Apr. 8th, 2006

fivemack: (Default)
If I want to listen to well-done classical music in Cambridge, I can look out for adverts announcing bits of the standard repertoire to be performed by various people in West Road, in college chapels, or (if the 'various people' are thoroughly famous) the Arts or the Corn Exchange.

In non-classical music, I don't see so much of a standard repertoire: I don't understand the way that random local performers encode what kind of a thing they are. I have a couple of sets of fairly pronounced tastes - I like well-produced undisguised pop, Spice Girls and Steps and Aqua. I like lyrics-driven pieces, fairly regardless of genre - Tom Lehrer, Johnny Cash, Leonard Cohen, I suppose some bits of Franz Ferdinand; I prefer the funnier of The Magnetic Fields' 69 Love Songs. I like Oysterband a great deal, from the mixture of ceilidh bouncy enthusiasm with politicised lyrics; the Levellers a bit less, Billy Bragg on politics much more than Billy Bragg on people, same for Bob Dylan. Bounciness is probably the unifying feature there, and would explain why I'm pretty keen on everything on the Best of Pete Waterman double album. Politics isn't necessary, I like Meatloaf and quite a lot of other Eighties rock, but it helps - very fond of Laibach's NATO.

Most rap I'm actively unkeen on; I picked up the new Kate Bush album and it did nothing for me. Most soul strikes me as wallpaper, there was nothing on the recent Goldfrapp that particularly stuck. Straightforward 'how I love him' solo-singer hasn't appealed when I've listened to it; whilst I like some of the recordings of absolute jazz standards, I've not enjoyed much live jazz.

So, what should I be listening to, and when are they next performing at the Corn Exchange, the Junction, or some smaller and more accessible Cambridge venue?
fivemack: (Default)
I am precisely ninety years younger than Esperanto, was born twenty years to the day after the assassination of dictator Armas of Guatemala, and sixty-nine years younger than the organisation which became the FBI.

I share my birthday with George Bernard Shaw, Carl Jung, Aldous Huxley, Kevin Spacey and Sandra Bullock; the Earl of Rochester who appeared in The Libertine died 297 years before I was born, and Eva Peron's death preceded my birth by precisely a quarter-century.

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