What are you guys listening to today?
#11
#12
#14
#16
Hey Dusty.. I couldn't find your old thread regarding your itunes and the 'Kardashians' but wanted to show you this: This is what I'm listening to... did you see the grammy's last night? Did I call it or what?
The Neighborhood rocked the house!
GRAMMY Awards Video - W.D.Y.W.F.M? - CBS.com
GRAMMY Awards Video - A Little Death - CBS.com
I am so in love with this band...
Last edited by KernowDiscovery; 01-28-2014 at 06:25 AM.
#17
NAILED IT!!!!!
KernowDiscovery wrote on earlier, music related, thread..=
I know this thread is somewhat old but still active. Christmas present idea for your wife.. seriously. Get her the albums 'I'm sorry' and 'I love you' by The Neighborhood. You will not regret it. Good band. Wish I had tickets for their sold out shows in the UK. Emotional music. She'll love you for it. I particularly like 'sweater weather' (which is playing on the radio now), 'WDYWFM', and 'A Little Death'. Guess all three are on the 'I love you' album so if you're going to go for just one, that is the one I'd choose.. heck, you may find yourself liking it too and it would get that 'Kardashian crap' out of your head.
From their website:
'In early 2012 a mysterious band appeared online. The group, The Neighbourhood, revealed no biographical information, no photos and no backstory, offering only a moody track titled “Female Robbery.” Fans and the press were confounded, scouring the Internet for any information that might lead them to the identity of these musicians. Pieces of the puzzle, some reflecting reality and some not so much, began to emerge.
So who are The Neighbourhood? In essence, the group, which formed in August of 2011, is a collection of five friends who make music together. They’re headed by Rutherford, a 21-year-old singer who has dabbled in various genres, including hip-hop, before crafting the merge of sounds that categorizes The Neighbourhood’s style. Their debut EP was produced by Justyn Pilbrow, who brought Emile Haynie onboard to collaborate on “Female Robbery.” The EP, recorded at the end of last year, is composed of shadowy, emotional music with visuals to match. And it’s all part of the band’s master plan.
The evocative combination of rock instruments with R&B and hip-hop aesthetics seemed, in many ways, revelatory, a reimagining of sounds that seemed to make people clamor for more information with even greater fervor. In April, BBC Radio One DJ Zane Lowe, an early champion of the group, let it slip that The Neighbourhood was the handiwork of musician Jesse Rutherford, a resident of Newbury Park, CA. By early May, as the band unveiled a free, self-released EP titled I’m Sorry, it became understood that the identity of this young band was, ultimately, secondary to the music i
KernowDiscovery wrote on earlier, music related, thread..=
I know this thread is somewhat old but still active. Christmas present idea for your wife.. seriously. Get her the albums 'I'm sorry' and 'I love you' by The Neighborhood. You will not regret it. Good band. Wish I had tickets for their sold out shows in the UK. Emotional music. She'll love you for it. I particularly like 'sweater weather' (which is playing on the radio now), 'WDYWFM', and 'A Little Death'. Guess all three are on the 'I love you' album so if you're going to go for just one, that is the one I'd choose.. heck, you may find yourself liking it too and it would get that 'Kardashian crap' out of your head.
From their website:
'In early 2012 a mysterious band appeared online. The group, The Neighbourhood, revealed no biographical information, no photos and no backstory, offering only a moody track titled “Female Robbery.” Fans and the press were confounded, scouring the Internet for any information that might lead them to the identity of these musicians. Pieces of the puzzle, some reflecting reality and some not so much, began to emerge.
So who are The Neighbourhood? In essence, the group, which formed in August of 2011, is a collection of five friends who make music together. They’re headed by Rutherford, a 21-year-old singer who has dabbled in various genres, including hip-hop, before crafting the merge of sounds that categorizes The Neighbourhood’s style. Their debut EP was produced by Justyn Pilbrow, who brought Emile Haynie onboard to collaborate on “Female Robbery.” The EP, recorded at the end of last year, is composed of shadowy, emotional music with visuals to match. And it’s all part of the band’s master plan.
The evocative combination of rock instruments with R&B and hip-hop aesthetics seemed, in many ways, revelatory, a reimagining of sounds that seemed to make people clamor for more information with even greater fervor. In April, BBC Radio One DJ Zane Lowe, an early champion of the group, let it slip that The Neighbourhood was the handiwork of musician Jesse Rutherford, a resident of Newbury Park, CA. By early May, as the band unveiled a free, self-released EP titled I’m Sorry, it became understood that the identity of this young band was, ultimately, secondary to the music i
#19
Today Bob Dylan "The Bootleg Series , Vols 1-3 Rare and unreleased. Just because it's cold here and it came up first in a pile of Cd's I found. Forgot how good this was.
Yesterday +2 on CSNY DEJA Vu & Daylight Again. It was a Long way home. Also caught some Dead on a local radio show. Only 40 mins to home today Maybe some Chet Baker to smooth out the day.
Yesterday +2 on CSNY DEJA Vu & Daylight Again. It was a Long way home. Also caught some Dead on a local radio show. Only 40 mins to home today Maybe some Chet Baker to smooth out the day.
#20
Today Bob Dylan "The Bootleg Series , Vols 1-3 Rare and unreleased. Just because it's cold here and it came up first in a pile of Cd's I found. Forgot how good this was.
Yesterday +2 on CSNY DEJA Vu & Daylight Again. It was a Long way home. Also caught some Dead on a local radio show. Only 40 mins to home today Maybe some Chet Baker to smooth out the day.
Yesterday +2 on CSNY DEJA Vu & Daylight Again. It was a Long way home. Also caught some Dead on a local radio show. Only 40 mins to home today Maybe some Chet Baker to smooth out the day.
Big modern jazz fan - I used to play the horn in my teens and twenties, possibly thirties. Played a couple of times at Ronnie Scott's when his club was in Gerard Street in Soho, London. Stan Tracey was the resident quartet.
Kick back and enjoy
Last edited by OffroadFrance; 01-28-2014 at 04:45 PM.