***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 2Roots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2Roots. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Radioactive Cats - s/t

Name: Radio Active Cats
Album: s/t
Year:1991
Style: Roots Rock, Hair Metal, Blues
Similar Bands: Mr. Big, Blasters, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Cheap Trick, Tesla, Primal Scream
"One-Word" Review: Swamp Hair Metal
Based Out Of: Burbank, CA
Label: Warner Brothers, WEA Manufacturing
CD
Radio Active Cats (1991)
  1. Shotgun Shack 4:54 (single)
  2. Hold On Tight 3:27
  3. Bed of Roses 4:45 (single)
  4. Finger in the Pie 4:55
  5. Standin' in the Rain 4:24
  6. Love Razor 4:18
  7. Cry on My Shoulder 3:48
  8. Think About Love 3:29
  9. Cheap Mascara 4:28
  10. Knock Knock 3:56
  11. Wet, Hot Sweat 4:36
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Andy Wallace - Producer, Engineer, Mixing
  • Roberta Petersen - Executive Producer
  • Shel Graves - Vox (TV in Flames)
  • Michael Graves - Drums, Percussion, Vox (Broken Homes, Bang-Bang, Moccasoul, TV in Flames)
  • Ian Espinoza - Guitar, Mandolin, Vox (The Breakaways, Dancer, Failsafe, Beachy & the Beachnuts, Honeys. James House, The Coup, TV in Flames)
  • Ron Maldonado - Bass (Pappo's Blues)
  • Michael Doman - Drums (Broken Homes, Goodie Mob)
  • Joe Simon Seibert - Keys (Broken Homes, Rick Parker)
  • Janet Levinson - Art Direction
  • Andy Earl - Photos
  • John Jackson - Asst Engineer
  • Judy Kirschner - Asst Engineer
  • Bernie Grundman - Mastering

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band...and since i only have the CD, there is not much to go buy. From the song names and the band name, plus year this was released, they sound like a made-for-tv metal band, like something that would have appeared on Married With Children. I know Andy Wallace's name from Faith No More producing and other bands of that type, so perhaps hair metal is spot on. And spacing matters with this band...as they are not the Radioactive Cats, they are Radio Active...as if they are dudes who are active on the radio.

Album Review: The songs are a touch southern roots rock while singing about metal themes of women, love on the run, and roses. The songs are not that threatening, but i wonder if that is just time and the genre pushing the bar up since 1991 that makes it sound almost quaint. "Knock Knock" sounds like a metal singer fronting Cake, which is strangely enjoyable. They suffered the wrong band at the wrong time syndrome, as Alt-Grunge was picking up speed just as they were releasing this debut. Not entirely hair band metal and not classic rock inspired grunge at all, their cover-all-basis music made them a band that was stopped before it started

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Keith Sykes - I'm Not Strange I'm Just Like You

Name: Keith Sikes
Album: I'm Not Strange I'm Just Like You
Year: 1980
Style: Americana, Oldies Rock, Roots Rock
Similar Bands: Fabulous Thunderbirds, Walter Egan, Marshall Crenshaw, Steve Forbert, Blasters
"One-Word" Review: Buddy Holly Updated
Based Out Of: Memphis, Tenn.
Label: Backstreet Records, MCA Distribution

Cover, Sleeve, Record
Back, Lyrics & Credits, Record

I'm Not Strange I'm Just Like You (1980)

  1. B.I.G. T.I.M.E 3:09
  2. Love to Ride 4:15
  3. Smack Dab in the Middle 2:38 (Charlie Calhoun cover)
  4. Ain't That Some Lovin' 4:31
  5. 928 2:07 /
  6. I'm On A Roll 2:45
  7. Maybe I'm a Mockingbird 3:58
  8. Makin' It Before They Got Married 3:37
  9. When My Work Is Done 2:57
  10. I'm Not Strange (I'm Just Like You) 3:12
Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Keith Sykes - Writer, Vox, Lead & Rhythm Guitars (Jimmy Buffett, Kris Kristofferson, Rita Coolidge, John Prine, Billy Prine, )
  • John Hampton - Drums, Backing Vox, Percussion, Engineer (Todd Rundgren, Hard Rain, Todd Agnew, Mylon Fefevre, Tommy Keene,  many more)
  • Mike Brighardello - Bass, Backing Vox, Percussion (Giant, Steven Curtis, Lydia Miller, Amy Grant, Michael W Smith, Imperials,Glen Campbell, Jummy Swaggert, Alabama, Kenny Rogers, Anne Murray, Neil Diamond, Dolly Parton, Travis Tritt, Oak Ridge Boys, Billy Ray Cyrus, Emmylou Harris, Shania Twain, BJ Thomas, Jeff Foxworthy, Barry Manilow, Corey Hart, Toby Keith, Tim McGraw, Eddie Rabbitt, Lee Ann Womack, Clint Black, Van Zandt, Faith Hill  many more)
  • Mike Crews - Guitar, Backing Vox
  • Joe Hardy - Bass, Backing Vox, Engineer (Alice Cooper, ZZ Top, Ry Cooder, Georgia Satellites, Replacements, Jim Corcoran, Mylon LeFevre, Deborah Conway, CJ Chenier, Degarmo & Key. Siniestro Total, Marie Wilson, Cross Canadian Ragween, Loud Machine, Damn Quailes, Billy Gibbons, Tommy Keene, Tom Cochran, Jeff Healy Band,   many more)
  • Ed Degarmo - Organ, Engineer (Degarmo & Key, The Cause)
  • Jerene Sykes - Producer
  • Greg Ladonyi - Mixing
  • BACKING VOX/AUDIENCE ON TITLE TRACK: Terry Dane Adney, Redbeard & Sandy, Walter Dawson, Suzanne Phelps, Kay King, Trish Mitchell, John Kilzer, Stacey Parks, Bobby Grace, Harry Chittenden, Jamie Chittenden, Bobby Lane, Sky King, Jody McCarthy, Bobby Maupin, Lynn Yates, Luis Scholes, Robert Donahue, Mark & Debbie Jowers, Gerry Haas, Mary Tillerson, Tommy Jackson, White Heart, Steve Camp, Ace Cannon, Stacie Orrico many more)
  • Doug Sax - Mastering
  • Mike Reese - Mastering
  • Tom Corcoran - Photos
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this singer/songwriter. I'm guessing he's gonna be your average storyteller, unpretentious singer, that is part bar room open miker (miller lite can), part musician's musician (photo on back in the studio) trying to break the mold (based on the album title) but won't.

Album Review: The album is part Americana, Roots rock, and part revival of the style of Buddy Holly- pretty much the formula of any singer song writer trying to sound different. The only stand-outish track- and not really for good- is the album ending title track. It features what sounds like a live audience of folks with background conversational ambiance to a Blasters-like song with some yelps, whistles and claps. The audience also does a bit of  call and response with the chorus, reminding me of Chuck Berry's My Ding-a-ling live recording.

Sykes has had a long career in the music industry rollercoastering between performing and writing. He has performed solom accompanied many famous musicians, and was even in Jimmy Buffett's Coral Reefers. He has also written many songs recorded by others like The Judds, John Prine, Jerry Jeff Walker, Rosanna Cash, Guy Clark, George Thorogood, Sissy Spacek, Mitch Ryder Rodney Crowell, and he co-wrote Volcano with Jimmy Buffett. He started out in 1968 after hitchhiking to the Newport Music Festival and was inspired by Arlo Guthie's perfomance of "Alice's Restaurant Massacree." He even performed the single B.I.G. T.I.M.E on SNL in 1980, in support of this album, which was released on Tom Petty's record label.

Stand Out Track: B.I.G. T.I.M.E

Links:
Youtube (9/10 tracks, missing Mockingbird)
Wiki

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Seatrain - s/t

Name: Seatrain
Album: s/t
Year: 1970
Style: Bluesy, Roots Rock, Bluegrass
Similar Bands: Credence Clearwater, Grateful Dead, Kavaret, The Band, Fairpoint Convention
"One-Word" Review: Smokey Mountain Blues Barn Jigs
Based Out Of: Marin County, CA
Label: Capitol, EMI
Cover, Back. Record
Lyrics, Credits, Record
Seatrain (1970)
  1. I'm Willin' 3:32 (Lowell George/Little Feat cover)
  2. Song of Job 6:04
  3. Broken Morning 3:04
  4. Home to You 3:22 (Earth Opera cover)
  5. Out Where the Hills 5:48 /
  6. Waiting For Elijah 3:35
  7. 13 Questions 2:58 (single)
  8. Oh My Love 2:50
  9. Sally Goodin' 2:09
  10. Creepin' Midnight 5:20 (Carol King cover)
  11. Orange Blossom Special 5:07
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • George Martin - Producer (Beatles)
  • Larry Atamanuik - Drums, Percussion (Emmylou Harris, Hawks, Nash Ramblers, King Biscuit Boy, Paul Winter, Marksmen, Tony Rice, Peter Rowan, Mike Cross, Jon Randall, Alison Krauss, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Mallett, Continental Divide, Tim O'Brien, Jim Lauderdale, Blue Highway, Sam Bush, Johnny Saculla, Tom Dundee, Rob Ickes, Barry & Holly Tashian, Paul Craft, Bap Kennedy, John Prine, Ron Block, Trout Fishing in America, Shawn Camp, Rowan Bros, Stevens Sisters, Natalie MacMaster, Anne Feeney, Pine Mtn Railroad, Claire Lynch, Alison Brown, Bearfoot, Dierks Bentley, V-Roys, Nashville Cast, Chas Williams, Todd Burge)
  • Peter Rowan - Lead Vox, Guitar (Earth Opera, Blue Grass Boy, Muleskinner, Bill Monroe, Old & In The Gray/Way, Panama Red Riders, The Train Band, Rowans, Richard Greene, Usual Suspects, Ricky Skaggs, Art of Noise, Bela Fleck, Northern Lights,   more)
  • Lloyd Baskin - Lead Vox, Keys (Orphan)
  • Jim Roberts - Lyricist (Emmylou Harris)
  • Richard Greene - Violin, Viola, Keys. Vox (Jim Kweskin Jug Band, Muleskinner, Bill Monroe, Blue Grass Boys, Blue velvet Band, Dry City Scat Band, Grass is Greener, Great American String Band, Greene String Quartet, Blues Project more)
  • Andy Kulberg Bass, Vox, Flute (Blues Project, Sensational Guitars of Dan & Dale, Blue Velvet Band, David Soul, Daniel Kobialka, Parallax, Al Kooper, Chris Michie)
  • Bill Price - Engineer
  • Bob Cato & Friends - Photography & Design
  • Ira Friedlander - Design
  • Al Vanderberg - Photos
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but it looks like a knock-off version of the Grateful Dead, down to their logo with a boat that looks like a train in the gatefold. They look like nice enough mountaineering hippies, and i bet they did a lot of drugs. So I have a feeling this may be a proggy jam band, so focused on the music loops that it goes on forever.

Album Review: This is the immediately following, and due to contractual obligations; overlapping, band of The Blues Project. In fact, the first Sea Train album had to be released as The Blues Projects for those exact reasons. This and their first album are both named Seatrain, with the only difference is a space in the name between Sea & Train on the first record. This and their follow-up record were both produced by Beatles main man, George Martin, and this is the first post-Beatles project that he produced. They blend various genres of the time, going back to bluesy rock with Blues Project, adding in country bluegrass, fiddle band barn dance, roots rock, and some prog elements. It has a very renaissance mountain jug and string band folksy feel, but produced very well with talented musicians. Single "13 Questions," an alien abduction song from the alien's POV, broke top 50 on the charts, and has a little funk / pre-disco element to it, that reminds me a little of The Go! team.

Stand Out Track: 13 Questions

Links:

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Rave Ups (The) - Town + Country

Name: The Rave Ups
Album: Town + Country
Year: 1985
Style: Americana Country, Alt-Country
Similar Bands: Cracker, Camper Van Beethoven, Thorns, Uncle Tupelo, Del Fuegos, Blasters, Wire Train, BoDeans, Lone Justice
"One-Word" Review: Twangy Brooding Alt-Country
Based Out Of: Pittsburgh, Pa / LA, CA
Label: Fun Stuff Records
Cover, Sleeve, Record
Back, Liner Notes, Record
Town + Country (1985)
  1. Positively Lost Me 5:10 (single)
  2. Remember (Newman's Lovesong) 2:53
  3. Better World 4:42
  4. Class Tramp 3:29
  5. In My Gremlin 2:10 /
  6. Radio 5:12
  7. By The Way 3:25
  8. Not Where You're At (But Where you Will Be) 3:43
  9. You Ain't Goin' Nowhere 4:31 (Bob Dylan cover)
  10. Rave-Up/Shut Up 1:50
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Stephen Barnlard - Producer
  • Clyde Kaplan - Recording Engineer
  • Russell Nathan Castillo - Mixing Engineer
  • Bernie Grundman - Mastering
  • Terrmeister - Editing
  • Robert Fusfield - Art Direction
  • Jimmer Podrasky - Vox, Guitar (Lovin' Miserys, Jimmer)
  • Terry Wilson - Guitar, Vox (Springfield, MO All Star Band, The Dog People, Ozark Mountain Daredevils, J. Wunderle, Jimmer, Flat Creek, Giorgio Moroder, Amii Stewart, Big Trouble, Kenny Loggins, Skeletons, )
  • Tom Blatnik - Bass (Dancing Hoods, Lonsome Strangers, Whittier)
  • Timothy Jimenez. - Drums (Jimmer)
  • Sneaky Pete Kleinow - Pedal Steel Guitar (Burrito Bros, Burrito Delux, New Riders of the Purple Sage, Rick Nelson & The Stone Canyon, Sir Raleigh & The Cupons, Flying Burrito Bros, Grease Band, John Braden, Lynn Blessing, Joe Cocker, Dillard & Clark, Denny Brooks, Bill Cowsill, Eve, Carp, Delaney & Bonnie & Friends, Hedge & Donna Capers, Mother Hen, Marc Ellington, Bob Gibson, Daniel Moore, Potter St. Cloud, Don Everly, Burton & Cunico, Billy Joel, Little Feet, Cherokee, Helen reddy, Al Kooper, Barry McGuire & The Dr., Byrds, Joni Mitchelle, Crazy Horse, Little Richard, Jackson Browne, Frank Zappa, Martin Mull, Bee Gees, Yoko Ono, John Lennon  more)
Unknown-ness: I never heard of this band. Just from the cover + band name, i imagine this to be a mid 80's jangle pop band, where the name is full of energy, but the cover looks like middle america, and the back band photo on the railroad tracks with pastel highlighted clothing furthers the working man's band, complete with bolo tie and the 80's fad Pretty in Pink Duckie hat.

Album Review: So rather than jangle pop, this midwestern (Pittsburgh might as well be the midwest), this college rock band accents heavily on the slide country guitar, and american working class mentality. Aside from looking like extras from Pretty in Pink a year before its release (Podrasky was dating & had a child with Molly Ringwalks older sister, Beth), they actually were in the film (as well as Beverly Hills 90210, where Podrasky had a brief relationship with Shannon Doherty). They also touch on Roots Rock and Rockabilly ("In My Gremlin"), and their moody "Radio" reminds me of James in parts. There have been a couple incarnations of the band, as members gathered and fell off as Podrasky moved from Pitts to LA back to Pitts and then back to LA. This main and steadiest version is the band happened after Podrasky's second move LA where he worked in the mailroom of A&M records along  with the other 3 members.

Stand Out Track: By The Way

Links:

Monday, July 6, 2020

Rare Air - Hard to Beat

Name: Rare Air
Album: Hard to Beat
Year: 1987
Style: Celtic Bagpipe Instrumentals, Smooth Jazz
Similar Bands: Cheiftans, Enya, Celtic Thunder, 
"One-Word" Review: Windswept Irish Countryside
Based Out Of: Toronto, Canada
Label: Green Linnet Records
Cover, Liner Notes, Record
Back, Liner Notes, Record
Hard to Beat (1987)
  1. Tribal Rites 2:24
  2. Taxi Suite 6:10
  3. Inside Out 7:08
  4. Small as Life 5:36 /
  5. Marvin's March (For Marvin Gaye) 2:42
  6. The Waiting Room 5:38
  7. Dee Dee Diddley Bop 4:23
  8. Onward Blindly Onward 4:03
  9. Beam Me up 4:05
Album Rating (1-10): 4.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Dave Hillier - Recording, Mixing, Producer, Drum Program
  • Ellison Robertson - Cover Painting
  • Michael Foster - Cover Photos
  • Karl Martens - Cover Design & Layout
  • George Balderose - Artistic Manager
  • Pat O'Gorman - Highland Bagpipes, 'D' Flute, Biniou-koz, 'Eb' Flute, Bagpipes (City of Toronto Pipe Band, Na Cabarfeidh, Chalk Circle, Mychael Danna, Casadh An Tsugain, Howard Baer, )
  • Grier Coppins - Synth, Highland Bagpipes, Bombarde, Whistle, Bagpipes (City of Toronto Pipe Band, Na Cabarfeidh, Bernie Martin, Muchael Danna, Jaron Freeman-Fox, Al Tuck)
  • Dick Murai - Guitar, Bass, Drum Program, Bells, Vega Tenor Lute (Na Cabarfeidh)
  • Trevor Ferrier - Roto Toms, Brass Drum, Percussion, Clay Drums, Bells, Shakere, Snare Drums, Tabla, Long Drums (City of Toronto Pipe Band, Na Cabarfeidh, Jane Siberry, Pat Kilbride, Kalimba Kalimba, David Essig, Njacko Backo)
  • 'Truck Croteau - Bouzouki
  • Tom Coyne - Mastering
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but the packaging is odd, as you flip the record over, not from right to left to correctly view the back. From the cover art work, and the ransom letter font on the side A Front, and the multicultural + bagpipe cover on the back, i want to believe this is some interesting indie punk, but i believe it will be more college radio, jangley rock, based on the year. 

Album Review: This is straight up instrumental, bagpipe heavy jazzy soundscapes. There is a little Asian influence and some middle eastern theme in the music too, so it does not always just carry a Celtic feel. On this record Marvin's March & Dee Dee... are both homages to African American culture. Most of the songs feel like jigs and ceremonial songs. The instrumentation is mostly performed on old world devices. They continued to divert to alternate directions, and after this album and the departure of two members, they headed into the direction of Jazz Fusion.

Friday, July 3, 2020

Rainmakers (the) - s/t

Name: The Rainmakers
Album: s/t
Year: 1986
Style: College Radio, Jangle-Pop, Cow Punk, Roots Rock
Similar Bands: Bongos, Alarm, Barenaked Ladies, Men They Couldn't Hang, X, BoDeans
"One-Word" Review: Cringy-Embarrassing Americana Jangle Pop
Based Out Of: Kansas City, MO
Label: Mercury, PolyGram
Cover, Lyrics, Record
Back, Lyrics, Record
The Rainmakers (1986)
  1. Rockin' At the T-Dance 3:23
  2. Downstream 3:28 (single)
  3. Let My People Go-Go 3:37 (single, top 20 UK)
  4. Doomsville 4:27
  5. Big Fat Blonde 2:55 /
  6. Long Gone Long 4:08
  7. The One That Got Away 2:53
  8. Government Cheese 2:53
  9. Drinkin' On The Job 3:45
  10. Nobody Knows 3:33
  11. Information 4:46
Album Rating (1-10): 4.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Terry Manning - Producer, Engineer, Keys (Rock City, Wild Ones, Molly Hatcher, Fastway, Joe Walsh, Michael Anderson, Johnny Winter, Fabulous Thunderbirds, Disel, Al Green, Eddie Hinton, Alex Chilton, Big Star, Chris bell, Booker T & the MGs, more)
  • Thomas Hart Benton - Paintings
  • Bob Walkerhorst - Words & Music, Lead Vox, Acoustic Guitar (Steve Bob & Rich, Phantasia, Trizo 50, Lakeview Men, Walkenhorst & Porter, )
  • Steve Phillips - Words & Music Electric Guitar, Vox, (Steve Bob & Rich, Fields, Elders, Sterling Witt)
  • Alan Clutter - Words & Music 
  • Rich Ruth - Bass, Vox (Steve Bob & Rich, KC Blues Band, Webb Wilder, Lakeview Men)
  • Pat Tomek - Drums (Deco Auto, Hidden Pictures, Howard Iceberg & the Titanics, Bombpops, The Secrets, Lakeview Men, The Stringers, Jonathan Rundman) 
  • Wayne Jackson - Memphis Horns Stax artists backing band + more
  • Andrew Love - Memphis Horns Stax artists backing band + more
  • Jack Hale - Memphis Horns Stax artists backing band + more
  • Gary Topper - Memphis Horns (Royal Horns, Christeen, Gary Chapman, BA Robertson, Al Green, Little Jazz Rock Machine, Keith Richards, Toots Hibbert, Four Freshmen, Axelle Red, Dave Lisik Orch, Barbara Blue, Jay Gaunt, Wu-Tang Clan, Paul Rodgers, Michael Lington, Zeshan B)
  • Bob Ludwig - Mastering
  • Bill Levy - Art Direction
  • Bruce Allen - Design
  • Laurie Allen - Photography
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but the cover is a painting, which could mean really anything, but it errs to the side of educated, and the back photo looks like the Men they Couldn't Hang or Dexy's Midnight Runners...hoping for the Dexys style, rather than the bland soundscape

Album Review: Holy cow are most of these songs terrible! "Big Fat Blonde" and "Government Cheese" are incredibly embarrassing. The style is almost a Celtic jangle pop meets light cow punk with, to me, a very off-putting quivering main vocal that reminds me of the little i know of Barenaked Ladies. The vocal acrobatics are so cringworthy, they make Weird Al at his worst sound like Sinatra. The only restrained and listenable song is Long Gone Long...its actually a quite catchy song (the final track, Information is not bad, but the lyrics just feel rushed and specifically unrelatable, and it is about 2 min too long). Lots of themes of drinking and being suppressed permeate the album. Somehow, they were more popular in Europe, specifically Norway than the US. After breaking up the band after three albums and a hiatus, they reformed under pressure from their Norwegian popularity, and recorded a new album that went gold there in 1994. They are still together and active (2019) Their last album was in 2015. Stephen King liked them so much that he's included their lyrics in two of his books. 

Stand Out Track: Long Gone Long

Links:

Thursday, May 21, 2020

Jambalaya - High Rollers and Other Fine Ladies

Name: Jambalya
Album: High Rollers and Other Fine Ladies
Year: 1973
Style: Southern Blues, Country
Similar Bands: Ace, Allman Brothers, Lynyrd Skynyrd
"One-Word" Review: Swamp Root Country
Based Out Of: Libertyville, IL
Label: A&M
Cover, Lyrics, Record
Back, Lyrics, Record
High Rollers and Other Fine Ladies (1973)
  1. High Roller 3:30
  2. Lady Lightning 3:52
  3. Lovin' You 3:19 (single)
  4. Sweet Marie 3:22
  5. She's A Driver 3:47 /
  6. Sheriff Johnson 4:05
  7. Backwater Children 4:35
  8. Never the Wind 4:45
  9. Angry Tiger 4:48
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Peter Mac Ian - Lead Vox, Piano, Organ, Clavinet (Frane Golde, Doug Parkinson, The City)
  • Charles Ray - Vox, Drums, Percussion
  • Erik Scott - Vox, Bass (Alice Cooper, Flo & Eddie) 
  • Billy Steele - Lead Guitar, Slide Guitar, Dobro (Mo McGuire, Franne Golde, Tonio K, Alice Cooper, the Honeys, Steve Perry)
  • James Egan - Rhythm & 6-12 String Guitar
  • Thomas Jefferson Kaye - Producer
  • Roger "The Immortal" Nichols - Engineer
  • Carl E Huston - Equipment Man
  • Roy Shaffer - Equipment Man
  • Jeff "Skunk" Baxter - Pedal Steel Guitar (Four on the Floor, Steely Dan, The Best, Doobie Brothers, Louisiana Gator Boys, Texas Toad Lickers, Tupelo Bone, Ultimate Spinach, more)
  • Joe Giuliani - Engineer
  • Roland Young - Art Direction
  • Mick Haggerty - Design
  • Rod Dyer - Design
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but it reminds me of the other recently reviewed record, the Joey "King" Carrasco record, just with a rockabilly twist with the pin-up girls, dice, chips and leopard prink background. My guess for this record is swing, rockabilly tracks that probably step too far into country.

Album Review: The record is much more in line with southern country/blues rock, and does not really touch rockabilly at all. The stand out track i selected was because it sounds a lot like the FlashMan theme from Mega Man 2...so it literally stood out from the first time i heard it. Looks like this is the only release from this band, and there is not much info out there about them.

Stand Out Track: Blackwater Children

Links:
discogs
a&m corner
john katsmc5
RU Rock 70's
rate your music

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Doug & the Slugs - Music For the Hard of Hearing

Name: Doug & the Slugs
Album: Music For the Hard of Hearing
Year: 1983
Style: Pub Rock, New Wave, Roots Rock
Similar Bands: Blasters
"One-Word" Review: Witty-Whimsical-Oddball Pub-Wave
Based Out Of: Vancouver, Canada
Label: Ritdong, RCA Victor
 Cover, Lyrics, Record
Back, Lyrics, Record
Music For the Hard of Hearing (1983)

  1. If You Don't Come 4:00
  2. Nobody But Me 3:16
  3. Making It Work 3:27
  4. Take It Or Leave It 3:10
  5. St. Laurnet Summer 4:30 /
  6. Who Knows how to Make Love Stay 4:00
  7. Operator 3:00
  8. Cover of Love 3:10
  9. When the Doorbell Rings 3:20
  10. She's Looking At Me 3:00

Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:

  • Richie Cordell - Producer
  • Glen Kolotkin - Producer, Engineer
  • Ron Cote - Engineer
  • Doug Bennett - Vox, Album Design
  • Simon Kendall - Keys, Basso Profundo (Marsys Playground
  • John Burton - Elec Guitar
  • Rich Baker - Elec & Acoustic Guitars
  • Steve Bosley - Bass
  • John Wally Watson - Drums
  • Mr. Thick Productions - Producer
  • Dee Lippingwell - Photography
  • D.Baswick - Photography
  • Wayne Jordan - Artistic Interpretation 
  • Jeff Lesser - Pre-production, Arrangement ideas

Unknown-ness: I don't know this band at all, but based on the artwork & color scheme, it looks like really fun  new wave music...Even the band name & album title are quite silly. I have really high hopes for the music, based on the cover.

Album Review: So this comes across as light, silly new wave. Some songs sound like Americana Roots rock, particularly the vocals. They do an interesting, new-wavey cover of the Isley Brothers' "Nobody But Me." "Who Knows How To Make Love Stay" is a really fun bit of blue-eyed soul. Operator is a good driving Farfisa organ song, with a gruff Captain Beefheart supporting vocal. "She's Lookin At Me" is a fun piece of upbeat synth pop. D&TS were much bigger in Canada than here, with multiple to 40 hits. In their early days, they held massive themed parties wherever they could to draw up a following. To keep control of their music and releases, they made their own Ritdong label for production.  Band Namesake and vocalist Doug Bennett died in 2004 from liver cirrhosis.

Stand Out Track: Operator, Who Knows How To Make Love Stay

Links:
Wiki
Discogs
Rate Your Music
Music Ruined My Life
Canadian bands
Pique mag Obit

Friday, March 2, 2018

It's Immaterial - Life's Hard And Then You Die

Artist: It's Immaterial
Album: Life's Hard And Then You Die
Year: 1987
Style: Spoken, Roots Rock, Experimental
Similar Bands: James, The Alarm, Borghesia
One Word Review: Discordant Jazz-Theaterical Dreams
Based Out Of: Liverpool, England
Label: A&M, Virgin Records
 Life's Hard And Then You Die - Cover, Record
 Life's Hard And Then You Die - Back, Record
Life's Hard And Then You Die - Notes

Life's Hard and Then You Die
  1. Driving Away From Home (Jim's Tune) 4:12
  2. Happy Talk 5:29
  3. Rope 3:37
  4. The Better Idea 5:42
  5. Space 3:59 /
  6. The Sweet Life 4:38
  7. Festival Time 3:52
  8. Ed's Funky Diner 3:05
  9. Hang On Sleepy Town 4:02
  10. Lullaby 6:21
Album Rating (1-10): 5.5

Members & Other Bands:
Dave Bascombe - Producer
Felix Kendall - Engineer
John Campbell - vox (Yachts, La Fiancee)
Jarvis Whitehead - instruments (Branda & the Beachballs)
Dave Bates - Producer
Ross Stapleton - A&R
Jerry Harrison - Keys (Talking Heads, Tom Tom Club)
Tarrant Bailey Jr
Roddy Lorimer
Steve Wickham
Brenda Kenny
Henry Preistman (Yachts)
Gillian Miller
Merran Laginestra - Vox
Red Ranch - Art Direction & Design
Charlie Rivel - Clown on Cover
Tansy Spinks - Photographic Treatment Cover
Alastair Thain - Band Photo
Jim Lieber - Harmonica

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band, but from the dark album title, nihilistic name, scratchy clown artwork and general font choices, I'd imagine this is a hardcore, thrash band.

Album Review: “Driving Away From Home (Jim's Tune)” is a haunted country landscape tune similar to the Alarm, full of bouncy bass, echoing vocals and harmonica. The vocals are sedately spoken for the verse, and mildly sung for the chorus. The dead- gong jumps out from the background, echoing off in the distance.
“Happy Talk” kicks off with a discordant couple of notes, and quietly, whispers into a rushed, yet muted tempo. It is poetic, like many songs from James albums Laid and Seven, and the vocals are very similar in sound & style to Tim Booth. There is an over all, wind-swept sound to these songs so far. The song is long and meandering, where it can really lose the listener.
“Rope” begins with a skipping synth drum loop, and the Tim Booth style theatrical vocals continue here, supported by piano bursts and a steady bass. The chorus is very dreamy, upbeat and catchy. It slowly transitions into a Celtic jig, thanks to the violin section. A chorus of vocals supports the lead in bold, deep bursts at the end.
“The Better Idea” starts off with a windy background, and slow wood block percussion. It slowly creeks awake, stuttering and going back and forth between singing and beat poetry. It is much more a work on aestetic art than a song
“Space” begins with some mild, repetitive jungle xylophone action, and cold synth. The vocals are like an instruction manual or encyclopedic entry about space. The chorus breaks out into a cold, dark wave song, there is a little Russian Cold wave aspect here.

“The Sweet Life” is another dream-like minimal song, with held, wavering notes, somewhat operatic.  There is a little optimism in the horns at first before they squawk discordantly. The applause at the end give further suggestion of a theatrical
“Festival Time” starts out with a vibe similar to the Ewok celebration at the end of Jedi. Adding in some tribal rhythms, and flutes, but it also has periods of avant guard jazz bursts. And the song fades out with one or two remaining instruments played
“Ed's Funky Diner” has a more straightforward funky melody, a beat-snapping post-apocalyptic dance with horns and a lot of energy, comparatively to the rest of the album.
“Hang On Sleepy Town” has a slow, quiet swaying swagger with acoustic guitar and violin. The vocals glide through, painting a sad, sullen image. The farmhouse instruments slowly grow in urgency.
“Lullaby” begins with twinkling bells, and unexpectedly fast tempo in bass and guitars for a lullaby. The song is actually driving, musically, as the vocals slowly glide overtop. The lyric “It’s a shame” repeats over in the chorus. The piano and bass have an urgent quality to them, although the overall song is not that pressing. The end of the song has actual lullaby lyrics over synth instrumentations that sound like an ominous heart monitor, which paints a sad picture of a prayer for comfort in a hospital room.

Stand Out Track: Rope

Links:
Wiki
Discogs
facebook
pledge music drive (over)
allmusic
SuperDelux Edition
rate your music

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

(the) Men They Couldn't Hang - Night of A Thousand Candles~, Silvertown*

Name: The Men They Couldn't Hang
Album(s): Night of A Thousand Candles~, Silvertown*
Year(s): 1985~, 1989*
Style: Celtic Folk, Roots Rock
Similar Bands: Black 47, Pogues, Levellers, James, Bluebells, Midnight Oil
"One-Word" Review: Celtic Hoe-Down On A Prog-Train
Based Out Of: London/Southampton England
Label: Demon~, Imp Records~, Jive*, Silvertone*, RCA*, BMG*
 Night of A Thousand Candles - Cover & Record
Night of A Thousand Candles - Back & Record
Silvertown - Cover & Record
Silvertown - Back & Record

Night of A Thousand Candles (1985)
  1. The Day After 2:41
  2. Jack Dandy 2:24
  3. A Night To Remember 3:14
  4. Johnny Come Home 2:26
  5. Green Fields of France 6:29 /
  6. Iron Masters 4:11
  7. Hush Little Baby 4:22
  8. Walkin' Talkin 2:25
  9. Kingdom Come 3:09
  10. Scarlet Ribbons 5:55
Silvertown (1989)
  1. Rosettes 3:34
  2. A Place in the Sun 3:07
  3. Homefires 4:02
  4. Diamonds, Gold & Fur 2:39
  5. Company Town 5:42 /
  6. Lobotomy Gets "Em Home 3:22
  7. Blackfriars Bridge 4:06
  8. Rain, Steam & Speed 3:56
  9. Down all the Days 2:41
  10. Hellfire & Damnation 2:42
  11. El Vaquero 2:38
Album Rating (1-10): ~6.0
*6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Tom Keane - Bagpipes~ (Pogues, Clannad, Clancy Bros, Nomad)
Shanne Hasler (Bradley) - Bass, Flute~ (The Launderettes, The Nipple Erectors, Wreckless Eric, The Chicken Family)
Chimp Carver - Design, Artwork~
Jon Odgers - Percussion, Drums~* (Catch 22, Swill & The Swaggerband)
Nick Robbins - Engineer, Mixing~
Graham Sharpe - Guitar~
Paul Simmonds - Guitar, Bouzouki, Keys~Mandolin* (Catch 22, Liberty Cage, Naomi Bedford, Swill & The Swaggerband, Lob)
Tony Poole - Management, Producer~
Tim Young - Mastering~
Harold Burgen - Production~
David Howell - Photography~
Phillip Chevron - Producer~
Lindsey Lowe - Trumpet~*
Stefan Cush - Vox, Guitar~*(The Feral Family)
Philip Odgers "Swill" - Vox, Guitar, Tin Whistle, Melodica~* (Catch 22 Liberty Cage, Swill & The Swaggerband, Crash Alley)
Tom O'Grady - band name
Mick Glossop - Producer, Engineer*
Nick Muir - Piano, Accordion, (Fire Next Time, Bedrock)*
Ricky McGuire - Bass (UK Subs, Swill & The Swaggerband, Fits)*
Bobby Valentino - Fiddle (Fabulous Poodles, Mike Oldfeld, Any Trouble, Nick Lowe, They Style Council, Billy Bragg)
Phil Smee - Sleeve Design*
Keith Morris - Photography*
Kris Heuer - Crest Design*

Unknown-ness: I had never heard of these guys before buying these two albums, independently of one another. I liked the cold, industrial artwork on the first album I bought (which was their first album), and before listening to it, I found the other album, picking it up because of the name recognition. Both albums make the band seem to be a real blue collar, working man’s band, and I imagine the contents to be something close to Big Country.

Album Review: The band really broke out onto the music scene in 85 in a big way with their first album, and a strong supportive backing from John Peel. They have basically been active ever since, with a few lineup changes, and a few breaks, but they have recently put out a new album based on fan supported pledges. They will co headline festivals in the UK, as they are still a somewhat well-known act.

“The Day After” starts with a pulsing, driving drum beat, and grows into a folky hoe-down, complete with banjo. It reminds me a little of James. In the chorus, there is a chanting group of vocals supporting the lead.
“Jack Dandy” begins with more jangely guitars, and grows into a driving Celtic drinking sing-a-long.  The bouncy bass line really drives the song home in the end.
“A Night To Remember” was a single from the album. And it begins with a more country-ish tone in melody and vocal inflection. The acoustic guitar carries the rural, mountainside atmospheric song. This song too, becomes quite jangely towad the end.
“Johnny Come Home” is a bouncy three acoustic chord stomping ballad, employing punk rock start and stop time signatures (I Fought The Law).
“Green Fields of France” is a cover of an Eric Bogle song, and is a slow, side-to-side  traditional (drinking?) sounding Celtic song that reflects on a World War 1 victim. The vocals become doubled as the song gains emotional steam. It cycles back for a second verse with a bit more frustration behind the vocals.

“Iron Masters” was a single from the album, which had to be edited for radio play in the UK because it referenced Margaret Thatcher in poor taste at the song’s end with “Oh that Iron Bastard, She still gets her way.” It begins quietly, with just the guitar and story sung vocals. The marching drums come into the song, and the bold, proud Irish sounding chorus takes over. The tempo grows to a sprint, and the song finds a second life rather quickly as an aggressive barn dance. There is a bit of a breakdown with trumpets before it regains its pace and drive.
“Hush Little Baby” begins with the acoustic guitar quietly being played for the first minute. Then a drum crashes down and a melodica accompanied oompa/gypsy beat picks up with an altered, yet familiar Hush Little Baby melody. The song is a bleak and dark interpretation of the nursery rhyme.
“Walkin' Talkin” starts off with a rollicking vocal melody that can only be categorized as a bit of Irish Rockabilly. The song just charges on forward non-stop through the entire hoe-down of a song.
“Kingdom Come” features the same deep chorus of vocals, but this time, they are filtered through an echo, cave-like effect. From there, the song takes on a traditional, driving Celtic sing-song melody.
“Scarlet Ribbons” begins with a flute, and is followed up with a mandolin, and the song progresses like a renaissance era minstrel story-ballad. But the vocal style is that of a nationally proud battle crier. This falls into the emotional remembrance genre of song.

“Rosettes” begins with twinkling sounds from a mandolin, then blasts off in some sort of dark Celtic Punk, that actually sounds a little like Midnight Oil. The vocals are a little angrier.
“A Place in the Sun” was a single. The vocals are a little calmer and clearer. But there is still a very strong Celtic musical backbone to the song. The song does not sound all that particularly catchy or stand out-ish. It feels like an original track from a band headlining a small town Irish festival.
“Homefires” steps back from the angry, energetic vocals and is a memorial/roots song. The marching tempo picks up after a little bit, breathing more life and multiple vocals into the song, but it is has become a traditional sounding drinking sing-a-long.
“Diamonds, Gold & Fur” starts with a fast drum beat, and a piano that takes a page out of Squeeze’s playbook, but this is a bouncy honky-tonk produced pub rock song. The song employs a harmonica for the short instrumental break. The song sounds like a combination of the best parts of the Blasters, and a little like John Wesley Harding (Wesley Stace).
“Company Town” steps back into the Celtic roots culture with a slow ballad as it beginning.  It sings of corporate rule over blue collar life in a small, company owned town. The mood of the song is both longing, nostalgia and hatred in the same breath. The pace of the song slowly picks up from the beginning, but it never becomes too crazy nor stays quiet. This is a solid, respectful song, and is explanatory of where the band excels best: capturing life and sentiment from the oppressed working class

“Lobotomy Gets "Em Home” starts with a bass hook as the cement of the melody. If the song was produced differently, it would be a straight forward punk song with its rollercoastering bass line. But with the style of the era that the band was involved in, this song is just a rollicking, driving folk song. Even the vocals are angry and energetic.
“Blackfriars Bridge” is another slower, historical Celtic roots song. This one feels much more airy and it starts out as new age. Like all the similar songs before it, the band is never just ok with leaving a song as a quiet ballad. They always bring up a rock element, and kick in extra energy and emotion. And this song in particular builds up in vocal and instrumental stress to the very end.
“Rain, Steam & Speed” was a single from the album that keeps its roots in Celtic melody, but with a slightly funky bass line. The verse is a little quiet, but the formulaic chorus holds the harmonizing hooks. The song, like many hints on this album are very prog oriented, although there can be a fine line between Celtic style music and prog rock.
“Down all the Days” begins with a jangely guitar, then like a chugging train, the song takes off, fueled by the drum beat. These songs are simple tempos to carry out fun barn dances or hoe-downs as banditing passengers recalling better times on a cargo train.
“Hellfire & Damnation” is a Kinks-like swampy, staggering southern tinged brass-jug band’s alcohol dream. It features stand out horns akin to Dixie-land jazz. And the vocals are again similar to Glenn Tilbrook of Squeeze. As if it were played in a nearly empty barroom, a trickle of applause stumbles in at the end.
“El Vaquero” ends the record with a wispy, rainy moonlit graveyard anthem for a minute and half. Then the music transports the listener to a 1800’s vaudevillian bar for a few paces, until it reaches the back room for a brief moment, where a sinister Dracula character lays. The listener is then returned to the graveyard, to plod along through to the end of this very visual instrumental.

Stand Out Tracks: ~The Day After
*Diamonds, Gold & Fur

Links:
Website
Wiki
Discogs
New Album's Pledge site
Allmusic
Myspace
John Peel