold in high regard, that I find it almost desensitizing. I have limited listening time and dollars and the list of albums I need to get into is as long as my arm (actually longer, I'm sure). So when I listen I tend to go to something more familiar that I can enjoy while playing "in the background" rather than being frustrated that I'm getting interrupted and can't hear so and so's album that the LIstening Thread is going nuts over.
No real point this. Just some weird perspective from a music fan, with access to great recommendations who gets to do little actual listening. What bothers me about my predicament is that my next favorite musician is out there right now and I'm not listening to or supporting them.
Such a great, great record. Yeah we throw that word around too much, I realize that, but this one deserves it. Actually gets better with time and it started out amazing.
I don't know if anyone actually "throws it around" undeservedly, but you may be onto something TC. I find myself wondering why I dip so light into all the wonderful recommendations here and think it;s because everything is so damned great.
There's such a high concentration of great music in this thread, evangelized by folks who's tastes and opinions I hold in high regard, that I find it almost desensitizing. I have limited listening time and dollars and the list of albums I need to get into is as long as my arm (actually longer, I'm sure). So when I listen I tend to go to something more familiar that I can enjoy while playing "in the background" rather than being frustrated that I'm getting interrupted and can't hear so and so's album that the LIstening Thread is going nuts over.
No real point this. Just some weird perspective from a music fan, with access to great recommendations who gets to do little actual listening. What bothers me about my predicament is that my next favorite musician is out there right now and I'm not listening to or supporting them.
Well described, beebs. I probably don't feel it quite as much as you, the demands on my time being different than those on yours, but I've noticed I often react the same way to "yet another great find" here on 3dd. Information (or input) overload. Someone once wrote a book about it, i think.
All opinions and commentary in my posts are solely my own and are made in my personal capacity.
Such a great, great record. Yeah we throw that word around too much, I realize that, but this one deserves it. Actually gets better with time and it started out amazing.
I don't know if anyone actually "throws it around" undeservedly, but you may be onto something TC. I find myself wondering why I dip so light into all the wonderful recommendations here and think it;s because everything is so damned great.
There's such a high concentration of great music in this thread, evangelized by folks who's tastes and opinions I hold in high regard, that I find it almost desensitizing. I have limited listening time and dollars and the list of albums I need to get into is as long as my arm (actually longer, I'm sure). So when I listen I tend to go to something more familiar that I can enjoy while playing "in the background" rather than being frustrated that I'm getting interrupted and can't hear so and so's album that the LIstening Thread is going nuts over.
No real point this. Just some weird perspective from a music fan, with access to great recommendations who gets to do little actual listening. What bothers me about my predicament is that my next favorite musician is out there right now and I'm not listening to or supporting them.
Well described, beebs. I probably don't feel it quite as much as you, the demands on my time being different than those on yours, but I've noticed I often react the same way to "yet another great find" here on 3dd. Information (or input) overload. Someone once wrote a book about it, i think.
I think this is very real and while the demands on our time are quite different I sometimes feel the same way Beebs does. Sometimes I go whole hog into something highly recommended here but other times I simply don't have the time and it gets lost in the shuffle. Sturgill Simpson is a good example in that I just didn't dive in because I couldn't give his work the proper listen that it seemed to deserve. Now that I have I love his stuff but sometimes I forget about the hot stuff and by the time I can really listen people aren't talking about it as much and it gets forgotten. Still most of the new stuff I listen to is either from recs here or released by This Is American Music who's artists rarely disappoint.
We call him Scooby Do, but Scooby doesn’t do. Scooby, is not involved
Iowan's "Best of Son Volt" 1. Windfall 2. Dynamite 3. Hearts & Minds 4. Caryatid Easy 5. Drown 6. Jukebox of Steel 7. Bandages & Scars 8. Hanging Blue Side 9. Creosote 10. Loose String 11. Medicine Hat 12. Live Free 13. The Picture 14. Mystifies Me
Ok so about that thing about missing out on some of the stuff being plugged on here? Yeah, if it means missing out on stuff like this I gotta work on that.
NP:
Holy shit.
We call him Scooby Do, but Scooby doesn’t do. Scooby, is not involved
Tequila Cowboy wrote:Ok so about that thing about missing out on some of the stuff being plugged on here? Yeah, if it means missing out on stuff like this I gotta work on that.
With all the great live shows and studio albums, etc. of theirs out there, I find that this often slips through the cracks. Very well done and underappreciated release.
dee dee wrote: The current landscape of garage rock is overrun by bands who find heroes in Sabbath and the Stooges, so it's rare in 2014 to find an artist that invokes the masters of ultra-mainstream radio rock from the late 1970s and early 1980s, a sub-genre that the comedian Marc Maron recently described as townie music. We're talking Van Halen, AC/DC, Skynyrd, Nugent, ZZ Top—bands that binged on masculinity and guitar heroics and made hit records that sounded really good when they were played loudly. They made songs that were ideal for pushing the speed limit, lifting weights, getting in bar fights, flirtin' with disaster, and for those moments where you ain't talkin' 'bout love. This aesthetic void is handily filled by Austin shredders OBN IIIs, who revel in their own pose. They once made a music video in which all of the members murdered each other for the purpose of stealing booze and record money. On the cover of their new album, Third Time to Harm, frontman Orville Bateman Neeley III is flipping triple birds. They're surly in all their surface imagery, their lyrics are plenty macho, and sure enough, that churlishness finds its way into their beefy sound. http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/19375-obn-iiis-third-time-to-harm/
This. And loving it. I suppose I'm a sucker for "churlishness." Fucking Pitchfork.
You are entitled to your opinion, but you are not entitled to your own facts.
- DPM
I've never listened to much aside from Rumor & Sigh, but I think my recent discovery of Shoot Out the Lights may end up being my favorite RT record.
Shoot Out the Lights is amazing, maybe a top 50 record IMHO. Thompson is a great guitarist and a fantastic songwriter but unfortunately has been criminally overlooked.this new acoustic record is quite good in terms of just revisiting some old songs, much like Bottle Rockets Not So Loud but a studio affair.
We call him Scooby Do, but Scooby doesn’t do. Scooby, is not involved