***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 3Tape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3Tape. Show all posts

Sunday, February 28, 2021

Velvet Crush - Teenage Symphonies to God

Name: Velvet Crush
Album: Teenage Symphonies to God
Year: 1994
Style: Power Pop
Similar Bands: Posies, Redd Kross, Matthew Sweet, Teenage Fanclub, Raspberries, Big Star, Cliff Hillis, Connells, Ass Ponys, Young Guv, Soul Asylum, Fig Dish
"One-Word" Review: Streamlined Power Pop
Based Out Of: Providence, Rhode Island
Label: Sony Music Entertainment, Sony 550 Music, Creation Records, Epic
Tape & Cover
Tape
Teenage Symphonies to God (1994)
  1. Hold Me Up 2:58 (single)
  2. My Blank Pages 3:29
  3. Why Not Your Baby 4:48 (Gene Clark, single)
  4. Time Wraps Around You 4:12 (single)
  5. Atmosphere 3:52
  6. #10 2:22 /
  7. Faster Days 4:36 (Stephen Duffy)
  8. Something's Gotta Give 5:50 (Matthew Sweet)
  9. This Life is Killing Me 2:49 (single)
  10. Weird Summer 3:51
  11. Star Trip 4:17
  12. Keep On Lingerin' 2:29
Album Rating (1-10): 8.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Ric Menck - Drums (Choo Choo Train, Bag-O-Shells, Springfields, Reverbs, Paint Set, Pop the Balloon, Liz Phair, Marianne Faithful, Tyde, Matthew Sweet, Drats!, Big Maybe, Beatnik Filmstars, Eleventh Day Dream, Shoes, Matt Allison, Gigolo Aunts, Duffy, Kyle Vinvent, Aimee Mann, Two Lips, Dan Castellaneta, Andrew Sandocal, Angie Heaton, Mia Doi Todd, Pernice Brothers, Lori Meyers, Novenas, Quarter After, Stupid Cupids, Tommy Keene,  )
  • Paul Chastain - Vox, Bass (Choo Choo Train, Bag-O-Shells, Springfields, Nines, Stupid Cupids, Matthew Sweet, New Ruins, Big Maybe, Tomy Keene, Beowulf Umbrella, Eleventh Dream Day, Matt Allison, Duffy, Unbunny, Shalini, Three Hour Tour, Wicked Walls)
  • Jeffery Borchardt/Underhill - Guitar (Honeybunch, White Sisters, Springfields)
  • Mitch Easter - Producer
  • Stephen Duffy - Writer, Harmony Vox (Duran Duran, Lilac Time, Dr. Calculus, Me Me Me, The Devils, Hawks, Subterranean hawks, Vanity Project, Tin Tin, Idha, Saint Etienne, SW9, Robbie Williams, Michele Stodart, Diane Tell, Slingbacks, Nigel Kennedy, many)
  • Lloyd Puckitt - Engineer
  • Greg Leisz - Pedal Steel Guitar, Dobro (Charles Lloyd, Marvels, Funky Kings, All Star Band, Watkins Family Hour, Works Progress Administration, Rosie Flores, Jack Tempchin, Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, Todd Snider, Lucinda Williams, Dwight Yoakam, Syd Straw, k.d. Lang, Marshall Crenshaw, Matthew Sweet, Crash Test Dummies, Shawn Colvin, John Wesley Harding, Roxette, Chuck Prophet, Bash & Pop, Bad Religion, Percy Sledge, Pam Tillis, Julia Fordham, Bruce Cockburn, Joni Mitchell, Grant lee Buffalo, Jayhawks, Ricky Martin, Smashing Pumpkins, Susanna Hoffs, Joe Cocker, Beach Boys, Wilco, Dave Koz, Paula Cole, Fiona Apple, Gillian Welch, Beck, Lincoln, Murmurs, Whiskeytown, Adam Sandler, Vonda Shepard, Sheryl Crow, Randy newman, Tiger Army, Meshell Ndegeocello, Melissa Ethridge, Tonio K, Ventures, Brian McKnight, Wallflowers many
  • John Chumbris - Harmony Vox (Glory Fountain, Pinetops, Slickee Boys, Alaska, Jolene, Stratocrusier, Coronet Blue, Holden Richards, Peter Holsapple, Chris Stamey)
  • Lynn Blakey - Harmony Vox (Glory Fountain, Holiday, Tres Chicas, Someloves, Pinetops, Caitlin Cary, Greg Hawks, Tremblers, Alejandro Escovedo, Chatham County Line, Evil Wiener, Holden Richards, Two Dollar Pistols, Jeff Hart, American Aquarium, Kenny Roby, Jeffrey Dean Foster, Chris Stamley, Stratocruiser, 
  • Mike Denneen - Flute, Strings, Chamberlin (Busload of Nuns, True Confessions, Big Dapper, Pat on the Back, Til' Tuesday, Lord Boy, Walkers, Blackwells, Letters to Cleo, Aimee Mann, Gigolo Aunts, Gus, Expanding Man, Jen Trynin, Talking to Animals, Buddy Judge, Merrie Amsterburg, Shelia Divine, Averi, Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Loveless, Senor Hapy, Click Five many)
  • Wes Lachot - (Choo Choo Train, Flat Duo Jets, Swamis, Chris Stamey, Flying Pigs, PJ O[Connell, Fan Modine, Matt Barrett, Springfields, Gladhands, Holden Richards, Peter Holsapple, American Aquarium, Stars Explode, Jon Shain)
  • Greg Calbi - Mastering
  • Scott Litt - Mixing
Unknown-ness: I got this advanced cassette copy for a dollar back in the mid-late 90's, probably based on hearing their named dropped on MTV or read about them in CMJ Music Monthly, but i don't recall what the band sounds like. From the name & cover art, i imagine they are a pop band with garage and psych tendencies, as there is a 60's indie vibe to the art work, and velvet crush could be seen as either a clothing type worn in the psych world, or as appreciation of the Velvet Underground. On the other hand, with the album name mentioning god, and their small label name Creation, they might have underlying (or even outwardly) religious messages in the tracks. Is this Christian Rock?

Album Review: From the first couple of notes, they put out a strong garage power pop band vibe, with a little extra fuzz and feedback to keep one foot in the marketable alternative genre. They prove their versatility, with big Urge Overkill guitars on some tracks and alt-country slide guitar on others. My Blank Pages has a jangley electric hook that sounds like Michael Jackson's "Black or White."

Velvet Crush was formed in the Chicago-Champlain region as Menck & Chastain we friends between other bands and a few projects of their own. They moved to Rhode Island, where Velvet Crush was eventually formed. On the strength of a Teenage Fanclub cover, they found success with their first record, produced by Matthew Sweet, in the UK. This is their second record, first break-through for the US and first of two produced by Mitch Easter (named for Brian Wilson's description of SMiLe). They recorded up through 2004, but continue to perform reunion shows on occasion.

Stand Out Track: This Life is Killing Me, Weird Summer

Links:

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Underground (the) - Psychedelic Visions

Name: The Underground
Album: Psychedelic Visions
Year: 1967
Style: Psych, Garage Rock, Surf
Similar Bands: Led Zeppelin, Rolling Stones, Blue Cheer, Zappa, Blue Magoos, Count Five
"One-Word" Review: Anonymous SurfPsychGarageBlues freakouts
Based Out Of: a recording studio in the US
Label: Berkshire, Stereo Tape Corp
Cover, Cassette
Cassette

Psychedelic Visions (1967)
  1. Turn On Your Love Light 2:31 (Bobby Bland cover)
  2. (We Ain't Got) Nothin' Yet 2:20 (Blue Magoos cover)
  3. Psychedelic Visions 2:15 (surf version of Greensleeves)
  4. Mind Jammer 3:00
  5. The Warper 2:44 (St. James Infirmary instrumental) /
  6. Psychotic Reaction 2:54 (Count Five cover)
  7. Shout 2:55 (Isley Brothers cover)
  8. Psychedelic Dream 2:13
  9. Psychotic Vibrations 2:15
  10. Tobacco Road 2:05 (John D Loudermilk cover)
Album Rating (1-10): 8.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Merk Currie - Writer, Arranger
  • Jerry Kennedy - Producer
  • Roy Dea - Producer
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but it has all the right words & imagery to be a hippy psych band from the 60's. Usually these sorts of bands that went under the radar, never getting main stream attention came off lighter and not at all like what their packaging was trying to sell. This may or may not be the case. 

Album Review: The album is a great blend of echoey psych garage rock with some surf elements and heavy reliance on the Hammond organ. Five original instrumentals and five covers make up the record. The vocals could be compared to James Brown or a gospel preacher at times. The info of the actual band is hazy and nearly impossible to pin down, and minimal internet help with the bulk being reseller websites. The writer & arranger name Merk Currie is possibly fabricated to avoid listing any real credits (thus royalties), which classifies this as an exploitation album: exploiting the session players as well as the genre. From everything I've seen, this cassette has the track listing backwards...side 1 is side B on the record, and vice versa.

Stand Out Track: We Ain't Got Nothing Yet

Links:

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

School of Fish - s/t

Name: School of Fish
Album: s/t
Year: 1991
Style: Jangle Pop, College Rock
Similar Bands: REM, Redd Kross, Dillon Fence, James, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Collective Soul
"One-Word" Review: Slacker Pop
Based Out Of: LA, CA 
Label: Capitol
Cover, Lyrics, Tape
Lyrics, Notes, Tape
School of Fish (1991)
  1. Intro 1:42
  2. 3 Strange Days 5:12 (single)
  3. Talk Like Strangers 3:37
  4. Deep End 4:53
  5. King of the Dollar 2:47 (promo single b-side)
  6. Speechless 4:56 /
  7. Wrong 4:28 (promo single)
  8. Rose Colored Glasses 3:43
  9. Under the Microscope 4:34
  10. Fell 2:50
  11. Euphoria 5:45
Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • John Porter - Producer
  • Dave "Death" Pine - Engineer
  • Ken Paulakovich - 2nd Engineer
  • Lee Manning 2nd Engineer
  • Alison Donald - A&R Direction
  • Valerie Pack - A&R Coordination
  • Jon Blaufarb - Legal Representation, Spiritual Guidance
  • Sandy Tanaka - Mgmt
  • Josh Clayton-Felt - Lead Vox, Guitars, Drum Box (Francis X and the Bushmen, Twig, Jewel)
  • Michael Ward - Lead Guitars, Vox, Drum Box (John Hiatt, Wallflowers, Ben Harper, Innocent Criminals, Francis X and the Bushmen, Gogol Bordello, Guilty Dogs, Stripsearch, Harry Connick Jr, Lenny Laks, Mad Buffalo, Joel Simpson Quartet, Pinetop Perkins, Duck See Goose, Bo Dollis & Wild Magnolias, Jesse Johnson, Jude, Shawn Mullins, Jessica Riddle, Fastball, David Maxwell, Stripsearch, Gavin DeGraw, Eric Bibb, Avril Lavigne, Tracy Bonham, Shelby Lynne, Nerina Pallot, Five for Fighting, Anna Tsuchiya, Shannon Noll, Mikal Blue, Tom Freund, Kris Allen, Vanessa Da Mata, Glen Campbell, Sara Bareilles,  Cuntz, Sabrina Carpenter)
  • Dominic Nardini - Bass
  • Michael Petrak - Drums (Samiam)
  • Tommy Steele - Art Direction
  • Heather Van Haaften - Design
  • Dennis Kelley - Photographer
Unknown-ness: I got this cassette back in High School at some point, but i don't remember why or what they sound like. Probably heard a song of theirs on Post Modern PST or 103.9 WDRE, and saw their cassette in a cheap bin, alas, i don't know what's on it. From the muddled guitar smashing image, wacky "Shadowy Men" sorta font, i'm going to guess this is meandering jangle pop.

Album Review: So as soon as I saw the name of the second track, and it started playing I at least remember the song 3 Strange Days very well. It did, in fact, make its way onto a mix tape when i was in high school. The rest of the album falls in line with what was popular for early 90's college radio pop. Half classic rock, half power pop, with a little psychedelic, drawn out musical support, and a lot of loopy, meandering melodies that come off as more slacker rock than pure, clean pop. Singer Clayton-Felt was diagnosed with Cancer and passed away in 2000. King of the Dollar breaks down into the lyric and guitar riff of "I Can't Get No Satisfaction."

Stand Out Track: 3 Strange Days

Links:
Wiki

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Material Issue - Destination Universe

Name: Material Issue
Album: Destination Universe
Year: 1992
Style: Power Pop, Alternative
Similar Bands: Teenage Fanclub, Velocity Girl, Young Guv, Gin Blossoms, Jellyfish, Tragically Hip, Big Star, Replacements, Smithereens
"One-Word" Review:
Based Out Of: Chicago, IL
Label: Mercury. BMI, Polygram
Cover, Liner Notes, Lyrics, Tape
Lyrics, Tape
Destination Universe (1992)
  1. What Girls Want 3:55 (single)
  2. When I Get This Way (Over You) 4:09
  3. Next Big Thing 3:12
  4. Who Needs Love 2:52
  5. Destination You 2:49
  6. Everything 3:48
  7. Ballad of a Lonely Man 3:27 /
  8. Girl From Out of This World 3:56 (cover of their own song, Crazy)
  9. So Easy to Love Somebody 2:49
  10. Don't You Think I Know 3:47
  11. The Loneliest Heart 2:38
  12. Whole Lotta You 2:52
  13. If Ever You Should Fall 2:41
Album Rating (1-10): 8.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Ted Ansani - Bass, Vox (Bradburys, Teenage Frames)
  • Jim Ellison - Guitar, Lead Vox, Writing (Green, Slink Moss & the Flying Aces, Ides of March)
  • Mike Zelenko - Drums (Green, the Darlings, The Ladies & Gentlemen, Shoes, Specula, Starball, Local H)
  • Jeff Murphy - Production, Engineer, Mixing
  • Ron Staley - 2nd Engineer
  • Andy Wallace - Mixing
  • Howie Weinberg - Mastering
  • Bob Skoro - A&R Direction
  • Michael Bays - Art Direction
  • Michael Klotz - Design
  • Jeffrey Evan Kwatinetz - Mgmt
  • Caroline Greyshock - Photos
Unknown-ness: I got this tape some time back in the mid 90's, but have no recollection what Material Issue sounds like. From the font and era, i imagine it is some psych grungy appropriation of classic rock, just updated. I probably saw them on 120 minutes or heard them on post modern PST radio and then saw the album in a discount or cut out bin and took a chance. And despite having a tape player for many years, this never made the rotation, and i don't know the songs at all.

Album Review: So it is exactly what fits the early 90's jangley garage rock with classic rock and psychedelic tenancies, but in their special case, smooth & clear power pop vocals, i hear hints of the Bee Gees, Jellyfish, and especially Gin Blossoms in the vocals. Singer Ellison committed suicide in June 1996. They have reformed under popular demand as Material Reissue, even once with Marshall Crenshaw as guest vocalist, and there is a documentary in the works slated for 2021.

Stand Out Track: Who Needs Love, Destination You

Links:
jim ellison obit reflection in 2018

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Straitjacket Fits - Hail

Name: Straitjacket Fits
Album: Hail
Year: 1988
Style: Alternative, Jangle Pop
Similar Bands:Mighty Lemon Drops, Dillon Fence, Trashcan Sinatras, Teenage Fanclub, Flowerhead, The Chills, The Clean, Superchunk, Game Theory,
One Word Review: Tedious Jangley Melodies
Based Out Of: Dunedin, New Zealand
Label: Flying Nun Records, Rough Trade
Tape, Cover
Tape

Hail (1988)
  1. Dialing A Prayer 3:53
  2. All That That Brings 4:17
  3. Hail 4:05
  4. Sparkle That Shines 3:57
  5. She Speeds 4:05/
  6. So Long, Marianne 3:59 (Leonard Cohen cover)
  7. Grate 3:18
  8. Fabulous Things 3:38
  9. Live in One Chord 3:10
  10. This Taste Delight 4:21
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Terry Moore - Producer, Engineer (The Chills)
David Wood - Bass (Swamp Thing, Teens, Your Demise, Julian Lennon, Working With Walt, The Cruxshadows)
John Collie - Drums, Percussion (Doublehappys, The Weeds)
Andrew Brough - Guitar, Keys (The Orange, Bike, Mink, Blue Meanies)
Shayne Carter - Guitar, Vox, Keys (Bored Games, Dimmer, Lame & Sorry, TheAdults, Doublehappys, Weeds, The Chills, Bic Runga, Tha Feelstyle, Die! Die! Die! Peter Jefferies, Alistar Galbraith)
Jan Hellreigel - Backing Vox (Working With Walt, Cassandras Ears, The Verlaines, Push Push, Mutton Birds,

Unknown-ness: I heard of this band back in the early 90's, but didn't really know what I was buying when I got this tape for 20 cents. To this day, I can't recall their sound. I want to say that this is Americana alt-folk, and from the cover art, I would assume they are like Let's Active. Or perhaps it will be fuzzy & buzzy with feedback and a general muddled, alternative, slacker, wall-of-sound production, like My Bloody Valentine or early Smashing Pumpkins.

Album Review: Straitjacket Fits were a very popular band in their home country of New Zealand (Dunedin). Exporting their music and tour seemed like it would help them take off internationally, but they never gained the popularity in the US at least. Typical of the alternative era, if only a few years early, they combine psych dream pop with fuzzy, organic over-production, reminding me a little of early Superchunk. The two battling creative forces of Carter (brash, hard) & Brough (similar to Ian Broudie/Lightning Seeds) brought balance to this record, but was too much for Brough who bowed out after they were done touring for their second album. Carter kept the band going a couple more albums, and a move to California, but were done by 1994. Like most bands, they have done a few reunions (but all without Brough) and were inducted in the NZ music hall of fame, with "She Speeds" being rated the #9 NZ song of all time. Wood passed in 2010, and Brough passed in 2020
“Dialing A Prayer” starts with an urgent guitar and swaying bass line. The swaying nature takes over, and the boozy, wobbling melody takes the lead. Nasally, raucous vocals are added with a juvenile confidence. The song feels like a waltz, ready to topple over at any moment. The small hook in the title phrase chorus is catchy, but it is buried beneath a lot of fuzzy production
“All That That Brings” starts out simply with some jangly guitars and a soaring John Easdale-like vocal. The song feels kind of the same as the opening track, but it feels like it is trying to get somewhere that it can never reach, or chooses not to reach. It just meanders in jangly territory with half melodies and sleepy production.
“Hail” follows a dark jangly loop at the beginning. The vocals are layered in harmony, but the melodies are tedious and don’t really build anywhere. They just kind of exist in a free flowing format without a roadmap to guide the song.
“Sparkle That Shines” has a head nodding tempo built on shuffling chords and percussion. The vocals tap into a little psych-brit-pop sensibility. Still, the song is very jangly, and feels like it is overdubbed with a hundred layers of instruments.
“She Speeds” was a single, and ranked #9 in one poll of the top 100 NZ songs. The jangly guitar is shrouded in fuzz, as a delicate melody is introduced. Vocals slowly glide over the growing song, with an echo that is again, slightly psychedelic. After the first chorus, the song feels like it is going to go into a new direction, but it quickly dies down, preferring the initial verse. But there are lasts of vocal sections, playing intermittently with quiet, melancholy whiny vocal sections. There is a small section of the chorus that is catchy, but there is too much distraction to maintain quality interest.

“So Long, Marianne” is a Leonard Cohen cover. It begins with a layered acoustic guitar and side to side sway of a light, care free nature. The backing vocals are female, by a guest musician, and there is a certain Christmas-y vibe to the choral production.
“Grate” begins with a buzzy guitar alarm sound, and a deep, dark bass line. The whispy vocals add the slightest of change to the song, which might as well be an grueling, driving instrumental with vocals added as a second thought.
“Fabulous Things” has a meandering guitar over a new age/renaissance style guitar, and a minstrel percussive tempo. The vocals are sullen and reserved. But again, the song is pretty one dimentional. It doesn’t change or offer alternate atmosphere than a slow, down trodden stotyline with hints of bright strings in the background.
“Live in One Chord” is all fuzz and chaos in the beginning. What sounds like a drum machine propels the song into a driving, buzzing glam pop song. The song winds down slowly after a wall of buzzing sound carries the song to the end.
“This Taste Delight” is a quiet song at the beginning with mosquito buzzing effects and a tedious melody that is not that fun to follow. Acoustic guitars set the pace over haunting moans and creeking effects in the background. It grows, and the sections seem to come together following a steady tempo but still doing their own thing. The instruments stop, allowing the vocals to act out the remaining few notes of the album.

Stand Out Track: Sparkle That Shines

Links:
NZ Herald
Interview on Youtube
Audio Culture NZ
Flying Out
top 100 NZ songs

Spit - Thrust And Disgust

Name: Spit
Album: Thrust And Disgust
Year: 1987
Style: Grunge-Core, Humours, Indie
Similar Bands: Jello Biafra / Dead Kennedys, Christian Lunch, Dead Milkmen, Residents, They Might Be Giants
One Word Review: Growley-Smutty-Synth
Based Out Of: Philadelphia, PA
Label: a + r

Thrust And Disgust - Cover, Tape
Thrust And Disgust (1987)

  1. Distress 3:16
  2. Tear You Apart 2:57
  3. Givin' Up 2:57
  4. Skin Tight 4:29
  5. They Got You 3:19/
  6. World Torture Me 2:19
  7. Football Star 3:22
  8. Weakling 4:05
  9. Sorry Out Of Tofu 2:02
  10. Do You Wanna Whip Me 5:53
Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:
Vinnie Spit - Vox, Guitar, Producer, Cover (Batz Without Flesh)
Mc Clay - Cover 
Myers - Cover

Unknown-ness: I never heard of Spit. Just got this in a pile of gothic / dark wave / industrial tapes, so I can only conclude it is one of the same like Sisters of Mercy.

Album Review: Smut and lewdness seem to describe singer / artist Vinnie Spit, the self-proclaimed “Godfather of Smut.” Although this first album of his is relatively tame compared to his later compositions, shreds of indecency pop up in Football Star and Do You Wanna Whip Me. A Philadelphia native, he has gained minor popularity thanks to hometown radio station WMMR in 1989, and John Peel in England in 1988. He now lives in California, and still plays out live as of 2016.

“Distress” begins with a kick drum, and a discordant bass line. Guitar and a drum machine add in to form an aggressive, growley vocal style and driving song. The chorus finds a progressive rolling bass line under more raspy, growling vocals. The song then repeats, starting over with the first bass line. The song does build and recover nicely, continuing to push the momentum forward through the three distinct sections.
“Tear You Apart” starts with the drum machine, and dark tonal guitars. The speedy bass bounces all over the  place, and the growling vocals drag the song along. The bridge, into the chorus used a dark wave, crystal synth tone. The vocals sound like a rougher Rodney Anonymous from Dead Milkmen.
“Givin' Up” is a little more mysterious and new wavey, perhaps a little like the Residents. Drum machine and synth are the primary elements here. There is a drum machine breakdown with radio transmitted vocals spoken over top.
“Skin Tight” is an instrumental that begins with drum machine hand claps, and a slinky mysterious bass line. The drum machine is given a few solos that remind me simultaneously of early They Might Be Giants, Run DMC, and Harold Faltermeyer’s Axel F. The track, although it carries the bass and drum beat as a constant get a little jazzy at the end.
“They Got You” is a driving punk song, more straightforward than anything on the album yet. Looping guitar and bass sections and steady basic drum beat. The chorus is a little too basic, repetitive and embarrassing.

“World Torture Me” has a slow, jazzy start. It reminds me a little of a skatty Tom Waits song. It also reminds me of some of They Might Be Giants early b-sides, particularly Counterfeit Fake era b-sides.
“Football Star” starts off as a looping, repeating guitar driven song. The vocals ae very clear, and makes a juvenile, humorous commentary on football players, and their sexuality. It has a similar tone to Butt Trumpet songs. Overall, it is a pretty catchy song.
“Weakling” kick drum machine begins this track, followed by a bass heavy, stutter-stepping tempo. The vocals are even gruffer than usual. The song never diverges from the stumbling tempo, and the song grows boring pretty fast.
“Sorry Out Of Tofu” as a very Devo, new wave tempo and melody, featuring a rattling drum machine and building progression.
“Do You Wanna Whip Me” starts with non-melodic drum machine beats, and swirls up into progressive and spooky synth melody. It is anxious and nervous musically, but confident and subservient lyrically. The instrumental section features some soaring electric guitar and other synth effects, before transitioning back into the building verse melody. 

Stand Out Track: Football Star

Links:
allmusic

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Sisters of Mercy - A Slight Case of Overbombing: Greatest Hits Volume One

Name: Sisters of Mercy
Album: A Slight Case of Overbombing: Greatest Hits Volume One
Year: 1993
Style: Goth, Dark Wave, Industrial
Similar Bands: Fad Gadget, KMFDM, Jesus & Mary Chain, Iggy Pop, Depeche Mode, Nitzer Ebb, Borghesia
"One-Word" Review: Bleak Factory Rhetoric
Based Out Of: Leeds, UK
Label: Elektra, Warner Music UK
 A Slight Case of Overbombing: Greatest Hits Volume 1 - Tape & Cover & Notes
 A Slight Case of Overbombing: Greatest Hits Volume 1 - Tape, Lyrics

A Slight Case of Overbombing: Greatest Hits Volume 1 (1993)
  1. Under The Gun
  2. Temple of Love (1992)
  3. Vision Thing
  4. Detonation Boulevard
  5. Doctor Jeep
  6. More
  7. Lucretia My Reflection
  8. Dominion / Mother Russia
  9. This Corrosion
  10. No Time to Cry
  11. Walk Away
  12. Body & Soul
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Andrew Eldritch (Andy Taylor) - Vox (Sisterhood, Sarah Brightman)
Gary Marx (Mark Pearman) - Guitar (Ghost Dance)
Doktor Avalanche - drum machine
Craig Adams - Bass (Sisterhood, The Mission, Colorsound, Expelaries, Spear of Destiny, The Alarm, The Cult, The Vaynes, Theater of Hate)
Ben Gunn (Ben Matthews) - Guitar
Wayne Hussey - Guitar (Dead or Alive, The Sisterhood, The Mission, Hambi & The Dance, Quadra, Walkie Talkies)
Patricia Morrison - Bass (Gun Club)
Jim Steinman - Producer
Larry Alexander - Producer
Tony James - Bass (Sique Sique Sputnik)
Tim Bricheno - Guitar (All About Eve, XC-NN)
Andreas Bruhn - Guitar (Doc Cheng, Earthbound, Favola, Fourth INC, MCV, MLB Project, Max Melvin, Miller & Floyd, Newman & Reece, Shadow Queens, Low Riders, Upserver)
Adam Pearson - Guitar
Boyd Steemson - Manager
John Perry - Guitars
Maggie Reilly - Vox
Ofra Haza - Vox
Terri Nunn - Vox (Berlin)
Andrea White - Illustration
Billie Hughes - Producer
Ian Stanley - Producer
Roxanne Seeman - Writer
Dave Allen - Mixing & Producer

Unknown-ness: I might have heard of them in passing before, but I've definitely heard of them since picking up this tape. Don't really even have to guess to know this is dark wave with gothic tones.

Album Review: From 1977 – 1990, the band, basically a project of co-creator & hard-to-deal-with Andrew Eldritch, his drum machine named Doktor Avalanche, and a revolving door of musicians, produced three albums before rebelling against  their management and record label and never produced another album. He still tours under the name, and they have written new material, but they have not release any official follow up albums. There have been a bunch of breakaway bands form ex-members, most famously perhaps, the Mission UK (UK added here in the states). And as much as their music is attributed as goth, the band is adamantly against that classification, preferring “rock band.”

“Under The Gun” was recorded for this 1993 release, the final label released track for Sisters of Mercy. It has dark, deep vocals and ominous, droning atmospheric effects. Powerful guitars and female vocals supplied by Ofra Haza add to the stark, barren soundscape. Eldritch’s chanting vocals are layered underneath.
“Temple of Love (1992)” chugging guitar and soaring female siren vocals. Male vocals pick up with a dark, steady mechanical tone, reminding me of German industrial or KMFDM. Once it kicks in, it becomes dark and danceable. Could see this used in a stereotypical film set trying to show a vampire dance club or a gothic audience.
“Vision Thing” starts with a heavy metal guitar, where screeching vocals are expected, we have the continued authoritarian vocals chanted like demands and laws brought down from a restricted society. Supposedly this, the title of the album it came from, was a quote from VP George HW Bush, so the mood and theme probably are derived from US politics.
“Detonation Boulevard” carries on the theme of buzzy metal guitar chords played over a dark, angular, mechanical backdrop. Vocals parody Iggy Pop and other deep, steady, rhetoric-fueled sounds. 
“Doctor Jeep” is motivational song with a training montage musical pace. Crystal synth creates a bleak landscape under the driving tempos. And as the male vocals are steady and monotone, the female vocals have a nice melody and complement well.
“More” builds up in pieces for the first minute and breaks back down after the drum brake hits. Quiet vocals and Running Man atmospheric keyboards add until it really kicks in at 1:50 with some power chords and a chorus of energetic female vocals to clash with the drab, bleak lead vocals.

“Lucretia My Reflection” kicks off with a solid bass line and simple bass/kick drum mechanical rhythm. The vocals explode with the guitars (as much as monotone vocals can) about 1:30 in and the propaganda-chanting echos imagery of dark and cold communist USSR. This is another solid darkwave dance track. The instrumental section seems to go on a lot longer than necessary, not covering any new ground as it proceeds.
“Dominion / Mother Russia” starts with an industrial bass & metal sheet-drum beat, and features a watery guitar loop overlaid. The shuttering monotone lead vocals brood and follow a melody bolstered by angelic female vocals in the chorus. Once the song transitions to the Mother Russia part, with the same basic elements as Dominion, it begins to sound like a dark wave Talking Heads song.
“This Corrosion” has more of an Iggy Pop / Richard Butler vocal style with more melody than previous songs. The female chorus still echoes darkly, but at its heart, the song is actually upbeat and quite catchy – at least comparatively – with its Hank Kingsly-ish Hey Now Now chorus. Of course, this version is over 10 minutes long, so I could have dealt with the radio edit.
“No Time to Cry” cryptically begins with a few simple instruments then picks up like a dark New Order song. The vocals are deep and dark. There is a Devo-ish pogoing vocal in the background of the chorus. The lead vocals feel a little forced at being creepy.
“Walk Away” leans a little more toward arena rock, but on top of the cold, jangly guitars is that steady drum machine loop that makes it feel like industrial music underlying Dracula vocals.
“Body & Soul” almost has an oriental feel to it at the outset. The power guitar comes in, followed by the dark vocals. The song is pulled in the three ways, and it carries an overall mystical tone. 

Stand Out Track: This Corrosion (radio edit)

Links:
offical site
Wiki
AV Club: This Corrosion
Sisters-Wiki
Discogs
FB Community page

Friday, February 13, 2015

Prefab Sprout - From Langley Park to Memphis~, Jordan: the Comeback*

Name: Prefab Sprout
Album(s): From Langley Park to Memphis~, Jordan: The Comeback*
Years: 1988~, 1990*
Style: Light Pop, Jangle Pop
Similar Bands: Aztec Camera, Tears for Fears, Michael Penn, Trash Can Sinatras, Beautiful South, Lilac Time, ABC, Thomas Dolby, Scritti Politti, late-period Squeeze,
One Word Review: Wispy Lite Jazzy-Jams
Based Out Of: Witton Gilbert, Country Durham, England
Labels: Epic~*, Rollmo'~, Kitchenware Records~*, CBS Records~*, 
From Langley Park to Memphis - Cover, Lyrics, Record
From Langley Park to Memphis - Back, Lyrics, Record 
Jordan: The Comeback: Cover, Back, Liner Notes
Jordan: The Comeback: Liner Notes & Tape
From Langley Park to Memphis (1988)
  1. The Kings of Rock N' Roll 4:22
  2. Cars and Girls 4:24
  3. I Remember That 4:13
  4. Enchanted 3:47
  5. Nightingales 5:51 / 
  6. Hey Manhattan! 4:45
  7. Knock on Wood 4:15
  8. The Golden Calf 5:05
  9. Nancy (Don't Let Your Hair Down For Me) 4:01
  10. The Venus of the Soup Kitchen 4:29
Jordan: The Comeback (1990)
  1. Looking for Atlantis 4:00
  2. Wild Horses 3:44
  3. Machine Gun Ibiza 3:43
  4. We Let the Stars Go 3:35
  5. Carnival 2000 3:22
  6. Jordan: the Comeback 4:12
  7. Jesse James Symphony 2:15
  8. Jesse James Bolero 4:09
  9. Moondog 4:08/ 
  10. All the World Loves Lovers 3:50
  11. All Boys Believe Anything 1:34
  12. The Ice Maiden 3:19
  13. Paris Smith 2:55
  14. The Wedding March 2:46
  15. One of the Broken 3:52
  16. Michael 3:02
  17. Mercy 1:22
  18. Scarlet Nights 4:14
  19. Doo-Wop in Harlem 3:44
Album Ratings (1-10):~6.5
*6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Paddy McAloon - Vox, Guitar, Keys, Producer~*
Jon Kelly - Producer, Engineer~
Thomas Dolby - Producer, Keys~*
Andy Richards - Producer, Keys~
Stevie Wonder - Harmonica~
Andrae Crouch Singers - Vox~
Robin Smith - String Arrangement and Conductor~
Mike Ross - String Recording~
Richard Hollywood - String Recording~
Gavin Wright - String Leader~
Mike Shipley - Mixing~
Pete Towshend - Acoustic Guitar~ (Who)
John Altman - String Arrangment & Conductor~
John Timperly - String Recording~
Tony Philips - Mixing, Engineer~
Michael H Brauer - Mixing, Engineer~
Wendy Smith - Percussion~
Lennie Castro - Percussion~
Stephen Male - Design~
Cliff Brigedn - Engineer~
David Concors - Engineer~
David Leonard - Engineer, Mixing~
Gary Olazabal - Engineer~
Geoff Bruckner - Engineer~
Gonzalez Espinoza - Engineer~
Karl Lever - Engineer~
Mark O'Donaghue - Engineer~
Michael Ade - Engineer~
Mickey Sweeney - Engineer~
Peter Jones - Engineer~
Richard Moakes - Engineer, Mixing~
Steve Lyon - Engineer~
Steve Van Day - Engineer~
Terrence Wilson - Engineer~
Tim Hunt- Engineer~
Gary Moberley - Keys~ (Sweet, John Miles, A II Z, ABC, Monroes, The The, Rock & Hyde, Drum Theater, Charlene Smith, The Grove, Gary Windo, Feelabeelia, Onyeka)
George Marino - Mastering~
Luis Jardim - Percussion~*
Martin McAloon - Bass~*
Neil Conti - Drums Percussion (Niles Landgren, Bowie/Jagger, Martin Stephenson & The Daintees, Sandy Shaw, Sid Straw, Toni Halliday, Paul Young, Adventures, Horse, Alison Moyet, Mary Coughlan)~*
Wendy Smith - Vox, Guitar, Keys (John Dyson, Fold, Michael Sims, The Gist, Peter White)~*
Nick Night - Photography~
Muff Winwood - Executive Producer~
Wix - Keys~
The Phantoms - Horns*
Judd Lander - Harmonica*
Jenny Agutter - Vox*
Tim Young - Mastering*
Gerry Judah - Artwork*
Andrew Biscomb - Design*
Peter Barrett - Design*
Adrian Moore - Engineer Asst*
Charlie Smith - Engineer Asst*
Chris Puram - Engineer Asst*
Derek McCartney - Engineer Asst*
Karen White - Engineer Asst*
Mark Williams - Engineer Asst*
Paul Cuddeford - Engineer Asst*
Eric Calvi - Mixing Engineer*
Paul Gomersall - Engineering & Recording*
Bernie Grundman - Mastering*
Douglas Brothers - Photography*
Jonathan Lovekin - Photography*
Trevor Hart - Photography*
Keith Armstrong - Management*
Paul Ludford - Management*
Phil Mitchell - Management*

Unknown-ness: I have heard of Prefab Sprout, and I even picked up a couple albums based on the faint grasp of what they were like. But I do not really know. My mind has them as this dense, complex, non-melodic band that fits in with boring jangly-ness of mid 80's college radio popularity, but I can't recall if I've ever actually LISTENED to any of their songs.

Album Review: Prefab Sporut were a huge band in the 80’s in the UK, but failed to crack the US market at higher than #180. The core of the group are highly praised songwriter Paddy and his brother on bass, Martin McAloon. Their style combines intelligent, witty lyrics and smooth jazzy pop. The first of the two records I have feature cameos from Stevie Wonder & Pete Townshend, and were both produced by the popular Thomas Dolby. It was the highest selling album, but in contrast, is considered a week offering due to lack of solid songs, and slick production. The second was a concept album revolving around Jesse James (apparent) and Elvis Presley.

~“The Kings of Rock N' Roll” was their biggest and best known song in the UK. It starts with a smooth drum beat, and funky bass line. But then overproduced synth effects swoop by, as well as glass candy female la-la-las. Apparently the song is about a one hit wonder forced to repeat the one song forever, which with this being their biggest hit is somewhat ironic. The vocal style has a bit of the Thomas Dolby flair for dramatic line endings. And it sounds like the lyric is “I Want Cookie” (but is really Albequerque). The superficialness of the song and synth produced elements of all of the songs aspects dates the song, and it feels like it could have been concocted in some digital music suite. But the underlying hook in the chorus is catchy, and the effects and layers of vocals keep it interesting.
“Cars and Girls” reached minor US college radio success as a Bruce Springsteen parody. At the beginning, it feels like a slick produced doo-wop song, with the female vocals singing “Bop-Bop-Bop / Sha-doo-ba-doo”. Once the lead vocals begin, it again sounds like Dolby. Some points they are just a whisper, and then they find the energy to whine and extend on a note. The melody in the chorus is a two hilled sweeping hook. This feels like a solid adult contemporary single.
“I Remember That” was released as a single later on to promote a best of compilation. It begins with breathy George Michael like vocals under blanket of synth chimes. The song creeps along, growing into a slow side-to-side melody. I feel like some of the synth effects in this song were used in the Sonic the Hedgehog games. And they were only separated by 3 years, so it was definitely a sound of the times. More vocals step up to the plate and increase the tension as the song sashes out to the end.
“Enchanted” feels like it was stolen right from ABC’s album Alphabet City. It has string plucks and synth notes placed all over the place, yet mixed into the melody. The vocals are light and breathy
“Nightingales” was the 4th single released, and features Wonder on harmonica. It starts out with a style that could delve into Whitney Houston pop R&B or light AM radio fodder. The song whispers along the slow piano driven melody. The song is ethereal and could be categorized as lovely, but that is just because of its delicate pristine nature…not because the song is all that great. Stevie Wonder pulls out his 80’s harmonica which would fit right in with “I Just Called.”  Swirling synth effects change up the song a little toward the end, but it maintains its wispy ways. And the melody sounds like a slowed up, poor man’s version of Jimmy Ruffin’s great song “What Becomes of the Brokenhearted.” And they let Wonder finish out the track with a little harmonica summary.

“Hey Manhattan!” was a single, and features Townshend on guitar. It Begins with an island beat and some disco strings. The barely-there vocals continue through the verse, and by the chorus, they express a little emotion, but it is lost underneath the whooshy production.
“Knock on Wood” has a funky-reggae influenced beat to start the song off. And it comes off a bit like Squeeze from this same time period of their career. A lot of the synth produced tidbits and musical eccentricities seem to be superfluous and added simply because they could.  
“The Golden Calf” was the fifth single released. It begins with some jangely rhythm guitar that reverberates out as the notes are held. The song is very different from the rest of the album, with confident Tears For Fears like, deeper vocals, and a straight forward pop sense right off the bat. The verse into the chorus is very fluid and natural, and the chorus actually feels like it is a bridge leading to a catchier part that never follows up. Even the spoken word section around the 3:45 mark is deep and melodic and dumps the listener into a nice energetic instrumental section before revisiting the chorus. Unfortunately, the chorus just fades out: I was hoping for a more creative finish. Still, it is a solid song.
“Nancy (Don't Let Your Hair Down For Me)” twinkles in like an early morning dream state. The lyrics of waking up to go to work match the mood set by the return to whispery vocals and adult smooth jazz structure.
“The Venus of the Soup Kitchen” is a mostly acapella song at the beginning, with radio show like effects used in the background offering the flimsiest of structure. Instruments like a guitar and trepidations drums come in at their turns, but the melody generally exists in the vocals alone. With about a minute and a half to go, the vocals are bolstered by a choir of support, building in a slow jazzy way. The choir falls away leaving a delicate female vocal to solo, which is quickly overtaken by the lead vocals finishing off the album.

*“Looking for Atlantis” was a single. It starts off strong, with a doo-wop tambourine, energetic beat. It adds some 80’s smooth synth production, and female backing vocals that establish the chorus hook. The main vocals are as expected: airy and fragile. The melody is fun to follow along, as it rolls along, is always catchy and ever changing. The song projects the early 90’s vibe of baggy button shirts and pants, wire rimmed circle glasses, and floppy hair. The song ends in fade out when the harmonicas take over.
“Wild Horses” has a slow start, with mystical chimes and a slow drum beat. The vocals whisper over the music, and again, it feels like the over produced Squeeze tracks. The chorus is sing where the word Wild is sung like a ringing gong, balanced with the rest of it “horses. I want to have” fitting back into the precedent style and melody. The chimes come in again toward the end, but not featured as prevalently.  
“Machine Gun Ibiza” begins with a ocean waves washing upon the beach synth sound. The song keeps the island vibe going with synthesized congas and wah-wah guitars. The melody has a bit of a dark undertone, and reminds me a little of Sting’s lame solo work. The vocals are not as flat and strained here, they are more confident. The song even references island events like hurricanes, hanging 10, and the island Ibiza, itself.
“We Let the Stars Go” was a single. It has a slow waltz tempo. The song is sung as a sentimental reflection with adult contemporary smooth-jazz production. The melody slips side to side, and it lightly drags a limp lane behind.
“Carnival 2000” was released as a single to promote a four-track EP, creatively titled “Jordan: the EP.” It is a tribute to the South American festival, and after a quiet intro, brass celebration begins with a samba drum beat. The vocals are very reserved for the sort of energy the music is trying to release. It is as if the vocals are coming from a nervous tourist watching the festivals from his hotel room. Or it could be an out of touch advertisement to come join from some guy who’s never been there.
“Jordan: the Comeback” is beatnik jazzy as it begins. Spoken word political poetry is sung over a free form jazz beat that evolves for the first 45 seconds. Then the synth drums kick in for the chorus, and the music synchronizes for a loungy hook. Another spoken word verse is used to fill the gap until the next chorus. There is too much light echo production on the vocals for my taste, and unnecessary chimes bells and synth effects in the background. Just because you have 15 open tracks on a multi-track recording device does not mean you have to use them all. But again it was a sign of the times in the late 80’s early 90’s for intelligent pop to be way over produced synthetically.
“Jesse James Symphony” begins with the Michael Penn style melody right away. It is kind of show-tuney, as it is very descriptive and relies on the lyrics and minimal chimey, harp-like music that just parallels the vocal melody.
“Jesse James Bolero” continues with the Jesse James concept part of the album, with a bold, trumpeting grand entrance theme song. The basic melody is just carried over from the song that precedes this, but more music has been added to boost the waltzing image. I am reminded again of the horns from Sonic the Hedgehog in production quality to the horns used here. The song repeats its hook, cashing it all in on the one catchy part, and just running with it.
“Moondog” has a George Michael Father Figure romantic wispyness to it as the song begins. The enchanting song crests and falls below the vocals. Then for a short segment, the song gets fun and energetic, which is only a preview for the jazzy chorus, which breaks the quiet mood the beginning sets up with synth horns and cheezy keyboard sounds. The extras drop away for the second verse, and it is a combination of Michael Penn and Thomas Dolby precision in the vocal melody. Some of the synth effects also remind me of XTC’s wasp star.

“All the World Loves Lovers” feels like retreading of old ground. It follows a grandiose, sweeping artificial soundscape with smooth production and forgettable romantic melodies.
“All Boys Believe Anything” is a slow, backing, mostly instrumental soundtrack song. It is like a lullaby.
“The Ice Maiden” begins with dual male and female vocals over a cold, sterile landscape. Horns and a woodblock try to melt the chill, which is even promoted with the lyrics. The song changes up enough that there seems to be no repeating chorus. It’s more of a story song. One section the vocals begin to grow in energy, but then they mention a “death is a small price for heaven” it sounds a lot like the horrible group I reviewed a while ago: the Goth Christian new wave band Mad At the World.
“Paris Smith” transitions without break and is a little slower, but still just as polished and grandiose, with haunting synth flutters and minimal melody changes or instrument supplements. The song ends with female doo-doo’s and harpsichord strums.
“The Wedding March” has  a bit of a mysterious tone to it, with a jaunty, bouncing melody underneath the sweeping vocals. A classical style is used with jazzy vocals and melodies added in a bit of an old-fashioned carnival setting. The song sashays along, slowing down to a choreographed dance routine you’d see in something like Singin In The Rain. Its vaudevillian style sets it apart from the rest of the album, although the production reigns it in as best as it can.
“One of the Broken” has the feel of  a sad, and sullen march. The vocals are deep and spoken in an echoing cave. These words are supposed to be a memory. The lead vocals pick up the story in present day, and the song continues on in a forlorn, head down, feet dragging trance. The end of the song has a piano that feels like it’s trying to build up a gospel vibe.
“Michael” is spacey and oceanic at the same time. The free form synth effects don’t quite match with the vocals, as they come from different places. The synchronization of lyrics and music is set off after a loud mystical chiming crash. The chorus is short, and only consists of the title name drawn out and is followed by a building of emotion.
“Mercy” is like “All Boys Believe Anything,” where it drifts along with quiet vocals echoing lightly as if in a cave. It never gets started and ends before it goes anywhere, even as a filler track.
“Scarlet Nights” has a dripping, echoing cave-like sound, which is pushed away with a driving drum beat and a revving guitar. The song moves into standard pop territory with a simplistic structure. The chorus drifts over the driving backing beat and melody. It seems weird to hid this accessible gem in the back end of the album, when the album is ready to end, the song could easily band together some of the one-dimensional atmospheric songs. Female vocals take over for one short verse, revitalizing the song, and adding another layer that could be dropped at any time.
“Doo-Wop in Harlem” fades in with a church organ, with held notes and a developing melody. The male vocals come in quietly. The textured, layer vocals mix with female vocals textured the same way. A surprising turn signal like beep fades in and out quickly in predestined intervals (after the word Harlem) which wakes up the daydreaming listener. The song fades out from its one dimensional nighttime prayer. 

Stand Out Track:~The Golden Calf
*Looking for Atlantis

Links:
Website
Wiki
Allmusic
Discogs
Facebook
Guardian 2013 Interview

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Yehuda Poliker - Ashes & Dust

Name: Yehuda Poliker
Album: Ashes & Dust
Year: 1988
Style: Hebrew/Jewish Traditional, Mediterranean
Similar Bands: Theodore Bikel, Gruff Rhys
"One-Word" Review: Bleak-wind-echo-klezmer-rock
Based Out Of: Kiryat Haim, Israel
Label: CBS
 Ashes & Dust - Cover, Liner & Tape
Ashes & Dust - Liner Notes & Tape

Ashes & Dust (1988)
  1. Efer Vavak (Ashes & Dust) 4:31
  2. Chalon Layam Hatichon (A Window to the Mediterranean) 5:36
  3. Kshetigdal (When You Grow Up) 4:18
  4. Shir Acharey Hageshem (Song After the Rain) 4:06
  5. Prachim Baruach (Flowers in the Wind) 4:31
  6. Hatachana Haktana Treblinka (Last Station Treblinka) 5:12 /
  7. Yalel 2:27
  8. Radio Ramallah 5:14
  9. Ahva Horeget (Love Kills) 5:02
  10. Mikan Vad Bichlal (From Now On) 5:22
  11. Kol Meertz Haruach (Voice from the Land of the Wind) 5:43
  12. Biglal (Because) 4:49
Album Rating (1-10): 4.0

Members & Other Bands:
Yehudad Poliker - Vox, Guitar, Music, Arrangement, Production
Ya'akov Gilad - Lyrics, Arrangement Production
Halina Birnbaum - Lyrics, Translation
Vladshaw Shlengel - Lyrics
Yoad Nevo - Assistant, Recording
Simon Weinstock - Mixing
M. Hooning - Mastering, Digital Editing
J.Lamme - Cutting Engineer
Jan Saudeck - Cover Photo
Gandy Markus - Inner Cover Photo
Vardi Kahana - Inner Cover Photo
Michael Kleg - Inner Cover Photo
Yehuda Dery - Cover Design

Unknownness: I have never heard of this artist. But I found this tape in a clearance section of a library cast off book & music store, and I was on a hunt for more Eastern European, Klezmer music. I found this bleak looking tape, and decided to give it a try. With a production date of 1988, I really have no idea what to expect.
  
Album Review:  I was unaware that this was an Israeli pop album about the holocaust, as Wikipedai has pointed out. Yehuda’s father escaped from Auschwitz, so I can only imagine this has some second-hand story telling and spirit, and ultimately lead up to the bio-pic Because of that War a few years later. The album is all in hebrew, so I’ll not be able to understand the lyrics except by the emotion evoked.

Efer Vavak (Ashes & Dust) feels like an Italian folk song as it starts out with what sounds like an accordion and strumming guitar. Once the singing begins, the Yiddish theme emerges, and the result is an emotional, powerful ballad.
Chalon Layam Hatichon (A Window to the Mediterranean) is a darker, more sinister song at the beginning, with a gloomy hum stalking in the background. But the singing has a much more positive and hopeful approach. The transition/bridge between verse and the chorus has a nice hook in its build. There is a very earthy, and new age feel to the song as well, with the way the guitars echo and there is a breezy like chime in the background with a similar echo effect.
Kshetigdal (When You Grow Up) initially feels like theme music from a Dragon Warrior game when the warrior is tired, but in a safe and familiar place. Comfort and wisdom note the song’s character. The music is not a solid straight line, it is jagged and its flourishes are start/stop. Only the chorus glides by effortlessly.
Shir Acharey Hageshem (Song After the Rain) has a little bit of a western / Blaze of Glory feel to it, mainly thanks to the twangy guitar, and percussive march in the background. The chorus is repetitive in lyric, but it rolls the lyrics over the same melody over three keys, and is enjoyable in the anticipation and delivery feel.
Prachim Baruach (Flowers in the Wind) begins in a new age fashion too, but one that is bleak and sinister. The echoing bell/chimes effect is entrancing, and sometimes off-key. I like the atmosphere the song creates. The song also has loud booming bass drums that are sporadic, but when they hit, remind me of something big, like Genesis or something. An electric guitar wallows in pain and adds the perfect anger/frustration to the songs already confused emotion.
Hatachana Haktana Treblinka (Last Station Treblinka) begins with strumming guitars faint in the background, and an oscillating hum. This is the song that reminds me a lot of Gruff Rhys (from Super Furry Animals) live performance, were he begins instruments one at a time, and the lyrics over top are mostly spoken or echoing chants rather than sung. The song builds, and a steady drum beat starts around 2:15 in. There are controlled metal screeches that come and go, perhaps mimicking trains passing.

Yalel seems to pick up with the twisting metal sounds from the previous side/song, and progresses like a Middle Eastern religious chant with a circular buzz in the background.
Radio Ramallah continues the Middle Eastern sound, and reminds me a little of Faith No More’s Wood peckers from Mars in the very beginning. The song is more rocking than the other songs that felt more folky and traditional. There is a rock drum beat, and the song’s pace is quicker and surer. The chorus is catchy and besides FNM, it also feels like the rock/Mid-Eastern blend that Firewater or Gogol Bordello are popular for (and to a lesser degree, System of a Down, but I hate even mentioning them).
Ahva Horeget (Love Kills) continues with the hard rock/ Eastern European style of music. This song reminds me of a mix of Ween’s Stallion part 5 & I Can’t Put My Finger on It. It is a soaring, driving, near-disco song with the violin-sounding strings. Suddenly out of nowhere about 4 min in, the singer just shouts for seemingly no reason, except for perhaps the song’s climactic point. It ends in an electric fury and an echoing of guitar.
Mikan Vad Bichlal (From Now On) is another wind swept song-scape, with acoustic guitar leading the way, echoing as the entire album has before it. It is somewhat sad and solemn song once the vocals begin. It grows in confidence, and gets a little aggressive in its optimism, backed by the familiar echoing chime/bells effect. The song continuously feels like it is just starting out, building to something grand, but it never really unleashes the anticipated delivery. And with a whoosh effect, the song ends.
Kol Meertz Haruach (Voice from the Land of the Wind) continues the echoing wind effect, and backs it up with somber violin/string composition. This too starts out sad and beaten down. The vocals grow louder and it is loud calling out/chant/shout, with a yearning emotion. And like a whisper or a gale, it quietly fades away.
Biglal (Because) starts with spoken vocals with massive echo. The music begins with a sinister, almost industrial stripped down drum and guitar rhythm. The vocals continue to be spoken, not sung, and the song drives on, growing more intense with a Middle Eastern buzz in the background.

Overall, the album has a few select catchy & memorable hooks here and there. On a whole, it is depressing, which I believe was mostly the concept of design, with the topic being such a horrific tragedy as the holocaust. There are a few instances where the rock and traditional moments blend together flawlessly, but there is even more dead space and tedious construction to make it grow better on repeat listens.

Stand Out Track: Radio Ramallah (live)

Monday, January 30, 2012

Flesh Eaters - Destroyed By Fire (Greatest Hits)

Name: Flesh Eaters
Album: Destroyed By Fire (Greatest Hits)
Year: 1987
Style: Punk, Gothic Rock/Metal.
Similar Bands: Cows, X, Social Distortion, Dead Milkmen, Iggy Pop, Bay of Pigs, Danzig
"One-Word" Review: 3-chord-Chaotic-Jagger-Punk
Based Out Of: LA, Cali
Label: SST Records, Shakeytown Music BMI
Destroyed By Fire - Cover, Liner Notes, Tape

Destroyed By Fire (1987)
  1. See You In The Boneyard 3:29
  2. Cyrano De Berger's Back 3:20
  3. Dominoes 1:58
  4. Impossible Crime 1:53
  5. Secret Life 4:54
  6. Hard Road to Follow 5:25
  7. Divine Horsemen 7:07 /
  8. The Wedding Dice 4:16
  9. Pony Dress 2:31
  10. We'll Never Die 3:20
  11. Everytime I Call Yr Name 4:07
  12. Lake of Burning Fire 7:41
  13. Drag My Name in Mud 6:33
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Dave Alvin - Guitar (Blasters, Knitters, Dollar Store)
Bill Bateman - Drums (Blasters, Red Devils)
Steve Berlin - Saxophone (Los Lobos, Blasters)
D.J. Bonebrake - Marimba (X, Original Sinners)
Chris Desjardins - Producer, Vocals Composer (Divine Horsemen)
John Doe - Bass (X)
Robin Jameson - Bass
Jill Jordan - Vocals (Background)
Don Kirk - Guitar, Composer
Christopher Wahl - Drums, Composer
Ed Colver - Flesh Eaters Picture

Unknown-ness: I don’t believe I’ve heard of them. The name is very symbolic with a type of music, that I could only assume this is going to be dark punk, perhaps with Gothic tones. Maybe I’ve heard of them before, but I can’t really recall what the music is like or where I’ve heard of them from. So as this is a greatest hits collection, I do not expect a cohesive album, but a good introduction to their sound.

Album Review: “See You In The Boneyard” begins with a jazzy sax and rocking, driving drum beat. The vocals are gloomy but cartoonish with a side of evil. There is a Stray Cats big band element to the music, but the energy from the rambling lyrics and the shriek energy at the end of each verse gives is a classic dirty punk element. Like an organic Social Distortion.
“Cyrano De Berger's Back” feels like a 50’s greaser love ballad, full of sax and rock-a-billy qualities covered by a morbid punk act. The vocals are raw and full of emotion while the music is just a repetitive canvas for the poetic vocals to flow across.
“Dominoes” starts out as a lazy side swaying melody, but you can feel the tension building, and it launches into a faster, straightforward punk song. It lacks the brass or jazzy backing instruments. But it goes back and forth between the two sections of slow catch-your-breath sections and fast-forwarding circle pit action.
“Impossible Crime” is a nervous, speedy three chord punk song. It changes key for the chorus but quickly changes back for the short verse sections. It is repetitive and driving, never letting down like a good short punk song should be. It actually reminds me of “Tiny Town” by Dead Milkmen. “Secret Life” starts with a nice bouncy bass beat. And the vocals sound drunk, and tripping all over the place up and down off key. But the shrill expression reminds me of Mick Jagger at his most chaotic, and more so, Iggy Pop. The sax is back, but not as produced and prevalent as the start of the record, and it feels less Americana punk, and more smooth jazz.
“Hard Road to Follow” is another drunken King Missile sounding song with minimal, actual singing, and a more slurred tempo. But the range of vocal styles and pitch changes keeps it very interesting, and the music is less punk, and more dark, heavy rock. This reminds me of the other album I reviewed by Bay of Pigs. The guitar has a sounds that is like “Money for Nothing” but heavier.
“Divine Horsemen” starts with some sort of sax sound that reminds me of Akira Kurosawa’s film Dreams, specifically the Peach Orchard sequence. But the music is just a repetitive back and forth guitar and bass section, with a repeating 2 note xylophone bit. The vocals are erratic and agitated, good for the dark punk atmosphere they like to project. The instrumental section at the end just goes on without much variation, to the point where I’d assume it would be quite boring to play.

“The Wedding Dice” starts out with dark prog, like Black Sabbath. And then the pace picks up to a driving punk pace. The vocals lack sobriety, but they parallel the melody to the point of repetitive boredom. During the instrumental break, we revisit the slow prog guitars, which are backed by a squealing sax loop.
“Pony Dress” revisits the short speed punk with erratic singing. It is a simple fast verse, rearranged melody for the chorus, and return to the verse. The monotony is broken up with a bit different section referring to the title of the song at the end. It is repetitive in itself, but as a whole it is refreshing.
“We'll Never Die” starts with a guitar hook that is quite catchy, and then the vocals range from deep, nasally and yowling all in the same lyrical line. At their darkest, they are deep and nearly crooning, like Danzig; at their highest they are raspy and a bit screechy. But there is an undeniable energy the entire time.
“Everytime I Call Yr Name” begins with a fuzzed out metal guitar played at a punk rock pace. The deep vocals again remind me of Danzig or X at their lowest and like an angry feral cat at their highest. Like most other songs, the music does not diverge much from the initial melody, so you have this long song without much change, except it acts as a blank canvas for vocal experimentation and exaggeration.
“Lake of Burning Fire” sounds like it should be a prog song, and it comes off that way with an unconventional beat and a backing sax. The vocals are whine-yelling at first, I’m guessing like they are stuck in hell. It feels a little like a Half-Japanese song. The vocals are the same cadence, but lower than Jad Fair. Then they surpass Fair, and resemble Megadeath’s shouty vocals. The repetitive loop of jazzy prog continues and more yelling moans overlap and feels like an unsupervised jam session. The song then comes back to more lyrics, but nothing new is brought to the song. And they revert back to the howling jam session which is very tedious and extended.
“Drag My Name in Mud” is a heavy sax influenced metal stomp. The drums kick in and it begins at a fast, driving pace, but the vocals feel like they are constantly trying to catch up to the music. This is three chord metal-punk. The slower stomp-tempo is brought back for a breakdown section about 2 min in. By this point, listening to this much, the song feels like it is just rehashing everything that has come before, and the result is a forced feeling, like ideas have all been used up and that well is dry.

Stand Out Track: See You in the Boneyard

Links:
allmusic
Wiki
website
death rock
perfect sound forever
Chris D's New Texture blog
Rate your Music

Friday, December 16, 2011

David Lindley - Win This Record!

Band: David Lindley
Album: Win This Record!
Year: 1982
Style: Rock N Roll, Island, Reggae,
Similar Bands: Jackson Browne, Joe Jackson, Bill Haley, Cecilio & Kapono, Blasters, Bob Marley
"One-Word" Review: Relaxed, Carefree, Carribi-Rock
Based Out Of: California
Label: Elektra/Asylum, Warner
Win This Record! - Cover & Tape
Win This Record! - Liner Noted & Tape


Win This Record! (1982)
  1. Something's Got A Hold on Me 2:43
  2. Turning Point 4:45
  3. Spodie 4:57
  4. Brother John 5:50
  5. Premature 3:57/
  6. Talk to the Lawyer 4:55
  7. Make It On Time 3:17
  8. Rock It With I 5:06
  9. Ram-A-Lamb-A Man 4:10
  10. Look So Good 1:31
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
David Lindley - Bass, Guitar, Guitar (Electric), Guitorgan, Producer, Saz, Violin, Vocals (Kalidescope, El-Rayo-X, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, Rod Stewart, Dolly Pardon, Ry Cooder, Warren Zevon, Wally Ingram, Hani Naser)
Craig Anderson - Photography
Jorge Calderón - Bass, Percussion, Vocals
Terry Christian - Assistant Engineer
Peter Golmen - Managment
Booker T. Jones - Keyboards, Organ (Booker T & the MGs, & Pricilla, Drive By Truckers, Blues Brothers)
Greg Ladanyi - Engineer, Mixing, Producer
Bernie Larsen - Bass, Guitar, Guitar (Electric), Percussion, Vocals
George Massenburg - Engineer
Richard McKernan - Assistant Engineer
Jim Nipar - Engineer
Mike Reese - Mastering
Barbara Rooney - Assistant Engineer
Randee Saint Nicholas - Photography
Kaz Sakamoto - Photography
Doug Sax - Mastering
William D. "Smitty" Smith - Keyboards, Organ (Blood Sweat & Tears, Billy Joel, Tracey Chapman, Ry Cooder, Pointer Sisters)
Wayne Tanouye - Assistant Engineer
Jimmy Wachtel - Art Direction, Design
Ian Wallace - Drums, Guitar, Guitar (Bass), Percussion, Vocals (King Crimson, Bob Dylan, Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Fizzion Trip, Warriors, 21st Century Schizoid Band, Crimson Jazz Trio, Quireboys)

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of this artist / band. The cover is bright and has a bit of rock n roll oldies energy to it, reminding me of a combination of Bill Haley, Joe Jackson and Weird Al. And with the album title of “Win This Record,” I cannot imagine the album being too serious or complex.

Album Review: “Something's Got A Hold on Me” rocks and rolls from the starting gate. A harmonized mix of dual vocals carries the honky-tonk / 50’s style rock and roll song. An electric guitar instrumental modernizes the song, but the classic back beat drums continue through out, holding it in the past.
“Turning Point” is funkier with bass heavy and initial tambourine cymbal drum beat. The bass makes it sound like Squeeze’s “Black Coffee In Bed.” The vocals also follow a funky melody, but the voice is a higher pitch singer songwriter style. This song does in fact remind me of Joe Jackson, even featuring some horns in the chorus, and organ-style keyboards. The song ends with a long slide guitar spotlighted instrumental.
“Spodie” feels like a Dire Straits song. The bass is used to give a funky yet gritty & sly vibe. The vocals are shrill, and actually remind me of a non-screaming Axl Rose. Extended instrumental populate much of the song, giving center stage representation to the electric guitar.
“Brother John” has a warble guitar intro which ends after its scale, and is followed by drums then bass in sections. Electric guitar adds its two cents, and the song begins in its reggae, dancehall beat, including a repetition of “Brother John is gone” and some steel drum mixed with more electric guitar.
“Premature” also has an island feel to it, where the guitar sounds like a slowed version of Foghat’s “Slow Ride.” Once the vocals start the song takes root in a combination of slow reggae and gospel.

“Talk to the Lawyer” is a poppier interpretation of reggae, so it still retains a funky, “don’t worry be happy” island vibe, even if the topic is that of deceit and suspicion.
“Make It On Time” rocks back with a honky-tonk/pub vibe and gritty slide guitar track. It is a driving song, with a “Blasters” feel. The song rocks out with a lengthy instrumental to end it.
“Rock It With I” begins with harmonized picked electric guitars which evolve into a relaxed reggae beat with harmonized layered vocals as well. It feels like a warm and fuzzy Bob Marley song.
“Ram-A-Lamb-A Man” feels like Talking Heads song (And She Was) right away. Then the vocals start: a harmonized high pitched, with an obvious and somewhat annoying melody. The music is fun and interesting, but I can’t get behind the vocals here“Look So Good” is a slow, country, acoustic, “on the range” guitar ballad.

Stand Out Track: Turning Point

Links:
David Lindley site
Page of Steel