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It's a damn altar call and I'm up there right now! I haven't heard anything so sublime in awhile. The theology notwithstanding. The poetic, visionary, angelic....yeah, I'm a believer.
I still listen to a lot of religious music. The music is beautiful and the faith underlying it gives it an extra verve or something. And maybe it still speaks to my spiritual side, even if it is not specifically what I believe.It's a damn altar call and I'm up there right now! I haven't heard anything so sublime in awhile. The theology notwithstanding. The poetic, visionary, angelic....yeah, I'm a believer.
LOL. Country remains the one genre of music that, with odd exceptions, has not cracked this ape's playlists.Tried listening to country music during a couple weeks this month, but found that it just doesn't hit me right. So, I went back to my 80s pop and new wave. I love upbeat, energetic music. It's great to listen to and kind of dance along with as I travel down the streets of Korea. Yes!
I'm the same way sometimes, yesterday I heard, Johnny Cash and his daughter singing this together, just before his death and loved it. I can't post it but I thought it was lovely.LOL. Country remains the one genre of music that, with odd exceptions, has not cracked this ape's playlists.
Johnny was a funny one, though, in that he wasn't always easy to pin down as a "genre" artist. Obviously country most of the time but skirted rock a lot. I mean, one of his last hits was a cover of "Hurt" by Nine Inch Nails, an alt-rock band. And a lot of his early output in the sixties was basically on the country end of rock and roll. But, yeah, I love Johnny.I'm the same way sometimes, yesterday I heard, Johnny Cash and his daughter singing this together, just before his death and loved it. I can't post it but I thought it was lovely.
When September Comes
That's perfectly understandable, Mendalla. I tend to get into whatever music I listen to the most. Way back in the 80s I was a radio student in Ontario. As a part of my education, I got to spend a month working at a Country station. At first I couldn't stand the music but I did by the end of the month get into it to the degree that it was my preferred stuff to listen to. I guess because I was hearing many of the top tunes over and over again. It didn't really stay with me, though. One genre of music that I was never able to get into was metal. It always sounded more like noise to me than anything elseLOL. Country remains the one genre of music that, with odd exceptions, has not cracked this ape's playlists.
That used to be my thinking, too. But the genre has evolved a lot. Symphonic metal, power metal, even melodic death metal (yes, that's a thing, see my metal thread) are putting out incredibly complex, interesting compositions. I mean, if anyone had told me even a decade ago that I would be raving about singers who growl and scream, I'd have said they were nuts. Now, death metal and metalcore singers who do just that are among my favourites. Yeah, my musical tastes have gone weird and I'm loving it.One genre of music that I was never able to get into was metal. It always sounded more like noise to me than anything else
My current listening.Nightwish's Yesterwynde
Thank you for the tip, Mendalla. I just listened to both. My two immediate thoughts: 1) Hey, that's actually pretty good. 2) That's not metal(PS. If you need some listening material and want to see what I am talking about, Charlotte Wessels' The Obsession and Nightwish's Yesterwynde both dropped today and are modern metal at its finest.)
If you define metal as what we callsd heavy metal in the eighties, you may be right. But few define it in that limited a way anymore. Metal is a very broad, diverse category in the 21st century that evolved from those roots. Those are both artists who use it as a base and pull lots of other influences in. But believe me, when Nightwish plays Hellfest or Wacken Open Air, huge European metal festivals, the headbangers are out in droves. Sure, there's purists who don't regard them as metal. But purists in music are missing the point of it being a creative art form. I have the same problem with jazz purists.Thank you for the tip, Mendalla. I just listened to both. My two immediate thoughts: 1) Hey, that's actually pretty good. 2) That's not metal