What are you listening to, right now................
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I have posted this before on another thread but it's too good to not contribute again <br><img src="http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20160902/2dcbb9b878191d5bc30cd532a108504e.jpg" alt="2dcbb9b878191d5bc30cd532a108504e.jpg">
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="MN5" data-cid="611559" data-time="1472806553"><p>
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Toto certainly never looked cool, they looked like a bunch of dorks that the Alpha Betas woulda picked on.<br><br>
But shit they did some fantastic music.</p></blockquote>In case you haven't heard these before, I thought these isolated tracks from Rosanna are amazing.<br><br>
Jeff Porcaro's drum track:<br><br><br><a class="bbc_url" href="
Steve Lukather's guitar track complete with off the chart shredding that is completely at odds with his - ahem - "stage presence":<br><br><a class="bbc_url" href=" "> </a> -
#makeasongislamic <a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://www.ekla.in/trends/makeasongislamic.html'>http://www.ekla.in/trends/makeasongislamic.html</a><br><br>
Favourites so far<br><br>
Living on a prayer mat by bomb jovi<br><br>
Smells like Mujadeen spirit -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="JC" data-cid="611621" data-time="1472860233">
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<p>BTW, according to the management Toto members have collectively played on over 5000 (!) albums with total sales of more than half a billion.</p>
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<p>Along with guys like Jay Graydon, they were pretty much the ultimate session aces. They were the backing band for Boz Scaggs, Thriller (several song writing credits on the album), and members played on a ton of Steely Dan songs. </p>
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<p>Good interview with Lukather:</p>
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<p><a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://www.salon.com/2016/07/07/im_not_ready_for_the_dirt_nap_yet_how_toto_outlasted_the_haters_took_back_their_career_and_won_over_a_new_generation/'>http://www.salon.com/2016/07/07/im_not_ready_for_the_dirt_nap_yet_how_toto_outlasted_the_haters_took_back_their_career_and_won_over_a_new_generation/</a></p> -
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<p>The All Music Guide has a really nice paragraph about how critics hated Toto for exploding the authenticity myth:</p>
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote">It's as easy to see why radio listeners loved <a class="" href="http://www.allmusic.com/artist/toto-mn0000006320">Toto</a> as it is to see why critics hated them. <a class="" href="http://www.allmusic.com/artist/toto-mn0000006320">Toto</a>'s rock-studio chops allowed them to play any current pop style at the drop of a hi-hat: one minute prog rock, the next hard rock, the next funky R&B. It all sounded great, but it also implied that music-making took craft rather than inspiration and that the musical barriers critics like to erect were arbitrary. Then, too, <a class="" href="http://www.allmusic.com/artist/toto-mn0000006320">Toto</a>'s timing couldn't have been much worse. They rode in during the middle of punk/new wave with its D.I.Y. aesthetic, and their sheer competence was an affront. Of course, there's always been an alternate history of popular music not available to rock critics (it's written in record stores and concert halls and on the radio), and in that story, <a class="" href="http://www.allmusic.com/artist/toto-mn0000006320">Toto</a> was a smash. Singles like "I'll Supply the Love" and "Georgy Porgy" (featuring <a class="" href="http://www.allmusic.com/artist/cheryl-lynn-mn0000108256">Cheryl Lynn</a>) made the charts, and "Hold the Line" hit the Top Ten and went gold. The members of <a class="" href="http://www.allmusic.com/artist/toto-mn0000006320">Toto</a> had already influenced the course of '70s popular music by playing on half the albums that came out of L.A. All they were doing with this album was going public.
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<div>Starbucks corporate theme-song version:</div>
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<div>https://vimeo.com/2646359</div>
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<div>Does not own.</div> -
<p>I'm sorry, I meant feel the rains. Important distinction.</p>
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<p>Lukather alluded to it in the Salon article, but the number of cool parties that I've been to in London, Paris, or Copenhagen where a good edit of Africa or Georgy Porgy has had people on the floor and singing along ... Huge tunes.</p>
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<p>I bless the rains.</p> -
<p>No, I don't bless the rains.</p>
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<p>The worst thing about that song is the incredibly clumsy line "There's nothing that a hundred men or more could ever do" - jamming in words to fit the tune. It's as bad as Chris Martin extending syllables in weird places as if the music and lyrics met in the changing rooms before the match.</p> -
<p>You're not alone in bagging Africa's lyrics, Crucial. Lukather said this:</p>
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<span style="color:rgb(51,51,51);font-family:arial, sans-serif;background-color:rgb(250,250,250);">It's so funny, because it's the least representative (song) of what we really are. Yeah, it's in our wheelhouse, sure, but that was the oddball song on 'Toto IV.' It almost didn't make the record. I said to (David) Paich, 'This is a great track, but what the fuck do these lyrics mean, man?' He said, 'You wait and see.' It just hit a nerve. I was the guy saying, 'I'll run naked down Hollywood Boulevard if this thing's a hit.' Nobody would want to see that now.</span></blockquote> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="jegga" data-cid="601169" data-time="1469753042"><p>
Awkward , have you come up with a convincing explanation yet?<br><br>
There was a guy who used to fish locally and when he anchored up and put his burley down he put the chicken dance on a loop on the stereo on his boat . Never had to worry about anyone parking to close and ruining his fishing .</p></blockquote>
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Kind of counterproductive. Would rather have a boat 10 meres away than subject myself to that. -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="booboo" data-cid="611849" data-time="1472941008"><p>
Kind of counterproductive. Would rather have a boat 10 meres away than subject myself to that.</p></blockquote>
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That was the point, no one would come near him. He is a deeply annoying individual , he used to drink at the bar my ex worked at and put it on the stereo too.