I’m the Last Person on Earth Still Buying CDs. Here’s Why…

I seek order in the form of a ludicrously large CD collection.

(via CNET) by Erin Carson


One dark day, a fresh-faced person in a lab coat will try to coax an old Spoon record out of my ancient, gnarled hands. And upon that day there’ll be a tussle. 

I won’t be letting go of that jewel case easily, and I look forward to that day when, with whatever strength I’ve got left, I get to educate that youth about CDs.

Approximately 82 million people in the US paid for music streaming services as of 2021. In 2022, vinyl sales hit a ludicrous 43 million in the US

Yet here I am, vowing to be the last person on Earth buying CDs…

Read more: https://www.cnet.com/culture/entertainment/im-the-last-person-on-earth-still-buying-cds-heres-why/

Quora: Why didn’t The Beatles record ‘A World Without Love’?

(via Quora) Answered by Eli Matawaran

John Lennon thought the first line, “Please lock me away”, was laughable. And he added:

“I think it was resurrected from the past…I think he (Paul McCartney) had the whole song before the Beatles.”

Yes, McCartney had written it when he was only 16 and before the Beatles but it was an unfinished song.

Maybe Lennon didn’t realized it was unfinished because he had already rejected it based on the first few lines.

When McCartney moved into the London home of his then girlfriend Jane Asher, he shared a room with her brother Peter, a singer-guitarist…

Read more: https://www.quora.com/Why-didn-t-The-Beatles-record-A-World-Without-Love

Video of the Week: Glen Campbell’s Phenomenal Guitar Solos

On a Lighter Note…

Video of the Week: How Jimi Hendrix Discovered The Band Chicago

‘The soul of L.A.’: 20 years after his death, the stars are aligning for Warren Zevon

The late singer-songwriter Warren Zevon, whom Billy Joel, among others, successfully promoted for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. (Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images)

(via Los Angeles Times) BY MIKAEL WOOD

Shooter Jennings knew “Carmelita.” He knew “Lawyers, Guns and Money.” And of course he knew “Werewolves of London,” Warren Zevon’s 1978 rock hit about a “hairy-handed gent” on the prowl for “a big dish of beef chow mein.”

“It’s kind of the low-hanging fruit” of Zevon’s catalog, Jennings says of “Werewolves,” which after scraping the top 20 of Billboard’s Hot 100 went on to reach new audiences in the late 2000s when Kid Rock borrowed its strutting groove for his song “All Summer Long.”

But until three or four years ago, Jennings — the Los Angeles-based musician and Grammy-winning producer whose father is the late outlaw-country pioneer Waylon Jennings — had never dug deeply into Zevon’s work. That’s when a friend pushed him to check out “Desperados Under the Eaves,” the gut punch of a closer from Zevon’s self-titled 1976 LP in which the booze-soaked narrator contemplates his sorry situation from an air-conditioned room at the Hollywood Hawaiian Hotel…

Read more: https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/music/story/2023-01-31/warren-zevon-rock-hall-of-fame-shooter-jennings

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