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crisp

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Posts posted by crisp

  1. I noticed on PopMarket that the Electric Light Orchestra Complete Album set is for $49.99. That's eleven cds for the price. I'm really thinking of pulling the trigger on this one.

    Yeah, I bought the box set this morning.

    Congratulations. It's a good set. I got mine on Amazon UK for about the same price. Never thought I would want more than the Greatest Hits and Out of the Blue, but there's lots of good pop on those albums.

  2. Conversely there are standards that never seem to grate no matter how often they are played. I've never been particularly for or against Tenderly, but when I uploaded a load of my albums to iTunes I was surprised at how often it came up. Practically every major singer, musician and orchestra seems to have recorded it, yet it's never worn out its welcome (at least as far as I'm concerned).

    Again, though, I wonder what the appeal is. It's a nice tune, but nothing special.

  3. Vocalion has just announced a bunch of new pop releases, including big band albums by Syd Lawrence and Si Zentner. But the best news is that the next batch of jazz releases will be coming in May -- titles TBA. The home page is here.

  4. Another song that kind of grates on me is The Way You Look Tonight.

    Wow. That's my favourite song. Goes to show, etc.

    There's a difference between standards that are overplayed and those that one simply doesn't like. I've always liked My Funny Valentine, but it's performed far too much, or at least it once was.

    There are four standards I've never seen the point of as I find the tunes colourless and depressing:

    Willow Weep for Me

    Old Folks

    Darn That Dream

    and the absolute worst stinker of all time:

    Summertime

    I suppose all these have interesting chords or something, otherwise I can't imagine why musicians keep playing them.

  5. That's actually not a bad price for that much music. I don't own any Dylan, though, and I'm not sure if I'd take the plunge in that way. I've been monitoring prices on the mono box, however.

  6. It's funny, there's no standard as to what "standard" really means. You got "standards", "jazz standards", "jazz originals", on and on.

    And when something gets lyrics..."Stain Doll" falls into all categories!

    It's a much-misused term. Jazz critics have a habit of referring to any song from outside jazz as a standard, even if it's relatively obscure. Another popular misnomer is "showtune". I'd say a standard is any song that gets performed so often that everybody recognises it.

    (Stain Doll? There are some mucky lyrics for that one ;) )

  7. The bonus tracks are usually included because the versions used are typically the most recent rather than new remasters. In some cases you might get a whole extra album where an old two-on-one release has been used; for example the three-disc Aretha Franklin contains an unlisted Soft and Beautiful and the five-disc Henry Mancini also has Arabesque. It's a great series if you are new to the music or are filling gaps.

    King Ubu's point is pertinent: Popmarket's more expensive Complete Albums Collection series is making some of these OACs redundant (eg, the Brubecks), so follow your instincts carefully.

  8. From what I've read the channel -- its archive screenings, original documentaries and comedies -- will certainly be kept, but its original dramas will go. That makes sense to me. I'm not sure how many more quirky biopics of dead celebrities the public can tolerate. In any case there seems to be more of an appetite for that on BBC2 these days.

  9. I already do enough stuff which bores me, so it's been ditched.

    Well put. One shouldn't be afraid of abandoning books one finds dull just because they are highly rated.

    Now reading Nelson ALgren's "Man With The Golden Arm"

    I liked this one, although it's a little stodgy; it could have done with an edit. If you enjoy it, I recommend you try A Walk on the Wild Side, which is much better.

  10. You surprise me Crisp. Those three novels, published collectively as 'Smiley vs Karla' are easily my favourite Le Carre's and are generally regarded as not only his best work but the best of the genre. While they all have complex plots I never found them particularly difficult to follow, just superb storytelling.

    Perhaps because I'm a journalist, I'm rather into simple, solid sentences these days, so perhaps that's part of the problem I had with Tinker. As I said, I didn't read the others, although I started Schoolboy before abandoning it. I'm currently reading Somerset Maugham's The Razor's Edge, which has a complicated structure and grapples with some quite ineffable themes but is a masterpiece of clarity. The odd Oxford comma aside, each sentence is beautifully composed.

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