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Macklemore & Ryan Lewis - Thrift Shop ?
Best Song ever!
(Contains Profanity)
    Newton Faulkner - Write It on Your Skin

    He is developing into quite a good songwriter
      Bruno Mars - locked out of heaven ?
        Van Halen - A different kind of truth.....
        firstly I need to publicly apologize to my neighbours within a 30km radius...you will be listening to this for some time to come... :dance: :woohoo: :applause:
        if you listen to this at low volume its AT YOUR OWN RISK...... :yup:
          10cc - Bloody Tourists

          I know this Album didn't go down with the 10cc purists as Godley and Creme had left the band but there is some good song writing on this album

          Even the hit single "Bloody Tourists" (that was killed by the radio and the SA Cricket Board who used the song to promote cricket tours!) is a very cleverly written 'pop song'.
          Eric Stewart really shines as a songwriter, vocalist and decent guitarist

          I thought they did well without the quirkiness of Godley and Creme
            The entire RHCP discography! Too excited. :bopping: :dance: :woohoo:
              Squonk wrote: 10cc - Bloody Tourists

              I know this Album didn't go down with the 10cc purists as Godley and Creme had left the band but there is some good song writing on this album

              Even the hit single "Bloody Tourists" (that was killed by the radio and the SA Cricket Board who used the song to promote cricket tours!) is a very cleverly written 'pop song'.
              Eric Stewart really shines as a songwriter, vocalist and decent guitarist

              I thought they did well without the quirkiness of Godley and Creme
              Stewart and Gouldman wrote great singles and were involved in most of 10cc's hits. Gouldman had a serious track record as a writer of hits before 10cc having penned hit songs for The Yardbirds, the Hollies and Herman's Hermits (the rather good "No Milk Today").
                Various; I just loaded my playlist with the likes of Aerosmith, Boston, Van Halen, Metallica, Kansas, Def Leppard, Led Zeppelin, ZZ Top, Rolling Stones and quite a few others.

                Just letting it run 8)

                Billy Idol - Dancing with myself is playing as I type.
                  Dimitri Nutt wrote: Billy Idol - Dancing with myself is playing as I type.
                  Don't take it too literally ?
                    Kings of Jazz Guitar

                    A compilation I picked up at Microgram

                    Featuring Freddie Green, Eddie Durham, Charlie Christian, Django Reinhardt, Lonnie Johnson, Tony Mottola, Carl Kress, Al Casey, Teddy Bunn

                      Squonk wrote:
                      Dimitri Nutt wrote: Billy Idol - Dancing with myself is playing as I type.
                      Don't take it too literally ?
                      With the vibe in my office, I may just have to ?
                        just got two new albums - metallica's death magnetic and soundgarden's king animal. having a blast with both, although the soundgarden album is more reminiscent of cornell's work with the rage guys in audioslave than his past with soundgarden. just my humble opinion. still enjoying. loving the metallica, it's like a breath of fresh air after all that bull they pulled between load and st anger. with the exception of s&m.
                        dh
                          Nick Drake - Way to Blue
                            Squonk wrote: Nick Drake - Way to Blue
                            The song or the compilation?
                              X-rated Bob wrote:
                              Squonk wrote: Nick Drake - Way to Blue
                              The song or the compilation?
                              Compilation - it's good stuff
                                so i dont know what kind of music it is but it's Shovels and Ropes - O' be Joyful. But I dont care much for genres and things anyway. Chances are if you dig Imelda May then this may curl your toes the good way. But it's not the same kind of music. Well, maybe a bit sort of but not quite or at all. Please explain.
                                  Genesis Live '73

                                  I have just read a book on Genesis in their own words and Peter Gabriel and Tony Banks insist that they were never really good musicians but rather good songwriters. But listening to this album proves otherwise. Tony Banks is a great Keyboardist and especially on Mellotron, Phil Collins (as much as I can't stand him), was a decent drummer. Steve Hackett surely must be one of the most underrated Guitarists of his generation!

                                  The ironic thing is that because the songs are complex, to be able to play them you need a high level of musicianship, so Mr Banks and Gabriel I don't quite believe you!

                                  Progressive Rock at it's best - The shortest song is 8 minutes and 14 seconds


                                    Loudon Wainwright III - Career Moves. Great live album, recorded on one night in 1993. I've seen Wainwright live, and I think this album is a pretty good representation of the Wainwright in concert experience - a good mix of guffaws and big emotional punches.

                                    Shows that you don't need lots of chops to be a great performer. Indeed on most of this there isn't even a band - he gets joined by long-time sidekicks Chaim Tannenbaum and David Mansfield for a handful of songs round about the halfway mark.

                                    Opens with "Road Ode", Wainwright's riposte to Willy Nelson's "On the Road Again" and which details the dubious pleasures of life on the road.
                                      X-rated Bob wrote: Loudon Wainwright III - Career Moves. Great live album, recorded on one night in 1993. I've seen Wainwright live, and I think this album is a pretty good representation of the Wainwright in concert experience - a good mix of guffaws and big emotional punches.

                                      Shows that you don't need lots of chops to be a great performer. Indeed on most of this there isn't even a band - he gets joined by long-time sidekicks Chaim Tannenbaum and David Mansfield for a handful of songs round about the halfway mark.

                                      Opens with "Road Ode", Wainwright's riposte to Willy Nelson's "On the Road Again" and which details the dubious pleasures of life on the road.
                                      Sounds like a must for my collection