Musikk Fra Hybridene
Musikk Fra Hybridene[1] (Music From The Hybrids) is the second album of the Norwegian free-jazz band Farmers Market.
Musikk Fra Hybridene | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1997 | |||
Producer | Farmers Market | |||
Farmers Market chronology | ||||
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Track listing
- Lé Mysteres Des Guitares Grand Prix
- How High The Loch (Ornamentology)
- (Come On Baby Do The) Balkan Boogie
- Gankino Horo
- Teknopolsanitza
- Neli In The Sky With Farmers
- Power Ballad
- Kind Of Blues
- Tails Of The Unexpected
- Kyrillisk Bøddel
- I Took Up The Prunes
- For A Few Rubels More
- Siste Tango I Paradis (Last Tango In Paradise)
Title references
- In general, most of the names are puns.
- Lé Mysteres Des Guitares Grand Prix is a reference to Le Mystere Des Voix Bulgares, an album by Trio Bulgarka.
- How High The Loch is a reference to the song How High the Moon, with lyrics by Ella Fitzgerald.
- Kind of Blues is a reference to Kind of Blue, an album by Miles Davis.
- Neli in the Sky with Farmers is a reference to The Beatles' song Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.
- I Took Up the Prunes refers to Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek's recording I Took Up the Runes, which is heavily influenced by traditional Norwegian folk music.
- For A Few Rubels More refers to the Clint Eastwood film For a Few Dollars More.
gollark: hyperbolic geometry
gollark: Also, lots of things actually are subjective, like basically anything about "values" or what people "should" do ("should" without an "in order to", that is).
gollark: The Fibonacci sequence is *not* really one of my favourite sequences.
gollark: Going on about "the common source", "yin and yang" and "the dao" seems, well, pretty religion-like.
gollark: I too love pattern-matching hypothetical physicsy things to strange religious beliefs.
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