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What are you listening to?

Fletch

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,865
Location
Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
Last year we saw an amazing German band Max Raabe & the Palast Orchester. I meant to post a link last year and forgot. Some of you, may have enjoyed one of their concerts, especially New Yorkers, they have played Carnegie Hall no less than four times. You will adore their dress style and you will love that Max not only sings in the same way as stars of the era, he also refrains from using any hand or arm gestures. Instead he sings just like those matinee idols, with his hands by his sides.
I was lucky enough to hear Max and the band in Minneapolis in April. He really has what it takes to sell this music - which is a single, compelling, unique personality. A seamless, pleasantly stereotyped character who can embody the era. Someone approachable, yet otherworldly. Because the music of the dance orchestra IS otherworldly today - best presented and understood as theater.

The band is incredibly good, and shows enough talent at jazz, novelty acts and group singing to carry a show by itself. But you know what? Without Max there, leaning languidly on the piano Not Conducting between vocals, no one would give a good gosh darn. It's the times we're living in. There's no bringing a band like the Palast-Orchester into today's world. You have to create a space where it makes sense. That is Max's genius.

Max Raabe understands what a lot of my fellow musicians don't - that this music does NOT have a life of its own today. That's a hard thing to deal with for a musician like me, but for an entertainer like Max, that's a space for him to shine in. He is about the music and makes the music about him. And everybody's happy.
 
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GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,793
Location
New Forest
Max Raabe understands what a lot of my fellow musicians don't - that this music does NOT have a life of its own today. That's a hard thing to deal with for a musician like me, but for an entertainer like Max, that's a space for him to shine in. He is about the music and makes the music about him. And everybody's happy.
Your description, was accurate, succinct and generous, my compliments to you.
 

ToucanSam23

New in Town
Messages
36
Location
Toronto, Canada
I don't believe anyone has posted this here before...

[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RzwTL2rSFes[/video]

T'is quite interesting to see Eddie Condon singing. I'm also lead to believe that Benny Goodman is in fact the clarinetist here.



Edit: Why isn't the BBCode working?
 
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GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,793
Location
New Forest
Perhaps it's because I am old, but I had never heard of The New York Dolls, yet when I heard their lead singer, one David Johanson, in the guise of Buster Poindexter, singing that Trinidad calypso song by Arrows, namely: Hot, Hot, Hot. It blew me away. So I did a little research and found that The Andrews Sisters had their famous hit: "The Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," covered by Christina Aguilera, retitled to: "Candyman." And a lady that I had never heard, name of "Eliza Doolittle," sings: "Pack Up," which is a re-mix if the WW1 song: "Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag."
The list is endless, the more I delve, the more I find.
The videos that are made to accompany these remixed songs are very good indeed, but how do the producers get around the copyright?
And given the originality of the said videos, why aren't their talents used to write something original.
I've enjoyed listening to them but I can't make my mind up if the new versions are a tribute, or just blatant plagiarism.
 

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