Friday, December 31, 2010

The Best Records of 2010


#20 volebeats | volebeats

Matthew Smith, Jeff Oakes & gang fuse their usual blend of psych-rock & country pop with sometimes mixed results.




#19  marah | life is a problem
 
I consider myself a big fan of the band, devouring each new record, hoping anyone who'd listen would know how great they are. Life Is a Problem, their first without guitarist brother Serge, is an exalted, ramshackle, mess of a record that has grown on me over the year. I didn't like it much at first and found it rather disappointing, but the ensuing months revealed a few truths. It has a lot in common with The Basement Tapes, brother Serge needs to get his ass back in the band, and Within The Spirit Sagging is one of the best tracks of the year.   




#18   smoke fairies - through the light and trees
 
Debut record from British female duo Katherine Blamire and Jessica Davies. Haunting,  downbeat, sparse, folk/vocal harmonies that weave through filtered folk traditions and blues riffery. 
RIYL : Sandy Denny, PJ Harvey & Espers.   




#17  the len price 3 | pictures
 
Complaining that this is 60's derivative guitar based pop is impertinent. The LP3 are writing catchy, cockney, upbeat songs that every beat combo has done since the days of The Kinks & The Beatles. What’s not to like?




#16  teenage fanclub | shadows

Shadows, the Fannies eighth proper release in twenty years is a worthy addition to the legacy of a group that deserves a spot in the RnR hall of endurance. The dependable quality with which they have created music the last twenty years is astonishing. Yes, the days of loud guitars (Songs From Northern Britain) and sing-alongs (Sparky's Dream) are gone, only to be replaced by a more comfy landing-place, one still tied to their classicist pop leanings.




#15  the national | high violet
 
Given the fact that I had issues with their other records, I consider this my first "real" exposure to the band.  Bloodbuzz Ohio was the track that hooked me, and I still think of it as one of the best songs of the year. As for the rest of the record, cunning, cohesive, punchy and unwavering. Makes we wonder what they'd sound like without their drummer, cos he IS the straw that stirs the drink.. Vocalist, Matt Berninger seems comfortable staying within a particular vocal scale delivering his baritone melodies, and combined with his abstract lyrics, it seems to work.




#14   pernice brothers | goodbye, killer
 
At first, this short and very stripped down record felt like a lost Scud Mountain Boys record and a bit half baked when compared to older and lusher sounding affairs. The thing is, Joe writes brilliant songs with biting lyrics and after an initial ho-hum response I found myself playing the thing constantly. It might not be my favorite PB record, but it is yet another gem of a pop record by a guy that has yet to let me down.




#13  mary gauthier | the foundling

My first exposure to this was a couple of weeks ago, but in that time, it's left a big impression.
Drawing upon her life, this autobiographical concept record is at times, painful to listen to. Rooted in her abandonment as a child, Mary delivers a musical tour de force that's both affecting and convincing. I'm sure this would have placed higher with more spins. Wow. 




#12  bobby bare jr  |  a storm, a tree, a mother's head
 
How can you go wrong with My Morning Jacket as your backing band and your father co-writing a few of the tracks? This, Bobby's sixth release, finds him playful & profound, releasing his most personal to date, and, accordingly, one of his best, second only to the Young Criminals Starvation League.




#11  sunrise highway  | s/t 

Upbeat and lush, this 70's take on a classic pop format would have been right at home on AM radio sandwiched between The Beach Boys and The Raspberries. Great melodies, hooks and production.




#10  duncan maitland  |  lullabies for the 21st Century
 
On this, his debut, Lullabies for The 21st Century, Dublin native Duncan Maitland is joined by Colin Moulding (XTC) on the opening track and Barry O'Brien of Slumberjet/Pugwash on a few others. Intricate and complex, these arrangements are far more than ear candy, but a study in pop smarts. Every track is crammed with details that will have you going back for more. 
RIYL : Later day XTC, Beatles, Power Pop




#09   title tracks  |  it was easy

Power pop with all the typical influence, John Davis (Q and not U) has crafted an enthusiastic compact record full of friendly songs and good melodies that stays true to the album title




#08  the sadies | darker circles
 
Best absorbed and appraised as a whole. Darker Circles, the veteran roots rockers ninth official release is all about tone, atmosphere and vibe. If a Tele, B-bender, dread, sadness and something ominous is your bag, look no further.
RIYL: Clarence White era BYRDS.




#07  elvyn | the decline
 
Canadian pop never sounded so good. Imagine a slightly countrified Teenage Fanclub with stacked harmonies and songs.




#06  twin shadow | forget
 
I could not have imagined a record of this ilk charting this high, but these songs continue to surprise with every listen. I'm hearing a subtle nod to post-glitter Roxy Music, Power, Corruption & Lies era New Order and a big salty salute to Japanese icons, Yellow Magic Orchestra. While other similar music is "style" focused, George Lewis Jr. puts the spotlight on song structure. This is one of those records where the listener is rewarded with repeated listens. 




#05  free energy | stuck on nothing
 
Infectious, cocksure, irony free, derivative, enthusiastic, lighthearted, corny, 70's style, charming, commonplace, fun,fun,fun, stadium rock. Nuff said. As an aside, I can't think of a record cover that stays truer to the music.




#04  robert pollard | we all got out of the army
 
My love for the avuncular one from Dayton, OH, continues with this glam-pop, not too-rough around the edges, record. This was one of four released by Bob in 2010, and by far his most consistent. There is a part of me, actually a big part that wishes he would parse down all his releases to perhaps one or two a year. I guess part of the fun is weeding through all the muck to hit that Pollard sweet spot. Silk Rotor/I Can See = the best one/two punch to launch a record in Twentyten.
 



#03  mike stinson | the jukebox of my heart
 
Hands down, country rock, whatever you want to call it, record of the year.




#02  spoon | transference
 
I simply don't understand the hate levied against this record. The melodies are challenging, but rewarding. The instrumentation still shows off a sparse, strong versatility. While their experimental side is practically a no-show, the band regulates its rock vs rock-lite side with songs such as Got Nuffin and Goodnight Laura.  You might as well go ahead and add The Mystery Zone & Written in Reverse to those future best of Spoon Mixes, cos they're as good as anything they've ever done. Spoon continues their upward trajectory as a colossal band with considerable talent.




#01  the silver seas | chateau revenge
 
Harmony and Melody leads the way with this lavish, power pop, country rock, soft r&b; (gulp) recording. Each track gives you something a little different held together by the musings of the most underrated songwriter on the planet, Daniel Tashian. Thinking it must be a fluke, I picked up 2007's High Society only to find, yep, no fluke. After an email exchange, I learned keyboardist/producer Jason Lehning is a major factor in the group, arranging most of the material. An indispensable record.
 

Thursday, December 09, 2010

The Best of Damien Jurado















Ohio
Tragedy
Honey Baby
Big Deal
Trials
Parade
Paperwings
Birdcage
Air Show Disaster
Medication
Simple Hello
Denton
Gillian Was a Horse
Zombies Of The Sea
I Can't Get Over You
Cloudy Shoes
Rachel & Cali
Sheets
Omaha
Hoquiam
Eyes For Windows
Letters & Drawings
Abilene
Window

+++

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Obama Meets Bob Dylan















You had Bob Dylan here. How did that go?

Here's what I love about Dylan: He was exactly as you'd expect he would be. He wouldn't come to the rehearsal; usually, all these guys are practicing before the set in the evening. He didn't want to take a picture with me; usually all the talent is dying to take a picture with me and Michelle before the show, but he didn't show up to that. He came in and played "The Times They Are A-Changin'." A beautiful rendition. The guy is so steeped in this stuff that he can just come up with some new arrangement, and the song sounds completely different. Finishes the song, steps off the stage — I'm sitting right in the front row — comes up, shakes my hand, sort of tips his head, gives me just a little grin, and then leaves. And that was it — then he left. That was our only interaction with him. And I thought: That's how you want Bob Dylan, right? You don't want him to be all cheesin' and grinnin' with you. You want him to be a little skeptical about the whole enterprise. So that was a real treat.

Tuesday, October 05, 2010

The Best Power Pop of 2009






















01 Queen Of Hearts - Bobby Emmett
02 Girl After My Own Heart - Roger Klug
03 Bird Using Bird - The Resonars
04 There's A Light - Reno Bo
05 All Of A Sudden - Telekenisis
06 Anymore - Outrageous Cherry
07 Don't Ask Me Love - The Madd
08 Hope It Doesn't Come My Way - Leave
09 Welcome To My World - Tony Cox
10 You Really Bring Me Down - The Antennas
11 Willing Reason - Cheap Star
12 Let It Rest For A Little While - Boston Spaceships
13 Love Is Real - Bobby Emmett

PART 1

14 Now Or Never - Marc Carroll
15 Damn! - Gidgets Ga Ga
16 Telephone Operator - The Leftovers
17 Tell Me When It's Over - Joe Pernice
18 I Can't Quit Her - Chris Richards & The Subtractions
19 Hi-Hat - Roger Klug
20 Try - The Madd
21 World Apart - The Resonars
22 Feel Real Love - Tony Cox
23 Let Me Play - Biscuit
24 All Used Up - Belleville
25 Jupiter Optimus Maximus - The Tomorrows

PART 2

Photo courtesy of PowerPop Review

Belle & Sebastian Collection
















As a result of two disappointing releases (including the brand new Write in Love) and their upcoming appearance at The Treasure Island Festival in SF, I was asked to put together a collection of their best tracks from 1995-2005. Ask and you shall receive.
Without further ado, I give you in all their twee glory, Belle & Sebastian.
Carry on lads.

The State I Am In
Dear Catastrophe Waitress
Wrapped Up In Books
Me And The Major
Step Into My Office, Baby
I Don't Love Anyone
The Loneliness Of A Middle Distance Runner
The Boy With The Arab Strap
Seeing Other People
If She Wants Me
The Stars Of Track And Field
Expectations
Get Me Away From Here, I'm Dying
She's Losing It
Like Dylan In The Movies
I Fought in a War
If You're Feeling Sinister
The Chalet Lines
The Rollercoaster Ride

+++

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

The Songs of Mike Cooley


"I make more money off t-shirts. If you rip it, burn it, give it to somebody, and they come to a show and buy a ticket and a t-shirt, I profit more that way anyway, and then I've got a fan. Records are promotional items these days anyway"

What better way to introduce some songs from my 'favorite' Trucker, and one that can turn a phrase with the best of of'em.

Gravity's Gone
A Ghost To Most
Birthday Boy
Bob
3 Dimes Down
Space City
Self-Destructive Zones
72 (This Highway's Mean)
Loaded Gun In The Closet
Marry Me
Carl Perkins' Cadillac
Zip City
Sounds Better In The Song
Get Downtown
Women Without Whiskey
Daddy's Cup
Shut Up And Get On The Plane
Eyes Like Glue

+++

Sunday, March 07, 2010

Sparklehorse Collection

RIP Mark Linkous















Don't Take My Sunshine Away
Homecoming Queen
It's A Wonderful Life
Getting It Wrong
Painbirds
Weird Sisters
Piano Fire
Saint Mary
Shade and Honey
Rainmaker
Sea Of Teeth
See the Light
Spirit Ditch
Some Sweet Day
Saturday
Knives of Summertime
Most Beautiful Widow In Town
Heart Of Darkness
Someday I Will Treat You Good
Hundreds of Sparrows
Sad and Beautiful World
Gasoline Horseys
Junebug

+++

Monday, January 11, 2010

COTM's Twenty Delights of 2009














With the benefit of hindsight I can see 2009 was a somewhat disappointing year in the music world. I found myself gravitating to more of what puts the "power" in pop, and less of the folk/indie stylings that's ostensibly everywhere these days. Not that I find it all uninteresting per se, it's just that the component that ties it all together, "the songwriting", seemed to be lacking and at times, was an embarrassing rehash. When I think of songcraft, I think of how it relates to succeeding at something three times.
For example, in Hockey when one player scores three times, it's called the hat trick.
What?
Let me explain.
When you have it, the hat trick of songwriting in any genre should consist of :
(1) Good lyric with gravity and/or humour.
(2) mellifluous and tuneful.
(3) Sung & played well enough that creates a vibe and/or energy.
Addendum to (3)- You can attain vibe and energy without, how can I say it, playing it not so cleverly. See (1977-1981) related artists for how this is done. I've always felt that the goal of every songwriter should be to display or exhibit some form of humanity, hence what it's like to be a human being.

So now it's now 2010 and I find myself lowering the bar "again" seeking some sort of fulfillment. Is all this because I have less of an expectation now or do they simply not write'em like they use to. Dunno. As for the hat trick theory, if two of three checkpoints are achieved, I'm pleased. Unfortunately most of the time, it's more like one or none.

As for this years list, my Top 20 does include a few stock Americana checkpoints in Tim Easton, Son Volt, Neko Case and The Dexateens as well as my professed love for all that is Pollardian. Some of the more ubiquitous releases this year (Animal Collective, Grizzly Bear ) I tried and tried and in the end simply resigned myself to the fact that they were just not for me. There were others (The Madd, Roman Candle, The Heartless Bastards, The Deep Vibration, Tony Cox, The Milk & Honey Band, The xx) I was intrigued by and actually liked quite a bit and could see with more plays the potential of making their way onto the list. Good stuff Maynard.

There were others that apart from a couple of good songs, I was disappointed in. (Wilco, Bob Dylan, Lucero, Justin Townes Earle, Hayden)

Now without further ado, I give you my favorite records of the year. The ones I reached for most during these troubled times, economic downturns, foreclosures, bailouts, the exploited and the downtrodden.

el goodo - coyote
boston spaceships - zero to 99/planets are blasted
reigning sound - love & curses
roger klug - more help for your nerves
son volt - american central dust
neko case - middle cyclone
tim easton - porcupine
outrageous cherry - universal malcontents
telekinesis - telekinesis
dexateens - singlewide
the resonars - that evil drone
robert pollard - elephant jokes 
broadfield marchers - displayed in reflections
reno bo - happenings and other things
cheap star - speaking like an elephant
vetiver - tight knit
grant-lee phillips - little moon
gidgets ga ga - the big bong fiasco
bobby emmett - learning love
richmond fontaine - we used to think the river sounded like a freeway

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

COTM'S Cinematic Best of The Decade














01. there will be blood
02. sexy beast
03. the straight story
04. dancer in the dark
05. downfall
06. city of god
07. the triplets of belleville
08. mulholland drive
09. amelie
10. no country for old men
11. amores perros
12. donnie darko
13. oh brother, where art thou
14. you can count on me
15. eternal sunshine of the spotless mind
16. magnolia
17. ghost world
18. punch drunk love
19. talk to her
20. irreversible
21. 21 grams
22. memento
23. good night and good luck
24. sideways
25. 28 days later

I know this is cheating but I'd like to add the Three Colors Trilogy directed by Krzysztof Kieslowski. They first debuted separately in the '90's, but released as a set in 2003. Even though one can view each segment of Three Colors trilogy on its own, they're best seen as one piece.

Guilty Pleasure Picks
Napolean Dynamite
School of Rock
Wedding Crashers
Almost Famous

Music Documentary
Bob Dylan - No Direction Home
The Ramones - End of The Century
Wilco - I Am Trying To Break Your Heart

Monday, November 02, 2009

The Best of Marah




















This set of working class, sweat-covered songs are from one of my favorite bands, the boys from Philly, Marah. Often called, "the last rock n roll band", Marah, led by Dave & Serge Bielanko are a band with an inimitable sound, built upon the best traits of rock, vintage country, and classic rock. (Serge left the band in late 2008 to be a full-time father). The following songs are culled from the following records, Let's Cut The Crap and Hook Up later Tonight (1998), Kids in Philly (2000), 20,000 Streets Under The Sky (2004), If You Didn't Laugh, You'd Cry (2005) and Angels of Destruction (2008).

Of the records represented here, one will be included in my forthcoming Best of The Decade. Venture a guess ?

Enjoy !

Fever
Formula, Cola, Dollar Draft
Phantom Eyes
Firecracker
For The Price of A Song
Rain Delay
Baby Love
Faraway You
Point Breeze
My Heart is the Bums on the Street
Round Eye Blues
Barstool Boys
The Catfisherman
The History of Where Someone Has Been Killed
Sooner or Later
The Hustle
City of Dreams
The Demon of White Sadness
Walt Whitman Bridge
East
Feather Boa
Pigeon Heart
Angels on a Passing Train

+++

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Now Playing : Fall '09





















01. boston spaceships - zero to 99
02. reigning sound - love & curses
03. el goodo - coyote
04. son volt - american central dust
05. robert pollard - elephant jokes
06. broadfield marchers - displayed in reflections
07. neko case - middle cyclone
08. tim easton - porcupine
09. dexateens - singlewide
10. telekinesis - telekinesis

11. cheap star - speaking like an elephant
12. boston spaceships - the planets are blasted
13. outrageous cherry - universal malcontents
14. vetiver - tight knit
15. circus devils - gringo
16. deadstring brothers - sao paulo
17. richmond fontaine - we used to think the river....
18. bottle rockets - lean forward
19. chris richards & the subtractions - sad sounds of summer
20. lucero - 1372 overton park

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Best of Robert Pollard (2006 - 2009)






















If it's Monday, that means there's probably some Robert Pollard news to share. Shoot, if it's any day of the week YOU KNOW there will be something Pollardian to share. 'Zero To 99', the new record from Boston Spaceships is set to drop on October 6th. It represents their second release this year and third in the last two years. This also represents the sixth record from Bob & Co. released in 2009 alone. WTF ? How does the inexhaustible deity of rock do it ?
I've heard from the 'Dayton Mafia' that this record will be quintessential Pollard, a record that holds its own alongside the widely acknowledged classics, Guided By Voices' Bee Thousand & Alien Lanes. As much as I'd like to believe it, this can't be true. No way. But we shall see.

If you're already a Pollard fan, you'll understand, and you'll enjoy this. If you already don't like him, then you'll continue in your misguided ways. There are many naysayers that simply don't get or understand him, and they're certainly entitled to their opinion. The typical response is they don't like his music for this or that, lack of gravity, nonsensical lyrics, incomplete songs, blah blah, blah blah blah. C'mon people, it's called Rock n Roll with great melodies. There are also some that feel Bob would benefit from an editor-in-chief. One to keep him in check and oversee that brain of his that contains 'The Book of Rock' Volumes 1-100. Truth be told, I'm somewhat ambivalent of this notion and find myself thinking about it probably more than I should. Buuuut after awhile I come to my senses, quickly jump down off the fence and proclaim f**k it, let him do what he wants. It's like 'learning how to hunt' (no pun intended), to pick and choose and find the treasures hiding deep within.

Which leads me to why I'm here -

The following will be the first-ever Robert Pollard compilation posted on Conqueror of The Moon.
I want to keep it current AND bring the rock.
The twenty tracks presented here were released after 'From A Compound Eye' & 'Normal Happiness'.

(2006-2009)

Things Have Changed (Down in Mexico City) **
Stiff Me **
Death of The Party $$
Symbols and Heads **
Miles Under The Skin ++
Heavy Crown ##
Gratification To Concrete ()
Canned Food Demons ##
Go For The Exit &
Johnny Optimist **
Queen Of Stormy Weather ##
Jimmy **
No Island *
The Original Heart ()
Beauty of the Draft $$
The Killers ^^
Tattered Lily **
The Naked Wall $$
(All You Need) To Know **
Wealth And Hell-Being ()


Robert Pollard - Elephant Jokes **
Boston Spaceships - Planets Are Blasted ##
Robert Pollard - The Crawling Distance *
Robert Pollard - Off To Business ()
Boston Spaceships - Brown Submarine &
The Keene Brothers - Blues and Boogie Shoes $$
Robert Pollard - Coast To Coast Carpet of Love ++
Robert Pollard - Standard Gargoyle Decisions ^^

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

The Side Projects of Jeff Tweedy






















Not only is Jeff Tweedy Wilco's herr director, he’s also a member of Golden Smog, Loose Fur and with the help of Billy Bragg and the late Jay Bennett, helped create two records from pages of Woody Guthrie lyrics. Last but not least, Jeff was a member of Uncle Tupelo with Jay Farrar. That's quite the resume. The songs presented here (save for UT) are culled from the aforementioned projects, hard to find EP's, unreleased tracks, demos, and a special never-heard-before recording from the 'Guthrie' sessions. Also included is a more recent recording with the "new" band using more of Guthrie's lyrics. I'd like to veer off course a bit and say I'm extremely happy for Jeff's success the last few years. He's seemingly happier then ever before. Wilco's recent show at The Greek Theatre in Berkeley was perhaps the best they've ever sounded in the fifteen times or so I've seen them perform, both full band and Jeff solo. While all that would be perceived to be a good thing, I'm not so sure being in fine fettle works as well with that one thing that's pertinent to a band format. It's called the music. I've listened to Sky Blue Sky and Wilco (the album) countless times. They're seamless, safe, secure and as "snug as a bug in a rug." Dunno, maybe I just don't get it. At the Greek show they played the unexpected Box Full of Letters from AM and I was blown away. I was hoping Monday, maybe Casino Queen, even I Got You would follow, but they never came. After playing these rare tracks you may, like me, find yourself longing for 1999, Jay Bennett is stage right playing Airline To Heaven on his black Silvertone in a drop D tuning and all is well in Wilcoworld.

But I digress.

Enjoy !

The Ruling Class
Lost Love
Cars Can't Escape
When The Roses Bloom Again
Hey Chicken
Pecan Pie
Laminated Cat
Glad & Sorry
Wanted
Please Tell My Brother
Chinese Apple
Wreckroom
Venus Stop The Train
Radio King
Bob Dylan's 49th Beard
The Thanks I Get
A Magazine Called Sunset
Hummingbird (alternate version)
The Jollybanker

+++

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

Eels : Collection






















Mr. E's Beautiful Blues
Fresh Feeling
Love Of The Loveless
That Look You Give That Guy
Flyswatter
The Good Old Days
Rock Hard Times
It's A Motherfucker
A Daisy Through Concrete
Saturday Morning
Fresh Blood
Novocaine For The Soul
The Sound Of Fear
I Like Birds
I'm Going To Stop Pretending That I Didn't Break Your Heart
Trouble With Dreams
Dust Of Ages
That's Not Really Funny
Grace Kelly Blues
Daisies Of The Galaxy
My Timing Is Off
Hey Man (Now You're Really Living)
Things The Grandchildren Should Know

+++

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Rolling Best of 2009














01. son volt - american central dust
02. el goodo - coyote
03. the broadfield marchers - the inevitable continuing
04. tim easton - porcupine
05. outrageous cherry - universal malcontents
06. vetiver - tight knit
07. neko case - middle cyclone
08. cheap star - speaking like an elephant
09. dexateens - singlewide
10. telekinesis - telekinesis

11. the heartless bastards - the mountain
12. justin townes earle - midnight at the movies
13. the deep vibration - veracruz
14. hayden - the place where we lived
15. roman candle - oh tall tree in the ear
16. the milk & honey band - dog eared moonlight
17. wilco - wilco (the album)
18. m. ward - hold time
19. eels - hombre lobo
20. dangermouse/sparklehorse - dark night of the soul

Saturday, May 02, 2009

The Best Of Jay Farrar






















With the stunning new record from Son Volt set to drop on July 7th, I thought it high time to up a few songs from one of my favorite songwriters, Jay Farrar. Simply put, his songs have a profound effect on me as both a listener and a songwriter. These songs are culled from both of his solo releases as well as the first six Son Volt records including three tracks from the soon to released American Central Dust.

Enjoy !

01. Medicine Hat
02. Tear Stained Eye
03. All Of Your Might
04. Windfall
05. Creosote
06. Dust of Daylight
07. Methamphetamine
08. Picking Up The Signal
09. Bandages And Scars
10. Hanging Blue Side
11. Ten Second News
12. The Picture
13. No More Parades
14. Highways And Cigarettes
15. Drown
16. Barstow
17. Outside The Door
18. Roll On
19. Cahokian
20. The Search
21. Cocaine and Ashes

+++

Friday, March 13, 2009

Bob Dylan : Together Through Life - April 28th






















YESTERDAY, MOJO HEARD seven of what may turn out to be ten or eleven Bob Dylan originals to be released by Columbia Records in April, possibly the week of the 27th in the U.S. and Europe. The album is not yet titled and final track selection, sequence and artwork are still being finalized. Sources confirm what many have already heard: French filmmaker Olivier Dahan, who directed La Vie En Rose, the blood-on-the-tracks biopic of Edith Piaf, asked Dylan to contribute something to My Own Love Song, a road movie starring Forest Whitaker and Renee Zellweger about a wheelchaired singer and pal who travel cross-country to Memphis. Bob offered up Life Is Hard, a gorgeous ballad with a descending melody line that is reminiscent of the Bing Crosbyish, early 20th Century pop that Bob displayed on both "Love And Theft" and Modern Times.

Although the facts remain a mystery, evidently Dylan had more to say, more to write, or simply had accumulated enough songs for a new album. It took him four years to follow 1997's Time Out Of Mind with 2001's "Love And Theft", and five twixt Love... and '06's Modern Times, so no-one expected a new one so quickly. Details are sketchy about precise recording dates and personnel but sources say that Jack Frost (Dylan's nom de studio) produced and the line-up features Bob on guitar and keys as well as his road band and David Hidalgo from Los Lobos on accordion. Other possible contributors have been floated but have not been confirmed.

Your correspondent first heard of the possible existence of an album of new material on Dylan encyclopedist Michael Gray's blog on January 22. The rumor quickly made the rounds of Bobsites, forcing skeptics to point to the alleged April release date as proof that this was an April Fool's joke. As recently as March 10, one naysayer posted on the New Yorker website that guesswork about the album's title was "the strongest evidence there won't be an album." After checking with a friend of Bob's who confirmed the rumor, arrangements were made with the appropriate gatekeepers. Drugged, blindfolded, and forced to switch transportation periodically, I awoke on a tropical island in a bamboo hut, sparsely outfitted with a lone stereo. Here's what I heard:

1) Beyond Here Lies Nothin' - A minor chord mid-tempo rocker. Like all the tracks and like Bob's last two albums, it's got a big, full, raucous, rocking sound, making the case that Jack Frost is indeed Bob Dylan's finest producer since the '60s and '70s. Likewise, his voice packs a punch; not the thin, reedy instrument that occasionally detracts during live sets. He's enunciating the lyrics with a fire and intensity we didn't hear on Modern Times. Hidalgo's soulful squeezebox is omnipresent here - and everywhere else.

2) Life Is Hard - The song that possibly buzzed his muse and encouraged him to write the others. "I need strength to fight that world outside," and "I'm on my guard / Admitting life is hard / Without you baby" are lines that leapt out in a paean to the notion that two are better equipped to weather tragedy than one. A forlorn twinkling mandolin and mournful pedal steel accentuate the deep blue lyrics.

3) My Wife's Hometown - Chicago blues has always been a huge influence on Dylan. From Bringing It All Back Home up through his most recent work, the ghosts of Chess Studios lurk inside the man from Minnesota. This one's reminiscent of Muddy Waters' I Love The Life I Live, I Live The Life I Love. Job loss is referenced (a topical theme, you may have heard), but Bob's black humour is in cheeky abundance: "I just want to say that hell's my wife's hometown" and "I'm pretty sure she'll make me kill someone," Bob sings and then laughs demonically at the end. Man, he's enjoying himself.

4) Forgetful Heart - Lots of tunes in minor keys on this record, including this one. A neat banjo barely audible in the mix and one of The Master's best lines ever: "The door is closed for evermore / If indeed there ever was a door."

5) Shake Shake Mama - More Chi-town chugga-lugga. Some artists retreat to servile reasonableness and bourgeois banality as they get older. Not Bob. He got Las Vegas out of his system at Budokan. "I'm motherless / I'm fatherless / Almost friendless too," he growls and you believe him.

6) I Feel A Change Coming On - Like Spirit On the Water from Modern Times, this one possesses a blithe jaunt and gorgeous melody. As in all his recent work, there are intimations of mortality ("And the last part of the day is already gone") but there's a devil-may-care wistfulness and a frisky sexuality in both lyrics and phrasing. Best lines: "I'm listening to Billy Joe Shaver / I'm reading James Joyce / Some people they tell me / I've got the blood of the land in my voice."

7) It's All Good - Propelled by a John Lee Hooker boogie rhythm with a stinging slide guitar, here's Dylan taking on human woes: social, political, personal. He itemizes crimes ranging from "politicians tellin' lies" to environmental illness ("a teacup of water is enough to drown"), urban degradation, murder and adultery and sarcastically and scathingly responds to each in the chorus with that hideous New Age cliché referenced in the title. More proof that Bob never really stopped writing "protest songs".

Other song titles that I didn't hear but have been mentioned elsewhere include If You Ever Go To Houston and This Dream Of You. Yet what I heard offered ample proof of an artist steeped in the past but thoroughly living in the present, cognizant of everything, not afraid to point fingers or laugh at fools or fall in love.

It's a powerful personal work by a man who still thinks for himself in an era of fear, conformity, and dehumanization. That it rocks mightily makes the message even more compelling. Whatever the hell it gets called, it'll be in the running for Best Album Of 2009.

-Mojo

Monday, March 02, 2009

Outrageous Cherry






















Matthew Smith of Outrageous Cherry & The Volebeats
- Detroit musician and producer extraordinaire.


With the release of a new record, Universal Malcontents, I thought it high time to put together a comp for the uninitiated. The songs reflected here, culled from a sizable output over the last fifteen years are nothing short of genius.
Having toiled in in the shadows for years, which is a shame, really, as the Motor City quartet’s string of 60's/70's, AM radio, psych/fuzz output has always been consistently good. (That said, I'm still trying to figure out why last year's best-of, Wide Awake in the Spirit World, didn't contain one song from 1999's inspirational Out There in The Dark.) This late in the game, the band could be forgiven for coasting on its considerable talents, but instead Universal Malcontents may be its best record yet. Led by Matthew Smith (who's also a member of The Volebeats) is more in the zone than ever before, whether on the glam-inflected opener, "I Recognized Her", the two minute brilliance of "Anymore", the shimmering psychedelic "Feels Like Shadows” or the sarcastic stomp of “It’s Not Rock N’Roll (And I Don’t Like It).”, Universal Malcontents is Outrageous Cherry’s most engaging record in nearly a decade. These tracks, as well as several from Out There In The Dark, and many others are all represented here.

Enjoy !

Pretty Girls Go Insane
Where Do I Go When You Dream?
Anymore
(You're Not) A Nice Girl
Saturday Afternoon
Easy Come, Uneasy Glow
Corruptable
I Recognized Her
Solid Sound Gangster
Why Don't We Talk About Something Else
I Wouldn't Treat My Enemies the Way You Treat Yourself
Georgie, Don't You Know
Togetherness
Pale Frail Lovely One
Feels Like Shadows
What Have You Invented Today?
I've Been Obsessed
Memory
Lord Have Mercy On Me
Stay Right Here for a Little While
If You Want Me
New Creature
Stay Happy
This Evening
Memphis Stereo
Trust
It's Rock 'N' Roll (And I Don't Like It)

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Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Neko Case ( for beginners)






















With Neko's new record, Middle Cyclone (which, by the way is fantastic) set to drop on March 3rd, I took the liberty of putting together a collection of tracks culled from every one of her releases (save for the live, Tigers Have Spoken) dating back to The Virginian, released on Bloodshot in 1997, up to the aforementioned Middle Cyclone.

Enjoy !

Hold On, Hold On
Deep Red Bells
Margaret Vs. Pauline
Blacklisted
Star Witness
Fox Confessor Brings The Flood
People Got A Lotta Nerve
Middle Cyclone
South Tacoma Way
Things That Scare Me
Never Turn Your Back On Mother Earth
Twist The Knife
Vengeance Is Sleeping
Porchlight
Stinging Velvet
Thrice All American
Mood To Burn Bridges
Set Out Running
Dreaming Man
Outro With Bees
Bought And Sold
Furnace Room Lullaby
The Next Time You Say Forever
Magpie To The Morning
Bowling Green
Prison Girls

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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

The Kids Want The Hits : Best of 2008 Part One




















Cruel Girl - The Red Button
Dark As Days - Army Navy
I'm Amazed - My Morning Jacket
Gratification To Concrete - Robert Pollard
Demoted - Prima Donna
Satt Att Se - Dungen
Why Do You Let Me Stay Here? - She & Him
The Strawberry Blonde - Mike Viola
Whose Authority - Nada Surf
Gamma Ray - Beck
Auctioneer - The Broken West
Digging The Fault Line - Brent Cash

Victor Jara's Hands - Calexico
Out On Your Own - The Dexateens
White Winter Hymnal - Fleet Foxes
Morning Tide - The Little Ones
Geraldine - Glasvegas
Old Home Movies - The Botticellis
It's A Shame - Hayes Carll
Suffering Jukebox - Silver Jews
Hard Livin' - Justin Townes Earle
Hallowed Ground - Will Quinlan & The Diviners
Same Place Holiday - Jim Noir

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