Another week down.
First up, a track for
I picked up a copy of Prince’s latest, 3121, this week. I had shared a copy of the single, “Black Sweat”, last year, if you remember. The rest of the album is pretty damned cool as well. Here’s another cut from the album, for your perusal: Prince – “Love.”
Here’s one that
One of my favorite tracks from Muse, just to get you moving on a Friday: Muse- “Hysteria.” Another band that I really want to see live…I figure my chances are better than the possibility of me actually getting Police tickets….
One of my favorite 90s “Alterno-pop” singles, which my kids used to refer to as the “singing fast song.” I’m fairly sure that I posted this one back towards the beginning of Friday Music, but screw it — I like it. Letters To Cleo – “Here And Now.” “The comfort of the knowledge of a rise above the sky above will never parallel the challenge of an acquisition in the here and now…”
A killer dance track that I discovered this week — a Canadian producer’s remix of an Icelandic band’s single. Bang Gang – “Find What You Get (Nik7 Remix)”
Lastly, here’s something from Thomas Dolby, for those of you who only know “She Blinded Me With Science”, etc. This was one of Dolby’s earliest singles, only released in the UK in 1982. The b-side, “Wreck of the Fairchild”, an instrumental piece, segues into the a-side, “Airwaves.” Somebody has edited them together into one mp3. “Fairchild” was originally on the first UK pressing of Dolby’s Golden Age of Wireless, but was removed, and the longer version of “Airwaves” replaced with an edited version, to make room for the track “She Blinded Me With Science”. The rest, as they say, is history. So here it is, one of my all-time favorite Dolby songs, in it’s rarest form: Thomas Dolby – “The Wreck of the Fairchild/Airwaves (Single Mix)”
There you go. Enjoy.
thanks for the Prince. I needed that today.
Music playing
Thank you, for sharing those.
Yay for Letters to Cleo! Thank you, cause I’ve always enjoyed it, and I get the feeling my kids will, too.
Thanks!
Actually, Europe has a really solid rockabilly scene, much more so than in the states. A lot of American bands do respectable European tours even when they can’t even get a local gig in the U.S.
If you like that fuzzy surf sound, you should check out Los Straitjackets. Some of the most amazing guitar talent on earth.