Billy Corgan unveiled the new Smashing Pumpkins lineup in Chicago this past week, which includes bassist Mark Stoermer of The Killers and Rage Against the Machine/Audioslave drummer Brad Wilk. As previously reported, Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee, who recently recorded with the band, will not be joining the Pumpkins due to commitments with his own band, who are on a farewell tour that won't conclude until late next year.
According to Consequence of Sound, the Pumpkins show at Chicago's recently renovated, 800-capacity Thalia Hall this past Wednesday night was a success, praising the new songs culled from the upcoming Monuments to an Elegy album [Martha's Music/BMG], despite misgivings about the new rhythm section:
Wilk’s heavy-handed playing felt out of place on some songs and was
downright sloppy on older cuts like “Hummer” and “Drown”. Stoermer,
meanwhile, was unusually shy, hardly ever looking up from his fretboard.
Read the whole CoS review here.
Setlist:
One and All (We Are) [live debut]
Being Beige [live debut]
Hummer
Tiberius [live debut]
Tonight, Tonight
Drum + Fife [live debut]
Glass and the Ghost Children
Stand Inside Your Love
Monuments [live debut]
Drown
Disarm
Zero
Bullet with Butterfly Wings
Fame [David Bowie cover]
Silverfuck
Encore:
Burnt Orange-Black
11/29/2014
There's a Song For That
Three years ago, at the 2011 American Music Awards, actress/comedienne
Jenny McCarthy complained about the difficulty of finding “a man’s man” in
Hollywood.
“I’m from Chicago. I’m from the South Side, where guys eat
meat and potatoes. They don’t know what a vegetarian means. They’re a guy
through and through. Out here, they want to borrow my makeup and concealer. I
want to bring a little bit of importing into my life hopefully, and look for
guys outside of L.A.,” she told Access Hollywood.
11/27/2014
11/26/2014
Quote of the Day
“He can play 15 instruments. I can’t play Lotto.”
- Chuck D on his Public Enemy bandmate and musical prodigy,
Flavor Flav.
11/25/2014
Milestones: 'The Futurist'
ROBERT DOWNEY JR.
The Futurist
[Sony-2004]
The haunting piano instrumental that Robert Downey Jr. plays at the end of the movie Two Girls and A Guy [1997] piqued our interest in his then-unbeknownst to us musical side. Scanning through the film’s end credits we were even more intrigued when we learned it was one of his own compositions.
That particular song, "Snake", is not included in The Futurist. What can be found on this album is mostly piano-driven singer/songwriter material reminiscent of Elton John’s "I Want Love", in whose video Downey Jr. appears as the protagonist.
Sadly, due to The Futurist not doing too well sales-wise, Iron Man decided to put the kibosh on his music career. Too bad: this is a moving full-length debut—one that should appeal to an audience looking for mellow, more adult-contemporary fare—from a talented musician better known for his day job and run-ins with the law. Guests include former Yes vocalist Jon Anderson on "Your Move" first half of his old band's "I've Seen All Good People" medley; and legendary jazz bassist Charlie Haden, who performs on a heartfelt cover of Charlie Chaplin’s "Smile", appropriately enough.
Highlights:
"Kimberly Glide", "Little Clownz", "Your Move", "Details", "Hannah", "Smile".
The Futurist
[Sony-2004]
The haunting piano instrumental that Robert Downey Jr. plays at the end of the movie Two Girls and A Guy [1997] piqued our interest in his then-unbeknownst to us musical side. Scanning through the film’s end credits we were even more intrigued when we learned it was one of his own compositions.
That particular song, "Snake", is not included in The Futurist. What can be found on this album is mostly piano-driven singer/songwriter material reminiscent of Elton John’s "I Want Love", in whose video Downey Jr. appears as the protagonist.
Sadly, due to The Futurist not doing too well sales-wise, Iron Man decided to put the kibosh on his music career. Too bad: this is a moving full-length debut—one that should appeal to an audience looking for mellow, more adult-contemporary fare—from a talented musician better known for his day job and run-ins with the law. Guests include former Yes vocalist Jon Anderson on "Your Move" first half of his old band's "I've Seen All Good People" medley; and legendary jazz bassist Charlie Haden, who performs on a heartfelt cover of Charlie Chaplin’s "Smile", appropriately enough.
Highlights:
"Kimberly Glide", "Little Clownz", "Your Move", "Details", "Hannah", "Smile".
Coming Attractions: Joni Says 'No', Cobains Say 'Yes'
Last year we commented on a rumor that Taylor Swift was to play Joni Mitchell in an upcoming biopic. Well, it turns out it was more than a rumor: the pop songstress was indeed chosen to play the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer [class of '97] on the big screen in an adaptation of Girls Like Us, a book written by Sheila Weller which focuses on the influence of Mitchell, Carole King, and Carly Simon. The great John Sayles was hired as screenwriter with Kate Jacobs set to direct.
But Mitchell put the kibosh on the project. "I said to the producer, 'All you've got is a girl with high
cheekbones.' It's just a lot of gossip, you don't have the great
scenes."
Meanwhile, HBO will air Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck, an authorized documentary about the late Nirvana frontman which has the blessing of Cobain's family, in 2015. Montage of Heck was written, directed and produced by Oscar-nominee Brett Morgen.
Victims of Revisionism: '90s U2
Interesting how U2's experimental/ironic '90s were welcomed and
lauded at the time; the band celebrated for leaving behind their
earnestness and breaking from its past. It was a new decade and U2 were supposedly discarding the trappings of their collective '80s persona, embracing irony and fun, their reinvention hailed everywhere. Yet 20 odd years later, it seems
like a 'what-were-they-thinking?' revisionism has started to take hold.
Hmm...
Truth is, those guys wrote great songs AND lackluster songs before, during and after Achtung Baby [Island-1991], Zooropa [Island-1993], and Pop [Island-1997]. Our only beef with them is they let critics and not their own vision dictate their path. As none other than Bruce Springsteen himself stated in his speech at U2's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction, "[H]old the McDonald's arches on the stage set, boys, we are not ironists. We are creations of the heart and of the earth and of the stations of the cross -- there's no getting out of it."
Amen.
Truth is, those guys wrote great songs AND lackluster songs before, during and after Achtung Baby [Island-1991], Zooropa [Island-1993], and Pop [Island-1997]. Our only beef with them is they let critics and not their own vision dictate their path. As none other than Bruce Springsteen himself stated in his speech at U2's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction, "[H]old the McDonald's arches on the stage set, boys, we are not ironists. We are creations of the heart and of the earth and of the stations of the cross -- there's no getting out of it."
Amen.
11/24/2014
'Death Metal Angola'
A Tale of Two ECs: Clapton, Costello and Racism
We've always found selective judgement both fascinating and frustrating in equal measure. (Actually, more of the latter, to be honest.) How two people in the same field could commit a similar act and yet be viewed drastically different is a trait we find deplorable, and one we've encountered everywhere from the public life of celebrities to the private life of family, friends and associates. And of course, it happens in the music business as well: We firmly believe that if the vast majority of those who complained about finding a free copy of U2's recent album on their Apple device had instead encountered the latest release by some unknown, they would've treated it like spam and simply erased it, with no further to-do. But it was U2, so they had to pour on the hyperbole and bitch and moan endlessly about the whole thing. Haters, yo.
But here's a much more touchy scenario: alleged racism. Let's start with Elvis Costello.
Costello caught much grief when a March, 1979 drunken argument with Stephen Stills and Bonnie Bramlett at a Columbus, Ohio Holiday Inn bar, devolved into Costello making racist remarks about James Brown and Ray Charles. Costello held a press conference in New York City a few days later in which he apologized for trying "to outrage these people with about the most obnoxious and offensive remarks that I could muster." Costello was forgiven by Ray Charles who declared "Drunken talk isn't meant to be printed in the paper." (James Brown never weighed in on the subject.)
Eric Clapton, on the other hand, fared much better despite a much more damning outburst.
On August 5, 1976, Clapton said the following from a Birmingham concert stage:
But here's a much more touchy scenario: alleged racism. Let's start with Elvis Costello.
Costello caught much grief when a March, 1979 drunken argument with Stephen Stills and Bonnie Bramlett at a Columbus, Ohio Holiday Inn bar, devolved into Costello making racist remarks about James Brown and Ray Charles. Costello held a press conference in New York City a few days later in which he apologized for trying "to outrage these people with about the most obnoxious and offensive remarks that I could muster." Costello was forgiven by Ray Charles who declared "Drunken talk isn't meant to be printed in the paper." (James Brown never weighed in on the subject.)
Eric Clapton, on the other hand, fared much better despite a much more damning outburst.
On August 5, 1976, Clapton said the following from a Birmingham concert stage:
"Fucking wogs, man. Fucking Saudis taking over London. Bastard wogs. Britain is becoming overcrowded and Enoch [Powell, conservative politician infamous for his 1968 anti-immigration "Rivers of Blood" speech] will stop it and send them all back. The black wogs and coons and Arabs and fucking Jamaicans and fucking [indecipherable] don't belong here, we don't want them here. This is England, this is a white country, we don't want any black wogs and coons living here. We need to make clear to them they are not welcome. England is for white people, man. We are a white country. I don't want fucking wogs living next to me with their standards. This is Great Britain, a white country, what is happening to us, for fuck's sake? We need to vote for Enoch Powell, he's a great man, speaking truth. Vote for Enoch, he's our man, he's on our side, he'll look after us. I want all of you here to vote for Enoch, support him, he's on our side. Enoch for Prime Minister! Throw the wogs out! Keep Britain white!"
How much flak did Clapton catch for that? Zilch. Has he apologized for it? Nope.
This was his immediate response:
"I thought it was quite funny actually. I don't know much about politics. I don't even know if it would be good or bad for him to get in. I don't even know who the Prime Minister is now. I just don't know what came over me that night. It must have been something that happened in the day but it came out in this garbled thing... I thought the whole thing was like Monty Python. There's this rock group playing on-stage and the singer starts talking about politics. It's so stupid. Those people who paid their money sittin' listening to this madman dribbling on and the band meanwhile getting fidgety thinking 'oh dear'".
Hilarious.
So, why the double standard? Why was Costello eviscerated and Clapton been the human embodiment of Teflon? Sure, Costello gets to make albums with The Roots these days, but he apologized profusely for his drunken outburst. Clapton, on the other hand has recently reiterated his support for Powell and denied that the late politician's views, or Clapton himself, were racist. Sold.
Ugh.
This was his immediate response:
"I thought it was quite funny actually. I don't know much about politics. I don't even know if it would be good or bad for him to get in. I don't even know who the Prime Minister is now. I just don't know what came over me that night. It must have been something that happened in the day but it came out in this garbled thing... I thought the whole thing was like Monty Python. There's this rock group playing on-stage and the singer starts talking about politics. It's so stupid. Those people who paid their money sittin' listening to this madman dribbling on and the band meanwhile getting fidgety thinking 'oh dear'".
Hilarious.
So, why the double standard? Why was Costello eviscerated and Clapton been the human embodiment of Teflon? Sure, Costello gets to make albums with The Roots these days, but he apologized profusely for his drunken outburst. Clapton, on the other hand has recently reiterated his support for Powell and denied that the late politician's views, or Clapton himself, were racist. Sold.
Ugh.
11/22/2014
Song of the Day: "Song for the Orca"
An animal revenge fantasy set to a catchy melody, today's Song of the Day comes from The Dismemberment Plan frontman Travis Morrison's solo album Travistan [Barsuk-2004].
11/20/2014
One from the Vaults: 'Secaucus'
THE WRENS
Secaucus
[Grass-1996]
One of the most underrated and lesser known quality rock
acts of the ‘90s, The Wrens’ full-length debut is one hell of a ride. Let's put it this way: if
The Replacements’ main influences had been the angularity of Wire and Sonic
Youth crossed with the melodic gifts of The Raspberries, Secaucus is what they
may have sounded like.
When post-Secaucus the new owners of their label, Grass Records, offered the scrappy New Jersey quartet a new $1m deal to stay in the family, provided they actively commercialized their sound, our heroes decided to pass on the 7-figure payday, thus entering into a 7 year limbo from which they eventually emerged with the critically acclaimed The Meadowlands album [Absolutely Kosher] in 2003. (Btw, Grass became Wind-Up, home of Creed and Evanescence. So, that’s what they had in mind, huh?)
When post-Secaucus the new owners of their label, Grass Records, offered the scrappy New Jersey quartet a new $1m deal to stay in the family, provided they actively commercialized their sound, our heroes decided to pass on the 7-figure payday, thus entering into a 7 year limbo from which they eventually emerged with the critically acclaimed The Meadowlands album [Absolutely Kosher] in 2003. (Btw, Grass became Wind-Up, home of Creed and Evanescence. So, that’s what they had in mind, huh?)
Highlights: "Yellow Number Three", "Rest Your Head", "Dance the Midwest", "Hats off to Marriage", "Destruction/Drawn", "I Married Sonja".
Music News
- Reverberations from Taylor Swift's decision to remover her catalog from music streaming service Spotify are being felt industry-wide, as evidenced by statements made by Sony Music Entertainment CFO Kevin Kelleher at an investor conference in Tokyo this week.
“A lot of conversation has taken place over the past week. What it all really comes down to is, how much value is the music company and the artist getting from the different consumption methods? We are very encouraged with the paid streaming model. The key question is whether or not the free ad-supported services are taking away from how quickly and to what extent we can grow those paid services.”
- Music Key, YouTube's new music streaming service is now out in beta form and is being praised for its ease of use. Subscribers will need to sign up for a six month trial period attached to a payment format/method of their choosing and immediately have access to the service.
However, Global Music Rights, a music clearing house similar to ASCAP and BMI, which represents dozens of writers including Bruno Mars, Pharrell Williams and Smokey Robinson, has asked YouTube to remove some 20,000 songs by GRM affiliates. YouTube has acknowledged the request but has not acted on it as of yet, as required under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, a federal protecting websites that host copyrighted content from third parties.
- Apple will be bundling its recently acquired Beats Music with their next iOS. According to industry analysts, the company wants to make sure it does not lose ground to YouTube's Music Key service.
- Starting next month the Billboard 200 chart will take into account downloads and sales of individual songs. The chart lists the best selling 200 albums of the week and will count the sale of 10 songs and/or the streaming of 1,500 songs as the equivalent of one album sale. Billboard feels these numbers are "accepted industry benchmarks."
- Idris Elba is releasing his first album, titled mi Mandela. “[M]y music is so much more truthful...than my acting is. Music comes from my soul. I can connect with you more through my music,” stated the acclaimed 42 year old actor, who is also planning a hip-hop album for future release.
“A lot of conversation has taken place over the past week. What it all really comes down to is, how much value is the music company and the artist getting from the different consumption methods? We are very encouraged with the paid streaming model. The key question is whether or not the free ad-supported services are taking away from how quickly and to what extent we can grow those paid services.”
- Music Key, YouTube's new music streaming service is now out in beta form and is being praised for its ease of use. Subscribers will need to sign up for a six month trial period attached to a payment format/method of their choosing and immediately have access to the service.
However, Global Music Rights, a music clearing house similar to ASCAP and BMI, which represents dozens of writers including Bruno Mars, Pharrell Williams and Smokey Robinson, has asked YouTube to remove some 20,000 songs by GRM affiliates. YouTube has acknowledged the request but has not acted on it as of yet, as required under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, a federal protecting websites that host copyrighted content from third parties.
- Apple will be bundling its recently acquired Beats Music with their next iOS. According to industry analysts, the company wants to make sure it does not lose ground to YouTube's Music Key service.
- Starting next month the Billboard 200 chart will take into account downloads and sales of individual songs. The chart lists the best selling 200 albums of the week and will count the sale of 10 songs and/or the streaming of 1,500 songs as the equivalent of one album sale. Billboard feels these numbers are "accepted industry benchmarks."
- Idris Elba is releasing his first album, titled mi Mandela. “[M]y music is so much more truthful...than my acting is. Music comes from my soul. I can connect with you more through my music,” stated the acclaimed 42 year old actor, who is also planning a hip-hop album for future release.
"...stay calm, eat a peach and carry on..."
We're probably
not alone in this, but every March there seemed to be a certain happy, mellow
vibe in the air here in NYC. A feeling we've always ascribed to one thing: the
Allman Brothers were in town. It’s not like we were big fans or anything—never
had the pleasure of seeing them live, unfortunately—but there was just this…you know. And “In
Memory of Elizabeth Reed” seems to capture it perfectly.
The Brothers
disbanded three weeks ago after a 45 year run, playing their last show at their
beloved Beacon Theatre where, for 10 consecutive nights or so every Spring, they held court for more than 20 years. Gregg Allman once said that while Georgia was no.1 in
their hearts, NYC was a close second. Right back at'cha.
11/19/2014
11/18/2014
What's Love Got to Do With It?
Convicted murderer and one-time aspiring rock star Charles Manson is getting married. The bride to be is an attractive 26 year old brunette by the name of Afton Elaine Burton, aka “Star”. The Illinois native has been corresponding with Manson for about a decade; she's been visiting him in jail since 2007, when she moved to California. According to Time magazine, Burton has been actively proclaiming his innocence via a few pro-Manson websites she runs. As for the upcoming nuptials, the pair have already obtained a license, although the marriage itself cannot be consummated: due to his life sentence conviction, the 80 year old Manson is not allowed conjugal visits.
As imagined, news of Manson getting married has gone viral and we've collected 5 interesting tweets (via Ultimate Classic Rock) on the subject:
Animated: 'The Life and Times of Tim'
Visually speaking, The Life and Times of Tim (HBO) made South Park look like a Michael Bay extravaganza, but the show which HBO considered an animated Curb Your Enthusiasm was nothing less than a half-hour of pure comedy gold.
Want proof? The first season episode “Latino Tim” / “The Priest is Drunk”--each half-hour was a two-fer--is especially hilarious.
The Life and Times of Tim aired for three seasons before being cancelled in early 2012.
Want proof? The first season episode “Latino Tim” / “The Priest is Drunk”--each half-hour was a two-fer--is especially hilarious.
The Life and Times of Tim aired for three seasons before being cancelled in early 2012.
New Releases
It's Tuesday, so we've got a smattering of the noteworthy albums released today:
BUZZCOCKS The Way [1234]
BRYAN FERRY Avonmore [BMG]
ARIEL PINK Pom Pom [4AD]
TV ON THE RADIO Seeds [Harvest]
ROBERT WYATT Different Every Time [Domino]
And since the holiday season officially begins next week, gift-oriented releases are also beginning to see the light of day. Among them:
DAVID BOWIE Nothing Has Changed [Columbia]
(3 CD set retrospective.)
JONI MITCHELL Love Has Many Faces: A Quartet, a Ballet,
Waiting to Be Danced [Elektra] (4 disc box set.)
WILCO Alpha Mike Foxtrot: Rare Tracks 1994-2005 [Nonesuch]
(77 rare, non-album tracks.)
WILCO What’s Your 20? Essential Tracks 1994-2004 [Nonesuch]
(Best-of compilation.)
VARIOUS ARTISTS The Art of McCartney [Arctic Poppy]
(Tribute album includes performances by Alice Cooper, The Cure, Brian Wilson.)
11/17/2014
Bountiful Crops
Seeds
[Harvest]
Seeing as this is the band’s first album since the death of
bassist Gerard Smith and their bitter parting with the Interscope label, one
would not expect Seeds to be as upbeat or as, dare we say, catchy, as it
ultimately is. Could album number five be TVOTR’s decisive foray into the mainstream? Who cares? The
important thing is, one of the very few righteous denizens of the musically bankrupt but
incredibly hyped Williamsburg music scene of the ‘00s, has returned with a collection
of songs that underlines why they mattered then and continue to do so now. The Album of the Year category just got a tad more crowded. Welcome
back, gentlemen.
Music of New York, Time for Your Closeup (again)
To say New York City has a rich history of popular music is a pronouncement pregnant with understatement: it is, after all, the birthplace of bebop, hip hop, punk rock, and salsa; not to mention its nurturing of big band swing, house, hardcore and indie rock, and of course, musical theatre.
So, how 'bout an updated, 5 borough-centric, mini series on the subject? Sorta what Dave Grohl is doing with Sonic Highways on HBO but solely concentrated on NYC? In the right hands it could be all kinds of awesome.
So, how 'bout an updated, 5 borough-centric, mini series on the subject? Sorta what Dave Grohl is doing with Sonic Highways on HBO but solely concentrated on NYC? In the right hands it could be all kinds of awesome.
Milestones: 1999
5 choice albums from the last year of the 20th century (in alphabetical order by artist):
CHRIS CORNELL Euphoria Morning [A&M]
The Soundgarden frontman’s debut album was met with modest sales and the disappointment of quite a few of his former band's followers, who were obviously expecting a retread of Superunknown [A&M-1994], or something. We praised the album, found it to be a natural progression from the work he'd done with his previous band, and noted how those who were surprised by it had not been paying attention to the evolution of Cornell's songwriting over the last few Soundgarden records. Reminiscent at times of Temple of the Dog, it’s still the best thing he’s put his name on as a solo artist.
THE FLAMING LIPS The Soft Bulletin [Warner Bros]
While being hailed as, arguably, the best rock album of 1999, at the time many were asking "Where’s the old noisy Flaming Lips I knew and loved?" Well, the feedback and white noise that made them (in)famous gradually gave way to keyboards, strings and other assorted sonic landscapes.
A risky, but artistically viable—and subsequently, fruitful—step in the right direction, as far as we’re concerned, quite a few folks disagreed at the time: one particular reviewer disparagingly referred to The Soft Bulletin as a misstep where seemingly "… Led Zeppelin and Yes joined forces to back Neil Young…" Nothing wrong with that in our book. Then or now.
JUMBO Restaurant [BMG US Latin]
Not sure if they were a modern, melodic pop/rock band (“FotografÃa”, “Alienados Para Siempre”) or Local H’s Mexican cousins (just about everything else), Jumbo’s debut album is understandably a tentative affair. But the seeds of the Monterrey, Mexico quintet’s musical future were on that album’s “Siento Que”, a powerful anthem of longing and love on its last sighs that would subsequently come to define their sound, and is arguably their single best song.
Restaurant got the band plenty of exposure within and beyond the borders of their native country and set the stage for their first true international hit.
OWSLEY self titled [Giant]
Following the demise of his band The Semantics—an early version of which included Ben Folds on drums (!)—after Geffen Records decided not to domestically release their debut album Powerbill (which sold 20,000 copies in Japan with no promotion whatsoever), Wil Owsley became a sideman for the likes of Amy Grant and Shania Twain. With the income from his guitar-slinger day job, Owsley started work on his self-titled debut album, which he recorded at home over the space of three years. This is still an undiscovered gem littered with old-school pop hooks, catchy guitars and muscular drums. The top-notch songs may benefit from the spot-on mixes by über-engineer Tom Lord-Alge, but like Nirvana’s Nevermind, this is one of those albums where the songwriting and arrangements are too strong for you to notice how polished it is—until it’s too late: by then you’re hooked for good. Sadly, Wil Owsley committed suicide in 2010.
XTC Apple Venus Volume 1 [Cooking Vinyl]
After a protracted battle with their label, Virgin Records, that saw the band go “on strike” and not release any music for more than half a decade, main songwriter Andy Partridge decided XTC’s next two albums should be a mostly acoustic, orchestral disc and a rock-oriented record, respectively. Vehemently opposed was guitarist/keyboardist/arranger Dave Gregory, who preferred culling the best tracks for a single, and presumably more high-quality, effort. Gregory—for whom the mounting friction over the direction of the album led to his departure during its recording—was eventually proven right. But Apple Venus is not only chock full of gems (“I’d Like That”, “Easter Theatre”, “Harvest Festival”, “The Last Balloon”) it’s one of XTC’s very best.
CHRIS CORNELL Euphoria Morning [A&M]
The Soundgarden frontman’s debut album was met with modest sales and the disappointment of quite a few of his former band's followers, who were obviously expecting a retread of Superunknown [A&M-1994], or something. We praised the album, found it to be a natural progression from the work he'd done with his previous band, and noted how those who were surprised by it had not been paying attention to the evolution of Cornell's songwriting over the last few Soundgarden records. Reminiscent at times of Temple of the Dog, it’s still the best thing he’s put his name on as a solo artist.
THE FLAMING LIPS The Soft Bulletin [Warner Bros]
While being hailed as, arguably, the best rock album of 1999, at the time many were asking "Where’s the old noisy Flaming Lips I knew and loved?" Well, the feedback and white noise that made them (in)famous gradually gave way to keyboards, strings and other assorted sonic landscapes.
A risky, but artistically viable—and subsequently, fruitful—step in the right direction, as far as we’re concerned, quite a few folks disagreed at the time: one particular reviewer disparagingly referred to The Soft Bulletin as a misstep where seemingly "… Led Zeppelin and Yes joined forces to back Neil Young…" Nothing wrong with that in our book. Then or now.
JUMBO Restaurant [BMG US Latin]
Not sure if they were a modern, melodic pop/rock band (“FotografÃa”, “Alienados Para Siempre”) or Local H’s Mexican cousins (just about everything else), Jumbo’s debut album is understandably a tentative affair. But the seeds of the Monterrey, Mexico quintet’s musical future were on that album’s “Siento Que”, a powerful anthem of longing and love on its last sighs that would subsequently come to define their sound, and is arguably their single best song.
Restaurant got the band plenty of exposure within and beyond the borders of their native country and set the stage for their first true international hit.
OWSLEY self titled [Giant]
Following the demise of his band The Semantics—an early version of which included Ben Folds on drums (!)—after Geffen Records decided not to domestically release their debut album Powerbill (which sold 20,000 copies in Japan with no promotion whatsoever), Wil Owsley became a sideman for the likes of Amy Grant and Shania Twain. With the income from his guitar-slinger day job, Owsley started work on his self-titled debut album, which he recorded at home over the space of three years. This is still an undiscovered gem littered with old-school pop hooks, catchy guitars and muscular drums. The top-notch songs may benefit from the spot-on mixes by über-engineer Tom Lord-Alge, but like Nirvana’s Nevermind, this is one of those albums where the songwriting and arrangements are too strong for you to notice how polished it is—until it’s too late: by then you’re hooked for good. Sadly, Wil Owsley committed suicide in 2010.
XTC Apple Venus Volume 1 [Cooking Vinyl]
After a protracted battle with their label, Virgin Records, that saw the band go “on strike” and not release any music for more than half a decade, main songwriter Andy Partridge decided XTC’s next two albums should be a mostly acoustic, orchestral disc and a rock-oriented record, respectively. Vehemently opposed was guitarist/keyboardist/arranger Dave Gregory, who preferred culling the best tracks for a single, and presumably more high-quality, effort. Gregory—for whom the mounting friction over the direction of the album led to his departure during its recording—was eventually proven right. But Apple Venus is not only chock full of gems (“I’d Like That”, “Easter Theatre”, “Harvest Festival”, “The Last Balloon”) it’s one of XTC’s very best.
What We're Listening To
CHICAGO TRANSIT AUTHORITY self titled [Columbia]
JASON FALKNER Can You Still Feel? [Elektra]
JOHNNY PACHECO El Maestro [Fania]
TEARS FOR FEARS Everybody Loves a Happy Ending [Universal]
WINGS Venus and Mars [Apple]
What are YOU listening to?
11/15/2014
Quick Roundup: New Releases
5 of the most notable recent releases:
NEIL YOUNG Storytone [Reprise]
FLAMING LIPS With a Little Help From My Fwends [Warner Bros]
After their irreverent 2009 tribute to The Dark Side of the Moon, and King Crimson's debut masterpiece In the Court of the Crimson King three years later, it’s no surprise the Lips chose to tackle Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and give the iconic Beatles classic an acid fried, psychedelic makeover. Truth be told, we were expecting an unmitigated disaster. And after listening to the first couple of tracks our suspicions were close to being confirmed. However, With a Little Help From My Fwends does have its moments (“Fixing a Hole”, “She’s Living Home”, “A Day in the Life”), although it gets points more for the concept than the execution.
FOO FIGHTERS Sonic Highways [Roswell/RCA]
The soundtrack to the Foos' travelogue/tribute to eight different U.S. cities bears very little influence of the locales where the songs were recorded: putting aside certain snatches of lyrics that allude to their geographical inspiration, Sonic Highways is in effect another set of the band's patented 21st century arena rock. If latter day FF fare is your cup of tea, drink up; if not you won't be otherwise won over with this batch of tunes.
PINK FLOYD The Endless River [Columbia]
The release of what was originally purported to be a series of leftover tracks from Pink Floyd's late '80s/early '90s Roger Waters-less incarnation (to see the light of day as a tribute to late keyboardist Richard Wright), was not the most promising of announcements. But the mostly instrumental Endless River is a pleasant surprise, often reminiscent of '70s Floyd classics Meddle and Wish You Were Here. If this is truly the end of the line for the band—and there seems to be every indication of that to be the case—it's not a bad way to go.
The release of what was originally purported to be a series of leftover tracks from Pink Floyd's late '80s/early '90s Roger Waters-less incarnation (to see the light of day as a tribute to late keyboardist Richard Wright), was not the most promising of announcements. But the mostly instrumental Endless River is a pleasant surprise, often reminiscent of '70s Floyd classics Meddle and Wish You Were Here. If this is truly the end of the line for the band—and there seems to be every indication of that to be the case—it's not a bad way to go.
SCOTT WALKER + SUNN O))) Soused [4AD]
The most common reference point being used to compare this unlikely collaboration is the Lou Reed and Metallica disc Lulu. Think weirder. And heavier. Yup.
On Storytone, Young gives his fans a 2-for-1 with a
literal solo album on which he accompanies himself on acoustic and electric
guitar, piano, and even ukelele, coupled with a rock band/big band/orchestrated
version of the same, in which he’s backed by those respective groupings. The
solo album has its highlights (“Glimmer”, “Tumbleweeds”, “I’m Glad I Found
You”, “When I Watch You Sleeping”, “All Those Dreams”), and while the bonus big
band and orchestrated renditions don’t all necessarily work, they do offer an
interesting glimpse of Young in a different setting.
Odd News of the Day: Patti Smith to Play Vatican Christmas Show
The woman who once sang "Jesus died for somebody's sins/but not mine" will be one of the performers at the Vatican's annual Christmas concert, Concerto di Natale, in Rome, on December 13th. Word is, Smith was invited by Pope Francis himself.
Concerto di Natale, which has been a regular event since 1993, will take place at Auditorium Conciliazione, very near the heart of Vatican City. This year's show will be broadcast on Christmas Eve.
Concerto di Natale, which has been a regular event since 1993, will take place at Auditorium Conciliazione, very near the heart of Vatican City. This year's show will be broadcast on Christmas Eve.
11/14/2014
Drum Chair to Chairman: Jimmy Chamberlin, CEO
According to a recent piece in The Guardian, the former Smashing Pumpkins drummer, and a legendary figure
behind the kit, has tired of the rigors of the road and embarked on a new
adventure as CEO of the Chicago-based LiveOne, a tech company whose main
product, CrowdSurfing, is a an interactive streaming service for live shows. Chamberlin’s relationship with LiveOne began as an investor
and advisor; he became CEO of the firm about a year and a half ago. But the basic platform and its potential was something that had appealed to Chamberlin way before his involvement with the company.
[Chamberlin with Smashing Pumpkins, AOL Sessions, 2007.]
“When I saw the CrowdSurfing application, it immediately took me back to
scenarios with the Pumpkins. We looked at live
streaming as another revenue source with the Pumpkins. [Billy] Corgan and I used
to talk about it, but we always whittled that reality down to the way
people consume the content. Somebody looking at the event through a
laptop with crappy speakers isn’t going to drive the economics. We
needed to wait for live streaming to get better.”
LiveOne is also contemplating eventually expanding beyond music and delving into mega-church and political events, as well.
11/10/2014
Whole Lotta Loot
[Reunited Zeppelin: (L-R) Jones, Plant, Page.]
So, the entertainment media has been buzzing for the last
few days with news of Robert Plant rejecting his share of a purported $800
million Led Zeppelin reunion payday, offered by Virgin’s Richard Branson. The
vocalist’s publicist is on record calling the news item “rubbish”.
For the undetermined amount of reunion shows, Plant, along
with guitarist Jimmy Page and bassist/keyboardist John Paul Jones would each be
paid an equal amount, while drummer Jason Bonham, son of the late John Bonham,
would receive a fee. Use of a Virgin Airways airplane to travel from gig to
gig—in the spirit of Zep’s legendary plane The Starship—would be among the
perks enjoyed by the reunited hard rock legends. All this comes from an unnamed source—which has been the main basis of
information for this development—who further stated Page, Jones and Bonham all
signed up immediately, whereas Plant asked for 48 hours to consider, after
which time he purportedly tore up his contract, pointedly refusing to
participate and squelching the reunion, much to Branson’s dismay.
Now, we don’t have any inside track on any of this. But we
are not one bit surprised Plant turned down the reunion. And anyone who has
paid attention to his career over the last 30+ years since Zeppelin ceased to
exist shouldn’t be either. As a solo artist—with the exception of his debut
album, Pictures at Eleven [Swan Song-1982]—Plant has forged a deliberate path of
renewal; his every musical statement a move away from the sound that brought him
fame and fortune. Except to kindly mock it, of course.
The Ahmet Ertegun Benefit Concert in 2007 was a different
thing; it was the band paying tribute to the deceased musical benefactor who, as Atlantic Records head honcho, took them under his wing and into the stratosphere, with Plant more than
willing to pay his respects. But aside from not needing or wanting to revisit past glories, for a 66-year-old individual who is set for
life—Plant is allegedly worth more than $150m—money seems not to be a
determining factor at this point. And there is also, quite possibly, the desire to not
be compared with one’s iconic 20-something self, for fear of inevitably coming
up rather short.
Happy Birthday
Singer/songwriter, guitarist/bassist, and as
a member of both King Crimson and Emerson Lake and Palmer, respectively, a
bonafide prog rock titan: Mr. Greg Lake (67).
11/09/2014
168 Million Streams Nets Songwriter $4k
Avicii’s release "Wake Me Up!" that I co-wrote and sing, for example, was the most streamed song in Spotify history and the 13th most played song on Pandora since its release in 2013, with more than 168 million streams in the US. And yet, that yielded only $12,359 in Pandora domestic royalties—which were then split among three songwriters and our publishers. In return for co-writing a major hit song, I’ve earned less than $4,000 domestically from the largest digital music service.
- Aloe Blacc, from an open letter published in Wired magazine last week.
Just to put it in context, if those 168 million spins had been purchased copies/downloads, Blacc would've netted about $5M. No one is expecting sales numbers of that size—just trying to point out the staggering, Grand Canyon-size gap btwn $4K and $5M.
You can read his complete letter here.
11/08/2014
Are Taylor Swift and Spotify Ever Ever Getting Back Together?
Taylor Swift has become the first artist in music history to
release three albums with first week sales of a million or more copies. (The
Backstreet Boys, Eminem, and N’Sync, each did it twice.) Her new album, 1989 [Big Machine Records], sold 1,287,000 units in that time span. (And that’s only counting full price
sales and not discounted copies, such as those purchased via a promotion
sponsored by Microsoft.) At a time when album sales continue to decline quite
rapidly, this is no small feat. Actually, it was a big deal back when album
sales were significant: only 18 other releases have managed to sell a million
plus copies in its first seven days.
But this historic feat has been practically overshadowed by
Swift’s decision to remove her music from Spotify. A betrayal of her fans; a
savvy marketing ploy; cluelessness; greed; a show of solidarity for fellow
artists; the move from the popular music streaming subscription service has been called all those and more. What it isn’t—to anyone
who’s been paying attention, anyway—is a surprise: Swift has made her thoughts
on the subject of streaming quite well known, to the point of penning a Wall Street Journal op-ed in that regard earlier this year. Right before the release of 1989, Swift further explained
her views, stating she was “not willing to contribute my life’s work to an
experiment that I don’t feel fairly compensates the writers, producers,
artists, and creators of this music. And I just don’t agree with perpetuating
the perception that music has no value and should be free.”
One of the most noticeable aspects of the debate over the
removal of the Swift catalog from Spotify is how the vast majority of those
opining know very little about how the business works. Swift has been accused
of being greedy because she wants cold hard sales revenue in lieu of lesser, but still profitable, amounts she would earn from streaming services. Well, we’d
like to know what definition of profit describes a songwriter earning about
$100 for a million streams. (Yes, you read right— a c-note for 1,000,000 streams.) And of
course there’s that old chestnut “You’re rich, you should let us have it for
free or close enough”, an argument that would never work for those seeking
products from Chevrolet or Whole Foods, but seems to be good enough to demand of
artists. And then things took a turn for the humorous and perhaps a tad surreal when, in a page seemingly taken out of Swift's songbook, Spotify publicly begged her to come back, which she declined. Ha!
Never thought we’d find ourselves siding with Taylor Swift
on any matter. But stranger things have happened and so…
Quote of the Day
“A true doctor cares only about healing, let's not pay them
either. Oh, wait...”
- Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers keyboardist Benmont Tench.
11/07/2014
11/06/2014
Underrated: Colin Moulding
While his former bandmate, vocalist/guitarist Andy Partridge, may be the most prolific and best-known member of the British pop institution that was once XTC, Mr. Moulding has been no slouch: the writer of such classic tunes as "Making Plans For Nigel", "Life Begins At The Hop" and "Generals and Majors", is a wonderful vocalist with mean bass guitar chops to spare.
Just check out "Earn Enough For Us" from Skylarking [Geffen-1987]; "The Mayor Of Simpleton" and his own "Cynical Days" from Oranges and Lemons [Geffen-1989]; and any of the previously mentioned tunes above for a crash course in killer bass playing.
[Left: Moulding in 1979.]
11/05/2014
11/03/2014
Milestones: 'Amorica'
THE BLACK CROWES
Amorica
[American-1994]
When The Black Crowes debuted in 1990 their sound was as out of step with the mainstream as the alt-rockers that took over little more than a year later. Hair bands ruled the day, but changes were afoot: on the strength of “She Talks To Angels” and the Otis Redding classic “Hard To Handle”, The Crowes sold 5 million copies of their first disc and established themselves as one of the ‘90s biggest acts.
With no big singles to its credit, Amorica, their third album, is best remembered these days for the close-up of the Stars ’n’ Stripes bikini with overflowing female pubic hair that graces its cover. However, it would be foolish to dismiss a high caliber album such as this solely on the basis of controversy and a lack of chart-busting action. Make no mistake, this is The Black Crowes at their best, for Amorica is pregnant with bluesy riffs, tasty grooves, and great songs that distill their Stones/Faces/Allman Bros. influences into one very fine brew; at once both heady and intoxicating. Drink up, baby.
Highlights:
"Gone", "A Conspiracy", "Nonfiction", "Ballad in Urgency", "Wiser Time".
11/02/2014
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