What are you streaming tonight?


As we are in the modern age of music I thought I would see how this fares.
We have threads specific for cdp and tt so why not streaming as it is a modern media.
I don't care if you stream Tidal, Deezer, Spotify, Paradise Radio or any number of internet stations.
I would like you to share your tastes and method of streaming.
uberwaltz
@bdp24
Correct, UK ( not the band!) Is United Kingdom, or as some prefer Great Britain.
And yes David, Northern Ireland, just easier to say the Irish ...lol

There was not too much united about it tbh, apart from physical by land!
Billy Bremner is Scottish so yes truly a UK band.
In fact Billy formed the band if I remember correctly and has recently released material under name of rock files.
@uberwaltz, so UK refers to England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, correct? I love Rockpile, and that great band had members from England (Nick Lowe), Wales (Dave Edmunds and Terry Williams), and second guitarist Billy Bremner from where I don't know.
And onwards, sometimes I hate Tidal!
What? I hear!

Well it gets me so sidetracked at times.

For instance while listening to Metal Jukebox, which is an album of great songs covered and metalised a little, Helloween played Hocus Pocus.

Right, Focus and Jan Akkeman.
Search and looking through their albums then I look at similar artists, ooh Caravan!
Looking at their albums and then similar artists, ooh Camel!

So from Helloween to Camel in a few clicks!

So....

Stationary Traveller ... Camel

So, well British!
@bdp24 
Lol
I was going to go back and edit that post but was too late, as I realised it came off a bit stuffy!

So to clarify, it's fine to call bands or items British( unless it's a band made up of five drunken Scotsmen!).
But the people tend to get a bit squify if called British... Funny old blighters!

And yes the duds made a difference on stage and off it tbh.

A bit of class as you rightfully state.

Maybe should start a separate thread just for The Kinks!
Oops, sorry uberwaltz! I use the term in the old fashioned sense, as in "veddy British". I don't care for the Woodstock movie (I had no interest in going to it; sit in the dirt? No thanks ;-), but seeing The Who on stage in their fine Bri, I mean English, threads---ruffled shirts, lace, satin---in contrast to the hippie wear of the other bands, amuses me. I HATE to see guys on stage in T shirts and old blue jeans (or much worse, sweat pants). Have a little class, man. The Kinks always "dressed up" for the stage, and looked like Rock Stars, not farmers (as Cyril Jordan of The Flamin' Groovies described the other San Francisco bands).

Big Kinks fan here. I have a very special affection for Village Green Preservation Society. It never gets old for me, and there are no filler songs. Great lyrics and songs.

I can see why some fans were turned off by the concept album thing. I didn't let it ruin my enjoyment of individual songs, but I would have been happier without it. Still, even an album as concept driven as Preservation Act II has some great songs. And don't forget Everybody's in Show Biz. It has great live and studio cuts. 

What can I say bdp24... Makes me proud to be English!

Btw nobody would ever call themselves British... It's either English, Scottish, Welsh or Irish.

And now for something completely different.......

Metal Jukebox ... Helloween.

Just to be in the right spirit for tonight.

Tidal

Ray Davies is my favorite writer of all the British bands, including the Nerk Twins ;-) . He is SO British, capturing and invoking the soul of that country in the same way Brian Wilson does the U.S. A. To continue the comparison, he is, as is Brian, an excellent melodist; "Waterloo Sunset" is absolutely magnificent, and he has written many others of equal caliber.

It was therefore disappointing to me when he embarked on his concept period, where the songs were written to support the greater whole, rather than standing on their own. Some of the songs were good, but many just served the function of furthering the narrative, sounding, as songs---their chords, the chord structures and sequences, melodies, etc.---more like the filler songs that lesser bands always fill out their albums with.

Ray Davies was also a great entertainer---very charismatic and amusing. And The Kinks had that very unique, trademark band sound. Ray was a true rhythm guitarist, as was John Lennon. But my God was his Telecaster loud! Extremely piercing and bright, as Tele's can be. And Dave is an under-rated lead guitarist, very exciting in a pure Rock 'n' Roll way (very little real Blues influence, rare for a Brit). He also has written some great songs (sprinkled throughout the group's albums), and is himself an interesting singer. Mick Avory is a wonderful drummer, and perfect for The Kinks in the way Ringo was for The Beatles. Very musical---a song player, not just a drummer. I think The Kinks may be my favorite British group of them all! Snappy dressers, too ;-) .

Tidal through westlake bbsm-4 monitors with jbl subs - nearfield, superb sound.

Just discovered Nancy LaMott and Janis Siegel - great jazz vocalists. Already well-known for others I suppose.
CD is Voice of a woman, volume 1. "Talk to me baby" a new favourite. Very high fidelity.
I never knew there would be so much passion and depth of knowledge on The Kinks.
Never were at top of my list as to tell the truth I was into much heavier sounds in those years of which England had some giants!.

Saying that listening right now to...

Misfits ..... as never heard it before.
Tidal

@bdp24 Agreed, Village Green was great and sounds fine(as does Face to Face) in Tidal MQA streaming. Arthur is arguably the best ever rock concept album. The high points thereafter(all from the ’70s) are Muswell Hillbillies, Everybody’s In Showbiz, Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneyground Pt. One, Preservation Act One, Sleepwalker, and Misfits.

I followed them live in the mid and late ’70s. John Dalton on bass was a worthy replacement for Pete Quaife, and John Gosling on organ was big contributor to their updated sound. Soap Opera and Schoolboys in Disgrace were nadirs as concepts, but the music was always well made. Dave Davies was the spiritual George Harrison of this band. Check out his two solo albums from the mid ’70s. Ray’s recent solo albums since his transformational gun shot wound around Katrina are very solid illustrations of a trademark elegiac style that echoes the strongest middle period albums.

I can’t think of any band from the early ’60s with such a long and worthy arc.

@bdp24 

That particular Kinks album has been given the MQA treatment and it worked out rather well imho.

Will have to look out for the reissue box set

The Kinks Village Green album (a long-time favorite of mine) is getting the deluxe/boxset reissue treatment in the very near future. The album was part of the group’s fantastic "middle period" Face To Face/Something Else By/Village Green trilogy. After Village Green, original bassist Pete Quaife left the group, and Ray Davies started thinking in terms of the dreaded concept album. Thanks, The Beatles ;-) . The Kinks next album was Arthur, and it was all downhill from there.

The Kinks remained a great live band (I saw them in 1969 and ’70, or was it ’70 and ’71?), but their albums became less and less interesting with every release (to me, anyway). By the time their Reprise contract expired, and they signed to RCA, they were almost out of gas. They had one pretty good album left in them, Muswell Hillbillies, after which it was pretty much over. They had a real good run there for quite a while.

@uberwaltz 

The Kinks are the Village Green Preservation Society

Hey Uber, I remember Walter............
Acoustic .... American Hifi.

Tidal

This is a band I had high hopes for, their ST first album was superb but all subsequent releases were disappointing imho.

Oh well
Coco Montoya - Songs From the Road :-)
great bluesman.....

from the server

and a Teddy Pardo Linear Power supply will fix just about any wall wart trash / hash generator.... of course YRMV


uberwaltz, that is what I suspected but don't have enough experience to say so. Will continue trial and error! Its painless when its cheap. ;-)
N80

I was following your thread and asked a fellow member who I knew had tried the $150 iFi iPurifier.
His report was not promising as he said he could detect no change at all and he ended up giving it away.
But obviously YMMV.
@tomic601 - Yep, I've found a lot of new (to me) music on Radio Paradise. Probably more than any other source in recent years. Great stuff.
@reubent I love radio paradise
great for finding new stuff

i am listening to my server

Mike Zito - Pearl
River......
I'm still working out my future streaming strategy so tonight it is low-fi iTunes.

Listening to Ted Hawkins' "The Next Hundred Years" his third and last studio album and the only one with good backing players. Hard to describe Ted's music. Blues based but unique.
Some country sounding stuff too. Amazing voice. If interested start with the song "The Good and the Bad." That's what hooked me. Will look for CDs on eBay tonight.
Listening to some Radio Paradise this late afternoon / early evening. Bill and Rebecca (or their computer algorithm) are playing some excellent stuff.
After trying Amazon Music for a couple of days the SQ is not bad.
The layout is similar to Pandora.
Easiest to just choose a "channel" of your chosen band or genre and then you can customize with thumbs up or down to have it play songs you like.

Pretty decent for those times when you cannot choose just who or what you want to listen to.
The better half joined Amazon Prime so I thought I would at least try the Amazon music channel out.

90,S Alternative&Grunge channel
Discovered a Christa Ludwig album on the Tidal Masters series.  In heaven listening to this div8ne voice on my Martin Logan’s powered by Hegel Rost.
Leon Bridges, Johnnyswim...
with a properly chilled beverage.
Leon Bridges channel via
Spotify premium 

Olympus Sleeping ... Razorlight.

Pretty unknown British indie rock band with a sort of Green Day vibe to them but a little poppy in places.

Tidal
@david_ten,

I am still exploring Qobuz catalog but so far I am very pleased. I am waiting on the official launch so I can listen and compare my favorite tunes in high resolution. After all, Qobuz most enticing draw is their classical catalog and high resolution 24bit (up to 192KHz) streaming. 


@uberwaltz  Great! Good to see Qobuz getting some play here and you leading the charge! I'll jump on a trial, once they are broadly present in the U.S. market.
David
Yes it is great to see lalitk posting here and he is the first after myself to post streaming by Quboz for sure.
Think I posted maybe 10 times Quboz streaming but probably no more as their rock catalog is vastly smaller than Tidal.

That unfortunately makes it a non starter for myself after the 30 day trial.
@lalitk  Great to see a mention of Qobuz streaming...I believe the first I have seen here. How's it working out for you?