Not bad. I'm more of a Copeland and ?uestlove fan when it comes to master beat makers
No, I've stuck mostly to English stuff or instrumentals. Still feeling out what people will like. But it's a good suggestion. Personally, I prefer the minimalist version of Aimo best.
Aimo (by Megumi Nakajima, Macross Frontier OST, 2008)
But my favorite is definitely Alto's theme.
Eyes High wrote:Well I have to admit I was wrong about something. The singer of "Her Eyes", I have heard him before. I just didn't realize he had been in the band Train.
cmsahe: liked the music from your's. very relaxing. I couldn't understand the lyrics yet still I liked it. Thank you for posting the link.
The song
cmshae linked was in Japanese. If you liked that, you might like this track from the same series:
Alto's Theme (by Yoko Kanno, Macross Frontier OST, 2008)
trang wrote:One of these days, this week, that I can maintain consciousness long enough then be online at the same time ( I work Overnights if you couldn't guess that by the time of my posts!) at home I'm going to go back through thread and catch up on some of the variety of music. I'm similar to SwordMaster haven't heard a lot of whats posted.
I know a lot of music, but know there is a lot out there to share/discover!
That's why I thought this thread was a good idea. I'm always on the lookout for music and I figured maybe some other people were as well. Only problem is I'm notoriously critical of most music and I don't like a lot of pop. Typically, the more different something sounds, the more I like it. Or to be more accurate, the more unlike the kind of pop that is being played, the better. Whatever sounds fresh and not like everything else. Good news is I'll listen to almost any genre to find music I like. Rock, rap, metal, indie, electronica, house, trip hop, R&B, j-pop, punk, alternative, industrial, reggae, country, classical, computer, dance, blues, hip hop, jazz, et cetera.
Well, here's my next recommendation. A cookie goes to whoever can tell me what film this great song was used to score a closing montage
House of the Rising Sun (by The Animals, 1964)