percussion
Dance number at S.M. Baguio
Tags:
CPO
Uc
This is it....Thanksgiving session at the RI studio.
Featuring...Steve "The Bean" Moffa-congas and percussion,
Jesse "Littleman" Moffa-Gretsch drum, Zildjian cymbals, Johnny "You talkin' ta me" Trouble-Gibson acoustic guitar, Gibson Les Paul guitar, ESP 5 string bass and vocals.
Tags:
2008
BPE
John
Moffa

Beschrijving in het Engels en het Nederlands:
ENGLISH: On this musical postcard, Ruloff Manuputty plays six of his selfmade percussion instruments. Ruloff worked with wood, metal (for instance a frying pan) and newspapers (the shaker). The stones he found in Samos, Greece.
During the soundrecordings he made the images he used for his collage. These are images of soundrecording-takes that were actually (partly) used in the final mix. So no play-back!
"Stone, Rubber-wood and Metal-rice"
Ruloff Manuputty:
instruments, spel, composition, sound and images: recording and editing/ mixing.
© 2008 Ruloff Manuputty
NEDERLANDS: Op deze muzikale ansichtkaart bespeeld Ruloff Manuputty zes van zijn zelfgemaakte percussie instrumenten. Ruloff bewerkte hout, metaal (onder andere een koekepan) en krantenpapier (de shaker). De stenen vond hij op Samos, in Griekenland.
Hij maakte tijdens de geluidsopnamen de beelden die hij voor zijn collage gebruikte. Het zijn beelden van geluid-takes die, gedeeltelijk, echt in de uiteindelijke mix terecht zijn gekomen. Geen play-back dus!
"Stone, Rubber-wood and Metal-rice"
Ruloff Manuputty:
instrumenten, spel, compositie, geluid en beeld: opnames en bewerking.
© 2008 Ruloff Manuputty
Tags:
demo
greece
griekenland
handmade
hout
instruments
manuputty
metaal
metal
musical
muziekinstrumenten
percussie
percussion
rice
rijst
rubber
ruloff
ruloffflim
samos
selfmade
steen
stone
wood
zelfgemaakte

Beggars Opera - Time Machine; from album Waters Of Change (1971)
This band was from Scotland, their name is derived from a novel by the poet John Gray in 1728. The musicians of BEGGARS OPERA were Martin Griffiths (vocals), Rick Gardiner (guitar and vocals), Alan Park (keyboards), Gordon Sellar (bass, acoustic guitar and vocals), Virginia Scott (Mellotron and vocals) and Raymond Wilson (drums and percussion). BEGGARS OPERA made a lot of records but remained acting in the shade of most progressive rock bands.
Their debut-album "Act one" (70) contains fluent and tasteful organ driven progrock with powerful "Sixties" sounding guitarwork. The long track "Raymonds Road" is a splendid tribute to the "classics" featuring Mozarts A la Turka, Bachs Toaccata in d-fuga en Griegs Peer Gynt Suite on the Hammond organ. The second album "Waters of Change" (71) is build around the dual keyboardplay of Alan Park and newcomer Virginia Scott and the distinctive, a bit cynical vocals of Gardiner. The nine tracks are beautiful symphonic landscapes with many organ solos, some swelling and glorious Mellotron waves (like The MOODY BLUES and early KING CRIMSON) and fine electric guitarwork. On the third LP "Pathfinder" BEGGARS OPERA seems to have reached its pinnacle: strong and alternating compositions with lush keyboards (Mellotron, organ, piano and harpsichord), powerful electric guitarplay and many shifting moods (even Scottish folk with bagpipes). The band released three more albums but, in...
Tags:
Beggars
Opera
Progressive
Rock
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