Saturday, January 3, 2026

BraAgas - Live Sur Jahan 2017


The all female group of four called BraAgas has recorded their third studio album Tapas. Songs from the whole of Europe originally dating back to anywhere within a thousand years time span are interpreted by the ladies on the Tapas album in a very modern way. And they do it with such energy and noticeable polyphony singing that you feel like you have just traveled the entire continent in forty seven minutes. And because the name Tapas is not there just for kicks, the tidbits awaiting you while listening are served from Spanish, Balkan, Nordic and Italian sources…..thirteen selected music tidbits altogether.  
If you looked up any previous mentions about this group, they wouldn’t be that old.  The girl quartet started up in the beginning of 2007 after the split-up of the band Psalteria. Previous reviews are also little confusing regarding the genre because the two previous albums recorded by BraAgas are totally different from the current album Tapas. “The first album called No.1 was a mix of everything – medieval and folk songs as well; the second one called No.2 - Media Aetas was purely medieval and the album Tapas has nothing to do with ‘medieval times’. It’s an album containing songs which we have discovered and adapted and also those few ‘hits’ which we’ve taken the liberty to modify; those that listeners of world music will definitely recognize.“ And since the ladies are mostly playing ethnic instruments and historic replicas, many guests were helping them in the studio and there were also some electronic recordings. Thanks to those a new modern sound was developed in the production of David Göttlich and Petr Koláček who supported the modern sound of the recordings. The album Tapas helps to bring this music and beautiful songs closer to today’s generations using also the medieval songs that are delivered to untouched listeners. 
The ladies from BraAgas are not exactly beginners; they have been playing for a long time now. There were the already mentioned Psalteria before BraAgas and it’s not the only base BraAgas are building on. “It’s little similar for the listeners because the front woman, the all female group and the repertory genre has stayed the same. Our experiences from other bands have merged here – for me and Karla it was the Psalteria band, for Beta it was Gothart. Michaela had been sometimes the guest in different groups (e.g. Krless) before BraAgas originated,” says Katka Göttlich. The fact that the band was since the very beginning formed by professional musicians has helped them to record the album immediately and to start touring. Live playing is one of those things BraAgas can do really well. That’s why the CD Tapas is the result of their live concert art. The band won the music competition Česká spořitelna Colours Talents this June at Indies Scope Festival organized by Indies Scope Records and the Colours of Ostrava Festival supported by Česká spořitelna and the recording of an album was part of this prize.  From: https://www.indies.eu/us/alba/360/tapas/  


Thank You Scientist - Matrix 4 Leaked


Progressive music genre blenders Thank You Scientist has shared a “Matrix” inspired music video for their song “Soul Diver.” The video lampoons The Matrix right as Matrix Resurrections is in movie theaters. Ahead of the official Matrix 4 movie release,  the band “leaked” the film in their newest music video. Complete with virtual reality and sword fights, the video is directed by and stars longtime TYS collaborator, Richie Brown. The track comes from their recent EP Plague Accommodations. Written and recorded in quarantine and released in November 2021, the 4-track EP is the highly-anticipated follow-up to 2019’s Terraformer. As the first release under their own new label, Flying Jangus Records, Plague Accommodations marks a new, autonomous chapter for the group, and makes their music more widely available. The track features TYS bandleader and guitarist, Tom Monda, alongside bandmates Salvatore Marrano (vocals), Ben Karas (violin), Cody McCorry (bass), Joe Gullace (trumpet), and is the last recorded project to feature Faye Fadem (drums) and Sam Greenfield (saxophone).  From: https://ghostcultmag.com/thank-you-scientist-shares-a-new-matrix-inspired-video-for-soul-diver/


Venus Hum - Soul Sloshing


I know exactly what this song means. At first having listened to it on YouTube a few times, I thought it was a fun little ditty about having sex, what with a catchy infectious techno beat because of "soul sloshing" seemed to imply mixing of two lovers souls and how they intertwine after intercourse. For example I thought: Did I forget to mention I'm the center of attention - I thought clearly pointing at the vagina and how we men focus on that. Sweet is my surprise - meaning sex is a totally fun thing, ...but boy was this so superficial! I so totally wrong on this! Here's the real meaning of the song, and I was totally stunned at the depth of it:

Indulging inaccuracy I'm picking apart my friend Lizzie Throw another word on me and watch me hurl it back

This means, at risk of sounding wrong to others who defend her, Lizzie has been an antagonizing me and we have had words...which have been exchanged on both sides that have been hurtful.

I know you! (I swear I do) You're just like me- You're sipping a cup of pity Aw!

This is the author of the song stating how Lizzie has drawn us into her circle of deceit and falsehood by claiming some similarity in shared experiences when in reality, there is none.

Did I forget to mention I'm the centre of attention In my universe my pain's my pension I know you! (I swear I do) You're just like me-You're sipping a cup of dreams Yeah!

These lines mean the author is in constant pain for the psychic hurt Lizzie has caused. Repeating Lizzie's lines of "I know you" I swear I do, which is falsely attempting to draw me in for her own loving to see someone else's hurt as her own amusement, all focus is on me (as the author) and I can think of nothing else but the suffering Lizzie caused me and the loss of good dreams I once had.

Soul sloshing-don't shush me Just listen to me -pretty little kitty in the sky The bass of my laughter-my gut is the speaker Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Sweet is my surprise!

If the soul is truly immortal, then don't make me be quiet about its immortality or even reincarnation. Listen to me. (Pretty little kitty means perhaps even your beautiful pussy in disguise, Lizzie, which you used to draw me in literally). My bass of my laughter is really the basis of my laughter as I come out of the psychic pain. My gut is the speaker, from my depths of my soul, I will seek revenge, and my retribution.

Self involved security, yet you are such a part of me And somehow what we do seeps into me, seeps into you It's subtle-it's creepy knees It's condescension versus humility

These lines mean I know I need to protect myself from you Lizzie even though our relationship was so deep, that it creeps into our lives like on hands and knees, it affects both of our lives subtly, it's insidious. Your condescension, Your schadenfreude (enjoyment of pain at my cost) Lizzie, that you used to embarrass me to others and to myself is at odds by humble nature. It won't wash, it does not work, and it's not true.

My pain's my pension. Meaning, I'll have this pain long after this relationship is over, and past the point of when I'm old.

Soul sloshing-don't shush me Just listen to me -pretty little kitty in the sky The bass of my laughter-my gut is the speaker Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Sweet is my surprise!

Meaning once again, retribution is mine, and I'll get you back. Total different from my first take on the song.

From: https://songmeanings.com/songs/view/3530822107858513291/ 

Sonia Dada - You Ain't Thinking About Me


Sonia Dada, an eclectic, exciting genre-bending rock & roll group, was born in the spring of 1990. Like their labelmates the Freddy Jones Band, they are based in Chicago. The members take their songwriting inspiration from their experiences in that city as well as on the road. One day in 1990, songwriter-guitarist Dan Pritzker got off a subway train and heard the three-part harmonies of Michael Scott, Paris Delane, and Sam Hogan. Pritzker had already been working with a group that consisted of his longtime friends -- guitarist Dave Resnik, drummer Hank Guaglianone, and bassist Erik Scott. The three singers joined the quartet, and Sonia Dada had a new lineup: Paris Delane, Sam Hogan, and Michael Scott on vocals, plus the original four. Shortly after they began rehearsing in earnest, they added keyboardist Chris "Hambone" Cameron.
 The band has released two albums for Capricorn, Sonia Dada, (1995), their self-titled debut (originally released on Chameleon/Elektra Records) exceeded 100,000 in sales and spurred a minor radio hit, "You Don't Treat Me No Good.'' A Day at the Beach, their follow-up, was released in March, 1995.
The group's intoxicating blend of blues-rock, rhythm & blues, and soul music won them fans in faraway places like Australia, and led to the international touring schedule they now maintain. When the group toured Australia, they sold out all 19 concert dates, and in 1994, they opened 40 shows for Traffic while headlining some large clubs and theaters around the U.S. Songs like "Deliver Me" and "We Treat Each Other Cruel'' are soul-gospel-rock celebrations that feature creative arranging and the messages that appeal to the audience for adult rock radio.
 The songs on Day at the Beach continue the band's genre-fusing traditions, with tracks like "Lay My Body Down'' recalling the gospel-rock mix of their debut record, and the single from the album, "Screaming John'' showcasing a memorable melody, good harmonies, and crafty lyrics. On their second album, the band continues the grooves laid down on its first record, adding funkier rhythms and melodies.  From: https://www.allmusic.com/artist/sonia-dada-mn0000032719#biography


Solstice - Light Up - Live Grand Chapel Studios


I'm not really sure what there is left to say about one of our most iconic and unique progressive rock bands, as for more than 40 years they have been following their own path, guided as always by guitarist Andy Glass. It is strange to think that new album 'Light Up' is following on very quickly from 'Sia", and with the same line-up, both of which are unusual for Solstice. However, the line-up has been stable for quite some time with only singer Jess Holland not appearing on 2013's 'Prophecy'. The artwork is again by Shaun Blake who painted 'Sia', and it makes sense to have the same person involved as in many ways this is a continuation of that album, except here with even more of a concentration on the vocals. Musically there is much on here which could be thought of as prog folk as opposed to the neo tag they are often given, with a depth of thought and complex arrangements which contain a great deal of space within.
A violin has always been a keen element of their sound, but here it is used sparingly so that when it comes in it has even more dramatic effect, while the same is also true of Andy's delicious guitar breaks. When he pushes himself to the fore it changes the direction and momentum of the music, while the rhythm section keeps it tight and allows him room to move. The keyboards are often quite simplistic in comparison, allowing the others to weave the melodies while they often operate as a backdrop. It is nice to see that the album is a "proper" length, i.e. it will fit on one side of TDK-90 tape (if they are still made). Back in the "old days", 45 minutes was seen as an optimal length for pressing purposes, but the advent of CDs allowed that time to move to 75 or more, meaning some bands overstretched themselves when judicious editing would have been useful, but here we have a distillation of all that is good and wonderful about Solstice. This is refined, enjoyable and pleasant music with a rougher edge when the time is right, always with the focus on the vocals.
I have been fortunate enough to have been sitting with this album for some time, and it really is delicious with wonderful arrangements which invite the listener inside to sit down and rest a while. It is one which repays repeated plays as the more one listens to it the more there is to discover with some gorgeously understated moments from all involved, all ensuring they are doing everything they can to put Jess front and centre.  From: https://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=77029

Health - Sicko


Los Angeles industrial rockers Health have dropped an intense and somewhat disturbing video for the song “Sicko.” The song is from forthcoming album Rat Wars, due out December 7. You might recognize parts of “Sicko” because it features samples of the Godflesh tune “Like Rats.”
Director Mynxii White explains: “Taking inspiration from the haunting imagery of ’90’s music videos by Godflesh, we put together a video collage of some of our own favorite obscure horror moments of the same time period in one ‘sick’ video for ‘Sicko.’ Some of my best memories are from the stranger indie movies I’d watch in the middle of the night when everyone was sleeping, and it was a lot of fun going back in time to pull moments like a ‘greatest hits’ of all those dark hours of bloody horror.”
Rat Wars was produced by Stint (Oliver Tree, Demi Lovato) and mixed by Lars Stalfors (Salem, The Neighbourhood). “Sicko” is the second single the band has released from Rat Wars; the first being the industrial metal tinged track, “Children Of Sorrow.” Rat Wars was written during the most emotionally trying period of the band’s life, the album builds on their chaotic yet re-invigorating pandemic years.  From: https://newnoisemagazine.com/news-health-release-gory-video-for-track-sicko/

Health is an American industrial/noise rock band from Los Angeles, California. The band currently consists of drummer B.J. Miller, vocalist and guitarist Jake Duzsik, and bassist and producer John Famiglietti. It formerly also included Jupiter Keyes, who left in 2015. Originating from the Los Angeles underground experimental music community, they gained prominence with a remix of "Crimewave" by Crystal Castles before releasing a self-titled album in 2007.
Since then, they have released a further five albums: Get Color in 2009, Death Magic in 2015, Vol. 4: Slaves of Fear in 2019, and Rat Wars in 2023. The band also released the collaborative double album Disco4 in 2020 and 2022, and have contributed to a variety of video game soundtracks, including those for Max Payne 3, Cyberpunk 2077, Grand Theft Auto V, and Ultrakill.
Health was founded after its singer Jake Duzsik met bassist John Famigletti, while Duzsik was working at the flagship Guitar Center in Los Angeles. They decided to form a band and enlisted guitarist Jupiter Keyes and drummer B.J. Miller, the former of which Duzsik knew from university. The band's name was chosen after the members agreed it should be an "everyday word"; when reviewing a long list of terms, "health" was the only one not taken. Their earliest work was inspired by experimentation in Los Angeles' underground music scene, with the intention of incorporating it into a more conventional band format.  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_(band)


Pretty Balanced - Romeo and Juliet


Pretty Balanced played from Nov 2004 to Feb 2010. For the last nine months of their existence, they were known as The Alphabet. They showcased a new sound that's been called piano chamber rock, rock electronica, and finally by the band, Ctrl+Alt+tronica: the amalgamation of classical instruments, primarily piano, violin, double bass, and contemporary ones- vocals, drums and plenty of electronics. The musicians were Jude Shimer (also of The Sneaky Mister), Forest Christenson (also of Solarist, formerly The Liberty Tax), and Parker Ross.
On 18 April 2009, the band announced on its site that it was no longer Pretty Balanced, but would instead be performing under the name The Alphabet. On the band's website, Shimer says "it was a long time coming; we talked about it for well over a year and finally settled on one we all really loved. one of the main beefs with "pretty balanced" was that people had a hard time remembering it (got a lot of "perfectly balance" and stuff) and also, it was a little complacent for what we've become. and as anna maria stjarnell pointed out in her review on collected sounds, "pretty balanced make an album that is anything but." she meant it as a compliment, and we took it that way. it is good to be excitingly funny-looking and terrifyingly askew."  From: https://www.last.fm/music/Pretty+Balanced/+wiki 

Birdtalker - Graveclothes


Who Are Birdtalker? 5 Things You Need to Know

Birdtalker are a Nashville-born and -bred alternative country five-piece band. The folksy group incorporates rock and a sense of mysticism into their work, boasting bold, round vocals and delicate harmonies, wrapped in a sparkling package reminiscent of early-2010s indie folk, with the spirit of a back-porch acoustic jam. With their debut album, 2018's One, out in the world and a calendar full of festival appearances booked for the summer of 2019, Birdtalker are on a roll. Read on to learn five essential facts about the group.

Members Zack and Dani Green Are Married
The Greens were six months into their marriage in 2012 when, one day, Zack was playing music and asked for advice from Dani. They quickly realized that her lyrical sensibility and knack for singing harmony made a perfect musical match with his guitar-picking and singing. Though neither had previously played in a real band, they slowly decided to give it a chance (but it did take a while, and some convincing from their other bandmates, who came along later).

They're All From Nashville ... and They're All Friends
All five members of Birdtalker hail from Music City and still reside there. Zack Green attended Lipscomb University with drummer Andy Hubright, guitarist and mandolin player Brian Seligman and bassist Jesse Baker, and their tight friendship makes their music even better: They all shine with independent contributions, but create a greater overall sound when they come together.

Their Songs Are Wolves in Sheep's Clothing
Many of Birdtalker's songs have an airy Americana feel. While embracing elements of garage rock and staying true to their folk roots, the lyrical content is thought-provoking and inquisitive. They tinker with the meaning of religion in songs such as "Outside the Lines" and question universal meaning and domesticity in others -- not your typical country commentary. Birdtalker make joyful music with a moody twist (if you're listening closely).

They Picked Up a Band Member While Playing Shakespeare in the Park
On a sunny afternoon in August, after deciding to give the live performance thing a try, Seligman, a friend from college, hopped onstage with the Greens and Hubright. He melded his mandolin into the group's developing sound, and he's been a member of Birdtalker ever since.

Their Debut Single Kinda Went Viral
Before they released their debut record, One, in 2018, Birdtalker caught the attention of the world with their track "Heavy." Released independently as their debut single in 2016, it quickly accumulated over 24 million streams; now at 36 million listens, it's been covered by legions of fans on social media, and given them a national fan base. Last September, the group released a video for the song that features Nashville ballet dancers, a stunning visual complement.

From: https://theboot.com/who-are-birdtalker/

Dead Sara - Something Good


GENRE IS DEAD: Before Dead Sara released “Hands Up” last year, it felt like we hadn’t heard from the band in a while. Temporary Things Taking Space came out in 2018 and you embarked on a tour that same year. Take me through what happened from there leading up to Ain’t It Tragic.

Emily Armstrong: Well at that point, we had a very shitty manager, I’ll say that, and I’m not usually one to blame other people for our misfortunes. It was a time where we were regathering everything and doing what we thought we needed to do, but it kind of steered in the wrong direction. We just needed to figure out what exactly we were. We had to get rid of bad management and regroup and do an album. Do something from the ground up that we absolutely love. So, we went back to Noah Shain, he did our first two albums, and Warner was interested in taking us, so we kind of got a second chance, which reinvigorated us into making something we thought was great and genuine.
And that kind of thing takes time – getting people on board and getting in the studio. We were ready to go in the studio. We were at that point where we were rehearsing, rehearsing, rehearsing and we had songs Warner liked. Cool, now we can go on tour. Then the pandemic happened. We were like fuck what are we gonna do? At that point, everyone was like go in and record in your rehearsal space. We were stoked about having so much control to do what we wanted to do and what we wanted to sound like but also not really knowing how to do it so that took a lot of time. Watching YouTube tutorials on certain microphones and Warner getting us whatever we needed in order to get things rolling and stuff. Then we got going on that. We set up a studio in our rehearsal space and recorded. It was trial and error.

GID: What was recording like once the lockdown was in place?

EA: Noah wasn’t really in the room with us anymore. We did FaceTime but by the end, we were in such a rhythm we already figured out how to do things by ourselves, you know? So, there was a very big momentum shift in our confidence. Instead of depending on other people, it was like opening ourselves up and really taking a hard look at the album and being really honest with what it sounded like or what it was and what we wanted people to hear. Not letting any outside [feedback] getting in. That’s why it took so long.

GID: Listening to the album it sounds like a rebirth for Dead Sara, which is what the 2018 EP was supposed to be. The new album has that raw, rock sound the band is known for, but it also sees you guys branching out and trying new things that take you by surprise. One song that stood out was “Hypnotic.” It’s got this undeniable swagger, yet it’s very real with that line “I’m self-conscious.” It has that confidence but also reveals that layer of insecurity everyone has.

EA: Yeah exactly! That’s exactly what that is. Anxiety will eat you up and will take place of that confidence. That’s the world we live in right now. It’s looking at social media where you’re like fuck I’m not that pretty. I’m self-conscious, but hey, here I am! Fuck everything! That’s at the end where it’s like I don’t give a shit. I’m gonna live my life basically.

GID: Exactly! And with the pandemic, it’s easy to lean into that anxiety. Think about everyone talking about the bread they made, or the new skills that they picked up and you’re thinking I’m so depressed I can’t do anything.

EA: God yeah. Totally. I mean originally, it had a different jokier side to it. And then we asked what is this song? So, we practiced and made it into what it is now, like oh no I’m self-conscious but I’m also a fucking goddess. I got my fucking swagger. I’m on top of the world! That was cracked during the pandemic, but then there’s “Uninspired” which was written when I was in that depressed state of I don’t feel like anything’s gonna get better. That’s a weird position to be in where you’re like there’s something wrong with the world and you don’t want it to be this bad. I remember [drummer/programmer] Sean [Friday] was sitting at the boards and I just started singing “I’m uninspired by pretty boys in rock n roll bands.” I was being a little facetious and also being a little depressed It’s like how comedians always say dark things but it’s funny. That was really born from the idea of oh you’re so inspired! Why don’t you learn a new language? You can be all this kind of stuff and I’m like no. I’m not inspired. How about I sing a song about not being inspired instead of thinking what inspires me because it’s fucking nothing right now!
This world is dying! Will this be the future of our civilization? You start to really think that way. It gets very meta. So that song is very important. It’s just so real, you know? This shit is happening right now. That was the newest song we did because a lot of the songs were demos from a long time ago and when I say demo it’s like a shell. It had maybe a guitar riff, some idea of a song and a verse. Then we reworked the chords for every fucking song, added all this kind of stuff, wrote new lyrics and stuff like that. But we had to have this pandemic in order to do that. I hate to say that but like we were in there six days a week – Sean and I. Sean took over production a lot on this album. So, it was us two against the world. Obviously, [guitarist] Siouxsie [Medley] would be in there too; she takes care of a lot of her side as well, so we have a great dynamic. We also figured that out more because you kind of shift a lot as a group, figure out what’s working, and keep doing that.

From: https://genreisdead.com/interview-dead-sara-emily-armstrong/

Bob Weir - Ace - Full album


Some refer to him as “The Other One.” That’s not exactly a term of endearment or a ringing endorsement. In the Grateful Dead, nobody would ever rate Bob Weir above Jerry Garcia. Garcia always considered every member of the band equal, and the outfit a truly democratic collaboration. But that was just Jerry showing off his humility. 
The Grateful Dead was indeed like a super group all unto itself with the talent it amassed, certified by how bassist Phil Lesh, percussionist Mickey Hart, and rhythm guitarist, songwriter, and secondary frontman Bob Weir were all able to launch solo careers both during Jerry Garcia’s time on Earth, and after. But Bob Weir was regarded more like a reliable relief pitcher when the Grateful Dead took the stage as opposed to the feature act. 
It was Bob Weir’s ability to be selfless and subordinate to Jerry that made the chemistry of the Grateful Dead so legendary. Once a student of Garcia, Bob Weir specifically tooled his rhythm guitar style to Jerry’s natural form of playing. And even though he wasn’t as prolific, and his songs were probably more hit and miss, Bob Weir also contributed some of the most critically important songs to the Grateful Dead canon. 
Enter Bob Weir’s 1972 solo release called Ace, which was facilitated by the band’s record deal that allowed multiple Grateful Dead members to release solo albums under the band’s umbrella. Just like Jerry’s solo album Garcia from the same time period, Ace not only seeded the Grateful Dead’s legendary live shows with some important cuts, it deserves to be in the conversation for one of the band’s best studio efforts. With some exceptions, the album was the Grateful Dead band backing Bob Weir. 
The Grateful Dead played a very important role in the transition of California music from psychedelia to country rock, facilitated by Jerry Garcia’s studious knowledge of old-time string music and his steel guitar capabilities. The band’s early ’70s albums like Workingman’s Dead, American Beauty, and the aforementioned Garcia easily hold up against many of the Nashville country releases of the era. 
But Ace is not really that type of animal. There’s a lot of variety within the eight tracks, but it’s best described as maybe folk and blues-inspired rock. The album is unique in the Grateful Dead catalog for utilizing horns in the recording session, but unlike most Grateful Dead records, Ace doesn’t lend to some bold sonic expression or shift. Yet the album is also slyly and understatedly excellent, evidenced by how we’re still talking about it 50 years later, and it’s been awarded a 50th Anniversary Edition.
“Playing in the Band” with its extended jam on the end, the border town-inspired “Mexicali Blues” with its superb chorus, and the most up-tempo song in the entire Grateful Dead repertoire, “One More Saturday Night,” all come from this album, even if they were featured live before it. “Greatest Story Ever Told” didn’t get as much set list recognition in its day, but it has since been exposed as a defining Bob Weir track, helped in part by its championing by Tyler Childers. 
Even the deeper cuts from the album are worth your attention though. Few regard Bob Weir as some amazing singer. Since he didn’t have an especially unique or eloquent voice, he’d sometimes resort to shouting to get emotion across. Similar to his guitar playing, Bob Weir was at his best supplying harmonies to Jerry Garcia. But Bob’s performance of the heartbroken “Looks Like Rain” on this album is pretty spectacular, and finds Weir’s vocal sweet spot. 
“Cassidy” is also a song not to overlook. Bob Weir was good friends with beatnik icon Neal Cassady. Cassady was like a big brother to Bob, and when he died in 1968, it affected Bob Weir greatly. You also can’t mention the songs of this album without mentioning Bob’s collaborative songwriters. John Perry Barlow was to Bob Weir what Robert Hunter was to Jerry Garcia. Barlow’s work is all over Ace. Robert Hunter and Mickey Hart also contribute on multiple songs.
Beyond Ace, Bob Weir was responsible for some other important Grateful Dead songs like “Sugar Magnolia” and the “Weather Report Suite,” but Ace has really revealed itself as his master work.  From: https://savingcountrymusic.com/vintage-album-review-bob-weirs-ace-50th-anniversary-edition/

Polecat Creek - Surry County's Burning


Polecat Creek is a folk band based in North Carolina. It was formed in the mid-1990s by Kari Sickenberger and Laurelyn Dossett, after they met at a book club in Greensboro, NC. They have released three CDs: Salt Sea Bound (2002), Leaving Eden (2004), and Ordinary Seasons (2007).
Polecat Creek won the neo-traditional contest at the 2006 Appalachian String Band Festival. Dossett won the Chris Austin Songwriting Contest at MerleFest in 2004 in the gospel category. The group has performed with Garrison Keillor and played various festivals — including MerleFest, City Stages (Birmingham, Alabama), First Night Raleigh, FloydFest, and Shakori Hills, as well as concerts and harmony workshops around the Southeast. They are frequently joined in concert by Riley Baugus on banjo and guitar and Natalya Weinstein on fiddle.  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polecat_Creek_(band)

XTC - Beating of Hearts


Todd Bernhardt: Let's start off by talking about the history of this song. This is one of the last, if not the last, songs that Terry drummed on.

Andy Partridge: That's right. It was a pair that we did as a kind of audition for Steve Nye, the engineer, and also auditioning Genetic Studios, which belonged to Martin Rushent, the producer who produced "Are You Receiving Me?" He had his own studio complex, up in the woods in Reading. He must have bought these buildings off the army or something -- they were these weird bunkers up in the woods.
So, it was like, "Okay, let see what these studios are like -- it might be good to do the album there -- and we'll also do two tracks, because Virgin are talking about a double A-side single." That means they can't decide, and they don't want to upset the songwriters. [laughs]

TB: Talk a little bit about your relationship with Virgin at this time, because this was right after you'd said, "No more."

AP: It was not in a good place. It went very bad from '82 until the late '80s. It was going way down the slippery slopes, because we were getting ready, with the Mummer album, to make the album that would sell almost the least of our career, I think.

TB: Really? I thought The Big Express held that dubious distinction.

AP: I'm not sure. I think it's [laughs] kind of a photo finish! Or no, it wouldn't even be that fast, it'd be a linocut finish with these two poor-selling albums. I think they've sold a lot more since, but at the time, they probably sold about 30,000 or something each, and I think Virgin were very upset, because they wanted mega-millions.

TB: And you were poised for world domination after English Settlement...

AP: Well, we were certainly poised for English domination, because the English Settlement album had been Top 5, and the single was Number 10 -- that's the highest we've actually been in the English charts, disgraceful to say. Until Top of the Pops finished on television, I'd always watch it and see what was at Number 10, because that was supposedly culturally comparable to where we were! God, that's a shock -- some of the shit you've got to share your number in the charts with. So we were trying out Steve Nye, because we liked the sound of the Tin Drum album -- I didn't like the singing; I actually found it slightly comical, to be honest. It was sort of like somebody taking the piss out of Bryan Ferry. But I love the actual sound of the record -- it was beautifully recorded.

TB: So that's how you hooked up with him -- it was you being proactive?

AP: I think somebody at Virgin gave us the Tin Drum album. "Oh here, try this band, you might like them." Because you used to walk into their offices, and they'd give you stuff.

TB: Right. And then charge the artists for it.

AP: [laughs] Or charge us! We'd be looking for beer in the fridges of the A&R people, or something like that, and they'd be foisting these albums on us that we didn't particularly want. So they gave me this, and I kind of liked it song-wise, but I really, really liked the sound of it. So, it was a case of "Let's try the potential of a double A-side single, and let's try Steve Nye, and let's try Genetic Studios." It was kind of a gamble, which didn't start very well, because on the first day of the session, I think Steve Nye turned up about 4:00 in the afternoon, and I think we'd been there since about 10:00 in the morning. I did not feel kindly to him when he walked through the door, and was just like, "Alright lads?" It was a matter of, "Where have you been?" He'd failed test number one, which in my book is punctuality.

TB: The engineers, presumably, had been there?

AP: Well, the in-house person from Genetic Studios was racing around trying to get a load of microphones ready, not knowing which ones the Steve Nye would want to use...

TB: Oh, so it's not even like you were filling the time getting a sound or anything?

AP: No! I think we were just sort of jamming, and messing around and saying, "Where the fuck is he?" He arrived very late, and that was a bad start to me. And I think it was kind of an omen about his personality. He's a wonderful engineer, but he's possibly the grumpiest person we've ever worked with. We did choose to work with him. He did pass the audition purely on the beauty of his recorded sounds, but he was tricky to work with.

TB: I think that, for a 1980s album, Mummer has aged quite well, because of its overall sound.

AP: That's because, apart from rather subtle synthesizers, there's nothing too artificial on it. I mean there's probably more synthesizer on the Abbey Road album than there is on Mummer! But that's Steve Nye. When he records things, they are very subtle and they do have a quality. Even when he records fake things, synthetic things, they do seem to have an analog beauty, or almost a living, breathing kind of quality. That's an amazing talent, you know? But you'd work with him, and arrive at, say, 10 in the morning, and he'd be hunched over the mixing desk putting a mix together or getting some stuff ready, and it'd be hours before he'd talk to you! He wouldn't even say good morning. It might be two or three hours had passed before he'd say [grunts].

TB: When you've talked about the role of the producer, you've emphasized how important it is for them to have strong interpersonal skills.

AP: Oh, they're midwives! They have to have a great bedside manner, and if they don't, you're thinking, "Well, I don't want to pop my baby out for you to pull it! You're not going to put your hands around the head of my baby! Get me someone else." But Steve Nye is as grumpy and tricky an individual to get on with as he is marvelous as an engineer. His engineering is truly beautiful. Really platinum-quality recording. I mean, things like the drums on "Ladybird" are just totally three-dimensional. That's how to record a kit, you know?

TB: Even the drums on this song are quite focused and nice. Is there anything that you remember particularly about recording the part? The toms are very tuned.

AP: I think Terry was probably bullied by Steve Nye into tuning them up. I realize now the importance of well-tuned drums. I mean, after you've worked with people like Dave Mattacks and Chuck Sabo, people whose kits are so beautifully tuned that they sound musical when get played, and you think, "Oh, that's a delight to your ears!", you appreciate it. But Terry wasn't like that. I don't think he particularly tuned his drums. As long as they felt kind of tight enough, but there wasn't any particular thing he did. I don't remember his drums sounding particularly musical -- if anything, they sounded kind of box-like. They did sound musical when he played them, though. But the idea for the drums for "Beating of Hearts" was based on a kind of buoyant Indian rhythm. You know, [sings] boom-badap-bom, boom-badap-bom, boom. I don't think Terry actually plays it as buoyantly as I would have liked. He doesn't quite put those accents in the sort of micro-meter place that gives them the buoyancy that beat has when Indian drummers play it.

TB: You were talking about how this has kind of an Indian rhythm -- what prompted you do that? Was this the backbone that you built the song from?

AP: Well, I always wanted to do something with that buoyant, bobbing rhythm, but the whole song really came from the guitar tuning. I'd read somewhere that The Glitter Band had got the sound on their guitars by tuning every string to the same note, which they then played through a distortion pedal with a bottleneck. So, instead of chords, you had six notes [chuckles] sort of overdubbed simultaneously, if you see what I mean. I thought, "Well, that's a fantastic sound! I wonder what it's like to mess around with." So I just tried it -- I tried tuning every string to the note of E. I'd heard that they tuned to the note of A, but I thought I'd try it with E. So, I was dragging the plectrum across the strings, and it sort of made a rhythm as you played -- drrrr-lang, drrrr-lang. Because it was all the same note.

TB: Right, but slightly different timbres, because you have different weights of strings.

AP: Different weights and thicknesses of strings, yeah. And then you just throw your hand on, in a straight barre, and you're playing -- well, not quite chords, because at best they can only be octaves of each other. So, they're not chords, and they’re not single notes, what are they? They're something else. I was just moving my finger around in a straight barre on the guitar [sings "Beating of Hearts" guitar pattern], and very soon a song came out. That almost chime-like, or bell-like, guitar pattern suggested ethnic instruments to me -- certainly somewhere east of Dover, like India, or the Middle East, or maybe the Balkans or something. And I thought, "Well, if the song is growing the way it's coming out now, we'd have to make the drums fit with that as well." Then, in the studio, we had the Prophet imitate -- I don't think we knew about sampling at the time, and there was no way to play samples on a keyboard, I don't think -- a kind of orchestral bowed bass and/or cello thing, and we knocked up an accordion patch. I would actually do that -- I would take the Prophet 5 home, and sit there and build things I knew I might want in the future. It was like a hobby, you know? "Hey, let's see if I can make an accordion!" So, we fleshed out the east-of-Ipswitch [chuckles] sound, with our fake instruments, Terry doing his curry-flavored best on the drums, and Dave and I, with these jousting, six-stringed, one-note guitars.

TB: I remember reading that one of the ways you got the distinctive sound of the guitars on this song is that you played electric guitars but you mic'd them, and played them as if they were acoustic.

AP: That's right. We did that a lot -- the first time we did it was "Pulsing Pulsing", and I really liked it. I could hear it at home, because I'd have an open mic on a cassette machine or something, and would be just strumming an electric, and I thought, "I like the acoustic quality of when you get the mic near the guitar -- you get these super highs that don't go down the pickups." So, we did that from "Pulsing Pulsing," which was Drums and Wires time, onwards. It's all over English Settlement, and from then on, really. It's even on Wasp Star.

TB: But on most other songs you'd just use it as a type of sound reinforcement, right? Whereas on this one it's very prominent.

AP: It's prominent, yeah. Usually, we'd have the electric signal go out to the DI and/or an effect or amp somewhere, and then we'd put a mic about a half-inch away from the strings, so you had to sit very close and not move, you know? Then it would capture those super-highs, and you'd blend them in with however you'd process the electric side of the signal, and you either have that as one sound, or you split them across the stereo. You'd have, say, the acoustic side to the left, and the electric, treated side to the right. A great example of that is "I'm the Man Who Murdered Love." You listen to the rhythm guitar, and it's an electric guitar done in that way. It seems to play across your head, because you have the acoustic side of the electric on one side, and the treated side of the electric on the other. So, the guitars on "Beating of Hearts" -- Dave's playing a 12-string, I think...

TB: [chuckling] And all 12 were tuned to E?

AP: Tuned to E, yeah. He may contradict me, if you talk to him, but I think it was a 12-string. But we mic'd it up and blended it with the electric side of it, and the same with my guitar.

TB: You were playing the Ibanez on this?

AP: I think so. I'd say the acoustic side of it is heavier in the mix. Because it sounds very thin and brittle. But I love that sound, actually.

TB: Let's talk about the lyrics a little bit. When in the process did the lyrics come in?

AP: I can't remember how the musical side suggested the lyrical side. I'm guessing it would have been the kind of -- now, this is really corny, but I'm going to have to say it -- it's probably that, for me, the Indian-type sound equals 1967 or '68, which means love, and that led to the whole thing about the heart being the strongest rhythm -- the human heart being the most powerful thing. It really is one of those rather corny, "there's nothing greater than the power of the human heart"-type songs. So, like I was saying, it's kind of tricky for me to come up with anything to say about it, other than it's made up of descriptions of the power of emotion -- human emotion and love, good; war and war equipment, bad.

TB: Why did you build the lyrics around the whole concept of sound and loudness?

AP: I guess it's the thing of, however loud you can think of these loud war noises -- explosions, rifles, screaming war lords, tanks, bombers -- you know, the most awful sounds that man can make, probably topped off with an atom bomb -- sure, they can blow people to bits, but human emotion and the human heart makes a subtle, very quiet noise that is stronger than all of those.

TB: So, the difference is inside versus outside.

AP: It's inside versus outside, it's the beating of this little motor that keeps you alive, and helps you make decisions for good, and make decisions not to kill, and not to destroy. It's far more powerful. I guess I'm just a soppy old pacifist at heart.

TB: The lyrics are full of idealism, but the music is kind of dark.

AP: The music's dark, and some of the sentiments -- certainly those that describes some of the negative aspects of human behavior in there -- are rather dark...

TB: "Tanks on the highway" is a pretty grim image...

AP: Yeah, that, and "bombers in flight" -- that sort of thing.

TB: Let's talk about the vocals a bit.

AP: You know the bit that goes "buoya-dada, buoya-dada, buoya-dada"? The bit that sounds like a Popeye vinyl record stuck in a groove? That came from a TV program I saw, where I saw this Indian tabla player explain that they have to learn to sing all the patterns they play during the kind of classical regimen they go through to learn the instrument. You know, "dah-dah dikki-dah dikki-dah dikki-di dahdahdah." That sort of thing. So that was my intent on that part -- to sound like a tabla teacher. I don't think I pulled it off -- like I say, it's more like broken vinyl Popeye.

From: http://chalkhills.org/articles/XTCFans20080428.html 

The Nields - Jeremy Newborn Street


The Nields demonstrate that roots, like gold, are where you find them. More so than on previous albums, The Nields' roots are heard to burrow into the Seventies, with further tendrils extending to the bright sounds of Sixties bubblegum and the pop of the British Invasion, including some later Beatles. Such an explicit homage in no way obscures the signature Nields sensibility, upbeat even in life-story adversity, effacing the crisp sound of their twangy folk-rock abetted by guest musicians such as the Kennedys, or muting the often chilling vocal harmonies of the Nields sisters, Nerissa and Katryna.
"Jeremy Newborn Street" is energetic, bouncy, and coy, its recorder solo sounding enough like an ocarina to render some slightly Dixieland brass surprising. More mixed musical allusions await in "Wanting," including weepy strings and a "Free Bird" slide guitar, a song lyrically central to the album's theme of home; and what is home but roots? "This Town Is Wrong" approaches home more as place from which to flee, emotional lyrics and vocals depicting a young girl's strangulation by small-town expectations, lively rock advocating Barbie's escape from the dollhouse. Sometimes the world comes to you, as in "Mr. Right Now," a story of attraction and desire with lyrical directness and a trumpet fanfare that pushes it to breathlessness. There's country Nields, too, in a cover of Hank Williams' "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry," with yodeling harmonies, high and lonesome but also hopeful. There's a fair amount of experimentation on If You Lived Here You'd Be Home Now, and most is successfully and enjoyably integrated with The Nields vocal and lyrical prowess.  From: https://www.rootsworld.com/reviews/neilds.html

The Rolling Stones - Loving Cup


I’m a latecomer to Exile on Main Street. I mean….I’ve owned it since I was a kid, and listened to it a bit over the years. But I didn’t quite get the hoopla. I was more about its predecessor, Sticky Fingers. I always thought that Sticky Fingers was the perfect balance of “fuck it all” attitude and listener accessibility all wrapped into one. It captures the best of what Jagger/Richards can accomplish with their hook-writing sensibilities, and also what the band as a unit can accomplish with its eloquently messy, boozy groove.  And it’s a short, exciting, manageable listen in one setting. Songs like “Brown Sugar” and “Bitch” are irresistible numbers that swing like mad and incorporate the best of Chuck Berry and Muddy Waters while breaking new ground in the process. And “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking?” is pretty much a master class in blues/rock lead guitar and saxophone playing, the likes of which has been seldom matched in both tone and execution. This is a safe place to mine for rock chops. So I always gravitated toward this album as the leaner, slicker Exile. But Exile was always there, ominous in its size and scope, bending from the pressure of critical acclaim. I didn’t buy the hype for a long time. Then I got addicted to “Loving Cup” about three days ago. The repeats have been incessant.
As a casual listener of Exile, I was always passively aware of “Loving Cup” as a laid back, medium tempo love song that really had no discernible chorus besides the two-line catch phrase that is somewhat repetitive of the pre-chorus. It has the same sound as much of the rest of the album: elegantly sloppy musical performance; vocals thin, dry, and half-buried; bad intonation on the bass; gritty, flailing electrics; ever-present chugging acoustic guitar; horns creeping up as the song progresses, etc. But with the recent remastered release of Exile, I’ve been checking it out a lot lately as a whole. The instruments have better separation, and the vocals are up in the mix. The guitars are more articulate. And “Loving Cup” has crept up on me as a result. But what ultimately got me hooked was Nicky Hopkins’ emotive piano intro. It’s as romantic and sweet as any rock piano intro gets, yet it has a majesty about it that gives the song an aura of stately importance that clashes sweetly with the subject matter. Lyrically it’s about a scoundrel with “a face full of mud” who plays “a bad guitar” and whose “car don’t start.” But he’s addicted to a hot girl; with one sip from her metaphorical cup, his imperfections and life troubles are instantly erased by the “beautiful buzz.” Vocally, Mick Jagger is at the apex of his range, which gives the song an exciting and dangerous edge. You think he won’t hit the high notes, every time you hear it. But of course he does. And he likes to do a slurring “yaaaaaa” after particularly challenging notes, as if to say “fuck you, I hit it.” All the while Richards is behind him, executing a drug-addled version of Everly Brothers high harmonies with surprisingly accurate phrasing.
That’s been the key to the Rolling Stones’ appeal for fifty years: it sounds like they’re not trying, like anyone could pick up that guitar and bang out those grooves. But they are trying, make no mistake. Even the history behind the making of this album makes one think that it was all just a big fun jam. Rock and roll legend, and lots of books and bios, tells us that tracks for Exile were recorded at a rented mansion in the south of France called Nellcote, with the likes of Gram Parsons hanging out and doing drugs with Keith all day. Yadda yadda. The reality is often less exciting. Just because tracks were recorded there doesn’t mean that the album was completed there. And the reality is that “Loving Cup” was recorded in its entirety at Sunset Sound studios in Los Angeles, and it took several months to complete. No wonder it stands up to scrutiny and analysis. The substance here is deep. And this doesn’t come from throwing things together while wasted. These guys were intent on creating great music and myth all at once, and it worked in spades. It just takes a bit longer to find it on Exile because of the particularly ragged performances. On “Loving Cup,” Hopkins’ piano intro is an invitation into that process. The song features crafty writing, tight grooves, and an inspired vocal performance that in its imperfections contain the emotion that illuminates the spirit of the lyric perfectly.  From: https://chrisledrew.wordpress.com/2012/06/29/gimmie-little-drink-from-exile-loving-cup/ 


Friday, January 2, 2026

Sally Rogers - One I Love


Subject: RE: One I Love
From: Jean Ritchie

How/why written? A few years ago I was remembering listening to banjo-picking on Sunday afternoons - usually all boys & men sitting on a store-porch. No girls in our region played banjo then - it was considered unladylike! (Mom referred to it as a "low" instrument). One of the learnin' pieces was a simple ditty-tune that had only one chord change, hardly any melody to it, and the learner would play that little tune over and over and over, finally he or some of the other's would throw in a four-line verse, to keep him going and help set the rhythm:

Alla m'frins fl'out with me
Cause I kep y'r company,
Let'm all say what they will
Love my love with a free goodwill!

I got that fragment on my mind, and thought it was a very good bit of poetry, and kept humming it around, washing dishes, etc., and because it was such a nothing tune, I slowed it down and put my own tune onto it, and the singing of it became so satisfying I put some other verses on the make it longer and sort of tell a story. You're rightn- I did use lines and images from older songs; they seemed to work best with the tune, but other verses are my own words (at least I think so... sometimes there are things in the subconscious - there, but not really remembered). As far as I know, The "Over the mountains" verse and the "It's when I'm awake" one are completely new. Of course, all the other verses are mine also (with the exception of the first) - just using the older images and forms to string my thoughts together.

From: https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=8182

Instant Flight - She Shines


Instant Flight are a London based multi-national (Italian-Czech-Brit) band hailing from the 1960s British Psychedelic counter culture movement. Their self titled EP came out in 2001, followed by the albums "Colours & Lights" in 2004, and "Endless Journey" in 2008. The band consists of Marco Magnani (guitars and vocals), Lucie Rejchrtova (keyboards, accordion and backing vocals), Andrew Browning (bass), James Ovens (drums), and Charles Bennett (keyboards). There is a special guest appearance on the debut from Arthur Brown, a genuine legend in his own right. It is a multi-national band as Marco Magnani comes from Bologna, Italy, Lucie Rejchrtova is from Czech Republic, and other members hail from London. 
Instant Flight began when Marco played solo sets in London clubs in 1997, and then in 1999 was joined by 2 guitarists, a bassist and drummer. In 2001 Marco met Lucie Rejchrtova in the "Electric Orange", a psychedelic club, and the DJ was drummer James Ovens. Bassist Andrew Browning would join the lineup last and then they formed officially as Instant Flight. A licensed busker in the underground, Lucia's keyboard style comes from the school of blues, boogie-woogie, modern jazz, rock and funk. Arthur Brown was impressed with Lucia's style and the EP, so he asked if the band would play at his gigs. Later he would sing on the album "Colours & Lights", on "Kites" and "Freeway".  From: https://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=2240 

Indigo Girls - Chickenman / Nashville / Let It Be Me

 

Indigo Girls were one of a number of folk-rock groups taken on by major labels in the late 1980s and early 1990s following the success of the likes of Tracy Chapman and Suzanne Vega. What may have initially been viewed as a passing fad blossomed, and the ’90s arguably saw folk and crossover music being recognised in the mainstream to the greatest degree since the swinging ’60s. Indigo Girls not only flourished but thrived for three decades and are still performing and releasing new material. With appearances on major talk shows, iconic music videos and their relentless outspokenness, Amy Ray and Emily Saliers demanded from the beginning to be seen and heard.
And so they should be. Their music is at best excellent, and even the songs that don’t linger in the mind are well-crafted and feel honest. You get the distinct impression that Ray and Saliers are incapable of putting out a song they know is mediocre or filler — they just would not be able to bear it. This brings us to Rites of Passage. Released in 1992, it is their fourth album, but as their early records were released so closely together — pretty much annually — there is still the sense of a young, raw band.
The two members write almost totally separately, and a song will be known to fans as either “an Amy song” or “an Emily song”. However each usually lends her voice and guitar skills to the other’s tracks, producing gorgeous cacophonies of sound. Amy is generally the rocker, and Emily the jazzier, bluesy artist. In this album, however, both do some experimenting, with very positive results.
Amy’s Rites of Passage songs have a Celtic feel, especially ‘Three Hits’ and ‘Chickenman’. In ‘Cedar Tree’, she perhaps lays it on too thick: it’s cheesy but still pleasant on the ear. A hallmark of an accomplished artist is being able to create a parody of something that is actually also a brilliant example of the thing in question, and Amy demonstrates this with ‘Nashville’, a play on the distinctive style of country music that was popular in the titular city when Amy went to university there. She wasn’t happy and left, and the song conveys her frustration — yet she works in the harmonica, fiddle and accordion to create a piece of real beauty.
Amy’s main hit from this album was ‘Joking’, a jangly, angsty reflection of a more carefree time: “I was wide-eyed and laughing, we were dancing up to the bright side.” It is the rockiest and closest to her usual vibe, full of furious, rugged emotion. Finally, the low, intense ‘Jonas and Ezekial’ has some of her strongest writing, every line feeling important. “In the war over land where the world began, the prophecies say that’s where the world will end, but there’s a tremor growing in our own backyard…”
Emily really seems to grow on this album. In previous records she went for gentle ballads, which she handled well; here she embraces a faster pace and rhythmic style. ‘Galileo’ has a slightly bizarre premise based around reincarnation but is bouncy and moving and gave Indigo Girls one of their biggest hits. The video is brilliant. ‘Let It Be Me’ is a catchy protest song: “The darker the ages get, there’s a stronger beacon yet…”, and ‘Airplane’ is a great tune, but still it feels like it could have been more thoroughly developed.
When Emily does do ballads, she goes bigger and better: ‘Love Will Come To You’ is a ballad on an epic scale, building up into an explosion of harmonies, and ‘Virginia Woolf’ is similar. ‘Ghost’, a fan favourite, is orchestral and grand. The album’s one cover is ‘Romeo and Juliet’; while Indigo Girls have turned out better covers over the years, notably their take on Dylan’s ‘Tangled Up In Blue’, Amy’s take here on the Dire Straits classic is nonetheless striking, with a tenderness and a quiet passion.  From: https://mancunion.com/2017/01/30/record-reappraisal-indigo-girls-rites-of-passage/

Head East - Never Been Any Reason


"Never Been Any Reason" was written by Mike Somerville, who was the band's lead guitarist from 1973-1980, and again from 1994-2003. The song is about a guy who returns home - possibly from a tour - and has it out with his woman.
The band formed in southern Illinois in 1969 but went through a number of member changes before arriving at their core lineup in 1973. They honed their craft playing colleges and clubs in the midwest, which is where they developed "Never Been Any Reason." According to lead singer John Schlitt, they would sometimes introduce it as a song by Three Dog Night because club owners didn't want them playing original songs.
This song, along with the rest of Head East's debut album, was recorded at Golden Voice Recording, a tiny studio in Mike Somerville's hometown of South Pekin, Illinois. Instead of making a demo and pitching it to record companies, they just made the Flat As A Pancake album and released it independently on their own Pyramid Records label in 1974. They produced it themselves, keeping it simple and faithful to the arrangements they honed from playing the songs on the road.
When they were done recording, they had 2,000 vinyl copies pressed and sent one to every radio station and promoter in the area they thought might be interested. They ploy worked; "Never Been Any Reason" earned airplay on KSHE in St. Louis and Y-102 in Kansas City, leading to a deal with A&M Records, who signed the band and re-released the album in June 1975. 
Head East charted higher with their next single, "Love Me Tonight," but "Never Been Any Reason" is by far their most popular song, showing incredible endurance. Classic rock radio stations often pepper it into their playlists, as it's one of the few songs that listeners seem to love even if they've never heard it before. The band remained active in some form for decades, and the song was always their showstopper.
"Never Been Any Reason" was used in the 1993 movie Dazed and Confused, which takes place in 1976. Other films to use the song include J-Men Forever (1979), Sahara (2005) and The Education of Charlie Banks (2007).  From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/head-east/never-been-any-reason

 

Front Country - I Don't Wanna Die Angry


“For our 2017 record Other Love Songs, we made the decision to record using only acoustic instruments and our voices with almost no additional production. That’s how we’d been playing live up until that point and we wanted to capture the sound we’d been working on as an acoustic unit. Soon after we found ourselves stepping outside the acoustic box and experimenting with the overall sonic picture of what we were presenting live. Roscoe (Adam Roszkiewicz) and I began using more effects pedals and started playing through amps. Melody began playing percussion and after the addition of the pandeiro (a handheld Brazilian percussion instrument that can sound very much like a small drum kit), “Front Country music,” as we like to call it, began to evolve.
“As we began writing and arranging for the album that would become Impossible World, we made the decision not to put any limitations on production in the studio and found a producer (Dan Knobler) who could help us realize the sonic vision we were working on. This was basically a 180 from our previous record and it was very exciting! However, when any band takes a big leap forward musically, I often wonder what were some of the musical influences that helped inspire this transformation. So here is a collection of music each of us was listening to during the process and how these tracks helped inspire what we all brought to this record. For anyone who’s been following us for a while or maybe had a different impression of the band before hearing this new music this will help answer the question: ‘How did they get there!?'” — Jacob Groopman, Front Country

Brandi Carlile – “The Joke”

One of the most undeniably heartrending songs of the last decade, this song encapsulates Carlile’s emotionally earnest yet epic songwriting style. The way she wears her heart on her sleeve and doesn’t mince words has really inspired me to try and cut to the core with my own songwriting in the past few years. — Melody

Peter Gabriel – “Sledgehammer”

This track actually came up several times while we were arranging the songs for the new album, for the neo-soul vibes, the approach to instrumental hooks and, you guessed it: counterpoint. — Adam

HAIM – “If I Could Change Your Mind”

This first album from HAIM is full of throwback ’80s pop perfection and super catchy songwriting. I think their approach to dense, multi-layered backing vocal parts really influenced the harmony arrangements I did for the poppier tunes on Impossible World. — Melody

King Crimson – “Three of a Perfect Pair”

Intertwining themes and counterpoint have always been a big part of the FroCo sound and that approach was directly influenced by King Crimson and this track in particular; also we covered it on our Mixtape EP in 2016. — Adam

Los Colognes – “Flying Apart”

I came across this album randomly right as we were about to start working on the music for Impossible World and fell in love with the ’80s-meets-modern vibe. The use of electric guitar on this track had direct influence on what I brought to the table for a few of the tracks on Impossible World, especially “Miracle.” — Jacob

Paul Simon – “She Moves On”

From Graceland‘s Brazilian-themed follow up album The Rhythm of the Saints, this track is smooth and spooky in its trance-inducing worship of the dark, sacred feminine. The verse vibe of the song “Mother Nature” was loosely inspired by this one. — Melody

Lau – “Toy Tigers”

Lau is a band from Scotland that has successfully melded electronic elements with Scottish folk music and the result is something truly mind-blowing. They have become one of my all-time favorite bands. — Jacob

Muna – “Never”

I was also listening to a lot of electro-pop and aside from Muna’s production being on point, the level of risk they take in the instrumental section of this track is excellent. — Adam


Tame Impala – “Yes I’m Changing”

Kind of an ironic title for the purpose of this article, but the Tame Impala album Currents from 2015 was a big influence on creating a big sonic landscape that still completely serves the song and doesn’t overshadow it. I’d like to think we achieved this on a few tracks on the record. — Jacob

Queen – “I Want To Break Free”

I grew up on Queen’s tight aesthetic and Freddie’s vocal virtuosity, and while this is may be their most compact pop track ever, it’s edited economy inspired our arrangement of our song, “Real Love Potion.” — Melody

Squarepusher – “Welcome to Europe”

Continuing with the counterpoint theme, I was listening to a ton of electronic music while we were making the new album and this track exemplifies how you can have multiple hooks supporting each other throughout a track. Also, I love big jumps between notes in my hooks and get a lot of inspiration from tracks like this. — Adam

Dawes – “Telescope”

After we recorded the first half of our record early in 2019 I found myself listening to the Dawes’ Passwords from 2018 a lot and particularly this track. I love how the song has this slow build and new musical elements are constantly introduced throughout to keep it moving forward. It could be something really tiny that has a big impact on how the song moves. — Jacob

From: https://thebluegrasssituation.com/read/mixtape-front-country-how-did-we-get-here/

Black Sabbath - Wheels Of Confusion / Tomorrow’s Dream / Snowblind / Cornucopia


Having previously recorded exclusively in England with producer Rodger Bain, Black Sabbath opted to self-produce their fourth outing, recording it in sunny Los Angeles. If you’re guessing that their new locale exposed these four suddenly rich blue-collar kids from Birmingham to heretofore unprecedented Hollywood excess, you guessed right: By all accounts, the band consumed absolutely Olympian quantities of cocaine during Vol. 4’s recording, with guitarist Tony Iommi claiming to have had the stuff flown in on a private plane and bassist Geezer Butler recently joking (or is he?!?) that the coke bill exceeded the cost of actually, you know, recording the album.
You can glean all that information from interviews and behind-the-scenes accounts, or you can simply listen to “Snowblind,” the album’s centerpiece. (In fact, its riff is similar enough to album opener “Wheels of Confusion/The Straightener” that it almost serves as a reprise.) As Ozzy Osbourne lays down a blizzard of snowy metaphors for his drug of choice—at one point he whispers “cocaine,” in case the subject matter isn’t clear—Iommi and Butler serve up a riff that feels four feet deep, while Bill Ward’s drums skitter and thud in equal measure. (Ward’s unpredictability behind the kit has always been one aspect of Sabbath that their many heirs and imitators have failed to reproduce.) At times, the lyrics are so evocative (“Let the winter sun shine on/Let me feel the frost of dawn”) that they seem to anticipate the snowbound Viking saga of Led Zeppelin’s “No Quarter,” released a year later. At others, they depict the welcoming embrace of drug dependence with unexpected pathos: “This is where I feel I belong,” Ozzy sings in the song’s breakdown—a rough but relatable sentence for anyone who’s struggled with addiction, or loved someone who has.
Rejection of square society is the order of the day across several of the set’s songs. “Tomorrow’s Dream” is about leaving your problems behind by any available means, with the contrast between the grim present and glorious future encapsulated by the break between the verses’ steamrolling riff and the soaring guitars of the chorus. “Cornucopia” condescends to the normies, with their “matchbox cars and mortgaged joys…frozen food in a concrete maze.” For a band that has a bad rap for Satanic worship—you’ll find the devil all over the place in their body of work, but he’s invariably the bad guy—“Under the Sun/Every Day Comes and Goes” sure is a blistering kiss-off to “Jesus freaks” and “preacher[s] telling me about the god in the sky.”
Two of Vol. 4’s ten tracks have found enduring second lives as storied covers by other acts. The rollicking, science-fictional “Supernaut”—like an inverse “Iron Man,” it’s about a voyager through space and time who’s actually enjoying the trip—received a thrashing industrial makeover at the hands of a dubiously named Ministry side project dubbed 1,000 Homo DJs by Jim Nash, the (gay) head of their record label WaxTrax!. (Hold out for the version with vocals by Trent Reznor, which wound up suppressed by his old record label for years.) On the other end of the sonic spectrum, the moving piano ballad “Changes” was converted into a gut-wrenching soul scorcher by singer Charles Bradley, who transmuted its lyrics about a dissolved romantic relationship into a lament for his late mother. Blessed with one of Iommi’s wickedest riffs and Osbourne’s most vulnerable vocal performances, respectively, the original versions of both songs can stand next to these excellent reinterpretations without being eclipsed; Ward’s carnival-like percussion breakdown in “Supernaut” in particular feels like finding a prize in the song’s otherwise thunderous Cracker Jack box.
And no, Sabbath isn’t afraid to show off their softer side. In addition to the untouchable “Changes,” there’s a perfectly lovely guitar instrumental inspired by the California coast in the form of Iommi’s “Laguna Sunrise” (admittedly a bit hard to take seriously once you’ve heard the poetic piss-take the Who’s Keith Moon recorded over it), while “St. Vitus Dance,” a race of a song that clocks in at under two minutes and thirty seconds, encourages a buddy to patch things up with his girl à la the Beatles’ “She Loves You,” an Osbourne favorite. The Sabbath may be Black indeed, but there’s room for both light and shade, and Vol. 4 is a masterful evocation of both by the band that did it better than anyone.  From: https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/black-sabbath-vol-4-super-deluxe/