Friday, April 24, 2026

Coil - Are You Shivering / Backwards / I Don't Want To Be The One / Penetralia / Ether


 Coil - Are You Shivering
 

 Coil - Backwards
 

 Coil - I Don't Want To Be The One
 

 Coil - Penetralia
 

 Coil - Ether
 
When the teenage writer and aspiring experimental musician Geoffrey Rushton attended a gig by one of his favorite bands, Throbbing Gristle, in 1980 and had a chance to meet that group’s Peter Christopherson, it would have been a bold soul to have claimed what was going to result over the next quarter century, even beyond their own almost as long-standing personal partnership. But as the twin axes of the freeflowing musical, artistic and performance entity Coil, Rushton, most commonly but not exclusively known by the name John Balance, often in later years Jhon or Jhonn Balance, and Christopherson proceeded to create a massive subcultural impact. Relying on their interest in a wide range of instrumentation and electronic experimentation, they oversaw a vast slew of releases, from singles through to multiple album sets to unique one-offs including perfumes and book releases, not to mention a variety of notable videos and short film efforts as well. David Keenan’s book England’s Hidden Reverse, about Coil and their sonic and aesthetic compatriots Nurse With Wound and Current 93, as well as Nick Soulsby’s interview collection Everything Keeps Dissolving: Conversations With Coil are a few key resources to help further understand this remarkable double act.
With Balance, especially given his role as lyricist and vocalist, the more public and forthright of the two on various fronts while Christopherson maintained a certain wry reserve, his own widely successful work as a designer, cover artist and video and commercial director helping provide the group a fierce independence, Coil’s music itself was described in many different ways, from psychedelia to industrial to rave to ambient to simply experimental or even folk music. But the truth of their range and goals, informed further via overt resistance to mainstream heteronormative standards of love and sex as well as homophobia in general, connecting further to Balance’s deep interest in occult and esoteric practices, renders the group even more impossible to pin down, pursuing their own evolving vision as they chose. They did not do so on their own: numerous further musicians were key performers and collaborators over the years, most notably (but far from solely) Stephen Thrower in the 1980s and early 1990s, Drew McDowall through the 1990s and Thighpaulsandra in the late 1990s and 2000s, while engineer/producer Danny Hyde was a central participant in many sessions and releases in turn throughout their existence.
Both Balance and Christopherson brought their own creative experiences to the collaboration; while the latter’s Throbbing Gristle work was increasingly well known by that point, Balance similarly had been creating recordings on his own and in collaboration with others via acts like Stabmental and Cultural Amnesia. Similarly their joint first efforts emerged in wider contexts, as both were initial participants in Psychic TV as well as the group Zos Kia, which also included what for years were their only live performances in 1983. Following their formally recorded debut with the How To Destroy Angels EP, the duo soon signed with the Some Bizzare label for their initial two albums, Scatology and Horse Rotorvator, the latter of which became a massively influential album in industrial music circles in particular, as did their harrowing reworking of “Tainted Love,” providing a flipside to Soft Cell’s synth-pop landmark in the wake of the continuing slaughter caused by AIDS and associated health care and governmental neglect. For the rest of the 1980s they regularly appeared on a wide variety of compilations and also began associations with filmmakers with both planned and released soundtracks for directors, most particularly Derek Jarman, as more singles and collaborations emerged, Balance’s regular appearances for years on work by Current 93 being especially notable.
Having left Some Bizzare in 1987 to form what would be their own home label, Threshold House, Coil achieved a remarkable artistic next-level with 1991’s Love’s Secret Domain, incorporating the explosion in dance music interest in the UK with associated elements of hallucinogenic experimentation and their own multivaried inspirations. Both it and associated singles also were something of an American breakthrough thanks to its release on the famed Wax Trax label, while Trent Reznor, starting to come to wider attention with the success of Nine Inch Nails, commissioned some of the first remixes they did in 1992, leading to further remixing work for other artists that would continue until the group’s end, from Depeche Mode to Bill Laswell. Reznor also signed the band to his bespoke label Nothing for what would have been a planned album called Backwards; while demos and sessions were completed, however, nothing was formally finalized for release at the time. As an alternate creative outlet, the group released a variety of singles and albums under differing names such as ELpH, Black Light District and Time Machines, over time stepping further away from their dance-leaning early 1990s towards a more free-flowing drone and instrumental approach. 
Building on this work, Coil’s next major phase encompassed two remarkable developments. The first was a full return to releasing work under the Coil name directly, including a seasonal EP series later collected as Moon’s Milk (In Four Phases) and another overall artistic triumph in particular, 1999’s Musick To Play In The Dark Vol. 1. These efforts were in part driven by their relocation from London to the UK countryside and its attendant slower and calmer atmosphere, as well as fully leaning into a turn from what they considered the masculine ‘black sun’ energy of their earliest days in favor of what they described as a more feminine ‘moon musick’ feeling. The resultant releases reflected their deepening interest in lengthier, often rhythmless constructions; at the same time, they also showcased some of their most enjoyable shorter compositions in turn, Balance’s voice now generally calmer and appearing less often than in earlier years. Late 1999 brought the other major change: Coil’s return to live performance, with a small collective of further guest musicians working with the band on a series of irregular shows around the world over the following years that aimed at being as visually surprising and memorable as their audio work. All of this led in turn to live albums emerging in time alongside continuing studio efforts such as The Remote Viewer and the more formal song efforts on Black Antlers. Christopherson also began participating in in a Throbbing Gristle reunion as Balance continued his many guest appearances with others; while their romantic partnership had ended by this point, they were on a true creative roll in the best of senses.
But what could have yet been a path to even more remarkable work by the two reached an awful conclusion. Over the years Balance had been increasingly open in public about alcohol abuse and its impact on him, with the multi-artist compilation Foxtrot in 1998 created as a fundraiser to assist him, containing a heartfelt, moving short essay from him on his struggle. In November 2004, following a bout of binge drinking, Balance fell from a balcony in his shared home with Christopherson, dying later that evening, only 42 years old. In the wake of the disaster, Christopherson moved to Thailand the following year, completing a final full posthumous Coil release, 2005’s The Ape of Naples, and otherwise spending subsequent years exploring new solo efforts and collaborations of his own, as well as continuing work in Throbbing Gristle and related efforts while planning and releasing more Coil archival projects in turn, including a notable DVD box set containing a number of their famed live performances, Colour Sound Oblivion. But sadly and no less tragically, Christopherson suddenly passed in his sleep in November 2010 at the age of 55, bringing the story of Coil’s key participants to a far-too-soon end. 
Encompassing Coil’s full legacy requires much more discussion than can be provided by this guide – beyond their many studio efforts and live albums, during their existence they released three full CDs alone of various compilation and rarity appearances in their Unnatural History series, containing much crucial work. Meanwhile, their numerous 12” single and EP releases over their earliest years, themselves reissued and compiled at later points with even more rarities, adds considerably to their legacy. A welter of further reissues, releases of live concerts from their later years, presentations of yet more session work, collections of remixes for others, annotated download collections of yet more rarities and unreleased work and much more have created a truly chaotic grab bag of material that, unfortunately, has not all been given the thorough care and detailed attention it all truly deserves.  From: https://theshfl.com/guide/Coil
 

 

Genesis - In Concert UK 1976


 Genesis - In Concert UK 1976 - Part 1
 

 Genesis - In Concert UK 1976 - Part 2
 
In the splendid book Opening The Musical Box - A Genesis Chronicle (by Alan Hewitt) you can read that "this concert was shot at Glasgow and Stafford during the A Trick Of The Tail tour, it's the only visual record of the band with Bill Bruford on drums. The film was shown in the UK cinemas in 1977. You can obtain if from laser disc in Japan." Well, I have still very mixed feelings while watching this footage: on one hand it's excellent material with outstanding performances by all members but on the other hand, I missed the concert because our football team captain decided to give back our tickets, he wanted to be democratic after he only got four tickets for eights persons... I have never hated democracy so much at that moment and it still hurts!
The lightshow was obivously less extravagant than the next Wind And Wuthering show (with the 48 Boeing landing lights), at some moments even a bit dark. It's really exciting to see Steve Hackett playing Fly On A Windshield with his distinctive use of the volume pedal, so moving and creating a very compelling atmosphere. Another highlight is The Cinema Show featuring a very dynamic rhythm section and sensational synthesizer flights on the ARP Pro Solist, Banks' favorite synthesizer. It's a pity that the director decided to spoil the wonderful experience of watching Genesis in concert by using 'silent movie' images, really disturbing, especially during The Cinema Show, brrrr! During Supper's Ready I want the camera to focus on Hackett but the camera crew had other instructions, food for a conspiracy theory? Anyway, despite some irritating 'silent movie' images', it's a thrill to watch this 1976 Genesis line-up with duo-drums and some very delicate Hackett guitar play, my progrock guitar hero!  From: https://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=15605 
 

Slow Pulp - Track


Slow Pulp have released a new video for “Track.” The video features hand-drawn animations by Corrinne James, which were inspired by beautiful familial love and what it feels like being a fish pulled out of the water. Massey explains of the song: “I was waiting for the train one day to go home to my parents. There was an older woman who was also waiting on the track and she reminded me of my late Grandmother who I had not thought of in a while. She passed away of alzheimers when I was in high school. My mother often worries she is going to get it as well. The song acts as a letter attempting to reassure her that she will never be forgotten even if she forgets.”
Slow Pulp first started working on new songs in the Spring of 2019, immediately after the release of their EP, Big Day, before scrapping the material following’s Massey’s Mono and Lyme diagnosis. “When we started writing this record, I had been experiencing so much fatigue and getting sick a lot and I didn’t know what it was,” she explains. “The diagnosis validated a lot of what I was feeling. I got tools for how to take care of myself better.” For Massey, taking care of herself meant more than just addressing her physical needs. “The way that I internalize trauma is I will hold it in and not process it for a very long time, but writing songs is the one place where I can’t hide from myself. It just comes out whether or not I want it to or if I’m ready for it to. Figuring out how to write together, as a band, was like me learning how to take care of myself and learning how to communicate better.”  From: https://northerntransmissions.com/slow-pulp-track/ 

Snow Ghosts - Rip


The album is called ‘A Quiet Ritual’, does the name have a meaning? 

Yes, absolutely. The album grapples with themes of death and loss and how as individuals we all have our own 'quiet rituals' and coping methods to deal with grief. When you think of ritual, you imagine large ceremonial events but we wanted to question whether it's the small personal rituals that truly reflect the human condition. 

You recorded it in a castle, what was the castle called? What made you choose to record there?

We have set up our studio in a 'castle' - it has crenelations so that is considered a castle right? We haven't been very creative with the name I'm afraid, so it's just called 'The Castle' at the moment. It does have two sides to it, which we call 'The North Wing' and 'The South Wing' and it is filled with enough taxidermy and strange, medieval-looking furniture to qualify in our opinion. It was important to us to find a writing and recording space that worked with and helped inspire the themes of the album. The Castle is surrounded by stunning historical woodland has a decaying Victorian charm. You have the sense that much of it hasn't changed for hundreds of years and that in itself is an inspiration - particularly for Hannah lyrically. 

Any behind the scenes stories while recording? 

John Kenny came to visit The Castle with his wonderful boar-headed Carnyx as well as a selection of other fascinating horns. During one of the first Carnyx demonstrations, Indy (Ross's dog) was so convinced that the instrument was some sort of animal that he kept growling at its head incessantly . We actually have some of this on video. He was terrified and rightly so!

The album centers on the theme of death, can you explain that further? 

Death is a theme often explored, and  in many different art forms, but we wanted to delve in to how we process such a mysterious commonality, both on a group level and a personal one. The aim was to analyse the rituals surrounding death throughout history and how, in many ways, we have lost the ability to cope as well as we have in generations gone by. Is this  because of modern isolation or the break down of community, religion and rite or is it due to our a tendency to trust our own personal coping-mechanisms rather than grieving as a group? Saying that, death as a topic is timeless. We all have to deal with the death of loved ones and one day we have to face our own. It is something we all share , yet somehow it is still a taboo subject that we are often too scared - at least in the western world - to socially explore. 

There is quite the mix of instruments on this album, such as a boar-headed horn, how did you get hold of these? And what made you decide to use them? 

When we first started writing the album we watched a documentary that featured John Kenny's Carnyx and we were instantly fascinated. It beautifully wove together the album's themes of ritual and history and as an instrument its tone is simply timeless. It can sound aggressive and battle-ready, and yet equally tender and sympathetic. We thought it perfectly reflected the fluctuating stages of grief. We got in touch with John Kenny and he brought his wonderful insight and talent to the album. 

What musical inspirations did you draw on when writing the album? 

Other than collaborating with Toby Young composer and John Kenny on this album, who were both hugely inspiring, the majority of our influences have been non-musical. Being in an historically unchanged environment, surrounded by beautiful woodland and countryside has allowed us to really immerse ourselves in to the timeless aspects of the album concept. That space, environment and time to observe the losses we all share - and have done throughout time immemorial - was by far the most inspiring aspect of this album.

From: https://whenthehornblows.com/content/2019/5/9/band-of-the-week-0079-snow-ghosts 

Pink Floyd - Summer '68


“Summer ’68” is a distinctive track from Pink Floyd’s album “Atom Heart Mother,” released in 1970. Written and sung by the band’s keyboardist, Richard Wright, the song is notable for its bright piano work, lush horn arrangements, and reflective lyrics on the transitory nature of relationships, particularly those formed on the road by touring musicians. With its catchy melody and harmonious backup vocals, it takes a more direct approach to songwriting compared to the album’s title track. The brass section adds a layer of grandeur and a touch of nostalgia, hearkening back to the summer love themes popular in the late ’60s.
Lyrically, Wright offers a candid look at the highs and lows of fame and the personal impact of brief romantic encounters. The reflective nature of the song’s text and its juxtaposition with the upbeat music underscore the bittersweet sentiment of remembering a summer gone by. “Summer ’68” is not only a musical throwback but also a deeply personal account that adds a unique touch to the “Atom Heart Mother” album, showcasing Wright’s songwriting skills within the broader context of Pink Floyd’s evolving sound.  From: https://www.neptunepinkfloyd.co.uk/summer-68-lyrics-pink-floyd-atom-heart-mother/ 


Smoke Fairies - Frozen Heart


Hi Smoke Fairies! Welcome to Get In Her Ears! Hope you’re well. The two of you have known each other since childhood, which is quite impressive! Are you able to tell us a bit about how you initially met and what inspired you to start creating music together?

We met at school when we were twelve and started singing together when we were thirteen. We were interested in harmonies and recognised there was something interesting about the blend of our voices, but it took years to hone the sound into something properly intertwined. It feels like we are still honing it now. When we were kids we just loved playing together and being the centre of attention at school whenever possible; we were probably quite annoying, getting our guitars out at every opportunity. We dreamed of being on tour mostly, imagining it to be an experience where you drive around in a ’70s bus looking at sunsets and rocking up in small towns to wow crowds of people in leather jackets. Realistically, you are in a transit van surrounded by crisp packets driving on various ring roads and getting angry at the sat nav. It’s still great though and I hope our younger selves would be pleased!

I really love your rich folk-strewn musicality and luscious harmonious vocal layers, but who would you consider to be your main musical influences?

Thank you! I get lost in film scores and any form of dark choral music, psychedelic music and melodic moving songs. I’ve just had a new record player in my flat, so it’s nice to explore the old records again – like Nick Drake and Joni Mitchell, who were more formative influences. But nowadays, I feel like one of those boring people that says they “like all kinds of things”… For example, I was running to the Pina Colada song this week and had a really great time.

You’re about to release your sixth album, Carried In Sound, which is very exciting! Are there any specific themes running throughout the album?

The songs explore time and how it feels to get older – looking back on your past experiences from a more confident place and then looking ahead to the future. There are so many changes we go through as we grow, and Jessica and I have known each other since we were young, so there’s also been a constant in our music and friendship. That’s why Carried in Sound felt like a good title, as music has been a tide we’ve been riding all the way through ups and downs. Also there are themes of grief; loss not only for others, but also the things about yourself that you lose on the way. There’s also a hopefulness about finding a new sense of home and love, and being in a place to receive it.

You recorded the album at home with the volume turned down – are you able to tell us a bit about this process and what it was like for you?

It felt really important to shut out the world and focus on our own sound in our own space and on our own terms. The record is about quite personal thoughts, so it felt right to use the spaces and things around us to make it. Even when the narrative is more character driven, they are characters who are quite insular. The process meant we could hone the songs over time, whereas we are normally restrained by studio time, so that was quite liberating. We’ve released quite a few albums now, so this one needed to dive back into what it means to be a duo and put the voices at the front and give the guitars a lot of space to be heard. We needed to try to do it on our own, perhaps to prove something to ourselves but also to remain pure to the vision we had.

And how would you generally say the album differs from your previous releases?

There was no other motivation other than to create something really beautiful, so there’s no songs that are for the radio or for specific audiences – it’s just entirely us. Sometimes it’s just good to lock yourselves away and work out what you really feel and want to say. This record feels like it all has the same vibe and tones, all coming from the same wellspring.

It’s being released independently, and you’ve garnered lots of support through your Patreon page in the run up to its release – what triggered the decision to do this rather than release via a label, and what’s the experience been like for you?

The patreons have been great. It’s been amazing to have such a strong connection to your audience. It’s helpful to know it means something to people, otherwise you can feel too isolated and become negative, and it’s so encouraging to know that people are happy to receive the songs and waiting for them. It’s given us more confidence to do this independently, and obviously provides funding to help support the release of the record, including touring, promotion etc.

You’ve played and sold out numerous UK and international tours over the years, but is there a particular concert you’ve played that stands out as a highlight?

It’s very hard to remember them all. I do recall playing inside a tent at Latitude festival at an evening slot and it started raining and the crowds came into the tent for shelter and it felt like we created a real atmosphere to warm them. It was in the ‘Film And Music’ tent, so there was an old black and white 1920s film of The Naughty Smoke Fairies playing behind us, and the rain was beating down on the tent canvas; it felt very magical. We always wish our music could be used on film soundtracks as we always strive for something quite filmic with our sound. I liked that night because it felt like everything came together.

And you’re setting out on an intimate tour of special venues and churches to celebrate this album release – what inspired this decision?

This album requires focus and patience, so we wanted to play it in venues that naturally encourage audiences to listen. Churches are unique spaces that give harmonies a natural resonance with built in reverb, while also taking you to a place of stillness and thought. Some songs are really are quite hymn-like, so it felt apt to play them in a space where hymns have been sung through the ages.

When out on tour, are there any particular essentials that you like to take with you to keep you going when away from home?

A pillow, to either rest my head on or scream into depending on what’s happening. Jessica once brought an egg boiler with us, it was truly horrific because she kept making eggs in the van for breakfast. That has been banned now.

As we’re an organisation keen to support new artists, we just wondered how you feel the industry is for new artists at the moment? And do you feel much has changed over the years in its treatment of female and queer artists?

So much has changed in terms of an artist’s ability to work independently, which I think is hugely positive in a world where there is such under-representation at every level for women and queer people across the music industry. Learning how to record and produce opens up a freedom to create work on your own terms, build confidence, ignore the pigeon holing and just get on with what you want to do. Under-representation can create imposter syndrome if you don’t see yourself reflected, but now people can learn skills and push their art forwards without needing to get past so many gate-keepers. A lot of change is still needed of course, and the biased structures need to be addressed to really create an equitable playing field. But I think the rise in independently produced and released music is a testament to people finding their own ways to challenge these systems. We all need to make a living somehow though and it’s tough when you always have to find your own strength and motivation, without the backing of a bigger entity. I wish there was more support available for artists making strides on their own, then we would start to see so much more interesting music being produced from many more perspectives. Releasing an album independently is a lot of work, but it’s worth the sense of independence I think.

From: https://getinherears.com/2023/11/21/interview-smoke-fairies/Smoke Fairies 

Preoccupations - Continental Shelf


Preoccupations' beautifully rough version of post-punk is equally life-affirming and well-versed in existential dread. The band's debut album, 2015's Viet Cong, mixed post-punk, psych-pop, shoegaze, noise, and electronics in fearless ways that nevertheless maintained a very human pulse. This connection to their humanity remained on all of their albums, though Preoccupations' music became subtler and more open-ended on 2016's Preoccupations, more anthemic on 2018's poised New Material, and more confrontational on 2022's Arrangements.
Vocalist/bassist Matt Flegel and guitarist Scott Munro, a pair of musicians from Calgary, Alberta, Canada, formed Preoccupations in 2012. Flegel was a member of the celebrated Calgary indie rock band Women while Munro had formerly played guitar with Lab Coast. Flegel and Munro began working on songs together during a European tour as part of Chad VanGaalen's backing band; when they heard about the death of Women guitarist Chris Reimer, they realized it was time to start a new project. They recruited former Women drummer Mike Wallace and guitarist Danny Christiansen, who had worked with Flegel and Wallace in a Black Sabbath tribute act. Originally named Viet Cong, in 2013 the band released a four-song cassette -- cleverly titled Cassette -- that they sold at their shows during a North American tour with Freak Heat Waves. Following their performance at the 2014 CMJ Music Festival, the group signed to the Canadian label Flemish Eye, who issued two songs from the cassette as a single (in the U.S., Mexican Summer released an expanded seven-song version of the tape as a 12" vinyl EP in 2014).In January 2015, the band released their self-titled debut album. Produced by Graham Walsh, Viet Cong added noise and electronics to the band's moody mix of post-punk, shoegaze, and straight-ahead indie rock.
Citing concerns that their name might be offensive to some, in April 2016 the band announced they had changed their name to Preoccupations. Their first album under that name, September 2016's Preoccupations, was a more considered effort that nevertheless highlighted the heavy and danceable sides of their music and featured a guest appearance by Wolf Parade's Dan Boeckner. A deluxe version of the album included a single with covers of Yellow Magic Orchestra's "Key" and the Raincoats' "Off Duty Trip." For their third album, March 2018's bluntly titled New Material, the band recruited producer Justin Meldal-Johnson, who helped add polish and a grander scope to their anthemic songwriting.  From: https://www.allmusic.com/artist/preoccupations-mn0003514608#biography 

Eaves Wilder - Hurricane Girl


Eaves Wilder has announced her debut album Little Miss Sunshine will drop on April 17, 2026 via Secretly Canadian. Ahead of the album’s release, the artist shares her new single “Hurricane Girl”. The North London artist says of the song, “This is my go at cock rock. I love Pearl Jam, I love Janes Addiction, I love Stone Temple Pilots, Sound Garden, Aerosmith. I love how swaggering and soaring they sound. The first time I ever listened to Pearl Jam, I was up a mountain, and I wanted to make mountain music too. Songs with elemental scale.”
The path to Wilder’s debut album began, with a period of silence. After a run of singles and a debut EP, she stepped back from music entirely, hitting pause and questioning her creative direction so intensely she nearly walked away for good (she even, at one point, Googled nunneries). But the distance became a catalyst. While Wilder felt she had too much. “I wasn’t having a nervous breakdown; I was just a hurricane making a whirlwind. I am not stubborn, I’m a mountain. Clouds aren’t pathetic when they cry, so why am I?”
Removed from the outside world and working in isolation in her shed – where she arranges, writes and produces – she began work on her debut full-length, an escapist creation born within four walls. “I want to make worlds now,” Eaves said of returning to her musical calling.  From: https://northerntransmissions.com/hurricane-girl-by-eaves-wilder/

Cream - Doing That Scrapyard Thing


"Doing That Scrapyard Thing" is a song from British group Cream's 1969 farewell album, Goodbye. Composed by the band's bassist, Jack Bruce, with lyrics by Pete Brown, the song, alongside Eric Clapton's "Badge" and Ginger Baker's "What a Bringdown," was one of Cream's final studio recordings.
According to Pete Brown, Jack Bruce approached him to write the lyrics of the song in a telephone call: A funny thing happened with Goodbye. Dick Heckstall-Smith was living with me at the time as his marriage had just broken up. Jack [Bruce] was staying in Los Angeles and called me from there at 3 AM. He said, 'I want you to write the words to this song.' And he played me a theme over the phone, which I recorded on an terrible old Grundig tape recorder. I wrote the lyrics and then phoned him back. That song was 'Doing that Scrapyard Thing'. —Pete Brown
Eric Clapton explained that the song, along with the other studio cuts from Goodbye, were recorded due to a lack of proper live material for the album: We did those cuts after we decided to break up. That was after the last tour — the farewell tour. We were told by Atlantic [Records] that we didn't really have enough live stuff to release on the Goodbye album that was acceptable. So we had to go into the studio and cut some tracks after the tour. We all had bits of songs, so we went into the studio in L.A. and cut them — all in the space of three or four days. —Eric Clapton  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doing_That_Scrapyard_Thing 

Snake River Conspiracy - How Soon Is Now (Smiths cover)


Artsweek: People often casually refer to your music as sounding like Nine Inch Nails or Garbage. What do you think about this tendency to try to classify your music?

Tobey Torres: I don’t really care because somebody is always going to say you sound like someone else. Well, we don’t really sound exactly like anybody else. I guess it’s industrial rock pop, and we do have our pop songs. But if I’m going to write a pop song it’s going to have fucked-up lyrics. Both Jason and I like a lot of different music, and we incorporate it all with our Star Trek-like beats and moaning porn stars in the background.

You guys utilize sequencers and electronics in your songs. How do you think this increasing use of technology has affected music?

I think it’s great, in one aspect anybody can create music these days … but you still have to have all the talent and elements to make something that isn’t trite and boring. I love acoustic and straight-up rock, and it’s cool that people stay true to their roots. But music definitely has to evolve and I’m all for taking it a step further.

What do you think about the popularity of current hard rock acts like Limp Bizkit or Korn?

I like Korn; I think Jonathan [Davis] is great. Limp Bizkit sucks a big turd out of an elephant’s ass! I can’t stand their music; it’s all the same. And he causes so much trouble! You have to have some guts to go out there every night and sing in front of so many people, for him to fucking dis people for doing that is messed up.

Well, what are your favorite current bands?

Queens of the Stone Age are great. We toured with them recently and they’re all great guys. I’ve been listening to At the Drive-In a lot lately; that album rocks!

How do you feel about being a female lead singer in the hard-rock genre that is mostly male-oriented?

I don’t get intimidated by that shit because I’m always around men. I can kick it with the guys, and I’ve got a bad mouth and I’m a tomboy. So, I’m pretty comfortable with it. I try to make the music beautiful and feminine in spots so the women can relate, and so guys also see that I’m not some fake-ass bitch. But I am a woman and I am strong and I like to yell and scream in the mic.

So, how has it been playing with A Perfect Circle so far?

It’s been great; so far we’ve only done a few shows, but they’ve gone really well. We’re a little more rough edged and screamy, but we have our mellow side, just like them. I think this will be a good tour because we complement their music well.

From: https://dailynexus.com/2001-02-08/band-interview-snake-river-conspiracy/ 


 

Hedwig and the Angry Inch - Wig In A Box


The rock’n’roll drag diva played by John Cameron Mitchell in Hedwig and the Angry Inch was born 31,000 feet in the sky. In 1990, Mitchell was an aspiring playwright and erstwhile actor en route to New York from Los Angeles when he met musician Stephen Trask, the only other person not watching the in-flight movie. The two quickly bonded over their mutual tastes in film and music. It was the start of a lifelong friendship that would lead to this darkly funny rock musical—first an off-Broadway hit, then a cult film and Tony-winning Broadway production—about an “internationally ignored song stylist” with an ax to grind against her superstar ex-boyfriend.
Frustrated by his work as an actor, Mitchell was eager to kick off his playwriting career and found a kindred spirit in Trask. The two built the foundation for Hedwig for over a year, incorporating far-reaching and idiosyncratic inspirations: Plato’s symposiums, Bob Fosse’s Cabaret, and malleable gender performances from the glam-rock era. In the summer of 1994, they started workshopping the show at the downtown NYC gay punk club SqueezeBox!, where Trask led the house band. At the musician’s suggestion, the protagonist shifted to a drag character, a disappointed singer who’s left in the dust.
Hedwig and the Angry Inch didn’t exactly begin as a story about a flamboyant rocker, but instead a meek Army general’s son. Mitchell himself moved more than 20 times as the child of an Army commandant, a lifestyle that isolated him as a young person struggling with his sexuality. He found respite in bands like the Cars and the B-52’s, as well as glam-rock groups like Sweet. When Mitchell was 14, his family settled for a time near a base in Junction City, Kansas. There, he met Helga, a German-born Army wife who lived in a trailer park and worked as a prostitute. She’d smoke cigarettes in a tube top and capri pants and let him drink beer and act out pop songs in her trailer.
Standing onstage at SqueezeBox! some 20 years later, that brief memory of Helga spun out into Hedwig’s winged Farrah Fawcett wig, towering heels, and torn fishnet stockings. Though Mitchell had never done drag or sang in a band, he inhabited the pithy German mannerisms and performative bravura instantly, earning high praise from club regulars.
Over the next four years, Mitchell and Trask developed Hedwig and the Angry Inch into a full-fledged production, with Trask providing original songs and playing Skszp, Angry Inch’s bandleader. By the time the show opened at the Jane Street Theater in 1998, its lurid backstory was set: Born in East Germany the year the Berlin Wall went up, Hedwig (née Hansel) became obsessed with gender-bending glam and punk gods like David Bowie, Lou Reed, and Iggy Pop via American Armed Forces radio. He met a G.I. sugar daddy who offered to whisk him away to America under one condition: a sex change operation. He reluctantly agreed but the surgery was botched, leaving our protagonist with the titular “angry inch” of flesh. Rechristened Hedwig, she was plopped down in Junction City and soon left to fend for herself. She wrote music and dated/mentored Tommy, a confused teen who eventually dumped her, stole her songs, and scored it big as a proto-Marilyn Manson. The timeline catches up to Hedwig and her band years later, as she shrieks out the whole sad story onstage at a seedy New York nightclub.
Equal parts wounded tragedy, high-camp drama, and death-defying rock musical, the original Hedwig show blended concepts about gender and sexuality with a razored punk edge. (Hedwig’s queerness aside, Mitchell cast actress Miriam Shor as her aggrieved ex-drag queen husband/backup singer, further challenging the audience’s assumptions about gender in theater and rock’n’roll.) The production netted a rave review from The New York Times and became a hot ticket, with both Bowie and Reed turning up to see it. After a year off-Broadway, Mitchell started turning the role over to different actors, owing to the sheer physical cost of embodying the character every night. But when influential independent film producer Christine Vachon inquired about a screen adaptation, Mitchell got right back into Hedwig’s heels to star and direct.  From: https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/revisiting-hedwig-and-the-angry-inch-a-drag-rock-fantasy-that-was-ahead-of-its-time/ 


Della Mae - Shrewsbury Folk Festival 2022


 Della Mae - Shrewsbury Folk Festival 2022 - Part 1
 

 Della Mae - Shrewsbury Folk Festival 2022 - Part 2
 
You had the original idea for Della Mae nearly 15 years ago. How has the group changed musically since those days?

We were a pretty traditional bluegrass band at the beginning. Our lineup evolved and solidified, and now we have a lot of people in the band who love to write, so we started to build a large repertoire of original music.

Just a few years after forming, Della Mae scored a Grammy nomination for Best Bluegrass Album (2014). How did that high-profile recognition affect the group’s career direction?

We were very proud Grammy losers! A nomination is such an honor. It gives validity to what you’re doing. So at that point in our career, it was like, “Oh! People are paying attention; what we’re doing is important.” It definitely changed our outlook on our purpose. Because we’re not only a band, we’re a band with a mission statement. It’s very important for us to be encouraging girls and young women to play music and have a career in the creative arts. And the Grammy nomination added fuel to the fire for us to keep doing what we were doing.

Tell me more about the band’s mission and advocacy.

One of our goals is to make music more accessible to people. We’re always advocating for women; hopefully we’ll inspire young girls to pick up an instrument. We’re also involved in running camps. I personally run two, plus I’m the co-director of Kids on Bluegrass for the IBMA.
We like to branch out into different areas, too. We’re always advocating for more diversity – more women, more people of color – onstage. Any time we can get a seat at the table to help people understand the importance of diversity, we take that opportunity.

In 2013, the group embarked upon a 43-day international tour, sponsored by the U.S. State Department; you visited Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. What was it like being cultural ambassadors?

Traveling to the Middle East and Central Asia with the State Department has been some of the most meaningful work Della Mae has done. It meant a lot to have the opportunity to connect with young women and girls in these countries: to listen to them, and to play music for them and with them. These experiences led us to realize just how much music is a universal language and a great healer. In some places we’ve been, women standing on a stage isn’t something seen often or at all. We hoped that us simply being there would offer hope and represent opportunity and possibility.
And we’re about to go on another tour in June; we’re doing a program in the Netherlands. We’ll be working with kids and teaching them bluegrass. That should be really fun.

You have a busy schedule in the coming months: shows in the U.S. the State Department tour, and a high-profile festival date in Europe. What else is in the future for Della Mae?

We have been in the [recording] studio, and our plan is to release music in conjunction with the Earl Scruggs Fest; we’ll be releasing four singles throughout the summer. We’ve been doing a lot of writing, so hopefully, we’ll be able to get in the studio again this coming winter and have a full-length album for next year.

From: https://blog.musoscribe.com/index.php/2023/08/05/mission-statement-a-qa-with-della-mae/ 
 

Uriah Heep - Demons and Wizards - Full album

01 - The Wizard
02 - Traveller In Time
03 - Easy Livin'
04 - Poet's Justice
05 - Circle Of Hands
06 - Rainbow Demon
07 - All My Life
08 - Paradise
09 - The Spell

I must admit to finding it somewhat difficult to write dispassionately about this album, since for the last 30+ years it has been my all time favourite. I do remember however when I first heard it, the one minor criticism I had at the time was that, when compared to the previous "Look at yourself", there were too few instrumental breaks. That misgiving soon vanished however, and ever since it has taken pride of place in my collection.
This was the first album recorded by the "classic" line up, with Lee Kerslake (drums), and Gary Thain (bass), completing the quintet. Ken Hensley was now fully installed as the main composer with the band, and had just entered his "fantasy" phase. These were the final pieces which would see Uriah Heep creating it's finest works.
The album is supremely melodic, and much less "'eavy" than previous albums. The opening track, "The wizard" is an acoustic number, which finds David Byron in his best vocal form. "Easy Livin'" is wonderful three minute burst of driving rock, with everything turned up to 11. The Hammond organ and lead guitar combine with a great bass line from Thain, to provide the basis for this brief masterpiece. "Circle of hands" is similar in structure to "July Morning" from the previous album, with a repeating instrumental conclusion.
The closing two part track "Paradise/The spell", is awesome. It is two separate pieces, which happen to combine well together. "Paradise" is a soft acoustic number, on which Byron and Hensley alternate the vocals on the repeating choruses. "The spell" was in many ways a predecessor for Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody". It has a complex structure with a multitude of vocal styles, and time changes a plenty. The centre point is a choral backed slide guitar solo by Hensley, which on its own would have made an excellent single in the "Sylvia" (Focus) vein. It sends shivers up my spine every time I hear it. Had the other tracks appeared on any other album, I would have been listing them individually with glowing praise. In another moment of inspiration, Roger Dean was asked to design the excellent cover, which looks so much better on the gatefold sleeve of an LP.  From: https://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=5897


Resilia - Anjou


John Benoit, founder of post-hardcore band Resilia, talks with Dying Scene about the band’s origins, influences, and what 2024 has in store for the band.

DS: Who is Resilia? How and when did Resilia form?

R: The band is me on guitar, Daisy Chamberlin on vocals, Ethan Cate on bass, Grant Dickerson on drums, and either Gray Trainer or Owen Robinson on guitar. Gray does a lot of work with pop artists writing and touring so we have Owen a lot of the time too and he also helps do a bit of writing so I consider him in the band.

I started writing/recording the first Resilia tunes right before moving out of Boston to LA in 2018. I sat on ’em for a while because I couldn’t find a singer, but then I recruited Gray and Ethan from my old band and put out the instrumentals for “Royal Flush” and “Gambit”. When the pandemic hit I put out feelers for guest vocals and discovered Daisy, who ended up singing on those tunes, and shortly after became a full member of the band. Grant came into the picture a little while later, I believe in early 2022 or late 2021 and we immediately knew he was the guy! I love everyone’s musical personality a ton and I’m super lucky to work with them through Resilia.

DS: What are some key musical influences that have shaped the band’s sound? Are there any specific artists or genres that have had a significant impact on your music?

R: I’m most influenced by Coheed and Cambria, The Fall of Troy and Van Halen. They all have so much personality in their music and playing which really speaks to me. I love all kinds of music though, stuff like Frank Zappa, Taylor Swift, video game music, etc. Pretty much anything can influence my writing. Jazz and even classic rock are definitely some big influences on the approach I try to take towards my guitar playing but at the end of the day it’s all filtered through Coheed and TFOT for me. The rest of the band also have really varied musical backgrounds too. Grant never really even played this kind of music before joining but has absolutely killed it. Daisy and Gray are both huge fans of The 1975, Ethan has a background in marching band bass and listens to everything imaginable, and Owen leans heavier and will someday maybe get us to sneak a blastbeat in there somewhere.

DS: Can you walk us through the band’s creative process for writing, composing, and recording Well Intentioned: The Name of the Game and more generally? How do you collaborate on creating songs?

R: The way it went for all the songs on the EP is I would write the entire instrumental on a music notation/guitar tab program called Guitar Pro. Most of the songs only have a handful of parts that I actually wrote on guitar first. Once I had drums, bass, and two guitar parts ready, I’d see what the band thinks and if we liked it we’d start working on the parts and everyone starts putting their own spin on things. We also had Brody Taylor Smith from Invent Animate and Satyr program the drums since we were already working on the album before Grant joined. Brody absolutely killed it and was a pleasure to work with.

DS: Tell us more about Well Intentioned: The Name Of The Game. What inspired it, and what can listeners expect in terms of themes or musical direction?

R: Musically I think it’s just grass-fed farm-to-table progressive post-hardcore. I wrote a lot of the music during the pandemic before most of the band fully came together and I was trying to blend a few things like classic rock in “Hey There Pretty Girl…”, the more Coheed approach in some parts of a few songs and other stuff into my general idea of what progressive post-hardcore is. As far as the title for the EP, that came from the demo title for “Bad Lemon/Anjou” and it doesn’t really mean much I just made it up when I was writing the song just to call it something, but I ended up getting attached to the title because I liked the sound of it and we eventually decided to make it the title for the EP.

DS: How do you approach the visual representation for your music? How did you settle on a Gator to serve as a symbol of the band?

R: All of our cover art has been made by one of my close friends from college, John Rego. I’ve always loved his art so I just reached out and asked him to do whatever he wanted and he came back with the gator art for “Royal Flush” and “Gambit”. We all loved the gator so much and they’re actually Daisy’s favorite animal so we wanted to keep him involved. Later on when we were looking for art for Well Intentioned it seemed natural to go back to him. We definitely want to continue working John as much as we can for future releases.

DS: What do you enjoy most about performing live? Are there any memorable or unique experiences from your live performances that have made a lasting impact? 

R: Performing live has pretty much always been my favorite part of playing music but we’ve unfortunately not done a ton of gigging just yet on account of the band being split up in a bunch of different places. In the two tours we’ve done so far the best part has been seeing people really enjoying our music and singing along to songs I wrote sitting alone in my bedroom in Boston unsure of what I was doing with them. Since we don’t get to do it super often it’s always really special to get to play with the whole band so I think that’d have to be my favorite part overall.

DS: If Resilia could collaborate with any artist, who would it be and why?

R: Some more “in genre” collaborations that would be a dream come true for me would be Claudio Sanchez from Coheed and Cambria, Thomas Erak from The Fall of Troy or Anthony Green from Circa Survive/Saosin. But, to be honest, my real dream is to get Yung Gravy to rap over a post-hardcore breakdown.

DS: What are Resilia’s plans for 2024? Can we expect any new music or tours?

R: I moved to Florida a few months ago so Daisy and I could write the next batch of tunes and we’ve got some stuff cooking! We’ll hopefully start recording some of it soon and start putting out singles at some point in 2024. We don’t have any concrete tour plans at the moment but we’re interested in trying to play some local shows in or around Orlando in 2024 too!

From: https://dyingscene.com/dying-scene-interview-resilia-on-their-new-ep-and-future/ 


 

Poco - And Settlin' Down / Ride the Country / Restrain


In a surprising move, Poco released their strongest country-rock album so far with A Good Feelin’ To Know. I write “surprising” because their last record, From The Inside, kind of sucked. I was prepared for more songs about railroads and cowboys, but this is the first Poco record where invoking the ghost of Buffalo Springfield is meant as a compliment.
Like that band, A Good Feelin’ To Know showcases three distinctively talented singers/songwriters in Richie Furay, Paul Cotton and Timothy Schmit. The record gets off to a rousing start with Furay’s “And Settlin’ Down,” also the album’s lead single, which makes good use of the band’s instrumental and vocal interplay. Cotton’s “Ride The Country” reminds me of Neil Young in the cranky vocals and slightly bittersweet taste; maybe it’s a minute too long, but so far this is the best one-two punch of any Poco album and a complete departure from their last album’s limp country opening. Schmit gets the spotlight next for the luminous “I Can See Everything,” featuring some exotic percussion from George Grantham. It’s a case of all three artists putting their best foot forward while inverting the country-rock formula to put the emphasis on rock this time.
You’d think things would slow down after that, but instead A Good Feelin’ To Know maintains the same high standards all the way through. Stephen Stills’ “Go And Say Goodbye” gets a twangier reading from Furay and Cotton delivers two more rockers, “Keeper of the Fire” (again suggesting Neil Young) and “Early Times.” Cotton is the biggest surprise on this album, since I had him pegged for a country boy on the last record and he seems to be itching to make a rock ‘n roll album this time out. Furay’s upbeat “A Good Feelin’ To Know” returns to the mood of the opening track, Schmit delivers the album’s sweetest harmonies on “Restrain” and Furay closes it all with the gospel-inspired “Sweet Lovin’” featuring Rusty Young’s protean pedal steel as an organ this time.
In an era when country-rock was in its commercial ascendancy and arriving as it did on the heels of Eagles’ first album, you would think A Good Feelin’ To Know would have got a better reception. Instead, the album stalled well shy of the Top 40, Poco apparently incapable of cashing in on a style they helped create. Or maybe the awful album cover was to blame. Their next album, Crazy Eyes, fared better and was likely the beneficiary of people who listened to, and liked, the “new” Poco.  From: https://progrography.com/poco/review-poco-a-good-feelin-to-know-1972/ 

Lovemongers - Papa Was A Rolling Stone (Temptations cover)


While the track was made famous by The Temptations, “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone” was originally written for the Motown band The Undisputed Truth. Written by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong in 1971 for The Undisputed Truth, the track was released in 1972. But it was made into a legendary song—and an official No. 1 hit—by The Temptations later that year.
The Temptations’ version begins with an extended, heady instrumental that’s nearly four minutes long. It’s pensive, moody and lovely. A big bass line is heard amid cymbal strikes, hand claps, violin screeches, funky disco guitar and more. A solo trumpet rings out, played masterfully by the Funk Brothers’ Maurice Davis.
While shorter versions exist for radio play (that featured prominent bongos), the original song itself clocks in at about 12-minutes. It’s as much an acid trip as it is a piece of sonic entertainment. The vocals are mostly a group effort. The Temptations’ Dennis Edwards, Melvin Franklin, Richard Street (who often filled in for Paul Williams and was his eventual replacement), and Damon Harris (who had replaced Eddie Kendricks as the band’s falsetto vocalist) alternate lines like siblings asking their mother about their now-dead father.
Of the song’s meaning, Strong told the Wall Street Journal, “‘Rolling stone’ was a phrase used all the time in my neighborhood going back to the ’50s. It meant a guy who couldn’t settle down, even if he had a wife and kids. It was from the old proverb, ‘A rolling stone gathers no moss.’”  From: https://americansongwriter.com/behind-the-meaning-of-papa-was-a-rollin-stone-by-the-temptations/

Although Heart reconquered the charts during the mid- to late '80s, the band forfeited the organic sound of their early recordings in favor of pop gloss. By the early '90s, the Wilson sisters (vocalist Ann and guitarist Nancy) were ready to return to their roots, which they attempted to do in the form of a side band, the Lovemongers. The group (which saw the Wilsons joined by keyboardist Sue Ennis, guitarist Frank Cox, and drummer Ben Smith) debuted on the motion picture soundtrack to Cameron Crowe's 1992 film Singles, with a dead-on cover of the Led Zeppelin folk classic "The Battle of Evermore." The group issued a four-song EP a year later, The Battle of Evermore, which included the Zep cover once more, in addition to covers of Todd Rundgren, the Temptations, and even the early Heart classic "Crazy on You."  From: https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lovemongers-mn0000052866#biography

Maplewood - Darlene


Once upon a time not so long ago the musical sub-genre variously known as alt-country / y’allternative / No Depression / cosmic country / cosmic American music was born (mostly in the Far West), and its practitioners were demigods who stalked the earth with a fusion of twang and psychedelic feedback in their wake. Call them Cosmic Americanus Rex: the Byrds, the Buffalo Springfield, the Dillards, the Gosdin Brothers, the Flying Burrito Brothers, Poco, Gene Clark, Gram Parsons, Michael Nesmith, Clarence White, Neil Young, J.D. Souther, Rick Nelson (and you know, where the hell is Ned Doheny?). These twang titans also sported fellow travelers for better (Little Feat, Jerry Garcia) and for worse (Parsons idolaters/body-snatchers the Eagles, the Rolling Stones). Somewhere amidst this first flowering of the dubiously named country rock, a more concise and pop-oriented version of what far out explorers such as Parsons and Nesmith were discovering sprouted up under the aegis of such ’70s FM radio stalwarts as America, Seals & Crofts, Loggins & Messina, and Bread. 
The Brooklynites in emergent countryish soft rock outfit Maplewood, who also do double-duty in such bands as Koester, Nada Surf, Champale and Winterville, pay not too slavish homage to both the acid-drenched pinnacles of cosmic Americana and the desert rock of America (RIP Ian Samwell). It’s definitely “twinkling Western sky music,” as Hendrix once said of their forebears Crosby, Stills & Nash. With the exception of “Sea Hero’s” bling-blip coda on disc, there is no electro or Theremin to make the compositions for their first long-player “modern”; “Desert Queen” shows the influence of “White Horses”, but this is generally hazy country, psych-pop which could potentially benefit from the full on Arthur Lee/Bruce Botnick orchestral treatment.
Different from Arizona’s Calexico in that there’s no immediate symbolism of sand nor mariachi, and from the Los Angelenos in Beachwood Sparks for purveying tighter, more focused and less solipsistic tunes that might actually crack radio, Maplewood are one toke away from the cosmos and harbingers of a movement already afoot. As when Keith Whitley sang “Buck”, a backlash against late New Country and the teen pop that dominates the airwaves is well underway. Immediately, the lilting, easy, three-part harmonies of Steve Koester, Mark Rozzo and Craig Schoen (co-founder Ira Elliott was on tour with Nada Surf) draw the line in the sand between them and Orlando’s synchronized singing boy bands. If they don’t quite attain the heights of the Beach Boys’ supposed harmonic perfection nor that of those ’70s masters Maurice White and Phillip Bailey — and there were two spots at the band’s recent Knitting Factory show where the vocal blend went flat — Maplewood nevertheless are prime contenders for the mantle yet to be bestowed by the giants: Stephen Stills, Richie Furay, David Crosby, Chris Hillman and the ghosts of Gene Clark and Parsons on high. 
The central problem with the Beachwood Sparks (woodsy theme a-go go here in these group monikers, no?) is that Chris Gunst’s voice is not strong enough to support their musical ambitions and Brent Rademaker, who is better, never sings lead. Maplewood’s Koester and Rozzo display no such weakness. This fact, combined with the gorgeous accessibility of their songs, especially the sublime “Indian Summer”, should see them poised to penetrate the mass in a way other “Return Of Country Rock” standard bearers like the Sparks, the mighty Bobby Bare Jr., and assorted idolaters of the post-Flyte, post-Sweetheart Of The Rodeo Byrds have not managed to do. At the Knit, the sole whiff of angst came from the fragile and virtually chamber rock “Bright Eyes”, and somewhat from “Santa Fe” and the Sparks-esque “Sea Hero”. Otherwise, reflecting their slogan “Maplewood feels good”, the band effectively conveyed a hay cartload of peaceful easy feelings. 
Their music evokes a mythic (alternative) American pastoral of pleasant valley Sundays replete with a potential fiddle-heavy jam, sweet tea or lemonade sweating in a blown-glass pitcher, lazy dogs snoring on the wraparound porch and Mayan hammocks swinging ‘neath the flowering trees. Makes you want to hit the highway and fly on the ground past the outer limits. This was made literal during “Be My Friend” as its melody echoed the Byrds’ “Wasn’t Born To Follow”, thus rolling the post-commune skinny-dipping scene from Easy Rider behind one’s eyelids. Even as Maplewood make plans to release their debut toward the end of the year, and they are more than primed for deserved adulation, their current minor tragedy is that they are not out in some place like the Jemez hot springs, but bound to Gotham. And for all that this metropolis possesses its own concrete canyons, peaks and valleys and the odd eagle gargoyle, this is music that belongs to the wider open spaces of The Farm in Tennessee, Joshua Tree and Topanga.  From: https://www.popmatters.com/maplewood-030408-2496083539.html  

Richard & Linda Thompson - Civilisation / Borrowed Time / Justice in the Streets


1978's First Light marked Richard & Linda Thompson's first time in a recording studio after three years away from music, and it suggested they were still getting warmed up as performers; a year later, Sunnyvista found them in much stronger form and a significantly more upbeat frame of mind. Sunnyvista is the wittiest and most joyous album Richard & Linda made together; while several of Richard Thompson's trademark meditations on romance at it's least successful are on hand, "Why Do You Turn Your Back" manages to generate an unusually soulful groove, "Lonely Hearts" captures the melancholy country feel that First Light never quite caught, and "Traces of My Love" finds a winning warmth in its sadness. Richard Thompson's satirical eye gets an airing on the darkly witty title cut, and he displays his rarely aired politically conscious streak on the rabble-rousing "Borrowed Time" and "Justice in the Streets." Linda Thompson's vocals are in superb form on "Sisters," a lovely duet with Anna McGarrigle. And you'd have to go back to Hokey Pokey to hear the Thompsons having as much fun as they do on the rollicking "Saturday Rolling Around" and the wildly passionate "You're Going to Need Somebody." With a big band of Fairport Convention and Albion Band associates and top UK session players on board, and Kate & Anna McGarrigle, Gerry Rafferty, and Glenn Tilbrook contributing vocals, Sunnyvista boasts the stylistic eclecticism of the Thompsons' best work, with a healthy dose of added enthusiasm. Anyone who thinks Richard & Linda Thompson's records are always depressing have obviously never heard Sunnyvista; if it isn't quite as resonant as I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight and Pour Down Like Silver, it still boasts great songs, great singing, and you can play it at a party.  From: https://www.allmusic.com/album/richard-linda-thompsons-sunnyvista-mw0000192175#review  

Moby Grape - Ain't That A Shame / If You Can't Learn From My Mistakes / Going Nowhere / Seeing


Moby Grape ’69 found the band rebounding after the double album Wow/Grape Jam debacle. Wow is still a great but flawed record that at times recalls Buffalo Springfield’s tension filled Last Time Around. After Wow was completed, Skip Spence exited the band in pursuit of a solo career, releasing the legendary Oar. Spence’s departure was a major blow but like other great American bands of the time who lost key members, the Byrds and Buffalo Springfield, Moby Grape was still brimming with talent and enthusiasm.
While ’69 is not on par with Moby Grape’s self-titled debut, it’s still a great back to basics country rock record. The album only enhances the group’s legend though, including Skip Spence’s final contribution to the band, Seeing. ‘Seeing’ is undoubtedly their finest moment as a band and one of the best pieces of San Fransisco psychedelia ever waxed!
It starts out with Spence’s plaintive, apologetic vocals which give way to a hard rocking bridge with great spiraling acid leads. It’s as deranged as Syd Barrett’s swansong, Jugband Blues, and mandatory listening for anyone interested in 60’s rock. The band also rock hard with successful results on Trucking Man, Hoochie, and Going Nowhere. Trucking Man is almost a sequel of sorts to Fall On You, with some great, fat slingshot guitar riffs that hit you hard. There are also some quiet, country rock moments on the album like the majestic I Am Not Willing and the classic It’s A Beautiful Day. It’s A Beautiful Day is Moby Grape’s Ripple (Grateful Dead), a sparkling, country folk-rock gem that shines with hippy optimism. Moby Grape ’69 proved that after all the debut related hype settled, the band was still making great music. Another late period Moby Grape title worth searching for is 20 Granite Creek which was released in 1971.  From: https://therisingstorm.net/moby-grape-69/ 

I’m With Her - Find My Way to You


I have approximately the time it takes for I’m With Her to pile into a sprinter van backstage at Colorado’s Telluride Bluegrass Festival and drive to their late-night show at the nearby Sheridan Opera House to conduct a fast-paced interview. But, in truth, three and a half minutes of listening to songs like “Ancient Light,” “Year After Year,” or “Mother Eagle (Sing Me Alive)” is all you need to grasp the appeal of the supergroup trio. Their innate gifts for harmony, melody, and songwriting make their songs, especially those on the new album Wild and Clear and Blue, all but irresistible. “We’ve just lived so much life together, much more life together than we had on our first record,” the band’s Sarah Jarosz tells Rolling Stone. “This [album], we know what our sound is, and now what do we want to say?”
At 11:30 p.m., the group emerged behind a lone microphone at the intimate 1913 opera house on North Oak Street. The gorgeous “Year After Year” hushed the audience, focusing them squarely on members Jarosz, Aoife O’Donovan, and Sara Watkins. “Things will never be the same/as they were when we were young,” Watkins sang. “Let’s welcome the change/no song unsung.”
“I love singing with them so much,” Watkins says of her bandmates. “One of the main things I remember from that first meetup was just how easy it was to communicate.” The initial meetup occurred right around the corner from the opera house in nearby Elks Park. It was during the 2014 Telluride Bluegrass Festival. The three musicians were each performing at the gathering with various projects and were asked to host a workshop in the park. “It just happened that the three of us were the ones who could work something up beforehand,” Jarosz recalls. “We met up behind the main stage earlier that day and that was the first time we sang together. That harmony was so magical.”
“The thing I like most about our band is that it’s not always the same blend. Who’s singing high? Who’s singing low? Who’s singing harmony?” O’Donovan says. “So, you end up having all these color combinations. It’s like we have this whole box of paints and we’re constantly thinking of new colors to make.”
The seamless blend of ancient tones and soaring voices is what elevates I’m With Her, and Wild and Clear and Blue, in the roots-music world. The members are well-aware of their chemistry. “There’s this ease of working together,” Watkins says. “It’s just a very natural working environment.” While I’m With Her may have some elements in common with other harmony-based bands, like Crosby, Stills & Nash, there’s none of the rock & roll baggage and expectations that plagued some of the greats.
“Once we decided to become a band, it’s kind of what we always hoped it could be,” Jarosz says. “This band we could return to when we wanted to, and not something we had to do. I think that’s why it’s so enjoyable, because it’s this bonus musical experience.”
The day before the opera house gig, O’Donovan is sitting in the lobby of the Camel’s Garden Hotel in downtown Telluride. Later that afternoon, the trio will hop onto the festival’s large main stage, their melodies radiating out into the towering box canyon surrounding the town. But, for now, O’Donovan is reflecting on the origins of the group. “We’d all been friends for many years,” O’Donovan says. “We sang through a couple of songs and it was so cool. And right after the workshop, Chris Thile texted.”
Thile, frontman for the Punch Brothers, asked the group if they wanted to open for him at the opera house that night. It was the Sunday evening sendoff for the festival, a tradition Thile and his bandmates have held for several years. (To note, Watkins is part of Nickel Creek with Thile, and O’Donovan and Jarosz were regular performers on Thile’s radio variety show Live From Here.)
“We didn’t have any repertoire,” O’Donovan chuckles. “We got to the gig early. We went into the bathroom and worked up a bunch of songs.” Among them, Bill Monroe’s “Blue Moon of Kentucky” and Watkin’s “Long Hot Summer Days.”
“It was electric,” O’Donovan says. “The next day, Sara Watkins texted, ‘I feel like this should be a thing.’” The group released their debut album, See You Around, in 2018. They won the Grammy Award for Best American Roots Song for “Call My Name” in 2020. All the while, they played strings of rapturous gigs.
“I’m constantly surprised by how it still feels so creative,” O’Donovan says. “And we’re still thinking of new ways to change up older songs, play with dynamics, add little sections, little fills here and there.” Back in the lobby, O’Donovan’s cell phone vibrates. Jarosz and Watkins are in front of the hotel, ready to go for a quick hike together before their set. Exiting the hotel, the group disappears down San Juan Avenue toward the mountains cradling the community. “People have passed on. New lives have come into this world. Families have grown,” Jarosz says. “And we’ve all kind of experienced that together. That richness of life and grief and all of the above — all of that fed these songs.”  From: https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/im-with-her-wild-and-clear-and-blue-1235379011/