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Dinner party Music/Muzak
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Subject: Dinner party Music/Muzak From: GUEST,Roger the skiffler Date: 27 Mar 01 - 03:49 AM I know "lists of" annoy and intrigue Mudcatters in equal measure. Below is an extract from today's Times (UK) which suggests music to encourage a dinner party or to end it. Only the Miles Davis appears in my eclectic collection and I usually find Fats Waller or Nat King Cole acceptable to the widest spectrum of friends. To get rid of them I perform at the pianola! Story follows: ....Modern cooking prides itself on its dash and eclecticism, its crazy combinations and "funky" fusions. Dinner Party Music has been slow to loose its stays and corsets though. Keith Floyd and several other high-profile chefs have lent their name to "dinner party classics" CD series. These are invariably as chillingly predictable as the wine-list at a Julie's Pantry. Pasta tonight? Then why not try Vivaldi or Pavarotti? Paella? Miles Davis's Sketches of Spain, I think, or perhaps some flamenco? Strudel? Err, Deutschland über Alles? Greek food? Don't be ridiculous. Where is the musical equivalent of modern eclectic cuisine with its controversial "liver in lager" collisions and Mexicali-Kosher-Yorkhire "medleys"? Why not segue some Wu Tang Clan into Johnny Mathis? Drizzle some piquant Tortoise-style post-rock on that kebab? Stuck for some background tunes for your next Masai evening, the African cuisine based around blood and urine? How about Atomic Kitten? In the end, it doesn't matter. You may begin with some casually stylish collection from the Buddha Bar. But by the time you're on the bottle of Brazilian liqueur from behind the tumble dryer, everyone will be demanding Abba's Greatest Hits and The Best Disco Album In The World Ever. I think it's time you called them a cab.
Ten albums to whet your appetite
Portishead Dummy
Is that the time? Tunes to scare off your guests
Crass How Does it Feel to be the Mother of a Thousand Dead? |
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Subject: RE: Dinner party Music/Muzak From: Mrrzy Date: 27 Mar 01 - 01:41 PM Excellent! Although most folks I know would put Blue by Joni Mitchell into that second category... add anything polka to that one too... |
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Subject: RE: Dinner party Music/Muzak From: Sorcha Date: 27 Mar 01 - 01:50 PM At my place, we tend to BYOM--bring your own music...... |
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Subject: RE: Dinner party Music/Muzak From: Wesley S Date: 27 Mar 01 - 02:18 PM Years ago we had a dinner party where the theme was to bring a recording that you loved that you thought the others might not have heard of before. It was an eclectic evening to be sure. |
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Subject: RE: Dinner party Music/Muzak From: Matt_R Date: 27 Mar 01 - 05:41 PM I have to tell you, I picked up People Move On by ex-London Suede guitarist Bernard Butler. The album is simply gorgeous. I've listened to it a whole lot since yesterday. It's perfect for working, walking, relaxing, eating, sleeping....anything. Simply beautiful. He makes electric guitar a powerful thing...but not an travesty as some see it. At times it sounds like a violin, other times a cello, a dobro, a human voice. There are also some really nice acoustic songs, including on that is simple voice, acoustic guitar, and melodeon. Beautiful stuff from a guy who was, when with the London Suede, was considered a guitar hero/god. |
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