Showing posts with label Influential. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Influential. Show all posts

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Farewell, Star-Man

A few weeks ago we lost another great of a golden generation in the form of David Bowie. I gave his new album, Blackstar, a listen the day before he lost his battle with cancer. I’m still umm-ing and ahh-ing over whether I should get the album on vinyl – so I hope this blog post will straighten me out… 

Anyone who knows me will also know that I am not a Bowie fan – I don’t dislike him, I just never really got round to listening to him. I know the classics like ‘Changes’, ‘Space Oddity’, and ‘Life On Mars’ but I’m not your traditional Bowie fan and couldn’t name even 5 albums of a mammoth portfolio of 27 albums, but what would he care? However this gave me the opportunity to listen to album with neutrality. 

The avant-garde performer has quite simply blessed us with a great, trippy Jazz Rock record. Each song has been layered with sultry yet haunting saxophone tones meshed with the distinctive, charming Bowie vocal. In songs like ‘Blackstar’ and ‘I Can’t Give Everything Away’ Bowie wails, howls and cries touching lyrics - “Something happened on the day he died / Spirit rose a metre and stepped aside / Somebody else took his place, and bravely cried”, a sentimental parting gift to adoring fans and admirers.

The futuristic pop genius is certainly a role model for current, young artists and musicians and helped many other greats determine the value of experimentation and expression. Bowie led by example and more characters like him need to be developed in today’s music industry.  
Bowie’s death came amongst a selection of equally sensational, recently fallen greats like Glenn Frey (The Eagles) and Lemmy Kilmister (Motorhead). 

As I have mentioned, I’ve never really delved into the magical, mystery land that is David Bowie. But I honestly think that Blackstar is his defining moment… a masterpiece! So I hope Bowie fans hold onto the fact that he was a great rock-popstar and he left the Earth on a high. 

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Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Robert Johnson

This post is dedicated to one of the most important and influential figures in Rock ‘n’ Roll history, Robert Johnson.
Johnson was a blues artist in the 1930s and it was his recordings that laid the foundations for modern blues and rock, without Robert Johnson perhaps we wouldn’t have been gifted with household favourites like Eric Clapton, the Rolling Stones, and Jack White.
Listed 5th on Rolling Stone’s 100 Greatest Guitarists, Johnson was said to have sold his soul to the devil for his undisputed talent. Yes, that seems a tad over the top, but maybe that is just the way Johnson was – for example, Johnson’s lyrics were full of heart aching sentiment that only a career dedicated to the road hands down to you.
Listening to Johnson’s records is the only time I have ever mistook a solo artist for more than one person, seriously listen to “I Believe I’ll Dust My Broom”.


Which is also What’s The Set List’s Track of the Day, since 77 years ago today we lost a highly skilled musician in Robert Johnson.

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Robert Johnson
May 8, 1911 – August 16, 1938