Nina Simone-"I Put a Spell on You" Charlie Mingus, "Haitian Fight Song" John Lennon, "Imagine" Beethoven, "Ode to Joy" (and whole Ninth Symphony) Chet Baker, "My Funny Valentine"
A Girl, a Boy, and a Graveyard by Jeremy Messersmith The Dream (from 'Total Recall') by Jerry Goldsmith The Way You Look Tonight by Frank Sinatra Big Girls Don't Cry by Fergie Somewhere in Time theme by John Barry (in honor of his passing)
Take Five would have been on there if I was at home to see the CD we play twice a week at least. Stephen Foster, what a great choice. Sinatra could have been all five without much trouble.n Ditto Leonard Cohen and Tom Waits. Sean-your list sounds like the list my kids would choose. Got to get more familiar with music from this century. If I had been at home, this list would have differed substantially. But having no music with me, made me think rather than look.
the 5 cds getting most play in car and home right now are Tepid Peppermint Wonderland-Brian Jonestown Massacre High Violet-The National Attack and Release-The Black Keys Kiss Each Other Clean-Iron and Wine Kicking Against the Pricks-Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds(contains the best cover ever of a jimmy Webb song-Nicks version of By the Time I get to Phoenix)
Eric Dolphy "Sketch of Melba" (love jazz flute) at this link:http://www.npr.org/blogs/ablogsupreme/2011/02/02/133373253/agallochs-aesop-dekker-on-his-5-favorite-jazz-records
John Adams "Slonimsky's Earbox" at this link http://www.npr.org/2011/01/31/133220725/los-angeles-philharmonic-in-concert
Nina Simone, "My Baby Just Cares for Me" Morrissey, "You're the One for Me, Fatty" Erin McKeown, "To a Hammer" Beck, "Devil's Haircut" Belle & Sebastian, "Come On Sister"
Vince Gill, "Little Brother" Merle Haggard, "Big City" Brooks & Dunn, "You're Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone" Willie Nelson, "Pancho and Lefty" Charley Pride, "Please Help Me I'm Falling"
At this very moment, and I must say it will be different in five minutes: 1) LL Cool Jay: Mama Said Knock You Out (Unplugged version) 2) Audioslave: Show Me How To Live 3) Freedy Johnston: Mortician's Daughter 4) Kermit the Frog: Rainbow Connection 5) Kix: Blow My Fuse
Charlie Louvin - 'Ruby's Song' Raul Malo - 'Unbreakable' Eddie Hinton - 'The Well of Love' Paul McCartney - 'That Was Me' Sean Costello - 'No Half-Steppin''
It's true; I don't listen to much new music. By the time I find out I like a piece of music it's usually at least five years old.
I've never heard of 90% of the ones listed here, old fogey that I am. How about:
In My Room--Beach Boys I've Got You Under My Skin--Sinatra The Night Before--The Beatles Fresh Air--Quicksilver Messenger Service My Prayer--The Platters
I've been in a soul music mood lately. I'm listening to GREATEST HITS OF THE SUPREMES, GREATEST HITS OF THE FOUR TOPS, GREATEST HITS OF THE TEMPTATIONS, GREATEST HITS OF MARVIN GAYE, and GREATEST HITS OF ISAAC HAYES (2 volumes).
At this moment: George Russell: ELECTRONIC SONATA FOR SOULS LOVED BY NATURE 1969 Gil Scott-Heron: "Lady Day and John Coltrane" Brubeck Octet: "Rondo" Trusty: "Goodbye, Doctor Fate" Doc Watson: "Walk On, Boy"
Tonight at 8:30 P.M. on a very icy night in New Jersey:
The Franck Symphony in D Minor
Dvorak's Cello Concerto
Beethoven's 6th Symphony
Tonight's the Night by The Shirelles
Dawn Go Away I'm No Good For You by The Four Seasons
Most anything sung by Dick Haymes
Wait, that's 6! Best I can do at the moment. Of course, the list is subject to impulse. Great topic, Patti!
And I too love the Ode to Joy.
Wait, wait, I forgot Gilbert and Sullivan and the Anvil Chorus from Il Trovatore and most of the opera Turandot and most any movie score by John Willians, especially Superman, and Brubeck's Take Five and ...!! Fun.
Yeah, the Shirelles. Can't remember who, but someone once said that WILL YOU STILL LOVE ME TOMORROW was the best rock and roll song every. Some days I agree. Some days I pick TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT.
Or maybe WHY DO FOOLS FALL IN LOVE by Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers.
Actually I'm listening to the theme from the film SILVERADO right now.
Forgot too, the Brandenburg Concertos - HOW COULD I??? Ha!
Patricia Abbott is the author of more than 125 stories that have appeared online, in print journals and in various anthologies. She is the author of two print novels CONCRETE ANGEL (2015) and SHOT IN DETROIT (2016)(Polis Books). CONCRETE ANGEL was nominated for an Anthony and Macavity Award in 2016. SHOT IN DETROIT was nominated for an Edgar Award and an Anthony Award in 2017. A collection of her stories I BRING SORROW AND OTHER STORIES OF TRANSGRESSION will appear in 2018.
She also authored two ebooks, MONKEY JUSTICE and HOME INVASION and co-edited DISCOUNT NOIR. She won a Derringer award for her story "My Hero." She lives outside Detroit.
Patricia (Patti) Abbott
SHOT IN DETROIT
Edgar Nominee 2017, Anthony nominee 2017
CONCRETE ANGEL
Polis Books, 2015-nominated for the Anthony and Macavity Awards
27 comments:
Stephen Foster's "Hard Times Come Again No More" as sung by Side by Side (Doris Justis & Sean McGee).
A Girl, a Boy, and a Graveyard by Jeremy Messersmith
The Dream (from 'Total Recall') by Jerry Goldsmith
The Way You Look Tonight by Frank Sinatra
Big Girls Don't Cry by Fergie
Somewhere in Time theme by John Barry (in honor of his passing)
Mahler’s Titan
David Brubeck’s, Take Five
Tom Waits, On the Nickel
Les Miserables, Bring him Home
Cream, Spoonful
Buckcherry "Dead"
The Racontuers "Attention"
Black Crowes "Descending"
Athenrye "The Sam Song"
Alice in Chains "Check My Brain"
Patti - Oh, I must admit, I love too much music too much to pick just five songs - even for right now. But I do love Ode to Joy...
Ambition - Subway Sect
Foreign Affairs - Tom Waits
Sons Of The Silent Age - David Bowie
Rowch Rumble - The Fall
Adultery -The Scars
Ditto on "Ode to Joy" and also ditto on not possibly being able to narrow it down to five.
It changes from day to day and mood to mood.
Jeff M.
Take Five would have been on there if I was at home to see the CD we play twice a week at least. Stephen Foster, what a great choice.
Sinatra could have been all five without much trouble.n Ditto Leonard Cohen and Tom Waits.
Sean-your list sounds like the list my kids would choose. Got to get more familiar with music from this century.
If I had been at home, this list would have differed substantially. But having no music with me, made me think rather than look.
the 5 cds getting most play in car and home right now are
Tepid Peppermint Wonderland-Brian Jonestown Massacre
High Violet-The National
Attack and Release-The Black Keys
Kiss Each Other Clean-Iron and Wine
Kicking Against the Pricks-Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds(contains the best cover ever of a jimmy Webb song-Nicks version of By the Time I get to Phoenix)
Eric Dolphy "Sketch of Melba" (love jazz flute) at this link:http://www.npr.org/blogs/ablogsupreme/2011/02/02/133373253/agallochs-aesop-dekker-on-his-5-favorite-jazz-records
John Adams "Slonimsky's Earbox" at this link http://www.npr.org/2011/01/31/133220725/los-angeles-philharmonic-in-concert
(see a trend?)
Winter, Mvt. 1 by Vivaldi
Untitled No 3 by Sigur Ros
Cold Song by Sting
That's what was tickling my fancy at work today, but in the car on the ride home it was The Four Seasons & Johhny Mathis, so go figure.
You are just trying to make an old lady feel good, Sean.
Right now, eh?
Nina Simone, "My Baby Just Cares for Me"
Morrissey, "You're the One for Me, Fatty"
Erin McKeown, "To a Hammer"
Beck, "Devil's Haircut"
Belle & Sebastian, "Come On Sister"
Vince Gill, "Little Brother"
Merle Haggard, "Big City"
Brooks & Dunn, "You're Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone"
Willie Nelson, "Pancho and Lefty"
Charley Pride, "Please Help Me I'm Falling"
Much too difficult: on a day like today every single one might be The Fall. A momentary slice:
50 year Old Man - The Fall
Post-Break-Up Sex - Vaccines
The Smiles - Bisonics
You're The One - Kate Bush
At Last - Etta James
and five minutes from now a completely different list...
And I should add that Lady Gaga's Fame Monster double CD has not left the car for months.
At this very moment, and I must say it will be different in five minutes:
1) LL Cool Jay: Mama Said Knock You Out (Unplugged version)
2) Audioslave: Show Me How To Live
3) Freedy Johnston: Mortician's Daughter
4) Kermit the Frog: Rainbow Connection
5) Kix: Blow My Fuse
Jeremy-you are way too cool for me,
The restm I recognize some of them. Nina Simon, Mississippi Goddamn also a contender,
Today, at this moment:
B52s: Girl from Ipanema Goes to Greenland
REM: Superman
David Bowie: Golden Years
Bitter:Sweet: The Mating Game
Lindesfarne: Lady Eleanore
Tomorrow it will all be different. Hell, in five minutes it'll be different!
Charlie Louvin - 'Ruby's Song'
Raul Malo - 'Unbreakable'
Eddie Hinton - 'The Well of Love'
Paul McCartney - 'That Was Me'
Sean Costello - 'No Half-Steppin''
It's true; I don't listen to much new music. By the time I find out I like a piece of music it's usually at least five years old.
I've never heard of 90% of the ones listed here, old fogey that I am. How about:
In My Room--Beach Boys
I've Got You Under My Skin--Sinatra
The Night Before--The Beatles
Fresh Air--Quicksilver Messenger Service
My Prayer--The Platters
But because of the Internet, I have discovered many new CDs or groups.
One of the good things about it.
I've been in a soul music mood lately. I'm listening to GREATEST HITS OF THE SUPREMES, GREATEST HITS OF THE FOUR TOPS, GREATEST HITS OF THE TEMPTATIONS, GREATEST HITS OF MARVIN GAYE, and GREATEST HITS OF ISAAC HAYES (2 volumes).
At this moment:
George Russell: ELECTRONIC SONATA FOR SOULS LOVED BY NATURE 1969
Gil Scott-Heron: "Lady Day and John Coltrane"
Brubeck Octet: "Rondo"
Trusty: "Goodbye, Doctor Fate"
Doc Watson: "Walk On, Boy"
Tonight at 8:30 P.M. on a very icy night in New Jersey:
The Franck Symphony in D Minor
Dvorak's Cello Concerto
Beethoven's 6th Symphony
Tonight's the Night by The Shirelles
Dawn Go Away I'm No Good For You by The Four Seasons
Most anything sung by Dick Haymes
Wait, that's 6! Best I can do at the moment. Of course, the list is subject to impulse. Great topic, Patti!
And I too love the Ode to Joy.
Wait, wait, I forgot Gilbert and Sullivan and the Anvil Chorus from Il Trovatore and most of the opera Turandot and most any movie score by John Willians, especially Superman, and Brubeck's Take Five and ...!! Fun.
God, THE SHIRELLES. I think they were perhaps my favorite group at age 12 or so. I knew the lyrics to every song.
Yeah, the Shirelles. Can't remember who, but someone once said that WILL YOU STILL LOVE ME TOMORROW was the best rock and roll song every. Some days I agree. Some days I pick TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT.
Or maybe WHY DO FOOLS FALL IN LOVE by Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers.
Actually I'm listening to the theme from the film SILVERADO right now.
Forgot too, the Brandenburg Concertos - HOW COULD I??? Ha!
Post a Comment