Sunday, December 8, 2024

Daisy House - Superman


I was turned on to three hit albums last week, all by a duo calling themselves Daisy House. I had forgotten what it was like, hearing track after track after track and thinking hit, hit, hit, hit as I listened. I kept expecting it to end, this string of songs, but they didn’t. One after another, the songs piled one on top of the other, all more than worthy of airplay on the AM radio in my head. Good songs. Wonderful songs. Like Ebenezer Scrooge, I was giddy with delight. I didn’t think I would experience it again, albums packed to the gills with musical delight. Maybe all of the tracks weren’t Top Ten, but they were chartable.
You hear it? The early Fairport Convention influence? The Judy Dyble/Sandy Denny-leaning voice? The layering of acoustic and electric guitars? As important, the choral background, especially at the end of the bridge? The twelve-string lead? This is not only good stuff, it is arranged to perfection. And there is more. It is not all psych-infused folk/pop. They bend genre to song but always with a melodic and harmonic edge. Indeed, the melodies and harmonies are what elevates them to hit status. What songs they record are pleasant to the ear with just enough edge to make them fresh.
I could nominate any one of their albums for a Grammy in a number of categories but if it had to be one (or two), it would have be production and arrangement. Some of the songs are simple and almost sparse by the albums standards while others are arrangement gems, the voices stacked, the guitars weaving in and out, the piano/harpsichord/organ placed precisely, and the crescendos well-placed and amazingly effective.  It’s almost over and I will bet you hardly felt it, the songs the perfect icebreaker to what could have been the drudgery of reading. I have done you a favor. I have switched out words for music— one video is worth ten thousand words. Now, if you will, head to the Daisy House Bandcamp page and download. Stream away and get comfortable for I will even allow you to download individual tracks. You are welcome.  From: https://www.nodepression.com/album-reviews/daisy-house-sounds-of-todays-real-hits/

Elephant Stone - Hollow World


Today sees the release of the new album from Montreal psych rockers Elephant Stone. Back Into The Dream, the band’s sixth full length project, dwells on the mysteries of dreams and capturing the cycle of sleep and wakefulness with a blend of power-pop, psychedelic rock and frontman Rishi Dhir’s trademark sitar. The record starts with three fantastic tracks: “Lost In A Dream”, “The Spark” and “Going Underground” are bursting with upbeat choruses and Byrds-esque harmonies. Amongst other highlights are “Godstar” which is a mystical instrumental while “Pilgrimage” is a sprawling epic with hints of Beatles and Pink Floyd mixed in. Rishi Dhir is the driving force behind Elephant Stone, writing all the tracks and providing vocals, guitars, synths and many other instruments. Rounding out the rich soundscape of Elephant Stone are stalwarts: Miles Dupire on drums, Jason Kent juggling keys and guitar, and Robbie MacArthur on guitar. We caught up with Rishi over Zoom in his home studio to talk about the new record and getting more sitar into his music.

Your new album Back Into The Dream comes out in a couple of weeks. I think I may have just seen it but where did you write and record it?

Yeah, this is it. My writing process is here, my demoing here, the recording, the mixing; it all happens in the studio. It’s a small room. This is the first full-length album since Hollow in 2020. I did like a French EP, I did a soundtrack and I’ve been slowly chipping away at this record.

You mentioned that the album has been ready for a while – what was the delay in releasing it?

I’m releasing the record on my own label, but I also partner up with the US label Little Cloud Records out of Portland and Fuzz Club in Europe. I also wanted to find an Australian label and I’m working with Cheersquad there. I guess the plan for this record was that we hadn’t released a full length in a while, so rather than just releasing the album, I wanted to put out some singles as like a waterfall release. It’s funny; when you release an album, a lot of songs just get lost. People focus on a few, and I just wanted to kind of present each song as its own thing. The song I find that people have been connecting with most is my favorite too, “Pilgrimage”. It’s our last single. It’s a really mellow saxophone one but that’s not a song you’d think for a single, though.

Which classic album cover art is your current mood?

I guess Talk Talk – Spirit of Eden. I’m just in a Talk Talk mood these days. Conceptually, I love the covers they had for The Color of Spring and Spirit of Eden.

With Hollow being released in 2020, I was wondering if Back Into The Dream is your COVID record?

The French record that I put out – that was my real COVID album! It was about the end of the world and this new one was kind of coming out of COVID.

You’re known for your sitar playing and there’s not a lot of sitar in modern music. When did you start learning to play?

I guess in February 1997. I’m Indian and I went to my cousin’s wedding in India with my parents. I was 19 at the time, in a band and I love the Beatles so I was like, “Oh, I’ll buy a sitar.” So I bought a sitar and brought it back with me. I didn’t have a teacher for a few years. I found my teacher who is a German fellow named Uwe Neumann. He looks a bit like Charles Manson and he studied in India for 10 years. And I took lessons pretty regularly for about 10 years. I had a band. I left that band. I started this (Elephant Stone) and I wanted to incorporate more sitar in the music I was making.

Listening to your albums, there always seems to be a sitar-heavy track (“Godstar” on the new album), almost like a mystical interlude, very reminiscent of late 60’s Beatles. You don’t hear that with many modern bands.

Well, CornerShop! When I Was Born For The Seventh Time and Teenage FanClub – Bandwagonesque were my albums when I was younger.

Back Into The Dream is the sixth full-length Elephant Stone record in fifteen years – how have you kept the project going?

Well, the band is just me but prior to Elephant Stone, I was in another band, The High Dials, for about 10 years. I was like a side man in that band. I didn’t write the songs, I was the bassist and I left that band because it wasn’t satisfying me artistically. I felt like I needed something else. I went on a big journey. My wife and I were trying to have a baby. We had a miscarriage and I think that was the catalyst for me to start writing music. It was my therapy – writing songs became my therapy. Our first record (2009’s The Seven Seas) was me going on a journey. We packed up, went to India for a few weeks, and I wrote a lot of songs there. So, this band is very much me.

You’ve worked with some amazing musicians outside of Elephant Stone – does working on other projects help keep things fresh?

Yeah, I guess it’s part of the journey. Along the way you meet so many amazing musicians and you’re inspired by them. I was in the Black Angels for a bit, I got to play with Beck, and moments like that, it just kind of makes you feel like, okay, what I do is of value to people and it is worth continuing.

What’s one piece of advice you would give the 2009 version of yourself if you could?

Relax a bit – things will come when they come.

We touched on some of your influences earlier but who were you listening to when you were growing up that made you go “I want to be a musician”?

I mean, the Jam or the Who. When I was like seven, it was The Who and The Beatles, and then in my teens, it was Teenage Fanclub and The Pixies. Then, as I got into my late teens, I got into the whole mod thing and I was all about Paul Weller. I had my scooter and everything was Small Faces. At every stage, there was always something that I was obsessed with.

If you could only listen to one record, what would it be?

Revolver. I mean, that’s just my easy answer because it’s the album I’ve listened to most in my life.

Where did the name Elephant Stone come from? Was from it The Stone Roses or somewhere else?

I wanted to name the band Elephants, because I had a sandstone statue of Ganesh, the Hindu god of new beginnings. So, when I started the band, I wanted to have some kind of Indian reference in it. I’d just gone on the travels through India, and I was thinking of “The Gandharvas” but there was already a band called that. And then elephant, and I was like Elephant Stone. I love that first record (The Stone Roses). It just made sense.

You’re going on tour in March – is there somewhere you’re really looking forward to playing or a favorite location that you’ve played before that you’re excited to play again?

The album comes out February 23rd, and then in March, April and May, we’re doing the US and then going to Europe. So it’s going to be a busy few months. Europe is always exciting – I think we’re playing Sweden for the first time, I’ve never toured there. We’re going back to Italy and haven’t been there in years with the band, so it’s gonna be nice.

What’s one thing you can’t do without when you’re on tour?

Good coffee!

What would go on your signature pizza and what would it be called?

Well, it’s funny because I make a pretty amazing pizza. My signature pizza that I’m known for is my “Pickle Pizza”. I make my own pesto. It’s basil, dill, oregano, garlic, olive oil. It’s a white pizza so some parmesan and mozzarella, and I slice up some naturally fermented pickles. And then garnish it with dill.

What else do you have planned for 2024?

Yeah, you mentioned that I play with a lot of other people; I have another band, Mien, which is me, Alex Maas from the Black Angels, Tom Furse from the Horrors, and Jon-Mark from The Hurleys. We put out our debut in 2018 and I’ve just finished mixing our new album which will come out in early 2025 after we finish the Elephant Stone tour.

From: https://idreamofvinyl.com/2024/02/24/i-just-wanted-to-kind-of-present-each-song-as-its-own-thing-an-interview-with-elephant-stone/

The Rattles - You Can't Have Sunshine Everyday


Edna Bejarano is an Israeli-born German singer. She was born in 1951 in Tel Aviv, the daughter of Esther Bejarano.The family moved to Germany in 1960. She was the lead singer of the German rock band The Rattles from 1970 until 1973 and sang on their biggest selling record, the 1970 song "The Witch", which sold over one million copies globally. She also performed in the 1980s with her mother Esther Béjarano, one of the last survivors of the Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz, in the musical group Coincidence. They sang songs from the ghetto and in Hebrew as well as anti-fascist songs.  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edna_B%C3%A9jarano

In December 1960, the Rattles were founded in Hamburg by Achim Reichel and Herbert Hildebrandt. On February 3, 1963, the band won a competition in the Hamburg Star Club and became the first German band to play in this club. In the autumn of the same year, they recorded their first single. The group then went on a six-week tour of England with Bo Diddley, Little Richard, the Everly Brothers and the then little-known Rolling Stones. After the release of the film Hurrah, the Rattles are Coming in early 1966, they appeared on stage with the Beatles in June of the same year and played as the opening act for the Bravo Beatles Blitz tour in Munich, Essen and Hamburg - to great acclaim.
Rattles records were released that were a regional success in England, and for a time they were celebrated in Liverpool as the "German Beatles". The group had a dozen hits in total, including titles such as La La La (1965), Come On and Sing (1966) and Cauliflower (1967). In 1965 they also recorded songs with Johnny Hallyday (Laß die Leute doch reden, It's Monkeytime), which appeared on the LP/CD Johnny Hallyday Meets The Rattles.
In 1970 the Rattles had an international hit with The Witch. The song was first released as the B-side of the 1969 single Geraldine. In June 1970, The Witch reached number 79 as the A-side in the USA, and in October it reached number 8 in the UK. The Rattles line-up at this time: Kurt "Zappo" Lüngen (bass), Rainer Degner (guitar), Peet Becker (drums) and Henner Hoier (vocals), who had moved from the Rivets. Because of its success, the Rattles recorded a new version of The Witch with Edna Bejarano as singer, which climbed to number 4 in the German charts in October 1970. The piece was composed by Herbert Hildebrandt. Henner Hoier, who had sung the original, left the band a year later and founded the Les Humphries Singers with Les Humphries. By this time, Achim Reichel had long since left the group. After his time in the Bundeswehr, he founded the group Wonderland in 1967 with the ex-Rattles Dicky Tarrach and Frank Dostal, as well as Helmut Franke and Les Humphries. The "new" 1970s Rattles with Edna Bejarano, Frank Mille, Borny Bornhold and Zappo Lüngen only had something to do with the original formation insofar as Herbert Hildebrandt continued to be the composer and producer of the group. Other singles, such as You Can't Have Sunshine Every Day and Devil's on the Loose (both 1971) were only minor hits in the Federal Republic of Germany.  Translated from: https://www.wikiwand.com/de/articles/The_Rattles

Green Seagull - It's Too Late


Ah psych-pop…Harpsichords, sitars, fuzz guitars, reverse recording, and Beach Boys harmonies married together with pop, culminating in gorgeous melodically ornate songs. Hailing from London’s underground neo-psych scene, the baroque honey-drenched Green Seagull return from the ether again bringing us a myriad of delights in their recently released album ‘Cloud Cover’.
Arriving in 2016, the 4-piece formed when Paul Nelson (New Electric Ride) approached Paul Milne (Hidden Masters/Magnetic Mind) to work on a project. With a shared predilection for late-60s baroque psychedelia and 12-string jangles shortly the songwriters united together, and to this day they’re still going strong with a dedicated UK and European cult following. Joined shortly after by Sarah Gonputh on keys and Elian Dalmasso on drums, the quartet quickly recorded a demo in their rehearsal room on an old cassette 4-track. Consequently, the lo-fi recordings produced found their way into the laps of Mega Dodo Records, who without hesitation signed the band for a record deal.
Experimenting with contrapuntal melodies and functional harmony patterns, ‘Cloud Cover’ is an ambitious and stylistically broad venture that follows their widely praised 2018 number ‘Scarlet Fever.’ Beginning with the buoyant rhythms of “Aerosol”, which framework being owed to drummer Elian Dalmasso also fuses the sound structures of The Kinks, Strawberry Alarm Clock and The Zombies to name a few. Green Seagull showcase their musical breadth and scope throughout with an enviable arsenal of 60s and 70s psych influences.  Here we have a cognoscenti with a forensic understanding of 60s pop construction that feels and sounds effortless, with both sharp and subtle chord changes alongside hauntingly euphoric and dreamscape lyricism.
“Made to be Loved” stands out here as a grooving catchy 12 string jangle with a late 60s New York Baroque sound, think The Magic Plants/Left Banke/Stories. They’re so authentic and embellished with vintage nuance, you’d hear this in a bar and think they were an obscure long-forgotten 1960s collective – and be very surprised when Shazam informs you their vinyl came out yesterday, and they’re only down the road. 
Their deeply entrenched love for 60s experimental eclecticism is clear as the playful psych adventure continues into the “Little Lady in the Amplifier”, a West Coast beachy melodic boardwalk with psychomimetics echoing the vocals of Brian Wilson. “This Wheel” is it’s darker counterpart that faces the listener with a ‘cold winters morning’ allowing the stinging nostalgic timbre of the moody keys to take centre stage. Pink Floyd, SuperTramp, 70s prog all tied up with a psych-power pop bow.
Quintessentially English and with such an acute sense of identity – they are evidently leaving behind less desirable tropes of retromania/pop-pastiche. We’re certain that Green Seagull will find themselves recognised among their contemporaries which is exactly where they need to be. Above the cloud cover, among the stars, propelled into the burgeoning London Psych scene’s stratosphere and beyond.  From: https://moofmag.com/2020/08/07/album-review-green-seagull-cloud-cover/

The Nields - Christmas Carol

The Nields have been called equal parts The Beatles, The Cranberries and Joni Mitchell but the comparisons hardly end there.The Cincinnati Enquirer said they’re “The Roches meet The Cranberries but with better songwriting and better harmonies.” The Chicago Tribune said they’re a mix of The Bangles, The Roches and Alanis Morrissette. Sing Out! said they’re like Natalie Merchant if Merchant “had a sister with an equally good voice singing perfect harmony.” But while almost every profile or review of folk-rock sisters compares them to other acts, perhaps the comment that puts it best came from a concertgoer quoted in a Winston-Salem, North Carolina, daily: “If you don’t like the Nields, you need to get your ears checked.”

OVERVIEW
Western Massachusetts-based sisters Nerissa and Katryna Nields started their singing careers as part of a trio that morphed into a quintet before becoming the duo that they are today. Nerissa is the tunesmith of the pair, penning meticulously crafted songs with lyrics that are as heartfelt as they are intelligent, the deep sensitivity of some belying the toned, muscular nature of the writing itself. Katryna handles lead vocals, adding both clarity and nuance that provide her sister’s thoughts with an organic magic that at times is positively breathtaking. With Nerissa singing back up, the result is overwhelming proof that there’s no harmony quite like blood harmony.
Known for their oft-hilarious on-stage banter and direct engagement with fans, they’ve opened for artists including James Taylor, The Band, Indigo Girls, Ani DiFranco and 10,000 Maniacs and have recorded 21 albums over the past 30 years. Their latest is Circle of Days, released in June 2023.

MUSICAL BEGINNINGS
Nerissa (b.1967) and Katryna (b. 1969) were raised in Washington, DC, by folk-music loving parents and they remember singing together as preschoolers in the car during family trips. The elder sister wrote her first songs at age seven and the younger learned to sing from her father, spending innumerable hours practicing in the kitchen of their home. Both strengthened their singing skills by taking a class with John “Jack” Langstaff at The Potomac School in McLean, Virginia. A highly respected vocal trainer, Langstaff was director of The Revels, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based group in the ‘70s that performed a wildly eclectic mix of medieval and modern music. Nerissa and Katryna sang together throughout high school before Nerissa left home for Yale, where she studied English, and Katrina went to Trinity College in Hartford, where she studied religion.

TRIO FORMATION
The first incarnation of what became the Nields came together in 1987 when Nerissa met David Jones, a Yale graduate student and accomplished guitarist who started playing gigs with Katryna occasionally as a duo. In 1990, Nerissa and David married and – in an example of a thoroughly modern relationship – he took her surname, becoming David Nields. In 1991, when Katryna graduated from Trinity, the Nields began performing as a trio in coffeehouses and other small venues in and around DC with Katryna singing lead, Nerissa on back-up vocals and rhythm guitar and David on lead guitar.

MOVE TO CONNECTICUT
In 1992, the three moved to Connecticut, where David had taken a job as an English teacher at the Loomis Chaffe School in Windsor. “What we didn’t realize was it was the absolutely perfect cradle to start a band,” Nerissa told Live Music News & Review in 2016 about Windsor at the time. “We were in this incredibly supportive, intellectually stimulating community, centrally located, and we definitely had a dream to get famous.” While living in the school’s dorms from 1991 to 1995, they tried out their new songs – a number of which wound up on their future albums – on the students at the school and asked for their honest feedback. “Being around teenagers kept us grounded in that youthful transition period,” Nerissa told Live Music News & Review.

66 HOXSEY STREET, LIVE FROM THE IRON HORSE MUSIC HALL
In 1992, the band recorded its first album, the self-released 66 Hoxsey Street, an 11-track collection of original material named for a house in Williamstown, Virginia, where Nerissa and Katryna had lived as kids. They gigged across New England, eager to build their reputation on the region’s folk scene. In 1993, they recorded a 15-track live album, Live at the Iron Horse Music Hall, recorded at the popular club in Northampton, Massachusetts. Later that year, Nerissa and Katryna contributed harmonies to Dar Williams’ The Honesty Room, and in 1996 they did the same on her LP Mortal City.

QUINTET FORMATION
In 1994, the band became a quintet with the additions of bassist Dave Chalfant, whom Katryna had met in college, and his friend, drummer Dave Hower. With a rock-solid rhythm section, David’s Pete Townshend and Adrian Belew-influenced guitar riffs and the sisters’ lilting harmonies, the five-piece was an acoustical force across the board. Spin magazine likened them to Alanis Morisette fronting Indigo Girls.

BOB ON THE CEILING, ABIGAIL, GOTTA GET OVER GRETA
The five-piece band self-released their first album in 1994, Bob on the Ceiling, and to nobody’s surprise it was infinitely more rocked out than anything the trio had ever done. The disc’s critical acclaim in the New England press boosted audience sizes so much that band members were able to quit their day jobs and become full-time musicians.
In 1995, they self-released the EP Abigail (named for Katryna and Nerissa’s sister) and landed a deal with independent label Razor & Tie. They recorded 1996’s Gotta Get Over Greta, produced by Kevin Moloney (U2, Sinéad O’Connor), which one critic described as “acoustic folk music meets pop, punk and country in a strong and daring shoot out.”
In 1997, The Nields signed their first and only major-label contract with Elektra sublabel Guardian (Joan Baez’s label at the time), which reissued Gotta Get Over Greta in 1997 with three bonus tracks. With a global label’s support, the future looked bright for The Nields but their dreams of major national fame were short lived; Elektra liquidated Guardian within six months of signing the band.

‘MOUSSE, “Jam for the Van,” PLAY
To add insult to injury, in 1997 the group’s aging tour van was in bad shape from near-constant use. Without enough cash on hand for repairs or a new ride, they self-released the album ‘Mousse (the nickname of Chalfant’s sister Andromache) and held a fundraising concert entitled “Jam for the Van.” As a result, the Nields were able to purchase brand new wheels.
In early 1998, they signed with Zoë, a division of Rounder Records. Their first release on the label was 1998’s Play, a 14-track collection. “There’s a sense of literary high-mindedness at work throughout this album that lifts the material to another level,” wrote critic Cub Koda. “Despite the sing-songiness of several of the songs, there are some deliciously dark moments in the lyrics that makes this a cut above your usual folkie rant album.”

IF YOU LIVED HERE YOU’D BE HOME NOW, LIVE FROM NORTHAMPTON
In 2000, the group recorded If You Lived Here You’d Be Home Now, yet another dense effort with 15 tracks. “This is elegant, appealing music that speaks to the varied concerns of contemporary women,” wrote AllMusic’s William Ruhlmann, noting the exceptional expressiveness of Katryna’s voice. In early 2001, the band self-released Live From Northampton (recorded at the Iron Horse Music Hall) but by the end of the year they had stopped performing together despite a strong local following. It turned out to be David’s final album with the band; later that year he and Nerissa divorced and he moved to North Carolina.

Duo Formation, LOVE AND CHINA, AMELIA, THIS TOWN IS WRONG
In 2002, Nerissa and Katryna started billing themselves by their first names occasionally, not always as The Nields, and recorded 2002’s Love and China (with bassist Chalfant and studio musicians), which Nerissa has called “basically a break-up album.” They followed up with an EP of children’s songs, Songs for Amelia, and the LP This Town is Wrong in 2004.

2006-2017 ALBUMS
Between 2006 and 2017, the Neild sisters were extremely busy in the studio, recording 12 self-released albums: All Together Singing In The Kitchen (2006); Sister Holler (2007); Rock All Day/Rock All Night (2008); Organic Farm (2010, live DVD); The Full Catastrophe (2012); XVII (2015) and  Joy to the World (2017). In 2016, Mercury House Productions issued Haven’t I Paid My Dues By Now – Greatest Hits 1991-2016.

NOVEMBER, CIRCLE OF DAYS
In 2020, they released their 20th album, November. Topical in nature, songs address subjects including the climate crisis (“Kids Always Get It”), disputes over immigration (“Goodbye, Mexico,” “Jesus Was a Refugee”) and democracy (“Tyrants Always Fall”). It also includes two standards, “America the Beautiful” and Woodie Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land,” on which Dar Williams, Chris Smither and others sing harmony alongside Nerissa and Katryna’s children and members of a local youth chorus. In June 2023, the Nields released their latest studio effort, Circle of Days. Each of the 11 tracks refers to an annual event such as the winter solstice (“Darkest Day of the Year”), Easter (“Death and Resurrection”) and Thanksgiving (“Comic Books and Movies”).

CURRENT ACTIVITY
Nerissa and Katryna live in western Massachusetts’ Pioneer Valley and still play shows together, mostly as a duo. When they appear with a full band, they’re backed by former bandmates Chalfant on guitar and Hower on drums, with the addition of Paul Kochanski on bass. They also lead a popular singing class for preschoolers called Hootenanny. Dave Hower plays drums with a variety of bands, including Winterpills, Spanish for Hitchhiking and The Fucking Sparklies. Dave Chalfant owns a recording studio and teaches instrumental music at the Academy of Charlemont in Charlemont, Massachusetts. David Nields was the theatre director for the Imperial Centre of Arts and Sciences in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, and now he teaches theater at the State College of Florida.

COMMENTS ON SONGWRITING
Asked in a 2016 interview with Me & Thee Music if she has any advice for young songwriters, Nerissa said the important thing is to put in the work, even if you write some terrible songs.
“I think it’s great for songwriters to write songs, at least sometimes, just to work those songwriting muscles,” she said. “I have put in my 10,000 hours of practice. I have probably averaged one song a month since about 1988. That’s over 300 songs. And we’ve recorded around half of those. So I know how to write a song. Still, sometimes, when I am sitting with my guitar or at the piano, it’s as if I am a pure beginner again. That first phrase is the hardest.”
“One last thing I’ll say, and this goes for any kind of writing, too,” she added. “It helps to give yourself permission to write a really bad song. I like to do what Phillip Price [of the Winterpills] does: write five versions of one song. That takes the pressure off!”

From: https://www.mmone.org/the-nields/


Los Lobos - Wake Up Dolores


Richly textured, beautifully played, brilliantly produced, Los Lobos records sound fantastic. And that is before you get to the songwriting of Hidalgo and Perez, with its highly visual quality and classic Latino-Americana feel. The results are very organic. Best rock band in L.A. And, quite possibly, the US of A. The music streaming platforms claim to have music discovery solved, largely through data. That’s incorrect though. Music discovery isn’t really data driven - but it might be information driven.
I really discovered the music of East L.A. legends Los Lobos through David Hidalgo’s guitar work on Suzanne Vega’s 1992 album 99.9 F. His playing blew me away and that guitar sound was a key element to 99.9 F being such a change of direction for Vega, too. Once I’d checked the personnel on the CD sleeve notes (remember those) and clocked Hidalgo, I went over to the Los Lobos catalogue and saw their most recent release had been earlier that same year, entitled Kiko. I bought Kiko on CD, loved it (because it is a work of genius) and then left it there for many, many years. The next encounter was Tin Can Trust, released exactly 10 years later. I bought Tin Can Trust on the strength of a review and again, it proved to be a thoroughly excellent record.
I say really discovered here because of course, I had first come across ‘Lobos’ in 1987 when they popularised Latin pop with ‘La Bamba’ (preceding Luis Fonsi’s Despacito by 30 years no less). The song bugged me at the time, so much so that I would turn the radio off when it came on (I was a kid rocker). Funny that La Bamba turned out to be nothing like a true representation of Los Lobos, but over 30 years later has been the band’s only hit single, contributing to making them one of the most misunderstood rock bands of all time. At least outside of their native North America.
Back to information, the connection between Vega’s 99.9F° and Kiko is that they are both produced by Mitchell Froom (whom Suzanne later married of course). Froom was one half of the most innovative production team operating throughout the 90s, with engineer Tchad Blake being the other half (the two had a full-time partnership between ‘92 and 2002). My next musical adventure is to track down every other project those two worked on, but it’s a long and eminent list (perhaps a future playlist). Since both Froom and Blake are geniuses, the combined effect is worthy of note for anyone interested in music and how it’s made. However, Froom and Blake only ever joined a band as full members with David Hidalgo and Louie Perez of Los Lobos - together they formed the experimental roots collaboration Latin Playboys, largely because their work on Kiko and Colossal Head could not fully satiate their desire to experiment. Wow.
In preparation for the Art of Longevity podcast with Steve Berlin, I had spent three weeks listening to as much of the Los Lobos catalogue as time would allow. Effectively, this experience retrained my ears. Richly textured, beautifully played, brilliantly produced and engineered, Los Lobos records sound fantastic. And that is before you get to the songwriting of Hidalgo and Perez, with its highly visual quality (yes, cinematic) and classic Americana feel. The results are very organic and deeply immersive.
It’s mystifying in many ways the band are not much bigger than they are (circa. 2 million monthly listeners on Spotify when I last looked) and indeed the band has very occasionally intimated the same thing. In an interview with for Paul Zollo’s “Songwriters on Songwriting” Louis Perez said ‘I wish we sold more records’. But, when I asked Steve Berlin whether their lack of commercial respect bothers the band, he gave me short shrift: “Not at all. The main thing for us is longevity and being able to do what we do and to answer to nobody other than ourselves, we have such gratitude for that. We have no obligation other than to move forward with our music”.
I guess approaching 50 years of making music together and paying the bills from doing it is success enough. And we listeners get to benefit as well. Indeed, it’s pretty hard to adjust back to listening to a lot of modern records, which sound a bit ‘thin’ by comparison. Anyway, if you happen to be barreling along Sunset Boulevard, then head East for a change, and keep on going until you reach the suburbs of East L.A. and Phillipe’s “Famous French Sandwich” restaurant, and crank up this playlist. You might not get your sandwich free but you’ll get to experience Los Lobos in their element. Or, you can just listen and see it in those pictures in your head.  From: https://www.songsommelier.com/los-lobos-wolves-of-east-la

Paper Bird - To the Light


For Paper Bird, their new album marks a milestone. More importantly, it provides them with a new beginning, a new chapter in their trajectory that sees them redefining their direction, a change in their musical sensibility while maintaining their trademark upbeat attitude. The band’s self titled album, available September 9th on Thirty Tigers Records/ Sons of Thunder Records, introduces vocalist Carleigh Aikins to the line­up, whose previous credits include extended stints with the critically acclaimed bands Bahamas and Fox Jaws. Her addition to the band adds an extra edge, highlighting a clear sonic evolution. A shift in the band’s line­up has opened up new possibilities, swapping electric guitars and amped up instrumentation for the laid back, folk­flavored sound they favored in the past. “In truth this is an entirely new band,” bassist Caleb Summeril explains. “With Carleigh coming on board, we’ve literally made a fresh start.” Guitarist Paul DeHaven first met Aikins at a concert on Willie Nelson’s ranch during South by Southwest in 2012. The two hit it off, and before long Aikins and the rest of the band began collaborating long distance via email. “It was serendipitous that we could join forces so seamlessly,” says Aikins. “We created an instant bond and a new sound we can all stand proudly behind; which merges our respective influences from the Canadian and American music we were raised with. Everyone’s input is welcome here and everyone has their moment to shine, in the true democratic sense and tradition of a band." Paper Bird has always made a point of encouraging each of its members to share the spotlight. The group boasts three lead vocalists ­­ singer Sarah Anderson, singer and keyboard player Genevieve Patterson, and Aikins herself ­­ all of whom blend their voices in seamless three part harmonies. The instrumental duties are shared by Summeril, DeHaven, and drummer Mark Anderson. Hailing from Denver, Colorado, Paper Bird first emerged from the same environs that launched such outfits as Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats and the Lumineers. The group has toured extensively throughout the U.S., sharing bills with the aforementioned bands, as well as Daryl Hall & John Oates, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, and Shakey Graves. On Paper Bird, the band collaborates with world-renowned musician, singer and songwriter John Oates, who co­produced the album with Aikins’ fellow Canadian David Kalmusky. The album was recorded and mixed at Addiction Sound Studios in Nashville, and for his part, Oates couldn’t be more delighted. “Paper Bird is a band that possesses a sound that’s more than the sum of its parts,” Oates effuses. “It’s the coming together of two perfect trinities. It has three distinctly unique female lead singers whose harmonies blend together as one...united with an inventive, cohesive rhythm section trio. I loved their sound from the first time I heard them and they just keep getting better. They are a true musical family united by a unique and pure artistic vision...a rare quality in this day and age of so much disposable and less than original music.” Paper Bird has a sound that blends the engaging vocal harmonies of Fleet Foxes and The Lone Bellow with the classic ‘70s stylings of bands like Heart and Fleetwood Mac without imitating or emulating any one of them in particular. Indeed, the new music is rugged, resilient and flush with enthusiasm. It conveys the essence of inspired Americana, while still staying true to its riveting rock regimen. The album starts with the soulful strut of “To The Light,” and heads into desire and yearning with the single “Don’t Want Half.” With its playful harmonies and rhythms, “I Don’t Mind” captures the ephemeral feelings of love, as “it’s not easy to be a dreamer, when you’re sleeping with the wind.” Paper Bird merge the musical past with the present on “Sunday,” conjuring up doo-wop, rock and groove sounds. “This is definitely the start of something exciting,” Summeril suggests. “We’re at a point in our career where we feel we’re ready to take on the world.”  From: https://livesessions.npr.org/artists/paper-bird