What is the Best Saxophone Song?

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Discussion Overview

This thread explores various songs featuring saxophone and guitar, with participants sharing their favorites and links to performances. The discussion includes a mix of personal opinions on the quality of songs, performances, and artists across different genres, including rock, blues, and progressive metal.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants highlight "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty as a top saxophone song.
  • Others mention Leo Kotke's "Vaseline Machine Gun," noting the quality of available recordings.
  • Bruce Springsteen's "Tunnel of Love" is also suggested as a notable song.
  • One participant expresses admiration for Dream Theater, particularly their song "Octavarium," citing its progressive nature.
  • Several participants discuss the guitar work of artists like Erik Mongrain and Tommy Emmanuel, with varying opinions on their styles and contributions to music.
  • There are mixed opinions on Guns N' Roses' "Sweet Child O' Mine," with some praising its guitar riff and others criticizing Axl Rose's vocals.
  • Participants share links to various songs, including works by Pink Floyd, Iron Maiden, and David Bowie, indicating a wide range of musical tastes.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

The discussion features multiple competing views on what constitutes the best saxophone or guitar songs, with no clear consensus emerging among participants.

Contextual Notes

Some participants express difficulty in finding links to specific songs, and there are mentions of varying quality in recordings shared. Additionally, personal preferences and subjective opinions on artists and songs are prevalent throughout the discussion.

Who May Find This Useful

Music enthusiasts, particularly those interested in saxophone and guitar performances, as well as fans of rock, blues, and progressive metal genres.

  • #1,921
I like this song:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X88Kz7uRalc
 
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  • #1,922
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdaJqynA8Y0

Stevie Nicks new album, In your dreams!
 
  • #1,923
rootX said:
Stevie Nicks new album, In your dreams!

I'm glad to see (hear?) that Stevie is recording again. She's one of my favorites from way back when. It's interesting that Mick Fleetwood was interested in hiring her then boyfriend (1975) Lindsey Buckingham, but not her. Lindsey insisted that they were a pair. Mick hired her and soon after they recorded Stevie's composition "Rhiannon". Most everyone in PF over a certain age has probably heard it, but perhaps not some of the younger members and visitors.



EDIT: My only complaint about this performance is that they didn't give Christine more solo time on the keyboard. She was starting to lay down some cool licks.
 
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  • #1,924
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7DAHi_Cks8
 
  • #1,925
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MCtaEGWA93U
 
  • #1,926
 
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  • #1,927
 
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  • #1,928
best song which i like is blues one love. this one of my best song forever i had heard the lyrics of this song is such a hart touching. One love for the mothers prider ...One love for the times we cried ...One love got to stay alive... I will survive
 
  • #1,929
rootX said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdaJqynA8Y0

Stevie Nicks new album, In your dreams!

SW VandeCarr said:
I'm glad to see (hear?) that Stevie is recording again. She's one of my favorites from way back when. It's interesting that Mick Fleetwood was interested in hiring her then boyfriend (1975) Lindsey Buckingham, but not her. Lindsey insisted that they were a pair. Mick hired her and soon after they recorded Stevie's composition "Rhiannon". Most everyone in PF over a certain age has probably heard it, but perhaps not some of the younger members and visitors.



EDIT: My only complaint about this performance is that they didn't give Christine more solo time on the keyboard. She was starting to lay down some cool licks.
I always liked Fleetwood Mac (with Stevie Nicks). Here's another tune of hers that I like that got high in the charts (don't know if it's with Fleetwood Mac):

Dn8-4tjPxD8[/youtube] @ SW, alth...y them: [MEDIA=youtube]JxEsUiPm17c[/MEDIA]
 
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  • #1,930
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  • #1,931
 
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  • #1,932
ThomasT said:
I always liked Fleetwood Mac (with Stevie Nicks). Here's another tune of hers that I like that got high in the charts (don't know if it's with Fleetwood Mac):

Stevie had left FMc and started her own group when she recorded "Edge of Seventeen"(1981). It launched her on a successful solo career. She had her troubles with addiction and eating disorders for a time, but she got through them. She's now over 60 (b 1948), and still sounds pretty good.

@ SW, although Christine is a decent keyboardist, she didn't exactly set the keys on fire in that tune. Now, if you want some really nice keyboard stuff :smile:, here's, eg., Herbie Hancock playing a version of a Steely Dan tune:

Well I don't really know what she could have done on the keyboard since her role in FMc was generally limited to back up. However, the key to the sound of FMc was the background blending of Christine, her husband John McVie (base guitar) and Mick Fleetwood (drums) behind the soloists. Of course, she's no Herbie Hancock, but that's a different genre which Christine tantalizingly flirted with in her brief solo.
 
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  • #1,933
Bob Dylan - Shelter From The Storm (electric).

 
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  • #1,934
I am not very familiar with Beatbox but have you heard of Beardyman Borek? He is very entertaining.


If you liked that there is also this video which is rather long but fun.
 
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  • #1,935
SW VandeCarr said:
Stevie had left FMc and started her own group when she recorded "Edge of Seventeen"(1981). It launched her on a successful solo career. She had her troubles with addiction and eating disorders for a time, but she got through them. She's now over 60 (b 1948), and still sounds pretty good.

Well I don't really know what she could have done on the keyboard since her role in FMc was generally limited to back up. However, the key to the sound of FMc was the background blending of Christine, her husband John McVie (base guitar) and Mick Fleetwood (drums) behind the soloists. Of course, she's no Herbie Hancock, but that's a different genre which Christine tantalizingly flirted with in her brief solo.
SW, I always enjoy your posts, even if once in a while I might not agree with everything you say.

Imho, whatever Christine was flirting with in her brief solo wasn't very tantalizing. That said, I do admire her general ability both as a musician and as a singer. In other words, I pretty much like just about all of her stuff. Maybe I just didn't listen closely enough to her brief solo. I do agree that she wasn't given enough time to really develop anything there.

I am curious about how you know so much about the musicians you write about. Are you a professional in that regard? Like a music critic, or music historian or something. Or just a very accomplished hobbyist?

Anyway, it's always interesting to me to hear what you might have to say about something.
 
  • #1,936
TheStatutoryApe said:
I am not very familiar with Beatbox but have you heard of Beardyman Borek? He is very entertaining.

Thanks. Never heard about him. Not that I am in beatbox, it happened Junior showed me dub FX last weekend and I really liked him.
 
  • #1,937
ThomasT said:
Imho, whatever Christine was flirting with in her brief solo wasn't very tantalizing. That said, I do admire her general ability both as a musician and as a singer.

I'm just sensitive to the little cues and details that occur in performances. I thought that her jazz style "noodling" might be going somewhere. It didn't. Hence my comment.

I am curious about how you know so much about the musicians you write about. Are you a professional in that regard? Like a music critic, or music historian or something. Or just a very accomplished hobbyist?

I just have a lot of interests. Music, both popular and classical is one of them. Stevie Nicks is one my favorites, so when RootX posted her new release, I responded because I used to follow her career, but not recently. I knew almost nothing about Amy Winehouse until she died. I just went online and was struck by her talent. So I've been researching her life and career. She's one of the most interesting personalities I've come across in recent years.

EDIT: If you haven't opened the link already, you might go back to post 1916 (p 120) and watch Amy sing "Valerie" at the BBC Sessions (2007). She doesn't merely sing a song, she lives it. Watch her go from a vacant stare to flirty, to serious, to sad, to angry ("Don't make a fool out me!") in a little over three minutes. From what I've been able to learn, she's not acting. The music and emotion seem to just erupt out of her. When she's good, she's very good, and when she's bad, she can be godawful. This time, it was the former IMO.
 
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  • #1,938
When it's all you've got, call it love.

 
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  • #1,939
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Qbtu0O_8CA

Atilla Csihar throat singing (a technique that enables the singer to sing more than one pitch at once - a fundamental tone and its harmonic partials)
 
  • #1,940
Borek said:
Thanks. Never heard about him. Not that I am in beatbox, it happened Junior showed me dub FX last weekend and I really liked him.

Ah, I thought it seemed sort of strange for you to be into that style of music though you never know what sort of thing may have caught on in some other part of the world. I still can't believe that David Hasselhoff is a famous musician.
 
  • #1,941
TheStatutoryApe said:
Ah, I thought it seemed sort of strange for you to be into that style of music

I am open minded. Something either sounds interesting and catches my attention, or not. I am not assuming it is bad just because it is (insert kind of music you don't like).

Doesn't mean I have no preferences, but I am not a slave to them.
 
  • #1,943
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFZvzMaMVzo

I love every word of this song!

What's cheaper than free?
You and me
What's better than alone?
Going home

What does money not buy?
You and I
What's not to feel
When love is real?

What's faster than a fast car?
A beating heart
What's deeper than a deep well?
The love into which I fell

More important than freedom?
Being needed
More exciting than high fashion?
High passion

What's brighter than a smile?
You child you child
What's brighter than a smile?
You child you child

You child you child
What's warmer than a sun drenched land?
Your hand
Your hand
Your hand
 
  • #1,944
The music video of Poco's "Call it Love". Better than watching a screen shot of the album cover.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5G1TwlUpMBI&feature=related
 
  • #1,946
 
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  • #1,947
Zakk's best work, IMO.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xh2VWr2UuLw
 
  • #1,948
OK

No surprises from here, but the video finally came out, and the band did a remake of the song (different from the album released in July).

I am inclined to like this band due to a few decades of admiration and fandom, plus the last 10 years of them making kids music right when I have my own kids... anyway I expected to like it,

but I was blown away.

 
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  • #1,950


I yam what I yam.
 
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