| Cassiopeia  performed by  Coheed and Cambria 
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| Look Away  performed by  Eternity�s Children 
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  : Eternity's Children.
Somehow the name got messed up and I can't edit it so I'm posting this correct spelling to help the search engine..... 
  : Eternity's Children are a fantastic group...I remember when I first heard "Mrs. Bluebird" and was blown away. 
That was around 1985 and just last year I picked up their singles collection on CD. Thanks for recommending their individual albums, I definitely want to check them out. 
  : I can't recommend the first album highly enough ... it's a pop masterpiece... My introduction to ET was through that singles package, which is good enough for what it is, but trusty me the first album really needs to be heard in the original order with all the tracks. 
  : I had the great experience of working with Mike "the Kid", Linda, and Charlie. you oughta hear linda do 5th Dimension live ot Mike kick it with a keyboard. First worked with some of them in memphis with Tommy Cogsbill. Linda was present-we were friends socially in '69 and then again with Mike, Charlie, drummer Johnny Thomasie from N.O.,sometime later. I can't remember the Guitar player's name-maybe Norman or something like that. We were doing the "B" side to a single of mine at Robin Hood Bryan's studio. All of us lived in Baton Rouge at the time and worked respectively for Crocked Fox Prod.(but this session was maybe a solo adventure with co-member of the production team, Guy Bellello [[R.I.P.]}since only he was present-who knows.) 
The "A" side was done at one of my sessions at American Studios, Memphis and featured the Memphis Horns, the Sweet Inpirations as female back ups, Cimmaron as writer/male harmonies. Elvis had been there the week before (recorded In the Ghetto, I think)and Neil Diamond was due the following week there in Memphis. I felt like such a nobody with life-sized pics of Elvis everywhere and everybody making their comparisons of Alex from the "Boxtops" and me. Pinning a VU meter the same way Alex did was not exactly the feedback I was looking for. Anyway, I guess I am saying we spent a little time together, I miss listening to and working with them. If anyone hears from them, it would be great to STS again. I started back playing professionally a couple of years ago and still consider them the gold standard in terms of harmony and think that the Hammond B3 has "the Kid's" name on it. As an update, Guy died an untimely death about 10 years ago and I only wish I could find Bubba Anthony if living, a sometimes ET drummer and any of that crowd.
Kindest regards,
Scatdaddy2002 
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| Great Southern Land  performed by  Icehouse 
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| Bob  performed by  The Dodos 
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| Threads  performed by  This Will Destroy You 
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| Creole Love Call  performed by  The Comedian Harmonists 
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  : This track is marvelous, thanks for the heads up. 
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| Laura  performed by  Julie London 
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| Royal Blue  performed by  Henry Mancini 
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  : I like Pink Panther so I bet I like this song! 
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| Escape  performed by  Armando Trovaioli 
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| Dark On You Now  performed by  The Ashes 
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  : I'm sure I have this on one of the pebbles "Highs of the mid sixties" series ("volume 3 Hollywood a go-go" IIRC) although I believe they credit it as "Follow the sun", I'm sure. Great summer song. 
  : That is a cover version by a band called the Love Exchange..."Swallow the Sun" is a key lyric in this 
song, but I really don't know what it means! 
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| The Shark  performed by  Hugo Montenegro 
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| Like to get to know you  performed by  Spanky and our Gang 
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  : I just found the original album of the same name this song is on. It's beautiful with just the right kind of softly psychedelic artwork and some crazy, groovy spoken word passages on some tracks. "Like to Get to Know You" stands out as the definitive song and remains one of the most mesmerizing soft pop tunes in the world. 
  : It's also worth noting that the single version, found on the 1969 "Spanky's Greatest Hit(s)" album, is the definitive one, free as it is from the pickup-line chatter that obscures the intro on the original album, as well as featuring the gorgeous coda which is included separately on the "LTGTKY" LP. 
  : This is my favorite Spanky and Our Gang tune, a gorgeous and wistful number. I also have the original LP, which features a different version from the 45 as gregcaz mentioned. There is a video of the band performing this on Youtube that I think originally aired on the Smothers Brothers. I saw Spanky and the Gang a number of times on TV as a kid. 
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| Lullaby  performed by  Krzysztof Komeda & Mia Farrow 
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  : I love this too! It seems to pull the whole movie into a class of it's own.
I've been trying to find the Claudine Longet version for years! 
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| Dolphins  performed by  Tim Buckley 
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| I don't intend to spend Christmas without you  performed by  Claudine Longet 
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| A moment to share  performed by  Charles Fox 
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  : well, you know what we do with "collaborators"... 
  : Yeah, I agree with you. I do love this tune's chord changes.  They are unexpected but dramatic. For me, So Kind To Me is my most favorite track in this soundtrack, especially the last overlapped chorus is terrific.  Anyway, Love American Style, Girl, Love Boat...the more I know about Charles Fox's works, the more I think he is a genius. 
  : This is really, really nice. So typical of late '60's American soundtrack music.
There was another film out at the same time called 'April Fools' and it had a very similar sound. Lovely horns! 
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| Mahahbalipuram  performed by  Stu Phillips 
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  : Great taste! 
  : Thank you "delicado" for your wonderful review of "Mahabalipuram." I'm only three years late in thanking you, so please forgive me.    Stu Phillips 
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| The Only Living Boy in New York  performed by  Simon and Garfunkel 
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| Cirrus Minor  performed by  Pink Floyd 
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  : Indeed. The Floyd records that are best are the soundtrack material. Mainly because they had to adapt to a medium outside their own dreamy minds. This is my second favorite after "A Saucerful of Secrets" LP. But their "Obscured By Clouds" LP is also a soundtrack piece for an unreleased film that has the same fine qualities... I hate to get long-winded about the whole Floyd thing, but I have to mention Hubert Laws LP "Crying Song" (CTI 1002/6000) which features two compositions from "More". 
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| The Spook Walks  performed by  Spooks 
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| Afro - Harping  performed by  Dorothy Ashby 
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| La Lucertola  performed by  Ennio Morricone 
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  : Perfect description, delicado. This track is firmly in my Morricone Top 10, though it would be impossible for me to actually write down a top 10, maybe top 20, no, a top 50 would be possible...maybe...damn, one man - so many terrific tunes! 
  : I got the first Mondo Morricone cd on its original release nearly 10 years ago now,I was familiar with Morricone's stuff but when I heard this it totally changed me.I became a Morricone devotee and this first track along with "Metti..." blew me away.The version on Mondo is actually about a minute shorter than the original version,so is "Metti" and some of the other "Mondo" tracks,they've abridged them no doubt to fit the cd...I found this out gradually from hearing the complete versions,they're not different versions,they've just been cut down....This is one of Ennio's all time great themes. 
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| Time Operator  performed by  Scott Walker 
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| The Call  performed by  Gene Page 
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  : Nice dense arrangement with the harpsichord penetrating attractively (try to remember that penetration can be unattractive at times). I enjoyed the excerpt very much. 
  : Yeah, the clarinet/sax you hear at the end of the sample nearly ruins it for me, but not quite.  Those chords at the beginning recall that great song 'Life is Mono' by Mono, don't you think? 
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| This Way Mary  performed by  John Barry 
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| Red  performed by  King Crimson 
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  : The entire album is a gem of guitars and pounding beats, much harder overall than, say, "Lizard."  "One More Red Nightmare" is another hard out rocker featuring the vocal talents of bassist John Wetton, but I find the most haunting song to be the West Side Story-esque "Fallen Angel." 
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| Bitter-Sweet  performed by  Roxy Music 
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| Cough/ Cool  performed by  The Misfits 
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  : Ya I'd have to say, the Misfits were an amazing band during the 70's.
Their old work was all so original, I can't get a feel for Danzig's new material with his current band.
Last Caress is a great old track as well, one of my favourites with that awesome guitar riff,  circa '79? 
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| Everybody’s Got to learn Sometime  performed by  The Korgis 
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| "ghosts"  performed by  japan 
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| Boys of Summer  performed by  Don Henley 
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  : Yeah, this is an absolutely great song, a classic to my mind, yearning for that perfect love, that perfect moment, and the chance to prove ones self. And this comes from an Eagle, who weren't bad but have been way overplayed these last years on radio. 
  : I agree, Don nailed it with this one.It's eerie simplicity is what was great about the Eagles better tunes. It is too bad about overplay, at least in the USA. FM radio is like a Coke machine in a vegatable garden... 
  : This is one of those few 80's songs that is still valid today. Instead of being about the excesses of the period, it's a very haunting song about missing something. Or is it about not looking back and having no regrets? You could probably argue for both sides of it. It's a true classic. 
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| Subdivisions  performed by  Rush 
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| "view from a hill"  performed by  the chameleons uk 
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  : "Atmospheric" as you say. I like that song, and virtually the whole album, Script of the Bridge. It's stood up to many, many listenings. I stumbled across it in 1990. What a nice discovery. 
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| Brilliant Trees  performed by  David Sylvian 
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  : Bought album of same name due to tracks "Red Guitar" and "Pulling Punches" getting major airplay on DC radio at time.  Was not disappointed!  Moody and nice bass lines!  Sylvian's voice is ... unusual. 
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| Duel  performed by  Propaganda 
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  : Another one of my all time favourites.  The extended 12" is outstanding. 
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| Skin Trade  performed by  Duran Duran 
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| Orpheus  performed by  David Sylvian 
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| Yawn  performed by  The Orchids 
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| Fadeaway  performed by  Laika and the Cosmonauts 
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  : Yeah, they're certainly one of the better neo-surf acts out there.
See Laika! Se Laika run! Go laika, go! 
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| She’s Dead  performed by  Pulp 
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| Spacebeach  performed by  Arling & Cameron 
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  : great track - best song on the LP 
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| Muscle Museum  performed by  Muse 
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| Comfort of Strangers  performed by  Skin 
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| Fault Lines  performed by  Radiogram 
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| Never Young Again  performed by  Mirwais 
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| Sleep  performed by  Godspeed You! Black Emperor 
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| The Conductor  performed by  the faint 
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| Through The Sky  performed by  Swing Out Sister 
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  : I have to say I am thoroughly delighted at learning of the continued career of SOS.  I always had time for them, and thought Breakout was actually the weakest of the singles I heard.  I particularly remember liking 'Fooled By A Smile' and 'You On My Mind'.
Hearing the snippets of these songs here, I can say I'm intrigued enough to try and seek out some of this later work.  It reminds me of the more produced end of Siesta records' (Spanish easy-pop label) output. 
  : You probably should try "Shapes and Patterns" from 1997 first, it's pretty much in the vein of 1989's "Kaleidoscope World" and thus a good starting point to rediscover SOS. This and the aforementioned "Somewhere Deep In The Night" (2001) as well. 
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| The Drapery Falls  performed by  Opeth 
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  : pull me down again and guide me into pain. this is a beautiful song. 
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| Death Valley  performed by  The Bellyachers 
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| Inward Movement  performed by  Gojira 
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| You, Assassin  performed by  San Serac 
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| Black and White Town  performed by  Doves 
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| Running Thoughts  performed by  Deerhoof 
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| Et si en plus y’a personne  performed by  Alain Souchon 
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| Threshold Of Transformation  performed by  Isis 
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