Saddleworth2
Well-Known Member
You really are missing out not listening to tracks more than ten minutes. I’m guessing you are not a fan of classical music ;-)Notes on the 1974 playlist
- "Roads to Moscow" by Al Stewart is one of the best songs of the 70s so far. @mancity2012_eamo nominated it in the playlist thread a while ago, and I was captivated by it then. The lyrics, telling the tale of the battle between Russia and Germany in WWII is brilliantly researched, evocative and delivered with just the right amount of instrumentation.
- Another song I really enjoyed was "Bridge of Sighs" by Robin Trower.
- Lou Reed's opener, "Sweet Jane - Live" was a great start to the playlist.
- "Boogie on Reggae Woman" is yet another Stevie Wonder toe-tapper that I'd not heard before.
- "No Woman, No Cry" - Bob Marley - reggae's not my thing but I said I'd give credit when credit was due - this is a fantastic song because it avoids the repetitive "um-chick, um-chick" sound of so much reggae,
- Dolly Parton's "Jolene" was a good listen. Like most people, I've heard it many times before but haven't taken the time to appreciate how effective the guitar is on this.
- "Astronomy" by Blue Oyster Cult continues a good run of songs from them on this thread. And they'll be plenty more.
- It was good to hear "Revolution Blues" by Neil Young - the best track on the On The Beach album that we recently reviewed on the album thread.
- As I commented on before, I consider myself a fan of Ameicana/country music in general, and listened to the Gram Parsons album in full as a result of the tracks included here. But it's drenched in pedal steel guitar and was too straight on-the-nose country for my liking. I'm sure we'll get to much better country stuff later.
- I may miss out on something but my new self-imposed rule is that I'll skip any track longer than 10 minutes. Yes, Kin Crimson, Van Morrison and Tangerine Dream need to have a good talk to themselves. I like a good long-form song with some interesting instrumenta; breaks but nothing good comes from stretching out a song way past its welcome.
- Speaking of Tangerine Dream, is this really music or just noise that happens to feature a keyboard? Like fellow Germans Kraftwerk, they ushered in a new eletronic form of music, but I can't say that the two tracks included here did anything for me at all.
- There are lots of familiar pop songs that whilst not my favourites, are certainly good for a listen.
- Other tracks new to me that I enjoyed:-
- "Home is Where The Hatred Is" - Gil Scott Heron
- "I Got The Same Old Blues" - J.J.Cale
- "Evie (Let Your Hair Hang Down)" - Stevie Wright
- "Then You Came" - The Spinners, Dionne Warwick
- "When I Get To The Border" - Richard & Linda Thompson
- "Free Man in Paris" - Joni Mitchell
- "Horror Movie" - Skyhooks
- "Before the Deluge" - Jackson Browne
- "Rock Bottom" - UFO
Other than that I agree with your choices. The Dolly Parton album was a breakthrough for her and one I still like when I’m in the mood. If you liked Lou and you aren’t au fait with the rest of the album, it’s just a sad good. Superb version of Heroin.