FOR YOU
If you are interested in any post deleted send me an email
(gomesdavi@uol.com.br) and have a link as soon as possible.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

1767 - Son Volt - American Central Dust (2009)

Son Volt
"American Central Dust"
Jul 7, 2009
Rounder
-----
REVIEW
by Mark Deming
Jay Farrar resurrected Son Volt in 2005 after his solo career seemingly ran out of gas, and the two albums that followed -- Okemah and the Melody of Riot and The Search -- were the best and most compelling music he'd made since Son Volt's masterful debut Trace in 1995. However, the new albums didn't connect with an especially large audience, and the band was dropped by Sony/BMG; 2009's American Central Dust, the third set from Son Volt 2.0, has been released by the venerable independent roots music label Rounder Records, and while there's little telling if it was dictated by finance or esthetics, the album sounds austere in a way its immediate predecessors did not. Okemah and The Search found Farrar and his new bandmates edging into new musical territory while embracing a bigger studio sound; by comparison, American Central Dust feels more organic and intimate, recalling the simplicity of Trace without delivering the bracing rock & roll of songs like "Drown" or "Route." However, if American Central Dust takes a few steps back in terms of energy and impact, Farrar still sounds thoroughly engaged as both a songwriter and performer, and his band -- Chris Masterson on guitars, Mark Spencer on keyboards and steel guitars, Andrew DuPlantis on bass, and Dave Bryson on drums -- is tight and sympathetic, finding just the right angle to approach this material. And from the fiery love of "Dynamite," the environmental and economic commentary of "When the Wheels Don't Move," and "Down to the Wire," the tribute to the joys of a good honky tonk in "Jukebox of Steel," and the glimpse into Keith Richards' psyche of "Cocaine and Ashes," Farrar has rarely spoken his mind so clearly in his songs as he does here, and if he still reaches for a spectral feel, his meanings are more clearly felt than ever. American Central Dust doesn't have the feel of a step into new territory the way Son Volt's past two albums did, but it consolidates old strengths and confirms Jay Farrar is still an artist worth caring about to 20 years after Uncle Tupelo cut their first album.
-----
1 Dynamite 2:49
2 Down to the Wire 4:19
3 Roll On 3:10
4 Cocaine and Ashes 4:31
5 Dust of Daylight 3:07
6 When the Wheels Don't Move 3:21
7 No Turning Back 3:35
8 Pushed Too Far 4:25
9 Exiles 4:22
10 Sultana 3:48
11 Strength and Doubt 3:35
12 Jukebox of Steel 2:56
All Tracks by Farrar
-----
Dave Bryson
Percussion, Drums
Andrew DuPlantis Guitar (Bass), Vocals (bckgr)
Jay Farrar Guitar (Acoustic), Piano, Vocals, Lap Steel Guitar
Dave Godowsky A&R
Chris Masterson Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric), Vocals (bckgr), Lap Steel Guitar
Mark Spencer Guitar (Acoustic), Pedal Steel, Keyboards, Vocals (bckgr), Lap Steel Guitar
Eleanor Whitmore Violin, Viola
-----
BIOGRAPHY
by Steve Huey
Formed 1994
After touring in support of their 1993 masterpiece Anodyne, the seminal alternative country band Uncle Tupelo split up over long-simmering creative differences between co-leaders Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy. Tweedy recruited much of the band to form Wilco, while Farrar teamed up with original Tupelo drummer Mike Heidorn to form Son Volt, the more tradition-minded of the two Tupelo offshoots. Joined by brothers Jim (bass) and Dave Boquist (guitar, fiddle, banjo, fiddle, steel guitar), the band signed to Warner Brothers and released its debut album, Trace, in 1995. It was greeted with excellent reviews from most critics, offering a set of stark, subtle, mostly downbeat songs that drew from traditional country, folk, and roots rock. The single "Drown" was successful on both college and rock radio, and the band subsequently added unofficial fifth member Eric Heywood on mandolin and pedal steel for its second album. 1997's Straightaways mined territory similar to Trace and again received positive reviews, though some found Farrar's lack of creative progression troubling. 1998's Wide Swing Tremolo was a somewhat harder-rocking affair, but the erosion of critical support for the group continued. They ended up on an unofficial hiatus (rumors of their breakup were denied), and Farrar debuted as a solo artist with 2001's Sebastopol, putting the future of Son Volt in further doubt. He continued with his solo career throughout 2002 and 2003, and in 2005 Rhino issued Retrospective: 1995-2000. But Son Volt wasn't over. Farrar revived the nameplate in July 2005 with the issue of Okemah and the Melody of Riot (Legacy). For the album, recorded in St. Louis, Farrar was joined by drummer Dave Bryson, bassist Andrew DuPlantis, and ex-Backsliders guitarist Brad Rice. Search arrived in early 2007, followed by American Central Dust in 2009.
-----
M
-----

1766 - Prism - The Best of Prism (1996)

Prism
"The Best of Prism"
Nov 19, 1996
Renaissance
70:56
Compilation
-----
REVIEW
by Gina Boldman
This compilation includes the band's best-known hit, 1981's "Don't Let Him Know" (co-written by Bryan Adams), and showcases the rest of their modest collection, which is mostly spirited attempts at a bland genre of music: watered-down synth rock. Call them art-rock lite, or hard adult contemporary. A hybrid of Sweet, Styx and the Little River Band, Prism goes for space-oddity flavor with lines like "On Mercury they're crazy about my stellar rock and roll, and I always seem to sell out at the Martian astrobowl" (from "Spaceship Superstar") and "The planet dies and no one cries" (from "Take Me to the Kaptin"). And oddest of them all, "Armageddon's" drum intro sounds quite similar to Metallica's intro to "Am I Evil?" (recorded several years later). Eerie.
-----
1 Good to Be Back (Adams, Harlow, Vallance) 3:10
2 Don't Let Him Know (Adams, Vallance) 3:10
3 American Music (Mitchell) 3:32
4 Party Line (Harlow, Mitchell) 3:23
5 Cover Girl (Adams, Mitchell) 2:55
6 Armageddon (Mitchell) 7:46
7 See Forever Eyes (Hall, Mitchell) 5:10
8 Spaceship Superstar (Higgs) 4:08
9 You Walked Away Again (Adams) 3:39
10 Virginia (Miller) 3:58
11 Mirror Man (Hall, Mitchell) 5:31
12 Satellite (Harlow, Mitchell) 3:26
13 Turn on Your Radar (Walker) 3:14
14 Night to Remember (Mitchell) 5:53
15 Flyin' (Harlow) 4:35
16 Young and Restless (Harlow, Mitchell) 3:28
17 Take Me to the Kaptin (Higgs) 3:58
-----
A.B. Bryant
Bass
John Hall Keyboards
Allen Harlow Bass, Guitar
Rodney Higgs Drums
Tom Lavin Guitar, Vocals
Andy Lorimer Keyboards
Lindsay Mitchell Bass, Guitar, Vocals
Rocket Norton Drums
Henry Small Keyboards, Vocals
Ron Tabak Vocals
Jim Vallance Producer
-----
M
-----

1765 - Prism - See Forever Eyes (1978) (By Request)

Prism
"See Forever Eyes"
1978
Jan-May 1978
Ariola
-----
REVIEW
by Mike DeGagne
Compared to their debut release, See Forever Eyes is of the same caliber, with more attention given to keyboardist John Hall and less appointed to the band's guitar players. One of Prism's best songs appears here in "Take Me Away," which became a Top 30 hit in their homeland. Bruce Fairbairn has Prism playing to a cleaner, crisper sound, utilizing the color and sheen of the synthesizers in place of harder guitar riffs, working well in some places and failing in others. "Take Me Away" does deserve its chart notoriety, making the best of Mitchell's sharp hooks and Tabak's floating vocals. The song was written by Allen Harlow, who wasn't part of Prism when he introduced it to them, but was added to the lineup after the band rehearsed the song in the studio. "Flyin" takes full advantage of the keyboards' piping energy better than any of the album's tracks, and "See Forever Eyes" is a solid hard rock tune with a crystallized grittiness. Bland fillers like "N-N-N-No," "Just Like Me," and "Crime Wave" are easy to pass over, lacking the creativity or the spark given to some of the other songs. A little flashier and more pop sounding, See Forever Eyes continues the group's sound from their first release, with greater magnitude and dimension coming from the instruments.
-----
1 Hello (McColl, Prest) 2:48
2 Flyin' (Harlow) 4:33
3 Nickels and Dimes (Harlow, Mitchell) 4:08
4 Crime Wave (Mitchell) 4:35
5 You're Like the Wind (Higgs) 3:44
6 N-N-N-N-O! (Higgs) 2:51
7 Take Me Away (Harlow) 3:17
8 You're My Reason (Koren) 3:36
9 Just Like Me (Hall, Harlow, Mitchell, Norton, Tabak) 4:40
10 See Forever Eyes (Hall, Mitchell) 5:10
-----
John Hall
Keyboards, Vocals
Allen Harlow Bass, Guitar, Guitar (Rhythm)
Lindsay Mitchell Guitar, Vocals
Rocket Norton Drums
Ron Tabak Vocals
-----
BIOGRAPHY
by John Bush
Formed 1976 in Canada
Disbanded 1982
Vocalist Ron Tabak, guitarist Lindsay Mitchell, bassist Allan Harlow, drummer Rocket Norton and keyboard player John Hall formed Prism (originally Stanley Screamer) in 1976. The Vancouver group signed to GRT Records and released a self-titled debut album in 1977, See Forever Eyes the following year and Armageddon (1979). After Hall and Tabak left (Tabak was replaced by Henry Small), Prism signed with Capitol, releasing Young and Restless in 1980, Small Change in 1981 and, after the band split up in 1982, Beat Street (1983). The greatest hits album, Over 60 Minutes with...Prism, was released in 1988.
-----
M
-----

Friday, July 3, 2009

1764 - Steve Miller Band (Box Set) (1994)

Steve Miller Band
"Steve Miller Band (Box Set)"
Jul 26, 1994
Capitol
215'23''
Compilation, Box Set
-----
1 Child's Medley (Miller) 2:38
2 Les Paul and Steve (Age 5) (Conversation) 1:03
3 T-Bone Walker (Steve's House 1952) (Walker) 2:44
4 Candy Cain (1958) (Miller) 1:04
5 Met a Little Girl on Her Way to School (Reed) 2:28
6 Children of the Future (The Beauty of Time...) (Miller) 1:00
7 Living in the U.S.A. (Miller) 4:02
8 Space Cowboy (Miller, Sidran) 3:25
9 Going to Mexico (Miller, Scaggs) 2:10
10 My Dark Hour (Miller, Ramona) 3:05
11 Stepping Stone (Scaggs) 2:05
12 Fannie Mae (Brown) 2:48
13 Going to the Country (Miller) 3:08
14 Little Girl (Miller) 3:02
15 Shu Ba da du Ma Ma Ma Ma (Miller) 5:39
16 Jackson-Kent Blues (Miller) 1:50
17 Your Saving Grace (Davis) 4:55
18 Kow Kow Calqulator (Miller) 4:26
19 Seasons (Miller, Sidran) 3:49
20 Baby's House (Hopkins, Miller) 2:19
21 Journey from Eden (Miller) 3:40
22 Baby's Callin' Me Home (Scaggs) 3:16
23 LT's Midnight Dream (Turner) 2:28
24 Quicksilver Girl (Miller) 2:42
25 Song for Our Ancestors (Miller) 2:12
26 Harmony of the Spheres (Allred) :54
27 Space Intro (Miller, Sidran) 2:09
28 Fly Like an Eagle (Miller) 2:42
29 Wild Mountain Honey (McCarty) 4:47
30 Serenade (McCarty, Miller) 3:08
31 Dance, Dance, Dance (Cooper, Cooper, Miller) 2:15
32 Take the Money and Run (Miller) 2:47
33 Rock 'N Me (Miller) 3:04
34 Jungle Love (Douglass, Miller, Turner) 3:07
35 Swingtown (McCarty, Miller) 3:54
36 Threshold (Allred, Miller) 1:06
37 Jet Airliner (Pena) 5:28
38 The Joker (Curtis, Ertegun, Miller) 4:24
39 Who Do You Love? (Davis, Miller) 2:54
40 Abracadabra (Miller) 5:06
41 Give It Up (Miller) 3:37
42 The Stake (Denny) 3:58
43 Out of the Night (Davis, Miller) 3:45
44 One in a Million (Miller) 3:40
45 True Fine Love (Miller) 2:38
46 Winter Time (Miller) 3:10
47 Rock It (Miller, Schon) 3:59
48 Come on in My Kitchen (Payne) 4:02
49 Evil (Miller) 4:34
50 Mercury Blues (Douglas, Geddins) 3:41
51 The Lovin' Cup (Miller) 2:09
52 Behind the Barn (Miller) 3:37
53 I Want to Make the World Turn Around (Miller) 4:22
54 Sacrifice (Cooke, Dudek) 3:00
55 Slinky (Miller) 2:38
56 Nobody But You (Miller) 4:02
57 I Wanna Be Loved (Reed) 2:23
58 Caress Me Baby (Reed) 3:16
59 Sweet Maree (Miller) 3:32
60 Born to Be Blue (Torme, Wells) 5:22
61 God Bless the Child (Herzog, Holiday) 4:56
62 When Sunny Gets Blue (Fisher, Segal) 4:32
63 C.C. Rider/All Blues 10:44
64 Maelstrom (Douglass) 4:03
-----
Byron Allred Keyboards, Vocals
Norton Buffalo Harmonica, Vocals
Doug Clifford Drums
James "Curly" Cooke Guitar, Vocals
Tim Davis Drums, Vocals
David Denny Guitar
Greg Douglass Guitar, Vocals
Les Dudek Guitar
Future Man Drums
Nicky Hopkins Keyboards
Gerald Johnson Bass, Vocals
Jack King Drums
John King Drums
Gordon Knudtson Drums
Kenny Lee Lewis Guitar, Vocals
Gary Mallaber Drums
Bobby Mallach Sax (Tenor)
John Massaro Guitar
Chris McCarty Guitar, Vocals
Steve McCarty Drums
Steve Miller Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals
Jim Peterman Keyboards, Vocals
Billy Peterson Bass
Ricky Peterson Keyboards
Boz Scaggs Guitar, Vocals
Ben Sidran Keyboards
Dicky Thompson Keyboards
Lonnie Turner Bass, Vocals
Ross Valory Bass, Vocals
Bobby Winkelman Bass, Vocals
-----
M
-----

Thursday, July 2, 2009

1763 - Southern Pacific - Greatest Hits (1991)

Southern Pacific
"Greatest Hits"
1991
Warner Bros.
Compilation
-----
REVIEW
by Al Campbell
Southern Pacific included former members of the Doobie Brothers and Creedence Clearwater Revival who were dedicated to playing modern country music with just a hint of their rock roots. Although the band didn't last long, they did manage to make the country charts on several occasions between 1985-1989. Among the 13 hits included here are "Reno Bound," "New Shade of Blue," "Honey I Dare You," and "Thing About You," which adds Emmylou Harris on vocals.
-----
1 Any Way the Wind Blows (McFee, Pessis) 3:38
2 Reno Bound (McFee, Pessis) 3:23
3 New Shade of Blue (McFee, Pessis) 3:45
4 Thing About You (Petty) 3:52
Performed by: Southern Pacific, Emmylou Harris
5 All Is Lost (Cook, Gibson, Howell, Karp) 3:37
6 A Girl Like Emmylou (Cook, Goodman, Knudsen, McFee) 3:38
7 Honey I Dare You (Cook, Gibson, Jenkins, Karp, McFee) 2:50
8 Midnight Highway (Howell, McFee) 3:45
9 I Go to Pieces (Shannon) 2:36
10 Perfect Stranger (Goodman, McFee) 4:07
11 Time's Up (Stinson, Waldman, Welch) 3:21
Performed by: Southern Pacific, Carlene Carter
12 Trail of Tears (McFee, Pessis) 3:51
13 Pink Cadillac (live) (Springsteen) 5:54
-----
Carlene Carter
Vocals
Stu Cook Bass (Vocal), Guitar (Bass), Vocals (bckgr)
Tim Goodman Guitar (Acoustic), Vocals
Glen D. Hardin Piano
Emmylou Harris Vocals
Kurt Howell Keyboards, Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
David Jenkins Vocals (bckgr)
Keith Knudsen Percussion, Drums, Vocals (bckgr)
John McFee Guitar (Acoustic), Mandolin, Pedal Steel, Violin, Guitar (Electric), Vocals, Vocals (bckgr)
Nashville String Machine Strings
Jim Ed Norman Arranger, Cymbals
Jerry Scheff Guitar (Bass)
-----
BIOGRAPHY
by Johnny Loftus
Formed 1985 in Los Angeles, CA
Disbanded 1991
Southern Pacific formed in 1983 around vocalist Tim Goodman, guitarist John McFee, drummer Keith Knudsen, bassist Jerry Scheff, and keyboardist Glenn D. Hardin. Both McFee and Knudsen were ex-Doobie Brothers; this rock & roll background would continue to tarnish for some the band's country-rock sound. Despite the adversity, Southern Pacific secured a deal with Warner, who issued its self-titled debut in 1985. A mixed bag, the album featured Tom Petty-penned rock songs alongside more countrified material from songwriters like Rodney Crowell. Former CCR bassist Stu Cook replaced Scheff after the first record; Kurt Howell, who had played with Crystal Gayle, took Hardin's place behind the keyboard. The refurbished Southern Pacific lineup issued Killbilly Hill in 1986, and the album's cover of Bruce Springsteen's "Pink Cadillac" was a minor hit. Goodman departed then, to be replaced by vocalist David Jenkins. He was onboard for 1988's Zuma, which included Southern's biggest hit, "New Shade of Blue," but left soon after, leaving only McFee, Knudsen, Cook, and Howell. The quartet issued County Line in 1989, but it was Southern Pacific's last gasp. Warner released a final greatest-hits collection in 1991. McFee and Knudsen returned to the Doobies; Cook toured with Doug Clifford as Cosmo's Factory; and Howell formed a group called Burnin' Daylight.
-----
M
-----

1762 - John McFee, Stu Cook, Keith Knudsen - Jackdawg (2009)

NOTES
by CDBABY
Sonic Past Music announces the release of Jackdawg, the self-titled release from classic rock heroes John McFee (Doobie Brothers/Clover), Stu Cook (Creedence Clearwater Revival) and the late Keith Knudsen (Doobie Brothers.) The never-before-released album includes 14 original tracks penned by McFee, Cook and Knudsen as well as two covers including Roky Erickson’s “Cold Night for Alligators” and Van Morrison’s classic, “Wild Night.”
After a great stint together in country-rock chart-toppers Southern Pacific, McFee, Cook and Knudson decided to carry on creating great music together and recorded the tracks at McFee’s Lizard Rock Studio in Solvang, CA. The songs and the band evolved from 50 years of experience in the music business and the belief that together they could come up with some great songs to showcase their musical roots.
Although the Jackdawg album was recorded in 1990, the songs remained in the vault for many years. After Keith Knudsen’s passing in 2005, John McFee and SonicPast Music’s label founder/owner and former Blues Magoos member Joey Stec started discussing releasing the tracks, as the label’s specialization is unreleased recordings by musicians who have been in successful bands.
In addition to the 14 original tracks, the band also covers Van Morrison’s, “Wild Night” and Roky Erickson’s “Cold Night for Alligators.” McFee played pedal steel on the original Morrison recording and all three Jackdawg members felt it would make a strong selection for the album. Although one of the most popular songs of the 70s, the album was recorded before the advent of the Internet and the original lyrics were a bit tough to find.
“It was hard to understand all the lyrics sung by Morrison,” notes Cook. “It took us about two weeks to come up with the correct version, but we pulled it together and it’s one my favorite tracks.”
“Cold Night for Alligators” is also another favorite of Cook’s. Stu produced tracks for Erickson, which were released on two albums, TEO (UK) and The Evil One (US). TEO received much critical acclaim and Erickson still includes most of the tracks in his live performances.
The other tracks are inspired by subjects as diverse as the lead singer from The Divinyls (“The Girl from Oz”), Keith Knudsen’s daughter (“Young Ones”), Creedence Clearwater Revival (“Bayou Rebel”) and The Beatles (“The Men Who Would Be King”).
-----
1 Bayou Rebel
2 When The Sun Don't Shine
3 The Men Who Would Be King
4 Hunger
5 Ghost Dance
6 Take It Off
7 Kisses In The Rain
8 I Couldn't Help Myself
9 Quicksand
10 Lookin' For Trouble
11 Relentless
12 Young Ones
13 The Girl From Oz
14 Cold Night For Alligators
15 In The Flesh
16 Wild Night
-----
M
-----

1761 - Dinosaur Jr. - Farm (2009)

Dinosaur Jr.
"Farm"
Jun 23, 2009
Jagjaguwar
http://www.dinosaurjr.com/
-----
REVIEW
by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
If Farm lacks the element of surprise of Dinosaur Jr.'s 2007 comeback, Beyond, that's just about the only thing it lacks: in every other respect it is its equal, a muscular, melodic monster that stands among the best albums the band has made. Again, what impresses is a combination of vigor and consistency, consistency not only in regards to the songs on Farm, but how it picks up on the thread running throughout the band's career, feeling as if it could have arrived in the early '90s, minus some subtle distinctions in production and attitude. As on Beyond, Dinosaur Jr.'s assuredness is striking; Mascis may drawl that he "did it wrong" on the pre-chorus of "There's No Here," but once again his tongue is firmly in cheek, and any traces self-mythologizing slackerdom are steamrollered by the band's roar. As good as the songwriting is — and it's as strong as it was on Beyond, as Mascis alternates between molten rock & roll ("Pieces"), fuzzy pop gems ("Over It" and "I Want to Know"), and churning slow burns ("Ocean in the Way"), while Lou Barlow throws in two strong numbers — the real rush of Farm comes from the band's interplay, how the group locks together and rides the wave, sometimes taking upwards of seven or eight minutes to get where they're going. Although there have been imitators and disciples, this is a sound that's utterly unique to Dinosaur Jr., and what's different about them in their reunion is that the group not only realizes their individuality, they revel in it, getting lost in the noise, and it's hard not to get swept up with it, too.
-----
1 Pieces (Mascis) 4:31
2 I Want You to Know (Mascis) 4:30
3 Ocean in the Way (Mascis) 4:20
4 Plans (Mascis) 6:41
5 Your Weather (Barlow) 3:06
6 Over It (Mascis) 3:47
7 Friends (Mascis) 4:32
8 Said the People (Mascis) 7:41
9 There's No Here (Mascis) 3:39
10 See You (Mascis) 5:47
11 I Don't Wanna Go There (Mascis) 8:43
12 Imagination Blind (Barlow) 3:21
-----
BIOGRAPHY
by Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Greg Prato
Formed 1983 in Amherst, MA
Dinosaur Jr. were largely responsible for returning lead guitar to indie rock and, along with their peers the Pixies, they injected late-'80s alternative rock with monumental levels of pure guitar noise. As the group's career progressed, it turned into a vehicle for J Mascis' songwriting and playing, which had the ultimate result of turning Dinosaur's albums into largely similar affairs. Over time, Mascis shed his hardcore punk roots and revealed himself to be a disciple of Neil Young, crafting simple songs that were delivered at a crushing volume and spiked with shards of feedback. Consequently, Dinosaur Jr.'s '90s albums — when the group was essentially a front for Mascis — don't sound particularly revolutionary, even with their subtle sonic innovations, yet their original '80s records for SST were a different matter. On their early records, Dinosaur lurched forward, taking weird detours into free-form noise and melodic soloing before the songs are brought back into relief by Mascis' laconic whine. Dinosaur's SST records laid the foundation for alternative rock's commercial breakthrough in the early '90s, and while the band's profile was raised substantially in the wake of Nirvana's success, they never really became much bigger than highly respected cult figures. Mascis (born Joseph D. Mascis; guitar, vocal) formed Dinosaur Jr. in Amherst, MA, after his hardcore punk band Deep Wound broke up in 1983. Hooking up with fellow high-school student Lou Barlow (bass), Mascis initially played drums in Dinosaur, but shortly afterward, former All White Jury drummer Murph (born Emmett "Patrick" Murphy), joined the group and J moved to guitar. Over the next year the group developed a local following, and in 1985 the trio released its debut album, Dinosaur, on the Homestead label. The record and the group's crushingly loud concerts developed a cult following over the next year. By the end of 1986, a hippie rock group called Dinosaur — featuring former members of Jefferson Airplane and Country Joe & the Fish — sued the band, which changed its name to Dinosaur Jr. In 1987, Dinosaur Jr. signed to Black Flag's indie label SST and released You're Living All Over Me, which became an underground sensation, with groups like Sonic Youth championing Mascis' wild, feedback-drenched guitar. Early in 1988 they released the seminal single "Freak Scene," a song that captured the feeling and tone of the emerging American post-punk underground. "Freak Scene" became a college radio hit, and it led the way for their acclaimed 1988 album Bug. Although the band's popularity continued to grow, tensions were developing between Mascis and Barlow, who rarely talked to each other. In 1989, Mascis told Barlow that the group was breaking up; the following day, he "re-formed" Dinosaur Jr., this time without Barlow, who went on to form Sebadoh. Without Barlow, Dinosaur Jr. relied on a rotating array of guest bassists, including Don Fleming and the Screaming Trees' Van Connor. In 1989, the group had an underground hit with their non-LP cover of the Cure's "Just Like Heaven." The following year, they signed with Sire Records. After "Just Like Heaven," Mascis remained quiet for several years as he produced acts like Buffalo Tom and collaborated with friends like Sonic Youth and Fleming's Velvet Monkeys. Green Mind, Dinosaur's 1991 major-label debut, was recorded almost entirely alone by Mascis, and its varied, eclectic sound was received poorly in many alternative rock circles. Before the Green Mind tour, former Snakepit member Mike Johnson became the group's full-time bassist. On the subsequent tour, Dinosaur Jr. were supported by Nirvana, whose success with Nevermind soon overshadowed Dinosaur's. Instead of capitalizing on the commercial breakthrough of alternative rock, Dinosaur released an EP, Whatever's Cool With Me, in early 1992 and disappeared to record their next album. Released early in 1993, Where You Been benefited greatly from the commercial breakthrough of alternative rock, and many of the articles surrounding the album's release hailed Mascis as an alternative godfather. It became the first Dinosaur album to chart, peaking at number 50, and it generated the modern rock hit "Start Choppin." That summer, the group played on the third Lollapalooza tour. Mascis recorded the band's next album without Murph, who unceremoniously left the band; he later joined the Lemonheads. Dinosaur Jr. released Without a Sound in 1994 to mixed reviews, but the album was a moderate hit, thanks to the MTV and modern rock hit "Feel the Pain." In the fall of 1995, Mascis launched his first solo acoustic tour, which was captured on his first official solo album, Martin & Me, released in the spring of 1996. After contributing several Brian Wilson-styled songs to Alison Anders' 1996 film Grace of My Heart — he also made an appearance in the movie — Mascis completed Dinosaur's next album on his own, leaving Johnson to his solo career. Upon its spring 1997 release, Hand It Over was hailed as Mascis' best album in years, although it failed to generate a significant hit. By the late '90s, Mascis decided to break up Dinosaur Jr. and launch a solo career, resulting in the release of More Light in 2000 (under the name of J Mascis + the Fog, a group that also featured former Minutemen bassist Mike Watt). The new group's ensuing tour was cut short in June of 2001, however, when their tour bus was involved in a serious accident in Sweden, resulting in Mascis cracking two vertebrae. In the wake of their breakup, a pair of postmortem Dinosaur Jr. collections saw the light of day in the early 21st century: 2000s live-in-the-studio BBC Sessions and 2001's Ear-Bleeding Country: The Best Of. In addition, the history of Dinosaur Jr.'s original lineup was documented in Michael Azerrad's excellent 2001 book of '80s alt-rock pioneers, Our Band Could Be Your Life. In 2005 the first three albums were reissued on Merge and Mascis announced the original band would be reuniting for a short tour. A year later, Green Mind and Where You Been were reissued by Sire with bonus tracks while Rhino released J Mascis Live at CBGB's, a recording of an acoustic gig from 1993. To coincide with the 2006 reissues, the reunited band began a world-wide tour and announced plans to work on material for a new album, which surfaced in 2007 in the form of Beyond. The reunion stuck, and two years later the original lineup of Dinosaur Jr. released Farm.
-----
M
-----

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

1760 - The Band Is Back (VHS) (1983)

The Band
"Is Back"
1983
VHS
DIVX
58'26''
574507KB
http://theband.hiof.no/
-----
The Band is Back
There are two versions of this video tape out there. The American version is 60 minutes long, only music. The version from Canada, also released under the title Reunion Concert, is 87 minutes long with more songs and interviews. It's their first taped appearance since The Last Waltz.
Filmed in Vancouver's Queen Elizabeth Theatre at the final concert of the reunion tour of '83, with Levon, Rick, Garth, Richard, Ernie Cate, Earl Cate, Ron Eoff and Terry Cagle.
The original 120 minute version of the concert was shown on a pay TV network in Canada, with no commercials. The interviews are longer and there is more music. Amateur video copies of this TV version may be circulating... The four songs not included in the official video releases are "Voodoo", "You Don't Know Me", "Caldonia", and "Rock'n Roll Shoes".
Also available as extended play, stereo laser disc. An Australian digitally remastered Dolby 5.1 DVD (87-minute version) was released on the Umbrella Entertainment label in 2003.
Contents (original Canadian TV show)
(all the things that are not on the 87 min. Canadian video release, written in italics)
Contents (US video release)
1. Rag Mama Rag
2. Up On Cripple Creek
3. The Shape I'm In
4. It Makes No Difference
5. The Weight
6. W.S. Walcott Medicine Show
7. Mystery Train
8. Ophelia
9. Chest Fever
10. Back To Memphis
11. Blaze Of Glory
12. Willie and the Hand Jive
The Band - The Band is Back - 87 min (US version 59 min) - 1983 - Pioneer Artist Video
Also released in PAL format in the UK and Europe.
DVD: Umbrella Entertainment DAVID0174, Australia, 2003
-----
M
-----

1759 - Levon Helm - Electric Dirt (2009)

Levon Helm
"Electric Dirt"
Jun 30, 2009
Dirt Farmer Music/Vanguard
Roots Rock, Country-Rock
http://www.levonhelm.com/
-----
REVIEW
by Mark Deming
In a musical career that has spanned six decades, Levon Helm has made more than a few excellent albums working with other folks — most notably as drummer and vocalist with the Band, as well as backing Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Muddy Waters, John Martyn, Rufus Wainwright, and literally dozens of others. But as a solo artist, Helm's record has been considerably spottier, with well-intended disappointments outnumbering genuine successes, so it's good to report that at the age of 69, Helm has found his second wind as a recording artist, cutting two of his most satisfying solo sets in a row. Following 2007's excellent Dirt Farmer, Electric Dirt is every bit as impressive and finds him sounding even stronger than he did on that comeback set. Dirt Farmer was Helm's first album after a bout with throat cancer nearly silenced him, and his vocals sounded firmly committed but just a bit strained; two years on, Helm's voice is nearly as supple as it was during his days with the Band, and even when it shows signs of wear and tear, his sense of phrasing and his ability to bring the characters in these songs to life are as good as they've ever been. While Dirt Farmer leaned toward acoustic music in the Appalachian tradition, Electric Dirt aims for a broader and more eclectic sound; "Golden Bird" sounds as if it could have been gleaned from the Harry Smith anthology, but the opening cover of the Grateful Dead's "Tennessee Jed" swings with a solid New Orleans groove like an outtake from the Rock of Ages concerts, a pair of Muddy Waters numbers are subtle but passionate acoustic blues, "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free" is joyous gospel-infused R&B, and "White Dove" is fervent and heartfelt traditional country. Larry Campbell, who co-produced Dirt Farmer, returned for these sessions, as did most of the same band, bringing a similarly organic touch to the music, and the bigger sound of this album seems to suit everyone involved, with Helm's drumming sounding especially lively and well-grounded. And though Helm only wrote two songs for this album, they're two good ones, especially "Growin' Trade," a tale of an aging farmer who has taken to raising marijuana, and what could easily have been played as a joke is a moving account of one man's conscience as it wrestles with his heritage and love of the land. Not unlike his old buddy Bob Dylan from Time Out of Mind onward, Levon Helm seems to have rediscovered his knack for making great records in what some might have imagined would be the latter days of his career; Electric Dirt sounds fresh, emphatic, and as effective as anything Levon has cut since the mid-'70s, and one can only hope he has a few more discs in him just this good.
-----
1 Tennessee Jed (Garcia, Hunter) 5:58
2 Move Along Train (Staples) 3:22
3 Growin' Trade (Campbell, Helm) 4:22
4 Golden Bird (Traum) 5:11
5 Stuff You Gotta Watch (Morganfield) 3:38
6 White Dove (Stanley) 3:29
7 Kingfish (Newman) 4:24
8 You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had (Morganfield) 4:01
9 When I Go Away (Campbell) 4:32
10 Heaven's Pearls (Helm, Isaacs, Leone, McBain, Patscha) 4:10
11 I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free (Lamb, Taylor) 3:25
-----
Steven Bernstein
Trumpet, Cornet, Horn (Alto), Horn Arrangements
Larry Campbell Dulcimer, Guitar (Acoustic), Fiddle, Guitar, Mandolin, Guitar (Electric), Vocals (bckgr), Harmony Vocals, Horn Arrangements, Guitar (Resonator)
Jay Collins Sax (Tenor), Vocals (bckgr), Harmony Vocals
Clark Gayton Trombone, Tuba
Amy Helm Mandolin, Drums (Bass), Harmony Vocals
Levon Helm Band Horn Arrangements
Levon Helm Mandolin, Drums, Vocals
Byron Isaacs Bass, Vocals (bckgr)
Howard Johnson Tuba
Erik Lawrence Sax (Baritone), Sax (Soprano)
Brian John Mitchell Organ, Piano, Accordion, Harmonium
George Receli Vocals (bckgr)
Catherine Russell Vocals, Guest Appearance
Allen Toussaint Horn Arrangements
Jimmy Vivino Organ, Guitar (Electric)
Teresa Williams Guitar (Acoustic), Autoharp, Harmony Vocals
-----
BIOGRAPHY
by Richard Skelly
Born Mark Lavon Helm on May 26, 1940 in Marvell, AR
The longtime drummer for the Band, Levon Helm wore many musical hats throughout his long career, including multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, singer, impresario, studio owner, studio engineer, and producer. He grew up working on a farm in Arkansas; his first instrument was guitar, which he began playing at age eight, but after seeing the F.S. Walcott Rabbits Foot Minstrels, he decided to switch to drums. As a youth, Helm listened to the music of the area, including radio broadcasts of the Grand Ole Opry and the blues and R&B shows on WLAC, a clear-channel station out of Nashville that became legendary in the development of rhythm & blues and early rock & roll. Accompanied by his sister Linda on washboard bass, he played various fairs and civic club shows until forming his first group, the Jungle Bush Beaters, while in high school. After seeing an Elvis Presley concert, Helm became keenly interested in rock & roll and musicians like Bo Diddley. Eventually, he moved to Memphis, where he began sitting in with Conway Twitty. Later, he was discovered by a fellow Arkansan, rockabilly singer Ronnie Hawkins, who asked the 17-year-old Helm to join the Hawks, his backing band. The group soon relocated to Toronto, where they'd heard there was a burgeoning scene for their kind of music. In 1959, Hawkins signed to Roulette Records, where he and the Hawks cut a pair of hit records right out of the gate with "Forty Days" and "Mary Lou," which went on to sell in excess of 700,000 copies.In the early '60s in Toronto, Helm and Hawkins recruited the rest of the members of the group that would become the Band, adding guitarist Robbie Robertson, pianist Richard Manuel, organist Garth Hudson, and bassist Rick Danko to the lineup. After numerous road trips with Hawkins, the group grew tired of the singer's abrasive manner, and they re-formed as Levon & the Hawks, later changing their name to the Canadian Squires for the purpose of recording two singles. Shortly after, they changed their name back to the Hawks. In the mid-'60s, Bob Dylan decided to electrify his sound and wanted the Hawks to be his backing band. After putting up with too many boos at Dylan's newly electrified shows in 1965, Helm decided he'd had enough, and went back to Arkansas, thinking he would leave the music business behind him forever. But Helm returned to action in mid-1967, when the Hawks (since renamed simply the Band) began working on Music from Big Pink, the first in a string of classic records that made them one of rock's most legendary acts. After the Band's famed 1976 farewell performance, dubbed The Last Waltz, he cut his 1977 debut solo album, Levon Helm & the RCO All Stars, followed a year later by his self-titled sophomore effort. In 1980 he recorded American Son, while another eponymously titled effort was released in 1982. The Band re-formed in 1983 without Robertson; following Manuel's 1986 suicide, the remaining trio released 1993's Jericho, recorded at Helm's home studio in Woodstock, NY. That same year, Helm published his autobiography, This Wheel's on Fire, co-authored with Stephen Davis. The Band's bluesy High on the Hog followed in 1995. The late '90s (and into the next decade) found Helm still making music in a new blues band called Levon Helm & the Barn Burners, with his daughter Amy on keyboards and vocals, guitarist Pat O'Shea, lead vocalist and harmonica player Chris O'Leary, and upright bassist Frankie Ingrao, and with a similar outfit called Crowmatrix. An album of tracks from this era called Souvenir, Vol. 1 appeared in 2000 from Breeze Hill. Cancer of the vocal cords silenced Helm's unique voice as the 21st century opened, although he kept up his drumming duties, and in time was able to sing again, emerging with a slightly raspier version of his old vocal style. He began holding intimate concerts with various musical friends at his studio in Woodstock, calling them Midnight Rambles, samples of which were released as Midnight Ramble Music Session, Vol. 1 and Midnight Ramble Music Session, Vol. 2 in 2006. The following year saw the release of Dirt Farmer, Helm's first solo album in 25 years. The similar but looser Electric Dirt followed in 2009.
-----
M
-----

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

1758 - The Mamas and The Papas - Straight Shooter (Video Documentary) (1991)

The Mamas and The Papas
"Straight Shooter"
Jul 1, 1991
Rhino
Video Documentary
rmvb
1h21'36''
376172KB
English, legends brazilian portuguese
-----
REVIEW
by Richie Unterberger
Even if you're not a big Mamas & Papas fan, if you have any interest in folk-rock or '60s rock, you'll probably enjoy this very well-done, 80-minute documentary of the band. It has extensive interviews with all three of the group's surviving members (Denny Doherty, Michelle Phillips, and leader John Phillips) and plenty of footage from their 1966-68 heyday. This includes TV and promo clips, home movies, a bit of their Monterey Pop performance, and a couple early-'60s clips of The Journeymen (a folk group that included John, Michelle, and Denny) and Cass Elliott (singing with a pre-Mamas folk trio). There are also interviews with associates Scott McKenzie (who was in The Journeymen), John Stewart of The Kingston Trio, and John Phillips's first wife. Lots of insights into how Phillips (as the group's principal songwriter and producer) piloted the group's success, and some frank reports of the oft-acrimonious (but little publicized) inter-band relationships that contributed to the band's demise after their two years or so of huge success. The post-Mamas traumas are also detailed fairly: their failed reunion LP in the early '70s, Cass Elliott's death shortly afterwards, and John Phillips's lengthy (and ultimately successful) struggle with substance abuse. One small revelation that may have been unintentional: the brief clips of the group in performance show just how much better their vocal blend sounded when it was meticulously crafted in the studio than it did live.
-----
BIOGRAPHY
by Bruce Eder
Formed 1964 in New York, NY
Disbanded 1972
The leading California-based vocal group of the '60s, the Mamas & the Papas epitomized the ethos of the mid- to late-'60s pop culture: live free, play free, and love free. Their music, built around radiant harmonies and a solid electric folk foundation, was gorgeous on its own terms, but a major part of its appeal lay in the easygoing southern California lifestyle it endorsed. The group's success was as extraordinary as it was brief, and onlookers may well wonder what went wrong with a performing group that seemed to have the world at its feet for all of two years. The irony behind the Mamas & the Papas' story is that the same forces that made it possible for them to create extraordinary music together also made it impossible for them to stay together for more than a short time. The group's founder and de facto leader, John Phillips, born in 1935, was actually quite a bit older than most of the figures who emerged as rock stars during the middle and late 1960s. He was more of Elvis Presley's generation, the product of a chaotic home life with a difficult childhood and adolescence, and seemed to be headed for life as a low-level delinquent until he was scared straight, and then had been headed for the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, MD. In the background, however, was music, the guitar, and the sounds of Elvis Presley, the Platters, Teresa Brewer, and everyone else charting records in the mid-'50s. He eventually entered music professionally, while his first marriage produced two children (one of them future actress MacKenzie Phillips). Phillips' first music forays moved from pop to soft jazz and finally into folk music, through groups such as the Smoothies and the Journeymen. The latter group, a trio with Dick Weissman and Scott McKenzie, was one of the most promising small ensembles of the early-'60s folk music boom, but it never connected with the public despite being signed to Capitol Records — in fairness, the label already had the Kingston Trio, and Phillips' group was perhaps just a little behind the curve of where public taste and radio programming were heading. Ultimately, Phillips' first marriage ended, as did the Journeymen, but his attempts at musical success continued. Phillips formed the New Journeymen with future screenwriter Marshall Brickman and a young model and singer named Michelle Gilliam; they didn't succeed any better, but Phillips and Gilliam married and they also started to write songs. One that they composed jointly during this period was a catchy tune with some potential that expressed an idealized vision. Meanwhile, working in a different realm of the musical spectrum was a Baltimore-born singer named Cassandra Elliot, who had become a big fish in a small pond — though Cass Elliot would have been the first to say that she was a pretty big fish in any pond — as part of New York's off-Broadway theater scene, and had made some noise in touring productions of The Music Man. She's moved into folk music in partnership with Tim Rose — himself an ex-associate of the Smoothies. They worked as two-thirds of a trio called the Triumverate, whose third spot was subsequently filled by Nebraska-born folksinger James Hendricks. This group eventually became the Big 3 and hit it big at New York's Bitter End, and from there went on to a brief flurry of recording activity that yielded two LPs, a handful of singles, and a brace of television commercials. Eventually, the Big 3 evolved into the Mugwumps, whose ranks included Elliot, Hendricks, Zal Yanovsky, John Sebastian, and Denny Doherty, a veteran of the Colonials in the early '60s, who later rechristened themselves the Halifax ThreeDoherty and Elliot, who were pretty impressive on their own, made a dazzling pair of voices together. The Mugwumps seemed to be on the edge of a new sound, mixing electric instruments played with ever more emphasis on folk-based material — this was concurrent with the West Coast activities of Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark, and David Crosby in the Byrds — but could never quite put together a sound that sold, even to the record labels, much less the public. They were foundering when Phillips decided to reactivate his trio as the New Journeymen and, with Brickman gone, recruited Doherty to sing some shows down in Washington, D.C. All of the pieces were almost all together in the closing days of 1964. Meanwhile, Cass Elliot was paying her bills by singing jazz, in Washington, D.C., no less. The New Journeymen might have gone it alone, except that Doherty brought his fellow members to see her perform. The quartet fell into place despite some resistance from John Phillips over Elliot's sheer size as well as her strong personality and (supposedly) her voice. Following a few ups and downs in personalities, a trip to the Caribbean (as immortalized later by the song "Creeque Alley"), an accident that suddenly had Elliot hitting what Phillips said were the right notes, and some acid use and drug experimentation along the way, they all headed west in search of success. The group headed to California late in 1965 and was turned down by ex-Kingston Trio manager Frank Werber, whose group the We Five — with a vaguely similar sound to Phillips and company — was scoring big with its version of Sylvia Fricker's "You Were on My Mind." At the suggestion of Barry McGuire, late of the New Christy Minstrels and an old friend of Elliot's, who was just coming off of his biggest hit, "Eve of Destruction" on Dunhill Records, the quartet auditioned for Lou Adler, the head of the label — their audition consisted of "California Dreamin'," "Monday, Monday," and many of the other songs that ended up comprising their debut album. Adler signed them on the spot and their debut single, "California Dreamin'," was out by the start of 1966 and shooting up the charts, with their album If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears coming up behind it. That album was one of the finest examples of what later became known as "sunshine pop," and it's still one of the best harmony vocal showcases in 1960s music. In addition to the two hit singles, "California Dreamin'" and "Monday, Monday," listeners could luxuriate in the radiant splendors of "Go Where You Wanna Go," "Got a Feeling," and eight more unabashed gems, and they reciprocated by lofting it to the number one spot on the charts and keeping it among the top-selling albums in the country for months. Sadly, this would also mark the Mamas & the Papas' high watermark as an album act; they would never again release any long-player quite as consistent in terms of quality and inventiveness. Even before it was recorded, the unity of the group and its sound, and the foursome's reasons for working as group (which had been cultivated for a year) were jeopardized by the overlapping romantic attractions between the members — John and Michelle Phillips were married, but that didn't stop Doherty, who'd already been the object of Elliot's affections, from pairing off with Michelle Phillips and, in the process, engendering stress and distrust all around. Stresses also arose as Michelle Phillips became involved for a time with Gene Clark, the principal composer, co-founder, and lead singer with the Byrds — worse yet, she ended up being accused of disloyalty to the group for her public displays of attraction to Clark and was finally, at one point, fired. There was an attempt to replace her with Jill Gibson during the recording of their self-titled second album during the summer of 1966, and to this day the actual personnel on various songs from that album remains a matter of conjecture. Ironically, even as their internal lineup was disrupted for a time — Michelle Phillips was back in the ranks by the time of the album's release — the group's studio sound was honed to a fine point. The first album had used a brace of top session people, including Glen Campbell and P.F. Sloan on guitars and Bud Shank on flute, but by the spring of 1966 it had solidified around guitarist Eric Hord and the established Los Angeles session players Larry Knechtel on keyboards, Joe Osborne on bass, and Hal Blaine on drums (usually referred to as "the Wrecking Crew"), all being coordinated by John Phillips, engineer Bones Howe, and label chief Lou Adler. Both the band's tracks and the quartet's vocals were meticulously worked out separately and merged in the final mix, which could go as deep as 16 tracks, unheard of in pop recording in 1966. The mix of hands didn't conflict at all — rather, on the Mamas & the Papas' recordings, they resulted in the illusion of a self-contained group that was playing as well as singing. Their records held up unbelievably well, on the radio or heard at home, and they seemed to move from triumph to triumph, the first two singles giving way to "I Saw Her Again" and "Words of Love," then "Dedicated to the One I Love," "Creeque Alley," and "Look Through My Window," all of which turned up on their third album, Deliver, which was sort of an "in" joke in its title, coinciding with the birth of Cass Elliot's daughter. Good as their second and third albums were, however, things were never quite the same for the group after that bout of disunity in the first half of 1966. They'd arrived in Los Angeles in relative innocence, essentially four happy people who were happy just to be singing together, but the intermingling of affections tainted that; although resolving the initial problems had allowed them to keep working together, the motivation soon became a matter of protecting the success they were enjoying — in essence, they were in it for the money, the prestige, and the stardom, as much as and perhaps more than the sheer joy of the singing and of seeing what they could accomplish. This was understandable as, for the first time, they were all making huge amounts of money from their music and were at the center of the musicians' colony in L.A., as well as nearly as well-known nationally as the Beatles. Indeed, their appeal was remarkably similar to that of the Liverpool quartet, in that both groups involved four distinct and well-known personalities. John Phillips was the pop guru, the main if not exclusive songwriter and producer and architect of their sound, and had the kind of persona that younger female listeners looked to almost as a fatherly figure (with, admittedly, some incestuous overtones in that context) or, in the context of the times, a romantic professorial figure, a guru who evoked libidinal urges. Denny Doherty was the alluring male voice that made women's hearts flutter and looked the part of hippie/romantic, playing the same role in the Mamas & the Papas that Gene Clark played vocally and Michael Clark played visually in the original Byrds. Michelle Phillips was the raving beauty, capable of stopping air traffic with just the hint of a smile or a glimmer of libidinal interest in her eyes, who most girls over 13 wanted to be like and most guys over 16, in John Phillips' own words, "wanted to do." And Cass Elliot was the hippie Earth Mother with a heart of gold and a glorious voice. Psychically and in terms of image, they were the ready-made core of a hippie commune on any turntable. The irony was that Phillips was a member of Elvis Presley's generation and had been in music longer than many of the group's younger listeners had been alive — ten years earlier, he could've been an aspiring member of the Four Freshmen. He'd reinvented himself with a few changes in visual style and his songwriting, and enjoyed his moment in the sun a decade later than his contemporaries such as Presley, Dion, Bobby Darin, et al. And for all of the idealism of their songs, there was a lot of hedonism present — Phillips and Doherty (whose voice and looks drew women like moths to a flame) enjoyed access to every fleshly pleasure there was to be had in late-'60s California; Michelle Phillips was no slouch in that pursuit herself, as well as being one of those fleshly pleasures herself, while Cass Elliot loved the role of Earth Mother and hippie Queen of Hearts, surrounded by admirers. She may have played as powerful an indirect role on American music as John Phillips, helping facilitate the birth of Crosby, Stills & Nash by bringing that trio together under one roof — it was a long way from The Music Man or The Boy Friend, stock and touring performances, or her father's delicatessen. In the late spring of 1967, John Phillips' influence on popular culture reached its zenith when he and Lou Adler, with Michelle Phillips, Al Kooper, and a lot of others assisting, organized the Monterey International Pop Festival. The first and most renowned (musically) of all the rock festivals of the 1960s, the event launched the careers of dozens of mostly San Francisco-based acts nationally and beyond, including those of Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, the Electric Flag, and Phillips' old friend and Journeymen bandmate Scott McKenzie. In honor of the festival, Phillips had written a song called "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Some Flowers in Your Hair)," which he gave to McKenzie to record as his solo debut on Adler's new Ode Records label; precisely why he didn't give it to his own group, except perhaps for the fact that they weren't recording or even working at the time, has never been clear, but McKenzie enjoyed a Top Five hit and was suddenly in almost as much demand as the Mamas & the Papas. By that time, the group even had a rival of sorts, at least in the public perception, in the guise of Spanky & Our Gang, a Chicago-based outfit with folk roots and impeccable vocals built around a powerful female singer, though they were a little wider-ranging in their repertory and placed more emphasis on comedy and a certain theatricality in their presentation. Monterey marked the last great hurrah for Phillips and the Mamas & the Papas as musical influences. The group had closed the festival, Doherty barely arriving in time for the performance, which was later released as the sole official example of their live performances; even the group's appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show had involved extensive lip-syncing to existing tracks, and in all honesty their studio sound, because of the way it was built up in two separate, perfect layers that were merged, was very difficult to re-create on stage. At the same time, they'd run through the best part of their repertory on those three LPs and 36 songs, and most of their enthusiasm was spent as well. John and Michelle Phillips built a studio of their own where their fourth album, The Papas & the Mamas, was recorded, and although there were some new sounds embodied in the work and some hits included (most notably the radiant, sadness-tinged "Twelve-Thirty"), the group's days were numbered; precisely how numbered they were was revealed by the release of the single "Dream a Little Dream of Me" as a Cass Elliot solo single. The world had also changed in the two and a half years since the group emerged. By 1968, assassinations, the dragging on of the Vietnam War, and the festering political wounds that the war engendered (and the underfunding of Lyndon Johnson's concurrent "War on Poverty" due to the United States' ongoing Vietnam involvement) were eating into the fabric of society at every level; things were getting ugly, or at least serious, and John Phillips' Pied Piper-like presence, beckoning people to California and an idealized quasi-hippie lifestyle, seemed increasingly out of touch with older teenagers and college students' sympathies. They were magnificent songs, to be sure — "Twelve-Thirty" was a stunning, bittersweet ode to California's beauty, both natural and in the guise of "young girls coming to the canyon," though as gorgeous as the group's version was, Scott McKenzie's solo rendition offered a poignancy that gives the song some unexpectedly serious overtones, at least in mood, while "Creeque Alley" is one of the funniest and catchiest autobiographical songs of the 1960s. By 1969, the Mamas & the Papas were history, victims of changing times, emotional exhaustion, and an excess of sexual, chemical, and alcoholic pleasures. Cass Elliot was the first to emerge in her own right, her larger-than-life image lending itself to pop stardom and her musical ability being the most solid on a solo basis — she had a big voice and she'd also acted professionally, which made her a natural, whether recording solo or in tandem with Dave Mason. Her first venture into performing solo, in Las Vegas, was disastrous, but by the early '70s she was on an even keel, hosting and performing on music-oriented television shows such as The Ray Stevens Show and Get It Together as well as her own specials, and also appearing in the movie H.R. Pufnstuf. John Phillips did a solo album, The Wolf King of L.A., that was well received critically but a commercial disaster, and Denny Doherty's solo albums disappeared quickly as well. Michelle Phillips concentrated on raising her and John's daughter, Chynna Phillips, and saw some brief activity as a recording artist, but it was as an actress that she kept the most busy, distinguishing herself dramatically in John Milius' excellent period film Dillinger (1973). The group did reunite in the studio early in the decade to record one album, People Like Us, to help fulfill its contract; conversely, there were also lawsuits by John Phillips against his former label over unpaid royalties, which dragged on for years. The most notable event surrounding the group, however, was the tragic death of Cass Elliot on July 29, 1974. From that day forward, the notion of any reunion or revival of the group was little more than the organizing of a "ghost band," even when John Phillips organized such groups (most notably in 1982 with Doherty, while his actress/singer daughter MacKenzie and Elaine "Spanky" McFarlane, formerly of Spanky & Our Gang, filled the women's spots) to play the oldies circuit and recycle the vintage repertory. Much more interesting was an appearance that Phillips made at New York's Bitter End in 1983, playing solo — he had spent most of the 1970s coping with various drug problems, and even in his prime had never performed solo, and there he was at a leading performing venue, armed with nothing but an acoustic guitar (and a surprise special guest, Scott McKenzie). This apparent effort at reactivating Phillips' career was overlooked by most of the press, however, and quickly forgotten. The group's appeal, however, has lingered, as reflected in its induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1997. There have been multiple reissues of their original four LPs, in widely varying quality (especially in America), culminating in 2001 with the release of All the Leaves Are Brown, a compilation of their complete 1960s studio recordings. The death of John Phillips on March 18 of that year would seem to have ended any but the most exploitative reincarnations of the group — in 2003, however, Denny Doherty, who had toured with a version of "the Mamas & the Papas," premiered the autobiographical stage musical Dream a Little Dream of Me, in which he also starred, in New York. Astonishingly, given their two-and-a-half-year principal history, there have also been four books dealing with the group's history. Taken together, Papa John by John Phillips (with Jim Jerome) and California Dreamin': The True Story of the Mamas and the Papas — The Music, the Madness, the Magic by Michelle Phillips (both 1986) form a he-said/she-said account of events, with John Phillips taking the prize for depth between the two of them. More recently, Doug Hall's The Mamas and the Papas: California Dreamin' was published, and in 2002 Matthew Greenwald's Go Where You Wanna Go: The Oral History of the Mamas and the Papas appeared. Reading any of them is a fascinating, eye-opening, and potentially disillusioning look behind the supposed idealism of the 1960s.
-----
M
-----

1757 - Nico - Chelsea Girl (1967)

Nico
"Chelsea Girl"
1967
Polygram
45:04
-----
REVIEW
by Lindsay Planer
Although Chelsea Girl (1967) was the first long-player from the German-born Christa Päffgen, it was not her debut solo effort. Prior to becoming involved with the Velvet Underground and while under the direction of Andrew Loog Oldham, Nico issued an obscure 7" on the mod pop Immediate label. The song selection on that 1965 single — which featured a cover of Gordon Lightfoot's "I'm Not Sayin'" and an Oldham co-composition with Jimmy Page called "Last Mile" — foreshadowed the eclectic nature of this LP. Although the dissolution between the vocalist and core instrumental quartet was not without its share of acrimony, the non-percussive contingent of the Velvet Underground is heavily featured on Chelsea Girl: along with then-unknown singer/songwriter Jackson Browne (guitar) — the vocalist's concurrent love interest — there is Lou Reed (guitar), Sterling Morrison (guitar/bass), and John Cale (piano/bass/viola), who contrast what they had been doing with the larger combo. These sides are decidedly "unplugged," providing a folky and Baroque setting for Nico's dark and brooding vocal inflections. There is an introspective foresight in Browne's "Fairest of the Seasons," "These Days," and "Somewhere There's a Feather." The minimalist string section features a quaint, yet effective arrangement giving the material a distinctly European feel. These orchestrated folk leanings are similar to the sound emanating from other burgeoning groups such as the Incredible String Band, Pentangle, and the Fairport Convention spin-off Fotheringay.The same can be said of her almost unrecognizable reworking of Bob Dylan's "I'll Keep It With Mine." The noir black-widow charm ultimately saves the performance, as does Cale's remarkable classical intonations. With Reed's "Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams" — a track which actually predates the Velvet Underground — there is a sense of history that Nico brings to her interpretation, as if the melody were, in fact, a traditional German folk tune. There is a palpable distinction between those lighter cuts and the menacing Velvet Underground-conceived material. At the center of the project are the extended "It Was a Pleasure Then" and the stunning semi-autobiographical Reed/Morrison title track. The juxtaposition of such honest and at times harrowing imagery to Nico's inherently bleak delivery is nothing short of an inspired artistic statement which has since long outlasted its initial socially relevant context — similar to the more modern contributions of Laurie Anderson, Ann Magnuson, and Patti Smith. An unqualified masterpiece.
-----
1 The Fairest of the Seasons (Browne, Copeland) 4:09
2 These Days (Browne) 3:33
3 Little Sister (Cale, Reed) 4:26
4 Winter Song (Cale, Reed) 3:20
5 It Was a Pleasure Then (Cale, Nico, Reed) 8:05
6 Chelsea Girls (Morrison, Reed) 7:25
7 I'll Keep It With Mine (Dylan) 3:20
8 Somewhere There's a Feather (Browne) 2:20
9 Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams (Reed) 5:09
10 Eulogy to Lenny Bruce (Hardin) 3:46
Nico - I'll Keep It With Mine

-----
BIOGRAPHY
by Richie Unterberger
Born Christa Päffgen on Oct 16, 1938 in Cologne, Germany
Died Jul 18, 1988 in Ibiza, Spain
One of the most fascinating figures of rock's fringes, Nico hobnobbed, worked, and was romantically linked with an incredible assortment of the most legendary entertainers of the '60s. The paradox of her career was that she herself never attained the fame of her peers, pursuing a distinctly individualistic and uncompromising musical career that was uncommercial, but wholly admirable and influential. Nico first rose to fame as a European supermodel, also landing a bit part in Fellini's La Dolce Vita film and giving birth to a son by Alain Delon. In 1965, she attracted the attention of Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham, who gave her a chance to record for his Immediate label, though the resulting single, which also featured Brian Jones and Jimmy Page on guitars, flopped. Shortly afterward, she moved to New York, where Andy Warhol installed her as a vestigial presence and occasional lead singer for the Velvet Underground. The band never really accepted her as a bona fide member and she departed in 1967, but not before contributing unforgettable deadpan vocals to three of the songs on their classic 1967 debut album.Nico embarked on a solo career, recording folk-rock-flavored songs for her debut Chelsea Girl album with assistance from Jackson Browne, Lou Reed, and John Cale. Her 1969 follow-up, The Marble Index, was a dramatic departure that unveiled her doom-laden, gothic persona, produced by Cale and prominently featuring her deep vocals, impenetrable lyrics, and ghostly harmonium. Her subsequent '70s albums explored much the same territory, with assistance from Cale and influential art rockers like Eno and Phil Manzanera. Her career fell into disarray during the rest of the '70s and the '80s as she struggled with a massive drug habit and tangled personal life. She released several live albums on various labels, but the ill-planned Drama of Exile and the more successful Camera Obscura were her only coherent studio efforts until she died of a cerebral hemorrhage in Ibiza in 1988.The original goth rocker, Nico's albums are demanding and bleak, but map a unique and starkly powerful vision that has become more influential with age. An intimate of Bob Dylan, Jackson Browne, the Velvet Underground, the Stones, Jim Morrison, Iggy Pop, and others, her fascinating story is recounted in the biography Nico: The Life & Lies of an Icon by Richard Witts, published in Great Britain by Virgin books; The End by James Young is a seedy look at her drug-addled final years by a member of her touring band.
-----
M
-----

1756 - David Clayton-Thomas - Spectrum (2009)

The Clayton-Thomas pipes are in fine form as evidenced by his new studio album “Spectrum".
He rips through hard charging big band charts and caresses soulful ballads. The lyrics range from a heartfelt lullaby written for his daughter to a scathing condemnation of war and world hunger.
From the opening tune the album throws a musical curve ball... An unlikely mix of jazz, Soweto “township” rhythms and African style reggae, meld together into a delightful jambalaya of musical styles called “I Still Really Love You.
Then a complete left turn... Sarah McLaughlin's “Angel” as you've never heard it before. Bittersweet and naked, the singer's years on the road pouring into every word.
The band literally explodes into “Stormy Weather, the old Lena Horne torch song given a driving big-band treatment. "A Love Beyond” is a moving tribute to the courage of an organ donor who saved the life of a friend. “Hail Mary” funky R&B, ala "The Staples Singers".
Classical cellist Shauna Rolston joins David for a lovely duet on “Ashleigh's Song". Then there is a raunchy blues with an electrified dobro called “Oh Angelina” that absolutely rocks the house. “The High Road” passes on some of the lessons the singer has learned in his long and sometimes rocky life. “Try To Imagine” is a caustic indictment of war profiteers... The set closes with a romping big-band rendition of Mose Allison's “Your Mind Is On Vacation". David absolutely nails the vocal and Bruce Cassidy's arrangement is perfect… clever and challenging, with a wicked sense of humor.
Clayton-Thomas and friends cover a lot of musical ground on this album... each song takes an unexpected turn. They defy formats and formulas and push the musical envelope.
-----
1. I Still Really Love You 4:34
2. Angel 4:37
3. Stormy Weather 5:20
4. A Love Beyond 4:09
5. Hail Mary 4:17
6. Ashleigh’s Song 3:45
7. Oh Angelina 3:25
8. The High Road 4:04
9. Try To Imagine 4:17
10. Your Mind Is On Vacation 4:23
David Clayton-Thomas - The High Road

-----
Vocals David Clayton-Thomas
Drums Paul DeLong, Mark Kelso, Davide Direnzo
Bass George Koller, Rich Brown
Guitars Aidan Mason, Bernie LaBarge, Rob Piltch
Keyboards Rob Gusevs, Dave Restivo
Trumpets Bruce Cassidy, Jason Logue, Kevin Turcotte
Saxophones Michael Stuart, Colleen Allen
Trombones Gord Myers, William Carn
Percussion Waleed Abdulhamid
Vocals Dione Taylor, Sharon Lee Williams
-----
BIOGRAPHY
by John Bush
Born Sep 13, 1941 in Surrey, England
The lead singer for Blood, Sweat & Tears' first four albums was born in Toronto in 1941. David Clayton-Thomas began his musical career at age 23 in the Shays. They became the Bossmen in 1965 and released "Brainwashed" in 1966. While singing in BS&T from 1968 to 1972, he began a solo career, releasing self-titled albums for Decca (1969), Columbia (1972) and RCA (1973). With Clayton-Thomas, a re-formed version of Blood, Sweat & Tears appeared in 1980, signed to MCA and released Nuclear Blues.
-----
M
-----