Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Poll 1

Best one minute song of the last ten years. discuss.

Friday, May 25, 2007

King Wilkie's New Material

Last night I saw King Wilkie on their mini-tour in support of their new CD Low Country Suite. They've just moved to Rounder Records from Rebel, and seem to be taking the ambitious move as a time to reach out beyond the bounds of bluegrass into country-tinged pop balladry.

I've seen this done before, and I've never seen it work. I'm reminded of Salamander Crossing who were a promising bluegrass band who put out an album of Gram Parsons influenced country rock called Bottleneck Dreams and promptly died.

"So," you are probably asking, "Are King Wilkie, one of the finest young bluegrass outfits in the country (if not the world) about to die the death of the inconsistent?" Well, bluegrass fans do like their bluegrass pure, and boy, is the new material I heard last night outside the box. But some of the songs were extremely pretty (as are them boys), and they're fine musicians, and their front man has some charisma. But what's the market for bluegrass bands that don't play bluegrass? I liked most of what I heard last night, but I was really longing for some uptempo material by the end of the night.

I think they're in for an uphill slog.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Jandek

I have been listening to a lot of Jandek recently. I find him intriguing. On one level, you kinda have to think "The boy must have $$$ to throw away" because he's done so many lps and CDs (50 releases in 29 years), and they're all so obtuse. I like obtuse. I got my eyes on the new live one. He's playing synth and the guitarist is Loren Connors. I haven't heaerd as much of LMC's music as I have of Jandek's, but I have heard a few things: very compatible with Jandek. There's also a rhythm section, so I'm most interested to hear what I imagine will be some very psychedelic music.

Of the 14 Cds I have, there's a whole bunch of the early ones, and a couple of the later ones (I love Khartoum). I have nothing from the nineties, and I'm feelinging the lack. I try to buy them at Twisted Village Records in Harvard Square (great store!), and they carry what's current and the early classics, but of that "middle" period, I have only seen one of the spoken word ones in there Put My Dream On This Planet and that was not one I was all that interested in. I keep hoping they'll get Glad To Get Away or White Box Reqiuem, but not to date.

I think Jandek's music is spooky, mysterious, timeless, primal. It's little-boy naive, it's old as the hills. It's blues, it's country, it's noise, it's a kind of subconsious diary...

I don't know how long this current fascination will last: I've had a few little bouts with this music before, but they kinda go away. But I feel like I'm hearing it on a new level now, I'm catching more of the lyrics (which are quite good) and hearing what he's doing with the guitar more distictly now, too.

So, maybe I'll be listening a bunch more? We'll see.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Noisettes

I had to let you know about this new band called the Noisettes. Their April 2007 CD is called What's the Time Mr. Wolf? and it is classic rock 'n' roll. Singer and bassist Shingai Shoniwa (pictured below) is one of the best rock singers I have ever heard. Impassioned, technically brilliant, expressive, she goes from a purr to a scream in nothing flat, and hits the emotional notes with the same jujitsu she hits the pitch with. And the rest of the band is just as killer. They remind me of the early Police a little bit, if the Police had had a lot more range of styles than just the 2, and if Sting had been a better singer.

Shingai Shoniwa

Photo is from mookychick.co.uk

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

This is a widget from last.fm that shows my recent listening habits.

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