Friday, September 5, 2025

Cat Stevens - Tea For The Tillerman - Live 1971


This DVD, coinciding with Cat Stevens’ 60th birthday, features a rare and classic performance from 1971 which captures the warmth of his studio recordings but with even more passion and depth. It also includes the delightfully animated short film by Cat Stevens entitled Teaser And The Firecat, with wacky narration by Spike Milligan. His recording career spanned 12 years from October 1966 to November 1978, and he recorded 11 albums in all, but his most creative and interesting period was probably whilst he was recording Tea For The Tillerman and Teaser And The Firecat during 1970 and 1971. With the hit single Wild World entering the US charts in 1971, Cat Stevens flew to America where this intimate concert, which features the best of his repertoire at the time, was recorded. After all these years, it is good to be reminded of Cat Stevens' original and creative talents and the huge contribution he made to the singer/songwriter genre.  From: https://concertsondvd.com/products/cat-stevens-tea-for-tillerman-live-studio-concert-1971-dvd

The New Respects - Trouble


The New Respects is a family affair, made up of three siblings, twins Alexis (bass) and Zandy Fitzgerald (guitar), along with their brother Darius (drums), and cousin Jasmine Mullen (vocals/guitar). The group is heavily influenced by the gospel music they were surrounded by growing up in Nashville, which extends to artists including Aretha Franklin, Alabama Shakes, and John Mayer. The New Respects showcased as an official artist at SXSW 2017 in Austin, TX and are signed to Credential Recordings.  From: https://first-avenue.com/performer/the-new-respects/

Tracy Bonham - Tell It To The Sky


The Burdens of Being Upright is the debut studio album by American singer-songwriter Tracy Bonham, released on March 19, 1996, by Island Records. The Burdens of Being Upright was recorded in the summer of 1995 at Fort Apache Studios in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Referencing this album, in 2015 Bonham said, That whole album was my experiment with getting a guitar. I was rebelling. It was just raw. I was like, ‘Just get out and do it; get behind a microphone and just scream.’ Twenty years ago I had more doubts; I thought, ‘I can’t just stand there and do that’ — which is when I knew I had to do it.
The album cover (a reference to German photographer August Sander's work "The Bricklayer") was photographed by George DuBose, who was the in-house photographer at the hip hop label Cold Chillin' Records.  From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Burdens_of_Being_Upright


The SteelDrivers - Midnight Train to Memphis


As The SteelDrivers prepare for their highly anticipated performance at Newberry Opera House on Saturday, October 14, let’s take a closer look at their remarkable career and their continued impact on the music scene. The SteelDrivers were formed in Nashville, Tennessee by a group of seasoned musicians who shared a deep love for traditional Bluegrass music. The original lineup included Chris Stapleton (vocals and guitar), Mike Henderson (mandolin), Tammy Rogers (fiddle), Richard Bailey (banjo), and Mike Fleming (bass). Their self-titled debut album, released in 2008, quickly gained critical acclaim and introduced the band’s unique sound to a wider audience.
“Mike Henderson, our original mandolin player, is really the guy responsible for getting the band together,” says Tammy Rogers. “He is the one who knew everyone and made the calls to get everybody together at his house for an informal night of playing some Bluegrass tunes! I had no idea at the time that he and Chris Stapleton, our original lead singer, and guitarist had been writing together for four to five years at that point and had already amassed an incredible catalog of great songs.”
According to Rogers, all the individual elements from each band member along with the songs that Henderson and Stapelton had been writing created the sound and direction of The SteelDrivers. Tammy states, “We all just played the way we played and sang the way we sang! It’s a unique sound because no one was trying to copy any other players or singers.”
Drawing from their collective experiences and influences, the band members fuse intricate melodies and poignant lyrics into a harmonious whole. Their approach often begins with a spark of inspiration, whether it’s a personal story, a shared emotion, or a vivid image.
“I usually just try to sit down and write the best song I can write with my co-writer, and then I see if it’s something the band would be interested in performing,” Tammy Rogers explains. “I really value their opinion and that way they have a vested interest in what we do as a group. In the case of “I Choose You,” I was definitely thinking of my husband when I wrote that song but also of other long-term couples and how they stay together.”
Guided by their mutual respect for tradition and innovation, they combine their instrumental skills with storytelling, allowing their songs to unfold naturally. Each member contributes a unique perspective, lending depth and richness to the narrative. Through jam sessions and heartfelt discussions, The SteelDrivers’ songwriting process evolves, resulting in compositions that resonate with audiences by capturing both the essence of Bluegrass roots and the contemporary spirit of musical exploration.  From: https://www.newberryoperahouse.com/from-nashville-to-fame-the-steeldrivers-rise-in-bluegrass-music/

Rickie Lee Jones - Pirates (So Long Lonely Avenue)


The pirates first announced themselves to Rickie Lee Jones in New Orleans, in the fall of 1979, with a delivery of mysterious gifts. "I checked into my hotel and there was a dress hanging there, and a gift. I opened it up and it was a diamond necklace, an ostentatious diamond necklace," she recalled. "And they sent drugs to all the guys. All the band was very high. And I said, I can't take these gifts ... it was like a dove with three diamonds in it. I would never wear a diamond back then."
Jones was traveling in support of her self-titled debut for Warner Bros., the slinky, imaginative sui generis blend of pop, soul and jazz that had already hit No. 3 on the Billboard 200, landed her on her first Rolling Stone cover, and associated her forever with the beret. In a couple of months, she would win the Grammy for best new artist. She was almost 25.
The pirates, who were actually local marijuana smugglers, came to her concert and introduced themselves, and although she was nonplussed by their extravagant gesture, they eventually became friends. In fact, when she took an apartment on the seedier downtown edge of the French Quarter in the early 1980s — inspired partly by Dr. John, whom she'd met back in Los Angeles — she split the rent with one of them.
"It was the combination of them and Sal Bernardi's crew in San Francisco that inspired the concept of Pirates," she explained. Some of the pirates went to prison and got out. One moved to Costa Rica. One still lives in New Orleans and now, 36 years after the release of Pirates, her second album, so does Jones, although not in the Quarter: Her neighborhood is leafy and quiet, near a park where she can walk her dog and ride her bike, her freshly purple-dyed hair tucked under a helmet.
"To be really clear, I was a drug addict when I lived here," she said. "It's not possible to walk in the footsteps I walked then. I woke up late in the afternoon, and I lived at night." It was a funny thing, really, to take off to the bottom of the U.S. at what seemed like the top of a career and hang around with dope smugglers, aging artists and weird characters — she was there at Professor Longhair's last recording session, she said, and befriended the one-eyed junkie piano genius James Booker, who'd die in 1983, at age 43 — but it felt right to her, "like a refuge," she said. "For me, it was part of feeding who I was. I felt that if I stopped living that way, whatever it was that I really was would stop being authentic," she said.
New Orleans and its characters helped inspire the cinematic storybook of hip that is Pirates, with its evocative imagery — the '57 Lincolns, the slow trains to Peking, the Lolitas playing dominoes and poker behind their daddy's shacks — as did Olympia, Wash., where she started writing it in 1979, New York City, where she was also paying rent, and L.A., where it was recorded. Close to forty years later, she still plays those songs onstage. Some feel different than others — for example, "We Belong Together," the ecstatic, dreamy stream of consciousness that opens Pirates, inspired by her famous romance and breakup with Tom Waits.
"When I sing that song, to me anyway, it doesn't have anything to do with me. It's like a house I built. When I go in, I say, 'I love this room. I'm gonna sit in this room.' It's a structure of its own and I get to experience the ride when I play it. But it's not about Tom and me. It has a life of its own." "There are only a couple of songs that haven't achieved autonomy," she said. "And when I sing them, I feel like, 'I don't wear my dress that short anymore."
But 36 years later, Pirates is a dress that's not out of style, a house that still welcomes new residents. It's canon, classic, a still-startlingly singular look at America both in style — the way it seamlessly weaves threads of beatnik jazz, fluid soul and aching, theatrical balladry — and in substance, as it captures perfect images of American romance and cool like so many Polaroid snapshots. Few pop artists have ever been as effortlessly cool; still fewer have managed to create a piece of art that sounds like it could have been crafted thirty years before it was, or thirty years after. Pirates has been influential, but rarely imitated.  From: https://www.npr.org/sections/therecord/2017/07/26/539509195/rickie-lee-jones-on-the-pirates-who-inspired-pirates-and-returning-to-new-orlean

Satin Nickel - The Shadow of Doubt


Satin Nickel is a band from New York that began as a collaboration between Samantha Aneson (vocals, guitar, banjo) and Morgan Hollingsworth (guitar, vocals, mandolin), who explored it as an intersection of Americana and folk. You can hear the Americana and folk influences on their new album Shadow of Doubt, but there are many more layers than just those two.
It doesn’t take long to figure out that this is a band that won’t allow itself to be pinned down to any particular style. The album contains subtle elements of bluegrass with the cello, mandolin and banjo. The band marries that with a healthy dose of rock – especially in the guitar. However, even the guitar tone varies from something like a Drive-By Truckers song (“Train Song”) to a spacey tone (“Good Love”) that you heard from a lot of moody bands in the 80s.
The band members do a great job of creating an atmosphere in these songs. In fact, this band is so good at creating atmosphere that each song sounds like a short-film script set to music. The impressive thing is that the band creates the feel of a song in a variety of ways. At some times, they accomplish this by featuring just guitar and vocals. At other times, like in “Last Night”, the mood is set by the spacey guitar sound and the cello. Throughout the album, the cello adds some dimension of mood to a song. In “Just Keep Running”, the fiddle adds some tension with sounds that would fit right into the soundtrack of a movie thriller.  
If you want a snapshot of this band, “The Ballad of Yankee Jim” is a good example. In less than seven minutes, the band tells the rambling story of the last man who was hung in San Diego. This is a song that blends not only Americana and folk, but also rock (just listen to the guitar in the instrumental break) and even gospel. The gospel influence can be heard mostly in the chorus that features mostly vocals and claps.  From: https://glidemagazine.com/242366/satin-nickel-marry-americana-folk-and-rock-on-shadow-of-doubt-album-review/

Richard & Linda Thompson - Sisters


1978's First Light marked Richard & Linda Thompson's first time in a recording studio after three years away from music, and it suggested they were still getting warmed up as performers; a year later, Sunnyvista found them in much stronger form and a significantly more upbeat frame of mind. Sunnyvista is the wittiest and most joyous album Richard & Linda made together; while several of Richard Thompson's trademark meditations on romance at it's least successful are on hand, "Why Do You Turn Your Back" manages to generate an unusually soulful groove, "Lonely Hearts" captures the melancholy country feel that First Light never quite caught, and "Traces of My Love" finds a winning warmth in its sadness. Richard Thompson's satirical eye gets an airing on the darkly witty title cut, and he displays his rarely aired politically conscious streak on the rabble-rousing "Borrowed Time" and "Justice in the Streets." Linda Thompson's vocals are in superb form on "Sisters," a lovely duet with Anna McGarrigle. And you'd have to go back to Hokey Pokey to hear the Thompsons having as much fun as they do on the rollicking "Saturday Rolling Around" and the wildly passionate "You're Going to Need Somebody." With a big band of Fairport Convention and Albion Band associates and top UK session players on board, and Kate & Anna McGarrigle, Gerry Rafferty, and Glenn Tilbrook contributing vocals, Sunnyvista boasts the stylistic eclecticism of the Thompsons' best work, with a healthy dose of added enthusiasm. Anyone who thinks Richard & Linda Thompson's records are always depressing have obviously never heard Sunnyvista; if it isn't quite as resonant as I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight and Pour Down Like Silver, it still boasts great songs, great singing, and you can play it at a party.  From: https://www.allmusic.com/album/richard-linda-thompsons-sunnyvista-mw0000192175#review