So ask aways, ILxMxOrockOrsilx!
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:01 (twenty years ago)
Should Whitehouse be considered melodic genii? They have "white" in their name.
― Jetlag Willy (noodle vague), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:09 (twenty years ago)
No because, even though their barrage of rhythm is interesting and even compelling in isolation, and the apparent extreme immorality of their lyrics betray, even in terms of delivery alone, an innate staunch moral fibre, and they have joined several important aesthetic genre dots in the last quarter-century, they lack melodic content and are therefore worthless.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:20 (twenty years ago)
― shine headlights on me (electricsound), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:21 (twenty years ago)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:26 (twenty years ago)
― Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:27 (twenty years ago)
― Jetlag Willy (noodle vague), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:29 (twenty years ago)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:35 (twenty years ago)
Are you using Babelfish?
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:36 (twenty years ago)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:38 (twenty years ago)
― Jetlag Willy (noodle vague), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:40 (twenty years ago)
― NickB (NickB), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:40 (twenty years ago)
Hang a on a second there: I'll have you know Captain Beefart (sic) has been officially verified and authenticated as degenerative 60's gibberish.
I will pass your analysis on to Mark Boston, Gary Lucas, Rick Snyder and Mark Perry 'though: I'm sure they'll all be absolutely thrilled.
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:44 (twenty years ago)
― NickB (NickB), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:46 (twenty years ago)
Really? And who am you been teached English to used by?
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:46 (twenty years ago)
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:47 (twenty years ago)
It is clear that it is Bernie Taupin. For over four centuries he has provide the lyrics to the songs of Elton Jon, the greatest and most melodic musician of our time age. Bennie Maupin is redonant of that time when Miles Davis lost his melodic gift and waste the rest of his life trying to copy the worthless funks of James Brown and Sly Stoens because he could go to bed with his girlfriend.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:48 (twenty years ago)
Until recently I was a huge fan of the melodic keyboard work of Rick Wakeman. However, I have come to suspect that his music is tainted with the animalistic rhythms of African drum-beating. Whom would you suggest as an alternative to this decadent jungly music?
― Gerald "Manly" Hopkins, Friday, 10 June 2005 07:49 (twenty years ago)
"If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth. Alles klar?"
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:51 (twenty years ago)
― Myonga Von Bontee (Myonga Von Bontee), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:52 (twenty years ago)
You are obvious listening wrongly, for Rick Wakeman is the predominance keyboard player of our age, with the exception of Elton Jon, who is more melodic. Nevertheless his works with Yes and the English Rocks Ensemble is large in scope but never loses the eye for melody. You must listens to King Arthur and His Merry Men, but maybe not sit on the ice while you doing so, no? :)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:52 (twenty years ago)
I've been searching for quite a while for a certain record by the Brotherhood of Breath, but sadly, it's been to no avail. Would the Brotherhood of Man provide me with a satisfactory substitute as their records can been found rather more readily in the charity shops of my town?
― NickB (NickB), Friday, 10 June 2005 07:59 (twenty years ago)
― Dr. C (Dr. C), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:01 (twenty years ago)
I'm glad I've bumped into you because there's something I've been wanting to ask you ever since a sadistic English teacher made my whole class learn "Pied Beauty" verbatim when we 10....
What the fuck were you on when you wrote that one?
".... For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim;Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches’ wings;Landscape plotted and pieced-fold, fallow, and plough;And all trades, their gear and tackle and trim.All things counter, original, spare, strange;Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim...."
This sounds to me like the sort of degenerative giberish I'd expect from the likes of Alternative TB and Captain Beefart!
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:01 (twenty years ago)
The Bishop's dick.
― Gerald "Manly" Hopkins, Friday, 10 June 2005 08:04 (twenty years ago)
These are a few of my favourite thims?
― mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:07 (twenty years ago)
I would be hesitate to recommend the Brotherhood of Man, as they are poor palled copy of Abba and their melodies are too repetitive to waste time.
Nevertheless they remains superior to Brotherhood of Breath, whose crime was to obliterate their melodic African hi-life pop content with atonal baboon freaksout noise. Just because aparthit is bad does not mean you should makes other peoples miserable with your psycho tick moods. When Nelson Mandela was release, he was exposed at Wembley to real musics like Peter Gabriel. No wonder he grinned so happy!
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:08 (twenty years ago)
Postpunk would have been better if it never exist. Punks rocks was bad enough as the worst thing to happen to pop music in the last 30 years, with the exception of selected coloured people with turntable made out of stolen jewelry. It destroyed melody. This is why you have Iraq and AIDS now. If postpunk had been suppressed and replaced by more melodic songs of the period, such as "Every Single Day" by Sad Cafe, there would have be no 9/11. Fact.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:11 (twenty years ago)
Are you 4 real? If not, what do you make of people who are?
Yours,
Richey Manic (ssh)
― mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:11 (twenty years ago)
Whoze got the craziest tittiez, Lil Kim or Remy Ma?
― Robert Robinson, Friday, 10 June 2005 08:13 (twenty years ago)
What do you think of Paul Simon's Gracelands album?
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:16 (twenty years ago)
Well I am certainly more real than what is probably left of Richey Manics, as he has been floating in the River Clyde since 1985! :)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:17 (twenty years ago)
This thread is about phonograph, not pornograph, so you need to commence I Love Tits messageboard no? :)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:18 (twenty years ago)
Gracelands is Paul Simons masterpiece, one of the key melodic works of the later half of 20th century, for he manages to civilise the native African musics with his uniq melodic and wry lyric gifts, it is like Woody Alan in the jungle, no? It is ironic that "You Can Call Me, Al" remains one of the most requested songs at revival discotheques! Is it played at Poptioptimomism?
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:20 (twenty years ago)
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:23 (twenty years ago)
― Vicious Cop Kills Gentle Fool (Dada), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:25 (twenty years ago)
― mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:25 (twenty years ago)
Funny you should mention James Brown back there. As you know, the line "take me to the bridge!" was a direct quotation of the valiant last words uttered by Lord Nelson to his faithful friend Captain Hardy as he died at the Battle Of Trafalgar. How, in your esteemed opinion, does James Brown rate as an interpreter of British maritime traditions compared to, say, Mike Oldfield and his fine reworkings of traditional sailors jigs?
― NickB (NickB), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:26 (twenty years ago)
Of course the Simons and Garfunkel classics are classics. No one can deny that "Bridges On Trouble Water" is the greatest song ever written, except for other ones. But the achieve he achieve with Gracelands is the same equal as Colombus discover America or Cortes stout in the Pacific state. This is a new continent of musics he discover, and nobody know about it before that.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:30 (twenty years ago)
― Vicious Cop Kills Gentle Fool (Dada), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:31 (twenty years ago)
You are incorrect. The correct verbage words said by dead Nelson was "Kiss, Me Hearty," when ask for his last request after stomach severed by cannonball. Thus James Brown should not come into conservation about British seascape, not like Mike Ofield and his rocking updates of Portsmouth Points by Willy Walton.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:32 (twenty years ago)
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:32 (twenty years ago)
You are being disingenious here, for well you know that Paul Simons did not author Bright Eyes, for that flowed from the pen of Mike Batts, one of the greatest songwriters of our era time, up there with Diane Warrens and Albert Hammonds. Just because he was a Wimble does not mean he is in capable write great melodic songs like "Crazy When You Close To Me" by Kate E Melluer.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:37 (twenty years ago)
― Vicious Cop Kills Gentle Fool (Dada), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:39 (twenty years ago)
i.e. other people got there a long time before them but failed to recognise it's potential and fully capitalise on the opportunites it presented for commercial exploitation, right?
"This is a new continent of musics he discover, and nobody know about it before that."
Well, nobody except the people who actually lived there already; and they don't really count, right?
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:41 (twenty years ago)
― NickB (NickB), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:42 (twenty years ago)
Do you enjoy the tradition of American singer-songwriters such as Randy Newman and Harry Nilsson or does it just get your Ackles up?
― NickB (NickB), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:45 (twenty years ago)
The only peoples who got to Africa before Paul Simons were the plantation owners. They took the slaves out of the jungles and made them do some work. Because the slaves were annoy about this they start making howling sounds of moaning while banging their tribey drums. This was the beginning of the blues musics and soul musics. But it was only with the corrective influence of Western and European idea of harmony and melody that these musics got anywhere. How could you have soul musics without Phil Specter, for example?
Otherwise they did count, but not very high, because they were yet to be educate. This is why you get so many soul musics records start with "1-2-3-4" because they didn't know any numbers higher.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:45 (twenty years ago)
Do not be the silly. Of course Randy Newman and Harry Nielsen are among the greatest writers of America musics, up there with Hoggy Carmichaels and Cole Portman. Randy Newman's "Rednecks" is an agreably wry portrait of grumpy old American people, about the time before they drown in flood caused by overflow of Brylcreem in 1928.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 08:47 (twenty years ago)
Do you enjoy Gospel music?
― Timbraun, Friday, 10 June 2005 08:53 (twenty years ago)
Do you prefer the melodic work of Guy Chambers with Robin Williams or with his first band The House of Love?
Thanks.
― Abel Ferrara, Friday, 10 June 2005 10:55 (twenty years ago)
Fwiw actually she did at least one other track, "One Down", which I think is probably more to your taste than "Memory".
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:01 (twenty years ago)
I think you are confused with your guys. The House of Love Guy was Guy Chadwick. Guy Chambers was great with Robbie William because he could do all the things he not allowed to in World Party by its leader Karl Kissinger. "Angels" will live forever as a song, as will "Golden Fields" even though not write by Guy Chambers and sung by Sting.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:02 (twenty years ago)
It is difficult to tell, as rumour has it that Bobby Brown listened to this Material records once and was so angry about its non-melodic content that he shoved the master tape down Whitny's throat and force her to eat it. This is how the drink problem started.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:03 (twenty years ago)
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:10 (twenty years ago)
― Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:17 (twenty years ago)
― Vicious Cop Kills Gentle Fool (Dada), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:18 (twenty years ago)
― Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:20 (twenty years ago)
― Vicious Cop Kills Gentle Fool (Dada), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:22 (twenty years ago)
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:47 (twenty years ago)
Question part the second. Is the William of "William, It Was Really Nothing" none other than the undertaker's assistant and aspiring songwriter William Fisher, protagonist of the novel and film Billy Liar?
― Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 10 June 2005 11:59 (twenty years ago)
Sie sind durchaus ein gescheiter Mann, und ich liebe, Ihre melodic Sachkenntnis zu genießen. Können Sie mir ein mp3 "der Kinder" der Robert Meilen bitte erhalten?
Dank für dieses.
― Merle Schtreep, Friday, 10 June 2005 12:00 (twenty years ago)
Even if the apposipriate technologoy been available at that time, Joan of Arc would have been extremely ill advise to "try it."
The William was in fact Billy MacKenzie, ertswhile lead singer of The Associate. Morrissey had a crush on him but unfortunately MacKenzie was too disorganise to be a proper pop star, so Bono stole his career and MacKenzie ending up overdose in paternal shed in Dundee. In truth be told, it was always going to be downhill for Macknezie after his split from the melodic gifts of Alan Ranking.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:03 (twenty years ago)
― mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:04 (twenty years ago)
― Emeric Pressburger, Friday, 10 June 2005 12:05 (twenty years ago)
Leider habe ich nicht Zugang zur Technologie mp3 wie, den tröstenden Purr der ehemaligen Stereoanlage zu bevorzugen. Jedoch bin ich sicher, daß dieser zugegebenermaßen melodic techno Erfolg in einer Vielzahl der Kompilation Formate vorhanden ist.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:06 (twenty years ago)
No. The Beat was from Brumingham, and thankfully ejected their early noisome ska influences to provide us with elegantly melodic songs such as "Save It For Later" and "Ever Fallen In Love."
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:08 (twenty years ago)
Y'all gonna get crunked up in this bitch or what?
― Dennis Norden, Friday, 10 June 2005 12:10 (twenty years ago)
Unfortunate I think you access the wrong forum. I Love Pets is elsewhere :) But your television show is wryly hilarious. Are you one of those people who think that getting your leg over is something done by a reluctant relay runner?
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:12 (twenty years ago)
I'm considering starting a musical career under the name Jean-Michel Jah, which will be a roots reggae tribute to the works of the great French master of the cosmic home organ. However, I'm concerned that we may simply blow too many minds with this outrageous fusion of delicious melody and skankin' rhythms. Is reggae a good vehicle for melody, or should we stick with beats you can goosestep to?
― Abra Cadaver (NickB), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:15 (twenty years ago)
Reggae is an excellent vehicle for melody, as has been proven by its finest exponents, such as Eric Clapton and Sting. But you must avoid heavy beats as turn kids of today into uncouth ferals and that is how the Germany of the Nazis started.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:23 (twenty years ago)
Yes?
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:24 (twenty years ago)
― Cumstick Carbonara (GeirHong), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:25 (twenty years ago)
― mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:27 (twenty years ago)
I recently inherited a copy of seminal hip-op "joint" "Whispering Grass" by Windsor Davies and Don Estelle, who went on to become Outkast and write such melodic hip-op classics as "Mrs Jackson" and "Crazy Frog Bitch". Anyway, can you tell me what is the current street value of "Whispering Grass"?
― Chiang Kai Geldof, Friday, 10 June 2005 12:34 (twenty years ago)
― mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:36 (twenty years ago)
You are inaccurate. Windsor Davies and Don Estelle did not become Outkast. They were in the popular televisual comedy series "Not Half Hot Mother Army." "Whispering Grass" has never been covered by the Streets as far as I knows, but its musichall aspects were certainly an influence on the more melodic site of Mick Skinner :)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:36 (twenty years ago)
― Cumstock Carbonara (GeirHong), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:46 (twenty years ago)
― k/l (Ken L), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:48 (twenty years ago)
― Ching Chong (GeirHong), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:49 (twenty years ago)
Recently my youngest boy, Heinrich, has fallen in with a bad crowd. He claims to be a "Rock and Roll" singer, and insists on being called "Pete". He has also affected a ridiculous accent, such as one might hear used by a barrow-boy from darkest Essex. As if all this weren't bad enough, I fear the lad is developing a touch of the Princess Margarets. His weekly allowance is barely lasting him 2 days and I have it on good authority that he is no stranger to the kind of Opium den one would normally associate with the heathen Chinee.
Last night I tried to tackle the lad on the subject, to which he replied "Fack Awf, Pater, you don't understand me or my music."
What I want to know is this: is there any chance that the little shit will ever put out a record that doesn't sound like a half-cooked Jam b-side?
Yours etc.
― Reginald ffoulkes-Docherty, Friday, 10 June 2005 12:51 (twenty years ago)
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Friday, 10 June 2005 12:59 (twenty years ago)
― Ian Riese-Moraine. Exposing ambitious careerists as charlatans since 1986. (East, Friday, 10 June 2005 16:24 (twenty years ago)
Well, you remembers the words of the Casts of Granger Hills when they said Just Say No, so this is what you have to incalcite in head of junior issue. He must be redeployed as a landscape gardener in Colchester - though maybe make sure that the garden is not uphill, no? :)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Monday, 13 June 2005 05:48 (twenty years ago)
(n.ob: it is incidental inappopiate to use endearment darling as my 15 coupons do not purchase a hairdryer. I spend too much weekend looking for hot chick to chat up and pay money in laundryette to be deny that. I do not know what hot chicks of today are look for. Yesterday I come to laundryette with Sunday Sports and look for elegant lady to own, but they are all 87 years old or families of 87 in number - so even my copy of Didos record I'm No Angel, on cassatt i got from tricity hospital charity shops and only pay 50 pens so this shows hot chicks I am economic and therefor more money to spend on their catering)
Postpunk bands are sporn of devils and are oxygenmoronic to call them melodies. The better bands are those who aknowlige superor importence of the bands who came after, name Duranduran and Flocks of Sea Gulls, who rescue melody from the hell of Ex-Roy Sex.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Monday, 13 June 2005 05:53 (twenty years ago)
Do you like the new Jack Johnson record? Would you agree it is the perfect soundtrack for twentysomethings' summer dinner parties this year? How would you counsel those individuals who clearly have so much inner rage that they are tempted to come round and "BREAK YOUR F**KING STEREO IF I HEAR IT ONE MORE TIME!"?
― zebedee (zebedee), Monday, 13 June 2005 08:58 (twenty years ago)
The new Jack Johnson record is a restrained but most melodious feast of tasteful guitar and mellow vocals, highly remindiscent of the Steve Millers Band. For angered individuals - and, honestfrankly, who can blame them for having minds damaged by the 20-year barrages of hip-op and r&b rot? - I would recommend some Prozaks to help cool their brain and focus on serenity. After all it has certainly done Bernard Summers a great favour in his poetic lyrics for the New Orders, for example: mountains and lakes and the human race.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Monday, 13 June 2005 09:05 (twenty years ago)
What advise would you have for the Spice Girls if they decide to play the Live8 Festival of Chari-Pop?
― Michael Gira, Monday, 13 June 2005 09:13 (twenty years ago)
Given the record-breaking chart debuts of the new solo albums by Sporty Spice and Ginger Spice, and the public humiliation which is always arising from bankruptcy proceedings, I would suggest that the Spice Girls need all the money they can get, and should therefore be paid their fee on the quiets, as indeed all the artists involved will be, but you never heard it from me, aright?
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Monday, 13 June 2005 09:18 (twenty years ago)
Robrt Wyatt has an indefinite grasp of melody. please comment.
bestHaringold mulygrubbrrrr
― mullygrubbr (bulbs), Monday, 13 June 2005 09:21 (twenty years ago)
This is incurate. Robert Whyatt has a very firm hold of melody and has composed many tuneful ones of them, for instances Building Ships, even though that was not composed by him, but it is not my fault that he chooses, his brain having been damaged by paralyse and Marxist, to obltierate his songs with freeform pig honking that should be confirmed to his farm, not put on a records paid for with our hard-earned cash.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Monday, 13 June 2005 09:29 (twenty years ago)
Is Shanks and Bigfoot's Sweet Like Chocolate the only thing of worth the UK grime scene will ever produce? Do you think Phats and Smalls showed a way melodic forward for the hip hop genre as a whole?
― elwisty (elwisty), Monday, 13 June 2005 09:29 (twenty years ago)
Death metal vs Black Metal
Whose best?
Regards,
Bidfurd.
― Bidfurd, Monday, 13 June 2005 09:34 (twenty years ago)
Sorry, but Smells Like Chocolate does not accrue to the rules of grime. Neither this nor You Looking Kinda Dumb To Me by Fatboy Smalls can be interpret to be properly melodic, as they are merrely four-4 bar loops of work stolen from other writers and superb imposed on a monotonos syncopate dance beat. The only worthwhile thing the grime secne will ever produce is when all these noisome braggarts have shot each other dead decease. Then parhaps we might get a piece of quiet... :)
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Monday, 13 June 2005 10:06 (twenty years ago)
No metal is best apart from melodic metal. Neither Death nor Black Metal contains melodic contents and are mirely offensive-sounding retched noise of no value to whosever. Metal is only value able can when allyd to melody, for instance Deaf Leopards Photograph and tender ballad Change The World by Ossie Osbourne.
― Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Monday, 13 June 2005 10:08 (twenty years ago)
Timely revive.
― Hupi Bojangls, Thursday, 27 September 2007 17:32 (eighteen years ago)
Dear Frogscock,
"Ether" or "Takeover"?
― The Reverend, Thursday, 27 September 2007 23:03 (eighteen years ago)
Comstock isn't on ILM anymore, but I guess Marcello would be able to answer for him.
― Geir Hongro, Thursday, 27 September 2007 23:14 (eighteen years ago)
maracas.jpg
― deej, Thursday, 27 September 2007 23:15 (eighteen years ago)
Oh haha! I forgot about maracas.jpg. I guess Marcello isn't here, either.
― The Reverend, Friday, 28 September 2007 00:16 (eighteen years ago)