When Stephen Moyer spends time listening to music, he likes raspy-voiced troubadours, genteel indie folkies, and bath-time anthems. What eclectic choices he has.
Now, don’t you want to load up your mp3 player with some of these lovely Stephen favorites? Click on the images to go to Amazon and get yours and create your Stephen Moyer playlist now.
Check out what True Blood’s Bill Compton likes to jam out to below:

I remember being at the Hollywood Bowl watching Pavement on their reunion tour, and Beck was sitting behind us. And I was like, ‘Why’s Beck here? There must be a link here,’ because we were surrounded by basically the band’s family. So I went home and obsessively Googled and then found that Beck was producing the new Jicks album, Mirror Traffic, from which I absolutely adore ‘Tigers.’ I like that album, but the one I keep going back to is Real Emotional Trash — especially its title track. It’s one of those ten- or eleven-minute long songs that’s perfect for those journeys to the grocery store. I like songs that fill the entire time [laughs]. So that’s my first choice, I’d say, also because it goes from slow to pure wigging out.”

The very first thing that turned me on to him was ‘Tango Till They’re Sore’ from Rain Dogs. I remember being at home, and I think I was about 14 or 15, and there it was. That song just literally changed how I saw music could be, from instead of just an entertainment you could play in the background to something you’re utterly immersed in. And then I just went and got every single thing of his that I could possibly buy.”
[When asked if he's seen Down by Law] Oh, I’ve seen everything. It’s funny, because he is the person who makes Dracula for me. That little tiny cameo is extraordinary. Also, I play very rudimentary piano, and there’s a couple of little Tom Waits-ian numbers that I always repeat because, you know, I haven’t got any imagination [laughs]. And, you know, Swordfish Trombone is that turning point in his career — that’s probably the album that I go back to the most out of everything I own. I saw him play London after he hadn’t played for like twenty years, and he came and did one night. It was just one of those amazing nights that I’m so pleased I managed to go to I paid a fortune for the ticket, and happily would have paid thousands more.”
MIDLAKE “I love the modern, new-wave folky song that’s around. That would be everybody from the Fleet Foxes to Mumford to Kurt Vile, Bon Iver. Huge fan of that sound. Like this early Midlake song, ‘Marion,’ that I really love. Ultimately for me, it comes down to vocals — all the vocalists from those bands I named have very plaintive-sounding vocals, and that song is just haunting.”



I always shove this song down peoples’ throats because I adore it so much, but I always have to warn them of this trumpet that blares in. Because you want to turn it up as loud as the stereo will go so that you can hear exactly what he’s doing in the beginning, but he wants you to do that, because the intent’s to blow your head off when the trumpet blares in as you get closer and closer. It’s like a kid with a foghorn running into a flock of starlings or seagulls, and watching them scatter. And it’s all about his love for this girl that he’s met at this store he goes into.
There’s one lyric I adore: ‘You are the only thing in any room that you’re ever in/I’m stubborn, selfish, and just too old.’ It’s just beautiful. And then he says ‘So yes, I guess I’m asking you/To back a horse that’s good for glue and nothing else/But find a man that’s truer than/Find a man that needs you more than I.’ I love it, it’s just so evocative. You need to listen to this song. F—ing brilliant.”


source: music-mix.ew.com
