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Tag Archives: Feeling Blue

Savath & Savalas

Were only available in 1998, Savath & Savalas was made for left-field producer Scott Herren (most widely known for his are Prefuse 73) to explore his more instrumental and acoustic tendencies. His initial full-length, Folk Music for Trains, Trees and shrubs and Honey, an experimental, glitchy affair, arrived in 2000, …

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Pulp

Most bands strike the big style immediately and fade, or they create a dedicated following and slowly climb their method to the very best. Pulp didn’t follow either path. For the very first 12 years of the lifestyle, Pulp languished in near total obscurity, releasing a small number of albums …

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Scrapper Blackwell

Scrapper Blackwell was most widely known for his use pianist Leroy Carr through the early and mid-’30s, but he also recorded many single edges between 1928 and 1935. A unique stylist whose function was nearer to jazz than blues, Blackwell was a fantastic player with a method constructed around single-note …

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Nanci Griffith

Straddling the okay range between folk and country music, Nanci Griffith is becoming as famous for her brilliant, confessional songwriting as her beautiful tone of voice. A self-styled “folkabilly” vocalist, Griffith began being a kindergarten instructor and periodic folksinger. The united states scene had taken her to center within the …

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Juke Boy Bonner

One-man rings weren’t too common around the postwar blues picture. Joe Hill Louis and Dr. Ross one thinks of as greats who plied their trade simply by their lonesome — therefore do Juke Boy Bonner, a Texan whose skill never really gained him much in the form of tangible incentive. …

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Saturday Looks Good to Me

Embracing a wildly eclectic selection of melodic affects, Saturday Appears Good if you ask me may be the brainchild of indie pop wunderkind Fred Thomas, that has been the only real constant person in the group since its inception in 2000. Sunday Looks Good if you ask me began like …

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Valeria Lynch

Debuting in 1977, effusive Latin pop singer Valeria Lynch documented a trio of popular strikes: “Que Ganas de No Verte Nunca Mas,” “Como una Loba,” and “Yo Sin El.” She also made an appearance within the 1988 film The Tango Club.

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Christ Agony

Hailing from Poland, house to some from the world’s most excessive rock rings, the controversially named Christ Agony was the brainchild of enigmatic, ever present leader Cezar (vocals/guitar), whose early-days cohorts included bassist Mauser and drummer Gilan. Rising in the first ‘90’s using the Unholy Union L.P., Cezar’s wicked crew …

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Portishead

Portishead might not have invented trip-hop, however they were one of the primary to popularize it, particularly in the us. Acquiring their cue in the slow, flexible beats that dominated Substantial Attack’s Blue Lines and adding components of great jazz, acid home, and soundtrack music, Portishead made an atmospheric, alluringly …

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Pedro Infante

A film and music idol, probably one of the most popular Mexican stars of his period, Pedro Infante was created within the bosom of the modest Mexican family members, learning fundamental music knowledge from his dad, musician Delfino Infante García, and inspiring caring treatment from his mom, Refugio Cruz. Infante …

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