Poll: Old School Music is cool

Page 166 of 176 FirstFirst ... 66116156164165166167168 ... LastLast
Results 1,651 to 1,660 of 1753

Thread: Old school music is cool!

  1. #1651
    Diamond Member Citizen X's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    lenasia
    Posts
    3,404
    Thanks
    868
    Thanked 701 Times in 613 Posts
    Juluka: Scatterlings: 1982: Lyrics and Video

    This is a special dedication to all my brothers and sisters from the Precast Informal Settlement (Ward 8 Lenasia)

    I see the inhumane conditions that you live under. I understand your plight.

    “Some people have nothing, some people have hopes and dreams , some people have ways and means”

    I understand your hopes and dreams and I’m convinced that you do have “ways and means!”

    I know you ask:
    "Who made me, here and why? --
    Beneath this copper sun."

    I am a scatterling of Africa and so are you. ‘United we stand, divided we fall.’





    Copper sun sinking low
    Scatterlings and fugitives
    Hooded eyes and weary brows
    Seek refuge in the night
    They are the scatterlings of Africa
    Each uprooted one
    On the road to Phelamanga
    Beneath the copper sun
    And I love the scatterlings of Africa
    Each and every one
    In their hearts a burning hunger
    Beneath the copper sun
    Broken wall, bicycle wheel
    African sun forging steel, singing
    Magic machine cannot match
    Human being human being
    African idea
    African idea
    make the future clear
    make the future clear
    They are the scatterlings of Africa
    Each uprooted one
    On the road to Phelamanga
    Beneath the copper sun
    And for the scatterlings of Africa
    The journey has begun
    Future find their hungry eyes
    Beneath the copper sun
    Ancient bones from Olduvai
    Echoes of the very first cry
    "Who made me, here and why? --
    Beneath this copper sun."
    My very first beginnings
    Beneath the copper sky
    Lie deeply buried
    In the dust of Olduvai
    And we are scatterlings of Africa
    Both you and I
    We are on the road to Phelamanga
    Beneath a copper sky
    And we are scatterlings of Africa
    On a journey to the stars
    Far below we leave forever
    Dreams of what we were
    Hawu beke Mama-ye! Mama-ye!
    In the beginning
    Beneath the copper sky
    Ancient bones
    In the dust of Olduvai
    Who made us, here, and why
    Remember!
    Video source: Youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2X-o7Kfqbuw
    Last edited by Citizen X; 03-Jun-17 at 02:59 PM.
    “Ubuntu is the essence of being humane" Desmond Tutu
    Spelling mistakes and/or typographical errors I found in leading publications.
    Click here
    sabbaticus

  2. #1652
    Diamond Member Citizen X's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    lenasia
    Posts
    3,404
    Thanks
    868
    Thanked 701 Times in 613 Posts
    Music trivia

    What instrument is used at the end of Bob Marley’s song “Stir it Up?”

    For several years I was under the mistaken impression that the sound at the end of the song “Stir it up,” emanated from an electric guitar. I was wrong!!!!

    That ‘wow,’ sound at the end of the song was created by a clavinet



    “The premise behind the people of Island Studios tendered to be based more on the musical aspect of recording rather than the technical excellence of the recordings. But, even technically these recordings were fabulous.” Tony Platt –Overdub and Remix Engineer Stir it up.[1]

    “The experiment was for Chris Blackwell to help Bob break into America, so we needed to add a little something that Americans were used to such as clavinets. So, Bob was ready for that. But, the thing that we were trying to do by bridging the gap between purist reggae and Americanized reggae which Americans could pallet was NOT PURIST. My parts on “ Catch a Fire,” are no- where near purists, they are an imitation of what Bob thought me to do.” John 'Rabbit,' Bundrick [2]



    Video source[3]


    [1] Documentary: Catch a Fire: 1973: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGAiJP8wwz8 (Date of use 6 June 2017)

    [2] Documentary: Catch a Fire: 1973: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGAiJP8wwz8 (Date of use 6 June 2017)

    [3] Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6U-TGahwvs. (Date of use 6 June 2017)
    “Ubuntu is the essence of being humane" Desmond Tutu
    Spelling mistakes and/or typographical errors I found in leading publications.
    Click here
    sabbaticus

  3. #1653
    Diamond Member Citizen X's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    lenasia
    Posts
    3,404
    Thanks
    868
    Thanked 701 Times in 613 Posts
    Bob Marley: Rastaman Vibration Live: Santa Babara County Bowl: 25 November 1979: Lyrics and Video

    The concert at Santa Babara County Bowl in 1979 is my favourite live performance of Bob Marley and the Wailers. The way he introduced the concert was remarkable! It took me many years to figure out where he got the mesmerizing words that introduced this concert. Fairly recently, I learnt that the origins of his introduction is from Psalm 87 of the Bible.

    He introduced the concert by saying:

    His foundations is in the Holy Mountans, Jah loveth the gates of Zion more than all the dwellings of Jacob. Glorious things have being spoken of the Old City of God. I’ll make men shine to Rahab and Babylon to them that know I.
    With the OLD Philistia, Tyre and Ethiopia, it shall be said, that this man was born there and THE HIGHEST HIMSELF SHALL ESTABLISH THE EARTH.
    Compare this to:

    Psalm 87 NIV


    “He has founded his city on the holy mountain.
    2 The Lord loves the gates of Zion
    more than all the other dwellings of Jacob.
    3 Glorious things are said of you,
    city of God:[a]
    4 [B]“I will record Rahab and Babylon
    among those who acknowledge me

    Philistia too, and Tyre, along with Cush[c]—
    and will say, ‘This one was born in Zion.’”[d]
    5 Indeed, of Zion it will be said,
    “This one and that one were born in her,
    and the Most High himself will establish her.”
    6 The Lord will write in the register of the peoples:
    “This one was born in Zion.”
    7 As they make music they will sing,
    “All my fountains are in you.””


    Live if you want to live
    (Rastaman vibration, yeah! Positive!)
    That's what we got to give!
    (I'n'I vibration yeah! Positive)
    Got to have a good vibe!
    (Iyaman Iration, yeah! Irie ites!)
    Wo-wo-ooh!
    (Positive vibration, yeah! Positive!)

    If you get down and you quarrel every-day,
    You're saying prayers to the devils, I say. Wo-oh-ooh!
    Why not help one another on the way?
    Make it much easier. (Just a little bit easier)

    Say you just can't live that negative way,
    If you know what I mean;
    Make way for the positive day,
    'Cause it's news (new day) news and days
    New time (new time), and if it's a new feelin' (new feelin'), yeah!
    Said it's a new sign (new sign):
    Oh, what a new day!

    Pickin' up?
    Are you pickin' up now?
    Jah love - Jah love (protect us)
    Jah love - Jah love (protect us)
    Jah love - Jah love (protect us)

    Rastaman vibration, yeah! (Positive!)
    I'n'I vibration, yeah! (Positive!) Uh-huh-huh, a yeah!
    Iyaman Iration, yeah! (Irie ites!) Wo-oo-oh!
    Positive vibration, yeah! (Positive!)

    Pickin' up?
    Are you pickin' up now?
    Pickin' up?
    Are you pickin' up now?
    Pickin' up? (Jah love, Jah love)
    Are you pickin' (protect us!) up now?
    Pickin' up? (Jah love, Jah love )
    Are you pickin' (protect us!) up now?
    Pickin' up? (Jah love, Jah love -)
    Are you pickin' (protect us!) up now?
    Pickin' up?
    Are you pickin' up now?
    Video source[1]


    [1] Daily Motion: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xj0...-bowl-hd_music. (Date of use 6 June 2017)
    Last edited by Citizen X; 07-Jun-17 at 04:54 AM.
    “Ubuntu is the essence of being humane" Desmond Tutu
    Spelling mistakes and/or typographical errors I found in leading publications.
    Click here
    sabbaticus

  4. #1654
    Diamond Member Citizen X's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    lenasia
    Posts
    3,404
    Thanks
    868
    Thanked 701 Times in 613 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by Vanash Naick View Post
    Music trivia

    What instrument is used at the end of Bob Marley’s song “Stir it Up?”

    For several years I was under the mistaken impression that the sound at the end of the song “Stir it up,” emanated from an electric guitar. I was wrong!!!!

    That ‘wow,’ sound at the end of the song was created by a clavinet



    “The premise behind the people of Island Studios tendered to be based more on the musical aspect of recording rather than the technical excellence of the recordings. But, even technically these recordings were fabulous.” Tony Platt –Overdub and Remix Engineer Stir it up.[1]

    “The experiment was for Chris Blackwell to help Bob break into America, so we needed to add a little something that Americans were used to such as clavinets. So, Bob was ready for that. But, the thing that we were trying to do by bridging the gap between purist reggae and Americanized reggae which Americans could pallet was NOT PURIST. My parts on “ Catch a Fire,” are no- where near purists, they are an imitation of what Bob thought me to do.” John 'Rabbit,' Bundrick [2]



    Video source[3]


    [1] Documentary: Catch a Fire: 1973: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGAiJP8wwz8 (Date of use 6 June 2017)

    [2] Documentary: Catch a Fire: 1973: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGAiJP8wwz8 (Date of use 6 June 2017)

    [3] Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6U-TGahwvs. (Date of use 6 June 2017)
    The actual scene, the making of 'Stir it up.' Towards the end of this video, you'll see how the clavinet was magically used to make a sound that I personally haven't seen or heard before this song. It's one of those unique pieces of music history and what can take place when a band works together' The actual scene and explanation of the clavinet is at 3:22 to 4:14 in the video below:-[1]

    " After RECORDING THEM, Bob himself, TOOK the A Tracks TO LONDON where he remixed and dubbed them with Chris Blackwell." Bunny Wailer 1973



    [1] Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QyYN0aBfo68. (Date of use 9 June 2017)

    Stir it up; little darlin', stir it up. Come on, baby.
    Come on and stir it up: little darlin', stir it up. O-oh!
    It's been a long, long time, yeah!
    (stir it, stir it, stir it together)
    Since I got you on my mind. (ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh) Oh-oh!
    Now you are here (stir it, stir it, stir it together), I said,
    it's so clear
    There's so much we could do, baby, (ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh)
    Just me and you.
    Come on and stir it up; ..., little darlin'!
    Stir it up; come on, baby!
    Come on and stir it up, yeah!
    Little darlin', stir it up! O-oh!
    I'll push the wood (stir it, stir it, stir it together),
    then I blaze ya fire;
    Then I'll satisfy your heart's desire. (ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh)
    Said, I stir it every (stir it, stir it, stir it together),
    every minute:
    All you got to do, baby, (ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh)
    Is keep it in, eh!
    (Stir it up) Oh, little darlin',
    Stir it up; ..., baby!
    Come on and stir it up, oh-oh-oh!
    Little darlin', stir it up! Wo-oh! Mm, now, now.

    Quench me when I'm thirsty;
    Come on and cool me down, baby, when I'm hot. (ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh)
    Your recipe is, - darlin' - is so tasty,
    When you show and stir your pot. (ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh)

    So: stir it up, oh!
    Little darlin', stir it up; wo, now!
    Come on and stir it up, oh-ah!
    Little darlin', stir it up!
    [Guitar alone]
    Oh, little darlin', stir it up. Come on, babe!
    Come on and stir it up, wo-o-a!
    Little darlin', stir it up! Stick with me, baby!
    Come on, come on and stir it up, oh-oh!
    Little darlin', stir it up
    AND THEN the clavinet
    Last edited by Citizen X; 09-Jun-17 at 09:08 PM.
    “Ubuntu is the essence of being humane" Desmond Tutu
    Spelling mistakes and/or typographical errors I found in leading publications.
    Click here
    sabbaticus

  5. #1655
    Diamond Member Citizen X's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    lenasia
    Posts
    3,404
    Thanks
    868
    Thanked 701 Times in 613 Posts
    Music Trivia
    Which artist played the guitar solo at the beginning of Bob Marley and the Wailers “Concrete Jungle,” with the 3 octave feedback at the end of the song?

    Wayne Perkins
    “And, I had this pedal on at the end of the solo, as I recall, which was a sustained pedal from Manny’s, that I bought in New York. And, you hit this thing and it just held a note forever. It would hold a note for 3 minutes. And it held that one note and would start to feedback in an octave higher and then two octave notes higher and when that happened, Blackwell or somebody hit the echo on that thing and it just rang across the whole room and it gave me goose bumps. It was one of those magic moments!” Wayne Perkins 1973

    AT 2:06 IN THE VIDEO BELOW:-



    Bob Marley and the Wailers: Concrete Jungle: 1973: Album –Catch a Fire: Video and lyrics



    No sun will shine in my day today (no sun will shine)
    The high yellow moon won't come out to play (that high yellow moon won't come out to play)
    I said darkness, darkness has come and covered my light has covered my light,
    (And has changed)
    And has changed (my day into night) my day into night, yeah.
    Where is the love to be found?
    Won't someone tell me 'cause
    Life (sweet life) must be (got to be) somewhere to be found (out there somewhere out there for me)
    Instead of concrete jungle (Jungle, jungle, jungle!),
    I said where the living is hardest (concrete jungle!).
    Concrete jungle (jungle, jungle, jungle)
    Man, you got to do your best (concrete jungle!)
    Wo-ooh

    No chains around my feet
    But I'm not free
    I know I am bounded in captivity; oh now
    (Never known) Never known (what happiness is) what happiness is;
    (Never known) I've never known (what sweet caress is) what sweet caress is yeah
    Still, I'll be always laughing like a clown; (oooh-oooh-oooh)
    Oh someone help me 'cause I (sweet life) -
    I've got to pick myself from off the ground (got to be, out there somewhere out there for me)
    In this ya concrete jungle (Jungle, jungle, jungle!):
    I said, what do you got for me (concrete jungle!) now?
    Concrete jungle (jungle, jungle, jungle!), why won't you let me be (concrete jungle!) now?
    Ohhh yeah

    [Guitar solo]

    I said that life (sweet life) must be (got to be) somewhere to be found (out there somewhere for me)
    Oh, instead: concrete jungle (jungle!) - collusion (concrete jungle!) -
    Confusion (confusion).
    Concrete jungle (jungle!): we've made it, We've got it.
    In Concrete jungle (concrete jungle!), now.
    Concrete jungle (jungle, jungle, jungle!).

    What, what do you got for me (jungle, jungle!) now?

    Video 1 source[1]
    Video 2 source[2]


    [1] Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8tCBI3LneI. (Date of use 10 June 2017)

    [2] Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inWHusa6tso. (Date of use 10 June 2017)
    “Ubuntu is the essence of being humane" Desmond Tutu
    Spelling mistakes and/or typographical errors I found in leading publications.
    Click here
    sabbaticus

  6. Thanks given for this post:

    Blurock (14-Jun-17)

  7. #1656
    Email problem Trickzta's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    East Rand
    Posts
    462
    Thanks
    217
    Thanked 47 Times in 41 Posts
    Here's a few of the mellow songs from yesteryear that I like. Great platform for music here and it's good to see a post where you aren't trying to make money selling skyspy pics, accommodation, old phones and the like. But then some of us have a life.

    Donovan 'The season of the witch.' https://youtu.be/GU35oCHGhJ0

    Jimi 'The wind cries Mary' https://youtu.be/ATDEtzAcTg0

    Marianne Faithfull 'The eyes of Lucy Jordan' https://youtu.be/d0NxhFn0szc

    Percy Sledge 'I been loving you a little too long' https://youtu.be/7tgYOCxxiAE

    Frankie Miller 'It's good to see you.' https://youtu.be/omG7sIDHD8Y

  8. #1657
    Email problem Trickzta's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    East Rand
    Posts
    462
    Thanks
    217
    Thanked 47 Times in 41 Posts
    Hope you enjoy these as much as I did. I'm not often in a mellow mood so this is unusual.

    *https://youtu.be/O0oosnKV5rk

    https://youtu.be/Q4oInT79CUk

    *https://youtu.be/_pXB1Mathqk

    *https://youtu.be/3TkitGRoGM8

    *https://youtu.be/cVRbajsztig

  9. #1658
    Diamond Member Citizen X's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    lenasia
    Posts
    3,404
    Thanks
    868
    Thanked 701 Times in 613 Posts
    Bob Marley & the Wailers: Duppy Conqueror: Album-Burning:1973: Lyrics and Video

    This song in particular represents for me, the change in the musical form from ska to reggae. The recognisable sound of reggae (chuckum) emanates from a rhythm guitar.

    What really changed it to reggae was the riff action with the guitar. It’s just basically a rhythm change in terms of what the guitar used to play like ‘chuck,’ ‘chuck,’ ‘chuck,’, THEN it start playing ‘chuckum,’ ‘chuckum,’ ‘chuckum.’ Sometimes some of these things happened out of accident, someone would be doing something, and the producer would say ‘HEY, I like that!’ Carlton ‘Santa’ Davis- session drummer
    Coxsone had bought a piece of equipment from the United States, and it was in the studio for a long time, and nobody knew what to do with it. They decided to hook it up, and when it was hooked up they realised it was a tape delay, so, when you make one strum, it comes back at you at the same time ‘chuckum.’


    The guitar in reggae usually plays the chords on beats two and four, a musical figure known as skank or the 'bang'. It has a very dampened, short and scratchy chop sound, almost like a percussion instrument. Sometimes a double chop is used when the guitar still plays the off beats, but also plays the following 16th or 8th beat on the up-stroke. Depending on the amount of swing or groove, this next secondary stab is often the 16th note sounding closer to an 8th placement in the rhythm. An example is the intro to "Stir It Up" by The Wailers. Artist and producer Derrick Harriott says, "What happened was the musical thing was real widespread, but only among a certain sort of people. It was always a down-town thing, but more than just hearing the music. The equipment was so powerful and the vibe so strong that we feel it." [1]


    Video source[2]


    Yes, me friend, me friend
    Dem set me free again
    Yes, me friend, me friend
    We in the streets again

    The bars could not hold me
    Force could not control me now
    They try to keep me down
    But God put I around

    Yes, I've been accused
    Wrongly abused now
    But through the powers of the most high
    They've got to turn me loose

    Don't try to cut me off on this bridge, now
    I've got to reach Mount Zion, the highest region
    So if you a bull-bucka, let me tell you that
    I'm a duppy conqueror - conqueror

    Yes, me friend, me good friend
    Dem set me free again, mm
    Yes, me friend
    Dem turn me loose again

    Don't try to cut me off on this bridge, now
    I've got to reach Mount Zion, the highest region
    So if you a bull-bucka, let me tell you that
    I'm a duppy conqueror - conqueror

    Yes, me friend Me friend, me friend, me friend
    We deh a street again
    Yes, me friend, me friend, me friend
    Dem set me free again.

    [1] Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhythm_guitar. Accessed 2 September 2017

    [2] Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8VQRFXgEnjc. Accessed 2 September 2017
    “Ubuntu is the essence of being humane" Desmond Tutu
    Spelling mistakes and/or typographical errors I found in leading publications.
    Click here
    sabbaticus

  10. Thanks given for this post:

    Blurock (03-Sep-17)

  11. #1659
    Diamond Member Citizen X's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    lenasia
    Posts
    3,404
    Thanks
    868
    Thanked 701 Times in 613 Posts
    Here’s another textbook example of the flawless use of a rhythm guitar. This is the live performance of “Sweet Sensation,” with Ali Campbell playing the rhythm guitar.

    “Ubuntu is the essence of being humane" Desmond Tutu
    Spelling mistakes and/or typographical errors I found in leading publications.
    Click here
    sabbaticus

  12. #1660
    Diamond Member Blurock's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Location
    Durban
    Posts
    4,154
    Thanks
    757
    Thanked 889 Times in 737 Posts
    Blog Entries
    7
    The right blending of instruments can make a song great.
    I've always been a fan of a the 12 string guitar. Here we have a good example from the 60's.

    Excellence is not a skill; its an attitude...

  13. Thanks given for this post:

    Citizen X (04-Sep-17)

Similar Threads

  1. New Gmail theme is so cool!
    By Neville Bailey in forum Technology Forum
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 01-Jul-11, 02:00 PM
  2. Music while you work
    By Mirelle in forum General Business Forum
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 04-Mar-11, 12:15 PM
  3. Mike Schussler loses his cool over Eskom
    By Dave A in forum General Chat Forum
    Replies: 12
    Last Post: 21-Apr-10, 09:21 PM
  4. Looking for music/biking/tattoo event organisers?
    By Debbiedle in forum General Business Forum
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 23-Feb-10, 02:33 PM
  5. Music Sales Figures
    By Illusion Studios in forum General Business Forum
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 25-Feb-09, 12:59 PM

Tags for this Thread

Did you like this article? Share it with your favourite social network.

Did you like this article? Share it with your favourite social network.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •