Showing posts with label Angel Haze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angel Haze. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2022

Music Monday (209): Angel Haze, Lauv & Chapel Hart, Alice Francis

Rules:

  • Music Monday is a weekly meme hosted by Lauren Stoolfire at Always Me that asks you to share one or two songs that you've recently enjoyed. For the rules, visit the page HERE 
Breana: Over the weekend, I was listening to Angel Haze's Ep, Girl With The Gun. One of my favorite songs is Bullet. I always enjoy music that's influenced by funk, and I really love what Angel Haze did with this song.

  
 
Adri: I've been listening to Alice Francis' recent album Club Noir. My pick for today is the titular track.


Andrea: Hi all! This week I am listening to Who (feat. BTS) & All 4 Nothing (I'm So In Love) by Lauv. Is everyone familiar with Dolly Parton's song, Jolene? If not you can click on the link to listen to it. This is one of my favorite songs by Dolly Parton. Now there's a new song entitled You Can Have Him Jolene by Chapel Hart. I really enjoyed this take on dealing with Jolene. Have an amazing week!





What are you listening to this week?

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Memorable....

It’s been a while since I wrote a discussion post, but a couple of recent things got me thinking about what forms of media—i.e. books and music, etc.—I find memorable and the reasons behind what makes them stand out. This is completely subjective of course, because I can only speak about my personal preferences. As such, there will be a number of references to music and books I’ve enjoyed, particularly the former since one album in particular inspired this post.

Do you know those books, the ones that are so deeply atmospheric that you can’t help but get caught up in the journey from start to finish? That’s how I feel about Back to the Woods by Angel Haze. Originally, I wasn’t going to write anything about Back to the Woods, because the album has been out since 2015. However, it’s so underrated, and that’s a shame. It’s one album that I would compare to a complex book. And just like Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik, Back to the Woods  was wonderfully atmospheric with a fairy tale like vibe. Rather than having a setting, history, and tale rife with detailed scenery, in this case, the compositions of the album was gorgeously layered and undeniably thematic from the opening tracks, D-Day and Impossible, to the brooding and dreamy closing, titular song, The Woods.

So, in thinking about all the ways Back to the Woods reminded me of Spinning Silver, my thoughts began to shift toward what made them so memorable to me in the first place: the emotion or feeling they elicited while being read or listened to. Specifically speaking, there’s nothing inherently similar about Spinning Silver and Back to the Woods. There are no lyrics that specifically speak to anything from the book. And there’s no text from the book that implies a connection to the album. They’re their own separate entities. However, I find it’s all based in the language I use to talk about them that led me to compare them in the first place. Often with words and phrases like layered, complex, thematic, and deeply atmospheric. What I’m saying is, when I listen to Back to the Woods it makes me think of a fairy tale. And when I read Spinning Silver, the story elicits much of the same reaction. In that way, they’re similar. And besides the fact that they’re both great in their own right, as I stated before, my reaction to them is part of what makes them memorable.

Of course, being memorable can come about in different ways (also entirely dependent on what a person likes/dislikes) and fairy-tale-like isn’t the only criterion that applies—poignant and difficult reads that’ll make you think; fantasy, science fiction, or contemporary; or even books that are light and enjoyable escapism can also leave long-lasting impressions. It could even be specific things like settings, characters, overall story, or subject (for nonfiction). So, books like Mem, The Tea Master and the Detective, The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, Why We Sleep, and the Heroine Complex series were all memorable to me for different or sometimes similar reasons respectively.

What do you think? What makes different forms of media—whether books, music, movies, TV shows, etc.—memorable for you?


Monday, October 1, 2018

Music Monday (59):Gerald LeVert and Eddie LeVert, & Angel Haze

   Rules:
  • Music Monday is a weekly meme hosted by Lauren Stoolfire at Always Me that asks you to share one or two songs that you've recently enjoyed. For the rules, visit the page HERE 
Breana: This week, I’m listening to music by Angel Haze. When Back to the Woods came out, I initially missed it. Recently, I was looking to see if there was any new music by Angel Haze, and there was. Back to the Woods is probably my favorite album by Angel Haze. So, today, I wanted to talk about one of my favorite songs from Back to the Woods: Moonrise Kingdom. I adore this song. Everything about it from the beat, lyrics, and Angel Haze’s vocals on the track, was perfect….


Andrea: This week, I just want to share my favorite version of Wind Beneath My Wings sung by Gerald LeVertand Eddie LeVert. Do you have a favorite version of this song?



Have you listened to any of these songs before? If not, what do you think about them?

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