Yes - Yessongs - Part 2
The Alchemical Jukebox
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Saturday, November 22, 2025
Yes - Yessongs - Live 1972
Yes - Yessongs - Part 2
Sons Of Zöku - Dead Poets
Endless is the new album from the Adelaide-based 6-piece Sons of Zöku, following their 2021 debut Sun. This ensemble features Ricardo Da Silva (Vocals, Guitars) and Ica Quintela (Vocals, Flute, Keys, Percussion), both Portuguese-born and Jordan Buck (Bass), Oscar Ellery (Sitar, Guitars), Eddie Hannemann (Drums) and Hannah Yates (Vocals), all Australian-born. The new album also features special guests Lovepreet Singh on Tabla and Paul Ellery on Sax.
They concoct an upbeat, heady blend of psychedelic rock that blends in sing-along chants and a limb-stretching mass of influences from Eastern music, folk, jazz and soul. From the attractive, hazy aquarian lysergic Moonlight to the infectious blues riff of Earth Chant, they make a compelling offering.
Their hypnotic chants and Eastern percussion bring diverse colours to their sound; it’s easy to see how their popularity as a live band has grown, especially with festival audiences; this is made for carefree, long summer days. Hints of early Akron Family float across on the dreamy and uplifting Kuhnoo, while the trippy O Saber demonstrates how they can bring such a broad range of influences into a cohesive whole. From: https://klofmag.com/2024/03/recommended-sons-of-zoku-endless/
Silly Wizard - The Heron Election Ballad No. 4
The Heron Ballads' by Robert Burns. Four works known collectively as the Heron Ballads which Burns wrote in support of the Whig party candidate Patrick Heron. Patrick Heron (1736 - 1803) was the party's candidate for the 1795 Parliamentary by-election for the Stewarty of Kirkcudbright. Burns had met Heron a year earlier and had known of him for quite some time - Heron was involved in the establishment of the Ayr bank of Douglas, Heron, and Company which failed disastrously in 1773. Nonetheless, Burns found Heron to be an able and just politician. From: https://www.nts.org.uk/collections/object/archive-110004777?page=1
Burns wrote the lyrics to The Heron Election Ballad No. 4 in 1795, set to the melody of “Buy Broom Besoms,” a popular ballad of the day. He composed it for the Whig banker/politician Patrick Heron of Kerroughtree (1736-1803) who served as Member of Parliament for Kirkcudbright Stewartry between 1794-1803. It is one of a series of political songs Burns wrote in support of Heron, who contested two separate elections for the seat in 1795. The first, against Gordon of Balmaghie. This ballad, Number 4, was specifically written for the second election, against Montgomery Stewart. Heron won the election, but was subsequently barred from taking office. From: https://lyricstranslate.com/es/silly-wizard-heron-election-ballad-lyrics?amp
The incredibly influential Scottish folk band Silly Wizard was formed in Edinburgh 1970 around a nucleus of Gordon Jones and Bob Thomas who were both at university and a little later by Johnny Cunningham who was still at school which must have made touring a challenge. Gordon recalls the band picking up Johnny at the school gate “to be driven to Sutherland for a gig and be decanted from the van at the school gates next morning!” They kept themselves busy as the band also ran the Triangle Folk Club in Edinburgh on Saturday nights. Their first tour abroad was in 1972 and maybe not so well known is that they also toured around Britain along with a female singer for a while – Maddy Prior. It was around this time that they were approached by Transatlantic Records and recorded an album in two days which has never been seen or heard since. Members came and went (including Dougie MacLean) until it solidified into the lineup that recorded their debut self-titled album in 1976 featuring Gordon, Bob and Johnny alongside Alistair Donaldson, Freeland Barbour (later replaced by Johnny’s brother, the well-known Phil Cunningham) and Andy M. Stewart. From: https://klofmag.com/2019/05/silly-wizard-reissue-1976-debut/
Milla - Gentleman Who Fell
Milla made her first foray into the music world with her 1994 hit “Gentleman Who Fell,” a pop oddity that snuck its way onto mod-rock radio stations and a handful of daring Top 40 stations. It was the kind of song that spoke to the Angela Chases of the world (“I don’t know how to speak to you/I don’t know how to trust you” goes the chorus); in fact, the song is still being used as a symbol of young female angst to this day (it most recently made a cameo in 2002’s The Rules of Attraction). The single, a video for which was originally directed by Lisa Bonet but ultimately scrapped for a more avant-garde clip inspired by Maya Deren’s 1943 short film Meshes of the Afternoon, unfortunately failed to crack the pop charts, but Milla’s music—a cross between the loony mysticism of Kate Bush and the more grounded, earthy witchery of Stevie Nicks—still sounds surprisingly fresh a decade later.
Milla displays more vocal range throughout The Divine Comedy than one might expect from a Revlon haircolor spokesperson: Her voice reaches from reedy, girlish, and coy to hearty and rich, often all in one line. Her lyrics also have surprising depth, from “Reaching From Nowhere” (“What if we decide to break these walls?/This, from me the builder”) to “It’s Your Life,” in which she attempts to negotiate a love triangle of some kind (romantic or otherwise). And for anyone who’s ever wondered what our world might look like through the eyes of a foreigner (read: space alien), Milla offers “The Alien Song (For Those Who Listen),” an early snippet of which she performed in—get this—Richard Linklater’s 1993 cult film Dazed and Confused. “Clock” tells the more sober tale of a girl (a la Anne Frank) who is hidden away from the “great murderer, great Aryan,” while the downright giddy “You Did It All Before” juxtaposes a spritely arrangement of penny whistle, ukulele, and crisscrossing vocal parts with the bloody anguish of Milla’s words: “The ground is still too red/From the wickedness you did.” From: https://www.slantmagazine.com/music/milla-the-divine-comedy/
Morgan Delt - Some Sunsick Day
It was over a year ago in December 2012 that Morgan Delt released his self-produced tape Psychic Death Hole and invented the label Inflatable Tapes to conceivably legitimize his eponymous debut. It was, being that it is now sold-out, a six-track double-sided spool of swirling and dripping psychedelic madness. Pop by nature, transcendent in execution, cathartic and beautifully exhausting in practice. Sometime last year but after May, a certain gung-ho weirdo who — after listening to Delt (by suggestion of the New Zealand blog The Active Listener)—decided to care for this man’s creation “upon first listen.”
“From the very first song ‘Make My Grey Brain Green’…from that very first 45 seconds of Psychic Death Hole, it sort of takes you on this weird journey,” relays Mr. Bill Roe of Trouble In Mind Records chuckling, “…from that moment, the first time I heard it…I knew I had to work with him.”
For Roe, who runs Trouble In Mind out of Chicago, Ill. with his wife Lisa, Delt’s sound is indicative of the 21st century mindset where the generational folds have collapsed in on themselves. An all encompassing array of a half-century of generational buzz. Techniques past and present are all in style and the contemporary here is merely one who could certainly get lost in that timeless, generational ambiguity. A talent who fits nicely into Trouble In Mind’s latest class of variegated paisley baroque authors: Maston, Jacco Gardner, and Doug Tuttle.
“I’d rather have a three minute song that changes into four different things than to have a ten minute song that never changes,” says Delt. “I dig that kind of stuff and will listen to it sometimes, but I personally gravitate toward over-the-top baroque and the ‘everything’s crammed in at once’ approach.”
Delt records everything on his own using Ableton which he then processes through a tape machine to get that underlying warble. His almost symphonic sprawls of instrumentation lend themselves to his fickle-minded history as a musician.
“When I was a kid I did all kinds of stuff. My parents had me taking all kinds of lessons—piano, stuff like that,” he says. “In school I started playing saxophone and getting into jazz and stuff for a while. Then I probably started playing guitar when I was ten. Then I got into recording when I was a teenager.” He goes on, “I was never really on any one thing. I kind of always jumped around, did a whole bunch of different things — tried to play a lot of different instruments.”
He's been producing his own music for years, only to take it down — offline — following discouragement from lack of acknowledgement. He’s currently working on a lineup to bring his psychic death hole concoctions into the live setting, but he's a particular person with meticulous material.
“I want to play live but I’m also a perfectionist control freak. I get discouraged sometimes like, ‘You’re not good enough!’” Delt admits. “I have played a bunch of times with some people and gone through some lineup changes. But even on my own I keep realizing I’ve got a lot of work to do by myself. Because there’s a lot of stuff where I just record something once and I don’t remember what I did or how to play it — there’s a lot of things where there’s two or three guitar parts so I’ve got to figure out how to arrange that down into one guitar part I can play while I sing.”
Translating a complex variety of music like Delt’s is no easy task, and once it’s ready how is going to look? With nothing scheduled nor a set backing band maybe we’re months from hearing Delt’s kaleidoscopic acid pop in-person. Roe’s contribution goes as far as releasing records for Delt, so maybe it’s up to the next gung-ho weirdo to concoct a tour or a one-off melty matinee featuring a sonic and visual performance nothing short of a Hawkwind show helmed by a 6-foot-2 Stacia bathing in the projections of a lunatic. From: https://imposemagazine.com/features/morgan-delt-interview
Diamanda Galas - Fire in My Belly
There is a long history to David Wojnarowicz’s disputed film, A Fire in My Belly, as several versions have been created and circulated over the years. A 7-minute edit of A Fire in My Belly was created, featuring Diamanda Galas’ song, This is the Law of the Plague. The music comes from Galas’ controversial Plague Mass, a requiem for those dead and dying of AIDS, which she performed at Saint John the Divine cathedral in New York City in 1991. As for A Fire in My Belly, This is the Law of the Plague was condemned by the catholic Church (John Cardinal O’Connor at the time), who tried to prevent its performance.
Statement from Diamanda Galás December 2, 2010
I am the composer and librettist for This is the Law of the Plague, the work from my mass for PWA’s, performed at St. John the Divine's in 1991 against the wishes of John Cardinal O’Connor, who tried to prevent its performance. This is the Law of the Plague was composed in 1986. I will presume this is the music composition upon which David’s film A Fire in My Belly was based, or with which he felt a strong affinity, because I have been asked to defend our work, this collaboration. And I shall do so now.
I must begin, however, by making a behavioral and medical diagnosis of the rather shocking reaction of the Catholic League of Washington DC and particular members of the House of Representatives to this work. Their complaint is that the work “offends Christians,” or so I hear. I have heard many stories, but working off of this assumption and the Smithsonian’s own decision to either independently censor the work or cave in to these organizations, there are possibly three guilty parties here. What the Catholic League and certain members of the House presumably wish to remove from their consciousness is thirty years of death sentences handed down to their parishioners and citizenry, who were told not to wear condoms, and the mistreatment of those stigmatized as miscreants and sinners by their viral status and/or homosexuality and/or status as drug addicts. They wish to remove the unseparate church and state conduct throughout the epidemic, which this film articulately reflects. A Fire in My Belly is a holy film. It must be. And why is this?
The text that I chose in 1986 in London was from Leviticus, chapter 15, The Book of Laws, from the Old Testament – whose treatment of the unclean is proscribed therein by any church that employs this text, and by the many legislators who for years have wanted to separate the infected from the uninfected. My liturgical treatment of Leviticus is a march of the priests and lawmakers forcing the unclean from the gates of the City into warehouses out of town, and is very gently illustrated by David’s depiction of the crucified Christ covered with ants. Ants are only one of the many insects and animals that would cover a man removed from his village and deposited in a leper asylum. There would also be maggots and rats and crows. David was gentle, I must insist. I remember the doctors who told me they believed this was the way to go, and this was in 1993. There was Plum Island, after all, and other places where the contagious could be housed.
Here, Catholics and House of Representatives is YOUR OWN TEXT written so long ago and practiced in the USA to a brutal degree in this country for thirty years and to a much MORE brutal degree now in the countries of Africa and the Middle East, among others. Do not forget the punishment of Iraqi homosexuals with hum (anal glue), which glues the anus shut, and, in combination with the forced imbibing of laxatives, explodes the colon. Here, Protectors of the Public Good, is your text and a Merry Xmas to you!
Leviticus Chapter 15 from The Old Testament
When any man hath an issue out of his flesh.
Because of that issue he is unclean.
Every bed whereon he lieth is unclean
and everything whereon he sitteth, unclean.
And whosoever toucheth his bed shall be unclean,
And he that sitteth whereon he sat shall be unclean.
And he that toucheth
the flesh of the unclean
Becomes unclean.
And he that be spat on by him unclean
Becomes unclean.
And whosoever toucheth anything under him
shall be unclean.
And he that beareth any of those things
shall be unclean.
And what saddle soever he rideth upon is unclean
And the vessel of earth that he toucheth, unclean.
And if any man’s seed of copulation go out from him,
he is unclean.
Every garment, every skin whereon is the seed, unclean.
And the woman with whom this man shall lie
shall be unclean.
And whosoever toucheth her will be unclean.
This is the Law of the Plague:
to teach when it is clean and when it is unclean.
And the priest shall look upon the plague
for a rising, and for a scab, and for a bright spot.
And the priest shall shut up he that hath the plague.
He shall carry them forth to a place unclean.
He shall separate them in their uncleanness.
This is the Law of the Plague:
To teach when it is clean and when it is unclean.
I performed Plague Mass in Italy in 1989 at Pogio a Caiano and was called a heretic by the Christian Democrat Party, led by Rinaldo Innaco. I was not allowed to perform in the country for many years. I was shocked and very offended. As a Greek, Italy is the country that had always most welcomed me, and our cultures are very close. I was surprised at the massive amount of publicity, which questioned me as an enemy of Christ.
BUT CHRIST WAS NOT A CHRISTIAN! HE WAS A VISIONARY AND A FIGHTER WHO WISHED TO OPEN THE DOORS OF THE SANCTUARIES TO THE SICK, AND FOR THIS HE WAS MURDERED BY THE LAWMAKERS.
The word ‘sanctuary’ is based upon the Greek expression ithiateron thomation, which means ‘safe harbor, private room, a space of one’s own.’ It also is based upon the Greek expression ieros assilon, which means ‘holy asylum,’ an asylum from predators. To call the name of the exhibition Hide/See: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture and remove this work from it because it is too unpleasant strikes me as truly shocking. Is this film an insult to the spirit of Twinkletoes’ whitebread Christmas, to his Christmas tree and its friendly beacons of light which whisper “Good cheer, One and All!”?
The video was removed. The cross is a symbol of the Crucifixion, among the cruelest tortures in the world. This is the sentence of slow and horrific death in which the spinal column breaks and the organs rupture. This is the torture for the worst of outlaws – the man who protested that the sick and the poor were not allowed into the church for the crime of being perceived as UNCLEAN, rather than “pristine” and moneyed, for his advocacy that the church BE a sanctuary to the sick, rather than a citadel for the rich family man, who comes to exchange invitations for tea and other such serious matters with OTHER rich family men.
David Wojnarowicz was a great artist who died a terrible death in 1992. It was one of the worst times in this country for people with AIDS. My brother, Philip-Dimitri Galas, died six years before him in 1986 of the same disease in San Diego. THERE WAS NO HOPE WHATSOEVER THEN FOR THIS DISEASE. So what is so shocking about the truth now in 2010? Does it remind the clergy and the lawmakers of what the cross stands for: PUNISHMENT AND SAVAGE CRUELTY, and make ugly with the nice and friendly warm xmas spirit? WHO in countries other than our own are dying horrific deaths of AIDS this Christmas? Christmas comes but once a year. AND YOUR LIFE? It comes to you but once.
From: http://diamandagalas.com/writings/david-wojnarowiczs-a-fire-in-my-belly/
Custard Flux - Equinox
US PSychedelic/Progressive Rock act Custard Flux published the official music video for the track “Equinox” taken from new album “Einsteinium Delirium” out on April 5, 2024.
This album is a little different than our first four albums. It’s no holds barred electric! The songs blend into each other on both sides of the LP to create one nuclear based relativity, with a conceptual narrative of our historical atomic madness in variable time signatures, rests and pieces. On top of that, our whole rhythm section is a Detroit gang. Let’s rock!
Einsteinium is a highly unstable element that was discovered in the debris after the first hydrogen bomb explosion. Using it in the title eventually compelled me to research and write about characters and events relating to atomic bombs, a thoroughly depressing subject. The infamous key scientist involved in developing the first atom bomb had deep spiritual interests and in some interviews had made references to the Bhagavad Gita, which I was able to use for more positive, psychedelic inspiration.
I tried to use the imagery I’d learned about in my research somewhat abstractly because I didn’t want the lyrics to be dark and depressing, or even obvious. It’s a factitious tale. My own version of our collective insanity. My hope is that it might inspire the listener to do some research of their own on the subject of nuclear bombs to see how many have been detonated already, which is staggering. Maybe read some eye witness accounts of Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors, if you have the stomach for it, or learn about real false alarms that have had the world on the brink of nuclear war. From: https://progrockjournal.com/news-custard-flux-published-the-official-music-video-for-the-track-equinox-taken-from-new-album/
Salyu X Salyu - s(o)un(d)beams (full album)
01. Tada no Tomodachi
02. muse'ic
03. Sailing Days
04. Kokoro
05. Utai Mashou
06. Dorei
07. Rainboots de Odori Mashou
08. s(o)un(d)beams
09. Mirror Neurotic
10. Hostile To Me
11. Tsuduki wo
S(o)un(d)beams is Salyu’s album, a celebration of everything great about her past work and a grand rebirth, like Lady Gaga hatching out of an egg if that actually resulted in something. To properly understand why this is, a little history lesson is in order.
Despite being the “mainstream” side of the project, Salyu never really has been an A-list J-Pop star. She first popped up not as Salyu but as Lily Chou-Chou, a fictional singer in a movie in 2000. Four years later she finally debuted as, well, herself. Her albums tend to chart well – sophomore effort Terminal remains her best-selling album having moved 87,000 units and climbing as high as number two on the Oricon album charts (the follow-up got to seven, while S(o)un(d)beams hit 12). Her singles chart all over the place though – at her peak she’s gotten as high as 10 by herself, usually following somewhere between 15 and 23 (before that, though, adjust to something like between 30 and 100). A collaboration with Bank Band titled “To U” remains her best known song, having reached the second spot on the singles chart. Salyu’s not an obscure artist, but she doesn’t demand attention like cornballs Koda Kumi or Aiko.
Her strongest tool has always been her voice, a soaring sound capable of pushing upper registers without losing any power. Last year’s “Atarashi Yes” highlights everything great about Salyu – that voice, mostly, but also the way you don’t have to know a single word of Japanese or even what “yes” means to get the emotional oooomph of the single. She’s shown flashes of the same vocal power Bjork boasts. Yet Salyu’s never had a good album to her name…”Atarashi Yes” was among a pocket’s worth of good songs on her third album Maiden Voyage, a bloated affair weighed down by half-hearted stabs at mainstream balladry. Earlier releases Landmark and Terminal don’t fare much better. Salyu’s not a top-tier pop star, but whoever puts together her full-lengths desperately want her to be. Bjork carved out an identity while still in The Sugarcubes, whereas Salyu remains caught in J-Pop R&D. Up to now, she’s mostly been a case of “what if.”
Yet here, name doubled up, she’s set free to chase her “Muse’ic” without fear of censor. Cornelius hasn’t improved on Salyu’s voice, but rather crafted a sonic world wide open for her to do her thing from all sorts of angles. It’s not perfect – at this point, it should be acknowledged the album opens with a relative thunk via the annoying “Tada No Tomodachi,” a case of both Salyu and Cornelius relying too much on the gimmick of “a lot of voices at once!”…but what artistic re-emergence is? On S(o)un(d)beams she finds someone willing to let her experiment, and she dives headfirst into an opportunity that it seems like she has been waiting a long time for.
So…whereas in the hands of a more chart-obsessed person “Sailing Days” (the latest in a string of songs finding Salyu obsessed with boats) probably would have ended up a minor-key ballad, here it’s a little shanty that turns into a crescendo of Salyu’s crashing against the shore at a dizzying rate. Cornelius steps way to the background on “Kokoro” and just lets her sing hauntingly around minimal strings. “Dorei” and “Rain Boots De Odorimashou” find Salyu having some of the most fun she’s ever had on record, playing with the extremes of her voice on both (screech-iness on the prior, calmness on the latter). “Hostile To Me” doesn’t just feature a Bjork-like title, it finally finds Salyu making something resembling a Bjork-ish ballad. It all comes back to “Muse’ic,” where she emerges from a cocoon with big bright wings and like eight mouths just ready to sing the praises of art.
It’s tempting to give Cornelius more credit than he deserves for how Salyu sounds here, since the draw of Salyu X Salyu has always been “Salyu’s voice all over the place!” He deserves a lot of praise – excellent placing of her various vocal tracks, not to mention creating the music that that allowed her to sound like this – but he’s just an arranger for the most part. Salyu is the one giving the vocal performance of her career, one that doesn’t feature anything resembling the big pay-off moments like “Atarashi Yes” but rather sees her exploring every corner of her sound. From: https://makebelievemelodies.com/review-salyu-x-salyu-soundbeams/
The Doobie Brothers - Live KSAN FM 1972
01 - Jesus Is Just Alright.mp3
02 - Disciple.mp3
03 - Feelin' Down Farther.mp3
04 - Nobody.mp3
05 - Slippery St. Paul.mp3
06 - Greenwood Creek.mp3
07 - Road Angel.mp3
08 - Going Down.mp3
Live performance by the Doobie Brothers at Pacific High Recorders in San Francisco on 1/16/1972. This set contains several songs from their debut album in April 1971 along with Disciple and Jesus is Just Alright from their next album Toulouse Street, due for release in July 1972. This concert was broadcast on KSAN 95 FM in San Francisco CA. The Doobie Brothers: Tom Johnston - Guitar, Vocals; Pat Simmons - Guitar, Vocals; Tiran Porter - Bass; John Hartman - Drums; With Special Guests (tracks 16-18): Gregg Rolie (Santana) - Keyboards; Mike Wilhelm (The Charlatans) - Guitar. From: https://archive.org/details/doobie-brothers-1972-pacific-high-sf-ksan
The Doobie Brothers got its start in 1969, when Moby Grape co-founder Skip Spence introduced drummer John Hartman to guitarist Tom Johnston. Hartman had come to California in the hopes of joining a band with Spence, but he hit it off with Johnston – and the duo formed the nucleus of a power trio they dubbed Pud.
Pud's pivotal turning point came with the introduction of guitarist and singer Patrick Simmons, whose fingerstyle playing complemented Johnston's R&B-influenced approach. With the addition of bassist Dave Shogren, the band's metamorphosis into the combo millions would one day know as the Doobie Brothers was more or less complete.
Setting a pattern they'd follow for essentially the duration of their career, the Doobies developed a local reputation as a hungry — and increasingly popular — live act, soon drawing a steady following among Bay Area bikers who heard their lifestyle tunefully reflected in the band's uptempo, guitar-based sound. Still, as tight as they might have been on stage, they didn't know much about the studio.
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"When we did the first album, we’d never really been together as a group at all," Simmons later told Sounds. "We were all old friends and we just got high in the studios. We hadn’t planned on making an album at all, but the demos came out so good that we decided to send them into Warner Bros. – and they liked them."
That innocence was reflected in The Doobie Brothers, which consisted largely of Johnston compositions, a handful of Simmons songs and a cover of Randy Newman's "Beehive State" thrown in for good measure. Like many debut offerings, the LP captures a band in the process of developing its sound. Looking back, it's easy to understand why Warner Bros. responded to the Doobie Brothers' demos — but it's also impossible not to hear all the ways in which the group would deepen and refine its technique over the years to follow.
Unfortunately for the Doobies at the time, few people heard The Doobie Brothers at all; the album failed to chart, and as they limped home from a sparsely attended tour, they wondered whether the record's lack of commercial success represented a first step or the end of the road. They'd face a further setback when Shogren quit the band after sessions started for their second LP. As they'd do so often over the course of their career, the Doobie Brothers simply adjusted course, replacing Shogren with Simmons' former bandmate Tiran Porter while adding second drummer Michael Hossack to play alongside Hartman. That season of change fed into 1972's Toulouse Street, the record that started the Doobies' rise to stardom. From: https://ultimateclassicrock.com/doobie-brothers-debut/
Robin & Linda Williams - Turtle Dove / Rollin' And Ramblin'
“All we ever wanted when we started out was to have a career in music.” Robin Williams was on the line from the tiny hamlet of Middlebrook, out in the Shenandoah Valley where he lives with wife and music-mate Linda.“We didn’t have any goals of being on the radio or being household names. We just wanted to have a life in music. It’s such a gift to have, to be able to work on it every day. And then to make a living in it is just icing on the cake. Here we are, forty three years into it and still doing it.”
Robin and Linda Williams have “done it” in a way they probably could never have imagined when they first met in 1971. But in 1975, shortly after releasing their first album, they met a guy named Garrison Keillor who had a new little radio variety show in St. Paul, Minnesota, called A Prairie Home Companion. He liked their music the first time he heard them, and Robin & Linda Williams became an integral part of the PHC family, appearing often on the iconic public radio program over the next forty years. From: http://www.jimnewsom.com/robin-linda-williams-a-life-in-music/
Traffic - Cryin' To Be Heard
The musical alchemy of Traffic was unlike any other of the 1960s. Rooted in blues and R&B, the group embraced classical, jazz, folk, African, rock, soul, Latin, and Indian genres then found ways of assimilating more than one at a time in song after song. In some ways, the band could easily be called rock’s first “getting it together in the country” by holing up in a rural cottage in the Berkshire Downs – light years away from Swinging London – to write and rehearse for several months prior to setting foot in the studio.
But how did it all begin? Well, let’s start with Steve Winwood, the prodigiously gifted young man from a musical family in Birmingham, who was equally adept at guitar and piano as a child, then fell under the spell of Ray Charles. As his voice began to break, the young Winwood incorporated Charles’ vocal depth and his phrasing even as he continued to explore music pioneers like Nina Simone, Jimmy Smith, Oscar Peterson, and Buddy Guy. Eventually, Winwood and his older brother Muff joined The Spencer Davis Group in 1964.
The SDG — who were sharing bills with The Graham Bond Organization, John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers, and The Yardbirds in 1965 — scored their first number one hit the following year with “Keep On Running” (which usurped The Beatles’ “Day Tripper”). It was during this period that Winwood bonded with Eric Clapton, who took him under his wing when Clapton moved to London and sympathized with this kindred artist who was not too happy about being a teen pop star six to ten years younger than all his bandmates. In short, Winwood was primed for change.
In Birmingham, Winwood was drawn to fellow musicians outside SDG: in particular, Chris Wood, a self-taught flautist (and later saxophonist) with a painterly approach who’d just been accepted by the Royal Academy; Jim Capaldi, a singer-songwriter/drummer whose previous bands included the marginally successful Deep Feeling; and Dave Mason who went to do some interesting work with Jimi Hendrix soon after.
When free from SDG responsibilities, Winwood and Wood, Capaldi, and Mason would jam at a local club called The Elbow Room, where touring musicians came to gamble, score hash, listen to Stax records, and of course play. Amid this scene, the four formed a communal mindset; and with support from Island Records’ chief Chris Blackwell, Traffic (as Capaldi named them) set up in a remote cottage in Berkshire, beginning in April 1967.
Since Winwood was still completing SDG obligations, including a final single “I’m A Man,” he invited Capaldi, Wood and Mason to the studio to overdub percussion and harmonies. What resulted was indescribable stardust layered on an already great track. You might say that “I’m A Man” is the first Traffic record in all but name.
Following their retreat, the group convened at Olympic Studios with producer Jimmy Miller. The first round of recording yielded the title track and two others for the film Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush, also a holdover obligation from Winwood’s SDG days. Following this, they cut their official debut single, “Paper Sun b/w Giving to You” which landed in the UK’s Top 10. Looking back, the B-side is even better: a Cannonball Adderley-styled groove that gives all four musicians a chance to solo amid a wholly new brand of psychedelic jazz-rock.
The debut album, Mr. Fantasy, was cut throughout the summer of 1967. This landmark release captures all the funk and wonderment of the era. A freewheeling record, it’s grounded by the title track, in which Winwood’s electric guitar playing is easily on a par with Hendrix, Clapton or Beck and crests with “No Face, No Name, No Number,” an achingly beautiful pastoral of psychedelic folk. Bolstered by Dave Mason’s whimsical compositions, Traffic’s debut proved a truly exquisite start.
When Mason briefly left the band for his solo career, the remaining trio of Winwood, Wood and Capaldi began work on the second album, Traffic. The first song “40,000 Headmen” proved a wonderfully idiosyncratically folksy tune with a heavy soul chorus. Soon thereafter Mason returned with his own batch of fine songs: “You Can All Join In,” “Feelin’ Alright?” and “Cryin’ To Be Heard.” Other tracks such as “Pearly Queen,” “Who Knows What Tomorrow May Bring” and “No Time To Live” remain some of the band’s finest work from this era.
Following Traffic’s release, the group actually looked set to disband completely at the close of 1968 but not before cutting their electrifying slice of soul-pop “Medicated Goo” — co-written with Miller. Cracking with bravado and sparkling like vintage Stevie Wonder, this song was packaged with a mix of B-sides and live material on Last Exit (1969) which may be one of the finest contractually obligated postscripts to any band’s mid-career. From: https://www.culturesonar.com/traffic-steve-winwood/
The Hooters - One Way Home
The Hooters were formed as a five piece in 1980, with guitarist John Kuzma, bassist Bobby Woods and drummer David Uosikkinen joining Bazilian and Hyman. They took their name from the nickname for the melodica, a unique type of keyboard harmonica which originated in Germany. Starting on July 4, 1980 the band spent the next two years playing everything from clubs to high schools and appearing on local television shows around Philadelphia and other areas of the East Coast. During this time, the band recorded several tracks to be released as singles including “Man in the Street”, “Fightin’ on the Same Side”, “Rescue Me”, and “All You Zombies”, and started to receive significant airplay on prominent rock stations.
During this time, the band was managed by Hyman and his girlfriend. The climax of this early era of the band came on September 25, 1982, when The Hooters opened for rock legends The Who during one of their farewell tour shows at JFK Stadium. However, the group decided to separate in early 1983 as Hyman grew tired of managing in lieu of composing and the rest of the band began to burn out from constant touring.
Rick ChertoffThat same winter, Bazilian and Hyman were enlisted by another Penn classmate, producer Rick Chertoff as session players on an album he was producing for a young singer/songwriter named Cyndi Lauper. Bazilian played bass, saxophone, and added vocals to the album, which would become the Grammy winning album She’s So Unusual. Hyman played keyboards and co-wrote the international smash hit “Time After Time”, which was also nominated for a Grammy. Following this hugely successful project, Bazilian and Hyman decided to give The Hooters another try in late 1983.
Uosikkinen returned on drums but Kuzma and Woods had moved on to another band and were replaced by John Lilley on guitar and Rob Miller on bass. Club owner Steve Mountain was brought in as full-time manager, leaving Hyman and Bazilian free to concentrate on the music. The reformed band immediately started work on their first album.
Amore contains the original versions of several songs that were re-recorded for the band’s major label debut, 1985’s Nervous Night, such as “All You Zombies”, “Hanging On a Heartbeat”, and “Blood From a Stone”. These original versions have a pronounced ska bounce and the production is not overpowering, there is a distinct live show energy. Upbeat and danceable rock that used keyboard/synth sounds were all the rage in the early 80’s, but The Hooters surrounded them with guitar, mandolin, real drums (from a drummer who hits ’em really hard), and vocals from guys who can carry a tune but don’t have “perfect”, processed voices. These were the Hooters and their signature sound owned that term long before before it became synonymous with calendar girls in tight t-shirts serving chicken wings to drooling patrons adopted the same name. From: https://modernrockreview.com/2012-the-hooters-1/
Steeleye Span - Royal Forester
John Strachan of Fyvie, Aberdeenshire, sang The Royal Forester on 16 July 1951 to Alan Lomax and Hamish Henderson. This recording was later released on the anthology The Child Ballads 2. Hamish Henderson and Ewan McVicar noted:
Rape presented as violent seduction occurs alarmingly often in the old ballads. Here the rapist knows that the king will give the girl justice against him and tries to fob her off with a foreign pronunciation of his name, but she knows how to name him in Scots. He rides away, but she reaches the king’s door before him. He is single and is obliged to marry her, but ironically she proves to be of higher parentage than him. The vigour and jollity of John’s refrain highlights the ballad’s lack of moral censure at the knight’s action and its respect for the girl’s determination.
Emily Sparkes sang this song as Sweet William in Rattlesden, Suffolk in 1958/59 and Charlie Carver sang it in the Gardeners’ Arms in Tostock in 1960. Both versions were included on the Veteran anthology of traditional music making from Mid-Suffolk Many a Good Horseman. John Howson noted in the album’s booklet:
This is a rare ballad usually known as The Knight and the Shepherd’s Daughter. It has been noted down in most corners of England and all over Scotland where it sometimes called The Forester or Lord or Earl Richard, Lithgow or Richmond. The story line is usually that a knight persuades a shepherd’s daughter to give up her maidenhead. She chases after him to the King’s court, she on foot and he on horseback, and demands marriage. He attempts to bribe her but is threatened with execution if he doesn’t marry her. Often the story then reveals that she is herself of higher status. Although both Emily Sparkes and Charlie Carver’s versions have slightly muddled story lines it is remarkable that these are the only traces of the song to have been collected in Suffolk. Furthermore there seems to be only one other actual recording of it from England; that made by Peter Kennedy of Louise Holmes from Herefordshire.
John Roberts and Tony Barrand sang The Knight and the Shepherd’s Daughter in 1971 on their first album, Spencer the Rover Is Alive and Well. They noted:
This ballad is the sole representative here of those which professor Child considered great enough to include in his collection. Our version escaped across the water to the Maritime Provinces of Canada, where it was collected by Helen Creighton as late as 1954. It lacks the “happy ending” often found in other variants, where the wronged maiden turns out to be a lady far richer than the knight who seduced her.
Steeleye Span recorded The Royal Forester in 1972 for their fourth LP Below the Salt, which was the first album of their longest-living “classic” line-up with Tim Hart, Bob Johnson, Rick Kemp, Peter Knight, and Maddy Prior. The sleeve notes commented cryptically:
Subtitled “The Aboriculturist Meets Superwoman”. From the singing of John Strachan. The first English text appeared in Anchovy Ram’s elementary drum tutor Half Way to Para-diddle, published in 1293. Although a faithful translation of the original Latin, there is still scholarly dispute as to the spelling of the name ‘Erwilian’ and over the use of the word ‘leylan’.
From: https://mainlynorfolk.info/lloyd/songs/theknightandtheshepherdsdaughter.html
As previously mentioned, there's a long tradition of folk songs where men deflower young maidens and then run. The Royal Forester falls into that category, but what makes it a cut above the norm is that, intead of just passively bemoaning her fate, she refuses to take it lying down. Um. So to speak. Instead, she chases him and CATCHES him. I love:
"She's belted up her petticoat
And followed with all her force."
Yeah! And also:
“The water, it's too deep, my love,
I'm afraid you cannot wade.”
But afore he'd ridden his horse well in
She was on the other side.
Bloody well right! It's just cool because of how it bucks the trend--there isn't much of a feminist tradition here. Can't say as I understand what's meant by “Erwilian, that's a Latin word, but Willy is your name,” though. Wuh?
As in all songs of this genre, the moral, if any, is inscrutable. Although our heroine does achieve what would at the time have been considered "satisfaction," it hardly seems satisfactory--that someone as high-powered as she is should have to marry this obvious loser. It's difficult to imagine that this is going to be a particularly happy union. And the fact that the song ENDS with "She's the Earl of Airlie's daughter, and he's the blacksmith's son" seems like it ought to be in some way significant. Is the idea supposed to be that she got a raw deal, being nobility but ending up married to a commoner? Or--after the manner of ancient Chinese miscellanies--is it just a matter of the song saying "this is what happened" without passing any judgment one way or the other? Am I projecting too much?
From: http://inchoatia.blogspot.com/2005/05/steeleye-span-royal-forester.html
Rainbow - Still I'm Sad (Yardbirds cover)
Probably one of the last great live albums of the 70's (the decade of the great live albums, by the way). Recorded with what now is regarded as the best ever Rainbow line up, this is a CD that is up to Ritchie Blackmore's best works, including Made In Japan. When it was released in Brazil it was reduced to a single LP, instead of the double album format elsewhere. It was a butcher's work that fans never forgave. I had to wait the arrival of the CD version of this masterpiece to finally have the complete recording. Things of the past, I Hope!
Although the set list is a bit confusing (Kill the King was still an unreleased song, while the recent Rising is represented here with only a short version of Starstruck, in the middle of a medley), the playing is absolute superb (with apologies to Sean Trane, I still think Tony Carey is a great keyboards player, even though his rumored problems with drugs and alcohol did some damage in concerts). I used to hear this record almost non stop after I got it.
Ok, the long versions may hint some self indulgence, but that's not the case. When you're dealing with such gifted and talented people like those ones, they really could extend the songs and make them sound even better than the studio counterparts. Rainbow was one of the last bands to actually have the chops to do such thing and come out unscathed. Highlights: Kill The King (they would later record this one in studio, but never matched this live rendition. Great Hammond organ and guitar interplay, while Cozy Powell shows why he was so legendary among his peers), the long Catch The Rainbow and the 11 minute version of Still I'm Sad.
If you think that heavy music could not be progressive (and if you doubt that some of its best musicians could not match your best prog heroes in terms of technique and creativeness) just hear this CD. You'll be surprised. I only wished they played more stuff from Rising, but nothing's perfect. A strong four stars rating, no less. From: https://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=13685
Patty Griffin - Forgiveness
“I started off by playing flute in the elementary school band,” remembered Patty Griffin with a little laugh during a telephone interview on Tuesday. “But it didn’t have a big enough voice for me. I wanted to change over to saxophone, but there weren’t any more available. So I eventually switched to singing because I needed a bigger, louder voice.” Griffin seems to have found that voice on her debut disc, “Living With Ghosts” (A&M), a voice compelling enough to stand alone without any more accompaniment than an acoustic guitar. The Bostonian-by-way-of-Maine will take her truly “solo” act to Lafayette College’s Kirby Field House tomorrow night when she opens for Central Pennsylvania’s Badlees (whose “River Songs” disc also on A&M).
“I’ve always done solo stuff, more often than not,” Griffin explained. But the stripped-down approach was not her first choice for the recording. “When I got the deal with A&M, I did a recording with a producer and a band, and the label didn’t like it very much. I think it had to do with my having trouble being comfortable with a band. I’m probably a better, or more relaxed, performer solo,” she said. “I lost some of the subtlety of the songs doing that band recording, so we asked if the label would release it this way, and they said, ‘OK.’ We were sort of surprised.” Her proficiency at what is a basically solitary craft might be a bit surprising as well, considering Griffin’s background.
“I actually grew up in a very large family, and got married almost right after that, so I’ve been surrounded by a lot of people most of my life,” she said. “But there certainly has been a feeling of loneliness, too, that probably has to do with not being able to express a lot of things I needed to express.” Griffin would discover a means of doing that in singing, which she picked up from hearing her mother sing around the house. “I loved music and I thought there was a peace in it, and a lot of movement of emotions and feelings,” she said.
Emotion is at the heart of “Living With Ghosts,” most of the songs coming from the period after her 1992 divorce, an experience that also spurred her to quit a waitressing job in Boston and pursue singing/songwriting in earnest. “A lot of fear of doing things goes away when you hit bottom like that. And it also opens up a lot of doors creatively as well, places you wouldn’t have gone before,” Griffin explained. While the mood of “Living With Ghosts” is decidedly somber, Griffin contends that it’s not a one-way street. “I don’t think it’s a total downer. I think I slipped some hope and joy in there too. I’m trying to find a way of expressing more positive feelings, though, without it sounding, I don’t know, lame or something. It’s not easy.” From: https://www.mcall.com/1996/09/27/patty-griffins-solo-voice-comes-through-crystal-clear/
Lucifer in the Sky With Diamonds - Highlow World
The pun in the moniker of Moscow double-guitar four-piece Lucifer in the Sky with Diamonds probably doesn’t need to be pointed out. Featuring The Grand Astoria collaborator Igor Suvorov, Lucifer in the Sky with Diamonds pull together touches of psychedelic impulsiveness and classic heavy rock structures with the production clarity and catchy songwriting of mid-era Queens of the Stone Age. There’s a danger underscoring the boogie of “How to Fix Things” from the band’s self-released debut LP, The Shining One, that seems to find payoff later in the big-groove hook of “Highlow World,” which provides one of the album’s most satisfying listens before shifting into an airier dreamspace and fading into the noisier “Lords of the Damned,” reviving the largesse of riff prior to the closing title-track. An intriguing debut for an outfit loaded with potential, the fullness of their sound boding particularly well for their confidence in their sound and the precision of their execution. From: https://theobelisk.net/obelisk/2014/09/12/the-obelisk-radio-bong-space-mushroom-fuzz-desert-lord-lucifer-in-the-sky-with-diamonds-plunger/
Patti Rothberg - Shadows of Me
Rew Starr: For those who don’t know, can you give us a bit of your story?
Patti Rothberg: 1994 was one of the wildest times of my life! I lived on 23rd Street next to the Chelsea Hotel. A LOT of changes. It was my last year at Parsons School of design, and my major was Illustration. I had NO plan, just figured one thing would lead to another.
My friends were all street people: A slide player with white hair who claimed to be from Paul Butterfield’s band…”Andy” I think, Shah who would bum cigarettes, perched outside my apt. (I found out he was an ex con who killed someone and was out on parole) but to me he was my friend…I would flit around and hang out with homeless people and street characters all the time… my old guitarist then, Lukasz, lived a few blocks downtown…when he said, “I just hung out with Kid Rock. I need a name what do you think of “Dr. Luke”!!!!?
I was meeting so many people that year and I invented an excuse to paint portraits which I liked to paint best: A book called “Math 4 Artists the Wonder of Genetics.” I went to Sidewalk Cafe (RIP) and waltzed right up to Lach (now famous for starting and running “Antifolk” for years) and showed him my portraits (manic much?) Asked him for a show. He gave it to me. 1994. My commute back and forth from Parsons was between the 1 and 9, F and L tunnel on 14th Street and 7th Ave (which was later shortened to “Between the One and the Nine. I incorporated many concepts…the artwork on the album is like a rubik’s cube with one oil painting in the middle and 8 surrounding making a 1 and 9.
Rew Starr: You got married in 2020. So was your husband a fan of your music?
Patti Rothberg: Another amazing story… 25 years ago, right after my record came out, Micah was working as the assistant manager of a record store, Sam Goody. He wasn’t even supposed to come in at all that day. A rep for EMI came in with my promo and asked if he would play my record ‘Between 1&9’….We’re pushing this girl.’ He asked ‘what does she sound like?’ and the rep dutifully replied ‘Alanis.’ Miraculously, he put on my CD in the store anyway.
Track after track, he says he was waiting for it to sound like Alanis and it never did. He ended up liking the CD, and even selling 40 or so copies! The rep returned 4 days later to follow up. ‘I listened to Patti Rothberg’ Micah said. ‘She’s pretty good!’ And he said, ‘Well she’s playing tonight, we have free tickets! Long story short, he asked his friend, Monique to accompany him to my show, and by his recount, judging from my underlit cover painting, he was expecting a “less than attractive troubadour”!
Micah was bored, facing the other way from where I entered, and someone exclaimed, “There’s Patti.” He turned around, and confused said, ‘Where? Behind the hot chick (meaning ME!) Micah ditched his date for who was to become his queen and bride.
From: https://rockmommy.com/2021/09/patti-rothberg-comes-clean-about-love-art-life-beyond-the-1-and-the-9-and-those-alanis-comparisons/
Gevende - Anonim
One can’t help but notice a colorful blend of geographies and cultures coursing through Gevende’s music. They deftly incorporate motifs, instruments, and languages from all over the map, constructing what might be called a multicultural tapestry. Their personal escapades across far-flung locales set the stage for this: while prepping their first album Ev, they traveled from Iran to India, immersing themselves in local jamming sessions. The encounters they had—particularly with lengthy ceremonies and ritual music—opened their minds to new ways of experiencing time and sound. Some see this as one reason behind their break from conventional track lengths and their comfort with slow-building compositions, as evidenced in Sen Balık Değilsin Ki (2011).
They also aren’t shy about drawing from different languages and ethnic motifs. In Sen Balık Değilsin Ki, for instance, “Beboyin Yerkı” nods to an Armenian folk tune and features guest guitarist Eivind Aarset from Norway. If you fancy a kaleidoscopic portrait of musical cross-pollination, there it is—Armenian melodic notions laced with a cool Scandinavian jazz vibe. Song titles range from Turkish (“Sanki,” “Sustum”) to English (“Vigeland”) to Armenian (“Beboyin Yerkı”), highlighting the band’s inclusive spirit. Beyond that, vocalist Ahmet Kenan Bilgiç often opts for meaningless syllables or an invented language, making the voice into a universal instrument rather than a vehicle for standard lyrical meaning. Let’s call it “post-linguistic,” if you will, and it all stems from the group’s fascination with transcending the confines of spoken language.
Their numerous cross-border collaborations have only expanded this multicultural dimension. Amsterdam-based bass clarinetist Tobias Klein and French guitarist Damien Cluzel figure among those who have jammed with Gevende, injecting European experimental jazz flavors into the ensemble’s evolving sound. Then there’s the aforementioned synergy with Balbazar, seamlessly weaving Turkish and French musical sensibilities. From the global scene, look no further than Tinariwen, who marry Tuareg melodies from the Sahara with Western rock and blues. They’ve garnered worldwide acclaim for this so-called “desert blues,” which parallels Gevende’s use of Anatolian inspirations within more contemporary frameworks. Similarly, the Netherlands-based Altın Gün reimagines Turkish folk songs within a funky, psychedelic rock context. Where Altın Gün revisits the 1970s Anatolian pop repertoire, Gevende composes original material that merges a swirl of local idioms and broader influences. (For the record, “gevende” in Kurdish means “wedding musician,” a little cultural nugget tying them again to the region.) All told, Gevende’s music often feels like a sumptuous world tour without the hassle of booking flights. From: https://www.turquazz.com/anatolian-alchemy-how-gevende-turns-folk-dust-into-sonic-gold/
Edie Brickell & New Bohemians - She
Perhaps I’m in the minority here, but I’m of the opinion that the clichéd phrase “one-hit wonder” is an overused and easily abused phrase, one far too often assigned to artists who are undeserving of such a dubious qualifier. It’s also emblematic of the average music consumer’s (and more than a few journalists’) lazy complacency in seeking out the fuller breadth of artists’ discographies, beyond what they’ve been force-fed, spin after spin after spin, on the radio or, at least back in the day, MTV.
Unfortunately, too many artists’ recording careers haven’t received the recognition and appreciation they arguably deserve because of this one-hit-wonder engendered myopia. A prime example is Edie Brickell, who, with her Dallas-bred band New Bohemians, struck gold back in late 1988 with their lyrically and sonically unconventional debut single “What I Am.” The album from which it came, Shooting Rubberbands at the Stars, received plenty of critical applause on its way to reaching double-platinum commercial heights, largely as a result of its ubiquitous single’s warm reception.
However, three-and-a-half decades later, Brickell and her bandmates (drummer Brandon Aly, percussionist John Bush, bass guitarist Brad Houser—who passed away last month at the age of 62—and guitarist Kenny Withrow) are still rigidly associated with that one song by far too many folks. But for those of us who weren’t merely satisfied with “What I Am” and instead used it as fodder to dig deeper into the group’s debut album—and subsequent recordings including 1990’s excellent Ghost of a Dog and 2006’s Stranger Things, as well as Brickell’s solo fare (1994’s Picture Perfect Morning, 2003’s Volcano, and 2011’s eponymous Edie Brickell)—the rewards have been plentiful. From: https://albumism.com/features/edie-brickell-and-new-bohemians-shooting-rubberbands-at-the-stars-album-anniversary
Federal Charm - Gotta Give It Up
Soulful, aggressive, yet direct and controlled – Federal Charm erupted onto the blues rock scene in 2011. Originally a duo, when Nick Bowden and Paul Bowe hit the studio they expanded into a four-piece tour de force. Relying heavily on thick, dirty guitar riffs and fast rhythms, the cathartic energy on Federal Charm’s self-titled debut feels uncontainable.
The four-piece sound like they learned at the knees of the likes of Led Zeppelin or Free, but with a modern sensibility that demands attention. Nick Bowden’s vocals sound eerily like Owen Thomas of The Elms, having a certain a dynamic, young quality. Some of Federal Charm’s best moments come from the way the vocal takes stand out against multiple guitar layers and pulsing, constant beat. Nick Bowden and Paul Bowe’s guitar play almost battle each other at times, contrasting dirtier grunge-type guitar play with technical speed work. Occasionally Bowe’s instrument lets loose with high-pitched squealing textures, making for an effect that sounds as though he’s channelling Joey Santiago.
The lead-off single, “There’s a Light,” captures southern rock in a frenzy of fast guitar riffs and quick, manic drumming, and the album opener “Gotta Give it Up” alternates a similar formula with a slower, body-rocking progression. Anytime the speed-riff card is pulled, Federal Charm screams its allegiance to the blues and classic rock groups of the seventies. The foursome can draw influence from their contemporaries as well. Structurally, “Somebody Help Me” sounds not unlike something that could be found on a Black Keys or Cold War Kids record were it not for the ever-persistent pulse of Federal Charm’s explosive guitar work.
Amidst all the noise and energy, Federal Charm still takes time to show off their knack for traditional bluesman song construction on the slow jam cover “Reconsider” (perhaps Bowden’s most vocally demanding track), even if the track is periodically interrupted with heavier guitar riffs and on one occasion a time change. If anything, this goes to highlight Federal Charm’s restlessness – the group toys with an idea briefly and, as though quickly growing bored of it, moves on to something new. Nothing on Federal Charm has been given enough time to become old or cliché. This is the type of record to keep in your car stereo on repeat. From: https://bluesrockreview.com/2013/08/federal-charm-federal-charm-review.html
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