Tumgik
#Instrumental rock
guerrilla-operator · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
MOGWAI
22 notes · View notes
Note
Steve Vai
Tumblr media
10 notes · View notes
myvinylplaylist · 8 months
Text
The Ventures: (The) Ventures In Space (1964)
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Dolton Records
19 notes · View notes
musicollage · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Yellow Swans ‎– Going Places. 2009 : Type.
! acquire the album ★ attach a coffee !
11 notes · View notes
nugothrhythms · 7 months
Text
"All My Friends Are Going to Kill Me" by Huntington, West Virginia-based instrumental gothgaze act Werewolf Gun off of their 2021 self-titled debut release
8 notes · View notes
rhapsodynew · 6 days
Text
Today my "Music Story" is exactly one month old. I want to thank all those who followed my blog.
Thanks to you, the blog's audience has expanded and it appears more often in the recommended ones.🎶🎧 ★🤗 🫶
Thank you very much for your support and trust!
You are the best, thank you! 🥰
BLAGODARY, Mira.~♡
🕊💐🌹🫶💕🍷🥂🎂🎉
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
odk-2 · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
Johnny and The Hurricanes - Storm Warning (1959) Bill Ramal / Tom King from: "Johnny and The Hurricanes featuring Red River Rock" (LP) "Johnny and The Hurricanes featuring Red River Rock" (EP)
Instrumental | Instrumental Rock
JukeHostUK (left click = play) (320kbps)
Personnel: Johnny Paris: Saxophone Paul Tesluk: Keyboards Dave York: Guitar Lionel “Butch” Mattice: Bass Tony Kaye: Drums
Produced by Tom King
LP Released: October, 1959 EP Released: 1960
Warwick Records
7 notes · View notes
randomvarious · 11 months
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Today’s compilation:
James Dean: Tribute to a Rebel 1991 Rock & Roll / Pop-Rock / Hot Rod / Instrumental Rock / Teen Tragedies
Well, this album definitely felt a bit weird and ham-fisted. Normally, tribute albums are made in order to celebrate and honor the legacy of a certain artist or band, but in this case, Capitol-EMI sublabel CEMA Special Markets thought it a good idea to celebrate and honor the legacy of someone who *was not* a musician: the posterchild for mid-50s male youth rebellion himself, James Dean.
But only a few of the songs on this album actually seem to make any reference to the guy at all: the opening classic bit of minimalist 1974 brilliance, David Essex's "Rock On," mentions Dean's name directly; the closing somber a cappella done by The Beach Boys, "A Young Man Is Gone," is a lyrically revised version of The Four Freshmen's rendition of a song called "Their Hearts Were Full of Spring," and is a clear ode to Dean himself; and an obscure, sweltering, mid-60s hot rod instrumental in the middle that feels like it was made for the open road, by Davie Allan & The Arrows, shares the same name as the film that Dean was most famous for starring in: "The Rebel (Without a Cause)."
And before that Arrows one made its way onto this comp, the only other place you could've found it was on an Arrows LP called Apache '65, which was released in, you guessed it, 1965. It wasn't a hit, wasn't released as a single, and it wasn't on any other V/A comp either, so props to whoever was ultimately responsible for compiling this thing for including it, because although it shares the same name as Dean's most famous film, it's also probably the most obscure song on this album. Go figure!
But the rest of these songs don't really seem to have anything to do with James Dean, besides carrying the same themes that wound up defining his persona and story: cars, racing those cars, ungrounded rebelliousness, and tragic motor accidents.
And there are a whole lot of songs out there that are about all of those subjects, so I guess I really just find it kinda odd and crass to try to cash in on this dude's legacy by retrofitting a bunch of songs onto a compilation and then claiming that they somehow specifically represent his very own essence. Can't say that I'm particularly a huge fan of this strange angle.
But still, every song on here, on its own, is nothing short of great. Had CEMA tried to market this collection as something more vague, with a title that's more clever, but basically means the same thing as Songs for and About Cool Dudes😎, this album definitely wouldn't have left as sour of a taste in my mouth as it did.
Great collection of pop and rock oldies that span the 50s through 70s, but an awkward theme to unite them all under, I think. There’s gotta be a classier and more authentic way of celebrating and honoring James Dean than this.
Highlights:
David Essex - "Rock On" Duane Eddy - "Rebel Rouser" The Shangri-Las - "Leader of the Pack" Eddie Cochran - "My Way" Chuck Berry - "No Particular Place to Go" Dion - "The Wanderer" The Arrows - "The Rebel (Without a Cause)" The Allman Brothers Band - "Ramblin' Man" The Beach Boys - "Shut Down" Link Wray - "Rumble" The Rip Chords - "Hey Little Cobra" Gene Vincent - "Race With the Devil" Jan & Dean - "Dead Man's Curve" The Beach Boys - "A Young Man Is Gone"
12 notes · View notes
lulotirabassi · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Práctica de diseño. Flyer alternativo para concierto de Russian Circles en Uniclub, Buenos Aires, 2024
3 notes · View notes
soapdispensersalesman · 2 months
Text
Nine Inch Nails with DOOM soundfonts? Don't mind if I do!
9 notes · View notes
guerrilla-operator · 4 months
Text
Mogwai // Christmas Song
22 notes · View notes
Note
John 5?
Tumblr media
4 notes · View notes
leiselaute · 3 months
Text
Mogwai - Two Rights Make One Wrong from "Rock Action". Released 30 april 2001
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
myvinylplaylist · 8 months
Text
Duane Eddy And The Rebels: $1,000,000.00 Worth Of Twang (1960)
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Jamie Records
7 notes · View notes
musicollage · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Frank Zappa – Hot Rats. 1969 :  Bizarre + Reprise Records.
78 notes · View notes
gothmusiclatinamerica · 11 months
Text
youtube
This video is on the 2021 release Praying Mantis by Asunción, Paraguay-based instrumental gothic project Pylgrym, the first band we have covered here coming out of Paraguay.
11 notes · View notes