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Friday, February 6, 2026
The Be Good Tanyas - Rain And Snow
Listen to the Be Good Tanyas and you'll have a vision of three feisty angels who rely on faith to negotiate a world that breaks their hearts. Though they aren't quite British Columbia's answer to Courtney Love - the subtle bluegrass-gospel-folk hybrid they make puts paid to any screeching - theirs is a very confident, modern approach to a very traditional sound.
But tonight, Frazey Ford, Samantha Parton and Trish Klein are nervous. "Holy crap, there's lot of you here," says Ford, her soft features fixed by fear. Parton peers through her long fringe and sighs deeply into the microphone, apparently worn out before she's begun. The outbreak of jitters could be down to the length of time it's taken the band to follow their last album, Chinatown. Ford tells us their first new material for three years will appear in October. "It should have been out a long time ago, but we're lazy," she says. "Great procrastinators. Especially me." Still, she's unrepentant. "I believe you have to live life to write about life." It's the life - and searing honesty - in their songs that has taken the Be Good Tanyas from tree planting in the Kootenay Mountains to the vanguard of the new bluegrass movement. They sing about dead dogs, junkies and death with gothic sparseness, and turn traditional country songs into tales of contemporary urban despair.
Though the band is very much a three-headed hydra - backed by Mark Beaty on double bass and John Raham on drums - the personalities behind the rich harmonies are distinct. Klein is a gifted musician, but so painfully shy it almost feels wrong to watch as she plays bluesy harmonica and ekes out haunting chords from her electric guitar. Ford is the earth mother with the luminous voice, struggling with her wrongs in In Spite of All I've Done and bunching her dress at the hip as she tears through a lively version of Neil Young's For the Turnstiles.
Parton is the Robbie Williams of the band. She dances like no one is watching and is quick with an anecdote. "I've got sweaty legs," she says, reaching for a towel. "That's what I used to tell my mom when I wet the bed. 'Mom, my legs are sweaty!'" But when Parton sings Don't Fall, her fear of relationships is palpable. A new song about addiction has her swallowing back her tears. The Little Birds, from the Be Good Tanyas' classic debut, The Blue Horse, cheers her up, though she makes a mess of the lyrics. "We were walking through the lobby today," says Ford, bursting into giggles, "and we said, 'People pay money to see us?'" Intimate, chilling but always entertaining, they are the only ones who wonder why. From: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2006/jul/19/popandrock
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band - Some of Shelly's Blues / Prodigal's Return / Rave On / Mr. Bojangles
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band began in the 1960s as a southern California folk rock band. They had limited success before temporarily disbanding in 1969. After renegotiating their contract with Liberty Records, they were given more artistic freedom, and the changes were immediately apparent in 1970’s Uncle Charlie & His Dog Teddy, which saw the band moving in a more country direction.
Country rock bands originating from California were nothing new, but the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band took things a step further by incorporating into their music instruments that were closely associated with bluegrass and country music, and featuring them prominently. While blending of genres is commonplace today, it was quite revolutionary in 1970. The eclectic Uncle Charlie & His Dog Teddy is equal parts country, bluegrass, folk, and rock. It features both original music and cover versions of other artists’ work, as well as reinterpretations of old folk songs that had long been in the public domain. At times, particularly when the band starts to harmonize, the sound is something akin to the Beach Boys with banjos.
The Uncle Charlie referenced in the album’s title was a relative of producer Bill McEuen’s wife. He was born in Texas in 1886 and performs a brief folk song “Jesse James”, recorded in 1963, on which he plays harmonica and gets his dog Teddy to howl along. He also gives two brief interviews, which are mildly interesting on the first listen.
A number of well known names appear among the songwriting credits: Michael Nesmith of The Monkees wrote the bluegrass-flavored opening number “Some of Shelly’s Blues”, which became a minor pop hit, and “Propiniquity”, which is one of my favorites on the disc. Kenny Loggins wrote another the album’s singles, the more rock-oriented “House at Pooh’s Corner” which name-drops several of the characters from A.A. Milne’s well loved children’s stories. The album’s biggest hit and the band’s best known song to this day is their cover of Jerry Jeff Walker’s “Mr Bojangles”. It didn’t garner enough attention from mainstream country outlets to make the country charts but that may have been due to the way the record and the band in general were marketed. It certainly sounded country enough, even by 1971 standards, to have fit into the country radio format. From: https://mykindofcountry.wordpress.com/2014/10/03/album-review-the-nitty-gritty-dirt-band-uncle-charlie-his-dog-teddy/
Rubber Tea - Desert Man
From a Fading World - Rubber Tea. This fantastic young German group continues to impress. On their second album, it's immediately evident that the band is willing to push their boundaries further. Their flirtation with Canterbury becomes more pronounced, and their delightful singer exudes a newfound boldness. Right from the start, the saxophone emerges, leading us into a melodic journey reminiscent of the pride Caravan would feel if they had produced it. While the group's style is labeled as neoprog, don't expect just another Marillion clone; instead, you're greeted with a remarkably mature band that effortlessly navigates styles evoking Camel, Caravan, Beardfish, Pink floyd, Big big train, Phideaux, Khan and King crimson. Attempting to describe this eclectic mix is a challenge in itself. The songs seamlessly blend together, creating a captivating flow throughout the album, prompting you to check your CD player to track your progress. Their ability to transition from tranquil subtlety to intricate complexity is admirable, never compromising the underlying melodies. The enchanting vocals complement the music flawlessly, never overshadowing the instrumental prowess. There's ample room for musical exploration, allowing each track to evolve organically. This marks yet another triumph for the burgeoning German band, deserving of wider recognition. From: https://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=11437
The Byrds - For Free (Joni Mitchell cover)
In the past year, I accidentally picked up The Byrds' 1973 reunion album Byrds from the library. I had never heard of it before. After having enormous success as the kings of L.A.'s Sunset Strip rock clubs, The Byrds toured the U.S. and U.K. and topped charts on both sides of The Atlantic with hits such as 1965's Mr. Tambourine Man and Turn, Turn, Turn.
Before long, Gene Clark, at one point the group's main singer and songwriter, departed... Crosby also left (was fired, actually)... then Gram Parsons came, saw, and conquered, before leaving as well. By 1973, The Byrds had lost much of their mid-60's lustre. Crosby, of course, had struck gold doing harmonies with Crosby, Stills, Nash and sometimes Young. Gene Clark's solo career had failed to take off, despite some stellar efforts shortly before and after this reunion album.
There were high hopes for the reunion album, which featured all of the original Byrds - Roger McGuinn, Crosby, and Gene Clark on guitar and vocals, Chris Hillman on bass, vocals, and mandolin, and Michael Clarke on drums. Yet the album apparently came and went without much notice being paid by music critics or the general public.
Listening to it for the first time, I was pleasantly surprised. It's a great album, particularly Gene Clark's four contributions - two songs he wrote, Full Circle and Changing Heart, and two Neil Young songs he brought to the project: Cowgirl in the Sand and (See The Sky) About To Rain.
How could such an album slip through the cracks? Supposedly there were a few negative reviews - people missed the Rickenbacker and Dylan songs translated into folk-rock and three- (or sometimes four-) part harmony - and a tour supporting the album's release was cancelled. Still, I was baffled as to why such a great album wasn't appreciated at the time (or since, for that matter).
Then I found this Rolling Stone review by Jon Landau (later a producer/manager for Springsteen). It does seem unnecessarily mean-spirited, dismissive, smarmy, and cynical, even by Landau's standards. Remembering how influential Rolling Stone was at the time, pre-Interweb and such, I wondered if this review could have single-handedly sunk the fortunes of this fine album. From: https://newmusictoday.blogspot.com/2016/03/x.html
Leon's Creation - Until You Were Gone
San Francisco in the late 1960. The hotbed of psychedelic and rock culture. The Dead, Joplin, Jefferson Airplane and a host of others all gaining mainstream acceptance for their acid tinged work. But the City and the surrounding Bay Area had so much more going for them. A liberal political outlook and a large African American and Latino population, meant that musical and cultural reference points were wider and more easily assimilated there than (Almost) anywhere else in the United States.
Two of the biggest groups to emerge from this scene were Santana and Sly and The Family Stone, with their melting pots of sound that took in jazz, soul, rock and latin influence. For a while they were two of the biggest acts in the United States and scores of local bands tried to follow in their footsteps. They were hard acts to follow and very few got to the stage of making a 45, never mind a whole LP.
One of the best to do just that were Leon’s Creation, whose debut LP “This Is The Beginning” Acid Jazz are reissuing here. A native of San Francisco, Leon Patillo, led the group, whose multi racial line-up echoed that of his heroes on the local scene. Self contained and gigging locally they made their debut album at the tiny Studio 10 who also custom pressed the album in extremely limited numbers
The music is a perfect blend of acid soul, mixed with hippie sentiments that will get you dancing on the uptempo numbers such as the title track, ‘Back Roads’ – with its glorious harmonies and the soaring ‘Power’. More thoughtful numbers such as ‘Until You Were Gone’ or ‘Love’ will touch your soul. So impressed was Carlos Santana that he eventually asked Leon to join his band. From: https://www.acidjazz.co.uk/product/leons-creation-this-is-the-beginning/
Spirit - Life Has Just Begun
Many consider Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus, released in 1970, to be Spirit’s finest hour, though I still find their initial self titled album to be their crowning moment. Nevertheless, Spirit, a nearly mythical band, arrived at the apex of experimental classic rock, lacing their music with jazz, rock, folk, and bathing all of that in the waters of psychedelia.
While not well thought out, Twelve Dreams was intended to be a sort of science fiction concept album, with the twelve songs supposedly representing, or being visions drawn from twelve actual dreams, though the construct was so loosely developed that most listeners were unaware of this attribute at all. Without a doubt, the album, and for that matter, the three previous albums by Spirit were miles ahead of their time, with the band’s vision so original that there was absolutely no precedent for almost all of what the band was laying down, meaning that far too many missed out because the music didn’t click immediately, or wasn’t as cohesive as the radio friendly hits, “Animal Zoo” and the gorgeous “Nature’s Way” … both very good, yet representing only a narrow portion of Spirit’s vision. This notion was not lost on the band either, as Randy California wanted to dive into his more loose experimental aspirations, while Jay Ferguson was in favor of more commercially acceptable material, hence the far and differing presentations on this release.
One of Spirit’s most enduring features is that none of their material ever sounds dated or self indulgent, and all of it comes across crisp and clean, sounding as remarkable today as it did so long ago. If anything, Twelve Dreams was Spirit’s apotheosis, Spirit’s merger of everything they had developed and learned over the years, especially from playing live, which they did relentlessly during the 60’s, finding the key to getting inside of any musical style and almost matter of factly making it their own, and I haven’t even mentioned “Mr. Skin” yet, or the bewildering and exciting “Morning Will Come,” a song that in my option nearly foreshadowed the coming of glam rock.
It was Neil Young’s producer David Briggs who managed to bring this album to completion, where despite the tripped out album jacket, is a very atmospheric album … but of the atmosphere of this planet. Briggs was swept away by Spirit’s jam oriented fuzzed out psychedelia meshed with tinges of jazz, where he managed to allow guitar prodigy Randy California to soar in time with the drumming of his stepfather Ed Cassidy, and the vocals of Jay Ferguson were not stepped on, where things got streamlined, and the magic leached out due to an equality for all involved, resulting in the creation of a stunningly well rounded endeavor that will not be forgotten.
*** The Fun Facts: Referring to the album’s title, Dr. Sardonicus “Mr. Sardonicus” was a 1961 horror film relaying the story of Sardonicus, a man whose face has becomes frozen in a horrifying grin while robbing his father’s grave to obtain a winning lottery ticket, and the Doctor who is coerced into treating him. The ‘Twelve Dreams’ represents the twelve songs on this album. Risus Sardonicus, known as a rictus grin is an actual medical condition, manifesting a abnormal sustained spasm of the facial muscles that appears to produce the effects of grinning. From: https://www.psychedelicbabymag.com/2018/02/from-vault-spirit-twelve-dreams-of-dr.html
High Places - Canada
High Places showed up in 2008 pegged as a Brooklyn act, but they never seemed very metropolitan. If anything, their innocent, home-recorded songs felt pastoral or coastal-- concerned more with breaking out of the city rather than toiling in it. That escapist tendency, mixed with their sonic primitivism and hopeful outlook, was refreshing. Even if their style wasn't exactly groundbreaking (we'd heard others combine global polyrhythms, hip-hop beats, and field recordings before), their approach was unique. In part because of Rob Barber's ragged production, High Places made those sounds feel roomy and lived-in.
While a good record, 2008's High Places was primarily an extension of what the band established with their singles collection 03/07 – 09/07. The sound was slightly glossier, but mostly it was vocalist Mary Pearson once again cooing over Barber's fractured arrangements. With High Places vs. Mankind, though, all that is out of the window. If you count High Places as their first true album, then their latest is a classic sophomore change-up-- a departure in both style and temperament. Far from the doe-eyed innocence and sunny bliss of their earlier work, High Places are darker and much more somber here, and their approach to recording and presentation has changed.
The biggest difference is the band's mood. High Places used to stress resiliency and optimism, but now they seem resigned to life's disappointments. On early track "On Giving Up", Pearson, who once radiated childlike hopefulness, sings solemnly of loss: "Though I have cried so many times before, it's all because I feel everything that's gone." Similar themes of heartbreak and fear exist throughout the album, and there's a notable change in the way the band sounds, too. Instead of the earlier sample-heavy style, Barber incorporates more live instrumentation, and as a result High Places feel more like a band. There are still loops and dance elements, but the focus is often more on heavy post-punk guitar-and-bass lines that enhance the overall gloomy vibe.
It's a surprising turn for the group, and whether or not you like them more as sunny optimists or somber realists is a matter of taste. The more pressing question is how this shift affects the quality of the songs. Mostly it works, but there are also songs here, especially the instrumental ones ("The Channon", "Drift Slayer") that aren't very memorable. Even a few of the more pop-focused cuts tend to skimp on melody, and it makes me think that in the band's desire to overhaul, they lost a bit of their initial spark. Still, the album is encouraging because it shows a talented young group unafraid of growth. Even if this isn't their best collection of songs, it takes nerve to try something so different. From: https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/14103-high-places-vs-mankind/
Second Hand - Hangin' On An Eyelid
“Hangin‘ on an Eyelid” is a brilliantly unique track from Death May Be Your Santa Claus (1971) a challenging masterwork by British progressive rock band Second Hand. Second Hand were formed in 1965 by teenagers Ken Elliott, Kieran O’Connor and Bob Gibbons who went on to record three studio albums between 1968 to 1972. Second Hand are considered by many critics to be one of the most underestimated and under appreciated progressive bands of their time. Personally I always thought they were as good as any of the prog bands around at the time. They were experimental, complex and challenging and as it turns out, quite timeless. From: https://tracksthatmakemarksdotcom.wordpress.com/2015/04/27/second-hand-hangin-on-an-eyelid/
Half Past Four - Shake Your Head
Half Past Four play original progressive rock. The antithesis of today's soul numbing repetitive motifs in pop music, Half Past Four offers something innovative to new music listeners and something familiar to those who have grown up loving the intricacies, driven melodies and exceptional musicianship of their influences: early Genesis, King Crimson, Frank Zappa, Mr.Bungle and many many others.
The current songwriting line up of Half Past Four was conceived in April 2005 and born in September 2005 opening for Russia's insane music star Chizh at the Opera House. They began their road to prominence playing a monthly "session" at the local pub Miguel's Club 329 (hosted by perennial music supporter Miguel who boasts a platoon of huge music star friends including Jose Feliciano and ex-roommate Joni Mitchell).
While their ground-breaking demo recording Half Past Four (2006) was collectively described by fans as "an uncanny masterpiece", Half Past Four began a career that has included scoring the Billy Zane "Zomedy" Horror Movie "The Mad", playing many cool venues with lots of great new progressive bands, and finally recording their first full album entitled Rabbit in the Vestibule which will be released early 2008 with much expected fanfare.
Despite several band line-ups imploding after many years of being part of a dynamic music scene (past band incarnations have occured since 1999), Half Past Four continues to produce constantly challenging and intriguing music with their signature approach to songwriting; complex time signatures, unusual and humorous lyrics, pronounced and magnetic keyboard and bass arrangements and pulsating guitar solos. From: https://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=3929
Los Lobos - The Giving Tree
It was the fall of 1990. MTV was serving up the last gasp of hair metal, grunge was bubbling under the surface, and blues-rock was having a moment. Somewhere in that mix, Los Lobos quietly dropped The Neighborhood. It didn’t storm the charts but it became a hidden gem for those paying attention. This was an album that spoke to the margins, the in-between spaces of mainstream music and cultural heritage.
For many, Los Lobos meant La Bamba. Maybe you were one of those kids in the late ‘80s with the song on a cassette you recorded straight off the radio. Lou Diamond Phillips made Richie Valens a household name, and Los Lobos became Grammy regulars. But they weren’t a flash in the pan. By 1990, this East L.A. band had been honing their craft for over a decade, blending traditional Mexican folk with rock, blues, and experimental textures that defied easy categorization.
The Neighborhood wasn’t your typical blues-rock record. David Hidalgo’s voice pulls you through a landscape of sounds that’s hard to pin down. There’s Tex-Mex accordion on “The Giving Tree,” a Bo Diddley-style groove on “I Walk Alone,” and baritone sax grinding through “Georgia Slop.” Each track feels like a new chapter in a story about place, history, and identity.
The whole thing feels like a soundtrack for the American southwest—desert highways, street fairs, and smoky backrooms. You wouldn’t guess they’re from East L.A. based on the sound alone. If you’d told me they were from Texas or New Mexico, I’d believe you. Their ability to absorb and reinterpret regional styles is part of what makes this record feel so expansive.
The instrumentation deepens this sense of place. Hidalgo’s accordion riffs often tug at the edges of the song’s structure, giving moments of warmth and melancholy. Tracks like “Emily” and “Take My Hand” reveal the band’s range, seamlessly weaving in folk traditions that pull listeners beyond the boundaries of conventional rock.
Levon Helm from The Band shows up on a couple tracks, adding his unmistakable voice and mandolin to “Emily” and “Angel Dance.” John Hiatt lends harmonies that feel earthy and familiar. Meanwhile, producer Mitchell Froom creates subtle layers with atmospheric textures, balancing intimacy and depth. Even with these guest appearances, Los Lobos never loses their grounding. The sound remains cohesive and timeless, dodging the overdone reverb and sterile production common in early ’90s rock albums. From: https://www.digmeoutpodcast.com/p/los-lobos-the-neighborhood-90s-rock
Alabama Shakes - Don't Wanna Fight
Alabama Shakes are about to release their second album, Sound & Color, a follow-up to Boys & Girls, their irresistible 2012 debut. Boys & Girls upturned the lives of Howard, guitarist Heath Fogg, bassist Zac Cockrell and drummer Steve Johnson. Before that, they were another dressed-down rock-and-blues band in their hometown of Athens, Alabama, not above doing covers in a local venue called Yesterdays, or afternooning at old people’s homes. Then one of their songs, the brash, catchy Hold On, became an online and radio hit. Their debut LP sold a surprise half a million, all of this hauling them out of Alabama and sending them… well, everywhere else.
They gigged in front of millions on Saturday Night Live and toured the US, Europe and Australia. They were a star turn of the UK festival season in 2012 then played at the Grammys in 2013, where they were nominated in three categories. Apart from a short break last year, for Howard to write songs for the new record at her kitchen table, and for Fogg and Johnson to tend to newborn kids, Alabama Shakes have been “road-dogging” ever since their breakthrough. It’s Howard’s phrase. “Road, road, road,” she explains, “then a few days back home to sleep, then road, road, road.”
When you’ve become popular by being very definitely from a place (and Alabama Shakes are very definitely from Athens, Alabama; the music they make channels the bluesy sound that has defined the region’s output since the days of Aretha), the challenge is to carry that sense of place through all the other places that popularity takes you. How to summon some authentic “heart of Dixie” in front of lagered-up campers in Perthshire, as the band will do when they travel to T in the Park this summer? Or on stage at the White House, where they played for the Obamas two years ago? It’s something they think about a lot.
They still dress down to perform, usually wandering on stage in hoodies and home-wear, something that can be read as affectation. But it’s an honest effort, I think, to retain a sense of themselves as the underdog band they once were. Gigging at Islington Assembly Hall in February (the night before I meet them, the venue just a few turns up the canal), this quartet slunk out and picked up their instruments as if they were still jobbers who hardly expected to be listened to, not headliners for whom everyone in the room had paid £40 to see. What else? Howard has a charm-like tattoo on her arm – a thin line tracing the shape of Alabama’s borders. “So that I could die in London or Paris or wherever,” she says, “and when they’re wrapping up and cleaning my body they’re gonna know.”
We’re outside the pub again, to escape the jazzy 60s music, and so Howard can smoke. “I never thought I’d be a singer when I started this habit,” she says, frowning at her cigarette. “I was 15. Ugh.”
She is tall, bespectacled, wrapped in an oversize leather coat she calls her “Trading Places jacket. In that movie everybody was wearing shit like this. Look at the sleeves!” Back in 2012, she had lots of wild curls, but the hair, now, has been buzzed into a compact wedge. It started falling out in the studio, she says, after a botched effort at straightening it. Howard is mixed race, inheriting from her African-American father a frizz that will fight to the death against being chemically messed with.
She is stocky. Without my prompting she alludes to being on a diet more than once. I bring this up because Howard does, though I have definite reservations. Nobody ever asks Jay-Z to account for his height, Chris Martin his skinniness. Howard’s shape, like her thick-rimmed specs, like her being “the only rock’n’roll brown chick”, as she once put it, all help to make her an unusual and intriguing frontwoman. But most of her appeal, trumping even that tremendous, cig-roughened voice, lies in her habit of going absolutely bananas on stage.
Lit by devil-red spots, Howard will fold herself over her guitar, riffing, howling, as if in critical pain. “I call it ‘the spirit world’,” she says, when I ask where she goes in these moments. “Latching on to a feeling, riding it, trying not to come out of it. You stop thinking, you’re just performing – that’s the spirit world.” She isn’t much of a one for microphone patter. “Sometimes between songs I have nothing to say. It’s not because I’m not appreciative of the applause, the love. I’m just still on it, and I’m trying to keep on it.”
As a woman fronting a band, she says, “you’re expected to be a darling up there. Like, ‘Look at that sweet little thing! Singing her songs about lurve.’” Howard shoots me a look: nope. “I’m a human being,” she says. From: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2015/mar/29/alabama-shakes-interview-sound-color-festivals
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Rosalie Cunningham - Crossroads Festival 2024
Rosalie Cunningham - Crossroads Festival 2024 - Part 2
With her aubergine-colored jumpsuit, flared trousers, and fringes on the arms, she would have been the party queen at any party in the 60s and 70s – even though she later called for: “Dethrone the party queen of yesteryear.” The evening begins with "Start With The Corners," an instrumental that sets the tone for the psychedelic prog rock world of the '70s. Initially quiet and introspective, the song builds to an overwhelming crescendo. The songs on her setlist, including "Ride On My Bike" and the electrifying "Dethroning Of The Party Queen," testify to an artist stylistically deeply rooted in the '60s and '70s without ever seeming antiquated.
The first songs, with their style somewhat stuck in British song tradition, fail to fully win over the audience. Anyone unfamiliar with the 34-year-old artist from Southend-on-Sea in East Anglia will indeed be somewhat lost in this blend of ballads, classic, and progressive rock, which incorporates nuances of 1960s British songwriting.
And then comes "Donovan Ellington," a multi-part piece that perfectly reflects Cunningham's penchant for intricate compositions and narrative song structures. Here, she effortlessly combines orchestral elements with heavy guitar riffs, jazzy rhythms, and an underlying folk marbling, making the song seem like a mini-opus, vaguely reminiscent of Jethro Tull at times, and vocally also of Chrissie Hynde. The second part, "Donny Pt. Two," takes up the themes of the first but changes the tone, leading the audience through a dark, almost threatening soundscape featuring hypnotic bass lines and reverbed guitar chords. By "Return Of The Ellington," the ice between the band and the audience is finally broken. The song comes across as rockier and overall more straightforward. There is tremendous applause.
The crowd favorite, however, was "Duet," a diverse, nearly ten-minute number full of musical references, including to the Beatles, Blondie, and Jefferson Starship. In the instrumental section, all the band members demonstrate what great musicians they are. This dynamic, with its sparing, well-measured use of bass, drums, and guitars, is exactly what many bands struggle with—but not Rosalie Cunningham, who, at 34, can already draw on an incredible wealth of experience.
Her singing is as diverse as her compositions: sometimes sweet and seductive, then wild and untamed. Her voice is reminiscent of the charming excess of Grace Slick, Siouxsie Sioux, Kate Bush, and Sandy Denny. When asked about her musical role models after the concert, she simply laughed and replied, "Oh, it would take hours to list them all."
In fact, Rosalie Cunningham's style strongly reminds me of Stackridge 's blend of folk, pop, and progressive . At some point, I also think of David Bowie, whose chameleon-like ability to blend genres and constantly redefine them. Perhaps it's this ease with which she switches between styles, sometimes glam rock, sometimes prog, sometimes psychedelic.
Cunningham has a strong charisma and masters the art of sounding both seductive and mystical, while at times being explosive and unashamedly raw. The psychedelic aesthetic of the 1960s, which so strongly influenced her possibly great role model Slick, can also be found in Cunningham's music, be it in the dreamy melodies or the spiritual, often surreal lyrics. These Donovan Ellington songs, in any case, sometimes leave you perplexed when listening. She laughs when I tell her this after the concert. You have to see the character as a metaphor, she says. Her lyrics are often cryptic, yet have a literary quality. This was particularly evident in "Riddles And Games" and "Tristitia Amnesia," in which she dealt with philosophical themes such as identity, transience, and the distorted perception of reality. Her words have a fairytale quality that draws listeners into a world that is as surreal as it is profound.
I have the impression that Syd Barrett, the eccentric founder of Pink Floyd, could also be an influence that shouldn't be underestimated. Cunningham's music, especially in songs like "Rabbit Foot" and "Riddles and Games," carries the fascination with the absurd and the mysterious that pervaded Barrett's work. She has adopted Barrett's mix of psychedelia and surreal lyricism and made it one of her trademarks, challenging the listener with complex and often cryptic lyrics. "Riddles and Games" begins musically with a touch of Slade and remains almost entirely in the realm of classic rock.
Musically and technically, there are clear parallels to progressive greats like King Crimson and Jethro Tull. The complex song structures and distinctive instrumentation that characterize Cunningham's work are reminiscent of the experimental nature of these bands. Like Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull, Cunningham utilizes various styles and instruments to give her songs a deeper dimension. The experimental spirit of King Crimson, evident in unconventional song structures and avant-garde elements, also flows into her work, especially in multi-part works like "Donovan Ellington."
Rosalie Cunningham masterfully captures the essence of her musical role models and transforms them in a way that is entirely unique. Her art pays homage to the pioneers of the rock and progressive music scene, yet she never remains stuck in nostalgia. Instead, she brings the legacy of her influences into the present by blending them with her own personal, distinctive style. This makes her an exceptional musician who knows how to combine tradition and innovation in a harmonious symbiosis.
Musically, Cunningham walks a fine line between rock, psychedelic, and progressive rock. Her songs flirt with classical influences, yet are imbued with a modern, idiosyncratic twist. "Chocolate Money," which closed the evening, summed this up perfectly: a playful piece that, on the one hand, is influenced by early 1970s glam rock, yet, at the same time, feels modern and biting thanks to its sophisticated arrangements and ironic lyrics. A truly powerful performance. From: https://jazzandrock.com/starker-auftritt-von-rosalie-cunningham-mit-band-beim-crossroads-festival-in-der-harmonie-bonn/
Vanishing Twin - Magician's Success
Vanishing Twin’s debut album, 2016’s Choose Your Own Adventure, featured the British band’s integration of psychedelic pop à la Broadcast’s first three albums and the instrumental/textural sophistications of mid-career Stereolab, with the majority of tracks occurring as ambitious, albeit frequently imitative, reconfigurations. Their second full-length release, last year’s The Age of Immunology, affirms the band’s ties to the above-mentioned artists as well as the sub-genre of ambient pop—though with significant departures from inherited stylistics. With this project, the band displays a more consummate skill for crafting melodic hooks. Protracted instrumental segments hold the listener’s attention more consistently, the quintet navigating complex rhythms and innovative progressions. In addition, the band references and re-contextualizes 50-plus years of electro-ambience, from the primitive sounds of Kraftwerk to the refined vistas of Suso Sáiz.
“Magician’s Success” contains the project’s most mainstream melody and composition, reminiscent of Camera Obscura’s brand of indie pop, particularly various tracks from Let’s Get Out of This Country (2006) and My Maudlin Career (2009). On one of the album’s more intriguing lyrics, Lucas sings, “The noise of hope / is like a racket in my heart,” her underscoring of the notion that hope is often desire well-masked, simply “attachment” packaged in a less offensive form. These lyrics can’t help but nudge a listener to consider the role of hope in their own life, to ask: what is life without hope? How, without the balm of hope, do we successfully navigate our world, its pressing issues and unique crises? Does the release of hope facilitate a greater level of acceptance and, thereby, open new possibilities for action that may not have been previously entertained? From: https://brooklynrail.org/2020/03/music/The-Best-Band-You-Never-Heard-Of-Vanishing-Twins-Global-Aesthetic/
Sopor Aeternus - A Strange Thing to Say
Could you talk about your relation with Poe’s work? Is he the poet that left the most powerful mark on you? I feel that your entire work is touched by the shadow of Poe, and that Poe’s poetry is a way for you to tell the depths of your soul…
Anna-Varney Cantodea: It's funny that you ask - well, maybe not funny, but interesting - because only a few days ago I was reminded of my very first encounter with the works of Poe. It was in third or fourth grade, so I must have been either eight or nine, and we were reading "The tell-tale Heart", in a German translation, of course, or maybe it was read to us, I cannot quite remember, I don't even know if we were actually told the name of the author... well, we probably were, but, if so, that information obviously went straight into one ear and out of the other, because even back then I had no interest in people. However, I only mention this, because, even though I didn't care who the author was, the story itself, or rather, the images that it created in my head left a deep impression on me. I was strangely attracted to the story - I felt there was an enormous power behind it - but, since I was so young, I didn't really understand the connection. I didn't know, why I felt the way I felt. The images, however, that were conjured up that day, they never left me. I still remember them.
So, flash forward a few years... at the age of twelve, when my depression started to become heavier, and I thought of suicide as an option for the first time... I gradually drew the cloak of darkness around me, if you wish, and slowly descended down into the world of shadows, and in the course of that I tried to find solace in the world of classical phantastic literature. You cannot imagine my relief, that sense of destiny, if you wish, when I discovered that someone, I had already encountered, had actually been waiting for me there all the time.
Would Poe be the perfect reflection of your soul?
AVC: You know, this may be an embarrassing thing to admit, but... honestly... you have no idea how right you are. When I began to work on Poetica, I approached the poems from the outside, if you know what I mean. I met them like old friends or acquaintances, ghosts, I had already encountered in the past but when the album was completed and that's actually the embarrassing part... I had completely forgotten that those words had originally been written by a different person. I felt like they were my own, as I had made them my own. In fact, they felt more like Sopor than Sopor did, if that makes any sense to you. I didn't just adapt them to music - I adapted them to
myself
There is a sound, a sort of funeral whistling, that comes often in your music, especially since "Children of the Corn" (for instance on "Dreamland" or the wonderful "The Haunted Palace")… it makes me think of old horror movies. Are those movies getting a growing influence in your work?
AVC: Umm... I know what you mean. That's the old theremin. The sound is almost synonymous with old black & white science-fiction and horror movies, yes... it's the sort of instrument you literally expect to hear when you think of these films, and I cannot deny that I am actually very fond of it. I have always been. It just suits me perfectly. Aside from the eerie atmosphere it creates, it's also a lovely bridge between the coldness of the synthesizer and the warmth of the violins. It combines, it balances the extremes, and that's what I am all about.
Do you like the movie "The Oblong Box" with Vincent Price and Christopher Lee? That’s the only Poe story that you interpret and which is not a poem but a short story…
AVC:To be honest, I cannot remember it. I know that I have watched it, but it obviously didn't leave any impression on me. Otherwise I would remember it. Unlike Roger Corman's adaptation of The Fall of the House of Usher, also with a divine Vincent Price... in dark velvet and bleached hair... and generally divine and beautiful... and breath-taking. In fact, I would go so far as to say that this is my favourite Poe adaptation. That one definitely has left a lasting impression on me... until this very day.
Was it hard to choose the poems that you would put to music?
AVC: No, and yes and No. Where shall I begin? Hmm, OK... when you listen to "Harvest Moon", which is the last track on Children of the Corn, you can hear that there is a distinct Dead Lovers’ Sarabande vibe in the string section. Well, maybe you cannot hear it, because it's rather short, and there is a lot of other stuff going on, but it IS there... take my word for it. Or, actually, I can play it for you. Wait a second... [plays fabulous music] so, this is the kind of mood I was in when the album closed. When I finished it.
After I had finished Children of the Corn I had this feeling that I really needed to go and clean up my house... as in to revisit old recordings that I had never been happy with, those that still carried an importance, that were still relevant to me, those I still felt a connection with. And, naturally, the first thing that came to mind were the Poe adaptations. Most of all "Alone", from that unlistenable piece of shit Spiral Traveller album. God, I hate that thing, but that's public knowledge. I'm allowed to say that. I did it.
You see, my initial idea was to do a mere 12" single with "The Sleeper" on side one, maybe, and "Alone" and "Dreamland" on the other. But then suddenly "Alone" had a twin brother, and on top of that my label suggested that I should do at least a 7 track mini-album instead of just a 12" single, so... pfff... I thought 'what the hell', and re-did all of my Poe tracks.
When you are still in the early stages of an album, things tend to be vague, and you're not always sure, in what direction the albums wants to go. You're not quite certain of its purpose. But as you work on it, things always become clearer, gradually... and so, after a while, I realised that Poetica in fact wanted to be an album, and for this I needed more material. So, initially, on a conscious level, that was the only reason why I was looking for further poems to put to music, but, naturally, I couldn't just pick anything at random. There had to be a connection.
"A Dream within a Dream", of course, was an obvious choice, and the only other two poems I could think of doing were "The Haunted Palace" and "The City in the Sea". The funny thing about "The City in the Sea" was, that I had never really read it before. I mean, yes... I had read it once or twice, but only cursory, and as a consequence, I had never really understood it. Also because, in my memory, it had blended together with Jacques Tourneur's film "The City under the Sea" - also with Vincent Price - which, I guess, is why I always believed that poem describes some sort of ghostly submarine habitat. What a joke.
With "The Haunted Palace" it was similar. Even though it is actually part of my all time favourite Poe story - the masterpiece which is The Fall of the House of Usher - I was never really aware of it. Again, yes, I had read it a few times on it own, but, because of my careless reading, I actually believed that the poem was about a haunted building. I mean, how ridiculous is that?! Can you believe it?! However, when the album was finished, "The Haunted Palace" turned out to be the one songs that actually makes me shiver - it still does - and when I listen to the album in one sitting, the very moment this song ends and the first notes of the last song begin, I start to cry. Every time. When I began working on Poetica, the poems and I were merely like friends or acquaintances, but when it was finished... we had become one.
From: https://www.soporaeternus.de/Interview_OBSKURE.html
The Jayhawks - Take Me With You When You Go
After two albums released on independent labels, The Jayhawks finally got major label backing when they signed with Rick Rubin’s Def American (now known simply as American Recordings, the label that oversaw Johnny Cash’s late-career renaissance), which was distributed by Warner Music Group. In one of the great music industry stories, the president of Twin/Tone Records (which released their sophomore album, Blue Earth) was on a phone call with Def American A&R man George Drakoulias in 1991. With Blue Earth playing in the background, Drakoulias inquired about the music he was hearing and was so enamored with their sound that he signed them later that year, also becoming their producer. The first fruit of this collaboration was Hollywood Town Hall (1992), which is where I initially discovered The Jayhawks. I loved it from the first time I heard it, and more than two decades later I get just as excited every time I play it. The core band of Olson, Louris and bassist Marc Perlman was joined by new drummer Ken Callahan, who was credited as a band member but apparently only played on two songs, while session pro Charlie Drayton handled drumming duties on the rest of the album. Other notable guests were keyboardists Benmont Tench (Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers) and Nicky Hopkins (Rolling Stones), who helped fill in their sound without overpowering it. From: https://kamertunesblog.wordpress.com/2013/11/09/the-jayhawks-part-2-two-hearts-and-two-angels/
Orgone - Don't Push Your Luck
Los Angeles based band Orgone is many souls with a cosmic connection, a natural creative force and musicians who have played together for years. They are self schooled and continue to shape their musical voice as a solid unit of guys who hang, spin records and jam out their shared inspirations. With a rooted sense of funk, soul, afrobeat, deep rhythms and an intimate understanding of dj culture as well as each others' individual talents, Orgone seamlessly slides through multiple styles and dynamic performances. The group continuously injects whatever they play with a heavy brand of raw funk power.
At the core of the band is a rhythm section comprised of close friends who have played together for more than 10 years. Having grown artistically as a unit they function as one organic and intuitive whole. The orginal 5-member band started out by putting their own gritty takes on tunes by the likes of the JBs, the Meters, Booker T. and the MGs, Grant Green and Funkadelic among many others. They quickly gained underground respect and die hard fans. With their searing live sets and original instrumentals, Orgone soon released their debut self titled CD, "Orgone," in 2002. The result was a collection of all original down home, transcendental, tough and gritty funk instrumentals.
The band fast grew to include a powerful three-piece horn section and a fiery soul singer who all shared the same spirit and deep reverence for the music that inspired them. Singer, Fanny Franklin, joined the groups’ recordings after they were floored seeing her perform with Dakah, the 30-piece hip hop orchestra, and asked her to record with them.
Gaining worldwide recognition for their raw studio recordings and exciting live sets led to the release of "The Killion Floor" on Ubiquity records- a full length album of hard hitting afro-soul & funk from the 9 piece band. While enjoying comparisons to classic acts like Rufus, War & Mandrill, or modern funk staples like Sharon Jones or Breakestra, they’re quick to point out that Orgone is unique.
“We draw from a wide musical and production palette … it’s a reflection of the music and production aesthetics that we love.” Orgone backs this up by taking the listener on a musical journey from the sound of Los Angeles to horn and percussion driven Lagos to a New York club and to the raw sounds of New Orleans. The title of the album "The Killion Floor" is derived from the Orgone apartment/studio facility where the majority of the album was recorded. From: https://www.playradio.one/artists/orgone-1717
The Beatles - Dear Prudence
Over the end of the Esher demo of “Dear Prudence,” John Lennon can be heard explaining the origin of the song: “No one was to know that sooner or later she was to go completely berserk under the care of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. All the people around her were very worried about the girl because she was going insane. So we sang to her.” The girl in question was Prudence Farrow, the 19-year-old sister of American actress Mia Farrow. During the stay, Prudence had locked herself away in her hut at the ashram in Rishikesh, India, where she and her sister were studying Transcendental Meditation alongside The Beatles, Donovan, The Beach Boys’ Mike Love, and others. She was meditating far longer than anybody else, and the others were beginning to worry about her state of mind.
“Prudence Farrow got an attack of the horrors, paranoia, what you’d call these days an identity crisis, and wouldn’t come out,” Paul McCartney recalled. “We all got a bit worried about her so we went up there and knocked. ‘Hi, Prudence, we all love you. You’re wonderful!’ But nobody could persuade her out. So John wrote ‘Dear Prudence, won’t you come out and play…’”
John told Playboy magazine, “Mia Farrow’s sister, who seemed to go slightly balmy, meditating too long, wouldn’t come out of the little hut we were living in. They selected me and George to try and bring her out because she would trust us. She went completely mental. If she’d been in the West they would have put her away. We got her out of the house. She’d been locked in for three weeks and wouldn’t come out, trying to reach God quicker than anybody else.”
For “Dear Prudence,” John deployed a fingerpicking style he’d learned in India under instruction from Donovan, a skilled folk musician who had studied under the likes of Bert Jansch and Davey Graham. Donovan recalled that John was a diligent student: “It’s a difficult style that requires perseverance. When John had it down he was so pleased to find a whole new way of songwriting emerge. That’s what happens to a natural songwriter when you get a new set of performing skills. He immediately wrote ‘Dear Prudence’ and ‘Julia’.” From: https://www.udiscovermusic.com/stories/dear-prudence-story-behind-song-beatles/
Health - Crack Metal
Health started life in 2005, but it may as well have been centuries ago. At the time, the then-four-piece were a traditionally untraditional noise-rock band that made scabrous, abrasive songs that sounded, as vocalist and guitarist Jake Duzsik once described, “like the rock band playing in the shitty club in the movie that was made in the ’90s about the future”. Which is to say that Health have always been both behind and ahead of the times, evolving their sound and process significantly over the years. Not only did they release counterpart remix versions of their albums with the subtitle of Disco, they also began incorporating more electronics into the mix. That started in earnest when they scored the atmospheric soundtrack to the 2012 video game Max Payne 3, which then bled – profusely – into 2015’s third record, Death Magic and 2019’s fourth, Vol. 4: Slaves Of Fear.
“When we did the Max Payne score,” remembers Jake, “we had to generate so much goddamn music that it just forced us to expand our musical palette that, in the process, there’s just an inevitable discovery that points you in other directions for where you want to take your own songs.” That essentially brought the band to where they are today. With Disco 4 Part II, however, the world has – sadly, worryingly, depressingly – pretty much become that previously only-imagined retro-future.
“Since our inception, we’ve always thought of ourselves as like a future primitive soundscape,” Jake says, “like Alien or Terminator after Skynet. It’s like there’s crazy technology. It doesn’t sound anachronistic, but it’s a shitty future. Everything is covered in grime. Everything has gone wrong, but we have made incredible technological advances and maybe one of the things we’ve gotten lucky with, unfortunately, is that now it seems we are arriving at that moment anyway. So the band seems prescient or more fitting or something, I don’t know. Even when we first started, we always thought we were making music for a post-Skynet landscape. That’s what it should sound like. That’s what it feels like. It feels like technology, but technology that’s breaking down, and that just seems to be where the world is at right now.” From: https://www.kerrang.com/health-interview-disco-part-ii-jake-duzsik-john-famiglietti-bj-miller-cover-story
Joe Jackson - Real Men
Joe Jackson was one of MTV’s greatest cynics. He hated music videos. After being forced by his record company to make what he considered a “crappy” video for his song “Breaking Us in Two,” he refused to make any more videos and condemned music videos in the press. Years later, he reflected, “I mean, I’m not such a miserable bastard that I won’t admit that some videos are great fun. But I believed [in 1983] that MTV was beginning to have a negative effect on music.” He added, “I’m well aware that refusing to make videos accomplished nothing whatsoever except—how should I put this?—to make my next record less successful. It damaged my career and it never fully recovered.”
Jackson achieved his initial MTV popularity with three memorable, poignant videos promoting his 1982 Night and Day album. These were elaborate, high-budget (for the time) videos with nuanced storyline and lush photography, filmed on cinematic 35 mm rather than cheap videotape. “Stepping Out” in particular is an essential golden-age video, rich in splendor and luxurious imagery evoking upper-class urban sophistication, yet gazed at from a decidedly working class (hence relatable) perspective. It depicts a maid cleaning up an elegant penthouse apartment. She sees a glamorous dress lying on a bed, picks it up, and fantasizes about wearing it and being part of New York’s elite nightlife. The wealthy residents’ return disrupts her reverie and she politely excuses herself. It’s delightfully voyeuristic and simple. It fits the mood of the song perfectly. It’s a superb video. “Breaking Us in Two” is really not that bad. It is mawkish and sentimental, but has some beautiful cinematography.
I have no memory of seeing the third video from Night and Day, “Real Men,” on MTV. Maybe I did, once or twice, but I have no specific memory of it, unlike his other videos. “Real Men” is the most elaborate of the three videos, very cinematic in its style and execution. “Real Men” depicts a young man struggling with sexual and gender confusion. The video references gay people, issues, and culture in a sympathetic, artful manner. It provides a stinging critique of American masculinity and an insightful meditation on unspoken cultural assumptions about gender in our society. It’s also gut wrenching to watch, almost too intense for MTV. From: https://videoclosetblog.wordpress.com/joe-jackson-real-men/
Dead Can Dance - Act II - The Mountain
Today, it’s the resurgence of Dead Can Dance, who has just released it’s latest album Dionysus, which is the duo’s first album in six years and consists of two acts across seven movements that represent the different facets of the Dionysus myth. “The Mountain” is the first movement of the album’s second act, where, explains Perry, “listeners will find themselves visiting Mount Nysa. This mountain was Dyonysus’ place of birth, where he was raised by the centaur Chiron, from whom he learned chants and dances together with Bacchic rites and initiations.”
Formed in Melbourne in 1981 by Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry, the style of Dead Can Dance over eight previous studio albums can be described as compelling soundscapes of mesmerizing grandeur and solemn beauty that has incorporated African polyrhythms, Gaelic folk, Gregorian chant, Middle Eastern mantras, and art rock. From: https://ghettoblastermagazine.com/uncategorized/dead-can-dance-share-new-video-act-ii-mountain/
The amazing musical project Dead Can Dance--Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry formed it in 1980--have just released their first new album in twelve years. Called "Dionysus," it is structured like a classical piece. A suite of seven movements in two acts each portray an aspect of the cult of this ancient Greek god of wine and pleasure.
The album sprang from two different inspirations. Perry had a transcendent experience twenty years ago in which he and his brother traveled to Spain and found themselves visiting during a festival called Rompida de la Hora in which thousands of drummers play for 16 hours, through the night. And being musicians and students of ethnomusicology, they grabbed some drums and joined in, overcome with a kind of Dionysian frenzy. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Perry said, "You just get into a trance after a few hours of playing and you wander around the streets and you meet other drum groups and realize there’s thousands of them playing throughout these little towns, and they’re covered in blood. Our hands split open. We didn’t feel anything. We were completely oblivious to the pain."
Then about two years ago while researching Greek music, Perry fell down a rabbit hole after reading Friedrich Nietzsche’s The Birth Of Tragedy: Out Of The Spirit Of Music which explores two schools of cultural thinking: Apollonian and Dionysian. In a simplified explanation, the former is about order, control, and logic while the latter is about freedom, chaos, and emotions. But much like our left-brain/right-brain minds, both are needed to create something. Perry responded to this idea and thus "Dionysus" was born.
He wanted to create a piece of music without creating "songs" so the structure assembled itself almost as chapters in an epic myth. And this Dead Can Dance "Dionysus" is indeed epic. Using world instruments such as the zourna from Turkey, the Bulgarian gadulka, the Ancient Greek bowed psaltery, and the gaida (a bagpipe from the Balkans and Southeastern Europe) blended with field recordings of ambient sounds such as Mexican singing birds and goatherds in remote mountain areas of Switzerland, the results are sweeping and cinematic.
Rolling Stone reports on the very special vocals of Perry and Gerrard: To craft the language of Dionysus, he used a computer plug-in of choral libraries that has an engine called a "Syllabuilder." "It’s basically a directory of sung syllables, which you can then put together into phrases and sentences from a directory," he explains. "You can invent your own words and phrases, and then you can play them polyphonically. You can have a whole group singing the same phrase in different harmonies. So I made a combination of that with Lisa’s and my voices to create the ensemble effect."
"I have no idea what language is on the album," Gerrard says. "I think the album is very much about Brendan unlocking his own language. He’s always been a genius and a remarkable composer, but I think that in this album he is coming to something very innocent and brave." From: https://ohbythewayblog.blogspot.com/2018/11/the-mountain-by-dead-can-dance.html
Friday, January 30, 2026
New Grass Revival - Austin City Limits 1987 / Live in Japan 1984
New Grass Revival - Live in Japan 1984 - Part 1
New Grass Revival - Live in Japan 1984 - Part 2
New Grass Revival was an offshoot of a Louisville, Kentucky-based group known as the Bluegrass Alliance, whose first version included Dan Crary, Danny Jones, Harry Shelor Jr. (aka Ebo Walker), and Buddy Spurlock. By 1971 band members were Shelor, 19-year old mandolin and fiddle prodigy Sam Bush, Courtney Johnson, and Curtis Burch. Fiddle player Lonnie Peerce was the acknowledged leader of the group. In 1971 Peerce parted ways with the band and took the name with him. Those left behind formed a new group which they called New Grass Revival. Sam Bush explained that the name was coined to convey the band’s intent to build upon bluegrass innovations of groups like the Country Gentlemen, the Osborne Brothers, and the Dillards.
New Grass Revival began to appear regularly on festival stages, notably Carlton Haney’s and Jim Clark’s, where they were an instant hit with younger audiences. In August of 1972 and again in July 1973, they were hired by Bill Monroe’s brother Birch to play at Bill’s Brown County Jamboree Park in Bean Blossom, Indiana, despite Bill’s opposition to their bluegrass/rock fusion.
The group’s self-titled first album was released in early 1973 on the Starday label. Due to the progressive nature of the music, at least one venerable bluegrass mail order outlet refused to review it. But Bill Vernon of Muleskinner News praised the versatility and proficiency of the band, noting that “Sam Bush could ‘jam,’ on mandolin and fiddle, as he does on the seven-minute ‘Lonesome Fiddle Blues,’ for several hours without ever repeating a ‘lick.’”
Bass player Ebo Walker bowed out in 1973 and was replaced by Butch Robins, a Virginia-born musician usually noted for his banjo work. Robins’ stay with the group was brief and the group recruited electric bass guitarist John Cowan to take his place. Cowan didn’t have a bluegrass background and his early indoctrination came from other New Grass Revival members. In short order, Cowan’s vocals became a real asset to the group. Courtney Johnson noted that “John brought a whole new vocal scene to the band. It was weak up until that point, but now the band had a good strong lead singer.” Also impressive were his soaring tenor vocals.
New Grass Revival signed with the independent label Flying Fish and released their first album with them in 1976. Fly Through the Country featured the new line-up, but rank and file bluegrassers still weren’t sold. Bluegrass Unlimited reviewer Dick Spottswood acknowledged that the album was “well produced and the musicianship is fine” but expressed his own bias against the “attempt at integrating pop-rock with bluegrass.”
Throughout the middle and late 1970s, the group played concert clubs and outdoor festivals throughout the nation. They released a string of albums for Flying Fish that included Too Late to Turn Back Now (1977), When the Storm is Over (1977), and Barren County (1979). If their 1978 season was any indication, they were a busy band, logging forty-two weeks of work.
For two years, starting in 1979, the New Grass Revival toured with rocker Leon Russell. Sam Bush looked on the association favorably, noting that they learned valuable lessons in how to relate to their audiences. In 1980, while performing at Perkins Palace in Pasadena, California, New Grass Revival participated in the making of The Live Album with Russell. An overseas tour with Russell included performance dates in Australia and New Zealand.
The group’s final album for Flying Fish came out in 1982. Entitled Commonwealth, it was also the last album to feature the long-time line-up with Curtis Burch and Courtney Johnson. The two were replaced by guitarist/vocalist Pat Flynn and banjoist Béla Fleck. A later newspaper clipping said of this new foursome that “using bluegrass instruments, they play a combination of rock, jazz, country, reggae and bluegrass. Bush plays fiddle and mandolin, the percussive trademark of the group. John Cowan plays bass and sings in a rhythm-and-blues style. Pat Flynn flat picks guitar with a fluid drive and Béla Fleck has turned the banjo into a bona fide jazz instrument.” From: https://www.bluegrasshall.org/inductees/new-grass-revival/
The Youngbloods - S/T - Full album
01 - Grizzly Bear
02 - All Over The World (La-La)
03 - Statesboro Blues
04 - Get Together
05 - One Note Man
06 - The Other Side of This Life
07 - Tears Are Falling
08 - Four in the Morning
09 - Foolin' Around (The Waltz)
10 - Ain't That Lovin' You, Baby
11 - C.C. Rider
By 1965, bassist and vocalist Jesse Colin Young was twenty-four and had already enjoyed a degree of success as a folk singer. He had already released two albums The Soul Of A City Boy in 1964, and Young Blood in 1965. However, Jesse Colin Young’s solo career was in the past.
Things changed when Jesse met twenty-two year old guitarist Jerry Corbitt, a former bluegrass musician. The pair decided to form a band, which they named the Youngbloods. Initially, the Youngbloods was a duo, with Jesse Colin Young playing bass and Jerry Corbitt switching between piano, harmonica and lead guitar. This initial lineup of The Youngbloods made their debut on the Canadian circuit. However, before long, Jerry Corbitt introduced Jesse Colin Young to Banana.
This was none other than Lowell Levinger, a bluegrass musicians who was born Lowell Levinger III. However, the nineteen year old multi-instrumentalist was known within the music community as Banana. Jerry Corbitt thought that Banana could flesh out The Youngbloods’ sound. Especially since Banana could play banjo, bass, guitar, mandola, mandolin and piano. Once Jesse Colin Young met Banana, he became the third and final member of the band.
After that, things happened quickly for the Youngbloods. Having made their live debut at Gerde’s Folk City in Greenwich Village, within a short time The Youngbloods were the house band at the prestigious Cafe au Go Go. By then, the Youngbloods had already signed their first recording contract.
Having signed to RCA Records, the Youngbloods discovered that the record label were unsure how to market the band. At one point, RCA Records tried to market The Youngbloods as a bubblegum pop act. However, in 1966, the Youngbloods released their debut single, Rider, which failed to chart. The followup was Grizzly Bear, which reached fifty-two in the US Billboard 100. Both of these singles featured on the Youngbloods’ eponymous debut album.
Work began on the Youngbloods’ eponymous debut at RCA Victor’s Studio B in New York in late 1966. This was the start of a new chapter in their career. By then, founder member Jesse Colin Young was regarded as the focal point of the band. He was the band’s lead singer, and later, would become the band’s songwriter-in-chief.
For The Youngbloods album, Jesse Colin Young only penned two songs; Tears Are Falling and Foolin’ Around (The Waltz). Jerry Corbitt contributed just the one song, All Over The World. The remainder of the songs were covers of old blues and folk songs. This included Blind Willie McTell’s Statesboro Blues, Jimmy Reed’s Ain’t That Lovin’ You Baby, Mississippi John Hurt’s C.C. Rider, Fred Neil’s The Other Side of This Life and Chet Powers’ Get Together. These songs were recorded at RCA Victor’s Studio B, with producer Felix Pappalardi.
Once the album was recorded, The Youngbloods was scheduled for release in January 1967. When critics heard The Youngbloods, they lavished praise and plaudits on what was primarily an album of folk rock, with excursions into blues and pop. Ballads and rockers sat cheek by jowl on the album, which allowed the band to showcase their talent and versatility. Critics forecasted a bright future for the Youngbloods. From: https://dereksmusicblog.com/2019/03/16/the-rise-and-fall-of-the-youngbloods/
Snowgoose - The Making Of You
Scottish indie mainstays Snowgoose are known for their emotional warmth, their songs representing an exploration of folky, 60s-style nostalgia with a little psychedelia along the way. New album ‘The Making Of You’, their second full-length, has drawn them the vibrant backing of novelist Ian Rankin, who’s a huge fan, and also saw the band backed – more literally, on several tracks – by much of the Scottish indie community.
The duo’s core – although there are many others regularly on stage – are former Soup Dragons guitarist Jim McCulloch and vocalist Anna Sheard, though members of Scottish indie royalty Belle and Sebastian and Teenage Fanclub are amongst those that appear on the new record alongside the songwriting pair.
“There’s a mutual respect in the music community that’s built around trust and integrity,” McCulloch says of the depth of collaboration. “Then all it takes is a phone call or email to see if and when someone is available to record. I’m not saying that it works for everyone and every time, but if your pals are the best at what they do then why the hell not ask them?”
Unlike their debut record, vocalist Sheard is heavily involved in the writing of this record, and that has contributed to the way it’s performed, and indeed its very feel, alongside all those big names. “In much of the new material, Anna isn’t having to sing words where she is second-guessing motivation or whatever,” McCulloch says of the change. “There is a much deeper connectivity with the material there, and she is much less the auteur or interpreter and more the artist… I feel this is a much more satisfying approach, both as a musician and writer.”
“From my perspective,” Sheard adds “‘The Making of You’ feels a cohesive progression toward the subtly sinister, where the recognizably hopeful spirit of Snowgoose shines amongst the eeriness. For me personally, it has been a very transformational time between records, both in becoming a mother and returning to my roots in Somerset. These experiences have been hugely grounding and inspirational, allowing me to find my confidence as a songwriter with greater focus and less fear.” From: https://www.hendicottwriting.com/2020/08/snowgoose-the-making-of-you-feels-a-cohesive-progression-towards-the-subtly-sinister/
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