***Click on 000list to see the full archive of album reviews (includes links to the reviews & stand out tracks)***

~~~Click on Thrift Store Music Player to hear all the stand out tracks on Youtube
~~~

^^^Click on Art Gallery to browse the album covers^^^

Blog Archive

Showing posts with label 6AR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 6AR. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Albert King - I Wanna Get Funky

Name: Albert King
Album: I Wanna Get Funky
Year: 1974
Style: Funky Blues
Similar Artists: B.B. King, Jimi Hendrix,
"One Word" Review: Sexy-Smokey-Smooth
Based Out Of: Forrest City, AR
Label: Stax
I Wanna Get Funky - Cover & Record
I Wanna Get Funky - Back & Record
I Wanna Get Funky (1974)
  1. I Wanna Get Funky 4:08
  2. Playing On Me 3:25
  3. Walk the Back Streets and Crying 6:28
  4. 'Til My Back Ain't got No Bone 7:32 /
  5. Flat Tire 4:43
  6. I Can't Hear Nothing but The Blues 4:16
  7. Travelin' Man 2:52
  8. Crosscut Saw 7:45
  9. That's What the Blues Is All About 3:56
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Albert King- Vox, Guitar
The Bar-Kays - Rhythm
The Movement - Rhythm
Amy Donald Kenzie - Rhythm, Guitar
Memphis Horns - Horns
Memphis Symphony Orchestra - Strings
Hot Buttered Soul - Backing Vox
Henry Bush - Backing Vox, Producer, Arranger, Engineer
Allen Jones - Producer, Arranger, Engineer
Lester Snell - Arranger
Dale Warren - Arranger
William Brown - Engineer
Robert Jackson - Engineer
Daryl Williams - Engineer
Davis Fried Krieger, INC - Art Direction
Larry Shaw - Creative Direction
Ron Gordon - Creative Direction
Maldwin Hamlin - Photography

Unknown-ness: I had never heard of him before. from the cover and obvious assumtion thanks to the title, I'm assuming this is gonna be something funky, akin to Isaac Hays. The smokey photo also give me the impression of something authentic, something that is relaxed and professional. Even if the back looks like a Barry White cover, I imagine it to be a little more complex.

Album Review: “I Wanna Get Funky” begins with an organ I associate with Tom Waits. And a sad electric guitar and a horn section are added to the front & background. Vocals begin that sound a bit like Hendrix, smooth, melodic and they carry a heavy burden of blues. Even as the song proclaims the desire to be funky, the style and sentiment in the song is a struggle that the singer is comfortable with. This is a nice, dark alley song to start off a blues-funk record.
“Playing on Me” is a bit more upbeat, with the same electric guitar that sings with distinct notes rather than playing a melody. The jazzy horns and funky bass bring a pleasant danceable groove.
“Walk the Back Streets and Crying” is another sorrowful head down, slack arms dragging, sad blues story-number. It is slow and calculated.
“Til My Back Ain't got No Bone” has a slow and quiet start, the only really audible thing is the steady 3rd count kick drum. Everything else: the vocals, bass and guitar, are hushed. The vocals are spoken when audible, and they sound to be one side of a phone conversation. Then about 3:45 singing commences, and the funky bass is paired up with a piano, and the pub style song really begins. The horns push along the melody, and become the main driving force along side the electric guitar.

“Flat Tire” features vocals that are somewhere between Barry White and Isaac Hayes. The song features wakka-wakka guitars, and a chorus of female vocals in the background. This is more soulful funky than anything else on the album, and the horns are treated like a disco hook. Again, half of the lyrics are spoken over the song rather than sung.
“I Can't Hear Nothing but The Blues” is really a positive outlook on misery. Where you’d think a title like this one’s would demand a sad, sorrowful song, this is brightly proud and bold. Its not fast or over enthusiastic, but it has a confidence, like in “I Wanna Get Funky” where the singer is content with his situation.
“Travelin' Man” has a fast flourish in the beginning before settling into a slinky groove full of upbeat horns and yes, funky bass and organ. This short number is a great dictionary definition of a bar room blues number.
“Crosscut Saw” is fun and upbeat. It takes time out from the blues verse to suspend vocals to let the guitar sing out the chorus. The bass groove is a continuous hook that could repeat forever. There is a break in the song to allow the singer to break verse and speak to the “audience” before transitioning back into the guitar and song, as if it were a live experience. The jamming continues on, bass never faltering, electric guitar never stopping, and the marching drum beat pounds on until fade out.
“That's What the Blues Is All About” starts with the horns, making the song feel like it will be a Motown classic. And this too is a very un-blues-like blues song with very funky and upbeat (but I guess that should be expected, via to the title). At the songs middle, the short instrumental section is highlighted with the electric guitar pumped up to a piercing volume in comparison to the rest of the instruments.

Stand Out Track: Playing on Me

Links:
Allmusic
Wiki

Cascade Blues Assoc.
Stax
Last FM
Rolling Stone Bio
Delta Boogie
About.com

Friday, May 15, 2009

Ho-Hum - Local

Name: Ho-Hum
Album: Local
Year: 1996
Style: Alternative Rock
Similar Bands: Lemonheads, Buffalo Tom, Jayhawks, Spoon, Counting Crows, Paul Westerberg
"One-Word" Review: honest-carefree-radio-play-naivety
Based Out Of: Little Rock, Arkansas
Label: Universal Records
Local - Cover, Back & Liner Notes
Local - Inside Liner Notes & CD

Local (1996)
  1. Around the World 2:51
  2. Get Down 4:10
  3. Pills and Guns 3:31
  4. Disappear 4:40
  5. Don't Go Out With Your Friends Tonight 2:54
  6. Moon Lies Beautifully 4:10
  7. Wake up Call 3:27
  8. One Out Of Ten 2:34
  9. It's A Lie 3:53
  10. Frozen 3:19
  11. I Can't Swim 3:36
  12. Here She Comes 3:12
  13. Superhuman 3:34
  14. Pure D. Wrong 3:49
Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:
Clive Langer - Producer (Madness, Bush, Dexy's Midnight Runners, Elvis Costello, TMBG, Dogs Die In Hot Cars, Morissey, Bowie)
Alan Winstanley - Producer (Madness, Bush, Dexy's Midnight Runners, Elvis Costello, TMBG, Dogs Die In Hot Cars, Morrissey, Bowie)
Tom Lewis - Executive Producer
Stephen Marcussen - Mastering
Lynn Goldsmith - Photography
Kevin Kirby - Cover Painting , Guitar, Harmonica, Mandolin, Vox (Mulehead)
Sandie Lee Drake - Art Director
Lenny Bryan - Guitar, Piano, Keys, Vox
Rod Bryan - Bass, Piano, Screams, Vox
Dave Hoffpauir - Drum, Vox (Mulehead)
James Hooker - Organ
Luis Jardin - Percussion
James Brown Jr - Horns
Harvey Thompson - Horns
Charles Rose - Horns
Vincent Ciesielk - Horns

Unknown-ness: I never heard of these guys when I bought the CD at Streetlight records in Santa Cruz for fifty cents about 10 years ago. I liked the artwork and look of the cover: the cartoony ghosts seem happy-go-lucky mixed with the boredom band name of Ho-Hum (which is also a great onomatopoeia for the ghosts) made for a reason to buy it. The picture on the back also has a run down carney feel to it, and the band looks like a bunch of average guys, so it shows at least a bit of not-sucking promise. And it was fifty cents.

Album Review: So apparently this album was produced by the amazing duo that is responsible for many great albums of Madness, Dexy’s Midnight Runners, They Might Be Giants and Elvis Costello. How the album actually comes across is anybody’s guess, but the pedigree is there. The album begins with “Around the World” an alternative, Lemonheads-ish melody, and a lot of little musical changes that are all full of hooks and are interesting. There is an organ in the background that carries the song, and adds a psychedelic ? and the Mysterians quality to it. The vocals are not that competent, but they are good in an honest way. A buzzing fades into the next song “Get Down,” which is slower and more alt-country than the first song, feeling more like Buffalo Tom or the Jayhawks. There is a short, dark section that mimic’s the heavy guitar hook of Enter Sandman. There is a transitional bridge of repetitive note playing and it feeds right into the chorus for another verse, before ending with the “Exit Light/Enter Night” riff. A drum fill leads into “Pills and Guns” which feels like a fast pace Spoon song (“June’s Foreign Spell” to be precise). It’s not quite as catchy as Spoon, but if it were a little less produced, and more focused, it could easily be a Spoon song. But on the other hand, I can hear a little Counting Crows in his voice, the way he ends his lines, the down turn of the vocal note is similar. “Disappear” is a slow, drawn out mumbling song. Some kind of synthesized sounding horn and string sections appear here very briefly, which build the song up, but it quickly limps back into its slow groove. It sounds a little Pearl Jam-ish in his vocal delivery. “Don't Go Out With Your Friends Tonight” is an upbeat rock song, sung like a true radio-friendly alternative garbage track from that time period. I’m thinking like Everclear or something. The chorus has a little catchy part to it, and the secondary chorus is even catchier, and this does redeem the song a bit, but the verse to start off with was kinda lame. Ok, the song is good. I take it back. There are a lot of little intricate catchy parts like in the opening track that keep it interesting. “Moon Lies Beautifully” is a meandering half ballad, half fuzzy, introspective grunge song. It picks up like a Lemonheads song (or like Sugar) again. The vocals are not over-exerted, but they are meaningful and inspired all the same. “Wake up Call” features a wailing guitar played repetitively like a siren, I’m thinking Dinosaur Jr. here with more Eddie Vedder-ish vocals, but not quite as annoying. The chorus features a shifting in and out of emotional near shouting and settling back into a monotone rolling vocal. It is actually pretty catchy.

In “One Out Of Ten,” you can feel the momentum building up in the chugging guitar chords, and the stutter-stepping vocal melody. It is unleashed in the same Replacements / Paul Westerberg way of fast pace guitars, that are not threatening, and more anthemic. When it comes back after a background count off, it becomes very toe-tappingly catchy and ends at a place where you wish there was more of it. It is like a faster version of the chorus in the Shawn Colvin song “Sunny Came Home” The next song slumps down into an alt-country song with “It's A Lie.” But it picks up some fuzzed out guitars for the chorus, which is just basically a chance for the instruments to rock out rather than change up the vocal melody. The instrumentation in the chorus sound like Better Than Ezra’s “Good.” At the end it goes back and forth from lite harmonica sleepy jamming to hard, heavy fuzz-rock until it fades out on the jamming. “Frozen” starts off immediately catchy. But the chorus feels like it should be catchier than it is. It feels like there is too much noise and production that drowns the melody in guitars that don’t help the cause. This song feels like it should have been included on the Singles soundtrack. “I Can't Swim” is a slow shoe-gazing melodic ballad. The melody is slow and droning, but the music is trying to be rocking. And it does rock out with accompanying vocals in small sections, but it comes across as a little kid digging his feet in the dirt, shy and embarrassed about not being able to swim. “Here She Comes” is even slower and mopey than the previous song, but it has a positive, head held high feeling. The breakdown is a couple measures of good Elvis Costello inspired song structure. But a shouting vocal ruins any progression of the song. The catchy chorus reminds me a little of Graham Parker too. “Superhuman” begins with electric guitar and a rhythm guitar added like an oldies slow dance song. It is a lazy, care free sun hammock lemonade sipping tune. A trumpet helps push the feeling along too. And it ends in a three note song wrap-up. “Pure D. Wrong” has lots of pent up energy, and is a good recap and way to end the record. It gets going and is fun to ride along with. The vocals are an enjoyable trip along the instrument melody, full of fuzzy guitars and quick, driving drums, and guitar solo fills. The music reminds me of Richard Butler’s Love Spit Love. And with an record unplug wind down, the album is over.

Stand Out Track: Around The World

Links: