What is the Best Saxophone Song?

  • Thread starter Evo
  • Start date
In summary, some of the best songs are "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty, "Guns N Roses, Sweet Child O' Mine." by Axl Rose, "Bruce Springsteen - "tunnel of love"" by Led Zeppelin, "Honor thy Father" by Dream Theater, and "Octavarium" by Dream Theater.
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  • #1,962
King Crimson anyone?

 
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  • #1,963
SW VandeCarr said:
Warning. This song may be hazardous to your (mental) health. Obviously probably millions of people have watched this video without any problems (or at least no new problems). In any case: caution, you are about to enter the twilight zone. If anyone has any idea what it means, please tell me. (I've already read the wiki article and some other sources. It's just a lot of speculation.)

http://letras.terra.com/nirvana/28514/

Well, I guess morbid madness sells.

He was obsessed by birth, death and bodily functions. Look up some of his artwork.
 
  • #1,964
123 Pages?? Almost 2000 posts?! And still no consensus. So... what're the best songs ever? I've for $3.79 in iTunes credit and I want to make sure I buy the three best songs.
 
  • #1,965
Lyle and Allison!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVZOsWgoLxo
 
  • #1,966
I like a lot of video game music. Then again, I am a rather odd person. But here's some of my favorites:

Liberi Fatali(From Final Fantasy VIII)


Act on Instinct(From some of the Command and Conquer games)


The Landing on Dollet(Also from Final Fantasy VIII)


Holy Butterfly(A remix of some Japanese game series, I think Touhou)


Sparking Slash(Also a remix of the same Japanese game series)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vyCTkh35zbw&feature=related
 
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  • #1,967
MrNerd said:
I like a lot of video game music. Then again, I am a rather odd person.

Total Annihilation had an amazing soundtrack!



 
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  • #1,968
FlexGunship said:
Total Annihilation had an amazing soundtrack!

That is some pretty nice music you linked.
 
  • #1,969
Kurdt said:
He was obsessed by birth, death and bodily functions. Look up some of his artwork.

Re: post 1955 p123

Yeah, he was. These are pretty big issues for everyone, so it's easy to see how this video would attract some attention. But I don't understand the symbolism with the little girl dressed in a KKK outfit. What kind of message does it send for a blond blue eyed child to be dressed that way?

BTW. I was wrong about the skeletal fetus in the IV bottle. You can see it's a "fresh" human fetus with the umbilical cord and placenta when you stop the video. Kurt had such delicate tastes
 
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  • #1,970
SW VandeCarr said:
Re: post 1955 p123

Yeah, he was. These are pretty big issues for everyone, so it's easy to see how this video would attract some attention. But I don't understand the symbolism with the little girl dressed in a KKK outfit. What kind of message does it send for a blond blue eyed child to be dressed that way?

BTW. I was wrong about the skeletal fetus in the IV bottle. You can see it's a "fresh" human fetus with the umbilical cord and placenta when you stop the video. Kurt had such delicate tastes

i'm not sure what it means. except that it apparently involves some kind of woman troubles. but with a lover or his mother? a heart-shaped box is probably one of those keepsake boxes that she stores her memories in - pictures, tokens, and other mementos. and, knowing him, she's somehow driven him to go on a drug bender.

i'm also not a fan of cobain other than i can enjoy some of their tunes for the sound. i certainly don't think of him as a great poet like others do, and probably the reason the lyrics seem so screwed up is because he himself was pretty screwed up and this spilled over into his relationships and everything else.
 
  • #1,971
Proton Soup said:
i'm also not a fan of cobain other than i can enjoy some of their tunes for the sound. i certainly don't think of him as a great poet like others do, and probably the reason the lyrics seem so screwed up is because he himself was pretty screwed up and this spilled over into his relationships and everything else.

He was miserable most of his short life beginning with his parents' divorce. He spent his teenage years partly with his father and partly with his mother. His mother was in an abusive relationship and his stepmother ignored him after his half-brother was born. Unable to deal with Kurt, his father sent him to live with an evangelical family where he initially was happy but later rebelled. He moved in with his mother but she soon kicked him out. He had a number of difficult relationships with women and later said he was gay. However, this doesn't seem to have been true.

During his later teenage years and early 20's he was in several different bands in Olympia and Seattle and eventually formed the band Nirvana with his friend Krist Novosilec. The band became famous with the release of the album "Nevermind" on Sept 24, 1991. Many celebrated the 20th anniversary of this release recently. He married Courtney Love in 1992 and had a daughter with her named Francis Bean Cobain who recently had a "coming out" as a model and singer.

During most of this time he continued with heavy drug use and apparently suffered from a painful GI disorder (possibly ulcerative colitis). He OD'd on heroin a number of times and Courtney regularly carried an antidote which she became expert at injecting. He also made several deliberate suicide attempts until he succeeded (4/94).

Courtney recently said in an interview that if he (miraculously) returned, she would kill him. She said a bit more. You can read the article.

http://www.wesh.com/r/29421298/detail.html [Broken]
 
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  • #1,972
I am a collector of boats built about a mile away from the bridge young Cobain sang about. I went to meet the builder of my boats a few years ago. It was his 90th birthday. He wasn't dead, but the town Kurt grew up in appeared to be.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oqfPMc-3Wks

Oh poop.

Look what's on Curt's tombstone:

ourdutyasyouth.jpg


sorry... but Evo did forewarn of our/my rants.
 
  • #1,973
OmCheeto said:
I am a collector of boats built about a mile away from the bridge young Cobain sang about. I went to meet the builder of my boats a few years ago. It was his 90th birthday. He wasn't dead, but the town Kurt grew up in appeared to be.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oqfPMc-3Wks

The myth, that Cobain actually lived under this bridge, is probably not true according to his friend and co member of Nirvana, Krist Novoselic. The song "Something in the Way" describes such an existence. Not all of Kurt's whereabouts during his periods of homelessness are documented, but he often stayed with friends and had lived for a time with a girlfriend who worked at a SeaTac airport restaurant. Kurt probably earned some money from gigs but it's not clear what he did with that money. Anyway, his frustrated girlfriend eventually kicked him out (like his mother did).

http://blogs.ocweekly.com/heardmentality/2011/07/kurt_cobains_hometown_to_consi.php
 
  • #1,974
 
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  • #1,975
The kids at work are always playing strange music. This was a song that I couldn't comprehend, but it had a catchy tune, so I looked it up.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPtSKimbjOU

If someone could explain the song to me, I would be most grateful.

...

Never mind. I just watched the video about 10 times.

I understand now.

:frown:
 
  • #1,976
OmCheeto said:
Never mind. I just watched the video about 10 times.

I understand now.

:frown:

Good. To help others, here are the lyrics. I think this makes everything clear.

http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/awolnation/sail.html

BTW, Another example of Cobain's genius is the opening verse of the Nirvana classic, "In Bloom".

"Sell your kids for food
Weather changes moods
Spring is here again
Reproductive glands"

Enough high culture. I'm going to listen to Jupiter for a while. Thanks Willowz.
 
  • #1,980
SW VandeCarr said:
None of the Polish defenders were known to have survived.

There are no verifiable information, only estimates, that about 40 people were taken POW and about 40 retreated.
 
  • #1,981
gads
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IKy_gTrdXaU
those were happier days... :blushing: :smile: :blushing: :smile:
 
  • #1,982
A very sad song. :frown:



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDgokYi-1lI
 
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  • #1,983
Evo said:
A very sad song. :frown:



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDgokYi-1lI
A favorite!
 
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  • #1,984
Here's one of my favourite. I know this one is disliked by many for the reasons i don't know but i love its music. :)
 
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  • #1,985
Just listened to Pressed Rat and Warthog again. Cream wrote some pretty quirky stuff, at times. This one is a favorite.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZX06inW2hK4
 
  • #1,986
Dan Fogelberg wrote and performed some of my all-time "chill" songs. Here are a couple.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdDwm3QIwfg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEL_qqXGjHU

"The Reach" is especially accessible to Mainers.
 
  • #1,987
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wHylQRVN2Qs
1985

In his 2010 interview with World Entertainment News Network Sting admitted that the song was inspired by watching the Soviet TV via satellite:

I had a friend at university who invented a way to steal the satellite signal from Russian TV. We'd have a few beers and climb this tiny staircase to watch Russian television... At that time of night we'd only get children's Russian television, like their 'Sesame Street'. I was impressed with the care and attention they gave to their children's programs. I regret...
 
  • #1,988
OmCheeto said:
The kids at work are always playing strange music. This was a song that I couldn't comprehend, but it had a catchy tune, so I looked it up.



If someone could explain the song to me, I would be most grateful.

...

Never mind. I just watched the video about 10 times.

I understand now.

:frown:

I don't think much of the lyrics, although we've been enjoying the song. I think I even linked the song in chat some weeks ago.
 
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  • #1,989
fuzzyfelt said:
I don't think much of the lyrics, although we've been enjoying the song. I think I even linked the song in chat some weeks ago.

One of the lines from the song; "This is how an angel cries", reminded me of; "This is how it sounds when doves cry".

I think it's a well done version of societal psycho-bombardment and self-imposed human angst.

"Blame it on my ADD" - Doctor's diagnosis of what is wrong with him.
"Sail, Sail, Sail" - Tourettes
"Maybe I should kill myself" - Passive aggressive?
etc. etc. etc.

I'm not a doctor, but he seems to just need a big hug. :smile:

But the visual message people are making of this song, says it has a message:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QS3uyThYCE

Along with the "Aliens" stuff. ALIenS. (anagram!)
 
  • #1,991
turbo said:
Just listened to Pressed Rat and Warthog again. Cream wrote some pretty quirky stuff, at times. This one is a favorite.

Weird... if not knowing, I would have bet $$$ on Monty Python... "atonal apples, amplified heat"... :shy:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQycQ8DABvc
 
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  • #1,992
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7hTAp6KrGY
 
  • #1,993
They have been playing this on Classic FM a lot recently. Great song:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2K7D-uMH2g
 
  • #1,994
Can't find the yt classics thread, but this song is a classic and a great song too!


Lol
 
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  • #1,995
fuzzyfelt said:
I don't think much of the lyrics, although we've been enjoying the song. I think I even linked the song in chat some weeks ago.

I tend to make too much of lyrics sometimes. This song, supposedly about insomnia, I was able to translate into the Arab Spring.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UoNtIkRm1HE

Go without = being poor
till the need seeps in = starving
mumble mumble pedals, stem
eviscerate your fragile frame = self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi
a thousand different versions of yourself = scores of copy cat self-immolations across the middle east
and if the old guard still offends = tired of the status quo
they've got nothing left upon which you depend = hopeless for the future
So enlist every ounce, of your bright blood, and off with their heads = Revolution (in the style of the French)
Jump from the hook = take a step back
you're not obliged to swallow anything you despise = decide what you want for yourself

See, those unrepenting buzzards want your life, and they got no right.
As sure as you have eyes,
They got no right.

Just put yourself in my new shoes.
And see that I do all I do.
Because the old guard still offends.
(Their pudgy hearts and slimy hands)
They got nothing left on which we depend.
So enlist every ounce
Of your bright blood.
And off with their heads.

Jump from the hook.
You're not obliged to swallow anything you despise,
That you despise.

Though Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire on 17 December 2010, and the album, "Wincing the Night Away", which contained the above song, was released on January 23, 2007. So my interpretation, is probably fueled by madness/insanity.
 
<h2>What is the Best Saxophone Song?</h2><p>As a scientist, I cannot determine the "best" saxophone song as it is subjective and based on personal preference. However, there are some popular saxophone songs that are frequently mentioned by listeners:</p><h2>What are some popular saxophone songs?</h2><p>Some popular saxophone songs include "Careless Whisper" by George Michael, "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty, "Just the Two of Us" by Grover Washington Jr., "Yakety Sax" by Boots Randolph, and "Born to Run" by Bruce Springsteen.</p><h2>Who are some famous saxophone players?</h2><p>Some famous saxophone players include Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Stan Getz, Sonny Rollins, and Kenny G.</p><h2>Is the saxophone a difficult instrument to play?</h2><p>Like any instrument, it takes practice and dedication to become proficient at playing the saxophone. However, with proper instruction and regular practice, it can be mastered.</p><h2>Can the saxophone be used in different genres of music?</h2><p>Yes, the saxophone is a versatile instrument that can be used in various genres of music including jazz, blues, rock, pop, and even classical music.</p>

What is the Best Saxophone Song?

As a scientist, I cannot determine the "best" saxophone song as it is subjective and based on personal preference. However, there are some popular saxophone songs that are frequently mentioned by listeners:

What are some popular saxophone songs?

Some popular saxophone songs include "Careless Whisper" by George Michael, "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty, "Just the Two of Us" by Grover Washington Jr., "Yakety Sax" by Boots Randolph, and "Born to Run" by Bruce Springsteen.

Who are some famous saxophone players?

Some famous saxophone players include Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Stan Getz, Sonny Rollins, and Kenny G.

Is the saxophone a difficult instrument to play?

Like any instrument, it takes practice and dedication to become proficient at playing the saxophone. However, with proper instruction and regular practice, it can be mastered.

Can the saxophone be used in different genres of music?

Yes, the saxophone is a versatile instrument that can be used in various genres of music including jazz, blues, rock, pop, and even classical music.

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