Friday, April 10, 2026

Vanishing Twin - Pensiero Magico - 2021 Concert Film


 Vanishing Twin - Pensiero Magico - 2021 Concert Film - Part 1
 

 Vanishing Twin - Pensiero Magico - 2021 Concert Film - Part 2
 
This is a concert film and live album from one of my very favorite bands, psychedelic pop legends Vanishing Twin. It’s excellent as a watch or a listen with the theatrics and the raw musicianship both being top notch. The version of the band documented here consist of the incredible rhythm section of Valentina and Zongamin aka V/Z, one of the most psychedelic songwriters and talented vocalists in the business Cathy Lucas, and the synth experimentalist Phil MFU (who has since departed the group.)
This film, musically and visually, is one of the finest live sessions of the 2020s. The prodigious band is costume clad and filmed in black and white. The direction accents the otherworldly songs and doubles down on the feeling of mystery and possibility contained in the music. The songwriting and the instrumental virtuosity are given equal attention across the set. It’s a performance with a real musical and psychic weight to it that highlights the way cinematic and experimental kinds of music can perfectly soundtrack the inherently strange and epic experience of being a conscious living being.  From: https://thelastpsychedelic.blog/2025/09/08/vanishing-twin-pensiero-magico-live-2020/
 

The Animals - Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood / We Gotta Get Out Of This Place


 The Animals - Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood
 

 The Animals - We Gotta Get Out Of This Place
 
Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood was written by Horace Ott, Bennie Benjamin and Sol Marcus. Benjamin and Marcus were a songwriting team that had been working together since the '40s; their compositions include "Lonely Man" by Elvis Presley and "Fabulous Character" by Sarah Vaughan. Ott is an arranger who worked on tracks for Nat King Cole and Aretha Franklin, and later gave life to most of the Village People's material - you can thank him for those horn lines on "Y.M.C.A."
Ott started writing the song after getting in a heated argument with Gloria Caldwell, whom he had recently married. Sitting down at the piano, he expressed in song how he was well intentioned, but misunderstood by his wife - a sentiment many married men could relate to.
Gloria Caldwell is listed on the credit instead of Ott because of contractual issues. She learned to understand him: the couple stayed together.
Nina Simone was the first to record this song, releasing an orchestrated, downtempo rendition on her 1964 album Broadway-Blues-Ballads that nicked the US chart at #131. The best-known version is by The Animals, who reworked it into a rock song. Eric Burdon recalled in Rolling Stone magazine, "It was never considered pop material, but it somehow got passed on to us and we fell in love with it immediately."
In our 2010 interview with Eric Burdon, he said: "I've really been misunderstood. By my mom, my dad, school teachers, a couple of the women that I married. I've been misunderstood all of my life."
In 2013, Eric Burdon recorded a new version of this song with Jenny Lewis for the HBO TV series True Blood. "When I was asked to record a new version of 'Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood' for the new season with Jenny Lewis, I had to bite," Burdon said of recording the song for the vampire drama.  From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/the-animals/dont-let-me-be-misunderstood

We Gotta Get Out Of This Place was written by the husband and wife songwriting team of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil. Mann had just signed a record deal and recorded this song himself, but his version was pulled when The Animals released the song. Mann and Weil were very productive in the mid-'60s, as they made the transition from writing fluffy pop songs like "Blame It On The Bossa Nova" to songs with more of a message, which appealed to rock bands like The Animals.
The Animals producer Mickie Most heard this song and had the band record it. He was looking for American material as he was trying to break the band in the States, and had a call out to the New York City songwriters in the Brill Building and 1650 Broadway looking for songs.
Animals lead singer Eric Burdon came in #57 in a Rolling Stone poll to find the greatest singers of all time. On this song, he delivers an anger and energy that was an influence on later punk bands. In our 2010 interview with Eric Burdon, he said: "I've always viewed myself as a punk. The Animals could have evolved that way. We had the energy and the anger, but we didn't stick together. When the punk scene became commercial, I was all for the politics of the movement, but the music didn't really stand up and ultimately, it was self destructive."
There are two entirely different recordings of this song by The Animals. The US single version is an alternate take, shipped to MGM, The Animals' American record label, by mistake. Nevertheless, this is a far superior version of the song. Unfortunately, it's this version that's played by almost all Oldies radio stations today. 
Adrian Cronauer (the movie Good Morning Vietnam was based on his life) mentioned on a special Independence Day show on Sirius Satellite Radio that this was the most requested song on Armed Forces Radio when he was in Vietnam. 
At the 2012 SXSW festival in Austin, Texas, Bruce Springsteen talked about this song when he gave the keynote speech. After reciting the lyrics, he said, "That's every song I've ever written." Bruce was referring to his penchant for writing songs about getting away in search for something better in life.  From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/the-animals/we-gotta-get-out-of-this-place
 
 

Sneaker Pimps - Post Modern Sleaze


In the 1991 movie Thelma & Louise, two women from Arkansas who escape their humdrum routines by going on a road trip where they leave a trail of destruction before driving off a cliff. The film touched a nerve with many women who felt constrained by their everyday lives and unsatisfied with their partners. Many of these women set out on road trips of their own in what some in the mental health community labelled "Thelma & Louise Complex." 
Sneaker Pimps, a trip-hop act from England, were quite amused when they read about this in a newspaper, and wrote "Post Modern Sleaze" in response.
According to Sneaker Pimps guitarist Chris Corner, this song was inspired by his sister, Deb. "She's a post-modem sleaze - an odd person - pretty f--ked-up," he told Vox in 1997. "Love her though I do, I think she's psychologically unstable."
The video was directed by Howard Greenhalgh, who also did Soundgarden's "Black Hole Sun" and System of a Down's "Question!" Sneaker Pimps lead singer Kelli Dayton dons a wig to portray a woman from the South in the Thelma & Louise style. "It's an indictment of the American road movie and the power it has in glamorising problems and suggesting that everyone should be on a quest for self-discovery," Pimps keyboard player Liam Howe said.  From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/sneaker-pimps/post-modern-sleaze

Sweet Pill - Dog Song


In less than five years, Sweet Pill has gone from a local band playing rowdy hometown shows all over Philadelphia to a five-piece touring across North America. What started as a college project for guitarist Jayce Williams (the band’s lone New Jerseyan) and frontwoman Zayna Youssef has expanded into a fully formed band that’s already garnering recognition from artists like Hayley Williams and La Dispute. 
Williams and Youssef say it was when they rounded out their lineup and added Sean McCall on guitar, Ryan Cullen on bass, and Chris Kearney on drums that they really became what people know as Sweet Pill. Together, Sweet Pill is crafting a love letter to the Philly music scene and its community through their music — which is exactly what they aim to share with the rest of the world, show by show. 
In May 2022, the band released their first LP Where the Heart Is, a 10-track record full of emo anthems that fuse hardcore with pop sensibilities. Their title track takes math rock elements and blends them with strong melodic hardcore guitar riffs and punchy lyrics — confidently introducing the band to the world through their freshman effort. 
You don’t have to look any further than the album’s cover art to see the impact Philly has had on the group. “The painter [who did the album art] was my neighbor in South Philly. During quarantine when I used to hang out on my roof, he would be out there on this roof painting,” Williams says. “I would play my guitar and he’d always tell me I should write a record. I was like, ‘I did,’ and sent it to him.”
Little did Williams know: His next-door neighbor was artist Kerry Dunn, a successful portraitist whose award-winning work has been exhibited across the country for over three decades. Through neighborly camaraderie and a shared love of art and music, Sweet Pill and Dunn collaborated to create a portrait for Where the Heart Is that has been captivating prospective listeners since the album’s release. 
“The album art helped a lot with people randomly listening to us,” Youssef says of the eye-catching image of her own likeness. After fans were reeled in by the art, they found that Sweet Pill’s music speaks for itself, and kept coming back for more. “All it took was somebody to share it with somebody.”  From: https://www.altpress.com/sweet-pill-where-the-heart-is-interview/ 

Tally Hall - Good Day


Good Day was one of the first songs written for Tally Hall, With it Being written and finalized around March of 2003 and originally appeared on the Party Boobytrap EP, released in April of 2003. This version opens with a loud cough and clapping, and features original drummer Steve Gallagher on drums. The whole EP was recorded in Joe Hawley's attic bedroom using a digital camcorder, with tracks being edited together using Final Cut Pro. Even in this original recording, the final few seconds feature the opening guitar riff from the song Greener, implying the 2 songs were always meant to transition one into the other.
In 2005, "Good Day" was re-recorded for Tally Hall's first studio album: Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum, this time with replacement drummer Ross Federman on drums, and with new orchestration. When remixed and partially re-recorded for Atlantic Records in 2007, quite a couple changes were made, such as: more vocals on the intro, the "I thought you knew I knew" section was completely re-recorded, and more backing vocals were recorded for the "Let us sing" section.
The music video for "Good Day" was filmed over a period of 4 months in 2006, and later burned to DVD for filming of the TV segments over that September. Tally Hall seemingly asked people around Michigan to film their TVs for the video, as a Reddit user on r/tallyhall would show a scene featuring a picture of a University of Michigan band "Groove" on a wall. Tally Hall would later post outtakes from the filming on tallyhall.com. Most of the members would also change their profile pictures to scenes from the video, Ross using the weight loss ad, Zubin using the Bob Ross parody, Andrew using the Blue's Clues parody, and Rob using their Party Boobytrap rap video segment.
When asked about it by calenderlive.com, Rob stated: "We're doing it guerrilla-style, we shot part of it at Michigan Stadium.... I think the grounds crew thought we were important because of our ties."
During the filming of one scene at their local rotary park, Joe Hawley and Zubin Sedghi were robbed of most of their equipment and were left injured. This event was referenced in "Rotary Park", a song by both Joe and Zubin on Joe's album called Joe Hawley Joe Hawley.  From: https://wiki.hiddeninthesand.com/Good_Day_(song)

Rufus & Chaka Khan - You Got The Love - The Midnight Special 1974


Rufus was an American funk band from Chicago, Illinois best known for launching the career of lead singer Chaka Khan. They had several hits throughout their career, including "Tell Me Something Good," "Sweet Thing," and "Ain't Nobody." In 1967, The American Breed Gary Luizo, Al Ciner, Charles (Chuck) Colbert and Lee Graziano had a top ten hit with the classic rock single, "Bend Me, Shape Me". After much success, Ciner, Colbert and Graziano (without Luizo who pursued a successful production career) created a new group, adding Kevin Murphy on keyboards and Vern Pilder from the bar band Circus. They re-emerged in 1969 under the name Smoke. In 1970, female vocalist Paulette McWilliams and vocalist James Stella were added and the group's name changed again to Ask Rufus. Willie Weeks would replace Vern Pilder. In 1971, the band signed a contract with Epic Records recording an album that wasn't released. Willie Weeks was replaced by Dennis Belfield. In early 1972 Epic dropped their contract and James Stella was replaced by keyboardist and vocalist Ron Stockert. Former Curtis Mayfield and Jerry Butler drummer Andre Fischer, replaced Lee Graziano. Colbert and Fischer approached and recruited the eighteen-year-old vocalist Chaka Khan (née Yvette Stevens) at a south-side club called the "Pumpkin Room" where she sang with a local Chicago group called Lock and Chain led by drummer Scotty Harris. With that change and Paulette McWilliams pursuing her solo career, the group simply became Rufus with its main focus on Stockert, while Khan became its official second lead vocalist. In 1972 the group contacted friend and newly-hired ABC Dunhill A&R executive Bob Monaco and flew him to Chicago to watch the group perform for consideration to be one of his first signings. Monaco returned to Los Angeles, convinced the label to give him a demo budget and then quickly returned to Chicago where the group recorded eleven songs in two days at Marty Feldman's Paragon Studios. After taking the demo tapes back to ABC Dunhill the group was immediately asked to sign a long term recording contract. Khan, who at eighteen she was still a minor, had to have her mother participate. The singer had just married Hassan Khan, who was a bassist of a former band that she fronted. The group then drove to Los Angeles and recorded their first "Rufus" album at Quantum Recording Studios in Torrance, California. That album was released in 1973. While the songs "Whoever's Thrilling You (Is Killing Me)" and "Feel Good" (both songs led by Khan) brought the group some attention from R&B radio stations, the album itself had minimal sales and the Stockert-led "Slip & Slide" failed to catch major attention from pop radio. The group quickly re-entered the same studio to record their follow-up album Rags to Rufus that included the Stevie Wonder song "Tell Me Something Good," Ray Parker Jr's and Khan's "You Got The Love" and Dennis Belfield's "In Love We Grow," and "Smokin' Room." Stockert, Ciner and Belfield would leave the group shortly after the album was completed. Los Angeles-based keyboardist Nate Morgan replaced Stockert. Additionally, Tony Maiden and bassist Bobby Watson, also from Los Angeles, were recruited by drummer Andre Fischer and asked to join the group. Maiden's, Watson's and Morgan's addition to Rufus added a unique sound to the group, bringing a stronger funk and jazz influence to compliment Chaka's now emerging powerful lead vocals.  From: https://www.jango.com/music/Rufus+featuring+Chaka+Khan+/_full_bio 


Surly Gates - Under Your Tongue


The Paisley Underground comes home to roost on the first full-length from Surly Gates. Like that long-gone Cali conclave, Lay Low spotlights squarely on the songs, letting acid-fried colored gels give the tracks their strange sheen. Fronting traditional rock tropes and creamy harmonies, “Wicked Lover” and “Under Your Tongue” rely equally on melody and muscle, while “Catatonia” and the title track spin winsome pop skeins. “Growl” enters enigmatic ballad territory, slowly unfolding its journey into mystery. Singing guitarists Jonathan Lennartz and Rusty Boyer field most of the heavy work, but it’s organist James Webber pulling the tracks into a parallel dimension. Ghosts of trips past.  From: https://www.austinchronicle.com/music/texas-platters-11766869/ 

Poppy - Scary Mask


Love them or hate them, the many music videos released by YouTube star and pop singer Poppy rarely fail to evoke a visceral reaction. The 24-year-old singer-songwriter has released over 400 clips on her channel created with collaborator Titanic Sinclair, ranging from her repeating brand names for an entire video, to visuals where she's vaguely perturbed by a reflection of herself bleeding. Her songs are similarly high concept and meta, whether lamenting the terminal nature of the human condition or puzzling over how her identity is now inextricably tied to the internet. Recently, Poppy has begun processing the sounds and visions of nu-metal, reimagining the typically harsh genre through the lens of bubblegum pop. The song "X" on her last record Am I a Girl?, for instance, shifts between Sixties pop and shredding heavy metal, creating a dizzying dichotomy.
Today (May 29th) she's teamed with Revolver to premiere the latest in her heavier works: "Scary Mask," a collaboration with Los Angeles–Atlanta rap-rock firebrands the Fever 333. It's a pairing that works shockingly well. Together, Poppy and Fever singer Jason Aalon Butler create a compelling push-pull dynamic between her singing and his screams, which come to a head on the joint chants of "M-A-S-K." Meanwhile, Fever guitarist Stevis Harrison busts out some mathy riffage not unlike the Dillinger Escape Plan, spliced with hip-hop 808s and some crazy synth work that sounds like a computer dying, all leading to a mosh-pit–crushing breakdown. The song's commitment to chaos plays out in the video, too, which sees Poppy shifting between various personas, from a princess in a skull dress emblazoned with the phrase "Go to Hell," to a ballerina seemingly losing her mind.  From: https://www.revolvermag.com/music/poppy-slipknot-new-song-video-scary-mask-fever-333/
 

Stone Temple Pilots - Interstate Love Song / Plush


 Stone Temple Pilots - Interstate Love Song
 

 Stone Temple Pilots - Plush

Lead singer Scott Weiland wrote Interstate Love Song about his relationship troubles and his growing heroin addiction. When he wrote it, he thought about what kind of a liar he had become towards his fiancé, Janina Castaneda, and how he had promised to stay off drugs when they went to Atlanta to record Stone Temple Pilots' second album, Purple. He didn't keep that promise, but in phone calls, would tell Janina that everything was OK. The song is written from Janina's perspective, with Weiland imagining her seeing right through his lies.
In Stone Temple Pilots' appearance on VH1's Storytellers, Scott Weiland explained that the band would travel in a Winnebago that pulled a trailer with their equipment. When band members wanted some quiet, they would go in the trailer with a walkie-talkie. Robert DeLeo was back there with his guitar one day when he came up with the music for the song, and he used the walkie-talkie to call to the band and play it for them. Weiland added: "The words are about the lies I was trying to conceal while making the Purple record."
Like many STP songs, the title is not mentioned in the lyric. It was an "interstate" love in the literal sense because Scott Weiland wrote it in Atlanta while his fiancé was back in California.
The band's bass player, Robert DeLeo, wrote the music to this song. He says it started out as a bossa nova.
"Interstate Love Song" is one of Stone Temple Pilots' biggest songs. It was huge on the various "Alternative" radio stations that were cropping up in the early '90s, and it also got a lot of airplay on Top 40 stations, where it shared space on playlists with the likes of Gin Blossoms and Sheryl Crow.
At this time, the band's songs weren't sold as singles in the United States, which encouraged album sales. Their label, Atlantic Records, still meticulously promoted the singles to radio stations in an effort to keep STP on the airwaves as long as possible.
To play up the liar theme, the music video features a man who emerges into the modern day from a silent film, and finds his nose growing throughout the clip. Kevin Kerslake, who also did the STP video for "Vasoline," was the director.  From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/stone-temple-pilots/interstate-love-song

The lyrics to Plush were inspired, in part, by an unfortunate news story in Stone Temple Pilots' hometown of San Diego, California about a missing young woman who was later discovered dead by local law enforcement ("And I feel, when the dogs begin to smell her..."). At a concert in Columbus, Ohio on May 17, 2008, lead singer Scott Weiland said that he and STP drummer Eric Kretz wrote the lyrics in a hot tub after hearing the story. Weiland has described the song as "a metaphor for a lost obsessive relationship."
This was STP's breakthrough hit off of their major label debut album. Like all of their songs of the era, it is a band composition. When Songfacts spoke with drummer Eric Kretz in 2013, he said it was a very collaborative and energetic time for the band in terms of songwriting. "There was enthusiasm and excitement and everyone was in the room and participating creatively, artistically," he explained. "It's the most fun time to be in a band when everyone has the same ideas and everyone has the same goals."
Bassist Robert DeLeo came up with the riff for this song in the back of a U-Haul truck the band was using for a local tour. The song's instantly recognizable chord structure was inspired by DeLeo's love of ragtime music.
The most widely broadcast version of this song is an acoustic rendition that starts with Scott Weiland saying, "This is a song called 'Plush.'" Thanks to "Sex Type Thing," the group was invited on the MTV metal show Headbangers Ball for an interview. Guitarist Dean DeLeo suggested that he bring his acoustic guitar so they could perform this song on the show, and the network agreed.
The show was recorded on December 5, 1992 after the band had finished a month of concerts opening for Rage Against the Machine. They took a plane to New York and ingested some pills to help them sleep. When they got to their hotel, DeLeo and Weiland both got sick, but they made it to the MTV Studios for the 6 a.m. taping, as Weiland recalled, "high as zombies."
In this altered state, DeLeo and Weiland performed the song, delivering a far more relaxed and poignant version than is heard on the album. This version also turned out to be quite radio-friendly, and lots of stations started playing it. This version made #39 on the US Airplay chart on August 14, 1993 and stirred a great deal of interest in the band, although listeners who bought the Core album expecting similarly mellow fare were in for an unpleasant surprise. In America, no singles from Core were made available for purchase, since Atlantic Records liked selling $16 albums more than $2 singles.
Scott Weiland told the English music publication NME that the band's name came from Scientifically Treated Petroleum - petrol. He explained: "STP came from the image of STP oil treatment, which was always a powerful image. Richard Petty, the famous NASCAR racing driver, had the STP logo on his car and he was always a sort of renegade. We were Shirley Temple's Pussy but we had to change. I think it was Dean (Deleo - STP guitarist or Robert (DeLeo - STP bassist) who said, 'How about Stereo Temple Pirates?' and then we decided on Stone Temple Pilots. It wasn't a very quick process."  From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/stone-temple-pilots/plush

The Cranberries - Stars - The Best of Videos 1992-2002


 The Cranberries - Stars - The Best of Videos 1992-2002 - Part 1
 
 
 
The Cranberries - Stars - The Best of Videos 1992-2002 - Part 2
 
1. Dreams
2. Linger
3. Zombie
4. Ode to My Family
5. I Can't Be with You
6. Ridiculous Thoughts
7. Salvation
8. Free to Decide
9. When You're Gone
10. Hollywood
11. Promises
12. Animal Instinct
13. Just My Imagination
14. You & Me
15. Analyse
16. Time Is Ticking Out
17. This Is the Day
18. Daffodil Lament
19. New New York
20. Stars
 
“We had a piano at home in my parents’ house, so I had been writing songs since I was 12 years old. But I wanted a band with bass, guitar and drums. There was a girl in my flat who was going out with a guy who used to sing with The Cranberries and at the time they were called The Cranberry Sauce. She told me they were looking for a singer and that maybe I should go and meet them. On Sundays they used to rehearse at the local studio, so I went there and met Mike, Ferg and Noel. I remember there were a lot of guys there, probably about 10 of them in the room, just hanging out, and they were about 16, 17 or 18 years old. I was 18 and went in with my Yamaha keyboard under my arm, sang a few songs for them and then they played a few songs for me. I remember thinking they had potential and one of the things they played was Linger – I really liked that one and took home a cassette recording of Noel playing the four chords. Then that week I was busy working on it in my bedroom, trying to work out my parts and what I was going to sing. You know when you’re a teenager, you’re dating and you get a broken heart and it’s just so fatal? Well, Linger came around that ‘fatal love’ kind of stage in my life, when it was all drama.”

How did the band develop from there?

“Well, we used to rehearse in this small little room and we didn’t have any PA or anything – Noel had an amp and Mike had an amp which I plugged my microphone into. It was very hard to hear what I was singing because his guitar was going through the same amp. A few months later we made our first demo with Linger and a song I believe was called Sunday, and Dreams, and I think there was a song called Nothing Left At All.
“Noel sent the demo to a bunch of UK record companies and a little buzz began to occur in the music industry over there. There was a company called Imago with a guy called Terry Ellis, who was interested. Also Island Records and, I believe, Rough Trade were interested, because Geoff Travis ended up managing us for a long period of time. To make a long story short, we ended up going with Island.
“We were doing a gig in Limerick and we had very little live performance experience. We’d only done five or six gigs before, at the time, so I didn’t have a clue how to perform – I was just a bag of nerves. I recall a band called 808 State were playing there that night too. For that show, there was a bunch of these record company people flying into Shannon and I remember coming off-stage and meeting Denny Cordell [from Island Records] who eventually went on to sign us. I had no idea what that even meant!”

You started off working with the legendary producer Stephen Street. How did that work out?

“We thought of Stephen because we were all die-hard Smiths fans, so we got him and he produced the first two albums.”

What was the point when you knew something special was happening?

“Maybe six months to a year later, when we were doing our first European tour. Because up until then we’d only done small, local gigs in Ireland. So we went out to mainland Europe and got the opening slot for the Hothouse Flowers. Their capacities would’ve been around 3000 to 6000 seaters, so that was good experience because we were actually on a tour bus. But I recall we were asked to go to America and we didn’t finish that tour because we were told Linger had gone Top 10 over there. So we flew into Los Angeles and made a video there, and I remember we were on heavy rotation on MTV – I think they played Linger about 12 times-a-day or something like that. It blew up then.”

What advice would you give to budding songwriters and lyricists?

“I suppose it’s important not to worry too much about what people think, because then you’d never write. I do get periods of writer’s block and that can be so annoying when you go through six months of having problems just writing.”

From: https://www.songwritingmagazine.co.uk/interviews/interview-the-cranberries-dolores-oriordan
 
 

Ouzo Bazooka - Astral Session 2022


Parallel the revival of 1960s-era psychedelic rock is the return of its weirder, international cousin. Inspired by American and British bands like the 13th Floor Elevators, the Pretty Things, and Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd, bands from around the world—in places as disparate as the Middle East, North Africa, South America, and the Far East—reimagined their traditional musics via a colorful blend of fuzzy guitars, early synths, and Farfisa organs. That music is making a comeback—check out bands like Altin Gün (they’re Dutch, but the music is Turkish), Acid Mothers Temple (Japan), and Forshpil (klezmer, but with a twist)—and in Israel, the pioneers of the local iteration of revivalist psych is Ouzo Bazooka, a band fronted by guitarist, vocalist, and producer, Uri Brauner Kinrot. 
Ouzo Bazooka isn’t Brauner Kinrot’s first project. He’s been on the scene for about two decades—he’s done a lot of work with groups like Balkan Beat Box, Firewater, and many others—and outside of Ouzo Bazooka, he’s probably best known as a founding member of the Balkan/Mediterranean surf band, Boom Pam, who’ve been together since 2003. But Ouzo Bazooka was an opportunity to let his hair down, and crank the amps to 11. 
“The sound that I had in my mind didn’t really fit with what we were doing with Boom Pam,” Brauner Kinrot says. “I wanted to do something that was more like the music that I was listening to in those years, which was rock music from all over the world, but not from the U.S. or U.K., but all those weird mixtures of rock ’n' roll with any kind of folk music.”  From: https://theingathering.substack.com/p/ouzo-bazooka-and-the-international 

 

Love - Da Capo - Side 1


01.Stephanie Knows Who
02.Orange Skies
03.Que Vida
04.Seven & Seven Is
05.The Castle
06.She Comes In Colors

With the songwriting power of main lead vocalist Arthur Lee and rhythm guitarist Bryan Maclean, Love created a fine mesh of tough, surly jangle-spike moves and, contrastingly, more than a few ultra-moody ballads to balance things out. Those qualities would run all the way through their incredible eponymous 1966 debut.
As they introduced a few new twists into their already heavy arsenal (losing and gaining some personnel along the way), the group were augmented by the sound of flutes, harpsichord and an the ongoing series of intricate acoustic guitar flourishes being played out courtesy of Johnny Echols, Lee and Maclean, the group now harnessing what could be claimed as the very beginnings of baroque’n’roll exotica.
This in turn formed the basis for many of the tracks you hear on this, their second, highly experimental jazz-inspired opus, ‘Da Capo’. It proved to be a truly great, if rather unusual move, yet one that all the time pointed forward to a more adventurous spirit, and sound that, in a relatively short time, would be heard much more frequently in a rock style setting. The exceptional arrangements we hear on ‘Orange Skies’ and ‘She Comes In Colors’ are perhaps the most successful realisations of the group’s newly-adopted emphasis and choice of direction. The album also contained two of their most celebrated, diamond hard punk style offerings in ‘Stephanie Knows Who’, and the runaway juggernaut-style beat-blast of ‘7 & 7 Is’; an amazing feat which – the 50 odd takes it took to get the astonishing drumming right or otherwise – also served them well on the US Billboard singles chart. Don’t know about you but every time I hear this I always wanna follow it up by playing the great original 7″ flipside, ‘No. 14’, but of course it wasn’t ever present on the original ‘Da Capo,’ and so neither is it present on this newly issued set. The overall sonic punch and super-kinetic energy created on ‘7 & 7 Is’, however, remains nothing short of miraculous!
And then there’s the side-long ‘Revelation’ to consider. This radical, one-off, dangerously experimental excursion never fails to surprise and amaze. It is still capable of arousing a high degree of controversy among many listeners too, even if some detractors remain wholly indifferent to its multi-faceted charms. Well, whichever way you look at it, ‘Revelation’ is a loose, thrusting, adrenaline-driven jam out whose devil-may-care punk spirit lies at its heart, yet audaciously it expounds on the similarly-extended nature (and then some …) that the ‘Stones already laid down on their mammoth ‘Goin’ Home’ cut (‘Aftermath’) – undoubtedly a major source of inspiration. With its almost continuous momentum – despite a few naturally occurring ebbs and flows – ‘Revelation’ affords the space and allows the chance for everyone in the group to shine a little; including guitars, drums, wind and, not least, Lee’s double-whammy vocal and bracing harmonica outbursts.
Released at the tail end of ’66 ‘Da Capo’ would prove a pivotal piece of modern rock innovation, providing a strong guiding light for many of the important things to come; in particular the freeform patterns of such as ‘Revelation’ and its influence upon some of the more outrageous work by Syd Barrett’s Pink Floyd in London, and others too who were then seeking to push all rock music boundaries farther out than ever!
Listen then, with heart, mind and soul as the heart-stirringly melodic content of such as ‘The Castle’, and ‘Que Vida’ washes into you; their potent lyrical and musical dexterity will have you in paroxysims of delight. The subtle nuances of Lee’s tricky word manoeuvres, and the patterns of Echols’ finely honed electric lines, seemingly complex can, at times, appear deceptively simple. Feed in the quizzicality of Ken Forssi and Alban “Snoopy” Pfisterer’s looping bass and drums groove, and the culture-crossing episodes emphasised by Tjay Cantrelli’s woodwind and keyboard-led passages, and there’s no denying that Love’s ‘Da Capo’ has, in abundance, the kind of inherent musical magic few groups could ever come close to possessing.
Like many tend to do nowadays – and with the advantage of the instant click-a-button hindsight we have it’s so much easier – I’d say it’s pretty pointless for people to always be making comparisons with ‘Da Capo’s’ far more revered follow-up, just accepting the “oh but it’s not as good as ‘Forever Changes” mentality that, especially, many industry insiders would have you believe. I get tired and irked at that type of lazy criticism, genuinely feeling that ‘Da Capo’ is every bit as innovative, clever, insightful, deliciously dangerous and experimental (perhaps even more so … ) especially as it was only the second LP by what (for the time anyway) was still a relatively new group. Perhaps I’m preaching to the converted, but I still feel the need to express the opinion that ‘Da Capo’ is a singular total tour de force in the long-play world, and a full-blown trip that can easily stand its own ground in whichever and whoever’s company anyone cares, or indeed dares to place it.  From: https://www.psychedelicbabymag.com/2014/05/love-da-capo-1966-review.html

The Sound of Animals Fighting - Stockhausen, Es Ist Ihr Gehirn, Das Ich Suche


The Sound Of Animals Fighting is a band which has been talked about quite a lot in the recent months both because of their music and the mystery surrounding the band. Recently I had a chance to talk toRich Balling, who is the one who put the whole project together. I had a lot of questions and he did his best to answer. Thanks to Lindsay for helping me out and of course to Rich for taking some time to talk to me.

GARY: i guess first off, how did the project begin? 


RICH: 1. the desire to be in a band called The Sound of Animals Fighting, a phrase my girlfriend came up with while reading an interview for the band Bear Vs. Shark. 
2. the intense need to work with Anthony Green, who I believe is the greatest vocalist in independent music. 
3. to get all of my friends that were off tour and at home together and collaborate once and for all, since we had all played with the idea for years and never actually jammed together. the end.

GARY: what other bands have you worked in/with before? 


RICH: i was in rxbandits for 5 years, did a side project with rich zahniser called cowboy communist in 2000, which still hasn’t seen the light of day, and created the book Revolution On Canvas, a collection of poetry from the indie music scene.

GARY: i was going to ask about that book, there’s a page that says something like “TSOAF watch out!” 


RICH: that is actually on the backside of the bookmark that often comes in the book. And you are probably the first if not only person to have caught that. 

GARY: what did you play in rx and what albums did you play on? (sorry for my ignorance) 


RICH: it is totally cool. i am (and i am sure they are) quite used to being overlooked as the phenomenal band that they are these days. i played on everything up to the newest one, the resignation. the last album i played on, in other words, was Progress. i played trombone, and did most of the backup vocals, with a little vocal trading with matt here and there. 


GARY: “What If” was my favorite song for quite a while. the resignition is amazing, i listen to it often. 


RICH: rad! 


GARY: and of course analogue boy. 


RICH: hehe

GARY: i guess i’ll ask this question before i say what i wanted to say next: Why did you choose (if it was a choice) to keep the members a secret? 


RICH: 1. too much legal hassle. five members are under contract with other record labels, and when you are under contract, unfortunately, you can’t just run off and record wherever you want and release it on another label. we did get permission from the labels to put the album out, however, it was on the basis that we would not use the names or band names of the members to make money. 

2. we don’t want our other bands helping us “cash in” with this project. this project is completely about the music, and we want as many people to appreciate it without having preconceived notions of what it might sound like. 
so it was by choice, but it also wouldn’t have been legal any other way. 


GARY: so i guess i’ll have no comment to what im saying next, but the drums and guitar sound quite a lot like rx bandits i had always thought. 


RICH: i think that too.

GARY: was there a reason you only recorded 4 songs? maybe time constrictions? 


RICH: the idea from the very beginning was to do it in the form of an opera, which is usually three acts. in this case, there are four “songs” or “acts” with the addition of an overture, interludes, and a postlude. though there are only four, the album is still full length, and not an EP. so the plan from the beginning was to have it split up into acts. and that is how it ended up.

GARY: how many artists worked on the project? 


RICH: 15 


GARY: i would assume that no all of the artists appeared on each song…am i wrong in assuming this? 


RICH: there are 8 artists that appear on every song, the remaining 7 are the people that helped outside of the music. the music, for the most part, is a consistent group of musicians. 


GARY: were you one of the artists as well as creator? 


RICH: yes

GARY: with that number of people coming together from different bands and different places in music, how did the song writing process work? What were the difficulties? did any one person take the lead role or was it a group effort? 


RICH: that, my friend, is where the whole thing gets interesting. 


GARY: oooh 


RICH: what most people will never realize when listening to it is how it was recorded. my idea was to execute the song writing process backwards. i got the best drummer i knew, had him play sick beats for two hours straight at the studio, two of us split those beats up into songs then gave the beats to the best guitar player i know. he added six guitar parts, and so on and so on. at no time did anyone see anyone else in the entire process, at no time did we sit down and write these songs. every musician was simply given a day to record over the previous tracks. 


GARY: that's amazing. 


RICH: in a way, the entire album is improvised which, if you know that, and then you listen to it, brings a whole new appreciation to it, i think. even the vocals were done in a day, with no planning, and no prior knowledge of the songs. 


GARY: wow…the singer is amazing. he wrote all that in one day? it does being a new appreciation for sure. 


RICH: whoever it was, had never even heard the songs before. just came in, played the song three times, went in the vocal room and busted out. no lyrics, no nothing. 


GARY: so no lyrics were written down? just sung? 


RICH: exactly 


GARY: wow 


RICH: i share vocal duties, and since i had nothing but time on my hands during all of these sessions, i admit, mine were planned, but literally NOTHING else was. i was the only one that had access to the songs the entire time. 


GARY: are you the speaking parts in them? “there are a million ways out of this city…” 


RICH: yes i am the speaking part and the robotic voice going on at the same time. i am also the one that starts the song before the “talking” song, as you put it. yes that is a quote read straight from peter pan. all of the talking is from peter pan. 


GARY: i didnt know that. the ‘robotic’ voice, when i heard it it sounded like the vocals were run through a keyboard or something. was i right? 


RICH: no. it is something i ripped off of massive attack. i do it a lot on the cowboy communist stuff. it is just a method of recording each word separately, over and over until you get the one on the right pitch, and then just lining the words up together. 


GARY: ah. so you’re also saying the ‘this box is lovely…’ part in the other song? 


RICH: yeah, i meant to say lonely, but the only good take i did i said lovely on accident. This interview is the interview of outtakes and secrets. haha 


GARY: which is great! when this started, did you get everyone together and discuss your plan and did each member know who else was a part of the project? 


RICH: a few people, luckily, jumped aboard last minute. for the most part, i had separate conversations with each person and basically aimed at making the whole process as low maintenance for them as possible, knowing that they all have their own bands to worry about. all of them are aware of everyone else that played on it, however, a few have to this day, never met. 


GARY: wow. for yourself, was it hard picking who you wanted to be a part of it? was there anyone who said no, or anyone you didnt get to ask that you wanted to? even somebody you didnt ask that wanted on board? 


RICH: not hard at all. i knew exactly who to call.

GARY: was there ever a fear that maybe this wouldnt work out? maybe the people you had in mind wouldnt take part? 


RICH: TONS. i lost sleep and had problems being intimate with my girlfriend over the whole thing. i wanted to work with anthony so bad i could taste it. musicians in general are so hard to get ahold of that i lost a ton of sleep wondering if things would work out. and they did, thank God. then with the months i spent dealing with legal issues, it was just insane. that was another scare.

GARY: each member had an animal name such as the Tiger, etc. How did you come up with the names? 


RICH: we each picked our own alias.

GARY: was there anything you would have done differently in the whole process? 


RICH: had a million dollars up front to pay my friends for their time. there was a budget of exactly $0 and one million favors. 


GARY: with such a small. (or i could say inexistent) budget, how/where did this get recorded? 


RICH: a lot of home recording, and a gracious studio in La Verne, CA called A to Z.

GARY: i know you can’t tell us who played, but can you tell us which instruments were used on the album? and how many musicians played which instruments? 


RICH: 2 guitarists, 1 bass, 1 drum, 2 vocals, 1 programmer, 1 opera vocalist.

GARY: i guess one thing im interested about is if you have any plans for a second release, or even a tour (i realize a tour would be near impossible) 


RICH: i would love to do a second release. shows are complicated, but we shall see how the album does.

From: https://www.thepunksite.com/interviews/the-sound-of-animals-fighting/


 

Shawn Colvin - Climb On (A Back That's Strong)


Did you always want to write, or were you more comfortable playing other people’s music?


No, I think I always wanted to write. I wrote a lot when I was a teenager and was learning the guitar. And I’ve always been a good chameleon–I can really cop another person’s vocal thing. I learned a lot of people’s guitar styles–obviously, cause that’s a good way to learn. But I wasn’t endowed with the kind of creative gift in my opinion. And the music that I wrote then wasn’t really good, it was derivative. Maybe some good melodies here and there. But I did write. I mean as soon as I picked up the instrument I wrote ten or twenty songs during the first year I was beginning to play. Then I just put up the writing. I don’t know why, but I did.

When did you pick it up again?


I didn’t really write again until I moved to California in 1979 and was in a quandary about what to do with my life. I was playing music, but to pass the time I would write snippets of things, they never came to anything, I never finished anything. Then I moved to New York in 1981 and met John Leventhal who had a band that was doing really sophisticated Steely Dan-esque kind of pop music. I loved the way they sounded and I began to write with him. He gave me music and I started to write the lyrics. And again I would be loathe to play any of those songs for anyone. They were not very genuine. But the relationship with him kept me at it because where I would falter he would push and vice versa.

When did you start writing on your own?


There was a breakthrough after four or five years of this where he gave me a track of music and instead of just writing the words over his production, I took his production and transposed it to the guitar. I dropped my E strings to D, a la Richard Thompson who is my second wave influence–Joni Mitchell being my first–and made this song into kind of a droney folk groove and I wrote “Diamond in the Rough.”

Did that open the door to your own writing style?


Yeah. That seemed like something I could really stick with. It was the first song of that style. And from that came everything else that’s on my first album. From that door opening and that stumbling upon my voice, if you will, came a system, a security, a net, that I could fall into and go and do something that I really did think was unique to me. And it definitely had to do with being confessional and personal.

Do you feel somewhat exposed by the personal nature of your songs?


They are personal. I sometimes feel as though I should apologize for that, but I’m too quick to negate myself as a songwriter…that’s part of what’s taken so long (laughs). I’d like to push myself and challenge myself beyond it, but it’s been enormously gratifying for me to write this stuff and my motto is stick with what you know. I didn’t have it in me to paint fictional pictures. I think that when you do that you’re going with things that have to do with you anyway. But I didn’t have the skill to make an interesting story, and I don’t know that I do now. But what I did have was a strong feeling of where I came from and where I was at. And it had been a struggle. Part of me wanted to document that. I also just needed to express it, and I had really gone through some things and come out the other side. I was just moved to shed light on that.

Are you comfortable singing those songs to such a large audience?


I think the thing that has made it possible for me to write personal songs and sing them year after year is the sensibility for good writing. In that just opening your veins all over the paper is not necessarily going to be interesting. I wanted to speak to people. I was interested in being good and in moving people, not just “I’m going to say what I want to say.” So there’s a poetic aspect to them. Some songs I would just go way overboard on the emotion and then I’d have to rein it back in to make it accessible. You have to watch for a twist that you can put in or a way that you can make the point in a more unexpected way. So it’s not hard for me to play the songs. There’s an artistic content to them that satisfied me to the point that…they’re nice pieces. You don’t have to know they’re about me, you know. I wanted people to be able to sing them themselves.

Do you write daily?


No. I’ve never written daily unless I’ve been under complete pressure to do so. I’m a very reluctant writer (laughs). I keep vowing to change that, but I don’t and I’m in such admiration of people who do. I ran into Lucinda Williams–and I think her stuff is just fabulous–and asked her if she writes all the time, and she said “No, I write when I have to and I do it under pressure, and I think it’s going to be a disaster,” and I just said “Praise the Lord,” you know (laughs). Finally somebody who does it the way I do. When I write it’s more like a spurt of writing and put it away. Or a spurt of writing, put it away and get it out the next day, and if I’m totally dry on it I’ll put it back away again because I don’t want to force it.

Were you under more pressure, deadline wise, during the making of Fat City?


Yes! I was pressed for time and I had a lot of songs one-half and three-quarters finished–not just one but a lot–and I was forced to become disciplined. It was really a great experience because I was terrified and had kind of made peace with the fact that I was just going to do bad work. And I found that I can set times and go into a room and it still can happen.

Do you keep some kind of journal?


I do keep a journal and a songwriting notebook. I’ll get a verse, a rhyme or a title I’ll just try to keep notes of things because 90% of the time I’ll end up using things that I just jotted down absent mindedly.

Do you use rhythm a lot to get an idea for a song?


Yeah. If you get a groove going and you kind of say nonsense over the groove then some words come out that you couldn’t have predicted. Some you keep, some you don’t. “Cry Like An Angel” was written like that. I would go down to this pond in North Carolina every day just bopping along to the rhythm of the song and I would do it over and over in my head. I had tons of words and most were thrown out, like I had the word mortician in that song (laughs).
So it’s a matter of just flooding the rhythm with more lyrics than you could ever use and then weeding them out and making a story out of it. Because when you just start free-associating like that over some rhythm you end up not realling talking about nonsense, but talking about yourself. It’s wierd, it’s cool, it’s scary, you know. This stuff comes out and you go “I haven’t thought about that in years,” but it’s you. So it’s kind of a cool way to write. You end up having a perspective maybe that’s not so forced. There’s room for things to creep in that you couldn’t have thought of.

Have you had much success with co-writing since developing such a definitive style?


“Set The Prairie On Fire,” which I wrote with Elly Brown (a New Yorker who used to be in a band called Grace Pool) is the exception to the rule–with the rule being that I have yet to have a successful outcome of sitting in a room with someone and trying to write a song. The way that I generally co-write is that someone else writes the music or part of the music. Like on “Round of Blues” I wrote the whole song but Larry Klein said that it needed a bridge. So he wrote the bridge and I wrote the words to it. But Elly and I really shared every part of the song equally. She wrote some of the words, I wrote some of the words, she wrote some of the music, I wrote some of the music.

When you finish a song, are they really finished or do you go back and pick at them?


They’re pretty much finished. I have a short attention span and even when I’m not completely satisfied with a line here and a line there I generally leave it as it is. I’ve got a dilemma, though, because I wrote “The Story” and it makes mention of not having any children and not being married. And I’m getting married. So once I get married the question is…well it’s probably so silly to even ponder it. I should probably just sing it like it’s written. But I did think maybe I should go back and kind of update it for what’s going on now and keep the same spirit. It’s kind of a challenge because I’m getting married and the people who love the depressing confessional kind of stuff go “don’t get too happy,” you know (laughs). I mean there’s still a lot of conflict in life even if you get married, it doesn’t solve your own damn problems. And that song’s very angry, so to hang on to my identity in that song and be married could be interesting.

From: https://addictedtosongwriting.com/shawn-colvin-born-to-be-telling-her-story/ 

The Lovetones - The Sound And The Fury


Be What You Want is a striking debut for Sydney, Australia's the Lovetones, a trio led by singer/songwriter Matt Tow, that manages to keep its balance on that difficult path between the past and the present. Tow is clearly a major fan of '60s U.K. pop from Revolver-era Beatles to the Move in their early days to the gossamer pop of the Zombies to David Bowie's pre-stardom mod phase (the anthemic, powerful opener "The Sound and the Fury" would have been a killer follow-up to Bowie's 1966 single "Can't Help Thinking About Me"), but unlike a lot of his contemporaries, Tow knows the difference between homage and thievery. Think Neil Finn or Allen Clapp, not Oasis. Songs like the dreamy neo-psychedelia of "Guiding Star" or the passionate title track are mature, literate pop with thoughtful, non-clichéd lyrics and sturdily memorable hooks.  From: https://poprunners.blogspot.com/2018/09/beatlesque-pop-lovetones-be-what-you.html 

 

Rhiannon Giddens - I'm On My Way


In a video that went viral at some point over the past few years, a gene-testing company gathered up a bunch of folks who were so very, very proud of their various heritages — some to the point of outright hostility to other races and ethnicities. When the tests came back to show that their DNA wasn’t exactly what they had presumed it to be, many of them cried, confronted by the existence of human migration and miscegenation across continents and centuries which had “sullied” their perceived ancestral purity.
Where humans travel, so go their customs and cultures, including music. Nothing is pure. Not this far into an ever-evolving world. And, because no thing is just one thing, all things share some things. That is the idea, on both the personal and musical fronts, at the heart of there is no Other, the new album by Rhiannon Giddens in partnership with Francesco Turrisi.
As students of music, history, and musical history, the two have created a glorious confluence of African, Arabic, and European cultures presented by an American roots artist and an Italian multi-instrumentalist armed with banjos, violin, accordion, frame drum, tamburello, lute, and other globe-spanning instruments. The result exists completely outside of time and place yet is still very much of the here and now.
In song after song, Giddens allows listeners to feel the weight of generations in her voice. With the opening track, “Ten Thousand Voices,” she seems to summon all of the stories and souls to pour right through her. She is but the vessel and the vehicle for both first takes on original compositions and new spins on old tunes, including Ola Belle Reed’s “I’m Gonna Write Me a Letter” and Oscar Brown, Jr’s “Brown Baby,” as well as various other traditionals. Three cuts in, “Wayfaring Stranger” brings all it has to bear in a performance that must be experienced, as any words used to describe it will fall embarrassingly short.
Produced by Joe Henry and recorded in Dublin, Ireland, there is no Other puts the connectedness of our world into stark relief and the hypocrisy of all bigotry to great shame. Once again, Rhiannon Giddens has shown what it means to be an artist of truly great import, using her platform to not just entertain, but to amplify and to educate.  From: https://folkalley.com/album-review-rhiannon-giddens-with-francesco-turrisi-there-is-no-other/

PigPen Theatre Co. - As Lonely As Me


The seven members of PigPen Theatre Co. first met as freshmen acting students at the Carnegie Mellon School of Drama in 2007. After working with each other in various classes, particularly movement and voice, the group decided to collaborate on a theater piece to present at the drama school's student-run theater festival Playground. The show, titled The Hunter and the Bear, was an original folk tale told through movement, music, and puppetry, and set the aesthetic for the group's projects moving forward. The production proved extremely popular, but the group did not seriously consider forming a theater company that could exist after graduation until they collaborated again for Playground the following year.
The group continued developing their plays, with plans to move to New York City as a collective theater company after graduation. During a residency in Martha's Vineyard in 2010, they were approached by a music executive who offered to help them also become a band after seeing one of their presentations. Prior to this, the company had only used original music as a "soundtrack" to support their works, but shifting to working as a band allowed them to focus more on individual songs, as well as the chance to increase their exposure by touring their music. Since then, the group has toured both their theatrical productions and recorded music as a band, with their debut album Bremen released in 2012. Recorded shortly after their graduation from Carnegie Mellon in 2011, Bremen consists of both music from their existing shows, as well as original songs. Bremen was acclaimed on release, with compliments to its layered harmonies and "Americana instrumentation" and comparisons made to British folk rock band Mumford & Sons. A second album, Whole Sun, followed in 2015. The group also have four EPs: The Courier's Wife, The Way I'm Running, PigPen Theatre Co. on Audiotree Live, and Out of the Overture.  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PigPen_Theatre_Co.

Gone Cosmic - Dazed


Championed by a soaring songstress Abbie Thurgood (The Torchettes), whose boldly evocative tones recall Skunk Anansie chanteuse Skin and Alabama Shakes’ Brittany Howard, and accompanied by an agile and aggressive psych-rock outfit, composed of guitarist Devin “Darty” Purdy (Chron Goblin), bass player Brett Whittingham (Chron Goblin), percussionist Marcello Castronuovo (Witchstone), Gone Cosmic has carved out an expansive domain that stretches from sweltering Southern sludge pits to breath-stealing sonic spacewalks.
A blood (orange)-scented breeze that bows the trees, Gone Cosmic chases the infinite haze from the skies and puts it right back in your eyes. Groove-mining breakdowns become the stuff of legend as the four pieces’ floor-thudding tail kick and hellfire halo holler originates a whole that is far more potent than the sum of its individual elements. Meet your new astromancers, the phase-shifting and hard-rocking force that channels the empyreal sounds of heaven on Earth.  From: https://calgaryguardian.com/psychedelic-rock-band-gone-cosmic/

The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Love Or Confusion


Jimi Hendrix was, as Patti Smith once said, a “guitar poet”. Every note he played was spiritually resonant, and there was nothing beyond his reach. We may never see another guitar player who is able to do what Hendrix did. There are imitators, for sure, and there are many capable Hendrix impressionists. But none of them can capture the energy of the man, or the soul of his art.
“Love or Confusion” is a droning, knotty masterpiece from the “Are You Experienced?” album. It’s a multi-part, polyrythmic composition that reeks of mystery and power. The lyrics are among Jimi’s best, and the Experience plays with more finesse than almost any other track on this album. The arrangement features multiple time signature changes and relies heavily on interlocking syncopation. Jimi’s guitar sounds expand and contract like stars collapsing in on themselves. The mid-song key change is so abrupt that that it almost feels like a different song. And listen to those crazy pauses at the end, when the gritty, bent guitars swing back and forth in your headphones, and the drums dance around and then vanish into thin air. This song was so tricky to play that the Experience apparently never attempted to pull it off live, save for once during a recording session for the BBC.  From: https://audioreckoning.wordpress.com/2012/08/24/awesome-tune-love-or-confusion-by-the-jimi-hendrix-experience/

Deep Throat Choir - Ada


In 1972 a pornographic film called Deep Throat, starring Linda Lovelace as a frustrated woman who could only be sexually satisfied through performing fellatio, triggered three major events in culture. One was the advent of the “Golden Age of Porn,” an era of increased respectability and cultural discussion around pornos. During this time films such as The Devil in Miss Jones in 1973 and The Opening of Misty Beethoven in 1976 premiered with increased production values and a focus on plot and dialogue in addition to sex. When Johnny Carson (cultural arbiter of ‘70s America if there ever was one) admitted to seeing Deep Throat, the rest of the country followed suit.
The other was the nicknaming of the informant who became the lynchpin that brought about the Watergate scandal, resulting in the resignation of Richard Nixon in 1974. In a stunning example of the entwinement of porn and politics, Deep Throat, later revealed to be W. Mark Felt, number two in the FBI at the time, was so pseudo-named because of the unprecedented cultural pervasiveness of the film in addition to the deep nature of his information.
The last, and remarkably least likely result is the all-female choral group based out of Hackney, London: Deep Throat Choir. The 30-member strong collective gather once a week to sing together; mostly covers of pop songs like Sade’s “The Sweetest Taboo” or Bjork’s “Stonemilker” but the group is now branching into new territory, having just premiered their first original composition, “Be OK” – a soaring, empowering track that is as much a dance-y romp as it is a feminist battle cry – from the album of the same name, (out now via Bella Union).
Still, Deep Throat Choir is far from done with covers. “The process of arranging a song for a cover gives you the ability to manipulate and experiment with the sounds, harmonies, and melodies of the original song – which is really fun.” Choir member Sophie Tunstall-Behrens explains, “You have to be creative in the way that you build in the instrumental sounds of the song using voices. In this sense each cover is its own work.”
In an age where everybody is connected at all times, yet people seem lonelier than ever, there is something rare and precious about these young women embracing old ways of social bonding. Luisa Gerstein, the de facto leader of the Choir, credits the organic growth of the Deep Throat Choir community to the power of people getting together and raising their voices. “Singing every week feels really good and you always come away feeling very uplifted. Whatever time you’re having, it’s always a really secure and comforting space and it can make you feel better and good.”
Choirs have existed since at least the 2nd century B.C.E. when they played an important part in Greek drama. From the all-male coal miner chorus’ in 19th Century Wales to African-American Spirituals in the late 1800s, song as a form of resistance is inextricable from the history of choral music. Most recently, Jan Chamberlin, a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir resigned from the Choir rather than sing at President Donald Trump’s inauguration. Chamberlin, writing in her open resignation letter, said, “I also know, looking from the outside in, it will appear that [the] Choir is endorsing tyranny and facism [sic] by singing for this man.” Deep Throat Choir member Thalia Allington-Wood echoes these sentiments. “I also think music as activism is not always about the artist either, it is also about the audience – how they understand a song and use it. We sang ‘Be my Husband’ for a while – made a video that mocked the words – but also stopped performing it live – potentially because that subversion wasn’t actually working in a live performance. Which says something about how conscious we are about the power of songs, words, and who sings them.” As Gerstein tells me later over email, “That perhaps one day that you might Google Deep Throat and find a group of empowered women singing at you is an activism of sorts.”  From: https://www.flaunt.com/blog/music-deep-throat-choir