"L"
Rules clarification--it's not strictly first-come-first-served. If someone else already requested something you want, ask for it anyway and I'll try to split things up fairly.
For some reason there are a lot of "I thought I liked this artist but it turns out I didn't" and "I tried to like this artist but it never happened" things in the "L" section.
Well, you can see how that happened.
Previously: "T", "S", videotapes, the rules.
For some reason there are a lot of "I thought I liked this artist but it turns out I didn't" and "I tried to like this artist but it never happened" things in the "L" section.
- John Lurie Fishing with John. From the TV show.
- The Jessica Lurie Ensemble !Zipa Buka!. Could be a relative--similarly on the edge between jazz and other things.
- Living Daylights Electric Rosary. Another Jessica Lurie ensemble.
- The Living Daylights Give Till It Hurts. Not the same band!
Well, you can see how that happened.
Luscious Jackson "Naked Eye". I love this song. Three mixes, one of them instrumental.
dougoLuscious Jackson, Fever In Fever Out. The album it's from. Produced by Daniel Lanois.
stragglyr_chrisLuscious Jackson, Electric Honey. The album after it. "Nervous Breakthrough" and "Ladyfingers" were good.
dougoLuscious Jackson, Natural Ingredients. The album before it. Beats me.
dougo- Arto Lindsay Mundo Civilizado. Bossa Nova meets electronica, falls ill, drifts downstream. Cover songs by Al Green and Prince, and one cowritten with Marisa Monte; DJ Spooky and Vinicius Cantuaria and Marc Ribot and Don Byron all appear.
- Arto Lindsay Hyper Civilizado. Remixes of the above.
- Arto Lindsay Noon Chill. More.
Low Songs for a Dead Pilot. People keep telling me I should like Low, and from everything I've read, I completely agree, which is why I've bought four or five CDs by them, none of which has really grabbed me. Hey, I hear they've got a new one out.
dougo- Low Pop Suicide The Death of Excellence. I bought this because I liked Rick Boston's work on the Rickie Lee Jones album Ghostyhead. I still do. But this isn't much like it.
- k.d. lang all you can eat. The followup to Ingenue.
- Caroline Lavelle Brilliant Midnight. Kind of new-agey? But with beats? Okay, I don't remember. Her previous album was pretty great though.
- Donna Lewis "I Love You Always Forever". What can I say? It hooked me. Radio mix, annoying remix, and two non-album tracks.
- Keith Little Distant Land to Roam. Terrific bluegrass guitarist and singer.
Lu Lu and the Cowtippers (s/t). Blues-rock, I think? Saw them in San Luis Obispo once.
rutemple- Mary Lou Lord Got No Shadow. I remember Park Street.
- Laura Love Octoroon. Exciting, genre-bending funky pop-folk. Also, she's a bass player!
- The Love Dogs I'm Yo Dog. Swing revivalists, it says here.
- Joe Locke Slander (And Other Love Songs). Jazz vibraphone. Includes songs by Stevie Wonder, Lalo Schifrin, and Joni Mitchell, and plenty of originals. Oh and an Elvis song.
- The Joe Locke Quartet Moment to Moment. Henry Mancini tribute.
Divination Ambient Dub, Vol. 2: Dead Slow. Bill Laswell by any other name.Dave S.- Steve Lacy Reflections. Few people have played Thelonious Monk's music more than Steve Lacy; here, for example.
- Patrick Leonard Rivers. More fishing music.
- Jason Lindner Premonitions. Big band music in the year 2000.
Erik Lindgren Scores! Chamber music from a former Birdsong of the Mesozoic. Features Liza Scriggins, who has a wonderful name, plays a mean viola, and, I'm pretty sure, was a featured soloist in the debut performance of my sole big band composition. Or was it only a dream?
rutemple
Previously: "T", "S", videotapes, the rules.
Luscious Jackson, Fever In Fever Out
Re: Luscious Jackson, Fever In Fever Out
Re: Luscious Jackson, Fever In Fever Out
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No one comes to mind. Sell it, I guess.
Erik Lindgren, Scores!
Stories: we connected 'cos someone, I think
I'll swap you some tracks of cool 14th century tunes if you like, including a cool modern version of Douce Dame Jolie classified as, I kid you not, Rock.
I think you'll like em.
Re: Erik Lindgren, Scores!
And no need for exchange, really. My main goal here is lightening my load. Someday when I'm settling in again you can surprise me.
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By the way, I'm trying not to second-guess my discard decisions (most of which were made a few years ago, and then I stored the CDs somewhere out of the way and didn't actually discard them), but I just took a listen to this one. I mostly like it, but I think everything I like about it is done at least as well on the Lounge Lizards record Queen of All Ears, with less of what I don't like. (A lot of the short cues that would work well as score music don't do much for me on the CD.) So I can give this one up.
If you haven't heard Queen of All Ears, I recommend it. It's most like the "John Lurie National Orchestra" tracks from Fishing with John--lots of repetitive pentatonic saxophone melodies. Also some shouting.
Okay, this has inspired me to move the DVD to the top of my Netflix queue.
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