Friday, January 30, 2026

U2 - A Sort of Homecoming

 

“A Sort of Homecoming” is a strange song in the U2 canon. It was not a hit, it is rarely played live (more on that, later), but it has long been one of my favorites—and in researching this piece, I found that there are many U2 fans who really love the song. As most of us know, U2 burst upon the scene with their remarkable debut, Boy, in 1980. I remember hearing it and playing it on WPRB, and being struck by the uniqueness of their sound, their earnestness, and their confidence, despite the fact that they were so young. The next album, October, was a minor stumble—not terrible, but somehow not fully realized. Their third album, War, was, start to finish, a great album, filled with anthems and love songs, delivered with passion, bravado, and musical talent. I saw them on that tour, at the Pier in New York, and was blown away. The album was a huge hit, and the album spawned hit singles—it was U2’s breakthrough into mass popularity.
When the band prepared to record its follow up, though, they wanted to move in a different direction, with less bombast and sloganeering. They wanted to work with Brian Eno, who initially was unimpressed by the band, and was planning to fob them off on his engineer, Daniel Lanois. Ultimately, though, Eno was convinced, and he agreed to work with U2 (along with Lanois), and try to create a more mature sound for the band. Not surprisingly, considering the production team, the collaboration resulted in The Unforgettable Fire, which was a more atmospheric and subtle album, but without losing the power of War. The two records are probably my favorite U2 albums (most critics probably go with The Joshua Tree or Achtung, Baby!, and I like them, too, but not as much).
“A Sort of Homecoming” is named after a line by poet Paul Celan, who Bono had been reading, in a speech he delivered on October 20, 1960, about five months after Bono was born, when Celan was awarded the Georg Büchner Prize. In that speech, Ceran discussed Büchner’s work, art, and poetry, and in his view, the circularity of poetry. He went on to say (in German, but I found a translation):
Is it on such paths that poems take us when we think of them? And are these paths only detours, detours from you to you? But they are, among how many others, the paths on which language becomes voice. They are encounters, paths from a voice to a listening You, natural paths, outlines for existence, perhaps, for projecting ourselves into the search for ourselves. . .  A kind of homecoming. 
I’ll bet you never thought that we’d be discussing German literature when you started reading this music blog post, did you? But critics note that this song, and the whole Unforgettable Fire album, show a more Celan-like spiritual doubt as compared to the more certain religious themes of their prior work.
Although I've never read Celan (but have read a little Büchner), what grabbed me about the song was the sense of yearning, both lyrically and musically, that is palpable from its quiet, polyrhythmic opening, to its more intense end. Note that the song is not called just “Homecoming,” it is “A Sort of Homecoming,” so it is fitting that lyrically it works on so many levels—as a personal homecoming to Bono’s native Ireland, as the “homecoming” of his late mother, as a return from war (possibly the violence that was engulfing Ireland at the time), and as a spiritual renewal. 
U2 played the song pretty regularly from 1984-1987, as they toured in support of The Unforgettable Fire and its follow-up, The Joshua Tree. There’s an excellent, if more triumphant and less atmospheric, live version from 1984, released on 1985’s EP Wide Awake In America (which is an odd title, because the song was actually recorded at a soundcheck before a show in London, with the crowd noises dubbed in later).  From: https://sixsongs.blogspot.com/2018/10/homecoming-sort-of-homecoming.html

Maria McKee - I'm Not Listening


To my ears and soul, Life Is Sweet is not just one of the greatest lost albums of all time, but one of the greatest, period. It’s glam. It’s rock. It’s operatic. It’s art. The story behind it: While touring in support of her country-rock classic You Gotta Sin to Get Saved in 1993, one of the members of Maria’s band is said to have given her a mixtape of classic glam and glitter tunes. Maria listened. Loved. Obsessed. And then wrote and recorded a set of songs, released in 1996, that blended those glittery hues of yore with dramatic colors of her own design.
“Scarlover,” the opening track, is a great example. It’s rough, ragged and refined all at the same time, with guitars giving way to strings that give way to guitars, set to Maria’s seemingly stream-of-conscious admission that “ugly inside of me taught me of beauty/I wouldn’t trade that work of art.” As a whole, the album explores self-doubt, self-loathing and, ultimately, self-acceptance. At times, yes, it’s stasis in darkness (aka Sylvia Plath set to song). More than that, however, it’s Maria McKee unshorn, seemingly exploring her rapid-cycle bipolar disorder in ways that both replicate it and make it relatable. It’s the Bowie homage “Absolutely Barking Stars” with lyrics that delve into yin-yang duality and the dramatic “I’m Not Listening,” in which she attempts to ignore the voices inside her head that are taunting and haunting her. 
The utterly catchy “Everybody” explores celebrity and Andy Warhol’s infamous “15 minutes of fame” maxim: “We’ve all been flirting/with the perfect day/when they think we’re perfect/Yeah, but who are they?” There’s also a flat-out incendiary guitar break. “Carried” is another highlight and, of course, there’s the title track, which may well be the greatest song she’s yet written or recorded. 
Geffen, her record label, hated the album. AAA radio stations like WXPN, which embraced and promoted the hell out of You Gotta Sin, refused to play it. Some critics slammed it. Some fans did, too. Artistic growth often comes at a price, and in this case the cost was Maria’s major-label career. Life Is Sweet failed to sell, and she left Geffen not long thereafter. The album also fell out of print, and has never been reissued, even digitally. (A true crime against art.) Twenty-plus years since its release, however, and it sounds as fresh and hauntingly familiar as it did upon first listen.  From: https://oldgreycat.blog/2018/06/23/the-essentials-maria-mckees-life-is-sweet/

Melody Fields - Rain Man

  

The fact that this Melody Fields album has come out on the ever excellent Kommun2 label is already a tick in the positive column for me, and tells me that the musicians behind this album are most likely to be Swedish, and so it proved. Even more exciting is the fact that it was recorded at Parkeringshuset Studio where the likes of Goat and Hills have also recorded. Like these other bands there is a nice blend of Swedish and other musical sounds to create something different, which I think is where my appreciation for this album is taking root.
The album opens with ‘Morning Sun’ which immediately establishes the band’s credentials as putting out music that is upbeat and, well, sunny. There are some lovely melodies here and in some senses you could be sitting on the West Coast of the USA looking out to the Pacific. By the same token you could also be looking out onto the Kattegatt from the West Coast of Sweden with the track’s folk underpinning reminiscent of Träd Gräs och Stenar. Then the sax kicks in and just takes you off into the sunlit uplands… lovely!
If that puts you in a right good mood then you’re going to be positively beaming when ‘Liberty’ kicks in with its smooth edges and lysergic tone. This is just so laid back, but not in any passive or banal way… there’s just something about it that feels very spiritual and deep. Melody Fields have influences, but they are not copyists. After that ‘Run’ steps things up with the guitar coming to the fore more and in between some more chilled out vocal which retains that ray-soaked atmosphere, even though the lyric talks of ‘summer rain’… this is one of a few albums that are bubbling up that I can see are going to be my soundtrack for the summer this year.
‘Rain Man’ keeps us guessing for a few seconds with it’s low key jangly intro before that multi-part harmony drops in and takes us off into a heavenly realm of pastoral melodies, I can already imagine me staring out at the same Kattegatt on my holidays in Denmark later this year… I’m sure the ‘Rain Man’ will make an appearance at some point, but with this on I won’t care.  From: https://fragmentedflaneur.com/2018/03/27/album-review-melody-fields-by-melody-fields/

PJ Harvey - Hair


Straight out of England’s rural Southwest, Polly Jean Harvey always had a spiritual connection with the American South – the birthplace of backwoods-gothic sin and redemption – and of the blues, which she discovered through her first musical hero, Howlin’ Wolf. With that lineage, it was no surprise that the debut album by this young Englishwoman was unlike anything else that appeared in 1992. Almost three decades later, it’s no stretch to say that it’s still startling. Albums like Dry are so way-out-there that they don’t belong to a decade or scene.
The feral blues-rock underpinning Harvey’s volcanic presence on the record raises the hair on the back of your neck. More than that: hearing Dry‘s gnarled guitar/bass/drums attack is like being in the same room as something disquieting and eternal. Though Harvey’s sonic armory later included a bit of goth, a little electronica, some plain old rock, and something approaching pop, it was the blues that unlocked her storytelling abilities.
The other remarkable thing is that despite being only 22, PJ Harvey was already fully-formed as a singer and songwriter. This “guitar-toting succubus,” in Rolling Stone’s description, had an emotional spectrum that skewed toward drama, and she had no filter. But she wasn’t out of control – as some contemporary reviewers speculated – she was just conveying her truth, figuratively ripping away Band-Aids to show some wounds, while leaving others safely covered. One 1992 rave review – that didn’t quite grasp her – contended that Dry was an “honest irrational outpouring.” (The reviewer also claimed she’d reinvented “post-rockist guitar.”) In fact, the album was only irrational in the sense that human feelings are irrational. Honest, though, it certainly was. While Polly Jean later rebutted the assumption that her songs were autobiographical, Dry was undeniably influenced by her own life.
She and her band (Rob Ellis, drums; Stephen Vaughan, bass) had moved from her home village of Corscombe, Dorset (population 445), to London in 1991, and it was a wrench. While the move was musically productive – they signed to indie label Too Pure and were championed by influential Radio 1 presenter John Peel – Harvey was deeply unhappy. Her first real relationship had just ended, she was renting a damp flat in North London, and the city felt overwhelming.
Thus, the songs that ended up on Dry have a definite narrative arc. Over 11 tracks, the mood gradually shifts from heartbroken pleading to a thirst for revenge. Aptly, it kicks off with a discordant clang – that’s Harvey’s guitar, welcoming you to the opening “Oh My Lover.” Dark and bass-heavy, it grimly gives her boyfriend permission to see another woman while still involved with Polly.
On “Dress” and “Sheela-Na-Gig” (the first and second singles), Harvey first adopts a teenage whine, begging the guy to look at her in the dress he bought her; in the second song, she offers him her “childbearing hips…ruby-red ruby lips,” only to be rebuffed by his brutal retort, “You exhibitionist…Wash your breasts, I don’t want to be unclean.” All of this, including the furious payback tracks “Joe” and “Hair,” is thrust along by Harvey’s caustic guitar-playing and the cavernous noise kicked up by drums and bass. In the latter song she’s Delilah, cutting off Samson’s crowning glory as he screams, “Wait!” an image that any wronged lover will relish.  From: https://www.udiscovermusic.com/stories/pj-harvey-dry/

The Verve Pipe - Villains


In this song, there's "another villain on the cover of every major magazine." Verve Pipe frontman Brian Vander Ark wrote the song after the Oklahoma City bombing of 1995, when Timothy McVeigh killed 168 people with a truck bomb at the Federal Building. McVeigh was all over the news and his face was on the cover of just about every news magazine. Vander Ark, who was in the Army from 1983-1987, had a day job at the time. "I'd get my coffee and pick up a magazine, but I'd have to get back to work before I could read it," he said in a Songfacts interview. "So my point was, when his face is on the cover of all of these magazines, we would get distracted and didn't have time to read about the victims and feel that empathy for the victims. So the villain usually wins this kind of popularity contest, and for me that was a very sad state we were in, and we're still in it. In fact, we're probably in it worse now than ever."
This was the follow-up single to The Verve Pipe's biggest hit, "The Freshman." It didn't make the Hot 100, nor did any subsequent Verve Pipe track. Their next album was a difficult one for the band - they blew a big budget and weren't happy with the result. Their 2001 album was primed for success, but was thwarted by 9/11 (to that point, the Oklahoma City bombing was the worst act of terrorism on American soil). The band broke up that year and didn't re-form until 2009, when they added children's music to their repertoire.  From: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/the-verve-pipe/villains

The Nields - Yesterday's Girl


Now billed as a twosome, Nerissa and Katryna Nields have retained the signature sound of their former band the Nields on their newest release, Love & China. The key to the Nields' sound over the years has always been the slightly quirky combination of the sisters' voices. Despite the duo billing, former band mate Dave Chalfant is very much involved in this record -- as bassist, producer and husband of Katryna; former band mate Dave Hower also appears on drums on several tracks. 
Love & China offers a listener-friendly collection of songs all written by Nerissa, which vary from the folk-rock that the Nields are known for, to alt-country and even alt-pop -- maybe even alt-power pop in the case of several songs such as "Yesterday's Girl," which in some alternate reality would be, could be and should be huge hits. Perhaps this is what the alt-labels are really all about. "Ticket to My House" leads off the album with a nice slice of folk-pop that would also go down very easily on the radio. 
Tracks three through six move resolutely into country territory, with "Love Me One More Time Before You Go" sounding more traditional than alt-, featuring pedal steel guitar and a classic story of soon-to-be-lost love. "Tailspin" follows with some wonderful fiddling by Alicia Jo Rabins and excellent production to match. Look out Dixie Chicks! "I Haven't Got a Thing" continues the country groove established by the two previous tracks. 
Intelligent and clever writing also makes this record special. On "Christmas Carol," the Nields put their unique vocal stamp on Christmas with an original song that uses the titles of familiar Christmas carols in the lyrics. Lines like "Merry Christmas, new born baby" in addition to the obvious Christmas connotation, have a nice double meaning as a reference to Dave and Katryna's daughter Amelia, who was born just before the recording of this album began.  From: https://www.rambles.net/nields_love02.html 

Arcane Roots - Triptych

  

As I enter the studio where Arcane Roots are busy beavering away on the follow up to 2013’s Blood & Chemistry, the first thing that strikes me is hooks. Gigantic ear worms that wrap themselves around your auditory cortex and simply refuse to let go. It’s no exaggeration to say that these songs are some of the catchiest tunes the band have penned to date.
“The grand plan is to get these songs stuck in people’s heads for days," says vocalist/guitarist Andrew Groves. ‘It's that fight between the melodies and the heavier side of our music and trying to get those two elements to marry together. The problem is when you start sticking loads of riffs together without melody, then it just sounds like a bunch of riffs that have been shoved together rather than a song that’s actually going somewhere.”
The band have returned to Stakeout Studios, the very same studio that bore witness to the recording of their debut mini-album Left Fire, partly because it’s local and partly because, as Andrew enthuses “Reuben recorded Racecar is Racecar Backwards here!” They're here to record a new EP, Heaven & Earth, five gloriously anthemic songs that are amongst the most joyful the band have written to date. The main focus of the two days I spend in the studio is on recording Andrew’s guitar parts and vocal lines, the bass and drum tracks having been laid down a few days before.
If the melodies I hear cascading out of the vocal booth are anything to go by, it’s clear that they have been refined and finessed into succinct infectious vocal lines that are begging to be sung back to the band en masse in a live environment. Andrew has pushed himself as a vocalist, utilizing his voice in ways that we’ve not heard from him before. (He mentions singing along to White Christmas at home to reach the low notes of one particularly deep vocal line). “I'm putting myself out on the line as a frontman really and I think this is the first record where I’ve really thought about my role as a frontman. (When the band started) I didn't want to sing, I just wanted to play guitar. Now I sing and play guitar and I thought, ‘if I'm gonna do both I'm gonna do both well!’”  From: https://www.the-independent.com/arts-entertainment/music/features/arcane-roots-in-the-studio-the-grand-plan-is-to-get-these-songs-stuck-in-people-s-heads-for-days-10416987.html

Friday, January 23, 2026

Ben Folds Five - Sessions At West 54th


 Ben Folds Five - Sessions At West 54th - Part 1
 

 Ben Folds Five - Sessions At West 54th - Part 2
 
One of the better episodes of the now defunct late-'90s PBS music show Sessions at West 54th was when Ben Folds Five performed in an intimate setting in support of their second album, Whatever and Ever Amen, back in the spring of 1997. The original episode saw the group share equal billing with Beck, so many of the trio's performances were left on the cutting room floor. But with 2001's The Complete Sessions at West 54th, you finally get to see the complete 15-song Ben Folds Five set, and it proves to be a dandy. While it may lack the zany and unpredictable energy of a BF5 club show, due to the fact that they're performing in a TV studio, Complete Sessions serves as a solid reminder as to how good BF5 were in concert. Drawing from a set list comprised almost equally of ballads ("Missing the War," "Selfless Cold & Composed," and, of course, their big hit, "Brick") and up-tempo pop/rockers ("Kate," "One Angry Dwarf and 200 Solemn Faces," "Underground," "Battle of Who Could Care Less"), there are also several rarities sprinkled throughout, including a deconstructed cover of the Flaming Lips' "She Don't Use Jelly," an outtake from their debut album, "Emaline," as well as a soaring instrumental that became a perennial concert highlight, but never found its way onto an album, "Theme From Dr. Pyser." Included as a bonus on the DVD is a Ben Folds Five biography, plus extra live footage titled Spare Reels, which features the group in their natural concert setting, and contains a pair of songs ("Don't Change Your Plans" and "Army") that would appear on their final album, 1999's The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner.  From: https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-complete-sessions-at-west-54th-video--mw0001190243 
 

Wicking Ground - Cool Pool


Piper Josephine, the artist known as Wicking Ground, has been singing and playing the piano since early childhood. She plays multiple instruments and creates layers of vocal loops into what she calls avant folk, edging industrial, dark and hymnal. Piper frequently includes butoh inspired dance in her performances, alongside original music.  From: https://www.facebook.com/reel/857872326119896  

Gin Blossoms - Found About You


The Gin Blossoms maneuvered through the 90’s music scene with a nuanced touch, occupying a distinctive space that distinguished them from their contemporaries. While they sidestepped the heavy gravitational pull of grunge and bypassed the confrontations within the nascent world of hip-hop, they also avoided the veneer of artifice and superficiality often associated with pop acts of that era. Instead, Gin Blossoms served up an unpretentious and accessible version of rock, securing a role in the broader context of ’90s music and culture.
Despite not being the flashiest or most audacious band in the crowd, the Gin Blossoms provided a haven for listeners yearning for music that echoed a more grounded, relatable narrative. They quietly etched out their own space, representing the more thoughtful, less boisterous facet of the ’90s alternative rock scene. Their hits like “Hey Jealousy” and “Til I Hear It From You” might not have made a loud, sudden impact, but they gradually permeated the cultural fabric of the time, leaving a subtle yet enduring imprint that is still felt today.
But despite their unassuming image, Gin Blossoms were not immune to internal strife. During the recording of their seminal album, New Miserable Experience, the band faced a turmoil that echoed the bitterness lurking just underneath the surface. The struggles within the group often echoed the struggles they sang about – tales of emotional turbulence and quiet resilience, juxtaposed with catchy melodies and unforgettable hooks as they were.
New Miserable Experience, despite its ultimate commercial success, was born from those struggles. It was an album conceived in the crucible of interpersonal conflict and emotional tension, offering an even more authentic resonance with fans who could feel the genuine sorrow and frustration seeping through their music. The fact that they managed to channel these experiences into a powerful artistic expression speaks volumes about the depth and resilience of the band.
The discord within the group, primarily stemming from the substance abuse and erratic behavior of band member Doug Hopkins, and his subsequent tragic departure and suicide, added a layer of tragic poignancy to their music. Despite, or perhaps because of, their internal turmoil, the Gin Blossoms’ legacy is one of making deeply affecting music that reflected both their personal struggles and the broader anxieties of the time.  From: https://v13.net/2023/08/gin-blossoms-robin-wilson-interview-cover-story-sugar-ray-new-miserable-experience/

Sea Moss - Candy Run


In 2017, Noa Ver and Zach D'Agostino were both solo electronic artists. Then, one fateful night in March, they were both scheduled to perform at a house show that became overbooked.
"I have a dorky circuit tattoo and so does Zach," Ver says. "We sparked a conversation at some show about our dorky habits, and that's how it started." Instead of playing their planned solo sets, the pair decided to team up and play gibbering vocals and improvised noise.
Three years later, that spontaneous collaboration has grown into two biting EPs and Bidet Dreaming, an album that Sea Moss released last year. In Ver's words, Sea Moss' music is "mostly nonsense." But that doesn't do justice to the complex circuitry that creates their chaotic music. Using a swarm of homemade feedback oscillators and drum synthesizers, the duo constructs music that both needles your nerve endings and makes you want to dance. It's warped, glitchy and very, very noisy.
Live, the two play face to face: D'Agostino behind a drum set with a cowbell fastened to the cymbals, and Ver stationed at a table covered with wires and analog circuitry, which she calls her "critters." Vers sings while pressing a contact mic to the vibrations in her throat, creating the urgent, drill-like voice that wails to the rhythms.
Whenever they can, Sea Moss plays on the venue floor instead of the stage, surrounding themselves with the moshing crowd. Sometimes, a vigilante audience member will take it upon themselves to protect the band's gear from being knocked over, a gesture that the band appreciates but which isn't wholly necessary. "If our shit gets knocked over in the middle of a set," says Ver, "it means we're doing a good job."  From: https://www.wweek.com/music/2020/07/08/experimental-duo-sea-moss-was-born-out-of-a-chance-meeting-and-dorky-circuit-tattoos/

Genesis - The Cinema Show


Let’s talk about this romantic song, shall we? It’s a lovely little opening here with the tinkling 12-string sound. It gives similar vibes to “The Musical Box” a couple albums earlier, though the notes and structures are very different. But it almost wasn’t to be.

Steve: When it was originally put together it was linked to “Dancing with the Moonlit Knight”. We had a very sort of contentious meeting about this at the time. I remember Phil saying, “Well, if there’s a 12-string passage in something, does it mean that every long song has to have a 12-string passage in it?” There were some crestfallen faces. So we started to do some long songs that didn’t have 12-string passages in them. 

You can almost see Mike’s face getting even longer than usual at an exasperated Phil saying “Enough with the 12-strings already!” And indeed, while the 12-string wouldn’t exactly go away until the three-piece era, after this album it did become slightly less ubiquitous. But by golly, “The Cinema Show” is a romantic song, and romance means 12-string guitar!

Mike: Another good example of when I tuned my 12-strings. Normally you’ve got twelve strings and they’re paired up, and you tune each pair to the same note. I started tuning each pair to harmony notes. Which is how the song starts with that little rundown. Now what the hell that tuning is, I haven’t got a clue. Because the other day in New York they were saying, “Let’s do the first half of ‘Cinema Show’ maybe.” And I said, “Well, I have no idea how I played it. We’d have to work a compromised version out.”

Spoiler alert: they never did work a compromised tuning out, so if you’re disappointed that you never got to hear “The Cinema Show” in its entirety in the 21st century, it’s all Mike’s fault. Anyway, there are a lot of guitar strings tinkling around in this one. 

Steve: I was influenced by the flute work of Ian McDonald working with King Crimson, so I tried to play very pastoral phrases. I developed it a bit more when we did it live, doing percussion noises and whathaveyou. But in some ways it typifies the Genesis sound because you’ve got almost a plethora of 12-strings going: sometimes two 12-strings, sometimes three. And an electric 6-string as well. And this jangly sound where you can’t tell: it sounds almost...is that a keyboard? Is that a guitar? What is that sound? 

And then we get the story, or really more like a snapshot, of this busy young woman trying to tidy up her place and herself before going to catch a movie with her date. I confess when I first heard the lyric that she “clears her morning meal” I thought it meant she was having some gastrointestinal difficulties, if you catch my drift. Decidedly unromantic, that. But I wouldn’t have put something like that past Peter. Was it Peter? Who did the lyrics to this one, anyway? 
In any case, from Juliet we go straight to Romeo, who is basically just looking to get laid. It’s a classic story. Boy meets girl, boy lusts after girl, girl agrees to a pleasant night at the cinema, boy gives girl chocolates, girl thinks boy is nice, boy propositions girl, both go home a little more tired. Tale as old as time, that one. And it’s from there that Tiresias makes his appearance, where his actual background is relayed. There are variations on the classical myth, but Genesis lands on one of them in particular. 
Tiresias, as the story goes, was hiking up a mountain and saw a pair of snakes “getting nasty,” as I think they called it back then. He used his walking stick to “break that shit up,” I think was the parlance, which incurred the wrath of the goddess queen Hera, who was aspected to things like fertility. Hera was a capricious and impulsive goddess, and so she immediately decided that interrupting a pair of fornicating snakes was punishable by forced sex change. Thus, she transformed Tiresias into a woman and made Tiresias one of her priestesses so (s)he could atone. Tiresias was surprisingly not much put out by this turn of events, and found a nice man to settle down and have kids with. After some years, Mother Tiresias found some more snakes doin’ the deed, and left them alone. Hera then turned Tiresias back into a man since he’d seemed to learn his lesson, which meant that in a very strange twist of fate, his kids now had two biological dads; I imagine the family dynamics probably got a little awkward after that. 
Later, Hera and her husband Zeus found themselves in an argument over who derived more pleasure from sex - men or women. Being exceedingly petty gods with victim complexes, each one wanted the other sex to be the “winner.” That is, Hera argued that men enjoyed sex more, and Zeus the opposite. At an impasse, Hera summoned Tiresias on the basis that he was the only person - mortal or god - who had experienced sex from both sides of the equation. They posed the question to him, and though he was a priest(ess?) of Hera, he felt compelled to answer truthfully: women get way more out of it than men do. Genesis translate this reply thusly: “Once a man, like the sea I raged. Once a woman, like the earth I gave. But there is, in fact, more earth than sea.” A furious Hera struck him blind on the spot for embarrassing her, but a very pleased Zeus tried to make up for it by giving him foresight instead. Thus, Tiresias became known as a blind seer, a title as fittingly oxymoronic as his status as the first man-woman-man. 
So, in summary, “The Cinema Show” isn’t an adolescent fixation on sex. No, it’s an adolescent fixation on sex combined with classical Greek mythology. See? All grown up now! In fairness though, musically that maturation is very clear. After our first dalliance with Tiresias, we go into a veritable forest of guitar strings once again, featuring oboe and flute solos.  It’s such a unique atmosphere. As much as I love the live versions of this song, listening to this section on Seconds Out you can’t help but feel like an entire audio channel is missing. Those jazzy, improv style woodwind lines have an impact that to me can’t be overstated. 

From: https://www.reddit.com/r/Genesis/comments/ixm1qe/hindsight_is_2020_9_the_cinema_show/

Hooverphonic - 2 Wicky


Along with the dawning of the grunge rock movement, rise of Britpop, commercial ascendance of hip-hop, emergence of the neo-soul subgenre, and (regrettable) resurrection of boy-band pop, the musical landscape of the 1990s was also defined by the proliferation of the so-called chill-out phenomenon.
Particularly pervasive across Europe, and markedly less so stateside, during the final decade of the 20th century into the early years of the new millennium, chill-out was the convenient classification for music largely defined by lush, downtempo and midtempo electronic beats and rhythms. The perfect late-night, come-down complement to a long, adrenaline-fueled and/or drug-enhanced evening of dancing your fanny off to high-energy dancefloor stompers at your local club, in other words.
While plenty of hackneyed acts gave the style a whirl to capitalize on the genre’s popularity, offering banal, soulless, and ultimately forgettable tunes in the process, there were thankfully a handful of respectable artists that actually crafted music of substance and stamina during the period. Artists who, while lumped within the broadly defined chill-out category, possessed noticeably more refined, kaleidoscopic musical vision and ambition that defied such lazy labels. 
Included among this rarefied group were Air, Chicane, Groove Armada, Gus Gus, Kruder & Dorfmeister, Lamb, Morcheeba, Nightmares on Wax, Sneaker Pimps, and Thievery Corporation, among others, in addition to the Bristol contingent of Massive Attack, Portishead, and Tricky, all of whom, bless their creative souls, were often tagged with the chill-out brand as well.
Perched high at the top of the class with their aforementioned peers is Hooverphonic, the Belgian band formed in 1995 by the quartet of Esther Lybeert (vocalist, who was replaced by Liesje Sadonius soon thereafter), Frank Duchêne (keyboardist), Alex Callier (multi-instrumentalist, programmer, producer), and Raymond Geerts (guitarist). Originally named Hoover, the group added the “phonic” qualifier to avoid potential copyright issues with the famous vacuum cleaner company, not to mention the now-defunct Washington DC-based and German bands that had already staked their claims to the name.  From: https://albumism.com/features/tribute-celebrating-25-years-of-hooverphonic-a-new-stereophonic-sound-spectacular 

Thursday, January 22, 2026

David Bowie - Cracked Actor


With the release of his album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars and his performance of "Starman" on the BBC television programme Top of the Pops in early July 1972, David Bowie was launched to stardom. To support the album, Bowie embarked on the Ziggy Stardust Tour in both the UK and the US. He composed most of the tracks for the follow-up record on the road during the US tour in late 1972. Because of this, many of the tracks were influenced by America, and his perceptions of the country. 
In October 1972, Bowie and an entourage of 46 people (including Mike Garson's family and Iggy Pop) stayed at the Beverly Hills Hotel on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles for a week. The entourage spent time at clubs and the hotel pool, accumulating a $20,000 hotel bill by the time they departed. "Cracked Actor" was written during this stay. It was primarily inspired by the numerous barely-teenage prostitutes and drugs that Bowie witnessed on Sunset Boulevard. According to author Peter Doggett, the song encompassed "three layers of prostitution" on the Boulevard: "offering money for sex; sex for drugs; worship for fame." Regarding the Boulevard's clients, Bowie recalled: "They were mostly older producer types, quite strange looking, quite charming, but thoroughly unreal."
"Cracked Actor" was recorded at Trident Studios in London in January 1973, following the conclusion of the American tour and a series of Christmas concerts in England and Scotland. Like the rest of it’s parent album, the song was co-produced by Bowie and Ken Scott and featured Bowie's backing band the Spiders from Mars – comprising guitarist Mick Ronson, bassist Trevor Bolder and drummer Woody Woodmansey.  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cracked_Actor_(song)

Luscious Jackson - Under Your Skin


An interview with Luscious Jackson vocalist and bassist Jill Cunniff (conducted 12/97) 

What do you think of Lilith Fair?

“I think it’s a really great idea. I’m sorry we missed this last one. We did something else and we weren’t sure if we made the right choice, but…. [laughs] We’re doing this and hopefully we’ll do another one, a full tour in the future.”

The number of artists performing means that everyone gets relatively short sets. Since you have a lot of material, how will you determine which songs to perform?

“I think we have 45 minutes. That’s more like an opening length set. So we know how to do that. We do certain songs that people have to hear, definitely the singles from both records, we have three records, but… certain things we just have to include, like ‘Naked Eye,’ obviously, and ‘City Song’ from the first record, ‘Why Do I Lie?’ from this one. That’s between eight and ten songs, a 45 minute set.”

Your first EP, “In Search Of Manny,” seemed to have a more raw, sometimes spontaneous sound to it. What do you think led to the more polished sound of “Natural Ingredients”?

“I don’t think we were even conscious of anything changing. We just made the music. I guess the first one was made with lunch money basically , on less expensive equipment, and we thought it sounded really slick. But people were like, ‘oh, it’s really lo-fi’ but we thought it sounded really slick! So we never knew we were doing anything lo-fi. We just chose the sounds that we liked. We did the same thing for the second record, and for the third one we really tried to get a live band. So if anything’s spontaneous, I would say it was some of the live performances.”

Since sampling was used so heavily in the studio, did playing live pose any problems?

“The second record probably has as much sampling as the first, and that one was like, we didn’t really have our live show together until we toured for a while. We figured it out. We had to take those songs that were all sampled from “Natural Ingredients” and learn them. They were not written live, they were written on samplers mostly, except for maybe two or three songs. So that was a whole process to learn. Vivian was learning the sampled parts on the keyboard and playing them in time and we all had to re-create something that was not written by us as a band. So that was interesting.”

Did that influence the way you wrote the most recent album, “Fever In, Fever Out”?

“Yeah, I think the touring did. We played together so much as a group touring that we decided to pursue that side of it for “Fever In, Fever Out.” We just wanted to record the live band as it was. I’d been getting very into song writing, returning to basic song writing on acoustic and then translating it. Instead of going in with samples. There’s a lot of different ways to write, a lot of what we’d done was taking samples and writing over that. And I started to go back to the other way, which is to go in with a piece music, lyrics and vocals, and translate that into something with samples.”

Emmylou Harris appears on the album. How did that come about?

“She’s a friend of Daniel Lanois. He had produced her record “Wrecking Ball”. So one night he said ‘oh, Emmy’s in town, let’s call her and see if she wants to sing.’ And of course that’s an unbelievable honour. She has such a great voice. She was such a good sport too. She came over and we did harmonies and it really brought the track up a lot.”

You recently appeared on the TV show “Clueless” – what was that experience like? 

“That was fun. The director was ‘Potsie’ from “Happy Days,” Anson Williams. He was very excited and fun. They can make it fun, or it can be a drag. It depends on the show. There’s a lot of sitting around.”

Do you see those things as a way of promoting yourselves, or just something different to do for fun? 

“It’s for both. The “Pete And Pete” show [a Nickelodeon series where they appeared as a band playing at a school dance] – so many people have seen the show. They must have re-run it 15 times. These kids – we got a whole other audience from that. Young kids, who watch “Pete And Pete,” they just know us now from that. That’s something about television shows, people really see them. So it’s a good thing to do.”

From: https://chaoscontrol.com/luscious-jackson/

Beaulieu Porch - We Are Today


I have something to admit. I have a reoccurring dream of hearing a psychedelic symphony. It’s a sort of British version of Smile with full orchestra, Indian instruments, harpsichords…plus bugles and flugelhorns of course. Unfortunately, the tunes fade away and disappear as I arrive back in the waking world. However, Beaulieu Porch, aka Salisbury native, Simon Berry must have the same dream with his new album “We Are Beautiful”.
Encouraged by the success of his debut album, Simon has penned and performed ten tracks where the psychedelic kitchen sink has been recycled and dusted off for the modern era. “We Are Beautiful” therefore has plenty of highlights.
“The View From Gainsborough” combines electric guitar with lovely harpsichord style flourishes where the vocals ask the listener to “Let me be your guide to the other side”. “Limestone Head Of The Year” blends trumpets and church organ building up to a sing-a-long crescendo. “Daylight Faces” then gives us a stomping Indian style trippy track. 
My favourite is “Of Particles”, a sort of acoustic space rock trip into the mind. The long player finishes with “Is”. It mixes backward swishing Rain style backing, Syd Barrett strumming, climaxing in a full orchestral rock out. You don’t hear that everyday!  From: https://thestrangebrew.co.uk/beaulieu-porch-we-are-beautiful/ 

Espers - Another Moon Song


Having seemingly shrunk back into the undergrowth following the dense psychedelia of 2006’s II, Philadelphian folksters Espers return to the fray with their fourth album, III (man, I bet they wish they’d renamed second LP The Weed Tree now, even if it was a covers record.)
Of course, Espers have hardly been resting on their laurels, as this new album reveals. The band’s creative driving force, Greg Weeks, has been almost as busy as fellow freak folkster Devendra Banhart, popping up on any number of other people’s records, and releasing a solo LP, the dirge-filled The Hive. Meanwhile, Weeks’ creative foil in Espers, Meg Baird, released a solo album of her own, 2007’s Dear Companion, that was light and airy where Espers can be shadowy and imposing.
It would be simplifying things slightly to suggest that this lighter side that has had the bigger influence on III, but it’s a hard argument to ignore. As a whole, III is cheerier than its predecessor, and the band themselves have stated that this was an aim from the outset – before admitting that they failed with such ambitions. The gentle ‘Another Moon Song’ does capture this aesthetic perfectly – Baird’s airy vocal drifts atop a rolling, relaxed rhythm that recalls Vetiver or Pentangle’s softer moments. Elsewhere, ‘The Pearl’ breaks into an extended, blissfully fuzzed-up solo halfway through, which then continues to track Baird’s vocals for the rest of the track. If such a thing as pastoral chill-out folk-rock exists, this is it.
However, there are darker moments lurking on III. ‘The Road Of Golden Dust’ is probably the bleakest of these, an eerie duet between Weeks and Baird that talks of death and other such delights, before becoming overrtaken by Brooke Sietinsons’ piercing solos. From there, the track evolves into an extended mass of guitar and shrieks of fiddle, and is perhaps the individual track that recalls Espers' earlier work the most clearly.
The following track, ‘Caroline’, initially feels like the most conventional moment on the record. The duetting vocals return, over a bubbling brew of analogue synths and woodwind, telling the listener, "don’t you cry, go lie down in the day", but paired with the track beforehand, it feels more like a respite from the storm than any simple-minded hippy talk.
Indeed, it’s this switching between dark and light that characterises III, rather than any direct move towards a lighter, more conventional style. Closing track ‘Trollslända’ is a great example – beginning as a Fairport style stroll through Anglo folk territory, it soon makes an impressive break for the border, striding purposefully towards post or even classic rock territory with the electrifying solo that follows.
It’s certainly a very different album to II, but that’s certainly a positive thing, for both the band and listeners, as another record in that vein would have been hard to differentiate from its predecessors. As it is, Espers have moved towards new territory, stumbling occasionally, but with a clear eye on where they’ve come from.  From: https://drownedinsound.com/releases/14831/reviews/4138336

The Who - Sell Out - Full album


01 Monday to Sunday
02 Armenia City in the Sky
03 Wonderful Radio London
04 Heinz Baked Beans
05 More Music
06 Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand
07 Premier Drums
08 Odorono
09 Radio London
10 Tattoo
11 Church of Your Choice
12 Our Love Was
13 Pussycat - Speakeasy - Rotosound Strings
14 I Can See for Miles
15 Charles Atlas
16 I Can't Reach You
17 Medac
18 Radio One Jingle [Happy Jack]
19 Relax
20 Great Shakes
21 Silas Stingy
22 Bag O'Nails
23 Sunrise
24 Things Go Better with Coke
25 Rael 1
26 Rael 2

Inspiration can take many forms, but nothing stirs the creative juices quite like a looming deadline. Just ask The Who. In mid-September 1967 the band returned from an exhaustive tour of the US, a slog prefaced by an incendiary appearance at the inaugural Monterey Pop Festival, at which their gear-trashing performance left audience members open-mouthed. Rather than being allowed a breather back home, they were swiftly informed that new Who music was expected in the shops by Christmas. 
“It was a surprise, and there are a couple of shades to that,” reflects guitarist and chief songwriter Pete Townshend. “One was that our managers, Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp, were diverted to a great extent away from The Who to running Track Records, which featured Marc Bolan and Jimi Hendrix. 
"There was also a contractual obligation to Polydor, the parent company. They just needed a Who album, and we didn’t have one ready because we’d been working so hard. We’d been all over the place, incredibly busy. And although I had a lot of material, I didn’t really feel much of it was appropriate for The Who. So it felt to me like: ‘Oh god, how am I going to rescue this?’ There was a huge sense of panic."
The Who already had a tiny handful of standalone songs in the can, recorded at various US studios during rare breaks in the tour: Relax, Rael, I Can See For Miles. Townshend also had the seeds of other, equally disparate ideas. But the solution to the band’s immediate problem arrived via an ingeniously simple device that would link these songs together as a unified statement: the advertising jingle.
The new album started to take shape at De Lane Lea studios in London. The Who created spoof promo slots for Radio London, Premier Drums and Rotosound Strings, recorded in the brash ad-speak of 60s pirate radio. Bassist John Entwistle came up with humorous, minute-long odes to Heinz baked beans and Medac spot cream; Townshend brought along the song Odorono, ostensibly about a brand of underarm deodorant. 
“I think the idea of doing commercials was already knocking about in my head,” Townshend recalls. “I’d already written two songs for [co-manager] Kit Lambert for the American Cancer Society – Little Billy and Kids! Do You Want Kids? – and I had Odorono, about a girl who loses a record contract. It wasn’t meant to be a commercial, it was just a song about body odour. 
"That’s the kind of thing I was writing at the time, totally off-the-wall. And it just came up when we brainstormed. Subsequently, Kit Lambert pulled it together and made one half of the album into an emulation of a pirate radio station. For me, that just saved it.” 
The album, soon to be titled The Who Sell Out, also happened to be very timely. In August 1967, the British government had passed the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act, which outlawed pirate radio in the UK. The offshore stations had been a lifeline for pop music fans over the previous few years, as well as providing crucial airtime for bands and artists including The Who. In what could be seen as a cynical move, the BBC now attempted to woo the same audience with the launch of their own pop station, Radio 1. Bold and brilliant, The Who Sell Out was both a valedictory salute to a lost art form and a satirical take on 60s consumerism. 
“It was really done as a tribute to those ships that used to beam that wonderful music,” says frontman Roger Daltrey. “We’d been raised on pirate radio for the last five years. For the first time ever we’d had DJs, these kinds of renegade people, who were just so happy to be playing the music they loved. It was really special. 
"Although we’re one band playing all the music, the album sounds exactly like a pirate radio show with the jingles. To me it still sounds a lot better than modern radio. It’s one of my favourite Who albums.”
Just as the Summer Of Love symbolised a seismic shift in the counterculture, The Who found themselves in transition in 1967. The band were still masters of auto-destructive chaos on stage, but they’d ditched the R&B and mod connotations of their early years. 
Townshend’s songwriting had begun to deepen, as evinced on A Quick One, While He’s Away, the epic closing track from the previous year’s A Quick One, their second album. He’d also moved towards colourful character studies with recent songs like Happy Jack and Pictures Of Lily, a style that he began to perfect on The Who Sell Out gems such as Tattoo and the winking Mary Anne With The Shaky Hand. 
Such creative evolution, Townshend suggests, “might have been inspired by the success of A Quick One, While He’s Away, which was a little song cycle that I’d done. What we used to call the mini-opera, which was maybe four or five very short thematic pieces strung together. It was quite clear that we’d hit on something really quite important and precious, the ability to tell stories and to go quite deep. 
"I think A Quick One, While He’s Away is about child abuse and I think it’s about rape and I think it’s about women’s rights. But for me at the time, I wasn’t thinking of it in those terms. I was thinking just in terms of a story about somebody being deserted. 
“It’s kind of an autobiographical story, I realised many years later,” he continues. “A child being deserted and being abused while the parents are away or the mother is away and then coming back and life being okay. I think the characters in the mini-opera were very real to me. I could see them and I could feel them. So when I started to go back to the idea, with the song Rael, I was on a mission to try to write a real opera. And I suppose I meant a rock opera.” 
Townshend, who suffered physical and sexual abuse as a child, would go on to process the experience more fully on 1969’s multi-faceted Tommy. Meanwhile, on a formal level the striking Rael provided a platform for him to get there.
Daltrey cites Kit Lambert as an important figure in Townshend’s move away from conventional pop music. The son of composer Constant Lambert, Kit introduced The Who’s songwriting captain to the classical music of his godfather, William Walton, as well as to figures like Henry Purcell. 
“Kit loved pop singles, he loved rock’n’roll,” Daltrey explains. “But he always thought that the music could actually do and say so much more than it was doing at the time. That was always his dream. He hated what classical music had become, the fact that it had become pompous for this overfed middle class with their noses in the air. Composers like Mozart wrote songs for the people and it was the pop music of its time. So Kit always wanted to give rock a bigger foundation.” 
As a working unit too, as 1967 wore on The Who were moving away from standard convention. They’d flown to America for the first time that March, making their live debut on an old-school Murray The K theatre bill in New York. By mid-June they were sharing a stage with Jimi Hendrix, the Grateful Dead and Janis Joplin on the closing night of Monterey. 
The contrast was stark – from jostling for position with comedy troupes and novelty acts on the East Coast, to being at the epicentre of the psychedelic youthquake out West. Acid had replaced pills as the drug of choice. And while The Who were never likely to align themselves to the hippie scene or its attendant paraphernalia, Townshend was keen to experiment with LSD. 
His brief flirtation ended after a particularly terrifying trip in which he underwent an out-of-body experience on the flight home from Monterey. Other, more meaningful factors played into Townshend’s development as an artist, not least a burgeoning interest in spirituality. 
“At that time I was starting to get interested in [Indian spiritual master] Meher Baba,” he says. “I was starting to get interested in metaphysical ideas and meditation, the kind of stuff that The Beatles had been doing, and hanging out with Brian Jones, who’d met the Maharishi. It was an exciting time.”
The Who onstage at Monterey Pop Festival, June 18, 1967 (Image credit: Getty Images)
1967 was a royal year for psychedelia, with Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band as its crowning jewel. Pink Floyd debuted with The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn; Hendrix hit a double whammy with his Are You Experienced and Axis: Bold As Love albums. 
Across the Atlantic, Love paraded the exquisite Forever Changes, while Jefferson Airplane’s Surrealistic Pillow included the counterculture’s defining hymn to turning on, tuning in and dropping out, White Rabbit. The Who seemed like dissidents by comparison.
Townshend acknowledges a debt to Sgt. Pepper’s experimental zeal, but says he was galvanised “more by some of the extraordinary harmonic leaps that Brian Wilson had taken in [The Beach Boys’] Pet Sounds. Going from songs about the beach that were not much different than those by Jan & Dean to a song like God Only Knows is just a huge leap. It was inspiring to me and obviously to many others. I was just trying to make the music interesting.”
Certainly The Who Sell Out has an outlier sensibility. It’s psychedelic only in terms of the rushing Technicolor of the songs, which feel instead like a confluence of Townshend’s love of Pop Art, English baroque music and windmilling rock’n’roll. There’s also a heightened sophistication to many of the arrangements and chord structures. 
The standout is I Can See For Miles, a smouldering firecracker of a song, riddled with paranoia. In May 1967, while promoting Pictures Of Lily, Townshend had referred to The Who’s sound as “power pop”. That term later came to signify an entire genre. 
“I suppose it’s about writing pop songs that have a little more going for them than the usual subject matter,” he reasons today. “I think powerpop was just an attempt to say: ‘Listen, pop songs are not going to be about what they’ve been about any more. They’re going to have power and energy and colour and humour. 
"And they’re going to be more important and they’re going to be much more emphasised. They’re going to be more mischievous. They’re going to be more dangerous, possibly.’ In a sense, the powerpop thing was a recognition, during that time in sixty-seven, that the function of the pop song had changed.”
Another key track was Tattoo, whose vaguely jocular lyrics belie a more profound discourse on the notion of masculinity. It’s a classic in the style of previous singles Pictures Of Lily and I’m A Boy, both of which had touched on a similar theme. 
Townshend explains that I’m A Boy, released in August ’66, arrived at a time when “homosexuality was still illegal in the UK, so these adventures had to be couched in vignettes of humour and irony”. As for his own preferences, he adds that he was probably pansexual at the time: “I think I was ready to fall into bed with anybody that would have me.” 
In terms of music, Tattoo displays a new level of finesse in Townshend’s songwriting. It was conceived during The Who’s recent US tour with British pop act Herman’s Hermits. 
“It was a long sixteen-week tour,” he recalls. “A charter plane and a gig every day. We had three days off in Las Vegas, and I wrote Tattoo while I was there. I think I was very conscious of the fact that somehow there was a poetry behind all this stuff. It’s a very important song. And it’s so interesting that the reason The Who still sing it today is because Roger just loves it. 
"I think he loves challenging himself with the idea of ‘what makes a man a man’, because when he was a young guy he talks about the fact that he was short and became a bully, a fighter. Roger was a notorious fighter in the neighbourhood we grew up in. I remember doing a gig in Glasgow and he got into a fight with about ten Glaswegians and knocked them all out. He was an incredibly efficient fighter."
For all Daltrey’s commanding presence on Tattoo, I Can See For Miles and Rael, it’s instructive to note that The Who Sell Out features an unusual amount of lead vocals from the guitarist. Townshend is front and centre on, for example, Odorono, Our Love Was, Sunrise and Can’t Reach You. This wasn’t necessarily by design. Townshend has a theory. 
“Jimi Hendrix was using the studio [recording Axis: Bold As Love] on the days that we weren’t in there,” he says. “And at that time Roger’s girlfriend, Heather, who became his wife, had been seeing Jimi. I don’t know whether or not this is turning into sort of silly gossip, but I think he wasn’t around as much as he would normally be. He used to enjoy being in the studio, and suddenly he was gone. 
"So I think what actually happened was that I was finishing the songs as I was finishing the vocals, imagining that Roger would come in and replace mine. But he just wasn’t there. I think it had something to do with him being concerned about Jimi Hendrix stealing his girlfriend. I think Heather is the redhead he wrote Foxy Lady about, so I think there was some intrigue going on there. I’ve never spoken to Roger about what really happened.”
Given the short lead time and Townshend’s initial lack of faith, it’s a wonder The Who Sell Out got made at all. Referring to the ultimatum laid down by co-manager Chris Stamp on The Who’s return from America, Townshend remembers “a difficult situation. I would, of course, have written songs eventually. There’s always been a problem for me to find the time to write songs, make demos of them – which takes me a long time – then go into the studio and record them all over again with the band. Then go out on the road and play them. 
“The guys in the band always wanted the album to be ready by the time we landed,” he continues. “I can remember Roger Daltrey once saying to a newspaper that ‘Pete writes his best stuff on the road’, which was his dream and his fantasy. But I never wrote on the road, because I needed a studio. So I was always under the gun.” 
Despite everything, The Who Sell Out is an undoubted masterpiece. Released on December 15, 1967, it invited ready comparisons to the Rolling Stones’ album Their Satanic Majesties Request, which came out the previous week. But it was light years removed from the latter’s contrived psychedelia. The Who pushed against expectation without sacrificing their identity.  From: https://www.loudersound.com/features/songs-about-body-odour-and-a-bath-full-of-beans-the-story-of-the-who-sell-out 


Old & In The Way - Live at California State College 1973

 Old & In The Way - Live at California State College 1973 - Part 1


 Old & In The Way - Live at California State College 1973 - Part 2
 
1 Going To The Races
2 Catfish John
3 Eating Out Of Your Hand
4 Lonesome Fiddle Blues
5 Land Of The Navajo
6 Old & In The Way Breakdown
7 Panama Red
8 Pig In A Pen
9 Fanny Hill
10 Hobo Song
11 Wild Horses
12 White Dove
13 Lonesome L.A. Cowboy
14 Drifting Too Far From The Shore
15 Wicked Path Of Sin
16 Knockin' On Your Door
17 Uncle Pen
18 High Lonesome Sound
19 Just A Tramp On The Street
20 All Around The Watertank
21 Midnight Moonlight
22 Orange Blossom Special 
 
Old and In the Way were (ironically) mostly not old – and certainly not at all in anyone’s way! – when they gathered in 1973 to play about 50 live shows. Fiddler Vassar Clements, born in 1928 and having joined Bill Monroe and his Bluegrass Boys at 21, was still under 50. The other members of OAITW were only about 30 at the time, give or take a few years.
After spending a year with OAITW playing the banjo (the first stringed instrument he learned to play as a teen), Jerry Garcia soon returned his focus to playing guitar in the Grateful Dead and the Jerry Garcia Band. John Kahn, who had been playing bass for Garcia’s side projects since 1970, remained by Jerry’s side on stage and in the studio until they both passed away in the mid-1990s. Clements, who appeared on over 200 albums in his life, was never lacking in invitations to record or play live with other musicians. He died in 2005.
Guitar player and lead OAITW vocalist/yodeler Peter Rowan (who had also played for Bill Monroe) moved forward with a storied solo career. The same can be said for 'dawg' music pioneer and mandolin virtuoso David Grisman. Both of them continue to carry the bluegrass torch and each has also led numerous explorations into other avenues of folk, Americana, and jazz.
It’s now fair to categorize their classic album, recorded at San Francisco’s Boarding House, as 'old'. (Fun fact: the album was recorded by the “Wall of Sound” engineer and LSD impresario Stanley Owsley.)
But they’re still not in the way. Most definitely not in the “just ignore the old guys in the corner” way. To the contrary, the original album was for decades the best-selling bluegrass record of all time – finally unseated by the “O Brother, Where Art Thou” soundtrack after more than 25 years. (Because, of course, all records are made to be broken!) It’s no exaggeration to observe that thousands and thousands of music fans, especially Deadheads, got turned on to bluegrass by OAITW.  From: https://www.gratefulweb.com/articles/album-review-old-way-live-sonoma-state-11473 
 

Fleetwood Mac - Bare Trees - Side 2

1. Bare Trees
2. Sentimental Lady
3. Danny's Chant
4. Spare Me a Little of Your Love
5. Dust

When Bare Trees arrived in March 1972, Fleetwood Mac were still searching for that now-familiar identity, with a lineup that included three future Rumours-era members – Mick Fleetwood, John McVie and Christine McVie – along with the sharply underrated Bob Welch and the soon-to-depart Danny Kirwan.
Kirwan, who'd joined Fleetwood Mac as an 18-year-old in 1968, was the link back to their galloping blues days with the now-departed Peter Green – but a penchant for more thoughtful songwriting eventually meant that he played a key role in their evolution toward stardom, too. "Danny was a quantum leap ahead of us creatively," Fleetwood later told Music Aficionado. "He was a hugely important part of the band."
Unfortunately, he also had gnawing personal issues which eventually led to an issue with alcohol. "Looking back, Danny was not suited to this business," Fleetwood added. "It was too much pressure. He and Peter were both highly sensitive people, not suited to take the blows."
Kirwan was summarily fired on the tour in support of Bare Trees, and later fell on very hard times. But not before quietly framing this entire project with five songs, to go with two apiece from the late Welch and Christine McVie.
"Danny wasn't a very lighthearted person, to say the least," Welch said in a 2003 Q&A for Penguin. "He probably shouldn't have been drinking as much as he did, even at his young age. He was always very intense about his work, as I was, but he didn't seem to ever be able to distance himself from it – and laugh about it. Danny was the definition of 'deadly serious.'"
You heard it in the music. Kirwan's weary, compact "Dust" counts – with Welch's "Hypnotized" from Mystery to Me – as one of the top moments in this transitional period. "Child of Mine" begins things with a tough declaration of intent, before Kirwan leads the group though "Sunny Side of Heaven," a introspective, musically rich instrumental. The title track boasts a muscled groove, while the wah-driven, rhythmically involving "Danny's Chant" sets an early template for "Tusk." "Trinity," another Kirwan song from this prolific final period, later appeared on the 1992 box set 25 Years: The Chain.
That said, Bare Trees was always most famous for the contributions of others. Elsewhere, both Welch ("Sentimental Lady") and McVie ("Spare Me a Little of Your Love") add signature songs to the mix. Fleetwood Mac made "Spare Me" a staple of their '70s-era set lists, while "Sentimental Lady" was later reworked into a solo Welch hit in 1977 – with notable assists from Fleetwood, Christine McVie and Lindsey Buckingham. Holding it all together was a polished, warm new production style that came to define their most famous period.
"Bare Trees is the beginning of the band showing a body of work with all the proper connections made," Fleetwood told Music Aficionado. "It's a well-rounded album. Like Lindsey, Danny had the chops with layering techniques, and the ability to know what's right and wrong in the studio."  From: https://ultimateclassicrock.com/fleetwood-mac-bare-trees/

Small Fools - Melt in the Sun


The duo of Small Fools are made up of brother and sister Nathan and Ruthie Prillaman. Born in Potomac, Maryland, the siblings reside at opposite ends of the United States, with Nathan in New York and Ruthie in Los Angeles. Both are composers in their own right, with Nathan writing for film, ballet and theatre. In film, he specialises in writing historically accurate pieces performed on period instruments, while focussing on neo-classical music for ballet and immersive electroacoustic sounds for theatre. In 2021, Nathan composed a new score to choreographer Norbert De La Cruz III’s work ‘Fluency’ at Juilliard School’s Center for Innovation in the Arts where he is currently serving as part of the music technology faculty.
Ruthie has written for television and has been commissioned by choirs and orchestras across the United States, having premiered a new children’s orchestral work called ‘What About The Duck?’ with the Utah Symphony in 2024. The short 15-minute piece is an intended sequel to Prokofiev's ‘Peter and the Wolf’ inspired by composer Andrew Maxfield’s son. Ruthie has also co-written a best-selling novel with Kate McMillan entitled ‘Maple’s Theory of Fun’, aimed at pre-teen readers. 
As Small Fools, the siblings have been releasing music since early 2023, beginning with the bluegrass single ‘Horseradish’ and continuing with the well-received four-track EP ‘Crying In My Subaru’. The latter combines Nathan’s electronic tendencies with Ruthie’s choir layering and minimised lyricism. The result is like driving through a medieval town in an EV. 
‘A Secret Dialogue on the Side of a Mountain’ is a purely instrumental single, fusing folk stringed instruments and further exploring the electronic sound heard on their EP. The dreamy ‘Spruce Grouse’ followed in the summer of 2023 and ‘Haunt This Place’ was released for Halloween. 
With the highly layered nature of their work, their studio playthroughs recorded by the band on their YouTube channel explore just how intricate their arrangements are. Nathan plays the mandolin, classical guitar and banjo parts for ‘A Secret Dialogue’, while Ruthie breaks down the five vocal lines for ‘Departures’ (even the pitched down one!). On Instagram and TikTok, the siblings have boosted their following through their wit and storytelling whilst incorporating their songs in fun and exciting ways.  From: https://www.mothsandgiraffes.com/theactualcontent/shb5k7gocpamug6ctrthla937qo1ze 


Harrow Fair - Dark Gets Close


Harrow Fair formed when Miranda Mulholland met Andrew Penner through the Toronto music scene. The two started writing songs together after the release of Miranda’s solo album, 2014’s Whipping Boy, on which Andrew played the dobro.
“We wrote a bunch of stuff pretty quickly,” Andrew said. “We didn’t really talk about it that much. It was just more like it worked really well, and there was a cool chemistry, and there was a sound that kind of happened right away.”
Miranda had been a member of Great Lake Swimmers and Andrew a member of Sunparlour Players, and they worked closely together to carefully craft a specific sound for their new act.
“We had a discussion about, ‘What do we want to do as far as what it’s going to look like?’” Andrew said. “It wasn’t a super long discussion … But I think the discussion was more like stripping that down even more, where it was just something much simpler that was still providing enough of a wide kind of sonic thing going on. You have the sizzle of hi-hats, and then you have the fiddle that can just go through, but it’s going through pedals and going through amps.”
For Miranda, working with Andrew has been extremely positive and has allowed her to continue to grow as an artist, she said, even though she already has years of experience.
“I’ve been taking more chances ’cause Andrew kind of allows me to take more chances sonically than I perhaps could’ve in other bands,” she said. “And I can kind of be a little more rock n’ roll, I guess, in a way that I really wasn’t able to before.”
Together, Miranda and Andrew manage to appear as if they’ve been playing together for over a decade even though it’s only been about half that. Their Troubadour Festival set highlighted their ability to perform a tight and memorable show featuring subtle gestures between the two members as they effortlessly balanced their individual roles to form a homogeneous duo. Miranda chalks up that dynamic to good communication.
“We had a good place to start from,” she said. “I think going on really long drives on tour you get to know each other really well, and you have a lot of trust.”
“We’ve both played so much I think we know when not to question things,” Andrew added, “Then we also know when to question things.”  From: https://www.rootsmusic.ca/2019/10/22/how-harrow-fair-got-so-good-so-quick/