<P>1. I recently bought a cd called "World Library of Folk and Primitive Music: India" from the Alan Lomax collection. I cannot get this thing out of my cd player. I have fallen in love with it. Any other recommendations similar to this album?</P>
<P>2. For the people who have heard Zony Mash's studio albums and found them kind of stale in performance...please check out the new "Live in Seattle" cd. Picked it up last night. AMAZING! Timothy Young's guitar playing lays waste to Hendrix and Sharrock on this one.</P></DIV>
<P>3. Also, I was hoping to get some feedback on my music (from people who aren't relatives, friends and co-workers!). ....any feedback would be great, positive, negative, neutral....http://www.mp3.com/worldmisery </P>
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Date: Sat, 6 Apr 2002 13:29:35 -0500
From: "Steve Smith" <ssmith36@sprynet.com>
Subject: RE: What Does DMG Know?
Well, since that's precisely the point at which I've just arrived (what were
the odds on THAT?), I can't really offer much more of an opinion. But yeah,
I was particularly impressed with those passages.
Steve Smith
ssmith36@sprynet.com
NP - James MacMillan, 'The World's Ransoming' - Christine Pendrill, BBC
Scottish Sym/Vanska (Bis)
- -----Original Message-----
From: Marcin Gokieli [mailto:marcingokieli@go2.pl]
Sent: Saturday, April 06, 2002 3:48 AM
> NR - Philip K. Dick, 'Martian Time-Slip'
What's your opinion on that one? I really loved a few things about that
book - teh description's of the boy's slowed down experience, for example,
or the scene in shool, whwre the main character discuses with teaching
robots.
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Date: Sat, 6 Apr 2002 15:50:45 -0500
From: "Steve Smith" <ssmith36@sprynet.com>
Subject: RE: A few things----
1. Depends on what you're after. If it's more ethnic recordings in
audio-verite quality but that unmistakable whiff of period authenticity,
keep going with the Lomax series. It's incredible. If it's more Indian music
in bite-sized chunks, Nimbus put out a 3CD set of ragas a few years back,
which is a pretty good primer. The company went belly-up last year, but you
might still be able to find this. I agree, the Lomax guide to India is
pretty amazing. You might also look for the 'Roots of Gamelan' disc on the
World Arbiter label, which performs a similar function for its subject
matter.
2. Sounds promising.
3. Inexplicable and fascinating. I like the bit on your website about
creating "ethnic music that doesn't exist." That's certainly how some of it
felt. I especially liked the ritualistic feel to "Bulimia Rhapsody" and
"10,000 years..." Fans of things like Nurse With Wound and Sun City Girls
would do well to check this stuff out.
Steve Smith
ssmith36@sprynet.com
NP - John Schuller, "Women" (MP3 download)
- -----Original Message-----
From: owner-zorn-list@lists.xmission.com
[mailto:owner-zorn-list@lists.xmission.com]On Behalf Of john schuller
1. I recently bought a cd called "World Library of Folk and Primitive Music:
India" from the Alan Lomax collection. I cannot get this thing out of my cd
player. I have fallen in love with it. Any other recommendations similar to
this album?
2. For the people who have heard Zony Mash's studio albums and found them
kind of stale in performance...please check out the new "Live in Seattle"
cd. Picked it up last night. AMAZING! Timothy Young's guitar playing lays
waste to Hendrix and Sharrock on this one.
3. Also, I was hoping to get some feedback on my music (from people who
aren't relatives, friends and co-workers!). ....any feedback would be great,