Who said that music programming is mundane?


My journey down a typically overgrown path has uncovered evidence that music programming is far from mundane. Here is the track listing for a newly released double CD from Cherry Red Records:

Disc One
1. Gabor Szabo – El Toro
2. Alice B. Toklas – Recipe for Hashish Fudge
3. Ustad Ali Akbar Khan – Raga Yaman Kalyan: Teen Tala
4. Aldous Huxley – "How Often Have You Taken Mescalin Yourself?”
5. Sounds Inc. – Taboo
6. Sun Ra (seen in header image) – Ancient Aiethopia
7. Ravi Shankar – Raga Jinjhoti
8. Herbie Mann – It Ain't Necessarily So

Disc Two
1. Les Troubadours du Roi Baudouin - Missa Luba: Sanctus
2. Gabor Szabo – Lady Gabor
3. Jackson Pollock – Modern Art & Method
4. Edgard Varèse - Integrales
5. Yusef Lateef – The Plum Blossom
6. Ustad Vilayat Khan – Raga Miya Ki Malhar
7. Ken Nordine – Spectrum
8. Sharan Rani - Raga Kausi-Kanada

The double CD is titled Dawn of Psychedelia and, on the same path, now read how Elgar takes a trip.

Also on Facebook and Twitter. No freebies involved in this post. Any copyrighted material as "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s).

Comments

Recent popular posts

Life's a bitch and then you reincarnate

The purpose of puffery and closed-mindedness

All aboard the Martinu bandwagon

A vintage year for blasphemy and heresy

Good enough for Toscanini, Ormandy and Stokowski

Classical music's biggest problem is that no one cares

Classical musician's brave journey from Mozart to Morisco

Audiences need permission to like unfamiliar music

How classical music became a pseudo-event

Third rate music on Naxos' American Classics?