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Author Topic: Desert Island Discs  (Read 3581 times)

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Offline uncharted

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Re: Desert Island Discs
« on: December 13, 2008, 04:08:26 PM »
Desert Island Discs are supposed to be 5 tracks not 8 whole Albums!

To make it even more authentic, you also have to pick your favourite out of the 5 and also name a book you'd take (can't choose a religious text or the complete works of Shakespeare)

Can you narrow it down to just the 5 songs?  It's actually painfully hard to do.  If you can manage it, I'll post my 5 (already got them in an iTunes playlist)
 

Offline uncharted

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Re: Desert Island Discs
« Reply #1 on: December 13, 2008, 11:38:50 PM »
You are indeed right, it is 8 and not 5.  I don't know where I got 5 from.  I'm going to have to think of 3 more :-)
 

Offline uncharted

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Re: Desert Island Discs
« Reply #2 on: December 14, 2008, 04:47:42 PM »
"Unfinished Sympathy" - Massive Attack (The Blue Lines, 1991)
Simply the most beautiful song I've ever heard.  I'd heard it before a couple of times, but it wasn't until I'd heard it on an advert in 1999 that I actively sought it out.  It's such an amazingly emotional and powerful track.  It doesn't have many words, but those it does have are so heart-wrenching.  Shara Nelson's (sp?) voice is just so beautiful.  I know that some people dismiss it because of the Hip-hop style beat and the sampling, but those strings still send shivers up my spine.

"No Good (Start the Dance) [Edit]" - The Prodigy (Single, 1994)
This track changed my life.  At first I hated the song and only listened to it because it was in between two songs I liked on a friend's compilation tape.  One day it just clicked and from that point on I was in love with electronic music.  I begged my parents for a Stereo for Xmas just so that I could listen to this song.  I prefer the edit over the album version because it's got a bit more energy and less farting about with intros.

"Gold Dust Woman" By Fleetwood Mac (Rumours, 1977)
I kind of rediscovered this a couple of years back.  It's the odd-ball drumming and the interesting sound engineering that makes it a favourite.  Even Stevie Nicks, who's voice generally gets right on my tits, sounds brilliant.

"3 Kilos" - The Prodigy (Music for the Jilted Generation, 1994)
Strangely, I never got hold of Jilted Generation (Which is my favourite album BTW) until after Fat of the Land came out.  Much like "Climatize" on FoTL, this one is a bit of a cinematic soundscape rather than a balls-to-the-wall dance track.  This really sparked my interest in down-tempo electronica.  This would often come on my Walkman when I used to walk back home after a party or night out.  Many good memories associated with this track.

"Green Light" - The Breakfastaz (Kick It/Green Light EP, 2004)
I don't remember how I came across this one, but I love its dirty basslines.  The breakdown and build-up in the middle is amazing.  I listened to this a lot during my last year of Uni, and its something I turn to when I'm feeling a bit irritated by stuff going on around me.

"Walking Zero" - The Sneaker Pimps (Becoming X, 1996)
I bought the album this is on at probably the greatest point of my life when I was most contented.  Sadly, a few months later things started to fall apart for me, but this track, despite its dark overtones has happy memories associated with it.  I had got the album for "6 Underground", but this quickly became my favourite track.

"Music Reach 1/2/3/4" - The Prodigy (Experience, 1992)
I was a bit too young for the rave scene, although growing up in Essex, I was certainly aware of it.  I discovered the wonderful music behind it through my love of the Prodigy and through the Experience album.  As much as I love the classics like "Jericho", "Fire" and "Out of Space", this is my favourite track on the album.  Just full of energy, just pure, don't give a {bleep} enjoyment.

"Sweet Harmony" - Liquid (Single, 1992)
Once I had acquired a taste for the long dead rave scene I started buying up as many "Old Skool" compilation albums as I could slowly building up a collection of gems out of the vast amounts of filler tat.  This is one track that kept cropping up, and for good reason, it's a great back-to-basics track.  This is another song I used to listen to while walking to and from nights out (I lived in a village a couple of miles away from most of my friends - and the train station).