[ale] OT: music sites?
Raylynn Knight
audilover at speedfactory.net
Thu Mar 30 00:09:44 EST 2006
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 08:33 -0500, Geoffrey wrote:
> Jim Philips wrote:
>
> <snip>
>
> > As a 53-year old music fan, I don't buy all of this "things ain't what they
> > used to be" talk. If you shop around and check some of the more active music
> > blogs on the Net, you can find lots of good music out there being made right
> > here in the 21st century
>
> Oh, I do that. Maybe I should have been more specific, when I talk
> about current music, I'm primarily talking about that which you can walk
> into a cd store and purchase. There's very little 'mainstream' music
> being produced out there that's worth buying, much less downloading for
> free. On the other hand I've got over 400 lps, all of which were
> purchased at least 20 years ago, most likely 30 years or older. I'd say
> 80% of those would have been considered mainstream at the time. I've
> got a similar number of cds and would estimate that maybe 60% of those
> are what one would consider mainstream. Of those that would be consider
> mainstream, virtually none were produced in the last 20 years.
>
> I'm a big fan of smaller bands. I've got cds and lps by bands I'm sure
> many folks have never heard of:
>
> Trout Fishing in America, Louisiana Le' roux, A-train, Silicon Teens,
> The New South Jazz Ensemble, Willis, Carlin and Quinn, Tamarac, Dan
> Sachs (teaches out at KSU!)
>
Wow! It's been ages since I've known someone else who has even heard of
Louisiana Le'roux! I have "Keep the Fire Burnin'" on LP. I'll have to
admit that I haven't heard of the rest though.
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