Re: OT: What are you listening to?
Posted: Thu Feb 8, 2024 5:42 pm
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tecumseh18 wrote:mdenny wrote:I actually don't know who Chris Boucher is?
Power forward for the Toronto Raptors, an NBA team founded in 1995. Boucher seems like a kid, but is already in his 30s and will never, ever get better.
I was trying to draw a basketball analogy. I believe Bill Simmons coined the term "jaw-drop upside potential" 10 or 15 years ago, to describe exciting 18 or 19 year old rookies or draft prospects. As a musician, Jacob Collier is undoubtedly jaw-dropping, and has been for a decade. But he hasn't had any hit songs, and at the age of 29 isn't likely to have any in the future. He's too old to have jaw-drop upside potential as a songwriter. When the Beatles were at an average age of 29, they recorded their last album - Abbey Road.
The whole idea of 'hit songs' is different now though. Culture is fragmented now. It used to be the case that everyone was familiar with the same hit songs whether they liked them or not. There used to be cultural gatekeepers that maintained a shared public awareness of emerging culture. Now....the average person can't recall ever hearing the song that wins 'record of the year'. So that's not really a relevant metric anymore.I love Prince but he's not seeing Jacob on ANY instrument and it's not particularly close.
We'll just have to agree to disagree on that. You are aware that Prince plays the guitar, right?
I love Prince. Have his records. Have seen him perform. I'm well aware he played guitar. BTW....he invested ALOT of time specifically in his guitar playing during the late 90s and 00s. So he was really only a great guitar player during the latter stages of his career. But like I said....there is not a single instrument, guitar or anything else, that Prince is even coming close to Jacob in terms of skill. That's just a function of Jacob coming from a jazz background. And yes....I saw Prince perform wherein he goes from Bass to guitar to conga drum to keyboards etc etc. Highly impressive but it's really not close.
revisit Jacob's cover of 'all night long' and peep his piano solo after the orchestra breakdown. Starts at around the 5:00 mark. It's just a different level because of the jazz background.I viewed an interview with Hans Zimmer on youtube a couple weeks ago where he was saying that what Jacob is doing with harmony is singular and unique.
So perhaps movie soundtracks are in his future. But someone like Danny Elfman has a strong sense of melody. Harmony is only important once you have the melody. That was the Beatles' (and Brian Wilson's) genius. Speaking of Abbey Road, listen to "Because", especially the Love album's a capella version. Listen to McCartney's high harmony part. Wow. And of course, Brian Wilson sang the high parts that made the Beach Boys great.
Jacob and Hans Zimmer already did work together on a movie score but i haven't checked it out yet. It was for a cartoon movie...like a family genre thing.
the Beatles 'Because' is definitely beautiful. So is the beach boys 'in my room'. Again.....Jacob's harmonies are just on a completely different level from them too. In fact....I believe Jacob did a cover of 'in my room' (not sure about that but I think so). Paul Mccartney has also praised Jacob in the press by the way.He performed on Jimmy kimmel last week and it was pretty dope. Gospel tune that he did with kirk Franklin - first single off the new album.
Thanks, I just watched it. Nice gospelly stuff, but in no way a "single". No catchy hooks/riffs. No beat. I mean, who is the audience?
It's actually frustrating to me as a hack musician who has written a bunch of songs that went nowhere. But I'd honestly rather listen to my songs - at least the instrumental parts - than Colliers'. That's not right, he should be a WAY better songwriter than me. His refusal to write a damn pop hook must be intentional. What a waste of talent.
tecumseh18 wrote:bballsparkin wrote:Bump.
I heard it. I like it. sue me.Spoiler:
How the hell do you come across stuff like this and Re-Stoned? Does the youtube algorithm send it to you?
bballsparkin wrote:tecumseh18 wrote:bballsparkin wrote:Bump.
I heard it. I like it. sue me.Spoiler:
How the hell do you come across stuff like this and Re-Stoned? Does the youtube algorithm send it to you?
In case you haven't looked into it here's a link. Since you seem to like stoner music.
https://ciut.fm/shows-by-day/psychedelic-stoner-rock-extravaganza/
This weeks set was pretty good. I'm listening to it now. But haven't checked to see if it's been uploaded.
bballsparkin wrote:^^^I think that stoner mix is put together by Ken Stowar the Acting Station Manager. Jason Palma is still doing his show Higher Ground Thursdays 8-10pm. He's great agreed. Medicine Man is before him Thursdays 6-8 on No Man's Land. Another great show. I got my good friend listening to that weekly. I'd venture to say Thursdays has the best shows. It's pretty solid all day long.
https://ciut.fm/schedule/
mdenny wrote:bballsparkin wrote:^^^I think that stoner mix is put together by Ken Stowar the Acting Station Manager. Jason Palma is still doing his show Higher Ground Thursdays 8-10pm. He's great agreed. Medicine Man is before him Thursdays 6-8 on No Man's Land. Another great show. I got my good friend listening to that weekly. I'd venture to say Thursdays has the best shows. It's pretty solid all day long.
https://ciut.fm/schedule/
Yah I'm pretty sure Ken IS medicine man.
Cbc radio has pretty good content every weekday. There's an evening drive show that is mostly rnb (not billboard stuff, lots of indie Canadian artists) that is usually good. 6 to 9. Then a shoe called "after dark" which is really eclectic. Gospel, jazz, indie rock, electronic. Runs the whole gamut. I think it's 9 to 12. So good music every night from 6 to 12.