What are you listening to now? Page 737

The Moldy Peaches.

Michael Buble - Haven't met you yet.

Can't beat the buble.

Quote: Paul W @ December 30 2009, 10:01 PM GMT

Can't beat the buble.

Please let me !

SUPERMAN!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8N2k-gv6xNE

I must get round to turning the sound on!

:D

Sundry Waylon Jennings !

:)

Tina Turner - Golden Eye

i have just listened to the top 30 list for our local station and am amazed that the songs picked were actually decent. :O :D

Quote: Matthew Stott @ December 30 2009, 7:23 PM GMT

The Moldy Peaches.

Lovey

Kane Gang - Gun Law. An '85 blast from the past. White funksters notable for writing a song that became both the theme to Byker Grove and a Bolton Wanderers football chant. Fronted by Melvyn Hayes.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-GFkoCME35M

Monietta Bonbon - A Fair Chance Of That - More Sade than Dido apart from the looks.

And as I'm in retrospective mood - Ringo's best single "It don't Come Easy." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4pffdCPOSY

Quote: JohnnyD @ December 31 2009, 10:57 AM GMT

The Pretty Things - S.F. Sorrow

I had that album on vinyl once. Interesting sound, they were nearly mainstream but but not quite.

Quote: SlagA @ January 2 2010, 2:53 PM GMT

And as I'm in retrospective mood - Ringo's best single "It don't Come Easy." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4pffdCPOSY

A great Ringo Starr number, has to be the most poppy of all the exBeatles. George Harrison solo is very over rated IMO and Ringo Starr solo stupidly under rated.

Quote: Alfred J Kipper @ January 2 2010, 3:08 PM GMT

A great Ringo Starr number, has to be the most poppy of all the exBeatles. George Harrison solo is very over rated IMO and Ringo Starr solo stupidly under rated.

Ringo is so underrated as a drummer (which is bizarre) and has released some fantastic albums - Vertical Man, Ringorama, Choose Love are just awesome.
:)

As to George solo: only got Cloud Nine a few months back as it struck me as too poppy when it came out but it is magnificent. Of all his albums, All Things Must Pass towers over his work, majestic but also dour... in the best sense of the word. Followed by Living in the Material World. Critically hated as aloof and self-righteous but ignore the lyrical patronisation and just drown in the slide guitar mastery and some beautiful songs. After that, it has to be the most trite of his albums, the eponymous George Harrison. Wishy-washy, as bollockless as an eunochs' convention, but oddly appealing to me. Maybe it's because the description of the album equally applies to me?
:D

Sunday Love Songs with Ronan Keating. He's no Steve Wright!

The Smiley Smile album by The Beach Boys.