Saturday, November 28, 2009

Some of my favorite and top lp's of '09

Alice In Chains - Black Gives Way to Blue
The Black Crowes - Before the Frost...Until the Freeze
Mastodon - Crack the Skye
Them Crooked Vultures - Them Crooked Vultures
Truckfighters - Mania
Clutch - Strange Cousins From the West
Neko Case - Middle Cyclone
Umphrey's McGee - Mantis
Dave Matthews Band - Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King
Pearl Jam - Backspacer
Wilco - Wilco (The Album)
The Answer - Everyday Demons
Baroness - Blue Record
The Avett Brothers - I and Love and You
Bob Dylan - Together Through Life
Gov't Mule - By a Thread
The Hold Steady - A Positive Rage
The Derek Trucks Band - Already Free
Drive-By Truckers - The Fine Print (A Collection of Oddities and Rarities 2003-2008)
The Dead Weather - Horehound
Silversun Pickups - Swoon
Lucero - 1372 Overton Park
Medeski, Martin & Wood - Radiolarians II & Radiolarians III
J.J. Cale - Roll On
MF DOOM - Born Like This
Maylene and the Sons of Disaster - III
Son Volt - American Central Dust
Ace Frehley - Anomaly
Melody Gardot - My One and Only Thrill
Dream Theater - Black Clouds & Silver Linings
Paramore - Brand New Eyes
Buddy & Julie Miller - Written in Chalk
Steve Earle - Townes
Rosanne Cash - The List
Yusuf Islam - Roadsinger
Justin Townes Earle - Midnight at the Movies
Drive-By Truckers - Live From Austin, TX
La Coka Nostra - A Brand You Can Trust
Chickenfoot - Chickenfoot
Bruce Springsteen - Working on a Dream
Muse - The Resistance
Mos Def - The Ecstatic
Ben Harper & Relentless7 - White Lies for Dark Times
Powderfinger - Golden Rule
Stereophonics - Keep Calm And Carry On
Small Jackets - Cheap Tequila

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Hank Williams III - This Ain't Country


DAMNED RIGHT THIS AIN'T COUNTRY MUSIC!



Monday, September 28, 2009

Joni Mitchell - Court and Spark




Joni Mitchell reached her commercial high point with Court and Spark, a remarkably deft fusion of folk, pop, and jazz which stands as her best-selling work to date. While as unified and insightful as Blue, the album -- a concept record exploring the roles of honesty and trust in relationships, romantic and otherwise -- moves away from confessional songwriting into evocative character studies: the hit "Free Man in Paris," written about David Geffen, is a not-so-subtle dig at the machinations of the music industry, while "Raised on Robbery" offers an acutely funny look at the predatory environment of the singles bar scene. Much of Court and Spark is devoted to wary love songs: both the title cut and "Help Me," the record's most successful single, carefully measure the risks of romance, while "People's Parties" and "The Same Situation" are fraught with worry and self-doubt (standing in direct opposition to the music, which is smart, smooth, and assured from the first note to the last).

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Wild T and the Spirit

Though born in Trinidad, Wild 'T' (aka Tony Springer) moved to Toronto while in his teens and began playing local clubs. He received several regional awards for his blues guitar; with backing band Spirit (bassist Brian Dickie and drummer Danny Bilan), he has released Love Crazy (1991) and Givin' Blood (1993).



I've Got the Rhythm

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Fredrik Strand Halland - Texas Flood & Little Wing

Man i was not ready for this!
blew me africkingway!





Janis Joplin


The greatest white female rock singer of the 1960s, Janis Joplin was also a great blues singer, making her material her own with her wailing, raspy, supercharged emotional delivery. First rising to stardom as the frontwoman for San Francisco psychedelic band Big Brother & the Holding Company, she left the group in the late '60s for a brief and uneven (though commercially successful) career as a solo artist. Although she wasn't always supplied with the best material or most sympathetic musicians, her best recordings, with both Big Brother and on her own, are some of the most exciting performances of her era. She also did much to redefine the role of women in rock with her assertive, sexually forthright persona and raunchy, electrifying on-stage presence.

Joplin was raised in the small town of Port Arthur, TX, and much of her subsequent personal difficulties and unhappiness has been attributed to her inability to fit in with the expectations of the conservative community. She'd been singing blues and folk music since her teens, playing on occasion in the mid-'60s with future Jefferson Airplane guitarist Jorma Kaukonen. There are a few live pre-Big Brother recordings (not issued until after her death), reflecting the inspiration of early blues singers like Bessie Smith, that demonstrate she was well on her way to developing a personal style before hooking up with the band. She had already been to California before moving there permanently in 1966, when she joined a struggling early San Francisco psychedelic group, Big Brother & the Holding Company. Although their loose, occasionally sloppy brand of bluesy psychedelia had some charm, there can be no doubt that Joplin -- who initially didn't even sing lead on all of the material -- was primarily responsible for lifting them out of the ranks of the ordinary. She made them a hit at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, where her stunning version of "Ball and Chain" (perhaps her very best performance) was captured on film. After a debut on the Mainstream label, Big Brother signed a management deal with Albert Grossman and moved on to Columbia. Their second album, Cheap Thrills, topped the charts in 1968, but Joplin left the band shortly afterward, enticed by the prospects of stardom as a solo act.

Joplin's first album, I Got Dem Ol' Kozmic Blues Again Mama!, was recorded with the Kozmic Blues Band, a unit that included horns and retained just one of the musicians that had played with her in Big Brother (guitarist Sam Andrew). Although it was a hit, it wasn't her best work; the new band, though more polished musically, was not nearly as sympathetic accompanists as Big Brother, purveying a soul-rock groove that could sound forced. That's not to say it was totally unsuccessful, boasting one of her signature tunes in "Try (Just a Little Bit Harder)."

For years, Joplin's life had been a roller coaster of drug addiction, alcoholism, and volatile personal relationships, documented in several biographies. Musically, however, things were on the upswing shortly before her death, as she assembled a better, more versatile backing outfit, the Full Tilt Boogie Band, for her final album, Pearl (ably produced by Paul Rothchild). Joplin was sometimes criticized for screeching at the expense of subtlety, but Pearl was solid evidence of her growth as a mature, diverse stylist who could handle blues, soul, and folk-rock. "Mercedes Benz," "Get It While You Can," and Kris Kristofferson's "Me and Bobby McGee" are some of her very best tracks. Tragically, she died before the album's release, overdosing on heroin in a Hollywood hotel in October 1970. "Me and Bobby McGee" became a posthumous number one single in 1971, and thus the song with which she is most frequently identified.



Saturday, August 22, 2009

Pride and Glory - Great Southern Undercovers