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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 21:49:47 GMT 1
This was the first song I heared friday morning when I opened the Arnhem radio and started the adds and the morning news. This oldy is a typical eightees song with a romantic nature.
In the nighttime and early they play a selection which is played by the computer, so this first song was a computers choice.
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 21:53:29 GMT 1
The most sentimental song ever, I think about all the girls I loved in my life.
The song is a typical example of what we call in Dutch a Jeugdliefde (Youth Love, a loved one of your youth). And a consolation giving song in times after the loss of such love. Because youth loves mostly never lasted long. But some people stay together for the rest of their lives, even if they met at an early age.
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 21:57:10 GMT 1
Another terrible ( ) romantic song!
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 22:01:25 GMT 1
When you were sixteen and there were nice girls in your school!
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 22:09:43 GMT 1
This song was played by a girl from my class over and over again when we were at a school bustrip to Austria to ski. She was sitting next to me and played her walkman Toto cassette. Every time she had listened to the song she rewinded the tape and she played it again. Everybody else would have gone mad, but I watched her being amused. It was fun to see her enjoyment and joy in listening to Toto. I did not listen to music, but heard a little bit from her headphone.
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 22:15:19 GMT 1
This is another youth sentiment of mine, listening to a Polish hardrock band I could not understand. I listen to this record hundreds of time until it was like we say in Dutch was drived grey. I got a stif neck from headbanging and exitement. Especially changes in the song, the guitars and the united sound of electric guitar, bass and drums is exellent. This is classical hard rock and in my view part of the history of hard rock.
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 22:17:45 GMT 1
I listened to this balad a lot too, and it's meaning has changed since Bonobo explained it's meaning in Poland! But it is stil the same beautiful song I liked back then, only with even more content and importance.
And this was also sentiment from behind the Iron Curtain:
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 22:28:00 GMT 1
Prince has many sides for sure:
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 22:30:12 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 22:38:09 GMT 1
What I learned from this movie, watch out French femmes fatales and American crooks! ;D
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 22:46:45 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 23:00:06 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 23:02:30 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 15, 2011 23:56:28 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 0:11:01 GMT 1
OK enough sentimental flashbacks for today.
What are yours?
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 12:47:02 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 12:48:55 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 16:31:55 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 16:38:20 GMT 1
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Post by valpomike on Apr 16, 2011 16:47:46 GMT 1
Please, post for me, so of the great Polish Jazz, true music. If anyone gives it a chance, they will love it, as I do. This is great music, and Poland has the greatest.
Mike
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 17:36:02 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 17:41:58 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 17:48:42 GMT 1
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Post by pjotr on Apr 16, 2011 17:55:29 GMT 1
And here some Modern jazz in Krakow
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Post by Bonobo on Apr 16, 2011 22:54:17 GMT 1
Good selection (though mine would be totally different ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D). It is interesting how music can bring back past memories and make us sentimental. I also achieve this state of sentimental maudliness with books.
Music pieces from my youth that I consider sentimental:
TSA, 3 matches, a legendary song from early 1980s. During concerts fans lit matches which created great atmosphere:
Martyna Jakubowicz, 1980s, In Concrete Houses There is No Free Love
Urszula, Puff Balls, Kites, Wind, 1980s
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Post by pjotr on Apr 17, 2011 3:38:05 GMT 1
Good selection (though mine would be totally different ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D). Bonobo, I am curious what you selection would be. In English language songs and hits, but also for instance in French, Italian, Czech, Spanish and Polish if you have more! Your three Polish sentimental hits are good ones! Yes, we light our lights with sentimental romantic songs too! Spoken about sentimental, a Dutch schlager (not my music though) Pieter
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Post by pjotr on Apr 17, 2011 3:52:28 GMT 1
Good selection (though mine would be totally different ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D). It is interesting how music can bring back past memories and make us sentimental. I also achieve this state of sentimental maudliness with books. Bonobo, I have that with books to both children literature from my youth and some mature literature novels. One of them is ' The Coat' ( Szatnia) of Nikołaj Gogol. ( pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niko%C5%82aj_Gogol ) and the equal bizar novels Die Verwandlung of Franz Kafka, and the Little Apocalyps of Tadeusz Konwicki. Pieter
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Post by tufta on Apr 17, 2011 6:15:11 GMT 1
The most sentimental song ever, I think about all the girls I loved in my life. The song is a typical example of what we call in Dutch a Jeugdliefde (Youth Love, a loved one of your youth). And a consolation giving song in times after the loss of such love. Because youth loves mostly never lasted long. But some people stay together for the rest of their lives, even if they met at an early age. Main hit of many school-discos in my lyceum! Here's another example of what you're talking about, I guess
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Post by pjotr on Apr 17, 2011 8:53:52 GMT 1
The most sentimental song ever, I think about all the girls I loved in my life. The song is a typical example of what we call in Dutch a Jeugdliefde (Youth Love, a loved one of your youth). And a consolation giving song in times after the loss of such love. Because youth loves mostly never lasted long. But some people stay together for the rest of their lives, even if they met at an early age. Main hit of many school-discos in my lyceum! Here's another example of what you're talking about, I guess Now you suprise me Tufta, I am a Bowie fan and have all his seventies cd's and two live albums and one greatest hit cd. But I did not know this sixtees Bowie song.
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Post by valpomike on Apr 19, 2011 17:06:17 GMT 1
The real Polish Jazz was great, and this is why I say, If you give it a chance, you to will love it, the Great Polish Jazz as I do. Some of the later suff, was not true jazz, but good also. Please post more.
Mike
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