Old school music is cool!

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  • Blurock
    Diamond Member

    • May 2010
    • 4203

    #1591
    Where do you go to my lovely?
    is about a young girl born in poverty in Naples, Italy, who grows up to become a member of the jet-set. It has been alleged that Peter Sarstedt had in mind movie star Sophia Loren, who was herself bought up in the back streets of Naples.



    Initially, his record company were not interested in releasing this as a single: Peter Sarstedt comments in the same publication "They said it has no drums, it is too long and there are only 3 instruments." The label relented and the song topped the UK charts for 6 weeks.


    LYRICS.

    You talk like Marlene Dietrich
    And you dance like Zizi Jeanmaire
    Your clothes are all made by Balmain
    And there's diamonds and pearls in your hair, yes there are.

    You live in a fancy apartment
    Off the Boulevard of St. Michel
    Where you keep your Rolling Stones records
    And a friend of Sacha Distel, yes you do.

    You go to the embassy parties
    Where you talk in Russian and Greek
    And the young men who move in your circles
    They hang on every word you speak, yes they do.

    But where do you go to my lovely
    When you're alone in your bed
    Tell me the thoughts that surround you
    I want to look inside your head, yes I do.

    I've seen all your qualifications
    You got from the Sorbonne
    And the painting you stole from Picasso
    Your loveliness goes on and on, yes it does.

    When you go on your summer vacation
    You go to Juan-les-Pines
    With your carefully designed topless swimsuit
    You get an even suntan, on your back and on your legs.

    And when the snow falls you're found in St. Moritz
    With the others of the jet-set
    And you sip your Napoleon Brandy
    But you never get your lips wet, no you don't.

    But where do you go to my lovely
    When you're alone in your bed
    Tell me the thoughts that surround you
    I want to look inside your head, yes I do.

    You're in between 20 and 30
    A very desirable age
    Your body is firm and inviting
    But you live on a glittering stage, yes you do, yes you do.

    Your name is heard in high places
    You know the Aga Khan
    He sent you a racehorse for Christmas
    And you keep it just for fun, for a laugh ha-ha-ha

    They say that when you get married
    It'll be to a millionaire
    But they don't realize where you came from
    And I wonder if they really care, or give a damn

    But where do you go to my lovely
    When you're alone in your bed
    Tell me the thoughts that surround you
    I want to look inside your head, yes i do.

    I remember the back streets of Naples
    Two children begging in rags
    Both touched with a burning ambition
    To shake off their lowly-borne tags, they try

    So look into my face Marie-Claire
    And remember just who you are
    Then go and forget me forever
    But I know you still bear
    the scar, deep inside, yes you do

    I know where you go to my lovely
    When you're alone in your bed
    I know the thoughts that surround you
    'Cause I can look inside your head.

    #petersarstedt

    Source
    [url]http://www.songfacts.com/d[/ur


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

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    • Blurock
      Diamond Member

      • May 2010
      • 4203

      #1592
      Click image for larger version

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      I can still remember the excitement of walking into the record shop with all the advertising, the sound of ROCK and seeing old friends.
      Selecting a record or two and then going to a booth to listen to a new release.
      Some record bars served coffee or soft drinks, so that you could spend the whole day there, listening to good music.

      I wonder if today's youngsters realise how much they are missing out on.
      The record shops selling vinyl in the 60's and 70's was a cultural affair.
      The record sleeves were works of art and also gave information on the artists and the songs.

      A lot of this gets lost in the digital age where everything is on social media, but with little or no emotion.
      Excellence is not a skill; its an attitude...

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      • Blurock
        Diamond Member

        • May 2010
        • 4203

        #1593
        Click image for larger version

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

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        • Blurock
          Diamond Member

          • May 2010
          • 4203

          #1594
          What a Beauty! Awesome!

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          I've always been fascinated by beautiful guitars. I will buy at least 1000 when I win the Lotto.

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

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          • Blurock
            Diamond Member

            • May 2010
            • 4203

            #1595
            How cool is this! A couple from the Woodstock album cover are still together, 46 years later!

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ID:	265121 I still have the vinyl, but the cover is falling apart.
            Really enjoyed the movie (documentary) followed by a 2 day rock festival at Hartleyvale in Cape Town with awesome South African and Zimbabwean bands.
            I remember the happy vibe and everyone wanting to emanate the peace and love of Woodstock.
            Excellence is not a skill; its an attitude...

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            • Blurock
              Diamond Member

              • May 2010
              • 4203

              #1596
              Woodstock was written by Joni Mitchell for Crosby Stills Nash and Young even though she herself was a no show.

              This song is about the famous music festival in 1969. Mitchell was scheduled to perform at the festival, but backed out on the advice of her manager David Geffen, who was concerned that she would miss a scheduled appearance on The Dick Cavett Show. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young did appear, playing an acoustic set followed by an electric set. They took the stage around 3 a.m. Monday morning - the festival was scheduled to end at midnight, but it ran long, culminating with a legendary Jimi Hendrix set that most people didn't stay to see.

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

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              • Blurock
                Diamond Member

                • May 2010
                • 4203

                #1597
                Aqualung deals with our reaction to the homeless population. Jethro Tull vocalist and flute player Ian Anderson wrote the song and called it "a guilt-ridden song of confusion about how you deal with beggars, the homeless." Elaborating in the 40th anniversary reissue of the album, he said, "It's about our reaction, of guilt, distaste, awkwardness and confusion, all these things that we feel when we're confronted with the reality of the homeless. You see someone who's clearly in desperate need of some help, whether it's a few coins or the contents of your wallet, and you blank them out. The more you live in that business-driven, commercially-driven lifestyle, you can just cease to see them.


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

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                • Blurock
                  Diamond Member

                  • May 2010
                  • 4203

                  #1598
                  For White Room, Eric Clapton used a wah-wah pedal on his guitar. An idea he got from Jimi Hendrix.
                  Clapton's solo earned the #2 spot on Guitar World's greatest wah solos of all time in 2015. The #1 spot? Hendrix' "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)."

                  On their last tour before the band broke up, Cream opened most of their shows with this song. When Cream did a reunion tour in 2005, they played it near the end of the sets.

                  Clapton refused to play this after leaving Cream until 1985, when Paul Shaffer urged him to play it while he was sitting in with the band on Late Night With David Letterman. That same year, Clapton played it at Live Aid.

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

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                  • Blurock
                    Diamond Member

                    • May 2010
                    • 4203

                    #1599
                    Book Now for the Durban International Blues Festival.

                    The three day program is scheduled to take place on Friday 9th September, Saturday 10th September and conclude on Sunday 11th September, where musicians take to the stage at 7.30 pm every evening. Duncan Parks has been on the circuit for a while but is performing a solo acoustic act at the Blues Festival for the first time. Super bluesman Seb Goldswain has a new trio of bluesmen and promises something incredibly special as only this young Durban star can.

                    Other bands include top notch Red Hand Blues Band, Raoul and Black Friday, Bobby and the Dynamites, The Sinners, The East Coast Blues Band and The Reals who perform with support artists and instrumentalists throughout the program.

                    Please buy your tickets in advance to avoid disappointment Tickets are R150 per person per show and from Computicket Outlets. The Season Ticket this year will be R330 for all three nights Tickets go on sale from 01 AUGUST 2016 Save.



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

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                    • Thato89
                      Email problem
                      • Aug 2016
                      • 21

                      #1600
                      Old is Gold!! Maybe I am wrong, but I feel like most of the music we listen to today is just BS. Either it's a good melody with shit lyrics, or OK lyrics with a horrible melody. Never a combination of the two, like it used to be in the 70s, 80s and 90s. Do you agree?

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                      • Citizen X
                        Diamond Member

                        • Sep 2011
                        • 3411

                        #1601
                        Originally posted by Thato89
                        Old is Gold!! Maybe I am wrong, but I feel like most of the music we listen to today is just BS. Either it's a good melody with shit lyrics, or OK lyrics with a horrible melody. Never a combination of the two, like it used to be in the 70s, 80s and 90s. Do you agree?
                        Hi Thato,

                        I couldn't agree more. Please feel free to share your favourite old school classics here.
                        “Success consists of going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm." Winston Churchill
                        Spelling mistakes and/or typographical errors I found in leading publications.
                        Click here
                        "Without prejudice and all rights reserved"

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                        • Thato89
                          Email problem
                          • Aug 2016
                          • 21

                          #1602
                          How about the old classics like MJ's Thriller! I also love Ledin Zeppelin, Nirvana, U2 and of course last but CERTAINLY NOT LEAST, The Beatles! What do you enjoy listening to Vanish? )

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                          • Blurock
                            Diamond Member

                            • May 2010
                            • 4203

                            #1603
                            non-musical

                            Originally posted by Thato89
                            Old is Gold!! Maybe I am wrong, but I feel like most of the music we listen to today is just BS. Either it's a good melody with shit lyrics, or OK lyrics with a horrible melody. Never a combination of the two, like it used to be in the 70s, 80s and 90s. Do you agree?
                            Thato, you are so right. There is no melody or harmony in modern music. (think CSN&Y, Simon & Garfunkel, The Hollies and the Beatles) Even the beat has been buggered up with a mindless duff, duff duff. Gone are the days that you could marvel at a good base player, the artistry of an axe man (lead guitarist) or the crazy drummer. Modern "music" is so bad that the youngsters don't even buy their idol's recordings. Some "Bands' or "artists" don't even bother to publish their "songs" but just post it online. The only music that is still selling is the nostalgia from the 60's to the 80's.The whole music industry is in decline due to stupid DJ's and greedy music companies who know nothing about music.

                            Music today is about marketing and selling a pretty face or an "artist" that cannot sing or play an instrument. With a few exceptions (Carlos Santana, Orianthi and some lesser known rockers) all music is produced in a studio and mimed on stage. It's all about the money. (I will post some examples later)

                            The unmusical world that we live in now has dawned on me at a recent old school reunion. The way that the kids recited (It was definitely not singing) the school anthem said it all. They took away all the melody and emotion and just recited (shouted) the words of the anthem. Sounded more like rap, which is not music, but crap.
                            Excellence is not a skill; its an attitude...

                            Comment

                            • Thato89
                              Email problem
                              • Aug 2016
                              • 21

                              #1604
                              Originally posted by Blurock
                              Thato, you are so right. There is no melody or harmony in modern music. (think CSN&Y, Simon & Garfunkel, The Hollies and the Beatles) Even the beat has been buggered up with a mindless duff, duff duff. Gone are the days that you could marvel at a good base player, the artistry of an axe man (lead guitarist) or the crazy drummer. Modern "music" is so bad that the youngsters don't even buy their idol's recordings. Some "Bands' or "artists" don't even bother to publish their "songs" but just post it online. The only music that is still selling is the nostalgia from the 60's to the 80's.The whole music industry is in decline due to stupid DJ's and greedy music companies who know nothing about music.

                              Music today is about marketing and selling a pretty face or an "artist" that cannot sing or play an instrument. With a few exceptions (Carlos Santana, Orianthi and some lesser known rockers) all music is produced in a studio and mimed on stage. It's all about the money. (I will post some examples later)

                              The unmusical world that we live in now has dawned on me at a recent old school reunion. The way that the kids recited (It was definitely not singing) the school anthem said it all. They took away all the melody and emotion and just recited (shouted) the words of the anthem. Sounded more like rap, which is not music, but crap.

                              Yes, yes, yes! This is so true. Although I am in the sphere of marketing and I understand the need to "sell" I think this desire to make money has entirely taken over the music industry. It's really sad to see this process of Auto-tuning music being globally accepted by all musicians. Do you think anything or anyone is capable of changing the path that music is headed on?

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                              • Blurock
                                Diamond Member

                                • May 2010
                                • 4203

                                #1605
                                I stopped tuning in to any radio station about 10 years ago. I just could not stand the shit that they promoted as music. Rap is not music and hip-hop is like bubblegum - it all sounds alike, but so shallow that you forget it as quickly as an advertising jingle. I now have a USB with 38 hours of non-stop music, so whenever I get into my car, I have my own selection of favourites to which I add from time to time.

                                Bad, unmusical "music" is like a rose without fragrance, a painting without colour, a sculpture with no form or a poem without words. Good music is a composition of melody, harmony and rhythm sometimes with good lyrics, but the lyrics are not as important as the heavenly sound. I enjoy more complex compositions such as in classical music with ever changing instruments, volume and cadence. A change in beat and melody makes a song interesting and not the mindless thump, thump of hip-hop and taxi music.
                                Excellence is not a skill; its an attitude...

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