Todos os posts de mauval
negativos & positivos (310) [o bafo]…
é o bafo, gente boa…
carnaval / rio de janeiro / fevereiro1980
negativos & positivos (309) (carná80)…
carnaval / rio de janeiro / fevereiro1980
é primavera…
tomara que sirva de inspiração para os produtores/entendidos daqui…
suspiraNdo…
Assunto: Suspiros 163“Mauricio. Salve!caramba, pegaram pesado ontem!
só sequência cabeleira alta com essas mulheres poderosíssimas!
Aretha e Mavis staples + Rosinha de Valença e Nina Simone + Elza e Alice Coltrane, foi de fazer chorar…
fiquei emocionada com o programa.
Obrigada 🙂abraços,
Nathalie”
Dallas

por essas e outras (ou “25 favoritos Dele”)…
márcia mandou pra gente esta matéria de 2013 onde bowie seleciona vinte e cinco discos favoritos “que podem mudar sua reputação”. o empolgante – no meu caso – é testemunhar as presenças de linton kwesi johnson, robert wyatt, daevid allen, the fugs e incredible string band. como deu uma creca na formatação do texto/imagens, vale muito clicar AQUI para checar a lista completa… imperdível!
Confessions of a Vinyl Junkie
By David Bowie
Vanity Fair, November 2013
From his collection of 2,500 vinyl LPs, the rock star has selected his greatest discoveries, and some record-buying memories as well.
There is really no way to do a list of my favorite albums with any rationality. I do only have about 2,500 vinyls. There is a possibility there. I’ll look through the albums and pull together a list of those I have re-bought or am in the process of re-buying on CD. I have little time, and there are just too many to sort through. So, I’ll keep pulling stuff out blindly, and if it’s too obvious (Sgt. Pepper, Nirvana) I’ll put it back again till I find something more interesting. A lot of the rock stuff I have is the same as everyone else’s, and I have so many blues and R&B albums that it would topple over into trainspotter world if I went that route.
O.K., no rules then. I’ll just make ’em up as I go along. I’d say half of this list below is now on my CD racks, but many are finding impossible to trace. The John Lee Hooker album, for instance, or The Red Flower of Tachai Blossoms Everywhere. I have done the only thing possible and burned them to CD myself, reduced the cover art down to size, and made reasonable simulacrums of the originals.
If you can possibly get your hands on any of these, I guarantee you evenings of listening pleasure, and you will encourage a new high-minded circle of friends, although one or two choices will lead some of your old pals to think you completely barmy. So, without chronology, genre, or reason, herewith, in no particular order, 25 albums that could change your reputation.

THE LAST POETS
THE LAST POETS
(1970, Douglas)
One of the fundamental building blocks of rap. All the essential “griot” narrative skills, splintered with anger here, produce one of the most political vinyls to ever crack the Billboard chart. While talking rap (what?), I can piggyback this great treat with the 1974 compilation The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (Flying Dutchman), which pulls together the best of the formidable Gil Scott-Heron works.

SHIPBUILDING
ROBERT WYATT
(1982, Rough Trade)
Not an album, a 12-inch single. A vinyl nonetheless. A well-thought-through and relentlessly affecting song co-written by Elvis Costello, and Wyatt’s interpretation is the definitive. Heartbreaking—reduces strong men to blubbering girlies.

THE FABULOUS LITTLE RICHARD
LITTLE RICHARD
(1959, Specialty)
Unusually subdued, these performances were recorded by Richard at his first Specialty sessions, mostly in 1955. It was sold to me discount by Jane Greene. More of her later.

MUSIC FOR 18 MUSICIANS
STEVE REICH
(1978, ECM)
Bought in New York. Balinese gamelan music cross-dressing as Minimalism. Saw this performed live in downtown New York in the late 70s. All white shirts and black trousers. Having just finished a tour in white shirt and black trousers, I immediately recognized Reich’s huge talent and great taste. The music (and the gymnastics involved in executing Reich’s tag-team approach to shift work) floored me. Astonishing.

THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO
THE VELVET UNDERGROUND
(1967, Verve)
Brought back from New York by a former manager of mine, Ken Pitt. Pitt had done some kind of work as a P.R. man that had brought him into contact with the Factory. Warhol had given him this coverless test pressing (I still have it, no label, just a small sticker with Warhol’s name on it) and said, “You like weird stuff—see what you think of this.” What I “thought of this” was that here was the best band in the world. In December of that year, my band Buzz broke up, but not without my demanding we play “I’m Waiting for the Man” as one of the encore songs at our last gig. Amusingly, not only was I to cover Velvet’s song before anyone else in the world, I actually did it before the album came out. Now that’s the essence of Mod.
a bula do #163…
herbie hancock – “blow up / main title”
the yardbirds – “i wish you would”
dan auerbach – “heartbroken, in disrepair”
randy newman – “mama told me not to come”
alceu valença & geraldo azevedo – “me dá um beijo”
mar.wol.mau – “space oddity” (demo)
chaba zahounia & cheb khaled – “ya loualid”
the damned – “i just can’t be happy today”
the damned – “smash it up”
CAN – “bubble rap”
aretha franklin – “spirit in the dark”
mavis staples & lucky peterson – “he’s got the whole world”
massive attack – “karmacoma” (12″ / portishead experience)
the clancy brothers – “mountain dew”
rosinha de valença – “asa branca”
nina simone – “tell me more and more”
richie havens – “my sweet lord” (ao vivo)
new order – “restless”
ian hunter – “lisa likes rock’n’roll”
elza soares – “firmeza”
alice coltrane – “something about john coltrane”
jah shaka & aswad – “aswad special”
the wedding present – “go out and get ‘em boy”
brian wilson – “heroes and villains”
o #163, no espaço, NOW…
o #163, HOJE, às 22h…
cá estamos de volta… ao planeta terra e com o jumboteKo lotadinho de pepitas cabriocáricas & inoxidáveis… e, mais uma vez, com a presença iluminada de josé. UAU!
+
dan auerbach, alceu valença & geraldo azevedo, CAN, alice coltrane, richie havens, herbie hancock (trilha “BLOW UP”), new order, cheb khaled, randy newman, jah shaka, nina simone, the yardbirds, massive attack, brian wilson, aretha franklin, mavis staples… & o diabo A4!
vem forte no K7 zeradão!