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Friday, December 27, 2019

Which one is your favorite? - XVI -

This is the last "Which one is your favorite?" post for 2019. I checked the previous posts and saw that it is time for a jazz classic and I picked a great piece from Monk. It is one of the most covered compositions of Monk and I hope you will like the ones I chose for you...

Here is the piece for this week;

"Crepuscule with Nellie"

Thelonious Monk wrote “Crepuscule with Nellie” for his wife (the eponymous Nellie) when she was having surgery for a thyroid disorder in 1957. “Crepuscule” first appeared on a Monk album that same year, Monk’s Music. 

The tune was originally titled "Twilight with Nellie", but Pannonica de Koenigswarter suggested instead to use the French word for twilight, which is crepuscule. 

Monk at the piano is joined here by Art Blakey on the drums, Wilbur Ware on bass, Gigi Gryce, Coleman Hawkins, and John Coltrane on saxophones, and Ray Copeland on trumpet. This version starts with a solo piano introduction from Monk before the drums and bass join Monk on this beautiful ballad. 

Monk himself played and recorded many different versions of the composition.

And here are the 3 versions I picked for you;

  • Jason Moran - "Crepuscule With Nellie"
  • Kronos Quartet & Ron Carter "Crepuscule With Nellie"
  • Chick Corea feat. Christian McBride & Brian Blade  - "Crepuscule with Nellie"

Now the floor is yours, go ahead and make your comments (here, Instagram, Facebook wherever you feel like...).


nb. Please note that I intentionally do not include the original versions of the songs as it would be a little unfair to the artists covering the songs, and I am sure that sometimes you will be surprised to see that the songs you thought were the originals are just covers..

Thursday, December 26, 2019

Five Songs for the Weekend - LVI -

The last "weekend songs" post of the year. I believe 2019 was a good year for music so the 5 songs I have chosen for this post are all released during this year. I hope you like them.

I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

As John Keats once said;
"Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard are sweeter."

Here are the 5 songs for this weekend;

  • Sharon Van Etten feat. Norah Jones - "Seventeen"
  • Jorja Smith - "Be Honest" 
  • HAIM - "Summer Girl"
  • Lil Nas X - "Old Town Road"
  • Cass McCombs - "Absentee"
Hope you have a great weekend.


nb. You can open the actual youtube page by clicking the name on the upper left side of each video.

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Happy Holidays!

It is impossible to finish the year without the Xmas songs. So I compiled a couple of songs I like. I hope everyone has a wonderful Holiday Season.

Wishing you the Merriest Christmas and the Happiest New Year so far. Let 2020 will be a year filled with music as well...


  • James Corden and Guests - "All I Want for Christmas"
  • Kacey Musgraves & Lana Del Rey - "I'll Be Home For Christmas"
  • Postmodern Jukebox - "What Are You Doing New Year's Eve"
  • Jeff Goldblum & The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra - "Winter Wonderland"
  • Abba - "Happy New Year"


Monday, December 23, 2019

Top 10 Albums of the Year

Here is my second "Top 10" list for 2019. This time with all genres combined, except jazz, which I already did a Top 10 post last week.
I need to restate that normally I do not like such lists due to the fact that one might be missing a lot of valuable works that are around but unheard of by the person creating the list. After all I am just an avid music listener and definitely not a critic or anything near that. So please take into consideration that the below artists/albums are only the ones I picked during the year and liked a bit better than the rest of the things I have listened to...



10) The Cinematic Orchestra “To Believe”



Long-awaited album from the sound scape masters. Jason Swinscoe and Dominic Smith have created a new dimension of dreamy music in collaboration with talented vocalists such as Roots Manuva, Tawiah and Moses Sumney. An album that can carry the listener out of this world.


A Caged Bird/Imitations of Life by The Cinematic Orchestra

9) Holly Herndon “Proto”


Very interesting album by Holly Herndon again exploring the musical links between humans and artificial intelligence. Is this the future of music? Who knows, but Holly Herndon and her band have created an impressive and a groundbreaking job this year.


Eternal by Holly Herndon

8) Vampire Weekend “Father of the Bride”


Vampire Weekend has a rather different musical perspective with the new lineup. Might not be liked by all fans but I guess they have done a brilliant job and as always managed to stay ahead of the curve. I liked the new sound and with each listening found new tastes.


Unbearably White by Vampire Weekend

7) Thom Yorke “Anima”



This year's Top 10 list would definitely be incomplete without Thom Yorke's Anima. He and  his longtime producer Nigel Godrich have created a phonetic atmosphere with loops, distorted instruments, heavily modified sounds and interesting rhythms. The short movie that was released with the album can take the viewer on a dystopic journey that doesn't seem very far from today.


Last I Heard (…He Was Circling The Drain) by Thom Yorke

6) Nilüfer Yanya “Miss Universe”



It's been a while I last posted about Nilüfer Yanya on the blog. I was following her closely in her earlier days but it seems she has achieved a lot in a very short period of time and came out with this debut. She really stands out with her unique vocal, her ability to bounce back and forth between musical and lyrical styles and surely deserves to be in the list.


H34T Rises by Nilüfer Yanya

5) Caterina Barbieri “Ecstatic Computation”



Berlin-based Italian composer Caterina Barbieri's 4th album is deeper, darker, and trippier than any of her previous releases. I believe you don't need to be an electronic music fan like me in order to enjoy this album as it has the power to create an emotional and a revelatory sound scape for every listener.


Fantas by Caterina Barbieri

4) Brittany Howard “Jaime”



As the lead vocalist and guitarist of Alabama Shakes, Brittany Howard released her debut album in September with great acclaim for the critics.  It is dedicated to her sister Jaime, who died of a rare cancer type as a teen.


History Repeats by Brittany Howard 

3) Lana Del Rey “Norman Fucking Rockwell!”


Here is an album with a cinematic beauty. Her Lana Del Rey persona is timeless and it seems that something that was missed during the last decades. Norman Fucking Rockwell! can easily be her magnum opus. Definitely should be in everybody's top 3.


Doin' Time by Lana Del Rey

2) FKA twigs “Magdalene”


It was difficult to place this album on the top of the list or as a runner up but only for sentimental reasons I had to pick another one for number one. Anyhow it is an album you will definitely be hooked on from the first track to the last. Haunting vocals, amazing beats and captivating melodies will draw you to the depths of FKA twigs' musical mind.


Home with You by FKA twigs

1) Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds “Ghosteen”


Here is my number one album of 2019. There is no better artist than Nick Cave that can musically express certain emotions like grief, loss and death.This is an album that gives you all these senses but not in a depressingly way. I do not know if it's only me who finds optimism in Nick Cave's music but listening to his music gives me hope in an unconventional perspective like seeing the light at the end of the dark tunnel. In my humble opinion if you need to pick one album to buy this Xmas or New Year, this should be the one...


Bright Horses by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds 

I hope you have liked my Top 10 albums of the year. And please post your comments as I would love to hear your favorite albums of 2019...

Friday, December 20, 2019

Which one is your favorite? - XV -

This is one of my favorite songs from one of my favorite bands, Radiohead. It is from their debut album "Pablo Honey". The song was not initially a chart success, but became a worldwide hit after being rereleased in 1993. Radiohead took elements from the 1972 song "The Air That I Breathe"; following legal action, Albert Hammond and Mike Hazlewood are credited as cowriters. The members of Radiohead grew weary of it in later years, and refused to perform it for a period.

Here is the song for this week;

"Creep"

Thom Yorke wrote the song in 1987 while he was a student at Exeter University in England. He first recorded it acoustic. He said that this is about being in love with someone, but not feeling good enough. He describes the feeling as, "There's the beautiful people and then there's the rest of us."

On the album version, Thom Yorke sings, "You're so f--king special." For radio, he recut it as, "You're so very special." Yorke regrets changing the line for the radio version, saying it disturbed the "sentiment of the song." According to him, the song lost its anger as a result.

The song interestingly became a popular hit almost everywhere but Radiohead's home country England. 

Following the release of Pablo Honey, Radiohead spent two years touring in support of Belly and PJ Harvey. They performed "Creep" at every show, and came to resent it.  Yorke said the band felt they were being judged on a single song and had to move on. During the tour for Radiohead's third album, OK Computer (1997), Yorke became hostile when "Creep" was mentioned in interviews and refused requests to play it, telling a Montréal audience: "Fuck off, we're tired of it."

Well we're not Thom...

And for the variety of the covers I chose 4 versions for you;

  • Macy Gray - "Creep"
  • Evrencan Gündüz - "Creep"
  • Scala & Kolacny Brothers - "Creep"
  • Postmodern Jukebox - "Creep"

Now the floor is yours, go ahead and make your comments (here, Instagram, Facebook wherever you feel like...).


nb. Please note that I intentionally do not include the original versions of the songs as it would be a little unfair to the artists covering the songs, and I am sure that sometimes you will be surprised to see that the songs you thought were the originals are just covers..

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Five Songs for the Weekend - LV -

Here is the 55th post for the weekend songs. It translates to 275 songs over a roughly one year period. I hope you have discovered some new songs and/or artists or the posts have made you crack a smile remembering a song with memories... Of course the posts will continue in the next year, after all, there are still a lot of songs to be discovered or remembered...

As Plutarch once said;
"Music, to create harmony, must also investigate discord."


Now the list for this weekend;

  • Chumbawamba - "On eBay"
  • Mano Negra - "Out Of Time Man"
  • Jazzmeia Horn - "Free Your Mind"
  • The Specials - "Vote For Me"
  • Fabrizio Bosso Spiritual Trio - "A Change Is Gonna Come"

Hope you have a great weekend.

nb. You can open the actual youtube page by clicking the name on the upper left side of each video.

Monday, December 16, 2019

Top 10 Jazz Albums of 2019

As the year end approaches we started to see the "Top 10" lists everywhere. I have been trying to make my own list since the beginning of the month without the intention of sharing with you; but when I completed it I said to myself "what the hell, I will post my own list".
Normally I do not like such lists due to the fact that one might be missing a lot of valuable works that are around but unheard of by the person creating the list. After all I am just an avid music listener and definitely not a critic or anything near that. So please take into consideration that the below artists/albums are only the ones I picked during the year and liked a bit better than the rest of the things I have listened to...



10) The Bad Plus “Activate Infinity”



Second album of The Bad Plus with the pianist Orrin Evans who replaced Ethan Iverson some time ago. All 8 pieces on the album are written by the band members. It is always a pleasure to listen to The Bad Plus and this album is no different. Lots of sophisticated and inspiring tunes...

Avail by The Bad Plus

9) Jon Batiste “Anatomy of Angels:Live at the Village Vanguard"


Recorded live in 2018 at the Village Vanguard in New York. As the high-profile bandleader on Late Night with Stephen Colbert, Batiste shifts to a more traditional jazz sound that evokes his deep New Orleans roots and passion for the music of innovative bebop pianist Thelonious Monk. 

Round Midnight by Jon Batiste

8) The Comet Is Coming “Trust in the Lifeforce of the Deep Mystery”


England's sci-fi jazz trio the Comet Is Coming paying a tribute to Sun Ra, and John & Alice Coltrane. Maxwell Hallett (Betamax), Dan Leavers (Danalogue) and of course Shabaka Hutchings (King Shabaka) are creating an unworldly atmosphere.

Because The End is Really The Beginning by The Comet is Coming

7) Nérija “Blume”



Another fine example of UK jazz. Almost an all women band including the great saxophonists Cassie Kinoshi and Nubya Garcia. The band is a true jazz power collective.

Nascence by Nérija

6) Hiromi “Spectrum”



Well no list is complete for me without Hiromi in it and I am really thankful she released a solo album after some years. Mostly she plays her own music but has chosen some great tunes to cover such as Blackbird and Rhapsody In Blue. This is a very good recording to listen to her technical mastery and marvelous improvisations.

Blackbird by Hiromi

5) Matana Roberts “Coin Coin Chapter Four: Memphis”



This is the 4th chapter of the Coin Coin series (a multi chapter musical work-in-progress exploring themes of history, memory and ancestry) of saxophonist Matana Roberts. Maybe it is one of the most powerful albums of this year.

As Far As The Eye Can See by Matana Roberts

4) Brad Mehldau “Finding Gabriel”


Here is another favorite artist of mine. It is always good to witness his novel approaches to music, this time with collaborations from people such as Ambrose Akinmusire, Mark Guiliana and Kurt Elling. You can find heavy use of electronics on this album too.

The Garden by Brad Mehldau

3) Kris Davis “Diatom Ribbons”


An album from a Canadian pianist. In her latest album, quıite she worked with many great musicians like Esperanza Spalding, Marc Ribot and Terri Lyne Carrington. I found the recording quite diverse which proves what a talented musician Kris Davis is.

The Very Thing by Kris Davis feat. Esperenza Spalding

2) Bremer/McCoy “Utopia”


It is difficult to define this album as pure jazz but I guess there is no other genre that would embrace the Danish Duo's latest. It is hypnotic and creates a unique integrity in a way you feel like there are not 12 pieces on the album but only one.

Aben Bog by Bremer & McCoy

1) Yonathan Avishai / Avishai Cohen “Playing the Room”


A perfect album from ECM. Great sounding musicians Avishai Cohen on the trumpet (yes not the bassist Avishai Cohen) and Yonathan Avishai on the piano. The music they perform is a pure but a complex conversation, very organic and aesthetic. For me it was the best jazz album of 2019.

Sir Duke by Yonathan Avishai & Avishai Cohen

I hope you have liked my Top 10 jazz albums of the year. And please post your comments as I would love to hear your favorite jazz albums of 2019...

Friday, December 13, 2019

Which one is your favorite? - XIV -

Here is a very popular song from the 50s. The original version was recorded by The Platters with Tony Williams on lead vocals, and released as a single on November 3, 1955. The words and music were written by Buck Ram, The Platters' manager and producer who was a successful songwriter before moving into producing and management. The song reached the top 5 in UK charts and became number 1 in US charts.

And here is the song for this week;

"The Great Pretender"

Buck Ram saids that he wrote the song in about 20 minutes in the washroom of the Flamingo Hotel in order to have a song to follow up the success of "Only You (And You Alone)". 

In 2004, the song was voted 360th greatest song of all time by the Rolling Stone magazine.

This song describes a man who deals with his heartbreak by denying it - he's mastered the art of smiling through the pain. 

The song was used in the movie Rock Around The Clock, and also appeared on the American Graffiti soundtrack along with two other songs by The Platters: "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" and "Only You."

Chrissie Hynde named her rock band "The Pretenders" after this Platters song.

And here are the 3 versions I chose for you;
  • Freddie Mercury - "The Great Pretender"

  • Roy Orbison - "The Great Pretender"

  • Rod Stewart - "The Great Pretender"

Now the floor is yours, go ahead and make your comments (here, Instagram, Facebook wherever you feel like...).



nb. Please note that I intentionally do not include the original versions of the songs as it would be a little unfair to the artists covering the songs, and I am sure that sometimes you will be surprised to see that the songs you thought were the originals are just covers...

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Five Songs for the Weekend - LIV -

Hello dear music lovers and sorry for skipping last week. I hope you missed the weekend songs post.
Year end is on the way and I wish you all a great Holiday Season. Warm your winter days up with music.

As Plato once said;
"Music is the movement of sound to reach 
the soul for the education of its virtue."


Here is our list of 5 songs for this weekend;

  • White Town - "Your Woman 1917"
  • The President Of The United States - "Ça Plane Pour Moi"
  • Jeff Goldblum & The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra - "The Sidewinder / The Beat Goes On"
  • Alfa Mist - "Keep On"
  • Hayden James ft. Running Touch - "Better Together"

Hope you have a great weekend.

nb. You can open the actual youtube page by clicking the name on the upper left side of each video.

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Which one is your favorite? - XIII -

Here is a Portishead song for you that has been quite popular in the 90s. Portishead were a UK group formed in Bristol by Geoff Barrow (numerous instruments), Beth Gibbons (vocals), Adrain Utley (guitar) and Dave McDonald (sound engineer). This was their first of three UK Top 20 hits. The album it came from, Dummy, was named as 1994's album of the year by three separate British magazines, Melody Maker, Mixmag, and The Face. In 1995 it won the prestigious Mercury Music Prize, awarded to the best album by a British artist.

And here is the song for this week;

"Glory Box"

"Glory Box" is an Australian term for a piece of furniture where women store clothes and other items in preparation for marriage. The title doesn't appear in the lyric.

The song used a sample of Isaac Hayes' "Ike's Rap II," from Hayes' 1971 double-album, Black Moses. 

The song can be heard in several films, such as Stealing Beauty, When the Cat's Away, The Craft, B. Monkey, Tout pour plaire, Lord of War, Claudine's Return and Wild. The song also featured in a Levi's Jeans commercial, and a French TV advert for Candia milk in the early 2000s.

And here are the 3 versions I chose for you;

  • John Martyn - "Glory Box"
  •  Eva Cortés - "Glory Box"
  • Olivia Colman - "Glory Box"
Now the floor is yours, go ahead and make your comments (here, Instagram, Facebook wherever you feel like...).

nb. Please note that I intentionally do not include the original versions of the songs as it would be a little unfair to the artists covering the songs, and I am sure that sometimes you will be surprised to see that the songs you thought were the originals are just covers...

Five Songs for the Weekend - LIII -

Finally some chilly weather in my hometown, I guess in every part of the world seasons are acting strangely...No spring, no autumn as we know them. Mixed seasons create mixed minds so this week I will try to choose some really eclectic pieces. I hope you like them...

As Les Baxter once said;
"Any good music must be an innovation."


Here are the 5 songs for this weekend;


  • Brad Mehldau - "Proverb of Ashes"
  • Ahmed Abdul-Malik - "Oud Blues"
  • Diamanda Galás -  "I Put A Spell On You"
  • John Zorn - "The James Bond Theme" 
  • DeVotchKa - "How It Ends"

Hope you have a great weekend.

nb. You can open the actual youtube page by clicking the name on the upper left side of each video.

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Hiromi Does It Again, Alone...

The Japanese pianist Hiromi Uehara has already been a guest in the blog pages several times. She might be in the top 3 on my contemporary pianists list and she continues to amaze again and again...

What I would like to introduce to you is her recent album that has been publised in September in Japan and in October elsewhere.


"Spectrum" is the eleventh studio album by Hiromi. The album was released by Telarc. It is her first solo album in 10 years after "Place to Be" released in 2009 also by Telarc.

The recording consists of 11 pieces including 2 covers,  one from the Beatles and one from George Gershwin. All other pieces are written by Hiromi.

She says, “as a pianist, making a solo album is really like, kind of being naked, there is nowhere to hide. There is no other instrument to play with in order to cover the sound. It’s really challenging, but at the same time, it’s the best way to fully enjoy this instrument.”

Spectrum by Hiromi

“Making a solo piano album, the biggest difference is that it’s only piano and it’s only me. So, I have to be a drummer, I have to be a bass player, I have to be like a multi-instrumentalist, only using the piano,” Hiromi says. She points to the opening track, “Kaleidoscope,” as a good example of this, as she aimed to treat each of her fingers like a different part of an orchestra.

Kaleidoscope

Try to listen to the full album and let Hiromi take you on a musical journey where you will stroll around different colors and references.

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Which one is your favorite? - XII -

Here is a very classic song for you, originally written and performed by Leonard Cohen. Maybe being the most famous song of Cohen in the later years, initially it almost didn’t get released; and when it was, it passed almost unnoticed.

And here is that song;

"Hallelujah"

"Hallelujah" is a song written by Canadian singer Leonard Cohen, originally released on his album Various Positions (1984). Achieving little initial success, the song found greater popular acclaim through a recording by John Cale, which inspired a recording by Jeff Buckley. It is considered as the "baseline" of secular hymns.

The song, in its original version, is in 12/8 time, which evokes both early rock and roll and gospel music. Written in the key of C major, the chord progression matches lyrics from the song: "goes like this, the fourth, the fifth, the minor fall, and the major lift": C, F, G, A minor, F.

Cohen wrote around 80 draft verses for "Hallelujah", with one writing session at the Royalton Hotel in New York where he was reduced to sitting on the floor in his underwear, banging his head on the floor. His original version, as recorded on his album Various Positions, contains several biblical references, most notably evoking the stories of Samson and Delilah from the Book of Judges ("she cut your hair") as well as King David and Bathsheba ("you saw her bathing on the roof, her beauty and the moonlight overthrew you"). Following his original 1984 studio-album version, Cohen performed the original song on his world tour in 1985, but live performances during his 1988 and 1993 tours almost invariably contained a quite different set of lyrics. Cohen's performances of the song drew the attention of many other artists and the song started to become viral. As of today it is one of the most covered songs of all time.

Leonard Cohen once explained: "Hallelujah is a Hebrew word which means 'Glory to the Lord.' The song explains that many kinds of Hallelujahs do exist. I say: All the perfect and broken Hallelujahs have an equal value. It's a desire to affirm my faith in life, not in some formal religious way but with enthusiasm, with emotion."

As I mentioned there are dozens of noteworthy covers of the song and I tried to pick the ones that have both artistic and historical value...

Just for this song I had to choose 4 versions and here they are;


  • John Cale - "Hallelujah"
  • Jeff Buckley - "Hallelujah"
  • K.D. Lang - "Hallelujah"
  • Rufus Wainwright - "Hallelujah"

And another performance from Mennel that I liked very much, but keep in mind that it is out of the competition...



Now the floor is yours, go ahead and make your comments (here, Instagram, Facebook wherever you feel like...).


nb. Please note that I intentionally do not include the original versions of the songs as it would be a little unfair to the artists covering the songs, and I am sure that sometimes you will be surprised to see that the songs you thought were the originals are just covers...


Five Songs for the Weekend - LII -

Hello dear readers, I am back from a week off. I hope you missed the weekend songs. I did enjoy the good music and rum under the warm sunshine and now I am ready for a busy winter that looks like never will arrive.

As Cecilia Bartoli once said;
"Music is a way to dream together and go to another dimension."


So here comes our list for this weekend;

  • Roberto Carlos Valdes - "Drume"
  • Massive Attack - "Sly"
  • Paloma Faith - "Never Tear Us Apart"
  • New Order - "Temptation"
  • Balthazar - "Bunker"
Hope you have a great weekend.

nb. You can open the actual youtube page by clicking the name on the upper left side of each video.

Five Songs for the Weekend - LI -

Literally the last days of summer here, even had the chance for a swim during the Republic Day holiday. Next week I will be in Cuba and try to catch some Cuban sound for the coming posts, with Cuban rum of course. I will try to update the blog, however the internet seems a bit problematic there, so don't worry if you do not hear from me next week...

As Herbie Hancock once said;
"Music is the tool to express life – and all that makes a difference."


So here comes our list for this weekend;

  • Booth And The Bad Angel - "Dance Of The Bad Angels"
  • Matt Berninger - "Walking on a String" (feat. Phoebe Bridgers)
  • Gnarls Barkley - "Going On"
  • Stereolab - "Jenny Ondioline"
  • Sudan Archives - "Water"
Hope you have a great weekend.

nb. You can open the actual youtube page by clicking the name on the upper left side of each video.

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Which one is your favorite? - XI -

The song I chose for this week is one of my favorite songs of all time. I like the old versions, relatively new covers, interpretations in different genres, anything...Looks like I really have an affinity for George Gershwin.

Please keep your requests and comments coming...


Here is our song for this post;

"It Ain't Necessarily So"

"It Ain't Necessarily So" is a popular song with music by George Gershwin and lyrics by Ira Gershwin. The song comes from the Gershwins' opera Porgy and Bess (1935) where it is sung by the character Sportin' Life, a drug dealer, who expresses his doubt about several statements in the Bible. 

George Gershwin's life work culminated in the three act opera Porgy and Bess, which was based on the 1926 novel Porgy by DuBose Heyward. A jazzy fusion of classical opera and Broadway musical, the work is set in the fictional all-black slum dwelling of Catfish Row in Charleston, South Carolina. The opera tells of the disabled beggar Porgy's desperate attempts to rescue the beautiful Bess from her twin dependency upon her violent and possessive lover Crown and the aforementioned Sportin' Life.

It is said that Gershwin was largely influended by the Jewish blessings when composing the song.The first and most direct example of influence occurs at the start of the song; the melody and phrasing is nearly identical to the blessing incanted before reading from the Torah. The words "It ain't necessarily so" stand in place of "Bar'chu et adonai ham'vorach". This motif repeats multiple times in both, and both include a response from a congregation. While the phrasing of the melody in the blessing varies, it remains strictly in triplets in Gershwin's tune.The song also seems to draw from the tonality of the Jewish prayer mode Adonai malakh (God is King) by emphasizing the minor tenth, the major third, and the minor seventh.

And here are the 3 versions I chose for you;

  • Bronski Beat - "It Aint Necessarily So"
  • Aziza Mustafa Zadeh - "It Aint Necessarily So"
  • Cécile McLorin Salvant - "It Aint Necessarily So"

Now the floor is yours, go ahead and make your comments (here, Instagram, Facebook wherever you feel like...).


nb. Please note that I intentionally do not include the original versions of the songs as it would be a little unfair to the artists covering the songs, and I am sure that sometimes you will be surprised to see that the songs you thought were the originals are just covers...

Friday, October 25, 2019

Which one is your favorite? - X -

This week I took on a challenge and picked a Beatles song to present you. It is one of my favorite Beatles' song and I know there are a lot of good covers and it will really be hard to bring them down to three. Anyhow let me give it a try...

Please keep your requests and comments coming...

Here is our song for this post;

"Come Together"

"Come Together" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles, written primarily by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney. The song is the opening track on their 1969 album Abbey Road and was also released as a single coupled with "Something". The song reached the top of the charts in the United States and peaked at No. 4 in the United Kingdom.

"Come Together" started as Lennon's attempt to write a song for Timothy Leary's campaign for governor of California against Ronald Reagan, which promptly ended when Leary was sent to prison for possession of marijuana.

Timothy Leary was a psychologist who became famous for experimenting with LSD as a way to promote social interaction and raise consciousness. Leary did many experiments on volunteers and himself and felt the drug had many positive qualities if taken correctly. When the government cracked down on LSD, Leary's experiments were stopped and he was arrested on drug charges. In 1969, Leary decided to run for Governor of California, and asked John Lennon to write a song for him. "Come Together, Join The Party" was Leary's campaign slogan (a reference to the drug culture he supported) and was the original title of the song. Leary never had much of a campaign, but the slogan gave Lennon the idea for this song.

Lennon played rhythm guitar and electric piano and sang the lead vocals, Paul McCartney played bass, George Harrison played lead guitar and Ringo Starr played drums. It was produced by George Martin and recorded in late July 1969 at Abbey Road Studios in London.

The whispered lyric that sounds like "shoot" is actually Lennon saying "shoot me" followed by a handclap. The bass line drowns out the "me."

And here are the 3 versions I chose for you;


  • Aerosmith - "Come Together"
  • Ike and Tina Turner  - "Come Together"
  • Michael Jackson - "Come Together"

Here is another one for bonus this week coming from a band I like very much "Tok Tok Tok". 

Keep in mind that it is out of competition...


Now the floor is yours, go ahead and make your comments (here, Instagram, Facebook wherever you feel like...).


nb. Please note that I intentionally do not include the original versions of the songs as it would be a little unfair to the artists covering the songs, and I am sure that sometimes you will be surprised to see that the songs you thought were the originals are just covers...

Thursday, October 24, 2019

Five Songs for the Weekend - L -

Here comes the 50th post for the weekend songs. Music is such an important part of our lives and I hope at least some of the 250 songs I have shared under this title had an influence on your memories, feelings and maybe even your collections...

As the American novelist Sarah Dessen once said;
"Music is the great uniter. An incredible force. 
Something that people who differ on everything 
and anything else can have in common."


So here comes our lists for this weekend;

  • The National - "Rylan"
  • Etta James - "I'd Rather Be Blind"
  • Róisín Murphy - "The Rumble"
  • Ólafur Arnalds - "Þú Ert Jörðin"
  • Nilüfer Yanya - "In Your Head"

Hope you have a great weekend.

nb. You can open the actual youtube page by clicking the name on the upper left side of each video.

Friday, October 18, 2019

Which one is your favorite? - IX -

I wasn't planning to post in this series classical (such a wrong definition) music pieces but I have come across some beautiful covers (more like interpretations) in this genre too. This week I am picking a piece that I really love and find rather interesting. I hope you will share my enthusiasm in choosing this piece and send me your comments on the versions you like.

Please keep your requests and comments coming...

And our choice for this week is;

"Gnossienne No.1"

The Gnossiennes  are several piano compositions written by the French composer Erik Satie in the late 19th century. The works are for the most part in free time (lacking time signatures or bar divisions) and highly experimental with form, rhythm and chordal structure. The form as well as the term was invented by Satie.

Satie's coining of the word gnossienne was one of the rare occasions when a composer used a new term to indicate a new "type" of composition. Satie used many novel names for his compositions (vexations, croquis et agaceries and so on). Ogive, for example, is the name of an architectural element which was used by Satie as the name for a composition, the Ogives. Gnossienne, however, was a word that did not exist before Satie used it as a title for a composition. The word appears to derive from gnosis. Satie was involved in gnostic sects and movements at the time that he began to compose the Gnossiennes. However, some published versions claim that the word derives from Cretan "knossos" or "gnossus"; this interpretation supports the theory linking the Gnossiennes to the myth of Theseus, Ariadne and the Minotaur. Several archeological sites relating to that theme were famously excavated around the time that Satie composed the Gnossiennes.

It is possible that Satie may have drawn inspiration for the title of these compositions from a passage in John Dryden's 1697 translation of the Aeneid, in which it is thought the word first appeared:

Let us the land which Heav'n appoints, explore;
Appease the winds, and seek the Gnossian shore

The Three Gnossiennes were composed around 1890 and first published in 1893. A revision prior to publication in 1893 is not unlikely; the 2nd Gnossienne may even have been composed in that year (it has "April 1893" as date on the manuscript). The piano solo versions of the first three Gnossiennes are without time signatures or bar lines, which is known as free time.


And here are the 3 versions I chose for you;

  • Paolo Fresu, Richard Galliano & Jan Lundgren - "Gnossienne No.1"
  • Erkan Oğur - "Gnossienne No.1"
  • Quartet Cinderella - "Gnossienne No.1"

Here is another one for bonus this week coming from "Lost Unicorns". 
Keep in mind that it is out of competition...



Now the floor is yours, go ahead and make your comments (here, Instagram, Facebook wherever you feel like...).



nb. Please note that I intentionally do not include the original versions of the songs as it would be a little unfair to the artists covering the songs, and I am sure that sometimes you will be surprised to see that the songs you thought were the originals are just covers...