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Rs Top 100 Songs 2013
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there's worst songs in that batch then this one. but i understand..rs.
still nice that he made it to top 100 and it was mentioned. |
"a reminder he was always the classic rock counterbalance to Thurston and Kim's avant-gardening"
I shouldn't stupid shit music journalists say annoy me, but it does! |
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I think I know what you mean. Like in sense being classic rock? |
More that saying Lee's the classic rock guy in the band is idiotic if you look at his solo output, he's been doing putting out weird solo shit since the 80s and was the first member of SY to do so. From Here, Infinity came out in the SST days ffs!
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i think he was still in a sense a "classic rock" guy even tho he released all of his other projects. there was an interview around ejtns where he mentioned that his part in bull in the heather was inspired by fortunate son by creedence. thurston seemed surprised and shocked.
he openly admits to loving joni mitchell, the dead etc.... |
Thurston is a hipster doofus. Always bad mouthed the Pixies as a "college rock" band, saying they were uninteresting.
Lee however, has always been a song lover. he crafts songs. he is the man. My wife thinks he looks like a serial killer in all my old posters |
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I could be wrong, but I hear a massive Joni Mitchell influence. The songcraft, the weird tunings. |
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That list was crap but it was worthwhile for the link to Lee's review the recent Dead documentary "Sunshine Daydream" which also evinced memories of my chat with Lee about the Dead at the Filter Magazine secret show in 2006. Good times! http://thetalkhouse.com/features/vie...cWAD74.twitter Quote:
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FUCKING EXACTLY! THIS is EXACTLY what me and lee talked about in 2006, in particular at that time how the Nurse material readily availed itself as a vehicle for great structured-yet-improvisational jams. Glad Lee is revisiting this with Last Night on Earth, the Dead comparisons I thought were obvious for that record.. |
SY always had a musical connection to bands like The Dead or Phish more so that bands like Nirvana, or Pavement. By this I mean that they purposefully integrated full on improvisation into every aspect of their song performances live. SY did it more with "noise" and skronk and squalls of feedback but it draws from the same desire to spontaneously create in the middle of performance.
JAZZ baby, it all comes back to Louis Fucking Armstrong. |
yeah, you are exactly right with his early output, but he also grew up into most straight forward "classic rock" (plus all his avant. stuff) member off the band, no? Thurston is more punk, to me.
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Yes, in fact when I was talking to Steve about the dead-connection it was he who sent me to Lee saying, "Lee is our resident deadhead.." to which Lee then replied, "Yes I have been known to be from time to time.." Thurston? Not so much, though there was a kick as pic of him jamming the fuck out in Dead t-shirt floating around the interwebs somewhere years ago but I've never been able to find it since. Quote:
![]() Fuck all if that isn't Iggy Pop! |
I've read interviews with Thurston going on about the band Nazereth, also Sabbath, Lee mentions Dylan and Neil Young all the time, Steve reissued a bunch of Lee Hazlewood stuff, one with Kim talking about how much she loves Led Zep, all of them talking about Joni Mitchell and the Carpenters.
Who knows (or cares) if one of them is the "classic rock" one? |
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Whatever his stupid is!
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Funny, I always thought Lee was the counterpoint to Thurston's pop tendencies. |
I don't think classic rock necessarily implies "pop" although in some instances it could..
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