What are you listening to? March, 2018 special edition, now with stickers!

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His album from last year, A Crow Looked at Me, is the most sad and difficult to listen to album I have ever encountered. It's an amazing record, but can be depression inducing.
I agree. This would seem to be more in the same vein. He is a man in mourning ...and healing.

Now Only, written shortly following the release of A Crow Looked At Me and the first live performances of those songs, is a deeper exploration of that style of candid, undisguised lyrical writing. It portrays Elverum’s continuing immersion in the strange reality of Geneviève’s death, chronicling the evolution of his relationship to her and her memory, and of the effect the artistic exploration of his grief has had on his own life. The scope of Now Only encompasses not only hospitals and deathbeds, but also a music festival, childhood memories of conversations with Elverum’s mother, profound paintings and affecting artworks he encounters, a documentary about Jack Kerouac, and most significantly, memories of his life with Geneviève. These moments and thoughts resonate with each other, creating a more complex and nuanced picture of mourning and healing. The power of these songs comes not from the small, sharp moments of cutting phrases or shocks, but the echoes that weave the songs together, the way a life is woven.
 
Chicago Transit Authority (later Chicago) - Chicago Transit Authority (1969)


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Chicago III (1971)

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First listen - I have spun Chicago's first two albums plenty of times and have Chicago IV (Live at Carnegie Hall box) on vinyl. Beyond that, my experience with the band jumps to an oft-played Greatest Hits (Chicago IX) then the poppier 16 and 17 in high school in the '80s. My loss as this one combines rock, blues, and some jazz elements. Releasing a double album as your second outing is bold; releasing another as your third is just crazy but it showed that early Chicago was more jam-band than hits-band at their inception. In fact, despite several FM hits are on their first two, none on this one. Again, digging Terry Kath's guitar and realizing the sadness of his future drug and alcohol addition and eventual bizarre accidental suicide (showing off his gun collection)
 
Ruth Wallis - House Party (King 1956)

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Vinyl Rip Of The Day.

Ruth Wallis is familiar to Dr. Demento fans everywhere thanks to "The Dinghy Song", the nautical but nice tale of sailor Davy and his remarkable equipment:

Now I have seen a hundred other dinghies,
And I'm qualified to remark,
He's got the cutest little dinghy in the navy.
Why, I would know it even in the dark.
It isn't very long and it isn't very short.
It's built for speedy action and it gets him into port,
The cutest little dinghy in the navy. Heave ho! Heave ho!

The rest of her selections run in the same direction - "Too Many Men In My Life (But Not Enough Life In My Men)", "Johnny Had A Yo Yo", etc. Ruth's energetic vocals are backed by a small hot jazz band.
 
Chick Corea - Bliss! (Muse 1973)

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Allaboutjazz sez:

This album has a strange history. As Joel Dorn reminds us in the liner notes, it was originally produced by Alan Douglas in 1967 with the current title. The quartet is led by drummer Pete LaRoca, and features the talents of pianist Chick Corea, bassist Walter Booker, and tenor saxophonist John Gilmore. However, the album was later sold to Muse Records, who subsequently released it with a different title, Bliss! (MR-5011), listing Chick Corea as the leader. "Pete took umbrage, sued Muse and won," Dorn writes. "Unfortunately, when Muse took it off the market as a Chick Corea record, it was never re-released as a Pete LaRoca record and consequently hasn't been available for much too long a time."

It is now available digitally on Spotify and elsewhere with the original cover, which doubtless was more to the liking of Ruth Wallis:

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