I have got to take you up on that! SD and EWF were both in a different league to the Doobie Brothers. Sure MM had one of the great blue-eyed soul voices but I don't think their legacy is anywhere near the other two.
The formula implies they were better. Subjective I know but surely not? Were you suggesting this?
But I must admit I love the 'Taking it to the Streets' album.
EWF's 'All n' All' album was one of my earliest jazz oriented discoveries and connected me to jazz-funk. And did SD ever make a bad album? And of course MM never did an album that touched Donald Fagen's "Nightfly' - a high point in the '80's in admittedly the worst decade for music since the 1940's.
I listened to VW DID's today. The Arvo Part piece is a gem - Gidon Kremer on violin but few know that Keith Jarrett plays the piano on the album.
I have got to take you up on that! SD and EWF were both in a different league to the Doobie Brothers. Sure MM had one of the great blue-eyed soul voices but I don't think their legacy is anywhere near the other two.
The formula implies they were better. Subjective I know but surely not? Were you suggesting this?
But I must admit I love the 'Taking it to the Streets' album.
EWF's 'All n' All' album was one of my earliest jazz oriented discoveries and connected me to jazz-funk. And did SD ever make a bad album? And of course MM never did an album that touched Donald Fagen's "Nightfly' - a high point in the '80's in admittedly the worst decade for music since the 1940's.
I listened to VW DID's today. The Arvo Part piece is a gem - Gidon Kremer on violin but few know that Keith Jarrett plays the piano on the album.
3 comments:
I have got to take you up on that! SD and EWF were both in a different league to the Doobie Brothers. Sure MM had one of the great blue-eyed soul voices but I don't think their legacy is anywhere near the other two.
The formula implies they were better. Subjective I know but surely not? Were you suggesting this?
But I must admit I love the 'Taking it to the Streets' album.
EWF's 'All n' All' album was one of my earliest jazz oriented discoveries and connected me to jazz-funk. And did SD ever make a bad album? And of course MM never did an album that touched Donald Fagen's "Nightfly' - a high point in the '80's in admittedly the worst decade for music since the 1940's.
I listened to VW DID's today. The Arvo Part piece is a gem - Gidon Kremer on violin but few know that Keith Jarrett plays the piano on the album.
I have got to take you up on that! SD and EWF were both in a different league to the Doobie Brothers. Sure MM had one of the great blue-eyed soul voices but I don't think their legacy is anywhere near the other two.
The formula implies they were better. Subjective I know but surely not? Were you suggesting this?
But I must admit I love the 'Taking it to the Streets' album.
EWF's 'All n' All' album was one of my earliest jazz oriented discoveries and connected me to jazz-funk. And did SD ever make a bad album? And of course MM never did an album that touched Donald Fagen's "Nightfly' - a high point in the '80's in admittedly the worst decade for music since the 1940's.
I listened to VW DID's today. The Arvo Part piece is a gem - Gidon Kremer on violin but few know that Keith Jarrett plays the piano on the album.
The formula is just intended to imply a combination - nothing quantitative or ranking.
I agree about Nightfly - it took you some place else with some romance and fantasy in a dark decade.
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