‘Not like The Wind in the Willows’ ... a mole above ground.
Photograph: David Cole/Alamy
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‘Not like The Wind in the Willows’ ... a mole above ground.
Photograph: David Cole/Alamy
Lisa Lisa & Cult Jam - Let the Beat Hit 'Em (The Pop Radio Edit)
The time traveling alien known as the Doctor (Doctor 1) and his companions arrived in Tombstone in the old West of America in October of 1881. The Doctor had a toothache and sought out the local dentist who turned out to be Doc Holliday. Soon the Doctor and his companions found themselves intertwined in the events accumulating in the famous gunfight at the OK Corral. ("The Gunfighters", Doctor Who, vlm 1, TV)
While listen to Their to last album, I decided to draw this as a gift for Robert clivilles and David Cole to thank them for all the great music they gave us.
Glimmering at Redlands- Mick and Keith in the garden at Redlands (1967) © David Cole/Shutterstock.
One could claim I made a weird pivot in my discussion on all these highly overproduced records from the 90's. I mean, I included Gloria Estefan and The Smashing Pumpkins, but they don't have much in common. Neither does Mariah Carey, though I have to explain – while these LPs do not share their sound, they do share their working ethos. If the 80's were about the unreality, then the 90's moved towards the hyperreality. Everything had to be this way, which explains either the embrace of electronica or the highly polished tone. For instance, a column I read on Stereogum mentioned that a major factor to Mrs. Carey's success could be the Milli Vanilli scandal. The latter were exposed as fake, so she became presented as the real deal. However, the 90's ethos also made sure we noticed that.