Thursday, September 13, 2012
Sound Compendium 107 (SC 107): Thank You for Flying...British Overseas Airline Corporation
Today we bring you some vintage in-flight vibes from Great Britain. Artists include familiar Library and production music artists Syd Dale, Johnny Harris, David Snell, John Cameron and William Kimber.
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Sound Compendium 106 (SC106 B): Thank You for Flying...Lufthansa
As promised, the second of the double album. Jazzier than the first. Enjoy in Comments...
Also note that the dead links to Sound Compendium 101 and 102 are fixed. See their respective Comments sections for fresh linkage.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Sound Compendium 106 (SC106 A): Thank You for Flying...Lufthansa
The second in the Sound Compendium in-flight listening series. These grooves all come from Germany, East and West from the '60s and '70s.
We start with the first of a double album. Part two will follow next week. Here's a sample from a Hamburg-born artist that those familiar with the Selected Sounds releases will possibly recognize (link to album in comments):
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Sound Compendium 105 (SC 105): Thank You for Flying...Air France
This is the first of a series of thematic mixes I'm doing for in-flight listening entertainment. We start with some mid-tempo numbers from France.
I'm a bit short on patience to do a back cover or track list. You'll just have to trust me that this mix is top shelf. Artists include le meilleur des meilleurs musiciens Français.
Here's a sample (full album in the comments).
I'm a bit short on patience to do a back cover or track list. You'll just have to trust me that this mix is top shelf. Artists include le meilleur des meilleurs musiciens Français.
Here's a sample (full album in the comments).
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Sound Compendium (SC 104)
Found this little jewel while digging through my vinyl. Very spacey as the cover art would suggest. This mysterious comp must come from the late '70s to early '80s.
Sample:
Link in Comments.
Monday, August 6, 2012
Gustav Brom - Plays for You Pop Jazz and Swing (1976)
Considering my own Czech roots, I've always had a soft spot for anything Bohemian related. This is probably my favorite record from Communist-era Czechoslovakia. Gustav Brom was primarily a big band leader with the occasional penchant for groovier numbers, namely on several April Orchestra library releases. Sadly, to my knowledge I've only tasted two of the rumored 570 records Brom is rumored to have been on--this and his work on April Orchestra's Vol. 34 release. If anyone has anything else of Brom's, please link me up!
This is a fantastic album, with the coolly sideburned Brom suavely directing the orchestra, fantastically belying the sounds underneath. Check the sample and then go straight to the download in comments...and that's an order!
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Sound Compendium (SC 103)
No rest for the wicked Sound Compendium series. The Library comps are flying off the web like hotcakes.
Where SC 102 took listeners to the frontiers of the universe, SC 103 brings you back to the cold, cold glaciers of the Antarctic.
This volume is inspired by the mysterious, dark place way down under. Below is a very brief, brief snippet (29 seconds to be precise) of what lies beneath the frozen tundra, and you won't need a pick-axe to get to it. You'll only need to find your way to the comments section for a link and a faint bit of praise.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Sound Compendium (SC 102)
While not exactly a tour of the astral traveling kind as suggested by this here album cover, I'm off to Ulaanbaatar tomorrow on business. Perhaps Mongolia could be imagined as the very opposite of outer space. I have no idea, but I'll find out tomorrow.
To celebrate I leave you this nugget, a little Sound Compendium experience that is sure to capture the spaced out Library sounds of former times.
Link in the comments.
Friday, July 13, 2012
Goodbye and Hello
As you can see, the name High Plains Drifter exists no more, replaced by
the better-sounding, more appropriate Sound Compendium Home Library.
Why? The latter simply sounds much cooler, while the former, for many,
conjured the image of Clint Eastwood on a horse high above a blood-red
painted western village. Not musical, and not the image I was aiming
for.
The blog will be better than ever, more musical, and completely devoted to giving back the wealth of music that I've received over the years. The new theme kicks off with the spectacular share below.
The blog will be better than ever, more musical, and completely devoted to giving back the wealth of music that I've received over the years. The new theme kicks off with the spectacular share below.
Sound Compendium (SC 101)
In celebration of the blog's name change, but in keeping with the running Library and infectious beats theme, we present you with a fresh, home-sliced mix of Library recordings courtesy of the Sound Compendium Home Library. Not sure of the precise direction I'll be taking the Sound Compendium mixes long term, but you can expect a good 10-20 volumes of the current variety, updated about once a week.
I'm just starting to pick up on the basics of Photoshop. Hope you like the chunes and the artwork.
Here's a sample, an obscure Janko Nilovic tune which is unfortunate only in its rather scratchy recording quality. Alas, it's the only copy I can find.
Get the rest over at MF with the first ever installment, and sure to be collector's item. Link in comments and be sure to say hello while you're there.
Monday, July 9, 2012
MASS TRANSIT 3: MUSIC FOR LEISURELY AFTERNOON TRANSPORT
As the summer temperatures rise, Mass Transit 3 drops the tempo. This volume's beats and infectious grooves accompany your afternoon transit experience.
Here be a sample of thy goods within:
There's more where that came from! Get down with Mass Transit 3: Music for Leisurely Transport.
The one track mix is above. Check the comments if you prefer the individual songs.
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
mass transit 2: music for evening rush hour
HPD is back for the attack with another installment of homespun Mass Transit tunes. This time its a spectacular mix of propulsive grooves to aide your evening rush hour transit woes.
The feelin'-like-a-badass factor goes way up when you're slicing through a sea of commuters like Barry Sanders with this baby in your ears. And this time we've even got a frickin playlist and a back cover courtesy of Photoshop, so you can decide rather easily that this album is definitely for you.
This sample could not possibly fail to convince...
That's your link to the one track mix. A separate file broken up into individual songs is in the comments, so take the one you want, or both.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
MASS TRANSIT 1: MUSIC FOR EARLY MORNING COMMUTES
6 AM. Public transport. Speeding metal. Blurs of steel. Dodging traffic. The knowing rider needs the accompanying soundtrack. This is one groovy mix tape if I do say so myself. Check back in a week or so for volume two.
Bernard Estardy (shared in the post below), Francois de Roubaix, Alan Parker and Bernard Fevre are some of the names that appear on this mix. If you dig '70s Library, waste no time in grabbing this one. Next time you need to drag your tired morning ass across a city, strap your headphones to this beast and ride the groovy train.
I recognize that a single track can be a bit annoying for those who don't like it that way. Count me among those who find themselves supremely disappointed when a completed download reveals a much anticipated album on a single track. Thus you can go one or both. The single track link with proper crossfades, etc, is above. A link to the album with separate tracks can be found here.
Friday, June 15, 2012
Bernard Estardy: Electro Sounds Vol. 1 & 2
Prepare to be bombed out of your skull by two fantastic Early Electro albums courtesy of French sound engineer Bernard Estardy. These two are simply must-haves, though I slightly favor Vol. 2. The samples below are indicative of the quality of music throughout these two masterpieces.
Though I've not seen any reference to it, it would be one crazy coincidence if Architecture in Helsinki's "Tiny Paintings" wasn't taken from Vol. 2's "Asiatic Dream".
This first sample is titled "Tic Tac Nocturne". To be lazy with a reference, it's perhaps reminiscent of Pink Floyd's "Time".
...another brilliant piece:
Get the rest below...
Though I've not seen any reference to it, it would be one crazy coincidence if Architecture in Helsinki's "Tiny Paintings" wasn't taken from Vol. 2's "Asiatic Dream".
This first sample is titled "Tic Tac Nocturne". To be lazy with a reference, it's perhaps reminiscent of Pink Floyd's "Time".
...another brilliant piece:
Get the rest below...
Thursday, May 24, 2012
NFL Films
I could sit for hours listening to the voice of NFL Films, John Facenda, describe the seemingly banal sweep to the sideline of a running back being pursued by an angry linebacker intent on knocking his block off. No joke, I actually HAVE sat hours upon hours rewinding and rewatching old clips from '60s and '70s NFL Films. Those decades for me were the halcyon days of pro football coverage, an era when commentary, music, poetry and narrative all came together to create a classical period. Many Americans' nostalgia and love for football, consciously or not, is not just for the game itself. Rather it is provided through the dramatic action depicted by NFL Films which sometime in the early '60s helped elevate the professional football drama, a collision of reality and fiction, into a truly unique American art form.
In that classical period, NFL Films relied on Library music labels like DeWolfe and KPM for the soundtracks that accompanied the signature slow-motion shots of man-on-man battles in the trenches, bleeding foreheads, dejected players with chinstraps dangling; closeups of hands, teeth and of tight spirals that seemed to hang in the air forever. A pirouette in the open field by Paul Warfield, the menacing eyes of Dick Butkus, a galloping Gayle Sayers, a man who ran which such beauty and form as to bring a tear to the eye. Those players were all before my time, but they were so much a part of my childhood because, thankfully, those timeless episodes have been aired and re-aired for the last 50 years. Not only will they be re-aired forever, they are already part of an American classical canon that should be allotted their rightful place in serious film or art history study.
In the last year I've been frantically compiling Library music along with any video footage I can get my digital fingers on. Much of the music has a familiar feel precisely because I no doubt heard it as a backdrop to one of those Facenda narrated programs at some point in my life. Names like Alan Hawkshaw, Keith Mansfield, Alan Moorhouse and Sam Spence would be unfamiliar to just about anyone not into the cult of Library music. But anyone who grew up in the last 50 years and a fan of pro football has undoubtedly heard a few of their tracks.
As an adult, my dedication to any particular team or player has waned considerably. I no longer live or die by the wins and losses of my favorite team. However, I appreciate the greatest, most dramatic sport on earth much more. The history, the poetry, the drama of the game often make me very emotional, perhaps similar to the way one might get when reading Shakespeare or listening to Mozart. The NFL, thanks in great part to the work of NFL Films and the Sabol family, is a combination of many arts...it is America's great operatic form.
Dig in to this sample of Facenda describing a Walter Payton run. Facenda refers to Payton as "the leading runner in the history if the NFC", so it must be circa 1982-'84.
The following collection of music (no narration) is primarily from the '70s. Can't remember where I got this excellent album from, so apologies for lack of attribution. Enjoy...
In that classical period, NFL Films relied on Library music labels like DeWolfe and KPM for the soundtracks that accompanied the signature slow-motion shots of man-on-man battles in the trenches, bleeding foreheads, dejected players with chinstraps dangling; closeups of hands, teeth and of tight spirals that seemed to hang in the air forever. A pirouette in the open field by Paul Warfield, the menacing eyes of Dick Butkus, a galloping Gayle Sayers, a man who ran which such beauty and form as to bring a tear to the eye. Those players were all before my time, but they were so much a part of my childhood because, thankfully, those timeless episodes have been aired and re-aired for the last 50 years. Not only will they be re-aired forever, they are already part of an American classical canon that should be allotted their rightful place in serious film or art history study.
In the last year I've been frantically compiling Library music along with any video footage I can get my digital fingers on. Much of the music has a familiar feel precisely because I no doubt heard it as a backdrop to one of those Facenda narrated programs at some point in my life. Names like Alan Hawkshaw, Keith Mansfield, Alan Moorhouse and Sam Spence would be unfamiliar to just about anyone not into the cult of Library music. But anyone who grew up in the last 50 years and a fan of pro football has undoubtedly heard a few of their tracks.
As an adult, my dedication to any particular team or player has waned considerably. I no longer live or die by the wins and losses of my favorite team. However, I appreciate the greatest, most dramatic sport on earth much more. The history, the poetry, the drama of the game often make me very emotional, perhaps similar to the way one might get when reading Shakespeare or listening to Mozart. The NFL, thanks in great part to the work of NFL Films and the Sabol family, is a combination of many arts...it is America's great operatic form.
Dig in to this sample of Facenda describing a Walter Payton run. Facenda refers to Payton as "the leading runner in the history if the NFC", so it must be circa 1982-'84.
The following collection of music (no narration) is primarily from the '70s. Can't remember where I got this excellent album from, so apologies for lack of attribution. Enjoy...
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