Winter in New York City can feel more brutal at times than in other parts of the world, which is pointed out by Pom Poko midway through their set at Baby’s All Right on Tuesday night as guitarist Martin Tonne and drummer Ola Djupvik sought out some warmer layers. This surprised me, considering the band hails from Oslo—a city 19 degrees of latitude north of NYC. Tonne must’ve sensed my confusion because he quickly followed up by telling us that they ‘are from Norway but [they’re] not very tough.” This didn’t stop the venue from filling up for Pom Poko’s first show in New York since they played New Colossus Festival in 2022 and their first New York date as part of their debut North American tour.
Much like their music, Pom Poko’s show felt like we were dynamically weaving through big musical breaks and complicated, intimate vocal-driven moments. To guide us through this weave, lead vocalist Ragnhild Fangel plays the role of a conductor as she sings—using intricate hand and arm gestures to shape the quieter moments. As the music got bigger, she threw herself into the noise, jumping and dancing alongside her bandmates.
The crowd was more than ready to jump, dance, and mosh alongside Pom Poko, especially after Nashville-based Big Bill kicked off the night with a blistering set. Their high-energy performance set the tone for the evening as they leaped into the crowd multiple times, crowd-surfed, and spent the final song balancing on the side railing of the venue. I worked up a sweat just trying to keep up.
After taking us through different songs from their discography—with the focus of the night being on their newly-released album Champion—Fangel ended the night with a crowd surf during “If U Want Me 2 Stay.” This was Pom Poko’s last show of the first part of their North American tour before returning to Europe, where they will continue touring across the EU and UK. From: https://northerntransmissions.com/review-pom-poko-live-in-new-york-city/
The Alchemical Jukebox
DIVERSE AND ECLECTIC FUN FOR YOUR EARS - 60s to 90s rock, prog, psychedelia, folk music, folk rock, world music, experimental, doom metal, strange and creative music videos, deep cuts and more!
Friday, April 17, 2026
Pom Poko - Live at Paste Studio Austin 2022
Umbilicus - Gates Of Neptune
The debut album of Umbilicus was released in September. Can you introduce the band a little bit more?
Paul Mazurkiewicz: Yeah, I was extremely excited that we were closing it with the release date on September 30th. The band consists of myself on drums, Vernon Blake on bass guitar, Taylor Nordberg on guitar and Brian Stephenson is our vocalist. The three of us, Taylor, Vernon and me live in Florida – we're all from the same Tampa area and Brian Stephenson is from Ottawa, Canada. It makes things a little more challenging at this point right now where we're able to possibly do some shows or debut, ironically enough we've never even jammed together as a full band because of the whole pandemic thing here. With technology of course you're luckily able to record things like that and you don't have to be in the same room these days. We started jamming together in 2020 probably around May or June after Cannibal Corpse was done recording the album "Violence Unimagined". I talked to my buddy Vernon and we actually had a project about 20 years ago. It was myself, Vernon on bass and Jack Owen, one of the original guitar players in Cannibal Corpse. It was around 2000 we started a rock project. It was a kind of break-up to death metal and all that kind of stuff and to play the style of music that I really love which is 70s rock which is Umbilicus pretty much. Jack Owen had the same kind of taste that I did so we decided to start this project. We ended up playing two shows in Tampa around that time in 2000 in a smaller bar. We wrote all originals and we had maybe about 15 songs written and we could just never procure a proper singer that we were looking for. The band unfortunately I guess fell apart and nothing ever became of the songs we wrote. We made some demos but nothing of any quality to one will be released. I always like to say fast forward twenty years and when this opportunity arose like I was saying with the pandemic in '20 and me actually having more time again, not knowing what was gonna happen with touring and all with Cannibal Corpse, I talked to Vernon and asked him if he wanted to get that project and the band back together. He was all for it and the thing was that Jack doesn't live in Florida any more. He is living in Illinois now and we really didn't think he wanted to be part of it anyway. So what happened was that Vernon and I started playing actually some of the old songs because we had to start somewhere and we really like the songs that we wrote back for the original project which was called "Path Of Man" by the way. We learned some of the old songs and just him and I played bass and drums and then we figured out that we needed a new guitar player. We needed to kinda start fresh in this project and that's when Taylor came into the fold. We had some mutual friends that suggested we try him out. So we did and the first practice we had was just magical. Taylor learned one of the old songs that we had from the other project and he jammed it with us and we just started somewhere. It was awesome and it was a lot of fun and we gelled right off the bat and he was totally interested in wanting to move this forward as well. What we ended up doing though is we were considering using some of those old songs but the fact that Jack really had a good hand in pretty much writing most all those we said to start fresh. Taylor is a great creative force, a great artist and somebody in so many different capacities and a great songwriter so he ended up writing the bulk of this material pretty much all of it. The last piece of the puzzle was getting a vocalist. We toyed with the idea that it would be nice to have somebody local just to be able to play and to be able to be together all the time. We didn't want to admit ourselves at the same time because maybe the right guys weren't gonna be here and Taylor suggested Brian. Taylor is in another band with him and we said why not, we'll give it a shot! We sent a couple of songs to Brian and when we heard back after he only had one or two songs for a couple of days and he just slapped something together it was just like "wow, this is unbelievable!". He was the missing piece. We know he is in Canada but he is such a great vocalist and we'll make it work. So Brian was brought in at the end there and all the music was already finished actually. We had all the songs completed and they were actually recorded. It was just a matter of what we gonna do here – Taylor was gonna try to sing there a little bit first but we figured if we get somebody that is gonna be mind-blowing, somebody that's a vocalist – Taylor would give it a shot, he has a great voice but he never sang in a band before like this. So it made sense to bring Brian in. I mean the songs are incredible, you've heard the three that we already had out, and he took the songs to the next level. That's where we stand right now. It's been a couple of years in the making and we're ready to release the whole record and we're very excited for everything that's happening with us right now.
From: https://metalbite.com/interviews/1622/umbilicus-with-paul-mazurkiewicz-drums
Traffic - Paper Sun / Smiling Phases
Traffic - Smiling Phases
Zola Jesus - The Fall
Having recently announced her new album Arkhon is now due to be released on the 24th of June via Sacred Bones Records, Zola Jesus has shared the third single and video from the album, entitled “The Fall“. Nika Roza Danilova comments on latest cut “The Fall” saying: “I wrote The Fall for myself. It was an exercise in using music as a tool for the sake of my own inner catharsis. I had a lot of turmoil and complicated emotions that I couldn’t process in any other way. I suppose some feelings require you to write a pop song in order to fully understand them. For that reason, this song is very precious to me.”
Speaking on the track’s accompanying video, she adds: “Working with Jenni Hensler as a director was such a soul-feeding experience. She’s someone I’ve been collaborating with for ten years, and a dear friend to me. I value her own artistic perspective so much that at some point I realized there was no one else I could trust with my vision. We connected on an emotional and spiritual level regarding the intent of the song, and then I handed it over and let her make her magic. I’ve never felt so freed by a collaboration. And working with choreographer Sigrid Lauren was such an empowering experience. She was able to interpret and support my idiosyncratic movements in a way that allowed me to feel free in the moment.”
Director Jenni Hensler comments: “When we fall, we have the inner strength to pick ourselves up again. We sometimes have to struggle to find that strength, but it is there within all of us. The journey Nika goes through within the video, including confronting her reflection, removing her mask and the symbolic choreographed dance that follows are my way of expressing that.
I’ve debated whether to write a heartfelt statement speaking of the long-standing collaboration and friendship I’ve had over the years with Nika, about how she has touched my life and how we have both grown. Or to only speak about the meaning of this current collaboration. The two are connected, intertwined. This video is about the feeling of being stuck in a position or way of thinking about yourself and of the world around you, including the pressures to conform to a certain way of expression. It’s about the mask we wear, and the ways artists are forced to comply in order to succeed. This oftentimes makes us forget that creating art is one of the most transcendent forms of expression and that fully feeling, being in the present and enjoying the process while creating is at the core of who we are and the art we create. It is about change and coming into the power of our creativity. We need to wholly feel and release the magic within. When we make ourselves vulnerable and find the strength to do that, the art has a deeper meaning. The unspoken feeling when we truly feel connected and in the present moment of ecstatic joy or pain as we create is palpable. When Nika and I spoke about the vision for the song, we discussed a yearning for something better, a breakthrough of creative potential, and learning along the way. And then a sort of enlightenment when you realize that you are in control and do not need to conform to external standards. There is power and magic in knowing that. There is power in the desire for something better, the feeling within that desire including the drive and excitement it brings. There is strength in the feeling of expressing the sensuality simultaneously brewing and fully releasing that inner fire. This is an expression of all of that and reflects the journey of our collaboration and metamorphosis over many years.” From: https://musicandriots.com/zola-jesus-shares-new-single-video-the-fall/
Unwoman - Long Long Shadows
Unwoman is a San Fransisco-based cellist and multi-talent that have been active since 2001, releasing a wide array of about seven albums and one EP. Her real name is Erica Mulkey and she also frequently plays and visits goth, steampunk and science fiction-events. With praise from Amanda Palmer (Dresden Dolls) and collaborations with various acts such as Voltaire, Abney Park, Rasputina, Jill Tracy and many more – she’s gotten a wide range of perspective, influence and musicianship. Nowadays she also performs solo with the drummer Felix Mcnee as Heavy Sugar Duo. Besides that, she also does guest appearances in other bands. I got the opportunity to ask Erica about her collaborations, how she depicts the “dark cabaret”-genre and what’s in store for the future of Unwoman – and much, much more.
You’ve worked with many known acts within the dark cabaret-scene, if you’d get to choose one ultimate collaboration that you haven’t done yet, what and who would it be with?
– It would be pretty sweet to play with Amanda Palmer. I have seen her live many times but never met her, though we’ve communicated online.
I think it’s pretty cool that you’ve self-produced four full-length albums, could you tell me what goes into that process?
– Writing songs, recording material, polishing mixes (I could talk for days about how I actually produce songs but I suspect this isn’t the right place for that), package design, having material mastered, and communicating with pressing plants. I’ve actually self-produced six full-length albums if you count my remix album Unremembered and my covers album Uncovered – seven if you count Infinitesimal, my very first album which was unreleased until Feb 20, 2012.
Does it give you more artistic freedom if you self-release it?
– I have complete freedom and from what I gather I would not if I were beholden to a label, so yes, of course.
What do you think about the genre dark cabaret in general?
– It’s interesting in its communication style –- it brings back the tradition of songwriters speaking directly to the audience rather than being overwhelmed by intricate musical trickery, yet it’s open to visual glamour and seduction that coffeehouse singer-songwriters don’t generally employ. (For the record I don’t consider myself dark cabaret; my recorded music is too electronic.)
How many projects do you have going at the same time right now, as we speak?
– It depends how you count things. I have my documentary project, which I hope to have to press in March, I have this first album rerelease (Feb 20) for which I scanned a lot of old original lyrics notes, I have my next album (to come out Summer 2012) for which I have 13 songs written… I always have little collaborations happening here and there, too.
What do you think about Siouxsie and the Banshees, more than them influencing you musically?
– Oh yes, they were very influential. I think it was extremely important that post-punk/goth music had a strong female voice and Siouxsie was wonderful for that. I love all of their albums but my favorite may be Juju.
I’ve lately heard something that reminded me a lot about Siouxsie, her name is Zola Jesus, have you heard her music?
– Yes! In fact, her song “Night” is an important one between myself and my boyfriend, as we have to spend a lot of time apart because of my touring schedule. One time at Death Guild (San Francisco goth club, where he does lights and live visuals) we danced to “Night” – not touching, – but our eyes locked through the entire song.
It seems like you have quite dedicated fans, how do you feel about them?
– I seriously love them. They are smart, loyal, forgiving, and supportive, and I do my best to give back what they give me.
Amanda Palmer seems to help you a lot, have you collaborated with her in any shape or form, or do you want to?
– She has helped me a lot – but it was all in one day, when she found my ustream and tweeted about me, and got me at least a hundred new dedicated fans. I know I could double sales of any of my albums if she tweeted about those, but I don’t want to bother her. (Heh, I answered the 2nd question already) I have never actually met her – the last three times she’s performed in San Francisco I’ve had a gig out of town.
Where would you say that you’ve found inspiration for your aesthetics?
– Visual aesthetics: silent films, art nouveau paintings, steampunks, street goths on Telegraph Ave in Berkeley, Victorian dolls, post-apocalyptic fashion tumblrs, witches, burlesque performers, tribal fusion bellydancers…
Have you also drawn influences from Lene Lovich and Toyah?
– Not consciously.
You seem to have quite a lot going at the same time, does it ever become tiresome for you?
– I wouldn’t say tiresome, because my life is thrilling and beautiful, but it can be overwhelming. I had recently been saying yes to everything that came my way, and getting lots of people inquiring about shows, and saying yes to all of those, but I think I need to slow that down for a bit so I can make sure my head is above water and I’m not letting too many things fall through the cracks. The main difficulty is rapidly shifting gears between traveling for shows vs being at home editing music or video. I absolutely love both of those things but I need balancing skills that I haven’t fully developed yet – I’ve only been a full-time musician for two years now.
What do you believe that the future holds for you, and will you be releasing something new this year?
– Lots of convention appearances (steampunk, scifi, goth, etc) in the US. I will be releasing my next original album this Summer. Based on what’s been happening over the last two years, my fanbase will continue to grow slowly and steadily; I’ll never be a household name but I’m able to support myself and live by my own rules, so that’s just fine with me.
Will you be touring in Sweden someday or have you done that already?
– I hope someday to have a big enough fanbase globally to justify it, but right now I don’t think I could make it work. I played in the UK a year ago and the shows themselves were really fun, but being in a foreign country, even one where I spoke the language, where I didn’t have any close friends, was really difficult for me – I’ve only just recently gotten comfortable touring in the US and it makes the most sense to focus on playing here.
What would be your last words of wisdom to your Swedish fans?
– I recently expressed this to a young fellow musician but it really applies to every creative person: You will never get permission to rock to your fullest awesomeness. Do it anyway.
From: https://invisibleguy.wordpress.com/2012/02/22/interview-with-unwoman/
The Orange Kyte - Distractions
Steeped in psychedelic garage rock sensibilities, The Orange Kyte’s Stevie Moonboots has become a beloved voice in Vancouver’s diverse music scene since leaving his hometown of Dublin behind in 2012. For the Orange Kyte’s new album, Masquerade, Moonboots has drawn inspiration through reflective observation of Vancouver, unearthing his curious take on the duality of the human experience.
“I’m very interested in psychology and sociology,” says Moonboots. “I’m just interested in what lurks beneath the façade of everyday life. You know when you’re having a bad day and you see somebody who looks like they haven’t got a care in the world, but you know they’re looking at you thinking the same. The masks we wear and how we present ourselves from a societal point of view has always fascinated me.”
The Orange Kyte’s songwriting process conjures cascading kaleidoscopic visions of orange hues, and dreamy rock psychedelia that hits the aesthetic core of what Moonboots refers to as a growing —most certainly an orange coloured and hallucinogenic patterned — “umbrella” of genres.
“I try to keep a theme in my head then join the dots and make it cohesive. I’m very standoffish when it comes to dictating parts to everyone in the band. One of us starts playing and then we all join in. The focus is on creating the best possible songs I can write. We never limit ourselves and our sound is an ever-expanding umbrella of musical influences.” The lenses in which the band got its name is multifaceted, being an interesting homage to the past, with a surprisingly potent metaphor of rocks subversive power.
“I didn’t have a name for the band before I released the first single so I asked my girlfriend at the time what her favourite colour was, and it just happened to be Orange,” Moonboots says with a laugh. “Kyte is prison slang for contraband communication. People think I’m doing a playful version of kite but that’s actually not the case. Contraband communication you can relate that to music, and sometimes rock and roll can be that.” Avoiding any form of contrivance has been one of The Orange Kyte’s most cherished values. Comfortability as an artist can lead to a weakening of the messages found in the songs, losing its “humanity.”
According to Moonboots this is something many artists of the past have strived to avoid as it can dampen originality. Aware of this trap, this new offering feels truly vital and informed coming from a place of exciting inventiveness. Impressive for a genre of music that has existed for many decades.
“You want to create a body of work, like Guided by Voices for example, that leaves a legacy. Contentment is the death of your art. David Bowie said to never let your feet touch the bottom of the pool,” Moonboots says. From: https://beatroutemedia.com/the-orange-kyte-masquerade-album/
The Sugarcubes - Birthday / Motorcrash
But suppose I told you that the quote above belongs to Humbert Humbert, the predacious and reprehensible protagonist in Nabokov’s eyebrow-raising classic Lolita. In that case, your reaction might be, not surprisingly, less commiserative. This scandalous exemplar of late modernist literature is, after all, one in a short list of modern classics whose lurid content and racy premise belong in the collective cultural unconscious. You don’t need to have read the novel to know that its plotline details the improper love affair between a middle-aged English professor and his prepubescent ward. Nor do you need to be a heavy-handed moralist to understand the unsavory implications of that relationship. Even when it comes to love and the heart, some things are just plain wrong.
But even as the notion of inappropriate and illicit intergenerational romance makes us grimace in disapproval, especially when it involves a minor, Nabokov’s use of it as the vehicle with which to probe our fundamental desires is still remarkable. You don’t have to approve or sanction Humbert’s nefarious behavior to recognize that there’s something much more complex at work. As a skilled observer of the human condition, Nabokov is aware of our latent impulse to keep looking when everything around us tells us not to. It’s this curiosity, capable of pulling us out of our emotional comfort zone, that feeds our appetite for material that’s incompatible with any personal or collective moral standards. There’s a reason why sex, violence, shock, and horror sell as well as they do.
In this context, we can better grasp the book’s appeal and its beneath-the-surface subject matter. It’s also under this light that we can appreciate similarly provocative artistic statements. Enter “Birthday,” Icelandic band The Sugarcubes’ ground-breaking 1987 hit-single from their debut album Life’s Too Good. A four-minute-long, upbeat ballad that features an eclectic range of parts including Einar Benediktsson’s equable trumpet; Sigtryggur Baldursson’s syncopated percussion; Bragi Olafsson’s warm and stolid bass work; Þór Eldon’s new-wave-influenced shrill tone; and Bjork’s clunky and rattling keyboards, this old-MTV favorite served as the Reykjavic-native’s introduction into the American consciousness. Characterized by a fresh ‘80s-forward sound, the song quickly became famous for its odd and cryptic lyrical content about a five-year-old girl with some unusual habits:
She lives in this house over there
Has her world outside it
Scrabbles in the earth with her fingers and her mouth…
Threads worms on a string
Keeps spiders in her pocket
Collects fly wings in a jar
Scrubs horse flies
And pinches them on a line
That is a curious way to introduce a character that is, without a doubt, enigmatic. There isn’t much that we know about this girl other than “she’s five years old” and that whatever interests define her, they do not exist at home. Her life is spent outside, engaged in several strange and seemingly nonsensical hobbies. What’s interesting is Bjork’s decision to tell the story from a third-person perspective, making it feel as if she is looking out her window, able to see this child go on about her baffling business. It’s hard not to feel like she’s extending an invitation for us to come and observe with her, to watch this perplexing set of events as they unfold. And here, we come across that same “curiosity” principle. Curiosity, as we find out, doesn’t just keep us looking and listening. It also moves the plot along:
She has one friend, he lives next door
They’re listening to the weather
He knows how many freckles she’s got
She scratches his beard
She’s painting huge books
And glues them together
They saw a big raven
It glided down the sky
She touched it
By the third stanza, Bjork lets us know that the girl has a friend who lives in the house next door, which is not an uncommon thing for a child that age, particularly for one who spends most of her time playing outside. What’s strange, though, is that this “friend” is an adult man. What’s disturbing is the degree of familiarity he has with the child, particularly with her body. The fact that he’s aware of specific details about her physical appearance, like the number of freckles on her face, suggests a closeness that’s hard to bear. This sudden revulsion is reinforced by how at ease the child feels with this man. She doesn’t perceive his interest in her as perverse. On the contrary, she sees him as someone whose presence and affection feed her interests and curiosity and allow her to discover the world around her. Her interest in all of these odd and eccentric activities, in a sense, mirrors a profound and fundamental interest in him.
It’s important to point out that at no point in the song do we get a clear explanation of what happens. Instead, Bjork concludes each stanza with a guttural cry that heightens the song’s emotional tension as it intensifies our desire for a resolution. The song concludes with Bjork telling us that it’s the girl’s birthday, an occasion she celebrates with her adult playmate:
They’re smoking cigars
He’s got a chain of flowers
And sews a bird in her knickers
As if this tale couldn’t get any more objectionable, she concludes with:
They’re smoking cigars
They lie in the bathtub
A chain of flowers
Criticized and questioned when it first came out, the song’s intent isn’t different from Lolita’s, and it’s hard to argue the latter’s influence on the former. In a quote from Martin Aston’s biography on the singer, Bjorkgraphy, she explains that she set out to explore the way that not only “huge men, about 50 years old”, but also “material, a tree, anything,” can have a profoundly erotic effect on someone even when “nothing happens.”
In other words, nothing physical or concrete needs to happen for someone to be emotionally affected by a person or thing. Our mere interest in them, which Bjork and Nabokov contend are based on the innate desire in all of us to be both the object and subject of discovery, is enough to shape the way that we perceive our world. In coming to terms with the limits of what we’re allowed to experience, Bjork says, we can ultimately find the spiritual and emotional fulfillment we so anxiously crave.
From: https://twostorymelody.com/retrospective-review-the-sugarcubes-birthday/
According to Björk, the song is about a little girl who is out biking and sees "a motor crash, and no police has arrived yet, and there is a car with parents in the front and children in the back and they're all wounded. And she wants to help them - so it's a really nice song." The girl in the song then sneaks the mother in the motorcrash into her house and nurses the woman's wounds there. When the mother is healed, she and the girl disguise themselves and take a taxi to the woman's home. When the woman's husband opens the door, she and the girl pull off their disguises.
"But the husband gets very angry," Björk explained, "and says, 'Where have you been all this time?' And then the song is over." Lyrics about motorcrashes (or as Americans call them, car accidents), are not typically paired with jaunty music as heard here, but The Sugarcubes were not a typical band. The subject matter turned off some major record labels, including Polydor, which pulled plans to sign Sugarcubes because of the perceived offensiveness of "Motorcrash." Björk explained that labels' reactions were absurd because the song wasn't about anything mildly offensive. The Icelandic director Óskar Jónasson was behind the lens for the video, which starred the band members as the characters described in the song. Their keyboard player, Magga Örnólfsdóttir, is the girl on the bike. From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/the-sugarcubes/motorcrash
Rockfour - Oranges
It is not easy to make a record in 2000 with a heavy mid-to late-1960s feel that doesn't strike jaded ears as pointless revivalism. Rockfour manage to largely succeed in doing so, to their considerable credit. The harmonies are very much in the late-1960s vein of the Beatles and Pink Floyd, while the melodies and slight sense of whimsy are likewise much in the late-1960s British psych pop mold, and the guitars often carry a Byrdsian ring ("Oranges" being the outstanding example). "Superman" gets into a bit of a (very early) David Bowie mold, not least due to its title. Certainly the creative use of Mellotron in particular is vital to the convincing dreamy psychedelic feel, as are ventures with the stylophone and wind organ. Of course, many bands draw inspiration from these musical giants of decade past, but Rockfour stands out from that pack in their superior sense of melodics, an unforced ease with the approach, and a diverse lyrical palette that encompasses frustration with government and the media, poetic spaciness, and (on "Oranges") paisley alternate-world dreaminess. Any attention this draws in the U.S. and U.K. may be partially due to the novelty of an Israeli alternative rock band, but, in fact, this would be worthy of notice regardless of its regional origin. From: https://www.allmusic.com/album/supermarket-mw0000323786#review
PerKelt - Morana
Have any of you played in other bands?
Stepan: I have played just very briefly with a punk band called Poetické Odpoledne (Poetic Afternoon) and Bohemian Guitar Orchestra (if that is considered a band) back in the Czech Republic
Pavlina: I've played oboe in several orchestras and early music ensembles...
David: I've played in a melodic death metal band called "Shades of Syn" for 5 years in France.
Will:Yes! Many. At least 25 other full time bands and many smaller projects, as well as collaborating on various performances and recordings. Mostly I played with one3four, a math punk band, BAAMPHF!!!, an instrumental math metal band, Vultures Quartet, improvised music and modern composition ensemble, and a few other goth bands and Asian traditional projects, primarily.
How is it that you started playing music?
Stepan: Music education is a big tradition in the Czech Republic. Primary schools of music are in every town, attended by many children, and, if you are lucky, have a good teacher, and show a hint of talent and interest, there is no way to escape playing music.
David: Since I was a boy I have always been attracted towards percussion and drums. At the age of 16 I decided to start playing drums and became self-taught; finally this year at 28, I've enrolled in Music School.
Will:I started beating on things when I was about 15. I wanted to join my high school band, but I was told I was too old. Then I went to university where there was a small music program and I took a few percussion performance classes and lots of classical music history classes, but mostly I started playing with other musicians outside of university then. That would have been about 1983 or before. Quickly, I ended up in a few bands, and in some cases made my own percussion. The start of a trend that continues through to today! Now I have completed a few music degrees and play music full time.
What are your names? / Who plays what? / How old are you?
Stepan Honc (30) on guitar
Pavlina Bastlova (29) on recorders, harp and vocals
David Maurette (28) on percussion
and Will Connor (51) on percussion.
Have you had other previous members? Stepan: many... Michal Benda on viola, Filip Tomanek on percussion, Karel Novotny on viola, Matej Stepanek on Cello, and after we moved to UK we have briefly played with George Seaton on drums and Maya McCourt on cello as well. PerKelt takes a lot of dedication and only the fittest survive :)
Did you make music even when you were young?
Stepan: Yep, if I don't count a regrettable experience with a super noisy metal drum when I was 4 years old (my mum loved it!), I started playing guitar when I was 7, wrote my first song when I was around 15.
Pavlina: What is it? I'm 29, I'm still young!
David: Since I can remember, I've always made up wood sticks to play on anything
Will: Constantly. I was always tapping on something or making noise generating devices (and often getting told off for it by my parents, who hated that I was leaning towards being a musician even when I was a child). And I’m still young, too...
Where are you from?
Stepan: Originally from the Czech Republic, PerKelt first formed around students of Conservatory in Pardubice. Now we live in London, UK
David: I'm originally French but I grew up in New Caledonia.
Will: Technically, I'm a resident of Honolulu, Hawaii. I grew up in the Appalachian Mountains of South and North Carolina, and I've lived in Juneau Alaska, Chengdu, Sichuan and Lhasa, Tibet, China, and I am currently in the Czech Republic until I return to the band in the UK, where we all live in London.
What year did the band form?
Stepan: 2007
What's your style of genre?
Stepan: we call it Celtic Medieval Speed Folk, or occasionally Progressive Celtic Music as we are writing more and more of original material these days. We like to describe it as a music that sounds like folk songs from their own country (we have exactly this feedback from people from Ireland, England, Spain, Brazil, Peru, Eastern Europe...) with some ancient tweaks, and generally played way too fast...
What inspires you?
Stepan: Everything around what sounds good. We have a massive background of classical music, the first idea to form a band came to us once we heard the River Dance and a Czech medieval band called Gothart. Since then it is whatever from Jethro Tull, Loreena McKennit, random rock and folk bands, Irish folk music, alternative scene, jazz, math punk, jamming with friends...
Pavlina: I think that my greatest source of inspiration lays mainly in traditional Irish music. Particularly Irish dance music. I simply love its vibe... And I am also very fond of classical and film music because it can express a huge range of moods and feelings and it's got a lot of dynamics and tension... Those are the elements which we try to put in our music when we compose.
Will: H. P. Lovecraft has always been and probably always will be my main influence for everything. Godzilla mythos is also high on the list, as well as kung fu / samurai movies, noise music, Medieval music, ethnomusicology, and all things Gothic and Halloween related. It all feeds in to my music somehow. Energy is the other big thing. Perhaps that’s vague or cliché, but if music doesn’t have the energy (not necessarily speed or volume, although, that’s fine, of course), it’s just not inspiring to me, so a intangble influence for me is aiming for a high level of (good) energy.
How often and where do you reherse?
Stepan: Approximately twice per week at my house in Balham, London
How have you developed since you started with the music?
Stepan: We are still evolving but since I was 7 I definitely learnt how to play guitar better and since we started with the band I've learnt better how to arrange music, how to work with timing and orchestration, how to change time signature within one song seventeen times...
Pavlina: It's been a constant evolution since I was 4 and started playing recorders. A couple of awards from competitions settled my confidence; the Summer School of Early Music, which I regularly attended, introduced me to some music we later arranged with PerKelt; and performing technically demanding baroque pieces gave me the technique and sparkled the love for playing insanely fast. And, of course, 9 years of studies of oboe and playing in orchestra at conservatory and academy of music count too, with the background of music theory and harmony it's much easier to compose something interesting...
Will: I think this a question for the others, really, when referring to PerKelt’s development, but I would add that since I have joined the band, we have grown to be more “speed folk” oriented and taken a turn towards more rhythmically varied composition, and moved slightly away from straight forward Medieval sounds and even away from more traditional Celtic melodies, whilst still retaining a feel for it all. It's been a very fun development and I love the direction we are headed currently!
Do you have other interests of work outside the band?
Stepan: strictly speaking of work PerKelt is our full-time project, but of course we have another interests. For me it's nature, Pagan culture and Wiccan magic, poetry, Buddhism, philosophy, psychic explorations etc...
Pavlina: I am actually working on my first solo EP as well, and do abstract painting quite intensively.
David: I was working as barista/bartender but I just quit my job as school and PerKelt became the priority and took over most of my time, so good!...
Will: As Stepan says, PerKelt is our 9-5 job, but for me, in terms of non-PerKelt stuff, it's mostly Gothic and Asian cultural things, with many things relating back to percussion. (As I mentioned above) Lovecraft, old horror movies, Godzilla, kung fu and samurai movies and tv shows, XBox games, comics, Ethnomusicology studies, building instruments, Halloween, and I like to grow cacti. In addition, I still play a lot of other music, but PerKelt is my main focus. I play solo percussion dark ambient Lovecraft-influenced compositions and work on sound design for the Gothic immersive theatre company Dread Falls Theatre as my other main music outlets.
Are you looking for a booking agency, and what are your thoughts around that?
Stepan: We are just about to sign a big contract with one, so we are really keen to these things. Many agencies in London are quite incompetent but some really do their job great and it's a win-win situation, then. When you are an artist it's a great benefit for you to be able to focus on what you are good at and not be bothered by what you are not.
Are you looking for a label, and what are your thoughts around that?
Stepan: We absolutely want to keep total artistic freedom so major label would probably be avoided (not that we have any offer on the table :)). But to be honest this was never our main interest so I just hear rumors about labels pushing artists towards main-stream music, dictating what they can and cannot say on stage etc... Not really something we would like to do to our PerKelt baby.
Pavlina: Totally agree on this.
What made you decide to make this music?
Stepan: Coincidence... I happened to meet Paja and have exactly the same taste of folk music, preferably fast with strong melodies. Then we joined up with few schoolmates at conservatory and very quickly were offered a job as a band at one massive Medieval tavern to play regularly, which led us quite strongly to discover some great ancient melodies from 13th-16th century, but later we found that we need more artistic freedom. We moved to London and now we are rather curious what will inspire us next and where the band style will evolve.
Pavlina: I just always really wanted to create something new and interesting...
What are your songs about?
Stepan: Lyrics are mostly stolen from people who wrote them several centuries ago, so they are about random folklore things (trolls, drinking, animals, love, warfare...) or Christian topics. But we never really cared, most of them are in foreign languages so we use the vocals as another instrument rather than to bring some message to our audience... However, after few years in UK we are daring enough to write some lyrics, too. The last song Dancer in the Wind is about freedom, another one Going Home is about going home... so pretty much random things again :) We shall see in the future.
Who does the composing and writes the lyrics?
Stepan: I was always writing a poetry in Czech, so now when I actually speak English, I'm logically the source of things that rhyme again. With composing it's more interesting, because we all are involved in the process. Paja usually brings some short melody on harp or flutes, I get an idea to write something contrasting, then we all work on the harmony, accompaniment and argue about structure, and eventually our percussionists finish the full sound or bring some more ideas... It's pretty vivid, exciting and long process.
Do you start with the music or the lyrics?
Stepan: Almost always with the music. Even if the lyrics are already written, we are quite good at bending them to fit the melody we like. Usually it sounds better than before.
Do you compose in a certain environment?
Stepan: Not really, sometime in the park, in the pub, or romantically at home with my laptop.
Pavlina: My ideas come so spontaneously, that I have a pen and paper with me on the bus, on the lift, in the coffee shop...
Will: The bus and the tube work well for me, too, and I have been known to wake up in the middle of the night, having dreamt of a new song bit and I have to go write it down immediately (or even call/email Stepan at some ridiculous hour), a la the late great Sun Ra writing for his Archestra.
Have you done any covers live?
Stepan: If you consider 13th century songs from which we've grabbed lyrics and 8 bars of melody, and covered it with a 5 minutes song of completely different nature, then we are mostly a cover band :) But otherwise, apart from few jam sessions where we've played live Fee Ra Huri by Omnia, we don't do covers...
What language do you sing in?
Stepan: I was looking forward to this question :) Old Galician, Old Occitan, French, Swedish, Scottish Gaelic, Czech, English and few more are coming.
From: https://ghgumman.blogg.se/2015/october/interview-with-perkelt.html
Red Hot Chili Peppers - Breaking The Girl
For Red Hot Chili Peppers’ 1991 album BloodSugarSexMagik (BSSM) the band seemingly had it all. A breakthrough album with 1989's Mother's Milk, a new line-up with the mercurial John Frusciante on guitar and major tours booked. Yet there was much messiness behind the scenes.
The band were still grieving for guitarist Hillel Slovak, who overdosed on heroin in 1988, a tragedy that prompted frontman Anthony Kiedis to beat his own heroin addiction. A few other guitarists were tried out before Frusciante arrived in 1989. Ironically, Frusciante would soon spiral into heroin abuse himself and leave (in 1992) for six years. On the bright side, the Chili Peppers had great new songs and a new producer, Rick Rubin.
Rubin was a maverick and bought ‘The Mansion’, a 10-bedroom pile in Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles. The house had been used by actor Errol Flynn in the '30s and was once home to famed escapologist Harry Houdini. It wasn’t a typical studio, but Rubin and the Chili Peppers agreed they would record there for “the vibe”. Audioslave, The Mars Volta and Slipknot have all since recorded albums at The Mansion.
The basic chords for Breaking The Girl were written by Frusciante, partly inspired by Led Zeppelin’s acoustic forays Friends (III) and The Battle Of Evermore (IV). Kiedis immediately wanted to match Frusciante’s folksy neopsychedelic music to a lyric addressing his recent break-up with model Carmen Hawk.
Kiedis’ words also mused on fears that he was repeating the mistakes of his womanising actor father, John, who had bizarrely organised for Anthony to lose his virginity at just 12 with Kiedis Snr’s own 18-year-old girlfriend. Witness the lyric: “Raised by my dad / Girl of the day / He was my man / That was the way.”
The singer also later mused: “I began to wonder if I was following the standards of my father, jumping from branch to branch… As exciting and temporarily fulfilling as this constant influx of interesting and beautiful girls can be, at the end of the day that shit is lonely and you’re left with nothing.”
Clearly Breaking The Girl is no ordinary ballad. Unusually in the Chilis’ canon, it’s also in 6/8 time and a true collaboration. As Frusciante said of the Chilis’ modus operandi: “Everybody’s their own boss. I write the guitar parts, Chad does drums, Flea writes the bass and Anthony writes the vocals. Everybody makes suggestions about everyone else’s part. If you really want to do that part, you can do it, but everybody takes suggestions from everybody else.”
Bassist Flea has since revealed he wanted to adapt a “less is more” approach for BSSM: “I had been playing too much prior to that… If I do play something busy, it stands out, instead of the bass being a constant onslaught of notes. Space is good.”
Frusciante concurred, adding: “Space is a huge part of it. Like those parts of life when you’re able to kick back and do nothing – those are amazing parts of life. It’s the same with music… Mother’s Milk doesn’t represent the type of guitar player I am. I’m a bit embarrassed by the album, really.”
Meanwhile, Chad Smith’s Breaking The Girl drum parts were inspired by the Jimi Hendrix Experience’s Mitch Mitchell. “I was trying to think like Manic Depression, the Hendrix song, that tom thing… and that’s almost what Breaking The Girl is. I’ve always been into taking suggestions from other [band members]… Flea’s a very interesting pedestrian drummer and he’ll play a straight roll on a tom and I’ll move it around, but I wouldn’t have thought like that. I kind of digested [Flea’s] version and made it more drum-oriented.”
The percussive bridge is another story altogether. Smith recalls the whole band wanted a “metallic” breakdown. “We sent out the runner guy from the house to go to the dump yard and bring back big metallic pipes and stuff. We sat on the ground in the foyer and Flea had this big pipe and was beating it, and I’m playing [car wheel] brake drums and Anthony was playing a garbage can or something. Then we all kind of switched and double-tracked it and Brendan [O’Brien, engineer] put a mic out there and would say, ‘OK, now you sit closer, you sit farther’… and it was done in half an hour.”
Indeed, working at The Mansion encouraged such improvised recording. While Breaking The Girl’s metalwork was hit in the foyer, Kiedis recorded many vocals in his bedroom and all of Frusciante’s acoustic guitars for BSSM were recorded in his sleeping quarters. For Breaking The Girl, Frusciante played a Maton Messiah 12-string, down-tuned a semitone to Eb. A Mellotron was used for the ‘flute’ parts.
By the time the video for Breaking The Girl was filmed, Frusciante had tumbled into drugs and quit. The Breaking The Girl video is one of only two Chilis videos to feature Arik Marshall (who briefly acted as a replacement before Dave Navarro), the other being If You Have To Ask. But it’s Frusciante who plays both tracks. From: https://www.musicradar.com/news/red-hot-chili-peppers-breaking-the-girl
Tanya Donelly - Pretty Deep
Question: I have the impression that your surname is Irish. Do you know much about your family roots? Do you feel much of a connection to Ireland or wherever else your family roots might be from?
Tanya Donelly: Donelly is Irish, but my family came over so long ago that I feel no direct connection to Ireland, other than a romantic one. I just recently developed an interest in genealogy and would like to learn more about my blood. I’m also Hungarian on my mother’s side—easier to trace because my great grandparents came over in the beginning of this century.
Q: Is it scary having your name on the CD cover rather than having Throwing Muses or Belly on there?
T: Yes.
Q: Do you feel comfortable being a solo artist?
T: More so now.
Q: Or does it just seem natural?
T: It doesn’t feel completely natural to me yet. I’ve got a band again in a way–the people I toured with are playing on this new record and will most likely do the next tour with me, too.
Q: How do you perceive your place in the marketplace? Are record sales important to you? Or do you leave that kind of stuff to your manager and others? Are you happy with a small cult kind of following? Or does having huge record sales appeal to you?
T: I’m more happy with a small cult following and the artistic freedom that comes with that. It’s also important to sell enough records in order to continue to make them.
Q: How different was the transition from the Muses to Belly, compared to going from Belly to solo?
T: Leaving the Muses was an amicable, sad experience. The Belly breakup was a less than amicable, sad experience. I think the Muses split was harder, because I was younger and much more easily freaked out.
Q: Do you feel like you’re writing music more for yourself now, rather than for a band?
T: Yes, although I still keep the people I play with in mind when I have certain noises in my head and when I’m thinking about parts. Dean, Rich, Elizabeth and Dave are very much part of the process on this record.
From: https://fairangels.wordpress.com/2018/05/12/brief-interview-with-tanya-donelly-1998-2/
Best known as frontwoman for Belly and sometime member of Throwing Muses, this first solo outing by Tanya Donelly is everything you’d expect. Issued on 4AD records in 1997, ‘Lovesongs For Underdogs’ does not always sound like great departure from previous work with Belly; but while not greatly different, it manages to pull together the soft sounds of that band’s ‘Star’ and rockier parts of ‘King’ on one release. In that respect, it could be viewed as Donelly’s most “complete” record.
Released as a single, the opening number ‘Pretty Deep’ sets the tone for a lot of the record’s best moments. It’s a brilliant piece of chorus driven alt-rock (with poppy edges), its ringing guitars evoking lots of great 90s vibes, while the quieter moments highlight Donelly’s fantastically breathy vocal style. The chopping between loud and quiet is typical of the musical fashion of the time, and the multi-tracked guitars toward the end of the number have a great mix between dirty and clean, which in turn bring things to a solid climax. From: https://www.realgonerocks.com/2013/03/tanya-donelly-lovesongs-for-underdogs/
Stevie Wonder - Live Cannes, France 1974
Ah, Steve! Oh, Wonder! You don’t miss much, do you? “Who’s eating that bread?” Stevie reaches over and gropes around for my hand and his fingers discover the piece of garlic bread I’ve just picked out of the basket on the bar. “Thought it was you,” he laughs. “You hungry? You want to eat now?”
No, no, I’m fine, Steve. Don’t let me interrupt. On his other side is Mike Sembello, Stevie’s guitarist, with an acoustic, and right here in the bar of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, amidst the cocktail-hour clamor, they are working out a tune which has been gestating in Steve’s head. “Um, Mike, let’s try it this way. Doo doo da doo... no, doo doo doo da doo... yeah, then a C-major seven, pom pom pompom, C-minor seven, then a D with a C in the bass.” He clears his throat and croons liquidly: “When I said love... each word... I meant... forever... But when I told you that... C-major seven... But when I told you that...”
Charlie Collins, Stevie's business manager, steals up holding a big Sony portable cassette recorder. You can never tell when Stevie Wonder is going to feel like working so they always try to have one of these cassette rigs handy in case that stray hit might pop out. Bar service comes to a screeching halt as the bartenders and the waiters crowd in to hear Stevie sing: “... each word I meant forever, uh, there it goes for four counts then on to F... I meant, duh, duh, duh, duh, forever. Okay?” Sembello plays it back as requested and an enormous grin spills over Stevie Wonder’s face. “Oh, that’s beautiful, that’s so beautiful.” He clutches my hand again. “I still got to work out the words.”
Tonight is an occasion. We are gathered here at the Fifth Avenue to celebrate Stevie Wonder’s return. Six weeks before he was nearly killed in an accident in North Carolina when the car in which he was riding ran into the rear of a lumber truck. A log from the truck’s payload had come smashing through the front windshield and had caught Steve squarely in the forehead. You can still see the great, raging pink splotch of a scar above his dark glasses. He was pulled from the wreck bloody and unconscious and remained in a coma for over a week. When he came to, his sense of smell was completely gone and it was thought at first that the damage might be permanent.
Steve responded well to treatment, however, and the smell returned. He wouldn’t be allowed to resume touring for a couple of months yet, or even to return to his normal rather frenetic work pace, but he’d improved sufficiently that a press conference had been held the previous week to announce to the rock cosmos that Stevie Wonder was back on the case.
I’ve just met Steve a little while ago here in the bar, but it is already clear that we are not to relate solely as writer and subject. Whatever objectivity I’ve brought into this is crumbling fast. My God, I’m thinking, I don’t want to write a press release on the guy, but I love him already. His time is my time, he says. All he has on tap for the week are a couple of rehearsals and some doctor’s appointments; for the rest we can do what we like, do the interviews, see some movies maybe, kick around Manhattan, or just lay back and screw off... whatever. Furthermore, he says, he doesn’t want to know anything about what I’m going to write. If somebody’s out to do him a job, they’re gonna do it, no matter what, he says.
And right now, anyway, it’s time to get down. Most of the members of Wonderlove, Stevie’s band, are gathered under one roof for the first time since the accident, and tomorrow rehearsals start for a new album. But tonight it’s party time—the juice is flowing, the music and the chatter are loud... folks are feeling good. These last six weeks have been tough on everybody but now Stevie’s out of the woods sure enough. And right now that boy is really cooking. He’s left off working on the new song, and with some of the Wonderlovers gathered round to chip in with the echoes and doo-wahs, he’s launched into a rollicking retrospective medley of wonderful Wonder goldies. Stevie’s head wobbles drunkenly around on his neck like a spent gyro and the whole place throbs as he slams into the prophetic finish of Higher Ground, his hit single currently dominating the AM airwaves: “I’m so glad he let me try it again/ ’Cause my last time on earth I lived a whole world of sin/ I’m so glad I know more than I knew then/ Gonna keep on tryin’/ Till I reach the highest ground... Whew!”
I’m telling you! Stevie, you are a piece of work. “Oh, this is fun!” he exults. “I’m having so much fun. Really. Everything cool with you, Burr? You having a good time?”
I can’t tell you, Steve, but I can’t help wondering what it is you’re cruising on. I mean nobody feels that good without a little help. “I don’t even drink, man,” Stevie laughs. “Not since the accident anyway. And never too much before that. I used to drink a little beer now and then, and sometimes a little Mateus. But I even cut the wine out when I heard what the Portuguese were doing in Angola. Drugs? I never did acid or anything like that, but I did try grass a couple of times. The first time was pretty nice, I got out there, but the next time was nothing but a lot of paranoia so I never went near it again. I love to hear people talking about all the junk I must be doing, though. You know, ‘There goes Stevie Wonder jivin’ around. Must be stoned again.’ Sometimes I’ll be sitting somewhere listening to tapes, like on a plane or something, and my head’ll get to going around like it does when I hear music, and I’ll hear somebody whisper, ‘Look at Stevie Wonder over there actin’ crazy. You reckon he on dope?’ That’s so funny. First of all, they figure that ’cause you’re blind you can’t hear them. And my moving my head around like that, that’s just what is called a ‘blindism.’ When you’re blind you build up a lot of excess energy that other people get rid of through their eyes. You got to work it off some way, you know, and it’s just an unconscious thing. Like a lot of blind people are always rubbing their eyes. Each person develops his own blindism.” From: https://classic.esquire.com/article/share/5fd27dfa-6495-4dda-8e1f-8d071414f6b7
Bonnie Raitt - Old Grey Whistle Test 1976
Bonnie Raitt made her professional debut performing in and around Philadelphia in 1969 shortly after taking a break from college to explore a career in music. As a lover of folk music she heard at camp, she picked up the guitar around 9 years old to play songs by her heroes Joan Baez, Odetta and Bob Dylan. Always a fan of Ray Charles, Fats Domino and Motown as well, she first fell hard for the blues through The Rolling Stones and English bands who turned the world onto Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf in the mid-sixties. She fell under the spell of Country blues at 14 and taught herself slide and blues guitar listening to records until she had the great opportunity to befriend and learn from legendary Blues artists like Mississippi Fred McDowell, Muddy Waters, Son House and Sippie Wallace. What started out as a hobby, through a kismet of timing and opportunity, became a career. A few of her performances were captured on TV during the 70’s, including her 1976 performance on the BBC’s iconic ‘Old Grey Whistle Test’ program recorded in London. From: https://www.bonnieraitt.com/flashback-to-the-old-grey-whistle-test-bbc-1976/
In the 1970s, "The Old Grey Whistle Test" was a popular BBC TV show. Typically, it would have a variety of different performers for each show, but occasionally it would devote an entire show to just one artist. One such occasion was when the American singer Bonnie Raitt played a short concert for the show in London in 1976. Most of the songs are from her early 1970s albums, but she also does a couple from her latest at the time, "Home Plate," released in 1975. From: https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2022/08/bonnie-raitt-bbc-concert-old-grey.html
The Move - Shazam - Full album
1 Hello Susie
2 Beautiful Daughter
3 Cherry Blossom Clinic Revisited
4 Fields of People
5 Don't Make My Baby Blue
6 The Last Thing on My Mind
Very few Americans have ever heard of The Move unless they found themselves bored enough to dig deep into the liner notes for one of the Electric Light Orchestra’s commercial successes and learned that Jeff Lynne and drummer Bev Bevan were ex-members. Lynne was a johnny-come-lately, however, and did not appear on Shazam, a forgotten masterwork originally designed to properly introduce this long-popular-in-the-mother-country British band to the colonies, courtesy of A&M Records.
Things didn’t work out as planned. A&M was out of its league when it came to promoting rock bands (the “A” stands for Herb Alpert, for chrissake), and arranged a comically disastrous tour that required the band the lug their stuff around the USA in a U-Haul trailer. Creative and personal tensions between band members didn’t make things any easier. When the rubble had cleared, however, what survived was Shazam, one of the most fascinating rock recordings ever made.
The album has been buried for years, and I only vaguely remember hearing parts of it while growing up. I rediscovered it accidentally while browsing through iTunes and tracked down an extraordinarily expensive import CD version for my collection. I fell in love with it on the first listen, knocked out by Bevan’s drumming, the sheer diversity captured in a mere six songs, the intense riffs, the gorgeous harmonies and the great good fun captured in random street interviews and band chatter.
The album explodes with the no-bullshit guitar and pounding drums of “Hello, Suzie,” the story of a ditzy British teenybopper featuring an introduction that almost forces you out of your seat. Roy Wood growls out the lead vocal with good humor and strong support in the form of a thrilling backdrop of harmonies that come together with a huge exclamation point at the end of the bridge. I keep praying that somewhere out there a band will cover this sucker and use it as an opening number for a gig, as I’d love to see this done live with the same great energy as the original.
After a short interview with some native Brits, Carl Wayne steps to the microphone for the lovely and bouncy string piece, “Beautiful Daughter,” delivered in a perfect combination of romantic sincerity tempered by a touch of tongue-in-cheek and supported by the energetic strings that would later characterize early ELO recordings.
Then... a door creaks... footsteps...the door closes... and we hear a diffident voice narrating the story of how he would up going off his HEAD! The band explodes with heavy bass, drums, the works! This is “Cherry Blossom Clinic Revisited,” a high-power remake of one of their earlier songs, and a delightfully wacky remake it is. The heaviness fades into acoustic guitar playing Bach, no less, and ends with an over-the-edge falsetto picking up the tune and eventually blending into layers of perfectly executed harmonies.
Next comes the delightfully free-flowing “Fields of People,” spiced with chit-chat with passers-by, plenty of laughter, more gorgeous harmonies and one of the great drum rolls in history. Bev Bevan knocks me out on every song, and whenever I hear ELO today, I generally tune out the band and ride out the song with Bev. The song is an unusual combination of great fun and well-executed shifts that make for an entirely engaging listening experience.
The Move then go heavy-bluesy with their cover of “Don’t Make My Baby Blue,” which gives Carl Wayne a great opportunity to apply his naturally melodic voice to something with more oomph. The tone of the guitar anticipates the heavier sound common in 70’s rock, and the bass and drums provide an unusually strong bottom for a Move song (pre-Shazam Move tended towards baroque pop). Despite the variation from the norm, this is a strong performance that makes you wish The Move had gotten their shit together and explored the new possibilities suggested by this piece. Alas, they opted for a rebuild, and their follow-up album, Looking On, is a godawful mess (though I have always been rather fond of the song “Brontosaurus”).
Shazam ends with a long and again heavy cover of Tom Paxton’s classic, “The Last Thing on My Mind.” The Move’s version is nothing like the mildly pleasant folk original, with big guitars and pounding rhythms leading the way. Wayne does a superb job with the vocals and Roy Wood’s harmonies are dead-on, providing a beautifully sweet wrap to end this most unusual album. From: https://altrockchick.com/2012/05/02/classic-music-reviews-shazam-by-the-move/
Mitsoura - Pala Late
Six years after the self-titled debut of the band around Hungarian singer Mitsu, Mitsoura deliver their second album. Was it worth the wait? Indeed it was. As it turns out the intriguing mix of traditional lyrics and music with modern arrangements that was already present on their debut was only a preview of what the new album has in store. Connecting original Roma lyrics from Hungary, Romania, Serbia and even Egypt with modern (electronic) music seems nice on paper but, as we have seen in the past, can turn out completely wrong. Not so with Mitsoura who display the ability to create a whole new musical genre on their own. You will recognise influences from Nordic groups like Mari Boine and Värtinna, gypsy brass band music but also modern electronic music that we hear from artists like Mercan Dede or Transglobal Underground. Even fans of Lisa Gerard and Dead Can Dance will find strands back. The sum of all this is not a copy but a highly original musical approach. Of course the typical voice of Mitsu is the centre point but the contribution of Andras Monori (a.o. bansuri, sax and sitar), Peter Szalai (percussion) and Miklos Lukacz (cymbals) is substantial. To top it of the modern twist comes from the programming of Mark Moldvai. ‘Dura Dura Dura’ is a diverse musical journey around Eastern Europe. From the epic titletrack to the hotblooded ‘Tutti Frutti’, from the stomping ‘Kelushka’ to the powerballad ‘Ederlezi’, from the raga influenced ‘Pala late’ to the introvert closing track ‘Le shavore’. From: https://rateyourmusic.com/release/album/mitsoura/dura-dura-dura/
The Temptations - I Know I'm Losing You
In this dramatic offering from The Temptations, David Ruffin gives voice to an anguished man who's losing his girl to someone else. Motown hitmakers Eddie Holland, of the Holland-Dozier-Holland songwriting team, and Norman Whitfield wrote the tune, along with guitarist Cornelius Grant, whose searing guitar hook opens the track.
According to Temptations founder Otis Williams, Holland's lyrics often tapped into a female sensibility that translated into hits. "We knew that women love to hear guys pleading, begging, confessing, and basically admitting they'd made mistakes," he wrote in his 1988 autobiography, Temptations. "After all, it works so well in real life."
Whitfield took up the mantle as The Temptations' primary songwriter and producer from Smokey Robinson after "Ain't Too Proud To Beg" - another co-write with Eddie Holland - hit big earlier in 1966.
The Temptations had a lock on the R&B chart for 16 weeks in 1966 with four consecutive singles reaching the apex, the last being "(I Know) I'm Losing You," which held the top spot for two weeks starting on Christmas Eve. The lead single from the group's fifth studio album, The Temptations With A Lot O' Soul, it also reached the Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The Motown rock band Rare Earth recorded a 10-minute version for their 1970 album, Ecology. Also produced by Whitfield, the funky psychedelic-rock cover was edited for a single release and peaked at #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 - one spot higher than The Temptations' original. Another Whitfield act, The Undisputed Truth, recorded a psychedelic-funk rendition for their 1975 album, Cosmic Truth.
Rod Stewart recorded this for his breakthrough Every Picture Tells A Story album in 1971. Stewart told Rolling Stone that he and David Ruffin later became friends when both of their bands played in Detroit. "Ruffin would come to every show and we'd sing '(I Know) I'm Losing You,'" he recalled in a 2004 essay for the magazine. "His voice was so powerful - like a foghorn on the Queen Mary. He was so loud." From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/the-temptations/i-know-im-losing-you
Old Blood - Glowplug
Old Blood’s music has been called a number of things recently. As the band blend Doom, Psych, Stoner with a creepy Psychedelic Acid effect. Their S/T debut album is one I’ve been looking forward to for the past few months. Now it’s finally here. Fans of Black Sabbath, Pentagram and Uncle Acid will find much to enjoy here. The band’s main strength has to be their lead vocalist – Feathers. As she can sure hold a note to give Old Blood such a soulful groove.
Opening track – Wolves – is a creepy occult based number with twinges of murky blues rock that firmly remains in the Psychedelic Doom world. The lyrics have quite a playful vibe as they match the sultry tones coming from Feathers. If you’re here for the riffs then Old Blood have that area covered. As the music contains a heavy amount of different styles with an acid-style Fuzz based quality.
Second track – Glowplug runs for an epic eight minutes as the band start to broaden their musical horizons. Classic Doom based noises are mixed with a more modern day Occult based sound. The band takes their time in creating a psychedelic Uncle Acid style atmosphere. Though they still create their own sound. Feathers vocals are a mixture of hollow earthly blues sounds and the heavier occult doom vibes when the band play a heavier kind of Doom/Stoner Metal. From: https://outlawsofthesun.blogspot.com/2016/08/old-blood-st-album-review.html
Myrth - Don't Pity The Man
Myrth’s 1969 self titled album is their only release. This killer album is a something of a beloved if little known release from this Phoenix, Arizona band. It’s somewhat in the vein of brassy jazz rock bands such as Chicago and Blood, Sweat & Tears. Myrth also have different sides to their musical personality too which make this a standout. No sour notes here. My favorites are the sunny and melodic pieces “Gotta Find A Way”, “He Don’t Know” and “We Got To Stand Together”, along with the deeply funky “Myrtholate” and the more psychedelic soul cousin to it in “Mythadrine”, not to mention the more abstract psychedelia of “Shed My Skin”. From: https://www.facebook.com/groups/359479891287024/posts/1558552544713080/
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