New Drive-By Truckers: Hear it Now!

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It’s a great day when you get to hear some new music by the best band in America- the Drive-By Truckers.

CMT (ironic, I know) is streaming full tracks of the DBT’s forthcoming record, Brighter than Creation’s Dark.  I had to fire-up Internet Explorer to get the player to work, but that’s a small price to pay.  I’m listening right now, and so far it sounds like another excellent record.

Rolling Stone gave it 4 stars.  Here’s Twangville’s take.

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New Music: Great Lake Swimmers, Ongiara

Great Lake Swimmers are a Toronto based folk/rock band led by singer/songwriter Tony Dekker.  Their self titled first record was recorded in a silo in Ontario.  This sounds like my kind of band in more ways than one.

Their newest record, Ongiara, was released in May.  One look at the people and instruments on the album tells me I’m in for a treat:

Tony Dekker (voice, guitar), Erik Arnesen (banjo, electric guitar) and Colin Huebert (drums, percussion, glockenspiel, timpani), guest appearances by Serena Ryder (backing vocals, autoharp), Bob Egan of Blue Rodeo (pedal steel and dobro), Sarah Harmer (backing vocals) and Owen Pallett of Final Fantasy and Arcade Fire (string arrangements). Mike Overton (upright bass), Darcy Yates (electric bass), Mike Olsen (cello), and Mike Bonnell (organ).

glsong The first song, Your Rocky Spine (MP3 clip), is a mellow mid-tempo number with a great banjo track.  Backstage with the Modern Dancers is a melancholy masterpiece that I can’t get out of my head.

Catcher Song is a Byrdsy number, and my favorite song on the record (which is saying something). A 10 on the first listen.   

Changing Colours reminds me of a combination between Steve Goodman’s Yellow Coat (perhaps the most wistful song I’ve ever heard) and America (the band) at its most melancholy.  It’s hard to find anything not to like on this record.

The middle of the order is There is a Light, Put There by the Land and I Am Part of a Large Family (Mp3 clip).  The first two are fine songs, damned perhaps a little being on the same record as several 10s, including the latter.

Where in the World Are You is beautiful with great strings.  Passenger Song is another well written mellow number.

The last song the record, I Became Awake, is a pedal steel driven number that made me wish the other songs had more steel.  It’s my second favorite song on the record.

This is an excellent record, highly recommended for those who like mellow, reflective, well written music.  It’s not a record that will have you tapping your foot or dancing, but it will have you thinking…and smiling.

Rating (5 point scale): 4

New Music: Steve Forbert, Strange Names & New Sensations

wakeforesttangerine I remember the first time I heard Steve Forbert‘s Romeo’s Tune (off of his 1979 release Jackrabbit Slim) in my mom’s old LTD on the way to the 1979 Tangerine Bowl.  My buddies and I were driving towards Florida drinking Coor’s beer we couldn’t afford (this was back when it was an import everywhere but Colorado).  I was wondering how much trouble I was going to be in when I returned home with a beer smelling and generally trashed car, when that song came on the radio.  I loved it from the first listen.  I bought the LP when we got back home, and I’ve been a fan of Steve’s music ever since.

I saw him live a couple of times at the Mucky Duck, and up until a few years ago when a series of live records were released, I bought most of his records.  Last week, he released a new studio record, Strange Names & New Sensations.  This past weekend, I gave it a listen.

The first song was clearly written to my generation.  It’s called Middle Age.  I thought I was back in 1979 for a second when I heard those 1979 televisionsfor theme-like horns, but things quickly got a little better (horns are like Tobasco Sauce– they can make the right song much better and the wrong song much, much worse).  Middle Age contains some truth about the losing battle against time, but it’s not particularly compelling.  Strange Names is sort of clever, but can’t decide between being a Romeo’s Tune folk/pop number and a quasi-novelty tune.  Brian Burns’ retelling of I’ve Been Everywhere (in Texas) (Mp3 clip) sets a high standard for city names songs, that Steve’s northeastern counterpart can’t match.

I didn’t know who Spaulding Gray was before he died.  Steve’s tribute is probably wonderful (bag pipes and all), but neither the lyrics nor the arrangement moves me beyond the generally sympathetic place I start.

Man I Miss that Girl has a countryish arrangement, with a wistful vibe.  Since that’s my menu order for a good song, it’s my favorite cut on the record.  I give this song at least a 9.  Maybe a 9+.  This one is a good ‘un.

You’re Meant for Me is a mellow love song, which is not my preferred kind of song.  Not bad, just a little boring.  Same with Something Special and My Seaside Brown-Eyed Girl.  If I want to hear love songs, I generally opt for the Loudon Wainwright III variety (that record is one of my all time favorites, and highly recommended).

The Baghdad Dream rocks a little, but you have to seem convinced to pull off a protest song.  I like this one a little, but if you want a war protest song listen to Chairmen of the Board‘s Men Are Getting Scarce.  It was overlooked at the time, but man is it powerful.

Thirty More Years has a nice folksy arrangement with a Halloween connection.  I like it, but, again, the best Halloween song (and one of the best songs ever written) is Richard Shindell‘s Are You Happy Now.  The instrumental Around the Bend is my second favorite cut on the record, with a nice violin track and an engaging melody.  I bet he has some unsung lyrics to this one.

The last cut is a new version of Romeo’s Tune (see above).  My old friend Mickey Newbury (God rest his soul) had a habit of putting his more popular songs on multiple records, but that was because he was in a battle for the rights to his earlier recordings.  Who knows, maybe that’s why Steve did it.  The new version sounds more “mature,” which is fitting.  But I still like the original version better.

All in all, this is not a bad record.  But it’s not as good as some of Steve’s earlier work.  That’s not terribly surprising, as we all suffer from the passage of time.  It’s just good to hear another middle aged guy still doing his thing.

Rating (5 point scale): 2.5

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New Music: Ryan Adams, Easy Tiger

I’ve been listening to Ryan Adams‘ newly released Easy Tiger.

raet I’ve been a mostly on and sometimes off fan of Ryan’s since the first time I heard Faithless Street by his former band Whiskeytown.  I tend to really like his alternative country stuff and run hot and cold on his more pop/rock offerings.  I thought Cold Roses and Jacksonville City Nights were excellent.  This one, while more varied in its tone, is too.  If every song on it isn’t a 10 (as was the case on Strangers Almanac), there are enough 10s to make it a worthy purchase.  And even the lesser songs sound better with each listen.

Ryan has long been one of the best songwriters in the business.  His voice takes wistful to a new level, and the arrangements on this record are superb in their detail.  Two is a perfect mid-tempo country-folk song, with a guest appearance by Sheryl Crow.  Everybody Knows has a fabulous piano track and some wonderful acoustic guitar.

Tears of Gold is a steel guitar country weeper.  Pearls on a String is a folky number with a bluegrass arrangement.  Rip Off has a great guitar track and a vibe that would have been right at home on the slightly more countyish Cold Roses.

These Girls sounds the most Whiskeytown-like to me.  Bare and powerful, but missing Caitlin Cary’s wonderful violin.  I Taught Myself to Grow Old, the final track, is a moody slow number with some classic Ryan Adams lyrics.    

HearYa (a great music blog) has a video and some sound clips.  So does IHTFAF.

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Exile on Main Street – Video Style

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One of the great things about YouTube is all the music videos you can find.  Here’s almost all of the Rolling Stones’ Exile on Main Street, perhaps the greatest rock record ever made.

Rocks Off
Rip this Joint
Shake Your Hips (w/Bluesberry Jam)
Casino Boogie (by Dead Flowers, a Stones cover band)
Tumbling Dice
Sweet Virginia
Torn and Frayed (not available, which is a pity)
Sweet Black Angel (cover by Jose Butez)
Loving Cup (my favorite song on the record)
Happy
Turd on the Run (amateur music video)
Ventilator Blues (by Smoking Stones, a Stones cover band)
I Just Want to See His Face (not available)
Let it Loose (Lost mashup)
All Down the Line
Stop Breaking Down (cover by The White Stripes)
Shine a Light
Soul Survivor (not available)

A Great CD Rediscovered

The other day, I was driving home listening to XM Radio.  I channel surfed over to one of the I Love Lucys (Fred or Ethyl or Lucy, I can’t remember which) and heard a wonderful song, from an almost perfect record, that I had forgotten all about (one of the sad by-products of the LP to 8-Track to cassette to CD to MP3 buy it all again scam).

It was Speedboat off of Lloyd Cole and the Commotions‘ first record.  Rattlesnakes, from 1984.  Speedboat is my favorite song on that record- and that’s saying something, as Rattlesnakes is an excellent record from the first song to the last.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WD25jE0mqX4

A lot of the new bands I read about via Fred Wilson and others have a sound very similar to some of the post-punk alternative rock bands from the eighties.  I bought Rattlesnakes and have enjoyed rediscovering this gem.

Go buy it- preferably in CD or LP form.  You’ll be glad you did.

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My 10 Favorite Live Albums

I was talking with some friends about music today and we got on the topic of live records.

Here are my favorite live albums (at least as I listed them today), in order.

1. Allman Brothers – At Fillmore East
2. Grateful Dead – Europe ’72
3. Peter Frampton – Frampton Comes Alive
4. Bob Seger – Live Bullet
5. Lynyrd Skynyrd – One More From the Road
6. Emmylou Harris – At the Ryman
7. Little Feat – Waiting for Columbus
8. Mother’s Finest – Live
9. Talking Heads – Stop Making Sense
10. James Brown – Live at the Apollo

So what are your favorite live albums?

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A Musical Mystery Solved

Until today, I had two great musical mysteries.  Now I have one.

I remember back in the 60’s and 70’s there were these songs on the radio in which someone pretended to interview people and the answers were clips from popular songs.  For years and years, I have wondered who did those songs.  I did web searches.  I rooted around AllMusic.Com.  All to no avail.

And then today.  On the way home from work, I was surfing around XM.  I happened across the 60’s channel and lo and behold there it was- one of those songs.  XM displayed the artist as Dickie Goodman.  I came home, did a little research and found a Wikipedia entry, an AllMusic.Com entry and even a CD for sale.

Here’s a clip from one of the songs I remember, via Amazon.

The remaining musical mystery may be even tougher to solve.  In Nashville in the mid-eighties I used to hear this song on WRVU, which was either called or had as its chorus the words “I wish I’d killed John Wayne.”  It was a great song, probably by a local band.  I have racked my brain trying to remember who did that song.

But I can’t remember.

Maybe Wally Bangs knows.

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My Favorite Records:The Hangdogs – East of Yesterday

This is the another installment in my series of favorite records.

If you’ve been reading this blog for more than a couple of days, you know that I am a huge fan of New York City’s finest alternative country band- the Hangdogs.

Between 1998 and 2003, they put out some of the best alternative country music this side of the Star Room Boys. Virtually every song is excellent, and the playing and singing is nearly perfect.

Any of their first three records, Same Old Story, East of Yesterday or Beware of Dog could easily make this list. The latter two are available on eMusic.

But I’m going with East of Yesterday on the strength of Speed Rack and Drift, two of my all-time favorite songs. Speed Rack, which I’ve played more than once on our podcast, might be the perfect ode to an ex-girlfriend. Drift virtually reeks with wistful resignation. Hey Janeane shows that the usually mid-tempo band can rock. I’d Call to Say I Love You would have been a number one country hit if Travis Tritt had recorded it before country music died. They Don’t Play No Country Music on the East Side of New York is a romp that any music loving Big Apple dweller should love.

I have to assume the Dogs have broken up, since they haven’t released a record since 2003 and their lead singer and principal songwriter Matthew Grimm seems to have relocated to Iowa, from where he released a Pete Anderson produced solo record last year. It’s a shame that bands can be as good as the Hangdogs and not make a noticeable splash on the national music scene. I guess I’ll toss them in with the Star Room Boys and Steve Pride as my favorite artists that should have huge stars but weren’t.

I listed to some clips from Matthew Grim’s solo record and it sounds pretty good. A lot more rock-edged than the Dogs’ work- sort of the way Ryan Adams’ first few solo records were. I’d love to see Matthew take the cycle back to roots music the way Ryan did. Anyone who can write an alt. country song as good as St. Claire of Cedar Rapids (off of Beware of Dog) should write lots and lots more of them.

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