RE: OT: CUSA board Music thread (what are you listening to right now?)
Artist: Stardust
Album: none (single only)
Song: "Music Sounds Better With You"
1998 Roulé Records
Stardust were a one-time musical collaborative effort consisting of producers Thomas Bangalter, Alan Braxe, and vocalist Benjamin Diamond. They released their only single, "Music Sounds Better with You", on July 20, 1998. The song remains the only release of the trio. Shortly after the release Bangalter was offered 3 million dollars to produce a full Stardust album, but Bangalter, Braxe and Diamond have not worked together since. The song uses a sample of the song "Fate" by American singer Chaka Khan, which appeared on her third solo studio album What Cha' Gonna Do for Me (1981).
RE: OT: CUSA board Music thread (what are you listening to right now?)
Pulled this album out the other day to play for someone, and had kind of forgotten its awesomeness. Yeah, it's that guy. So many great tunes from it; here's but a few well worth the listen:
Artist: Peter Murphy
Album: Love Hysteria
Cut: "Dragnet Drag"
1988 Beggars Banquet Records
The album was largely written with former B-Movie (another decent, forgotten band from yesteryear) keyboard player Paul Statham, who had joined Murphy's band, The Hundred Men. It was produced by former member of The Fall, Simon Rogers.
Artist: Peter Murphy
Album: Love Hysteria
Cut: "All Night Long"
1988 Beggars Banquet Records
Artist: Peter Murphy
Album: Love Hysteria
Cut: "Time Has Got Nothing to Do With It"
1988 Beggars Banquet Records
Artist: Peter Murphy
Album: Love Hysteria
Cut: " Indigo Eyes"
1988 Beggars Banquet Records
RE: OT: CUSA board Music thread (what are you listening to right now?)
(01-24-2019 09:19 AM)ghostofclt! Wrote: clt says weezer album of covers is out.
songs sound really familiar.
stinkfist says he's two days late to pay tribute 37 yrs later....fwiw, the crescendo at the 2:00 min and 2:54 mark was a tribute to Prince's epic intro
Quote:Ingram’s smooth, silky baritone dominated the R&B, adult contemporary and pop charts throughout the 1980s with a series of high-profile movie themes and duets.
Ingram launched his career in 1973, performing with the band Revelation Funk, playing keyboards for the Coasters on Dick Clark’s oldies revues, and serving as the musical director for Leon Haywood. Super-producer Quincy Jones recruited Ingram for his solo album The Dude after hearing a demo of Ingram singing “Just Once,” and Ingram became Jones’s longtime collaborator — co-writing Michael Jackson’s Thriller hit “P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)” and “The Secret Garden” (performed with Al B. Sure, El DeBarge and Barry White) with Jones, and participating in the Jones-helmed 1985 all-star benefit single “We Are the World.”
His 1982 single with Patti Austin, “Baby, Come to Me,” went to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Another collaboration with Austin for the film Best Friends, “How Do You Keep the Music Playing?,” was nominated for Best Original Song at the 1983 Academy Awards. He also sang "One Hundred Ways."
A top 20 hit with Michael McDonald, “Yah Mo B There,” won the 1985 Grammy Award for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals. “Somewhere Out There,” a duet with Linda Ronstadt from An American Tail, earned him nominations for Best Original Song at the Golden Globe Awards and Oscars and won the Grammy for Song of the Year in 1988.
Artist: James Ingram
Album: The Dude
Song: "Just Once"
August 1981 A&M Records
RE: OT: CUSA board Music thread (what are you listening to right now?)
This guy always had a comforting voice. One of the video commenters said: "This is what America use to produce, I'm afraid it will not produce another Ray Price." As he was dying of Pancreatic cancer in December of 2013, Price offered a final message to his fans in the statement: “I love my fans and have devoted my life to reaching out to them. I appreciate their support all these years, and I hope I haven’t let them down. I am at peace. I love Jesus. I’m going to be just fine. Don’t worry about me. I’ll see you again one day.” Ray Price died at his home in Mt. Pleasant, Texas, on December 16, 2013. Good music for a Sunday Morning...
Artist: Ray Price
Album: For The Good Times
Song: "For The Good Times"
Songwriter: Kris Kristofferson
1970 Columbia Records
Artist: Ray Price
Album: For The Good Times
Song: "Help Me Make It Through The Night"
Songwriter: Kris Kristofferson
1970 Columbia Records
Artist: Ray Price
Album: Precious Memories
Song: "What A Friend We Have In Jesus"
Songwriter: Joseph M. Scriven
1976 Word Distribution Records
"What a Friend We Have in Jesus" is a Christian hymn originally written by preacher Joseph M. Scriven as a poem in 1855 to comfort his mother who was living in Ireland while he was in Canada. Scriven originally published the poem anonymously, and only received full credit for it in the 1880s. The tune to the hymn was composed by Charles Crozat Converse in 1868. William Bolcom composed a setting of the hymn.
RE: OT: CUSA board Music thread (what are you listening to right now?)
This thread is bout to sink below the top page. So here is a shot to get it back where it belongs. Here she is in all her pre-carb loveliness doing a Stones tune with gusto.