(Oct 29, 2021 05:17 PM)confused2 Wrote: [ -> ]This gets quite wild..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WheoGHREF60
Excellent. Much better than listening to all those kids practicing on it in various films and shows spanning the decades. Had felt it was featured in the original The Bad Seed. At least there's proof it was in the 1985 TV remake (the 1:20 mark): https://youtu.be/DFFLRXmjHag
Number fifteen on the Halloween list (not a ranking). Check out offerings by others in between. Previous is here: https://www.scivillage.com/thread-2918-p...l#pid46795
Throbbing Gristle: Hamburger Lady ... https://youtu.be/0BtTneSsNJ0g
More or less a time when industrial went mildly mainstream, after Throbbing Gristle experimentally founded the genre back in the 1970s. (Not to mention the distorted Dalek voices of "Doctor Who" back in the '60s/'70s)
The full version of "Stigmata" (with the nihilistic sequence of F-word declarations after the 6:20 mark) is here: https://youtu.be/F4v9ouAs8yI
What's embedded below is the "safe", shorter, edited version that played on alt-rock radio stations back in the 1990s. Also minus the lyrics display and graphics scenes the above has.
Ministry: Stigmata (1988) ... https://youtu.be/uP-jaRK27zo
Who would have thought back in the day that an organ could contain so many dimensions of alien horror in and of itself?
Live Journal (excerpt): Imagine taking a full-scale cathedral organ, the kind with three million pipes and a basement full of machinery, turning all the blowers right up to 'hearing damage' mode, and then leaning on all the keys and pedals at once. That's the opening chord of Volumina.
You feel as though, in settling down to write this piece, Ligeti carefully collected together lots of textbooks on classical harmony, sacred music, organ writing and so forth - and then chucked them out the bloody window. Volumina is an exploration of the sound limits of the organ, making it sound like the most adventurous of synthesizers before such things were even invented.
Ligeti conjures extraordinary, hallucinogenic soundscapes from the instrument. Eerie floating, throbbing textures of wind moaning through industrial piping give way to furious explosive rages that sound as though a serious bar brawl has actually broken out inside the organ. In between these are frankly disturbing collections of noises that sound as though they were made by no Earthly instrument, ranging from banging on the pipes to blowing across them to what sounds like the hoarse, dying bubbles of someone choking to death on a kazoo, while someone twiddles the tuning knob on a radio... (MORE)
How 2001: A Space Odyssey Uses György Ligeti's Music
A shorter, simulated(?) vintage video of BWJ playing it is here: https://youtu.be/Obs73TqWbog
Blind Willie Johnson: "Dark Was The Night, Cold Was The Ground" (1927) ... https://youtu.be/71dlO3ceX14
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Rockwell: "Somebody's Watching Me" (1984) ... https://youtu.be/7YvAYIJSSZY
How an Irish man wound up in Italy (interview of Baltimora): https://youtu.be/mv3e6tnbvNs
Where the Tarzan yell is unfortunately replaced by an instrumental riff, but still the best (IMO) acoustic cover with vocals out there: https://youtu.be/9Y4eH5vs5pk
Cover by Liz Berger (female vocals): https://youtu.be/IvNlB8pt-HU
The Weekend Jammers: cover of "Tarzan Boy" - Baltimora (1985)
Here is the original: https://youtu.be/7NJqUN9TClM
Usually I wouldn't embed a video where the microphone sounds even mildly distant from the singer. But this "impromptu" performance deserves a bit more than the total neglect it has received for ten years. No small feat to sing as adeptly as that in a slapdash environment, especially while distracted by whatever she's fiddling with intermittently.
jjmc10025: cover of "If I Die Young" - The Band Perry (2010)
Now to a more professional audio quality cover.
Jess Moskaluke: cover of "If I Die Young" - The Band Perry (2010)
The original as a live version, done the same year: https://youtu.be/ruTMp4_sy1E
I know, but this old-timer in the following vid is the best, minimalist acoustic cover Youtube has (excluding the many useless, interrupted ones that are guitar lessons). Just try to imagine what a long-haired rocker and totally wasted on acid tripper he might have been way back then:
https://youtu.be/OpSsrCcXWCU
Cotten (below) plays all the instruments herself, and does a pretty good job of reproducing the canon recording of the song. Which is something the Stones have rarely done well in performances, especially after the '60s.
Margot Cotten: "Jumpin' Jack Flash" - The Rolling Stones (1968)
As a belated scary movie I watched The Exorcist - hey I know that music - Tubular Bells. We were just moving from the Dansette (I could weep for the Dansette.. one 'o'clock, two 'o'clock, three 'o'clock..) to 'Hi Fidelity' with woofers and tweeters and the rest..
Looking back a bit I'd say Beethoven had more talent in his little finger than this guy .. but Beethoven had one huge scoopful of talent in his little finger..
Blast from the past..