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Showing posts with label 5-rough trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5-rough trade. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

The Schramms - Walk to Delphi

 Name: (the) Schramms
Album: Walk to Delphi
Year:1989
Style: Folk-Country
Similar Bands: Yo La Tengo, Jayhawks, Wilco, Neil Young, Uncle Tupelo
One Word Review: Twangy Rodeo Rock
Based Out Of: New York City
Label: OKra, Rough Trade
 Walking To Delphi - Cover & Record
Walking to Delphi - Back, Liner Sheet
Walking to Delphi (1989)
  1. Walk to Delphi 3:47
  2. Out of the Earth 3:16
  3. Living in Confusion 4:59
  4. Letdown Later 4:30
  5. It's Not What She Wants 4:22 /
  6. Big Stink 3:30
  7. Everytime 3:58
  8. The Way Some People Die 4:03
  9. Number Nineteen 3:50
  10. Gusano Verde 3:25
  11. Of All the Souls 2:53 
Album Rating (1-10): 5.5

Members & Other Bands:
Dave Schramm - Vox, Guitar, Harmonica (Yo La Tengo, Kate Jacobs, Chris Stamey)
Terry Karydes - Keys, Vox, Drums (Yo La Tengo)
Ron Metz - Drums (The Human Switchboard, Yo La Tengo)
Al Greller - Bass (Peter Stampfel & Bottlecaps, Yo La Tengo)
Mike Lewis - Bass (Yo La Tengo, Lyres, DMZ, )
Tom Quinn- Mandolin (Jack Lord;s Hair, Mud Pie, Mud Pie Sun, Rocknoceros, The Real Gone)
Pete Linzell - Sax (Andy G & The Roller Kinds, Los Primos, Devil Dogs)
Todd Novak - Guitar (Cowlicks, The Cycle Paths, The Dragsters, Kevin Salem)
Peter Moser - Cover Art
Gary Arnold - Producer

Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but I really like the cover art and backing photo artwork. Makes me think it will have an earthy, folksy feel, but still have a worldy, and interesting intelligence about it.  I'm expecting a Los Lobos meets Half Japanese feel.

Album Review: So the Schramms, originally a placeholder name when they found out their previous name was already in use, have a lot of ties to Yo La Tengo’s very early years. Founding and namesake member Dave Schramm left Yo La Tengo after their first album and many other band mates were involved with the early years as well. Their US distribution was through Rough Trade, which coincidentally folded just as they were beginning their first album push.

“Walk to Delphi” is a county rocking song with exaggerated, drawn our vocal syllables. It never really deviated from its pace or tempo, only building a little to go into the chorus. The instrumental at the end relies heavily on country style, mixed with rock, to make the definitive alt-country style.
“Out of the Earth” continues with the twangy vocals, and a slower story-song style, with slide guitar, quiet backing vocals, and harmonica instrumental section.
“Living in Confusion” is light, and features wood block percussion. The long vocal notes rise and fall, offering a defined country style. The instrumental at the end features slide guitar heavily.
“Letdown Later” is all acoustic guitar in the beginning. Then it launches into a jangley stomper with a defined verse-chorus structure. The instrumental features a shrill keyboard section that honky’s up the tonk (this sounded like a good description in my head).
“It's Not What She Wants” is a slower ballad, relying on organ-like notes held. It picks up in energy after a minute goes by, and continues the upward momentum with an almost rocking out chorus. Once it finds the hook and momentum, it rides it out for the rest of the song.

“Big Stink” starts side two as a theatrical western instrumental, with an upbeat tempo and plenty of slide guitar and organ in the latter part of the song.
“Everytime” shuffles along with a quick drum beat, sort of like the tempo of a train. Jangly guitar and drawn out vocals make up the rest of the songs motivation. The momentum is held though out the whole song, until the train makes it to the destination, and the instruments are peeled back
“The Way Some People Die” is a harmonica heavy, jangly singer-songwriter tune. The chorus melody is catchy, reminding me a little of the Violent Femmes (and the Bluebells), as it builds. It’s probably the most approachable and accessible song on the album.
“Number Nineteen” is a slowly building song with a swaying, sing song melody, and dual harmonicas. It kinda makes me imagine what John Linnell (of They Might Be Giants) would sound like singing country. The instrumental section slows down to a near-stall, before guitar kicks it back into gear. This song is more folky than country.
“Gusano Verde” starts as a double dose blast of chaotic, echoing rums and guitar. Then a slower, heel dragging section that also comes off as very cinematic, rolls along, kicking up dust in a small western town’s dirt road and blowing it into mini tornados. The instrumental continues along, with peaks and valleys of emotional and somewhat progressive musical sections until it just gives out.
“Of All the Souls” wraps up the album with acoustic guitar, and sloppy lyrical presentation that hits at drunkenness. It is very folky in execution, and a church organ kicks in about the 2 minute mark to finish out the song and album.

Stand Out Track: The Way Some People Die

Links:
Website
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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