Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
The fact that I got Brooks humor as a kid really suprises me, but it's so long since I heard it I don't trust my memories.
I thought Robin Williams' "Reality, Wow, What a Concept," was hilarious when I was a kid. I found out upon listening to it later as an adult that I was laughing because other people was laughing, and he spoke funny, and that I'd only actually understood about three jokes on the album.
That didn't stop me from repeating a lot of the jokes. I wonder how many of my techers or other adults I horrified with my borrowed drug-and-sex humor.
Oooh, Previously unreleased Phil Hartman comedy record
Score! Thanks, Hec.
I found out upon listening to it later as an adult that I was laughing because other people was laughing, and he spoke funny, and that I'd only actually understood about three jokes on the album.
On a related note, I got into a discussion with my boss (who's from Canada) and how he's always amazed that people in the US really enjoy British humor, both because of unfamiliar cultural references and just the general style of the humor (though it's hardly a narrow range). I mentioned how I really enjoyed Python as a kid (both on record and on TV - the records didn't have laugh tracks) and chalked at least part of it up to the fact that Python only very infrequently indulged in topical humor, which I suspect has been a factor in their longevity/universality.
I also mentioned I generally just chalked up the occasional reference I didn't get - "Tony Jacklin golf clubs" and "Watney's Red Barrell" spring immediately to mind - were funny because they sounded funny.
Of course, there were plenty of non-topical references that went over my head as well (Free Masons for instance), but somehow the delivery got me past all those difficulties.
I also mentioned I generally just chalked up the occasional reference I didn't get - "Tony Jacklin golf clubs" and "Watney's Red Barrell" spring immediately to mind - were funny because they sounded funny.
Yeah, there's context (Tony Jacklin was a bit of an angry prat at the time, and his brand of clubs were inexpensive and low quality, while Watney's Red Barrell was crap bevvy of the underclass, but you can probably winkle that out), but it isn't vitally important.
Has anyone commented on this? Velvet Tinmine: 20 Junk Shop Glam Ravers
I wrote about it in LiTG. In a sidebar.
I have all those comps and love them quite a bit. Bubble Pop is where I got one of my songs from the recently posted mixes, "The Late Late Show" by Clive Kennedy.
My favorite rare glam comps, though, are the two bootleggish CD-Rs by Ursula 1000 (available in NYC) and Glitter From the Litter Bin.
Glitterbest is fascinating for charting the late glam/proto punk era (around '75) where British rock was in transition. Cool track by the Tiger Lilys who later became Ultravox.
I wrote about it in LiTG. In a sidebar.
D'oh!
My mind is becoming less and less like a steel trap....
My mind is becoming less and less like a steel trap....
I posted several tracks at Buffistarawk under Rare Glam.
I can send you some of my glam comps (mostly rarer stuff, or mixed with lesser known favs by famous peeps) if you want.
I have a lot of glam.
Glitter From the Litter Bin.
From the album: "Ride A Black Sheep - Small Wonder"
Hee!
"Do You Like Boys - Starbuck"
Oh, I like that one. (The same as a song in your glam comp from last year, right?)
I posted several tracks at Buffistarawk under Rare Glam.
That's the group of tracks you posted last year, right? I downloaded all of those....
I can send you some of my glam comps (mostly rarer stuff, or mixed with lesser known favs by famous peeps) if you want.
Oh, that would be cool! Do you have my work address (on Dodge Ave.)?
Glam is so underrated....