What are you listening to? The world really needs to know - Mark IV

the only good poet

One retreat after another without peace.
See the dog yawn at 0:29. He's heard it all before.

Our dog does that - y-a-w-n-s - particularly when reprimanded.
 

mjp

Founding member
That Carter family was something else, man. June is a natural comedian. She's all-in.

And only white people could invent dancing like that...
 

hoochmonkey9

Art should be its own hammer.
Moderator
Founding member
they've been playing this song on the radio (CBC Radio2: Drive with Rich Terfry!) up here for a few months now. when I first heard it I thought it sounded like a song Perter Gabriel wrote for The Police to be included on the Synchronicity album. didn't pay much attention after that. but they kept playing it, and I wouldn't change the station. the next time I turned it up when the female vocals kicked in. the next time I turned it up when the chorus began. the next time I turned it up when the song started... you get the picture.

but I still say it sounds like a song Peter Gabriel wrote for The Police.

 

number6horse

okyoutwopixiesoutyougo
I love the focus of everyone in this performance - trying to do "just enough" and not overplay ANYTHING. The song alsways comes first and Miss Leslie Feist understands that. Thank you Leslie.

[This video is unavailable.]
 

Ponder

"So fuck Doubleday Doran"
RIP
BlindFaithBlindFaith.jpg





Album cover controversy

The release of the album provoked controversy because the cover featured a topless pubescent girl, holding in her hands a hood ornament from a 1956 Chevrolet, which some perceived as phallic.[3][4] The U.S. record company issued it with an alternative cover (which showed a photograph of the band on the front) as well as the original cover.
The cover art was created by photographer Bob Seidemann, a personal friend and former flatmate of Clapton's who is primarily known for his photos of Janis Joplin and the Grateful Dead. In the mid-1990s, in an advertising circular intended to help sell lithographic reprints of the famous album cover, he explained his thinking behind the image.[5]
I could not get my hands on the image until out of the mist a concept began to emerge. To symbolize the achievement of human creativity and its expression through technology a space ship was the material object. To carry this new spore into the universe, innocence would be the ideal bearer, a young girl, a girl as young as Shakespeare's Juliet. The space ship would be the fruit of the tree of knowledge and the girl, the fruit of the tree of life.
The space ship could be made by Mick Milligan, a jeweler at the Royal College or Art [sic]. The girl was another matter. If she were too old it would be cheesecake, too young and it would be nothing. The beginning of the transition from girl to woman, that is what I was after. That temporal point, that singular flare of radiant innocence. Where is that girl?
Seidemann wrote that he approached a girl reported to be 14 years old on the London Tube about modelling for the cover, and eventually met with her parents, but that she proved too old for the effect he wanted. Instead, the model he used was her younger sister Mariora Goschen, who was reported to be 11 years old.[6] Mariora initially requested a horse as a fee but was instead paid £40.[6][7][8]
Bizarre rumours both surfaced and were fuelled by the controversy, including that the girl was Baker's daughter or was a groupie kept as a slave by the band. The image, titled "Blind Faith" by Seidemann, became the inspiration for the name of the band itself, which had been unnamed when the artwork was commissioned. According to Seidemann, "It was Eric who elected to not print the name of the band on the cover. The name was instead printed on the wrapper, when the wrapper came off, so did the type." In fact, this had been done previously for The Rolling Stones' 1964 debut album, Traffic's self-titled 1968 album, and The Beatles' albums Rubber Soul (1965) and Revolver (1966).
 
[...] The U.S. record company issued it with an alternative cover [...]

same happened to U2's first album 'Boy' back in 1980 or something.

U2-Boy_cover_.JPG


I don't know if the officials who decided to censor this cover have a sick mind or if they just feared, other people who buy the record could have one. But I personally have a pretty clear opinion about WHO's fantasies are deranged here.
 
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