Mondays are Idiosyncrasy 'Cos They Ain't 'Nuttin Else

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  • Globaltruth
    Host
    • Nov 2010
    • 4298

    An old Taj Mahal song brought back to life by Sam Amidon whist walking down a small stream.

    Light Rain Blues.

    Sam Amidon's take on Taj Mahal's "Light Rain Blues," from his self-titled album, out now on Nonesuch Records: https://samamidon.lnk.to/SamAmidonVideo by Will...

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    • johncorrigan
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 10409

      Originally posted by Globaltruth View Post
      An old Taj Mahal song brought back to life by Sam Amidon whist walking down a small stream.

      Light Rain Blues.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SRMujwO-s1U
      Idiosyncratic vid indeed, GT. Great track, but he'll catch his death of cold carrying on like that, imvho.

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      • Globaltruth
        Host
        • Nov 2010
        • 4298

        佩兰 - Admiring the orchards

        We should listen to more quiqin! and more Zeng Chengwei!!
        (I suspect he made the instrument himself too.)

        hardly idiosyncratic but we rarely feature qin music.

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        • johncorrigan
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 10409

          There's been a fair amount of attention on those lovable Liverpool moptops lateley. Maconie's freakzone on 6 Music last night had a Beatles' themed couple of hours - one of my favourites was 'Lady Madonna' by Geesin's Mahogany Minstrels complete with banjo and lovely Scottish vocals - ideally idiosyncratic for a Monday.
          Weird and Wonderful RecordsEver heard it played on the banjo with a terrible vocalist? You have now.

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          • cloughie
            Full Member
            • Dec 2011
            • 22180

            Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
            There's been a fair amount of attention on those lovable Liverpool moptops lateley. Maconie's freakzone on 6 Music last night had a Beatles' themed couple of hours - one of my favourites was 'Lady Madonna' by Geesin's Mahogany Minstrels complete with banjo and lovely Scottish vocals - ideally idiosyncratic for a Monday.
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jF0QvPC3-DQ&t=12s
            Whilst checking out your interesting link I found this one:

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            • johncorrigan
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 10409

              Originally posted by cloughie View Post
              Whilst checking out your interesting link I found this one:

              https://youtu.be/nDCMK2VPeBA
              Thanks for that, cloughie. I didn't even know there was a mystery about it. I have to say that watching the excellent 'Get Back', I became aware of how flexible the fab four were moving from one instrument to another; but also how incredibly crucial Ringo was as the bedrock of the Band. One of the great bits is when they realise that one of them will have to play organ on 'Get Back', but that would leave them short of a guitar. Around this time, Billy Preston, whom they knew from their Hamburg days, turns up in London and comes by for a visit, and sits in. From that moment the song really goes into a new place and Billy becomes part of the Group - for me, it is an electrifying bit of the film to see them take off as a creative unit.

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              • johncorrigan
                Full Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 10409

                Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                There's been a fair amount of attention on those lovable Liverpool moptops lateley. Maconie's freakzone on 6 Music last night had a Beatles' themed couple of hours - one of my favourites was 'Lady Madonna' by Geesin's Mahogany Minstrels complete with banjo and lovely Scottish vocals - ideally idiosyncratic for a Monday.
                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jF0QvPC3-DQ&t=12s
                Another crackin' Beatley tune from last night's 'Freakshow' was Irvins 89 Key Merenghi Fairground Organ pulling out all the stops on 'She Loves You'.
                Yet another track from the 1979 LP"She Loves You"- The Beatles- Arr. James Tiller

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                • Globaltruth
                  Host
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 4298

                  Mondays are so idiosyncratic at the moment that they carry on until Tuesday at least...

                  Carrying on in the Beatles mode, here is an interpretation which has been aired a few times on LJ over the years and was Verity's choice to close the latest show - which was the usual curate's egg...

                  Nothing is Real (somehow the title seems appropriate)
                  by
                  Marino Formenti

                  Provided to YouTube by Kontor New Media GmbHNothing Is Real (Strawberry Fields Forever) (1991) · Marino FormentiNothing Is Real℗ col legnoReleased on: 2003-0...

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                  • Globaltruth
                    Host
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 4298

                    Think he won a Songlines award of some sort (I've wangled a free digital sub via my local library - a cracking free service which has been excellent through lockdown by the way)
                    Not too idiosyncratic except he doesnt have enough air play.

                    Afel Bocoum - Penda Djiga
                    Subscribe to World Circuit - https://worldcircuit.lnk.to/WCYouTubeID Afel Bocoum 'Lindé' out now: https://worldcircuit.lnk.to/AfelBocoumLinde'Penda Djiga' is...


                    A cracking vid too.

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                    • Padraig
                      Full Member
                      • Feb 2013
                      • 4250

                      Originally posted by Globaltruth View Post
                      Afel Bocoum - Penda Djiga
                      Subscribe to World Circuit - https://worldcircuit.lnk.to/WCYouTubeID Afel Bocoum 'Lindé' out now: https://worldcircuit.lnk.to/AfelBocoumLinde'Penda Djiga' is...


                      A cracking vid too.
                      I wish I could complement your interesting video, G, but I can only appeal to the idiosyncrasy of my post to qualify it for inclusion. Today is the birthday of Edgar Allan Poe, of whom I considered myself a fan in times gone by. So for the sake of the good old days I revive his wonderfully morbid imagination with this favourite song of everlasting love.

                      Here's the great Welsh Tenor Robert Tear singing "Annabelle Lee" the poem by Edgar Allan Poe from "The Good Old Days" the long running and superb BBC show th...

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                      • Globaltruth
                        Host
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 4298

                        Originally posted by Padraig View Post
                        I wish I could complement your interesting video, G, but I can only appeal to the idiosyncrasy of my post to qualify it for inclusion. Today is the birthday of Edgar Allan Poe, of whom I considered myself a fan in times gone by. So for the sake of the good old days I revive his wonderfully morbid imagination with this favourite song of everlasting love.

                        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sRlTgCqVbrk
                        I know the poem but had never heard it set to music before - enjoyable, and definitely hits the idiosyncratic button.

                        I know we're going off-piste here but please also consider this version of the Poe classic work The Raven



                        Oh Lenore!

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                        • johncorrigan
                          Full Member
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 10409

                          I heard this track on Maconie's 'Freakzone' last night - I will say little more than it's great, and that it is supported by The Association For Society and Culture - Yemenite Tradition and that it is well worth having a look at the English translation...and I haven't quite seen a video like it before.
                          Djaja (official video) From EL KHAT's 2nd Album - ALBAT ALAWI Op.99 - Glitterbeat Records The 3/3 part of a trilogy Spotify - https://spoti.fi/3JhM1QnApple m...

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                          • cloughie
                            Full Member
                            • Dec 2011
                            • 22180

                            Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                            I heard this track on Maconie's 'Freakzone' last night - I will say little more than it's great, and that it is supported by The Association For Society and Culture - Yemenite Tradition and that it is well worth having a look at the English translation...and I haven't quite seen a video like it before.
                            Djaja (official video) From EL KHAT's 2nd Album - ALBAT ALAWI Op.99 - Glitterbeat Records The 3/3 part of a trilogy Spotify - https://spoti.fi/3JhM1QnApple m...

                            Skiffle lives!

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                            • Globaltruth
                              Host
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 4298

                              Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                              I heard this track on Maconie's 'Freakzone' last night - I will say little more than it's great, and that it is supported by The Association For Society and Culture - Yemenite Tradition and that it is well worth having a look at the English translation...and I haven't quite seen a video like it before.
                              Djaja (official video) From EL KHAT's 2nd Album - ALBAT ALAWI Op.99 - Glitterbeat Records The 3/3 part of a trilogy Spotify - https://spoti.fi/3JhM1QnApple m...

                              Good post JC - much to like here - handmade instruments, typical Yemenite groove, an odd break in the middle and those lyrics...
                              I never listen to Maconie but may have to check him out.
                              I was curious to find out more about The Association For Society and Culture - Yemenite Tradition but there is v little info.

                              Here's another few tracks by them (15 min clip), quite African blues-y in places.
                              The fourth and final act in Tune In Tel Aviv's virtual showcase series features the diverse backgrounds, inventive handmade instruments, and traditional Yeme...

                              One of 4 live sets by Israeli bands from a virtual showcase event last April, produced in collaboration with the UK showcase festival, Liverpool Sound City.
                              That collaboration was a good idea.

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                              • johncorrigan
                                Full Member
                                • Nov 2010
                                • 10409

                                Originally posted by Globaltruth View Post
                                Good post JC - much to like here - handmade instruments, typical Yemenite groove, an odd break in the middle and those lyrics...
                                I never listen to Maconie but may have to check him out.
                                I was curious to find out more about The Association For Society and Culture - Yemenite Tradition but there is v little info.

                                Here's another few tracks by them (15 min clip), quite African blues-y in places.
                                The fourth and final act in Tune In Tel Aviv's virtual showcase series features the diverse backgrounds, inventive handmade instruments, and traditional Yeme...

                                One of 4 live sets by Israeli bands from a virtual showcase event last April, produced in collaboration with the UK showcase festival, Liverpool Sound City.
                                That collaboration was a good idea.
                                I certainly got those Desert blues influences too, Global. I loved that mad break in the video - was it a supposed to emulate a powercut, or outside attempts to disrupt the revolutionary music depicted in the lyrics?

                                That virtual showcase video is so interesting - I love that trumpet and wonder if that's some kind of Eastern European influence - I got the impression from Maconie last night that the band were based in a variety of locations, but retained some kind of Yemeni link. 'Freakzone' usually has enough o keep me interested for half-an-hour or so - bit like Ravenscroft on a Friday - there's often something I come away thinking that I want to hear again. More than I can say for most of LK's 'MPs'.

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