black moth super rainbow
Posted: Wed Oct 31, 2012 1:10 pm
What you don't know can't hurt them.
https://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/
https://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/viewtopic.php?t=10211
Bravo!!Allegro wrote:
< Music from a Tree | Diego Stocco
Drew, I love the video--very psychedelic, actually. Also love The New Pharaos; “The Pharaos' Theme” is going into my repertoire! And, you beat me to the Walker Bros./Wrecking Crew answer, and in much fuller detail with new tunes, thanks. Scott Walker now lives somewhere not far from me, in B.C. Canada I think; my drummer friend, who is a big Walker Bros. fan, met him a couple years ago.
The "Faeries Aire" sheet was something I found on the Internet awhile back. Then just the other day, I was looking at it and wondering if anyone had actually tried to play it---so thanks for answering that! And I knew nothing about John Stump, thanks for the link to his son's page---Stump sounds like a real character.Allegro wrote:Who was composer, John Stump (d 2006),
who “arranged by accident” words and music?
Elvis posted
Of course, someone on an electronic keyboard
with I guess a midi attempted to follow the score
^ the result begins at mark 0.41,if you wish.
POST 2803
I consult YouTube often when there's an old song I want to transcribe or learn on guitar. Sometimes I listen over and over, for big and little things that I might want to include in my own rendition. The latest one is this:Allegro wrote:Elvis : What are you listening to right now?
Randy Bachman (of the Guess Who) does this terrific weekly radio show---from his living room couch with a guitar in his lap. He plays old pop music, tells stories about the songs, artists, musicians, studios and tours etc, and plays the guitar to help explain things like musical hooks, rhythms and chord changes. If you like pop music (from the 1950s through the '60s, '70s and beyond), and like hearing interesting bits of its history, this program is a must-listen.Friday November 2, 2012
Leiber & Stoller #1
This week Randy Bachman puts extra money in the meter as the Vinyl Tap virtual taxi stops once again in front of the 11-story Brill building at 1619 Broadway in New York for the first of two programs featuring the music of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. The first big hit they co-wrote was "Hound Dog", recorded first by Big Mama Thornton and then most famously by Elvis. Jerry wrote the words and Mike wrote the music completing the song in just twelve minutes.
With the success of that song, Leiber and Stoller were off on a wild ride down the rock and roll highway as one of the most successful and influential song-writing duos in pop music.
Their hit songs have been recorded by musicians including Elvis, The Drifters, The Coasters, Ben E King, Peggy Lee, The Exciters, Stealer's Wheel and many others.
Don't get stuck in the middle or in Kansas City or even in a riot in cell block #9...tune in to the Tap.
Thanks, Elvis. I'm listening now.Elvis wrote:http://www.cbc.ca/vinyltap/Friday November 2, 2012
Leiber & Stoller #1