Tunes you digging right now | Page 8 | The Boneyard

Tunes you digging right now

On that subject, here's a bluegrass version of a Poco song.

 
Alison Krauss has described bluegrass as acoustic heavy metal. I like that. Here's an entertaining mashup of the Soggy Bottom Boys from O Brother, Where Art Thou and Metallica.

 
I get a hankerin' for 80s hair metal now and then. Streaming one of Ratt's albums from Hoopla currently, including this song.

 
I get a hankerin' for 80s hair metal now and then. Streaming one of Ratt's albums from Hoopla currently, including this song.


If you're going that genre, we should go with a tribute to Tawny. Although the videos needed more Tawny and less snake.

 
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If you're going that genre, we should go with a tribute to Tawny. Although the videos needed more Tawny and less snake.
I'll see your Tawny, and raise you a Bobbie Brown. Although I'm not gonna post the Warrant video she's in, might not quite be considered in good taste. If you know, you know.
 
Not that I'm listening to it right now, but yesterday I stopped into TJ's for a few things and when I walked in, this was playing:



I can't describe the joy. If my knees weren't acting up, I would've been dancing in the aisles.
 

Chis Cornell full album. This album is acoustic live and really brings his incredible vocals to the fore front.
 
'we can't afford to be innocent,
stand up and face the enemy,
it's a do or die situation,
we will be invincible!'


 
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ma, tell me when the boys get here!


get about as oiled as a diesel train,
gonna set this dance alight!
 
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I mentioned Ringo's All Starr band in the old fogey concert thread. I've watched a bunch of their live shows on YT and I'd say they've sucked since 2000 (although Edgar Winter doing Frankenstein in post-2000 shows is worth a listen). Biggest surprise was how good and versatile Dave Edmunds was on guitar during the 2000 tour - I'd written him off as a rockabilly guy, but damn he can play. He was doing Cream hits with Jack Bruce and holding his own (even better than Todd Rundgren did on the 1999 tour).

Jack Bruce did three tours with Ringo, two of which also featured Gary Brooker. And one of which also featured Frampton - and for my money, that was the best of all the All Starr lineups. I've never seen two guys who've never played together before have so much fun. There are several Bruce/Frampton moments in the show, but none better than the 10 minutes or so of this clip (ending of DYFLID and all of White Room).



They just don't make concerts like that anymore. Jack is gone. Gary is gone. Peter can no longer play. Ringo is still going at 81 but running out of playmates who actually rock.
 
Just got an email this morning that The Analogues are releasing a CD of their own music. After 8 years of breaking down and performing the studio-only Beatles stuff and being very successful at it, I'd assume whatever they came up with on their own would obviously have heavy Beatles influences. And some of it does. But some not so much based on the small samples they offered up on their website. Regardless, a CD I'll be looking forward to when it comes out.

 
They've been around for a while, but I've only discovered them recently. It twangs, but it rocks too.

 
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always enjoyed this song. Haven't really listened to anything else by them, if its similar to this vibe?

The whole Moon Safari album is worth a listen - some songs a little faster, most with the same chill - like:

 
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