Archive for May, 2009

A Dozen Modern Albums That Sound Like 1969

10 May 2009

Here are a dozen albums released after 1990 that sound like they could have been released in 1969…

The Stairs | Mexican R 'n' B
The Stairs | Mexican R ‘n’ B

Year it was actually released: 1992

Why it sounds like ’69: Lo-fi, with lots of gratuitous drug references, Mexican R ‘n’ B sounds like it might have been recorded on LSD. The modern corollary to bands like The Remains and The Seeds, The Stairs are now but a musical footnote from the early 90s.

Listen: Weed Bus

The Black Keys | Thickfreakness
The Black Keys | Thickfreakness

Year it was actually released: 2003

Why it sounds like ’69: The Blues reached the apex of its influence on popular music around 1969, and The Black Keys are a band that’s all about the blues. Fuzzed out to the max, Thickfreakness fits right in with the spirit of what some of the freakier bluesniks of that time were up to.

Listen: Have Love Will Travel

M. Ward | Transfiguration Of Vincent
M. Ward | Transfiguration Of Vincent

Year it was actually released: 2003

Why it sounds like ’69: This is no frills, acoustic music that features Matt Ward and his guitar, along with bass, drums and some piano. Ward’s guitar is reminiscent of John Fahey, and he sings like a choir boy channeling Howlin’ Wolf. If this album had been released in 1969 it would currently reside in the top 50 of Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums Of All-Time.

Listen: Helicopter

Devendra Banhart | Cripple Crow
Devendra Banhart | Cripple Crow

Year it was actually released: 2005

Why it sounds like ’69: This is some freaky hippie wailing. There is nothing about Devendra Banhart that doesn’t scream 1969.

Listen: Heard Somebody Say

The Mighty Imperials | Thunder Chicken
The Mighty Imperials | Thunder Chicken

Year it was actually released: 2001

Why it sounds like ’69: This is raw gut-bucket funk, and Joseph Henry’s occasional vocals are dynamite. If you dropped this one on the turntable, you’d have to convince listeners that it wasn’t released in the late-60s.

Listen: Joseph’s Popcorn

Madeleine Peyroux | Half The Perfect World
Madeleine Peyroux | Half The Perfect World

Year it was actually released: 2006

Why it sounds like ’69: Peyroux sings with the phrasing and feeling of a modern day Billie Holiday, but her sultry, sophisticated style is at home in any era. This woman makes me purr…

Listen: Blue Alert

The White Stripes | The White Stripes
The White Stripes | The White Stripes

Year it was actually released: 1999

Why it sounds like ’69: Like Thickfreakness, the Stripes’ self-titled debut is of a piece with the power-combo blues bands of the era. And seriously, covering both ‘Stop Breaking Down’ and ‘St. James Infirmary Blues’ is a late-60s move, not a late-90s move.

Listen: Stop Breaking Down

Black Lips | Good Bad Not Evil
Black Lips | Good Bad Not Evil

Year it was actually released: 2007

Why it sounds like ’69: This is sloppy, Nuggets-ready rock that sounds like it was concocted in a garage and produced by Frank Zappa. [On LP, the last track on side two is grooved backwards, so you have to put the needle at the end of the album to play the song, which spins out towards the edge of the record!] You’ll feel like you’re tripping after listening to an entire album of this stuff…

Listen: It Feels Alright

Dave Alvin | Public Domain: Songs From The Wild Land
Dave Alvin | Public Domain: Songs From The Wild Land

Year it was actually released: 2000

Why it sounds like ’69: Alvin’s take on traditional music – songs of “…honkey tonks, railyards, barnyards, backyards, church choirs and bedrooms” as he put it in his eloquent album liner notes – is kin to the lost-music explorations of groups like The Band and The Flying Burrito Brothers.

Listen: What Did The Deep Sea Say?

Raphael Saadiq | The Way I See It
Raphael Saadiq | The Way I See It

Year it was actually released: 2008

Why it sounds like ’69: Saadiq’s neo-Soul was inspired by Motown groups like The Temptations and The Four Tops, and The Way I See It sounds every bit like a vintage, chart-topping Motown release.

Listen: 100 Yard Dash

Erik Truffaz | Out Of A Dream
Eric Truffaz | Out Of A Dream

Year it was actually released: 1997

Why it sounds like ’69: Tapping the same creative vein as Kind Of Blue, Truffaz’ debut sounds more like 1959 than 1969. But well-executed ballads are timeless, and Out Of A Dream would have provided an interesting jazz counterweight to the fusion that Miles Davis was making at the time.

Listen: Down Town

Air | Moon Safari
Air | Moon Safari

Year it was actually released: 1998

Why it sounds like ’69: This album features French electro-pop that was created on vintage synthesizers and keyboards and tips its cap to Burt Bacharach on more than one occasion. Moon Safari wouldn’t have stood a snowball’s chance of gaining popularity in the 60s, and inevitably would have become one of those “great lost albums” that record geeks like me spend so much time tracking down.

Listen: La Femme d’Argent

Fleet Foxes | Fleet Foxes
Fleet Foxes | Fleet Foxes

Year it was actually released: 2008

Why it sounds like ’69: Fleet Foxes’ pastoral songs are distant relatives of the folk experimentation of artists such as Fairport Convention and The Incredible String Band. This is one of many albums on this list that sounds more like the 60s than the 00s…

Listen: Blue Ridge Mountains

1969: The Year In Music

7 May 2009

The scholar seeks, the artist finds.” – André Gide

*****

On January 30, 1969, the four members of The Beatles climbed the stairs to the roof of the Apple Records Building and staged an impromptu, five-song concert that brought their Saville Row neighborhood to a standstill before police intervened and shut them down. It was their last public appearance as a band, and the footage of them playing on that roof is a potent marker of the end of an era. Looking shaggy, tired and wise beyond their years, The Beatles seem about 15 years older than the group that arrived in America in 1964. The music business of the sixties was a meat grinder that took a toll on even – and especially – its most successful acts. With only short term gains in mind, the business squeezed musicians with never-ending album requests and put them through rigorous touring schedules that often made no geographical sense. It’s little wonder that most of rock’s biggest names were burning out or fading away as the 1960s became the 1970s.

1969 saw Jim Morrison arrested during a concert in Miami, FL for allegedly exposing his family jewels to the audience. It was the beginning of the end for The Doors, who saw their touring schedule evaporate in the ensuing controversy. The group would release one more album, the fine L.A. Woman, but they were never the same cultural force after Morrison’s stunt, and he would be dead before the end of the following year.

Consider that Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin would both also be dead by the conclusion of 1970, and ’69 becomes not just the final year of the 60s, but the end of the line for much of rock’s royalty. Many, including Brian Wilson, John Phillips, Fleetwood Mac’s Peter Green, and Love’s Arthur Lee, simply burned out through a frantic combination of artistic pressure and drug abuse, and were never a factor in the 70s. And an uncountable number of essential sixties bands lost their way and went adrift in the next decade, including The Byrds, The Kinks, Jefferson Airplane, Moby Grape, and CSN. Even stalwarts like Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, and Sly Stone seemed to withdraw into themselves, and were more miss than hit during the 70s.

But if 1969 was the last stand for many musical icons, it also provided a preview of the sounds that would come to dominate 70s radio. Led Zeppelin released not one, but two hard rock albums full of stadium-sized anthems. The Stooges’ debut was Punk a half-decade too soon, while The Flying Burrito Brothers and The Band charted new terrain called Country-Rock. And although he went unrecognized during his lifetime, Nick Drake was creating the kind of low-key, confessional folk that would make virtually every singer/songwriter not named Nick Drake rich during the 70s.

1969 had beginnings and endings. It had Woodstock and Altamont. It had happy hippies and Charles Manson. It had highs and lows. But mostly it had really, really good highs. Here are 20 (or so) of the best…

The Beatles | Abbey Road
#1 | The Beatles | Abbey Road | The Beatles’ last album just might be their very best. From the hard and heavy opener ‘Come Together’ to their most beautiful ballad ‘Something’ to the song suite that concludes side two, this album holds together in a way that belies the circumstances under which it was made. The Beatles all had one foot out the door, but the return of producer George Martin (who wisely sat out the debacle that was the Let It Be sessions) ensured that Abbey Road would be more polished that its messy predecessor. It turned out to be a fitting finale for the Fab Four.

Listen: Come Together

Miles Davis | Bitches Brew
Miles Davis | In A Silent Way
#2 | Miles Davis | Bitches Brew/In A Silent Way | And on the 7th day, Miles created fusion. But don’t hold it against him – Bitches Brew stands head and shoulders above anything else in that weak sub-genre. It is, like its cover, not of this world, and both beautiful and strange. Take a trip to the surface of Mars, the bottom of the ocean, and the Amazon Rainforest at midnight, all courtesy of Miles’ horn and John McLaughlin’s fluid guitar. In A Silent Way is fusion’s quiet storm – much lower key than its colorful counterpart, but no less intense.

Listen: Miles Runs The Voodoo Down [from Bitches Brew]

The Rolling Stones | Let It Bleed
#3 | The Rolling Stones | Let It Bleed | Coming on the heels of Beggars Banquet, this represents one of the Stones most stripped down and bluesy moments on record. Their first album released after the death of founding member Brian Jones features tough yet accessible songs like the title track, opener ‘Gimme Shelter’, and the epic ‘You Can’t Always Get What You Want’, in addition to Keith Richards’ first time as lead vocalist, on ‘You Got The Silver’. This was an emphatic statement that the Stones had graduated beyond of the blues and into their own sound. And though they’d revisit the formula time and again, the results never sounded as organic or genuine as Let It Bleed.

Listen: You Got The Silver

Led Zeppelin | Led Zeppelin
Led Zeppelin | Led Zeppelin II
#4 | Led Zeppelin | Led Zeppelin/Led Zeppelin II | Amazing but true: these albums were heavily panned upon release in the U.S. (this fact remains a point of embarrassment for Rolling Stone magazine, who led the naysayers). Right off the bat on ‘Good Times Bad Times’ it’s apparent that Zeppelin was onto a winning formula. Featuring Robert Plant’s soaring vocals, Jimmy Page’s quicksilver guitar lines and one of the rock’s greatest rhythm sections, Led Zeppelin was the first shot fired broadside on the psychedelic sloppiness that was often 60’s rock. II continues the greatness: ‘Whole Lotta Love’ is a fever dream that foreshadows epic tracks like ‘Stairway To Heaven’ and ‘Kashmir’. A knockout one-two punch from one of the heaviest and most highly influential bands of all time.

Listen: Good Times Bad Times

The Flying Burrito Brothers | The Gilded Palace Of Sin
#5 | The Flying Burrito Brothers | The Gilded Palace Of Sin | It was no accident that Gram Parsons contributed the only two original tracks to the Byrds’ country-rock classic, Sweetheart Of The Rodeo. Parsons was a bona fide trailblazer at a time when “Country” was a dirty word to many music fans. After just the one album with the Byrds, he left (and took Chris Hillman with him) to form The Flying Burrito Brothers. Taking the Sweetheart sound even deeper into country, the Burritos’ debut is full of twang and terrific tunes like ‘Sin City’, ‘Dark End Of The Street’ and ‘Wheels’. For better or worse, the musical sound that dominated 70’s radio (in the unfortunate form of The Eagles) was born here.

Listen: Sin City

The Band | The Band
#6 | The Band | The Band | The Band changed the face of popular music in a way that very few artists ever have. Both their debut, Music From Big Pink, and this self-titled follow up are as out of time as this black and white cover photo, and caused many musicians to ditch psychedelic extravagance. The songs, including ‘Up On Cripple Creek’ and ‘Whispering Pines’ are pastoral and feel like they’ve been around forever. More than any other group of its era (and after this, a lot were trying), this band from Canada perfectly channeled the sound of America before it was settled, when there was still much at stake – land, lives and gold to be won or lost – and men charged forth to grab their share, with an unquenchable thirst on their lips, and a song in their hearts.

Listen: Rag Mama Rag

The Velvet Underground | The Velvet Underground
#7 | The Velvet Underground | The Velvet Underground | The Velvet Underground’s self-titled third album saw bassist Doug Yule replacing avant-garde cellist John Cale, and the mood throughout is somber, thoughtful and as spare as anything they committed to tape. Tracks like ‘Pale Blue Eyes’, ‘Candy Says’ and ‘I’m Set Free’ convey an emotional honesty that was 180 degrees from the group’s normal combination of feedback and emotional detachment. However, Lou Reed’s journalist eye is as sharp as ever, and the scenes and characters drawn here possess a quiet dignity that makes this album the place to start for the VUninitiated.

Listen: Pale Blue Eyes (Closet Mix) [from Peel Slowly And See]

Fleetwood Mac | Then Play On
#8 | Fleetwood Mac | Then Play On | Then Play On is the highpoint of the original, Peter Green-led incarnation of this group. Green and Danny Kirwan trade guitar licks throughout, and the whole thing runs together brilliantly in spite of bold stylistic leaps. The only thing this has remotely in common with the Rumours-era Mac is the rhythm section of Mick Fleetwood and John McVie. Until you’ve heard this album, you haven’t heard the real Fleetwood Mac.

Listen: Oh Well

Johnny Cash | At San Quentin
#9 | Johnny Cash | At San Quentin | At San Quentin opens with a din then a roar that tells you this isn’t the typical live tour of hits. Menace and catharsis jump from the grooves in equal measure, and when Cash sings “San Quentin, you’ve been living hell to me” you almost expect a full-scale riot to break out. Much like the previous year’s At Folsom Prison, it’s clear that he’s feeding off his audience and giving them one of the performances of his lifetime. Like The Man In Black himself, this as an album that will never go out of style, and should provide the same unhinged and intense rush a hundred years from now.

Listen: Wanted Man

Nick Drake |  Fives Leaves Left
#10 | Nick Drake | Five Leaves Left | Woefully underappreciated in his short lifetime, Nick Drake made some of the most beautiful and sparse music ever created. Five Leaves Left was the first of three albums he released during his 27 years, and it perfectly balances his dark poetic vision with top-notch production and just-subtle-enough backing. ‘Time Has Told Me’, ‘Way To Blue’ and ‘Cello Song’ are but a few of the highlights on this gorgeous and understated gem.

Listen: Cello Song

Bob Dylan | Nashville Skyline
#11 | Bob Dylan | Nashville Skyline | In July of 1966, Dylan was in a motorcycle accident severe enough to be rumored fatal. During his lengthy recuperation in Woodstock, NY, he recorded songs with The Band that would become The Basement Tapes. The loose, almost drunken sound of those recordings led Dylan to 1968’s John Wesley Harding, which in turn led to the more country-fied Nashville Skyline. Many thought this was the first poor album he made because it eschewed political rhetoric, but it’s serene throughout, and finds him in his most honest, actually-trying-to-sing voice. It’s his most laid back album by a country mile.

Listen: Girl From The North Country (with Johnny Cash)

Neil Young | Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
Neil Young | Neil Young
#12 | Neil Young | Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere/Neil Young | Neil Young’s self-titled solo debut appeared in early ’69, and it could in no way have prepared its listeners for what he had cooking with a barely-competent garage band that would become Crazy Horse. On Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, released several months later, they unleashed classics like ‘Cinnamon Girl’ ‘Down By The River’ and ‘Cowgirl In The Sand’ – all three reportedly written while Young had a 105° fever. It also introduced the sound (sometimes that of a train struggling to stay on the tracks) that Neil would go back to time and again throughout his brilliant, mercurial, and influential career.

Listen: The Loner [from Neil Young]

The Stooges | The Stooges
#13 | The Stooges | The Stooges | One of the few bands that clearly would have been more at home at Altamont than Woodstock, The Stooges were way out of step with the flower-power, peace & love generation. Featuring standout tracks ‘1969’ ‘I Wanna Be Your Dog’ and ‘No Fun’, their self-titled debut was unlike anything that had come before it. The Velvet Underground’s uber-avant gardist John Cale was an odd choice as producer, and the 10-minutes-plus ‘We Will Fall’ bears his imprint while fulfilling its title by falling very flat indeed. But in spite of that misfire, this was a proper introduction to the blowtorch personality of Iggy Pop and the raw sound that would come to be known as punk.

Listen: 1969

Frank Zappa | Hot Rats
#14 | Frank Zappa | Hot Rats | Pinning down Frank Zappa’s music in words is about as easy as putting a weasel in a headlock, but here goes: Hot Rats is deliciously weird, white-boy fusion-funk, and features an amazing vocal guest spot (the only vocals on the entire album) from Captain Beefheart as the title character in ‘Willie The Pimp’. Zappa worked hard throughout his career to make the idea of ‘most listenable album’ a relative term, but this is where he most closely touched the earth. So what if the spot where he happened to touch down was a big top tent in Poughkeepsie full of freaks, clowns and pimps?

Listen: Willie The Pimp

Alexander 'Skip' Spence | Oar
#15 | Skip Spence | Oar | America’s answer to Syd Barrett held his mind together just long enough to make this amazing and totally ignored album. Barely-there songs like ‘Lawrence Of Euphoria’ and ‘Book Of Moses’ make Oar a love-it-or-hate-it affair of the highest order, but repeated listens reveal a stark poetic masterpiece that could only have come from a mind receding swiftly into darkness.

Listen: Little Hands

Santana | Santana
#16 | Santana | Santana | It’s probably something of a back-handed compliment to say that Santana’s debut is still the finest, freshest and most fully-realized of all the albums that Carlos put his name to – but there you have it. Tracks such as ‘Evil Ways’, ‘Jingo’, ‘Persuasion’ and ‘Soul Sacrifice’ (not to mention the psychedelic cover art) captured both the free-spirited fun and barely lurking dark side of the ‘60’s counterculture. It’s so good that it practically plays like (heck, most of it was) their greatest hits album.

Listen: Jingo

Taj Mahal | Giant Step/De 'Ole Folks At Home
#17 | Taj Mahal | Giant Step/De’ Ole Folks At Home

Fairport Convention | Unhalfbricking
Fairport Convention | Liege & Lief
#18 | Fairport Convention | Unhalfbricking/Liege & Leif

Both Taj Mahal and Fairport Convention were working under the same premise in ‘69: Take a traditional form of music, play it faithfully but with electricity (in both wattage and enthusiasm) and see if a new generation will swallow it. In Taj’s case it was the blues, Fairport were peddling English folk, but both were playing at such a high and imaginative level that it hardly mattered if their inspirations were centuries old.

The original double-album release of Giant Step/De Ole Folks At Home featured electrified blues on the first album (Giant Step) and traditional blues on the second (De Ole Folks), and the whole thing is excellent. Fairport pulled nearly the same trick over two albums. Unhalfbricking came first, and playfully stretched the boundaries of folk by refracting it through the prism of three separate Bob Dylan covers. Liege & Leif is more traditional, but no less fun. Both albums feature the extraordinary talents of singer Sandy Denny (most famously known in America as the female lead singer on Led Zep’s ‘Battle Of Evermore’) and guitarist Richard Thompson. Three albums for the ages.

Listen: Take A Giant Step [Taj Mahal]

Listen: Autopsy [Fairport Convention, from Unhalfbricking]

Sly & The Family Stone | Stand!
#19 | Sly & The Family Stone | Stand! | Stand! is the perfect midway point between the hippie-dippy, up with people songs of the early Sly albums, and the junked-out, bummer trips of later efforts. The smash hit ‘Everyday People’, the title track, and ‘You Can Make It If You Try’ acknowledge a multitude of world problems without ever losing their hopeful, upbeat outlook. But ‘Don’t Call Me Nigger Whitey’ nods to the direction the group was headed. Their next album, 1971’s There’s A Riot Going On, was bleak and ominous, and sounded almost nothing like the band that continually camped on the charts during the latter part of the 60’s. Yet another reason to enjoy this last shot of funk-infused sunshine.

Listen: You Can Make It If You Try

The Byrds | Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde
The Byrds | Ballad Of Easy Rider
#20 | The Byrds | Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde/Ballad Of Easy Rider | The back cover of Dr. Byrds and Mr. Hyde features a photo montage of the band transforming from spacemen into cowboys, and that pretty neatly sums up the sound found therein. Ballad Of Easy Rider is a tougher set, and features trippy, free-form liner notes courtesy of Peter Fonda. Neither of these albums is on the level of Notorious Byrd Brothers, Sweetheart Of The Rodeo, or Untitled, but they prove that even on average days, The Byrds were still a pretty formidable band.

Listen: Nashville West [from Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde]

*****

15 more that are worth a listen…

MC5 | Kick Out The Jams
Crosby Stills & Nash | CSN
The Allman Brothers Band | The Allman Brothers Band
The Live Adventures Of Al Kooper & Mike Bloomfield
The Meters | The Meters
Isaac Hayes | Hot Buttered Soul
Terry Reid | Terry Reid
Dusty Springfield | Dusty In Memphis
John McLaughlin | Extrapolation
Tim Buckley | Happy/Sad
Donovan | Barbajagal
Os Mutantes | Mutantes
PJ Proby | Three Week Hero
Elvis Presley | From Elvis In Memphis
Pink Floyd | More

*****

Not In My Jukebox You Don’t…

The Who | Tommy
Grateful Dead | Live/Dead
Grand Funk Railroad | Grand Funk
The Doors | The Soft Parade
Iron Butterfly | Ball
Jefferson Airplane | Volunteers
King Crimson | In The Court Of King Crimson The Crimson King
The Moody Blues | To Our Children’s Children
Pink Floyd | Ummagumma

Doubleshot Tuesday: Latin Funk Flavas/Fania DJ Series

5 May 2009

[Today: Getting funky on Cinco de Mayo...]

Various Artists | Latin Funk Flavas
Various Artists | Fania DJ Series: Gilles Peterson

Crate diggers are a notoriously rare breed. It takes a special constitution to relish rooting through thousands of dusty, dismal, damaged albums in search of a single elusive treasure that may or may not appear. But even if you don’t enjoy getting up at dawn to hit a flea market or scrounge through garage sale dollar bins of records, you can still build a collection of rare beats worthy of the dustiest vinyl hound. Thanks to compilation masters like record label Salsoul and BBC DJ Gilles Peterson, thousands of dollars (and thousands of hours of digging) worth of fat grooves can be had for the price of a couple of compact discs.

Latin Funk Flavas compiles rare latin-disco/funk grooves from the 70s – it’s up to you to supply the shag rug, bell-bottom pants, and piña coladas. These tracks teeter on the edge of kitsch, but the sheer intensity of the beats wins out in the end. Imagine the soundtrack to a Saturday Night Fever that starred Freddie Prinze instead of John Travolta and you’re halfway there. Definitely not for the faint of heart. Meanwhile, Fania Records turned noted record-finder Gilles Peterson loose on their vaults, and the results are reason for jubilation. Peterson reportedly listened to more than 200 albums before culling the best of it all down into 26 tracks over two discs. There’s nothing remotely kitschy about this edition of the Fania DJ Series – it’s one of the best salsa/funk compilations to be found anywhere, period.

Personally, I like digging through a big pile of records in search of a few new sounds, even if all it nets me is a couple of nasty hives. But Cinco de Mayo is a de facto holiday in these parts, so I’ll leave the digging to the pros for today, and concentrate on other pursuits instead:

World’s Best Margarita

Mix together equal parts:
-Lime Juice (3-5 limes will make enough juice for two drinks)
-Simple Syrup (1 cup sugar + 1 cup water, boil until dissolved)
-Silver Tequila (Don Julio is recommended, but any silver works)

For added flavor, cut your silver tequila with a bit of Cointreau, and top drinks with a splash of Grand Marnier.

Serve with ice and a wedge of lime… and enjoy!

Listen: Latin Strut [Joe Bataan - from Latin Funk Flavas]

Listen: Tighten Up [Al Escobar - from Fania DJ Series: Gilles Peterson]

Listen: The Return Of Leroy Pts. 1 & 2 [Jimmy Castor - from Latin Funk Flavas]

Listen: Saona [Noro Morales Quintet - from Fania DJ Series: Gilles Peterson]

Weekend Playlist

4 May 2009

Like sands through the hourglass, these were the records of our weekend…

Moby Grape | The Place And The Time
Moby Grape | The Place And The Time

Radiohead | In Rainbows
Radiohead | In Rainbows

Paul McCartney | McCartney
Paul McCartney | McCartney

J.J. Cale | Rewind: Unreleased Recordings
J.J. Cale | Rewind: Unreleased Recordings

Traffic | Dear Mr. Fantasy
Traffic | Dear Mr. Fantasy

David Grisman Quartet | Dawgwood
David Grisman Quartet | Dawgwood

Beck | Modern Guilt
Beck | Modern Guilt

Lee Morgan | Tom Cat
Lee Morgan | Tom Cat

Fleet Foxes | Fleet Foxes
Fleet Foxes | Fleet Foxes

Sly & The Family Stone | Small Talk
Sly & The Family Stone | Small Talk

The Beatles | Rarities
The Beatles | Rarities

Van Morrison | Veedon Fleece
Van Morrison | Veedon Fleece

War | The World Is A Ghetto
War | The World Is A Ghetto

Mac Wiseman | 'Tis Sweet To Be Remembered
Mac Wiseman | ‘Tis Sweet To Be Remembered

Bob Dylan | Highway 61 Revisited
Bob Dylan | Highway 61 Revisited

Kinks | Face To Face
Kinks | Face To Face

Pete Townshend | White City
Pete Townshend | White City

Mighty Imperials | Thunder Chicken
The Mighty Imperials | Thunder Chicken

Dr. John | In The Right Place
Dr. John | In The Right Place

Pete Seeger
Pete Seeger | The World Of Pete Seeger
[Album cover not pictured]

Freddie King | The Best Of Freddie King
Freddie King | The Best Of Freddie King

Neil Young | Massey Hall 1971
Neil Young | Massey Hall 1971

Lyrics Born | Everywhere At Once
Lyrics Born | Everywhere At Once

Jerry Lee Lewis | Live At The Star Club Hamburg
Jerry Lee Lewis | Live At The Star Club Hamburg

The Stooges
The Stooges | Declaration Of War: The Best Of The Funhouse Sessions [Album cover not pictured]

Radio Birdman | Radios Appear
Radio Birdman | Radios Appear

Ween | Chocolate And Cheese
Ween | Chocolate And Cheese

Whiskeytown | Strangers Almanac
Whiskeytown | Strangers Almanac

Stevie Wonder | Innervisions
Stevie Wonder | Innervisions

Magic Moment: Wading Into Big Muddy

3 May 2009

Happy 90th birthday to Pete Seeger, a true American hero…

Buried Treasure: Prophesy

2 May 2009

[Today: Globetrotting with Nitin Sawhney...]

Nitin Sawhney | Prophesy

Featuring more than 200 musicians recorded across six continents, Prophesy is a world music album in the truest sense of the term. Nitin Sawhney, the globetrotting ringmaster behind this project, built these songs around snippets of news broadcasts, an uplifting quote from Nelson Mandela, techno-babble from a Chicago cab driver, and many other spoken ideas about the state of the world. Sawhney further added a bed of pulsing electronic beats, lush strings, and exotic musical accompaniment from the far corners of the earth. The result is an album that sounds nothing like your garden variety world music release.

This sonic collage is a compelling look at a developing world that lacks resources, but not happiness. Sawhney sees a developed world full of bad habits, and a developing world full of promise, and makes no bones about the intent of Prophesy. In the album’s liner notes he wrote “We come from the developed world. We’re already developed. Sure. Then again, wealthy kids in America shoot each other. Poor kids in Soweto can’t stop smiling. So who’s developed?” But whether or not you can get behind the Material Vs. Spiritual concept, this is a musically adventurous album that rewards patient ears and has a way of getting under the skin with repeated listens.

The exclusively hot or cold reviews of this album that are in circulation suggest that Prophesy might not be to everyone’s liking. Each song features a different vocalist, which doesn’t give the listener room to settle in and get comfortable. But given the nature of this project, jumping all over the map is just part of the deal, and Sawhney is skilled at layering sounds for maximum effect. From the flamenco guitar and strings of ‘Moonrise’ to the South African school choir in ‘Footsteps’ to the Indian percussion and hypnotic chanting of the title track, Prophesy is an album that takes you places.

Listen: Moonrise

Listen: Prophesy

Masterpiece: Nebraska

1 May 2009

[Today: The Boss takes a hard look at America...]

Bruce Springsteen | Nebraska

One of the most bleak, barren albums ever released on a major label, Nebraska isn’t just about the 37th state of the union – it tracks the failure, despair, and criminal activity of folks all across this great country. These songs reveal a landscape where factories are closing down, people are becoming desperate, and killers roam the streets. The title track opens the album with the story of Charles Starkweather, who in 1957 took his 14 year-old girlfriend along on an interstate killing spree that left 11 dead. Singing from the killer’s point of view, Springsteen says simply “Well sir, I guess there’s a meanness in the world.” It’s a meanness that runs the length of Nebraksa.

Recorded by Springsteen in January of 1982, with just an acoustic guitar, harmonica, and 4-track cassette recorder, these songs were never intended for public consumption. They were cut as reference tracks for an album Springsteen attempted to record with the E Street Band, but when those recordings didn’t match the power of the demos, The Boss was eventually convinced to release those demos. This was easier said than done, as the original recordings were of poor enough quality to require extraordinary mastering to make them fit for release. Enter engineer Chuck Plotkin, who figured out how to clean up the tapes, earning a shout out in the album credits for “his help in the completion of this record.” Considering that these songs were recorded in Springsteen’s bedroom on rudimentary equipment, the sound is remarkable. Much of the album is sung barely above a whisper, lending undeniable intimacy to the proceedings – there’s nothing between you and the characters depicted here except the man who’s conjuring them.

‘Atlantic City’ tells the tale of mob violence in a gambling town, related by a man who’s so down on his luck that he’s ready to put all his chips on the table against one spin of the wheel. ‘Used Cars’ comes from the point of view of a kid watching his dad haggle with a car salesman, while he dreams of better times ahead. But his big talk only reinforces the cold, secondhand reality of his present life. Scratch the surface of any song here, and a deeper theme reveals itself – justice, religion, fate, family, reincarnation – you name it. The album closes with ‘Reason To Believe’ and its snapshots of someone poking a dead dog with a stick, an old man dying in a shotgun shack, and a groom left alone at the alter. Springsteen sings “At the end of every hard earned day people find some reason to believe” like a man who doesn’t quite understand how or why they do it.

Listen: Atlantic City

Listen: Used Cars

Listen: Nebraska

*****

Nebraska has inspired some eloquent reviews. Here are two of my favorites:

Nebraska Album Reflection And Review, by Anthony Kuzminski

Rolling Stone review of Nebraska (October 28th, 1982), by Steve Pond


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