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Saturday, July 26, 2025
Vinx - Keeping It To Myself
Vinx De'Jon Parrette (born 15 December 1957), known professionally as Vinx, is a percussionist, singer, songwriter, and former athlete. Vinx performed for the first time at Montreux Jazz Festival on July 9, 1978, after legendary musician Taj Mahal invited him to perform with him at Casino Montreux. Vinx was a member of the Austin, Texas funk & soul band Extreme Heat.
The next time Vinx performed at Montreux Jazz Festival would be July 20, 1990, when he performed nine of his own songs. The songs were taken from Vinx's first album, Rooms in My Fatha's House which was released through Sting's record label Pangaea Records, and featured guest vocals and bass by Sting. Taj Mahal, Branford Marsalis, Sheryl Crow, and Herbie Hancock were also among the album's guest musicians. The actor Roscoe Lee Browne appears on "While the City Sleeps". Vinx's regular band, made up of percussionists and a vocalist, was dubbed the Barkin' Feet. From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinx_De%27Jon_Parrette
The Nields - I Need a Doctor
The Nields - Gotta Get Over Greta: It's easy, with many many rock bands, to get the impression from their lyrics that they decided to be in a band first, and only later acknowledged that this suggests that they need to write some words for their songs. I never got the impression, for example, that Steve Perry would have spent his lunch hours writing love poems even if he'd turned out to be an insurance clerk rather than a singer. The Nields lyrics, on the other hand, have the feel of family gossip, childhood pageants, late-night discussions and long-distance confessions. They feel like stories that came first, little dramas that weren't thought up to fill the meter, but, quite the reverse, were what drove the family into music to begin with, searching for the proper setting for their tales. And so we get the charming inside-joke insistence on referring to the philandering older man in "Best Black Dress" by his full name ("Mr. George Fox" they sing, forming the words so precisely that, though no rancor is evident, I feel certain the family is smiling sardonically at remembrances of the man's transgressions), the title-track's ambivalence about growing up (where I particularly like the projection of adult standards onto childhood relationships when they describe the end of a childhood friendship by "there is no divorce more final"), the frank inside perspective on an anonymous sexual encounter in "I Know What Kind of Love This Is", the adolescent dominance games of "King of the Hill", and childhood memory itself in "All the Pretty Horses".
To me the most affecting pair, however, are "Fountain of Youth" and "Cowards", which come back to back towards the album's end. The crisp, bouncy "Fountain of Youth" is almost certainly the most fascinating pop song I can recall about a younger woman's view of her affair with a married older man. "'Here are the keys to my Infiniti', you say to me", she sings, both reporting his come-on and, effectively, her reaction to it. When she dreams, in the middle of the song, about his wife, things could easily take a cliched turn, but Nerissa avoids this deftly by having the dream take a surreal (and perfectly dreamlike) turn, in which the narrator and the wife are discussing the man's immaturity, and wondering if he'll ever have children, despite the presence of lots of photographs in which he already has some. "Cowards" is a stalled-relationship song that gets its authenticity and pathos not from the relationship itself, but from the contrast between the couple's denial of their stasis and the reactions of their friends and family.
Even the album's packaging suggests a lineage. The intricate hand-done layout of the lyrics reminds me strongly of the program for a family play, and the profusion of iconographic illustrations suggests an intimate involvement with these songs, as if the contents of this album were selected from an overflowing chest of personal treasures, rather than just being invented to fill the running time. In an era where too many albums sound to me like they were made because the creators had a record contract, it's profoundly encouraging to hear one that sounds like it would have been made even if there were no record contracts, no records, and nobody but the band themselves to hear it. And even though I'm not related to them, I like it, too. From: https://www.furia.com/page.cgi?type=twas&id=twas0060
Maldito - Moon and the Stars
Maldito is out of Trondheim, in the north of Norway and the home to a jazz-oriented conservatoire as you may know but their music is definitively tinged by a previous era and I’m thinking of the 1970s. Maldito was actually formed in Liverpool by students of the Institute of Performing Arts there, in common with many other bands that have come to my attention in recent years, and mainly from Norway as it happens. They established an early name as energetic live rockers. Then they gained some early fans while touring Germany, just like a scouse band whose name escapes me for the moment, back in the 1960s.
Prior to the pandemic they played many gigs across Europe including blues festivals. They even represented Norway in the International Blues Challenge in Memphis in January 2020. Their debut album was released in 2021, followed by ‘Contact Light, in May of this year, in which they ventured into new and previously unexplored territory, “drawing inspiration from 1970s prog rock, experimenting more with sound, time signatures, and genres while staying true to their roots in blues rock.”
That’s where we pick them up and while they released some early singles from it I zeroed in immediately on the opening track, ‘Moon & the Stars’, a blazing, rollicking, rocker of a thing that falls somewhere between The Allman Brothers and Yes, if you can imagine Steve Howe playing a catchy Blues riff while Wakeman picks away at a synthesiser with mazy little runs. And speaking of Yes, Maldito’s vocalist, Vegard Ring, has a distinctive rock voice and easily nails the very same high notes and pitch that was and still is Jon Anderson’s trademark. I like what they’ve done here. A Blues/prog combo isn’t unique but it isn’t found frequently either, and they have made it work exceptionally well. ‘Moon & the Stars’ makes you hungry for the whole 11-planet Solar System that is ‘Contact Light’ and is an excellent choice for opening track. From: https://www.nordicmusiccentral.com/maldito-norway-moon-the-stars-sample-track-from-the-album-contact-light/
Inner Ear Brigade - Shaman Coin Toss
A Rock Oaklanders Inner Ear Brigade were founded in 2006 as a quartet by a guitarist / frontman Bill Wolter and his fellow musicians. Although their lineup has not been settled, basically they've utilized Hammond Organ, Fender Rhodes, Moog synthesizer, voices, vibes or a viola for their music experimentalism, obviously influenced by Sun Ra, Ruins, and especially Magma. Since 2009 they've expanded their formation into a septet, featuring voices, guitars, bass, drums, keyboards, saxophone, and vibraphone. In January 2012, Inner Ear Brigade released their first full length album "Rainbro" via an Italian independent label AltrOck Records and upon their bandcamp (as a downloadable material). From: https://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=7638
Jesus Christ Superstar (Yvonne Elliman) - Everything's Alright
"Everything's Alright" is a song from the 1970 album and 1971 rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. It is about the anointing of Jesus. In the song, Mary Magdalene tries to calm Jesus with an expensive ointment and tells him not to get worried. Judas accuses her of wasting resources which would be better served helping the poor. Jesus retorts by saying that there will always be poverty in the world and that they will never be able to help everyone. The song is musically notable for its 5/4 time signature. Yvonne Elliman and Ted Neeley sing "Everything's Alright" in the 1973 film Jesus Christ Superstar. Yvonne Elliman, who sang the part of Mary Magdalene on the original rock opera concept album Jesus Christ Superstar and also in the 1971 Broadway original cast and 1973 film, released a single of "Everything's Alright" in 1971. From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everything%27s_Alright_(Jesus_Christ_Superstar_song)
Inga-Dingo - I'm Alone
The music of Inga-Dingo is a thrilling combination of airy melodies and raw intensity that takes listeners on a sensory adventure. Every note demonstrates their command of the guitar as they skillfully weave complex riffs and solos that have a profound effect. Their music is distinguished by its wide dynamic range, which allows it to flow from intense and dramatic sections to reflective and surreal ones with ease. Inga-Dingo takes cues from the 1960s psychedelic movement to create a kaleidoscope of vibrant sounds and textures in their music. From: https://www.viberate.com/artist/inga-dingo/
Saturday, July 12, 2025
I Draw Slow - Live at Pickathon 2013
I Draw Slow - Live at Pickathon 2013 - Part 1
I Draw Slow - Live at Pickathon 2013 - Part 2
In the latest installment of The First Time, Belfast-based photographer Joe Laverty catches up with Louise Holden of Dublin-based roots/Americana five-piece I Draw Slow to pry, ever so respectfully, into the “firsts” of her music-listening, loving and making life.
First album you bought?
First album you bought?
I’d like to say the Carter Family but actually I think it might have been Aha
First single you bought?
First single you bought?
‘Shake the Disease’ by Depeche Mode
First live concert/gig?
First live concert/gig?
The Cure in Dublin
First album you properly loved?
First album you properly loved?
Rust Never Sleeps, Neil Young. Still my favourite.
First artist/band to change your music-listening/making life?
First artist/band to change your music-listening/making life?
Joni Mitchell shook me up when it came to vocals and lyrics.
First local band you got really into?
First local band you got really into?
Any of those McGonagle’s bands – That Petrol Emotion and such.
First festival experience?
First festival experience?
Feile in Cork, I think it was 1992.
First favourite film soundtrack?
First favourite film soundtrack?
The Jungle Book
First band t-shirt/jumper?
First band t-shirt/jumper?
The Cure
First song to make you cry?
First song to make you cry?
‘Love Song’ by The Cure
First time you knew you wanted to make music?
First time you knew you wanted to make music?
When I set up my first school band, The Grinning Daisies
First instrument you learnt to play?
First instrument you learnt to play?
Guitar
First riff/song/piece you learnt from start to finish?
First riff/song/piece you learnt from start to finish?
The piano intro to ‘Blue’, by Joni Mitchell. Can’t play past the intro so I pretend to get diverted at that point.
First original song you wrote?
First original song you wrote?
‘I Wonder Why The Grass Is Green’. I think I stole the lyrics and the tune though.
First gig or performance of your own?
First gig or performance of your own?
A 21st birthday party with Friendly Fire. I think there’s another band called that now (ed: Friendly Fires, maybe?)
First musical hero/idol you ever met?
First musical hero/idol you ever met?
I met Morrissey at a bar in Dublin. He said “How did you know it was me? I look so old and fat.” He didn’t.
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