Friday, October 31, 2025

T. Rex - The Slider


In 1969, Marc Bolan published a folio of poetry titled The Warlock of Love. By that point, the man born Mark Feld had already been the guitarist of mod-rock band John’s Children (for all of four months) before turning his attention to folk-rock duo Tyrannosaurus Rex. Together with bongo player Steve Peregrin Took, the group released albums with titles like My People Were Fair and Had Sky in Their Hair... But Now They’re Content to Wear Stars on Their Brows and Unicorn. Bolan mostly sat cross-legged style on stage, strumming an acoustic guitar, singing with such heavy affect that his future producer Tony Visconti was certain he was French, not English. None of these endeavors turned him into a star. But the last line of that folio portended what was to come: “And now where once stood solid water/Stood the reptile king, Tyrannosaurus Rex, reborn and bopping.”
The very next year, Tyrannosaurus Rex was reborn. Bolan stood up, plugged in a Gibson Les Paul, replaced Took with Mickey Finn, and began to enunciate each syllable with lip-smacking aplomb on the band’s first single as T. Rex. Propelled by handclaps and a strutting gamecock of a guitar lick, “Ride a White Swan” climbed up the UK charts to No. 2. T. Rex was bopping. So much so that The Warlock of Love sold over 40,000 copies, making Bolan a best-selling poet.
When T. Rex’s second single “Hot Love” shot straight to #1, Bolan dabbed some glitter on his cheekbones before a “Top of the Pops” performance. As Simon Reynolds recalled in Shock and Awe: Glam Rock and Its Legacy, that performance was “the spark that ignited the glam explosion,” confessing himself to “being shaken by the sight and sound of Marc Bolan...that electric frizz of hair, the glitter-speckled cheeks...Marc seemed like a warlord from outer space.” With 1971’s Electric Warrior, T. Rex topped the charts and was poised to break in the U.S., where “Bang a Gong (Get It On)” reached the top 10. For a glorious, nearly two-year reign, England was caught up in what the music mags would call “T. Rextasy.”
What magic ingredients led to this transformation? Theories range, but this band pic offers a clue. Bolan wears a Chuck Berry tee, while Finn’s shirt proudly proclaims: “Enjoy Cocaine.” Stripping their sound back to the giddy early days of rock’n’roll while indulging in coke’s nervy stimulation, T. Rex very suddenly manifested the biggest screamfest since Beatlemania. Visconti deemed Bolan’s genius be in skipping over the Beatles’ influence entirely, instead reaching back to the ’50s: “He emulated Elvis, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, that was his little trick. It was ingenious.”
Recorded in March and released in July of 1972, The Slider marked both the zenith and imminent approach of the cliff’s edge for T. Rextasy. Recorded in a dilapidated castle in France, it captured Marc Bolan as the King of Glam at the absolute height of his powers. Think Nadia Comăneci in 1976, Prince in the ’80s, or Ronnie O’Sullivan running the snooker table. T. Rex could do no wrong during that span.
As such, every wrist flick and downstroke on The Slider rings out like an act of god. Each cast-off line from Bolan’s notebook transforms into a profound edict from on high. And every cut—be it pop perfection or half-sketched—gets spun into cotton candy by Visconti and the backing vocals of Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan (better known as Flo & Eddie), harmonizing their nasal voices towards new adenoidal highs. The Slider exudes confidence to the point of becoming delirious and drunk on Bolan’s own self-regard, careening between bawdy, brash Little Richard lop-bam-booms, weirdo machismo rock, and ethereal acoustic ballads, while line by line Bolan toggles between profundity and inanity, melancholia and nonsense.  From: https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/t-rex-the-slider/

Holly & The Reivers - Willy O'Winsbury


The natural worry for live music fans, when you hear one of your favourite live acts is going to record music, is ‘is it going to sound as good recorded as it does live?’ Known for their ferocious live shows, Holly & The Reivers are an excellent live act; full of multi-part vocals, precise folk musicianship and lovely and interesting asides. If only in terms of capturing their energy, recording their debut album must have been a challenge. 
“We were a bit worried when we went in to record the album,” confirms singer and guitarist Holly Clarke, who makes up the band with Merle Harbron (vocals, fiddle) and Bertie Armstrong (vocals, banjo), “but we also knew we could play well so we were pretty confident it would come out okay.” And come out okay it sure does. Taken over 11 tracks, Three Galleys is a treat for lovers of the darker elements of folk. Accompanied by wonderful musicianship and stunning three-part-harmonies, the trio’s album tracks its way across some of the most iconic parts of folk, with each song breathing fully to capture the expanse of their surroundings – it’s like listening to a live Cormac McCarthy reading. 
“The album’s an amalgamation of all of the elements we love about folk,” continues Clarke, “which for us means that it’s heavily into ‘folk horror’ aspects, so imagine the sound of The Wicker Man soundtrack which is creepy and eerie in places.” 
Choosing tracks which fall into the ‘folk horror’ realm, Three Galleys has a deliberate narrative theme; songs such as The Bold Marauder and Walking Boss drawing out elements of protest and punk that are deeply rooted in the more defiant aspects of folk. 
“For the debut record we’ve chosen songs we really believe in. So songs like Bold Marauder are protesting war and Bleary Winter talks about lamenting the loss of England’s land. With the current times and ideas of war, and of the right to roam movement, we felt like these were good songs to not only showcase beautiful folk songs but also showcase messages that are still really vital today.  Another song, Willie O Winsbury, is a 400 year old song about Queer love – again these are great pieces to connect with but also to show that there is still much to fight for and to be angry about.”
Whilst album launch dates are still being figured out (“we’re really keen to do some local live album dates but there’s a few things to still be worked out”), the trio’s talk has already moved on to album two and what comes next. “We feel like this is just scratching the surface of what we want to make, but we’re really happy with the record and want to create new atmospheres as soon as we can.”  From: https://narcmagazine.com/interview-holly-the-reivers/

Marvin Gaye - Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)


Marvin Gaye was in full cry in 1971. Seized with a new passion to create music of deep lyrical meaning, and to sing about the issues affecting a troubled world, he perfected the art of doing that in the context of a huge-selling album and singles from it. The album, of course, was What’s Going On, and on October 9, the latest 45 from it, Marvin’s “Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler),” took its bow on both the Billboard Hot 100 and the Best Selling Soul Singles chart.
The What’s Going On album had been released in May, four months after the title track had signaled Gaye’s dramatic new change of direction. That single was an R&B No.1 for five weeks that spent three weeks at No.2 on the pop survey. Then early July brought the second single, “Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology),” a two-week R&B champion and pop No.4. “Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)” completed a remarkable trinity. It climbed to the R&B summit for a two-week run that meant Gaye had spent nine weeks atop the soul chart with three singles from What’s Going On. 
Strange to think, then, that Motown boss Berry Gordy didn’t exactly embrace Gaye’s new direction, and was distinctly wary of the “What’s Going On” single in particular. Until Gaye’s audience showed that they were with him all the way, that is, and that they loved his new role as a soulful social commentator. As writer Ben Edmonds observed in the 30th anniversary edition of the album in 2001, the subjects on Gaye’s agenda remained all too relevant then, and all the more so now. “The music alone would assure What’s Going On of immortality,” he noted, “but its messages still bristle with urgency. Told from the point of view of a returning Vietnam soldier, its portraits of disconnected Vets, drug addiction, ecological disaster and economic desperation are so much our own that this 1971 recording now sounds like prophesy.”  From: https://www.udiscovermusic.com/stories/marvin-gaye-inner-city-blues-song/

 

Corpo-Mente - Scylla


Just slightly over four years ago, the eccentric soul behind Igorrr (who goes as Gautier Serre in real life) pulled what I like to call a ‘Casualties of Cool’. By that I mean that just like Devin Townsend, Serre poured his deepest innards into a strongly emotional side project which showcases feelings and moods above everything else. And just like Devin’s foray, Corpo-Mente is a stark departure from what we are used to hearing from Serre.
Corpo-Mente is truly something special, regardless from which angle it is viewed. Stylistically it’s difficult to pin down – as any proper record is – but if I’d absolutely have to say it’s something then it would be that it’s kind of an acoustic/modern classical frame that is filled to the brim with operatic vocals and a strong trip-hop aesthetic, all of which is then painted with a zestful handful of glitchy electronic shades and splattered with just a dash of Igorrr’s characteristic black metal.
The flow and composure of the record is quite thoughtfully laid down with a truly progressive mindset. This reverberates with exuberance in really every moment. The listener isn’t just entertained but rather immersed in a dark, gloomy, and visceral territory where emotions are incarnated and roam free. This particular trait is enhanced thousandfold by Laure Le Prunenec’s vivid and dynamic vocal delivery. I’m not only talking about how her technical prowess is absolutely on point, but also about how every pulse is perfectly articulated. There are very few vocalists that reach anywhere near this level, and for that, Laure’s contribution is an integral part of what makes Corpo-Mente so special.
I would be remiss if I wouldn’t mention how the production value gives extra depth in nuance to the entire trip. It adds that extra pinch of color which is sometimes missing on albums that are equally well crafted. This attention to detail is what separates a really good record from a masterpiece. Corpo-Mente is by no means a show of technicality or intricate composition, quite the contrary; it is an elegant display of how soul-stirring properties can emerge from something relatively simple. It successfully conjures an entire realm around the listener with an effortless grace and that is where its mettle lies. Such records are the ones I personally live for, regardless of the form or style they come in. All I hope is that Corpo-Mente doesn’t remain a one-album-wonder like so many other amazing projects.  From: https://everythingisnoise.net/features/a-scene-in-retrospect-corpo-mente-corpo-mente/

Hazmat Modine - Dead Crow


Hazmat Modine are a maverick New York band who are shifting from Americana to global influences with remarkable results. Founded by singer-songwriter, guitarist and impressive harmonica-player Wade Shuman, they are distinctive both because of their range and their line-up: two harmonicas are matched against a three-piece brass section, guitar, steel guitar and percussion. The songs here are often blues-based, but always different; the opening Mocking Bird starts like a slow work-song and builds into rousing, harmonica and brass-backed folk-blues, while Two Forty Seven is a finger-clicking burst of brassy R&B, and the title track is an exercise in poetry and blues. The cover songs are equally original, and include a cheerful, spoken treatment of Irving Berlin's Walking Stick and the harmonica-backed 70s soul of I've Been Lonely for So Long. But the collaborations are even better, with Kronos Quartet adding their strings to the cheerfully rhythmic blues Dead Crow and Benin's Gangbé Brass Band bringing African jazz influences to Cotonou Stomp and the slinky Child of a Blind Man, where Natalie Merchant provides lead vocals. A brave and unexpected record.  From: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2011/may/26/hazmat-modine-cicada-review 

Bosnian Rainbows - Eli


In March 2012, The Mars Volta released its sixth studio album, Noctourniquet, following a lengthy three year recording period. Only 19 tour dates were announced in support of the release, of which 18 were in Europe and one in Israel. Following the tour's completion, Rodríguez-López moved back to his home town of El Paso, Texas, and subsequently formed Bosnian Rainbows with frequent collaborator Teri Gender Bender of Le Butcherettes, Mars Volta drummer Deantoni Parks and Nicci Kasper, who previously worked with Parks in Kudu and also as the writing duo Dark Angels. Regarding the band's conception, Rodríguez-López noted, "I found myself lonely and bored. So it's like, 'OK, new phase — let's get into it and let's create a dialogue. Let's find some things out.
Rodríguez-López subsequently put The Mars Volta on hiatus (although the band dissolved four months later) in order to focus on a more democratic project, stating, "It’s a band — that's something I haven’t been in for over eleven years. The Mars Volta was my baby: I started the group; I named it; booked all our tours — it became known as my family, not my band. I had to be in control of everything and I was really fucking domineering with everybody, not just musicians." Rodríguez-López elaborated, "Doing films has taught me to be a collaborator, since it’s such a large medium, you couldn't do it on your own if you tried, you know? And also hanging out with all my friends, Jim and Tony and Paul, the At the Drive-In guys, and being in that headspace again, life puts you exactly where you need to be. You can try and pull away from it, but it will always remind you where your path is. So yeah, this past year has been a really illuminating experience for me."
In September 2012, Bosnian Rainbows embarked upon its first tour under the banner of the Omar Rodriguez Lopez Group, with Rodríguez-López noting, "The tour was booked five months before it happened, and it was going to be another solo tour, and then at some point, I decided to start a new group and have a team effort. So it got booked one way, but I try to make it clear every night that this is a new group, and these are the names of the players, and “thank you.”" The band chose to rehearse in Hamburg at Clouds Hill Studios, owned by Rodriguez-Lopez's longtime friend Johann Scheerer. During the rehearsals Bosnian Rainbows recorded a live session, which was released on 10" vinyl and DVD as a part of Live at Clouds Hill limited edition box set in December 2012. After the European leg of the tour they returned to the studio to record their self-titled debut album, with production by Scheerer.
Regarding the band's influences and aesthetic, Rodríguez-López noted, "These are very much shorter, more to-the-point songs [than The Mars Volta's]. They still have spaces that stretch out, but what I mean to say is that it’s all the same influences that have been in most of my writing and all the people in my bands’ writing. Can is there, Siouxsie and the Banshees is there, Gang of Four is there, all the Led Zeppelin, whatever... all those things are there, it’s just different elements of those things. You make it shorter. It’s stripped down, it’s starker. The very melodic side of Can; the very textural side of Siouxsie. You take all those elements, and you take elements that maybe you weren’t exploring as much before.  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosnian_Rainbows

 

Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Tarkus

"Tarkus" is the title track of Emerson, Lake & Palmer's second album. The progressive rock epic lasts 20:42. It was the longest studio suite by the band until the three impressions of "Karn Evil 9". The name "Tarkus" refers to the armadillo-tank from the William Neal paintings on the album cover. The artist has explained that the name is an amalgamation between 'Tartarus' and 'carcass' (hence the name being written in bones on the album cover). Consequently, the name refers to the "futility of war, a man-made mess with symbols of mutated destruction." The song "Tarkus" supposedly follows the adventures of Tarkus from his birth, through a fight with a manticore, which he loses and concludes with an aquatic version of Tarkus named "Aquatarkus". Keith Emerson, when asked what work he is proudest of, named his "Piano Concerto" (from the Works release) and "Tarkus".  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarkus_(suite)

Ani DiFranco - Worthy


We are looking forward to having you at MASS MoCA, Ani. When you’re on tour, do you explore the city where you’re playing? 

We don’t have a lot of days off, but whenever we do, then I have time to wander around and check a place out. On show days, I’m pretty ensconced with interviews and setlists. Making a setlist takes me a weirdly long amount of time, just trying to figure out what the flow is going to be like. I’m usually in the venue most of the day.

Your setlists vary depending on the venue? 

Yes, definitely. A rock club will be more rock and roll, and then in a seated theater, I can bring out the chill stuff. This spring is the first time I’ll be touring with my latest album, Unprecedented Sh!t. I haven't played any of those songs live.

I listened to the album again last night and really enjoy it. I'll ask you about that a little later. We have daughters who are a similar age, 17. How do you think your daughter’s life is different than when you were that age?

I guess the biggest difference is the smartphone. She's growing up in a whole other way, in a whole other world than those of us who were pre-internet creatures. I feel very grateful to have known the world before that. It sort of contracted from three-plus dimensions to two. She has her own world there in her headphones and with her phone and TikTok, which is typical of this generation of kids. I feel like these devices—having the world in your pocket—is expansive in some ways because you certainly are aware of much more than maybe we were at 17 just entering the world. But I feel it's also a deterrent to actually going out there and striking your own path in the world. It’s an intimidating amount of information. Anything that a young person could think to do, they can pull their phone out of their pocket and see somebody who's doing it better than anyone ever has. And I feel like that makes kids feel like, well, why would I bother? I can't be that pretty or that good a dancer or that smart of a designer or whatever it is. I feel like it's almost a repressive force. That’s just coming from my mother's instinct. It seems like a lot of young adults seem wary to leave the house and go try to do something.

What stands out most when you were 18 and on your own in New York City? 

New York was so different back then, in 1989, when I moved there. It was much rougher around the edges, more dangerous and edgy, but really fascinating, really vibrant. With money comes cleanliness and safety and convenience and all those things, but it also dulls down the spirit of a place. I'm also happy that I'm old enough to have known the old New York, where there were found sculptures everywhere and still chickens running around the Lower East Side, squats and artists and a less shiny and moneyed and rat race-feeling city. It was rough. Even though I grew up in the city in Buffalo, landing in New York at 18 was daunting. I had a sublet for two months, and I didn't know a soul. I had to get work. I had to figure it out real quick. I remember I cried a lot. It felt cold to me at first, but I was determined. I acclimated, and, of course, I fell in love with it. I would live again in New York in a heartbeat. 

What would you tell your younger self? 

I would mostly petition her to be more patient, to take more time doing everything. I was very driven and very determined. For whatever reason, I was flinging albums into the world twice a year, just churning out songs and throwing them against the wall and seeing what stuck. I would advise her to take more time—there’s no hurry—and even step back from making music, from making albums, from being on stage more than I did. I think it would have served me and my art, and in that sense, my audience, for me to remove myself and rebuild myself and regenerate my own cells more than I did.

Your kids must think you're so cool. 

I guess I'm doing okay in that regard. They're not mortally ashamed or embarrassed of me. It's amazing how little relevance the culture of one's parents has to their culture and their world. When I joined the Broadway show, I went up a notch with my daughter.

She got to experience New York and see her mom on stage, so I can understand why. Did you grow up wanting to be a musician? 

Yes, when I was nine, I started playing guitar, and right away it was the best medicine I'd ever had. It was the most healing thing to sing and to play guitar and to make music. Instantly, I wanted to do it and not stop. I didn't have a big plan for myself. I just knew that this was the best thing I found in terms of making art for me.

What did you listen to growing up? 

A lot of folk singers, so to speak. singer-songwriters of the ’70s, ’80s; I was fortunate to have a lot of them live and in person in my life.

How did that come about? 

When I was just a kid starting to play guitar, I made friends with this fellow in Buffalo, Michael Meldrum. He was a singer-songwriter, a troubadour playing in all the bars and running the open mics. I became his shadow. Another thing that he was doing was booking concerts. He had what he called the Greenwich Village Song Project, and he would bring songwriters in from the city. So, I met and hung out with a lot of them. I saw all of them play. The model for music was something you do. He and I would sit around and sing and learn songs and play together, and I would play with him at all his little shows. Growing up, it was more of a social act, which, I think, is the genesis of music and what it really is. So, I had a good, long beginning of the essence of what music is.

From: https://www.berkshiremag.com/post/10-minutes-with-ani-difranco

Gothic Chicken - Overthrow


Pink Hedgehog Records put together Gothic Chicken, a psyche-pop super group with members from The Lucky Bishops and Cheese; Marco Rossi (Guitars), Alan Strawbridge (Bass ), Tom Hughes (Keyboards), and Luke Adams (Drums) with all members contributing to vocal duties. The production here is high quality, a mix of Schnauser and Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd on the big opener “Overthrow.” Next the baroque pop gem “And As For Me” is like a Left Banke composition with smooth harmonies, but it dives into prog-land shortly after the chorus. This follows through for many songs, setting up a solid melody and then going ADD with it by flying into a Zappaesque direction. Gorgeous composition sets-ups like “The Mousetrap” and “Priest Hole” will demand repeat listens. “Westward Ho?” is another amazing gem; like a lost 10cc track floating through Pepperland. If you like psychedelic rabbit holes, this is an excellent album to turn on and tune in to. Highly Recommended.  From: https://www.powerpopaholic.com/2016/01/gothic-chicken-and-javier-escovedo.html

 

Monday, October 20, 2025

Kings & Beggars - Rosa das Rosas Medieval Show


 Kings & Beggars - Rosa das Rosas Medieval Show - Part 1
 

 Kings & Beggars - Rosa das Rosas Medieval Show - Part 2
 

 Kings & Beggars - Rosa das Rosas Medieval Show - Part 3
 
Kings & Beggars ensemble was found in march, 2008 in Lviv by Anna Vasylchenko. The ensemble's line-up has changed several times since then but now it’s stable and active and musicians are devoted to the same idea. Ensemble plays European early and folk music, which was enjoyed by the noble people at the royal court and the simple people in the cities and villages – this where the name “Kings & Beggars” came out. Ensemble repertoire is quite rich: from XIII century songs, ballads and dance melodies of XVI century to folk music from different European countries (Ukrainian, Irish, etc). Repertoire includes works from such known codex’s as Cantigas de Santa Maria, Cantus Buranus, Llibre Vermel de Montserrat, etc. It’s also includes a lot of English, French and Italian dances from XIII, XIV and XVI centuries. Kings & Beggars is working with musicians from Ukraine and abroad, also with historical dance collectives and re-enactors clubs. By this time the ensemble had taken part in many festivals of medieval culture, and in many other art events, concerts and tournaments.  From: https://sakingsandbeggars.z6.web.core.windows.net/  
 

The Fiery Furnaces - Ex-Guru


For those out of the loop, the Fiery Furnaces are the brother/sister duo of Matt and Eleanor Friedberger. It wouldn't be a stretch to say they're one of the most critically acclaimed and highly praised rock bands playing today. Last year, their two releases, EP and Rehearsing My Choir, made them the only artist on the College Music Journal's year-end chart with multiple records, at numbers 22 and 191, respectively. With two red cats stamped on my hands (the mark of being under 21 at the Cat's Cradle), a digital camera, and a spot to sit close to the stage against a graffiti-tagged wall, I was ready for the show to start. Eleanor Friedberger, the main vocalist, showed up on stage in an all white outfit with a very energetic start to the show. The man behind the music, Matt Friedberger, was playing only guitar this time around (no keyboards like on the albums) and a bassist and drummer who were both very impressive backed them. The mood was established early with the familiar tune "Asthma Attack" and an impressive up tempo version of "Straight Street" before diving into songs from their newest record, Rehearsing My Choir.
While the show wasn't the pyrotechnic phenomenon that is a Kiss show, it wasn't supposed to be. They proved that they have even more depth than their albums show and bring something more to the table live than just carbon copies of their songs. Luckily, I was able to talk to Matt Friedberger on the phone about the tour and upcoming albums.

I know it's early in the tour, but does it feel any different from past tours?

Well, we played Charlotte and we're in Florida now. We haven't played any shows here yet, but we're playing different places this tour. Besides that, you know, it's not much different. It feels different for me because I'm not carrying around a keyboard with me.

Yeah, I noticed that. The last time I saw you, about a year ago, you played a lot more keyboard and the bassist was playing a synthesizer, so it was sort of a different feel. Is there any reason you're not playing any keyboard?

No big reasons. It's a way to make it a different experience. We're sort of in-between records, I mean even though Rehearsing My Choir isn't that old, we're in-between that and Bitter Tea. It seemed more appropriate to me to just play guitar.

Is Bitter Tea going to be more guitar-based like what you're doing with the guitar live or is that just something your doing on tour?

Oh no, it's all keyboards, a lot of pianos, organs, and synthesizers. Well, some guitar, but heavier on the others.

Similar to what you did on Rehearsing My Choir?

This record has drums and drum machines, unlike Rehearsing My Choir. And the songs have choruses and it's not really narration like the last album was but more songs with repeating choruses, the same lyrics and what not. Does that make sense?

Yeah, definitely. Did you know when you were recording Rehearsing My Choir that the versions you were going to be playing live were going to be so different than the way they were in the studio? They seem much more consciously rock.

Live, you have the drums so it's natural to make them louder. You know, we try to make them into rock songs. I thought that would be fun. Live, there are drums and no Grandmother, so you've got those differences and so that was fun, to change them live.

When you sit down to write a song, what are your personal goals-is it to write something people will like or something they'll think is weird or unique?

[laughs] I think you just have to try to feel fulfilled, personally. It's not like writing for a goal, but you just have to try to satisfy yourself. So, no I don't write for someone to listen and think it's good or bad, but just that it is for me, if that makes sense.

This summer you have some solo albums coming out, are they going to be a lot different than the music you write for the Fiery Furnaces or is it similar?

To me, they sound completely different because I wound up singing. One record is all songs and one record is a story record. On the story one I sort of have this ghost language which is something that happened because I wanted an excuse to use a lot of backwards vocals [laughs]. It's more like Rehearsing My Choir in that there's a story but no narrating. The other is just songs. It's a much louder rock record.

Finally, I guess I was just wondering if the band name, The Fiery Furnaces, comes from the Bob Dylan song "Jokerman."

Oh "Jokerman," no, the name comes from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. I was watching and the dad says he's going to put the car in the Fiery Furnace and I knew it was a biblical reference. The idea of fire and brimstone I just thought sort of just fit for a rock band, plus my last name is Friedberger and there are two of us [in the band] so you have the two F's. And the plural of Furnace just when you say it seems sort of hard and tongue-twisting.

From: https://www.piratemedia1.com/archives/article_1015d0af-bf60-55cc-bd49-39af76679842.html

The Holy Family – Inward Turning Suns


The Holy Family are the latest band from David J Smith (Guapo, The Stargazers Assistant, Miasma & The Carousel Of Headless Horses) and features long time cohorts Kavus Torabi (Cardiacs, Gong, The Utopia Strong, Knifeworld, Guapo), Emmitt Elvin (Chrome Hoof, Knifeworld, Guapo), Sam Warren (Guapo, Thumpermonkey) and Michael J York (Coil, Current 93, The Utopia Strong, Teleplasmiste, Guapo, The Stargazers Assistant, Cyclobe). The band originally came together as Guapo to improvise new material in an old country house in England but it quickly became apparent that this was not a Guapo album.
David J Smith - "I guess if I had to try to put it into words it's my attempt at a musical interpretation of a very trippy and psychedelic murder mystery tale, or otherworldly dream / hallucination".
The band have explored a broad range of style across kosmiche, psyche, electronica, zeuhl, acid folk. It's a heady shamanic trip across altered states that grooves and rocks.  From: https://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=11898

The Fast Camels - Blissful Serenity


How would you describe your sound?

Drew Sturgeon: I’d say we have quite a distinct but varied sound. The 60s Psych/Freakbeat influences are clear but we’ve stayed true to producing records exactly how we feel at that moment and try not to reproduce a pastiche of our favourite era of music! In this album in particular, we have kept a live and almost raw energy in the majority of the tracks which was our intentions from the get-go! We pride ourselves on melody, harmony and interesting arrangements!

Would you like to talk a bit about your background?

The Camels have been releasing records now since 2007 (The Magic Optician album) when Neon Tetra Records signed us for a one album deal! We started off as a little Glasgow band playing the circuit but that album opened a few doors! None more so than being the only act from the UK to be selected for the 40th anniversary of Monterey Pop! Sadly, our trip was sabotaged by a former member and left the band in disarray for a long sullen spell leading to a chaotic turnover of band members. Because of several line-up changes, our 2nd release, Deadrooms & Butterfly Dreams was released 7 years later in 2014! Since then, we’ve been in a real good place with a solid base and the same 5 members. Mark (O’Connor) and I started the band and found an interesting connection through the love of music, humour and drive to create and write together. The Tales of the Expected album (2016) lead us on to successful tours of Mainland Europe and the USA before recording and releasing this LP, Full Of Strange.

When did you decide that you wanted to start writing and performing your own music? What brought that about for you?

I began writing songs years before ‘The Fast Camels’. My older brother was my main influence musically as he had a tremendous music taste and record collection fortunately for myself! He also taught me guitar and is a fine songwriter in his own right! So, before I met Mark, I did have a fair number of songs in the bank but I also found that collaborating opened up so many doors and has many more advantages. We tend to paint pictures in our heads lyrically for our own enjoyment whilst performing and there’s a real fun factor in our writing hence why we’re still at it!

What does the name “Fast Camels” refer to in the context of the band name?

Ha, that I’m not exactly sure? I know the reason why we’re called The Fast Camels but not sure you’d understand even with my explanation! Just think of Camels eating sand to save someone…

How do you usually approach music making?

There are 3 main procedures in my eyes and all songs take different routes. Probably around 90% of them begin with Mark or I having an idea, meaning melody, chords, a riff or a lyric. Sometimes a bit of everything. We then jam the idea out in one of the houses, my on acoustic, Mark on electric and pen the song in a session to the point where we have a decent arrangement. The 3rd part of the procedure is the most satisfying when you enter the studio with the band and you hear it all come together! Everyone has pretty much a free reign to put their own parts and ideas down and we’re always open to suggestions. Mark and I write the majority of the songs but Joe and Andy both contribute also.

What are some bands/musicians that have a big influence on you?

On me, there are so many! Love and Arthur Lee are an obvious influence and it was dream-like to perform with their guitarist Johnny Echols in the States! Was a mind-blowing experience not only covering songs of Love but our very own on stage with the man! More recently, I’ve discovered the album Scott 4 (Scott Walker) which blew my mind and I’m still hugely into all the 60s scene bands from The Who, Kinks, Beatles, Stones, Byrds, Jefferson Airplane to artists such as Neil Young and Syd Barrett.

Do you often play live?

Yes, we like to play Glasgow at least once a year and like I say, traveling is a lot of fun with this current line-up, so we always find ourselves playing Liverpool, London and other locations in the UK. No doubt, plans will be in place for another trip abroad! We probably should play more festivals to boost popularity but we are very much an indoor band in my eyes. Those are the best gigs to attend anyway.

Let’s end this interview with some of your favourite albums. Have you found something new lately you would like to recommend to our readers?

Here’s my current top 5:
Forever Changes – Love
Scott 4 – Scott Walker
The Who Sell Out – The Who
Vol. 3 – A Child’s Guide To Good & Evil – West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
Younger Than Yesterday – The Byrds
For something new, I would recommend See You in the Next World – The Vapour Trails and watch out for fellow Glasgow band, ‘The Poachers’ who are currently recording their first album!

From: https://www.psychedelicbabymag.com/2019/12/the-fast-camels-interview.html

Tautumeitas - Dzied Papriekšu Brāla Māsa


It has been more than 20 years since Latvia freed itself from Russia and Communism; there’s a generation that’s grown up in the heady air, and the six women of Tautumeitas (evidently pronounced Tautu-MAY-tas to avoid an offensive word) are among them. They’re part of the second Latvian folk revival – the first was part of the 1970s cultural resistance against the Russians – and their debut is full of joy, eagerly grabbing the country’s tradition and pulling it into the 21st century.
They bring big arrangements and choruses to the tradition, but keep the multi-part polyphonic singing that’s at the heart of Latvian music (historically performed by women). Instrumentally, on top of their own violins and accordion, there’s jaw harp, bass, and some electronic programming that gives plenty of punch to the sound. Even before this CD appeared, the band was already known in their homeland through a track put together by producer Reinis Sējāns, which was used in a TV documentary on Latvian history.  From: https://www.rootsworld.com/reviews/tautu-19.shtml 

Jeff Buckley - Last Goodbye


Jeff Buckley was born on November 17, 1966, in Anaheim, California, from musical lineage. His mother, Mary Guibert, was a classically trained musician, and his father, Tim Buckley, was a well-known folk singer. Buckley, however, only met his father one time; the two spent a week together when Buckley was 8. hHs father died of a heroin overdose at age 28, less than a year after the pair's meeting. Buckley was close with his stepfather, Ron Moorhead, and he gave Buckley his first Led Zeppelin album, which would prove to be highly influential to the future musician.
After performing in a handful of cover bands throughout high school, Buckley attended the Los Angeles Musicians Institute after his high school graduation. Over the next several years, he played various gigs and wrote songs, looking for direction. In 1990, he moved to New York City, where he eventually joined the band Gods and Monsters, featuring Gary Lucas, the former guitarist with Captain Beefheart. It wasn't long, though, before he left the group to embark upon a solo career. He found his home away from home in a tiny East Village café called Sin-é. Some of his performances were captured on a four-song EP titled Live at Sin-é, which was released in 1993.
In early 1994, Buckley went out on his first solo tour of small venues in support of the live album, and in the summer of 1994, his first studio album, Grace, was released (on August 23, the same day he and his band began their European tour in Dublin, Ireland). Featuring original songs such as "Last Goodbye," "Mojo Pin" and a cover of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah," Grace was released to a modest reception, but found some kindred spirits in the critical realm. Buckley and his band went on tour to promote the album for almost three years, during which time the album and Buckley saw popular and critical attention grow.
In the years since its release, in fact, Grace has been lauded again and again, seemingly picking up momentum with each passing year. An especially notable accolade was provided by David Bowie, who named Grace the sole album he would want if stranded on a desert island.
By the summer of 1996, Buckley had begun recording demos for his second album, which he intended to call My Sweetheart the Drunk. The recording sessions were held in New York City and Memphis, Tennessee, where Buckley had recently relocated. On May 29, 1997, the night his band was arriving from New York to record the final studio tracks, Buckley and a friend took a detour while en route to the recording space.
Making a stop at the Wolf River channel of the Mississippi River, a fully clothed Buckley waded into the water and began swimming. The wake of a passing boat sucked Buckley under, and he drowned. His body was recovered six days later, after it was seen by a riverboat passenger.
Following his death, Buckley's mother began working with Columbia Records on any posthumous releases, the first of which became Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk (1998), a double-disc set featuring unfinished songs that Buckley had recently recorded. Two years later, the live album Mystery White Boy followed, accompanied by the DVD/VHS Jeff Buckley: Live in Chicago. In 2003, a two-disc set of his early live performances at the East Village café, Live at Sin-é, was released. In a 2002 interview with The Guardian, his mother spoke about managing her son's legacy, "I have to compartmentalize myself quite a bit. There's the musician side of me, and the businesswoman side - and the mother side of me which never turns off. But the emotions are things I have to kinda set aside. That's why I take good counsel. I've always involved people from Jeff's band. It makes it a lot easier, especially if there are any critical blows. But the work we've done so far has been well received."  From: https://www.biography.com/musicians/jeff-buckley

Spiritbox - No Loss, No Love


 LH: You guys released the “Belcarra” music video and, along with a vocal cover that you did live. What has the response been and how did it feel to finally get that song out there, because it is powerful?


Courtney: We are so excited because we shot that music video in December and we had this song done since, god, I guess June or something like that. Yeah. So the song’s been done since June of 2018 and we shot the video in December 2018, and so we’ve just been sitting there wanting to put this song out for a long time, but we just kept pushing it back, because we just wanted to make sure it was a good release and we had all our artwork looking good, and we added our own video, so we wanted to make sure that it was looking as good as possible, right? So, it was so awesome to finally put out that really more heavy song, because we led all of our releases with a bit more of a groovy, more prog song, so it was nice. This song is a little tornado of heaviness, so I’m happy to dump this one on the world.

LH: You mentioned that you guys edit your own videos. I would like to say that, as a person that has definitely dove into you guys head first, you really take pride in the music videos. They’re edited well, they’re unique, and I sort of get a ’90s vibe in some of the music videos.


Courtney: You know what? You probably get the ’90s is probably because aesthetically, the more low fi something is, the easier it is to pull off, you know what I mean? We really lean into the fact that our stuff is very low fi visually, because we’re literally just doing it ourselves on our iPhones, except for, of course, you can see if you were to look at all of our videos, I don’t even have to say this, because it’s so obvious, but our video for “Perennial” clearly was shot by a professional. Our friend Dylan did that one and so we’re hoping that he’s… we have one more song to put out, and we’re hoping that Dylan is going to direct that one as well, so we can begin and end with Dylan doing our videos.

LH: What goes into making the videos? I’ve always been one to say that visuals are very important, and you guys seem to have an emphasis on visuals. Do you always try to make the best visual for the song, or do you make something a little different?


Courtney: Yeah. We don’t do it because we are truly talented at making visuals and stuff like that. We do it purely out of necessity, because we’re such a new band that any way that we could get more people to find out about our band and have sharable content that we can stand by is gonna help us so much rather than just putting out one song and hope people buy an EP. So, throughout the last year or so, Michael, my husband and our guitar player, we just taught ourselves how to do that and, obviously, our first and our only love is just making music and we’d rather focus on that. But, because of the necessity of needing to get people to be aware of our band, he’s really stumbled into finding that he’s actually quite good at doing music videos. But, in a perfect world, we would rather just pay the professionals to come up with, work with them to come up with something more finessed, but until that day comes, we want as many people to see us as possible, so we’re gonna continue to put out that visual aspect of our band. And it’s been really fun to learn how to do all that stuff.

LH: Now, what would you say has been your personal favorite music video to film?


Courtney: Well, obviously the one that our friend Dylan did, “Perennial,” was really cool because we got to watch a professional work, but I loved shooting… you know what? I think my favorite one was the one from our previous EP release that we put out last year. It’s a song called “The Mara Effect, Part One,” and I like that one because that was the first time that we got to make an actual performance music video. Before that, it was just more of a storyboarded video, because we didn’t have a full band to do a live performance then, and so I was so happy when I got to do that one, because it was really, really simple, because we finally got to perform a song as a band in a more traditional sense. So, that was my favorite one to do, I’d say. It’s like an all black and white video and we’re in an old warehouse. If you get time to check it out.

LH: I’d have to say that my personal favorite, I think, would have to be, I’d definitely say “The Mara Effect, Part 3” would be my favorite. I thought just the white water around your face and how you moved around, and it was appropriate for the tone of the song, as well. Just the movements that you had and I felt like, especially at the end, when you’re mixing the screams and clings together, it all meshed together so well and I just felt like it was very artistic.


Courtney: Well, that one was literally just Michael just standing above me on our bathtub and me lip syncing the song, which I couldn’t hear, because my ears were under the water and I had to just hope that I was on time. And then, we spent $10 on a couple gallons of milk and then $10 on some flour, and that’s all that, and he just shot it on his iPhone.

LH: Wait. So you were in a bathtub filled with milk?


Courtney: Yeah. You put in half water and then a couple gallons of milk and it all works out.

LH: Now, one more general question about the video. In the “Perennial” video, when you were actually in the body of water, you had this effect on your face. It was really bright and glittery. How did you guys manage to get that effect? It was really cool.


Courtney: Oh, well, I literally had glitter all over my whole body. I was covered in glitter. So, if you saw me in person, I looked crazy, but Bill, our bass player, his wife happens to be a professional makeup artist, so she was kind enough, for that video, to come and do my makeup for all the scenes. She put glitter from my whole head down to my chest and my arms and my fingers, everything, so I was covered in glitter, so it looks very, I’m so glad that you could kind of see that, because it was really subtle, but it makes me so happy because it was very uncomfortable to be covered in glitter for 10 hours, because I had to wait. She was leaving that day to go back to… we live on the island, and she was leaving that day to go back to Vancouver, and so she had to put the glitter on me before she left, but we had to wait till sunset to do that scene, so I had to just sit there all day covered with head to toe with glitter.

From: https://www.loudhailermagazine.com/interviews/interview-with-courtney-laplante-of-spiritbox/

James Gang - Walk Away - Beat-Club 1971


The James Gang didn’t start out as a power trio. Initially the band was a standard five-piece with a revolving door of members coming and going; including legendary guitarist Glenn Schwartz who would leave the band while AWOL from the Army, and move to California to form the blues rock band Pacific Gas & Electric. In 1968 the James Gang was scheduled to open for Cream at a concert in Detroit. At the last minute, guitarist Ronnie Silverman informed the band he was out. Desperate for gas money to get back to Ohio, Walsh, Jim Fox and Tom Kriss were forced to perform as a trio—just like the headlining band from London. Everyone liked what they heard, so the band remained a three-piece (with Dale Peters replacing Kriss on the second album, Rides Again) until Walsh departed for Colorado in 1971 to start Barnstorm with Kenny Passarelli and Canton, Ohio native Joe Vitale.  In addition to releasing three excellent albums in two years, Barnstorm also served as the backing band on Michael Stanley’s second album, Friends and Legends, which certainly clarifies the amazing guitar interplay that permeates that album, and a friendship that has lasted decades.
In 1970, the James Gang was assigned to support some shows on The Who’s American tour. Pete Townshend was so impressed he invited them across the pond to open for his band on their UK tour as well. Townshend and Walsh became fast friends and Pete once told Rolling Stone magazine that he thought Joe was the best American guitar player he had ever heard. Both Jimmy Page and Eric Clapton had equally complimentary things to say about him. When I finally dropped the needle on side one of Thirds and heard the opening guitar riff of “Walk Away,” I understood why Pete and the others were such enthusiastic fans. I also realized how shortsighted I'd been prejudging the band's sound and not listening to the records sooner. The James Gang with Joe Walsh at the helm was a quintessential high-powered rock n’ roll band; critically acclaimed and highly respected by fans and musicians alike. The icing on the cake was their hometown status; a source of pride that Cleveland music fans revere and rally behind to this day.  From: https://happymediumproductions.weebly.com/the-james-gang---walk-away.html

Mean Mary - Wherefore Art Thou, Jane


Banjo, fiddle, and guitar player “Mean” Mary James has quite a following on YouTube. Intrigued by this, I began listening to her music more closely. Mary has the unique ability to mix together a variety of musical styles, which can appeal to a wide audience—traditionalists, along with those who like a more progressive sound. I particularly admire the ease at which she can switch between those two poles. Mary grew up on the border of Florida and Alabama, and has been performing since she was 6 (when she recorded her first album!). Her name comes from a song she wrote when she was five, Mean Mary from Alabam. (She isn’t really mean at all.) 

Bob Piekiel: Tell us about your new album.

Mary James: “Sweet” has 14 songs, which is more than I’ve ever done before. I think I’ll go back to a 10-song album next time! This one is quite diverse. I was trying to stick more in it because I can go all over the board genre-wise, from bluegrass to rock and roll, Celtic, and so on. This one kind of took on a life of its own while recording. It has songs that I originally didn’t think were going to be on the album, songs that I’d just written, and it’s become my most diverse album of all.

BNL: How did you choose the material?

MJ: It kind of decided on its own! But I’ve written a lot of songs in the past year, and I’ve been playing songs that people would they be on an album, so I took some of those, and then added more that I thought would fit. We have a bit of a theme—a lot of the songs have that “sunshiney, happy-go-lucky” feel to them. There’s some banjo tunes, and a variety of other things. It wasn’t exactly a planned situation.

BNL: How did you get interested in the banjo, and when did you start playing?

MJ: I started with guitar, just before I turned 5. The next year I got into playing the fiddle. The banjo came along when I was about 7. My parents and I were in a pawn shop, and I pointed to a banjo and said, “I want to learn that next.” They ended up getting me an inexpensive, $50 pawn-shop banjo. I just went from there with that.

BNL: Who were your biggest influences, and how did you go about learning to play?

MJ: I’m self-taught. I learned from books, tab books. When I started on guitar, I learned how to read music, and learned songs that way. I learned how to read music before I learned how to read! My mother let me go through music books, and I had never heard the artist before, so I learned them from the sheet music, especially the songs that I thought were pretty. I would add them to my repertoire. I was influenced by many different artists and their performances. When I started with banjo books, I loved a beautiful arrangement of Blackberry Blossom by Geoff Hohwald. I thought that was just great.

BNL: Is the banjo your favorite instrument?

MJ: I like them all, but the banjo’s been good to me, especially with Youtube. For years the fiddle was my main instrument. I played fiddle with other groups, and fiddle solos, but I play multiple instruments because it gives you a lot of variety. Sometimes, an instrument you didn’t think belonged in a song all of a sudden becomes a tool. My song Bad Ol’ John had an electric guitar, and then I thought, maybe the banjo would add that special, quirky little sound to it, and something that first seemed to be straight rock-and-roll became a lot more fun!

BNL: Why do they call you “Mean” Mary?

MJ: When I was about 5, I wrote a song with my mother called Mean Mary from Alabam’. It was kind of my theme song back then. The press picked up on it, and would say things like “Mean Mary is coming to town!” That’s when I stopped performing that song! Things you did that were cute when you were 5 aren’t as cute when you’re older! (laughs) 

From: https://banjonews.com/2016-05/mean_mary_james.html

 

Joe Jackson - Live Hammersmith Odeon London 1982


01 Look Sharp
02 Cancer
03 Real Men
04 Breaking Us in Two
05 Fools in Love
06 Chinatown
07 Target
08 T.V. Age
09 It's Different for Girls
10 Tuxedo Junction
11 Steppin' Out

Joe Jackson is an English pianist, songwriter, vocalist, author, and occasional bandleader, active since the late 1970s. Emerging on London’s New Wave scene, he achieved fame with the 1979/80 albums Look Sharp!, I’m the Man, and Beat Crazy. Over the years, his music has incorporated rock, reggae, salsa, jump blues, Tin Pan Alley, big-band vocal jazz, and avant-garde classical forms.
Joe was born David Ian Jackson on August 11, 1954, in Burton upon Trent. He spent his childhood in Portsmouth and his teens in Gosport, where he learned violin and piano. From age 16, he played piano bars and won a scholarship to London’s Royal Academy of Music, where he studied musical composition alongside Annie Lennox. 
Jackson earned the nickname “Joe” when cabaret audiences noted his resemblance to Joe Cool, the piano-playing guise of Snoopy in the comic strip Peanuts. Jackson himself accepted the name as an ode to the titular teenage genius character in the Sixties ITV super-marionation series Joe 90. At age 20, he changed his legal name to Joe because he deemed David an over-given forename among his generation of Portsmouth natives.
In 1972, Jackson teamed with Gosport friends Graham Maby (bass) and Mark Andrews (guitar) in Edward Bear, a covers band named after the line “Edward Bear, coming downstairs” in English author A.A. Milne’s 1926 children’s book Winnie-the-Pooh. When a namesake Canadian soft-rock band scored a 1973 transatlantic hit with “Last Song,” Jackson shortened the name to Edward but signed as Arms and Legs to MAM, a pop-singles label that housed Irish sensation Gilbert O’Sullivan.
With the advent of new wave, Andrews formed Mark Andrews and the Gents. Jackson formed his own band, comprised of Maby, guitarist Gary Sanford, and drummer David Houghton. Meanwhile, he played piano on Portsmouth’s cabaret circuit behind the vocal duo Koffee N’ Kreme and used the earnings to fund his first demo. In 1978, American A&R talent scout David Kershenbaum spotted Jackson on London’s club circuit and secured the singer a deal with A&M.  From: https://jazzrocksoul.com/artists/joe-jackson/ 

Kate Wolf - Live - Give Yourself to Love - Selected Tracks


01 - Give Yourself To Love
02 - Desert Wind
03 - Ballad of Weaverville
04 - These Times We're Living In
05 - Medicine Wheel
06 - Pacheco - Redtail Hawk
07 - Some Kind of Love

I'm interested in your musical influences.

I have to say that it probably started with the Weavers and led into Rosemary Clooney. I started out with singers that you could hear the words. That's been the big influence. Then I got into writers. Dylan is a big influence and of course the Beatles happened and folk music was always kind of there in the background. I got interested in folk music out of the Kingston Trio stuff and the Weavers. I wanted to know more about it. Once I got interested in folk music and started going to libraries I started finding out about country music. Then I discovered the Carter Family. Then when I got into country music radio, by then I was starting to discover Merle Haggard and Lefty Frizel and people like that. I used to listen to Hank Williams as a kid. So it's kind of been a progression through honest songs and honest singers, that kind of clarity. I love Buffy St. Marie's work. I love listening to people like Stevie Winwood. I guess it's that heart that's out there.

Poets?

Poets that I read? Well, I always liked ... I never wrote poetry as a kid or anything but I used to read Whitman and then I got into Garcia Lorca when I was in my "Spanish period." I read contemporary poetry if it's the poem that gets me. I'm into imagery. I'm really a frustrated painter. It really isn't so much a question of whose work it is as what kind of pictures it paints and what kind of things it says. If you looked at my bookshelf you'd probably find things. I like Gary Snyder's work. I like Robert Bly's work. Alice Walker. Those are all pretty contemporary. Looking back over the years ... like I said there was this sort of a numb period when I wasn't really doing much except making dinner parties and sewing clothes and baking bread so I can't remember really a lot about poetry. At that time I was mostly listening to Sixties radio which was just filled with poets. Everybody and their brother practically. Probably this will all occur to me later. But as far as writing goes, the structure of how I write, I never thought about it being poetry too much. I just sort of followed the models of the folk and country stuff. I write a lot from visual imagery. I write a lot from stimulation and reading other people's things. 

From: https://www.katewolf.com/interviews