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Forget The Times - Soul Music mp3

Tracklist

1Romans In Storage
2From The Basement To The Grave
3Wash Yr Grippers
4Dead Slint
5Marion Morrison
6Pillows And Blankets
7Alarm Clock Celebration

Credits

  • Artwork By [Illustration], DesignJoshua Tabbia

Notes

300 copies

Info

Soul Music - Forget the Times. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. Soul Music by Forget The Times, released 21 February 2012 1. Romans In Storage 2. Marion Morrison 3. From The Basement To The Grave 4. Alarm Clock Celebration 5. Dead Slint 6. Wash Yr Grippers 7. Pillows And Blankets. Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more. Purchasable with gift card. Buy Digital Album. 5 USD or more. Soul Music. Forget the Times. Jazz free to Forget The Times Soul Music Romans In Storage, Marion Morrison and more. 7 tracks 32:14. or open in our Desktop app. Read the music review of: Artist: Forget The Times, Album: Soul Music, Label: Already Dead Tapes, Release Date: Feb 21, 2012, Format: Vinyl Record. UMPI, Kobalt Music Publishing, UMPG Publishing и другие авторские общества 21. For the Good Times is a song written by Kris Kristofferson, first recorded by singer Bill Nash in 1968 before appearing on Kristofferson's own debut album in April 1970. After a recording by Ray Price became a number-one hit single in June of that year, the song established Kristofferson as one of country and popular music's top songwriters while giving Price his first chart-topping country and western song in 11 years. Over the past few years, Ms. Parton has released a series of impressive, old-fashioned, mischievous albums taken together, they seem like a wry joke about the notion of roots music. The most recent was ''Halos and Horns'' Sugarhill - nominated this month for a Grammy for best country album - which gave Led Zeppelin's ''Stairway to Heaven'' a bluegrass-meets-gospel makeover. KELEFA SANNEH

Forget The Times - Soul Music mp3

Performer: Forget The Times

Title: Soul Music

Country: US

Release date: 21 Feb 2012

Label: Already Dead

Style: Experimental, Free Improvisation, Avant-garde Jazz

Catalog: AD029

Genre: Electronic / Jazz

Size MP3: 2040 mb

Rating: 4.1 / 5

Votes: 512

Record source: Vinyl, LP

MP3 Related to Forget The Times - Soul Music

Zbr
Something different obviously, but also something on which it was hard to find suitable information was the LP by Forget The Times (which times? I wondered. The good old days of the 80s? After Thought Broadcast?). This is apparently their third LP and it contains the whole array of free music: free jazz, free rock and free improv. Three, maybe four decades of music from the free fringes of free music pass by here, all recorded in the basement. That home-spun quality is something which they obviously share with Thought Broadcast, although here the sound is less muffled, but still notably lo-fi. Actually I prefer this best when they go for the more rockist agenda, like the two lengthy pieces which are on the opening of side B. I wished both of these records were less clouded wit obscurity however. Thought Broadcast is the band to play at home, but Forget The Times seems like the thing to see in a damp basement. (FdW)

vital weekly,
http://www.vitalweekly.net/840.html
---------------------------------------------------------------------
There aren’t many things in life as beautiful as holding a fresh nicely handmade-packaged vinyl. You get intimate with what’s behind it, watching it taking its spins on the turntable and the sound reaching your ears. It’s easier to focus, not starring at a computer screen, no digital equalizers either. Just sound, two pages of artwork and a description that does a hell of a lot more talking than any page on the internet would do. And of course, the vinyl keeps spinning.

When I received ‘Soul Music’, crafted in hand screenprinted artwork, I played it immediately. Forget The Times is not your ordinary experimental group. Strongly guitar-driven, improvised by blasting drums and a significant amount of fuzz, it demands more than one listen to get to it. In times you find yourself getting into strange drone compositions, before your monitors start exploding fuzz and noise all over. From free jazz to stoner and all the way back, it’s pretty clear that it’s a record made only for the sake of musical expression; not going for that overworked ‘shiny’ production but not keeping it lo-fi either. There’s no point in me going through the record track by track, as what matters most here is the flow. How from the vocal parts on the fuzzy ‘Dead Slint’ you get into that crazed jam on ‘Wash Yr Grippers’ and then finally into the acoustic-based drone of ‘Pillows And Blankets’. And that’s only Side B. The 4 tracks on Side A set the ground for the whole record; starting off with repeated horn patterns, loud fast drumming and guitars that sound like ancient angry bells, those first two minutes go by the title ‘Romans In Storage’, turning into ‘Marion Morrison’ where you can actually visualize the whole recording process (sampled guitar and words probably played backwards). An aggressive 8-minute ‘From The Basement To The Grave’ exploration on guitar noise, a psyched-out impersonation of alarms and voices screaming on ‘Alarm Clock Celebration’ and you already have experienced a lot.

Forget The Times just got back from touring with Problems That Fix Themselves and Batcaves, doing almost 17 shows in about a month. Their upcoming release is going to be a tape coming out on Space Slave Editions later on this year.

Jackie Farrow | Foxy Digitalis
Zbr
Something different obviously, but also something on which it was hard to find suitable information was the LP by Forget The Times (which times? I wondered. The good old days of the 80s? After Thought Broadcast?). This is apparently their third LP and it contains the whole array of free music: free jazz, free rock and free improv. Three, maybe four decades of music from the free fringes of free music pass by here, all recorded in the basement. That home-spun quality is something which they obviously share with Thought Broadcast, although here the sound is less muffled, but still notably lo-fi. Actually I prefer this best when they go for the more rockist agenda, like the two lengthy pieces which are on the opening of side B. I wished both of these records were less clouded wit obscurity however. Thought Broadcast is the band to play at home, but Forget The Times seems like the thing to see in a damp basement. (FdW)

vital weekly,
http://www.vitalweekly.net/840.html
---------------------------------------------------------------------
There aren’t many things in life as beautiful as holding a fresh nicely handmade-packaged vinyl. You get intimate with what’s behind it, watching it taking its spins on the turntable and the sound reaching your ears. It’s easier to focus, not starring at a computer screen, no digital equalizers either. Just sound, two pages of artwork and a description that does a hell of a lot more talking than any page on the internet would do. And of course, the vinyl keeps spinning.

When I received ‘Soul Music’, crafted in hand screenprinted artwork, I played it immediately. Forget The Times is not your ordinary experimental group. Strongly guitar-driven, improvised by blasting drums and a significant amount of fuzz, it demands more than one listen to get to it. In times you find yourself getting into strange drone compositions, before your monitors start exploding fuzz and noise all over. From free jazz to stoner and all the way back, it’s pretty clear that it’s a record made only for the sake of musical expression; not going for that overworked ‘shiny’ production but not keeping it lo-fi either. There’s no point in me going through the record track by track, as what matters most here is the flow. How from the vocal parts on the fuzzy ‘Dead Slint’ you get into that crazed jam on ‘Wash Yr Grippers’ and then finally into the acoustic-based drone of ‘Pillows And Blankets’. And that’s only Side B. The 4 tracks on Side A set the ground for the whole record; starting off with repeated horn patterns, loud fast drumming and guitars that sound like ancient angry bells, those first two minutes go by the title ‘Romans In Storage’, turning into ‘Marion Morrison’ where you can actually visualize the whole recording process (sampled guitar and words probably played backwards). An aggressive 8-minute ‘From The Basement To The Grave’ exploration on guitar noise, a psyched-out impersonation of alarms and voices screaming on ‘Alarm Clock Celebration’ and you already have experienced a lot.

Forget The Times just got back from touring with Problems That Fix Themselves and Batcaves, doing almost 17 shows in about a month. Their upcoming release is going to be a tape coming out on Space Slave Editions later on this year.

Jackie Farrow | Foxy Digitalis