Radiohead just released Kid A. It's been dominating the British charts since its release. It's utterly brilliant and beautiful, as long as you're not hung up on "traditional" song structure. At present I own two albums of music. Kid A
and Aphex Twin's "Come To Daddy" At present I need no more.
Rock may well be dead. Music, far from so. Me, I'm more excited about music than I think I've ever been. I sort of tend to ascribe to the "Caligula Theory" of social tidal movement; ie dominant cultural mores inevitably harden and congeal into ever more elaborate forms of decadence, corruption and disconnection, until the time comes when their
inherently self-serving nature leaves them without a genuine base. Then, they topple.
B
Baerwald
(view)
Radiohead just released Kid A. It's been dominating the British charts since its release. It's utterly brilliant and beautiful, as long as you're not hung up on "traditional" song structure. At present I own two albums of music. Kid A
and Aphex Twin's "Come To Daddy" At present I need no more.
Rock may well be dead. Music, far from so. Me, I'm more excited about music than I think I've ever been. I sort of tend to ascribe to the "Caligula Theory" of social tidal movement; ie dominant cultural mores inevitably harden and congeal into ever more elaborate forms of decadence, corruption and disconnection, until the time comes when their
inherently self-serving nature leaves them without a genuine base. Then, they topple.
and Aphex Twin's "Come To Daddy" At present I need no more.
Rock may well be dead. Music, far from so. Me, I'm more excited about music than I think I've ever been. I sort of tend to ascribe to the "Caligula Theory" of social tidal movement; ie dominant cultural mores inevitably harden and congeal into ever more elaborate forms of decadence, corruption and disconnection, until the time comes when their
inherently self-serving nature leaves them without a genuine base. Then, they topple.
