VGFacts

Full Version: The Music Thread
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
The finest tune, now performed live.




EDIT -
From this livestream. What a top guy, I hope he manages to kick cancer's ass.
The Nutshack? Snow Halation? Donald Trump?? BAH, screw that, 'We are Number one' is the best meme of 2016!!
(12-17-2016, 11:50 AM)Space Jockey Wrote: [ -> ]The Nutshack? Snow Halation? Donald Trump?? BAH, screw that, 'We are Number one' is the best meme of 2016!!

Dat key change.
So, 2016 is nearly over, and I don't see any new big releases coming up to talk about. So, I figured I'd give out a little on my top 5 albums of the year. Note my musical choices are generally a little off, so proceed with caution.

5: Neon by Savlonic
So, I have always enjoyed the more classic age of Synth-pop, including such acts from the late 70s and early 80s as Gary Numan, OMD, John Foxx, Depeche Mode and the like. I also feel that in recent years, somewhere along the way, some of the soul and vibrancy of electronic music has been lost, focusing more on a danceable beat than creating a mood or feeling.
This is why, to me, as a fan of electronic music, Savlonic has been a breath of fresh air. Sure, it started out as a side project of a comedy youtube channel, but that has only helped the growth of the fictional band to be more organic. And while Mr. Weebl's music has always been a little goofy, he decided to try to foray into a more adult-themed and regular album here.

Savlonic has been the perfect opportunity for such a progression. Ever since that first song from around 2009, the Savlonic project has just grown over time. This is the second official Savlonic album, and it blooms and swells. It may be electronic, but it is firmly routed in other traditional songwriting techniques. It doesn't have anyone it really needs to answer to either, being funded entirely by Kickstarter (like the first album). If you want a slice of electro-pop without having to feel the bulsing beat of EDM, you can have your nostalgia here: serviced from a fictional youtube band.
4: The Glowing Man by Swans
Swans have been an oddity for it's entire existence, and frontman Micheal Gira has never been afraid to sound wholly unique. From the early days, they were a collection of abrasive noise, meant to shake you to your very core. Now, over 30 years later, Micheal Gira continues to experiment, but with longer and longer melodies, blending noises together into a new form of noise, just more controlled and beautiful than the anger of his youth.

While their last two albums "To Be Kind" and "The Seer" (which were also both critically acclaimed on all fronts) combined that original drudge with these longer repetitions, "The Glowing Man" actually has much more subtlety. While those two other albums certainly had their little nuances, it was difficult to pick them out of the drone. Hear, you can hear the vocals, the guitars, the bells, the layering of drums in a much clearer balance. While it still prefer "The Seer" over this effort, the progression and willingness to change can still be heard. That is why I believe Swans has always been a force in the music world and will continue to do so with whatever the next step of Micheal Gira and crew proves to be. (Note this album is a good 2 hours long and is NOT for casual listening, probably more so than anything else on this list. I mean, the song I'm linking is a half hour long.)
3: Skeleton Tree by Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds
Another legendary act here, which helped form the genre of post-punk (which, without post-punk, the entire alternative scene that exists would never have actually been born.) However, Nick Cave and crew have always been able to walk a fine line between an easy listening act and pushing what can be accomplished lyrically and sonically.

Skeleton Tree is probably the group's most ambient work yet, and is an incredibly mature affair at the same time. Much of the album deals with the fairly recent death of Nick Cave's son Arthur. It's very sparesly populated here, and the burdening lyrics fall even deeper in the void with Nick's smooth voice. It's touching, painful and poetic all at once.
2: My Woman by Angel Olsen
Here! Take a newer singer for my list please! Ok, in reality, Angel Olsen is basically a lo-fi indie darling. But, at the same time, she can just let her voice linger nearly perfectly, as if honey dripping down slowly. It may be a lo-fi, non nuanced, sound, but it is also uniquely hers.

What sets "My Woman" apart from her past two full albums is an approach to purposely break away and confuse past listeners of her music. While it is still very clearly a lo-fi record, it catches bits and pieces from synth-pop and straight up pop melodies. However, it continues to do so with just oddly arranged structures combined with a highly untraditional band structure itself. The end result is haunting and ghostly, yet totally glorious.
1: Blackstar by David Bowie
If you aren't familiar with who David Bowie was, I'm not sure I can help you here. There is simply to much to his amazing career and life to try to put into a few short words, so let's just cut to the chase: Blackstar was an amazing album.

I had pre-ordered a copy of Blackstar and received it the day of release. After the music video releases, I had been entralled by this return to form. Every inch of this record just oozed with a feeling of "I can do whatever I wish to do", and it drifts with amazing horns. David Bowie's voice touches to the very heart, especially in the final track "I Can't Give Everything Away".

Then David Bowie died two days after it's release from terminal cancer, and we all realized the album was meant to be a final goodbye.

Suddenly, lyrics such as "Look up here man, I'm in heaven" struck like hammer. This was more than just a collection of good songs, it was a summation of his whole life. In his life, he was an entertainer. In his death, he gave us all one last time to ponder and think. I can't think of a more beautiful goodbye that a musician has ever given.
Welllllllp.
Sadly, George Micheal has passed away on Christmas day at only 53 years old. Too soon, and may he R.I.P.
(12-25-2016, 07:42 PM)CosmykTheDolfyn Wrote: [ -> ]Welllllllp.
Sadly, George Micheal has passed away on Christmas day at only 53 years old. Too soon, and may he R.I.P.

Came here to share the news. It sucks, that's all I have to say.
My mother was pretty shocked with the news.

She told me that she met him back in the 70's/80's or so and he was a very kind and modest man. He only had one record out at the time and wasn't very famous. My mother was working as a Nurse and his mother was in the hospital dying of cancer. He used to visit every night, and would make small talk with the nurses, my mother included.

He used to bring food and drink to the nurses and doctors who were working at the time. My mother told me that she used to discuss how working in shoes that nurses wear were a pain and really killed their feet. When his mother finally passed, he bought ever Nurse at the hospital a pair of expensive clarks shoes so they could wear them instead of the ones they currently wear.

He was a very kind man, and while I didn't listen to any of his music he deserves respect. May he rest in peace.
It's just so weird the random crap I remember at work when I'm just doing mundane tasks and not really thinking about anything.

When I was a really, really little kid I was a Weird Al fanatic. I'm not really sure what the circumstances were, but one day my mom tells me that he was going to perform a free concert in a city about an hour away. I got super excited and asked if she would take me since it was on a weekend. She pretended to think about it before saying "No" and not giving a good reason.

We weren't doing anything that day and she even found a channel on TV that was showing him perform; hardly anyone was even there.

I have never been to a single concert in my life and I know that would have been something I'd have always remembered if she hadn't used it to torture and disappoint me instead.
Man,i forgot that i ever listened to this.
(12-12-2016, 10:56 AM)SERIOUSLY THOUGH Wrote: [ -> ]The finest tune, now performed live.




EDIT -
From this livestream. What a top guy, I hope he manages to kick cancer's ass.

Now its got an electro swing remix.
One of the true pioneers of what would become rock and roll. Dear lord, could she ever pick a guitar. Sister Rosetta Tharpe started all the way back in the 30's and was a big influence on Elvis, Chuck Berry, Little Richard and many more. Sad that she has been mostly forgotten, while many that said that they got their start because of listening to her are still household names.


Cab Calloway still had it in him when he was on The Blues Brothers.
Here is a classic from Mason Williams.



I like the acoustic version even more.

Saints Row has made me realize how many songs I have forgotten about.



And now I really want to watch Gen 1 of Transformers.
^ that's awesome. BUT, which song is your fave? I've only played SR3, so my choice is...