The Music Box

britbox

Multiple Major Winner
Joined
Apr 14, 2013
Messages
27,424
Reactions
6,247
Points
113
Location
Gold Coast, Australia
You know when a song is fairly crap but you love it anyway...

This was a remix of Matthew Wilders's 80s original.

 

Hoergren

Multiple Major Winner
Joined
Apr 15, 2013
Messages
3,810
Reactions
1,630
Points
113
Age
75
Location
Denmark
X-mas around the corner - let's get a rocking start - The Refreshments -
Boogie On Christmas Night

Santa's Gonna Rock

Christmas time
 

Horsa

Equine-loving rhyme-artist
Joined
Feb 2, 2016
Messages
4,865
Reactions
1,308
Points
113
Location
Britain
X-mas around the corner - let's get a rocking start - The Refreshments -
Boogie On Christmas Night

Santa's Gonna Rock

Christmas time

I hadn't heard these before but enjoyed listening to them. Thank you very much for sharing.
 

Hoergren

Multiple Major Winner
Joined
Apr 15, 2013
Messages
3,810
Reactions
1,630
Points
113
Age
75
Location
Denmark
Here is the official video to Little Mixs Xmas song. Made while they were on their sold out tour in England and Ireland october-november
 

Hoergren

Multiple Major Winner
Joined
Apr 15, 2013
Messages
3,810
Reactions
1,630
Points
113
Age
75
Location
Denmark
Let's make some tributes to the past by a new artist. This time I'll present Sina who's playing the drum part in Sweets Ball room blitz

And she's good so let's take another one - Deep Purples Smoke on the water with Sina on the drums

Tha last one is Dire Starits Sultans of swing with Sina on the drums - she's damn good me thinks


If you want to know more about this talented young 20 year old German woman - here is a link - worth reading

https://girls-got-groove.com/bio/
 

Hoergren

Multiple Major Winner
Joined
Apr 15, 2013
Messages
3,810
Reactions
1,630
Points
113
Age
75
Location
Denmark
Sina one woman band - quite impressive

Cheap Trick - I want you to want me - with SIna doing the drums

And the 8th track from her seccond album - came in 2018
 

Hoergren

Multiple Major Winner
Joined
Apr 15, 2013
Messages
3,810
Reactions
1,630
Points
113
Age
75
Location
Denmark
Well I must conclude that new artists have a no go life in this box - wonder why? Are you not open for new music or do you just want to stay in the past? I'm 70 and SOMETIMES i go back in time, but music today is fascinating to me and also keep my mind going. Ideas come all the time. Saw on a standard channel - NOT streaming, as that makes you dumber and dumber - an elderly lady who had invented a new way to move peoples old bones - having a VODKA yoga class. Well you get a glass with a mixture of vodka and the taste you like, and you have to stick with that during the whole lesson (45 min). From time to time the instructer says cheers or skaal (Danish) and you take a sip after you've cheered with her or your neighbours. If you drink too fast the glass is refilled by a helper, so some of them were a little wasted, when class ended. Good class me thinks.
 

Horsa

Equine-loving rhyme-artist
Joined
Feb 2, 2016
Messages
4,865
Reactions
1,308
Points
113
Location
Britain
Well I must conclude that new artists have a no go life in this box - wonder why? Are you not open for new music or do you just want to stay in the past? I'm 70 and SOMETIMES i go back in time, but music today is fascinating to me and also keep my mind going. Ideas come all the time. Saw on a standard channel - NOT streaming, as that makes you dumber and dumber - an elderly lady who had invented a new way to move peoples old bones - having a VODKA yoga class. Well you get a glass with a mixture of vodka and the taste you like, and you have to stick with that during the whole lesson (45 min). From time to time the instructer says cheers or skaal (Danish) and you take a sip after you've cheered with her or your neighbours. If you drink too fast the glass is refilled by a helper, so some of them were a little wasted, when class ended. Good class me thinks.
I like some new music but I think most new musicians don't sound as good as old ones. I like some of the new music you share. I like to see how music has changed through time. (I now work in heritage preservation so sometimes I get to conduct 1940's sing-songs & the like & be a Victorian Carol-singer & stuff like that. Part of my job is to be an archivist too.) I am open to new (or indeed old) music from all nationalities. I don't know any Indian languages but like Indian music because I like the sound of the Sitar for instance. I also like to hear Spanish music which I do understand. I listen to French music too. Although I'm more familiar with the Irish accordion I do listen to the Eastern European accordion sometimes which sounds different but is still good. I love bagpipes, not only Scottish ones but all the different types I've heard like the Irish & Northumberland ones. That sounds like a good way to get people to want to exercise.