Saturday, September 30, 2017
Friday, September 29, 2017
Wealthy art types explain NYC street culture: Rammellzee
Watch Sotheby's Eric Shiner & Harrison Tenzer chat about Rammellzee's contribution to Afro-futurism. |
Labels:
Afro-futurism,
Beat Bop,
Jean-Michel Basquiat,
Rammellzee,
Sotheby's
Wróblewski Jazz Quintet vs. José Prates
Jan Ptaszyn Wróblewski's Polish jazz crew does a fine job with José Prates' Brazilian swinger Nana Imboro. |
Labels:
Brazil,
Jan Ptaszyn Wróblewski,
Jerzy Milan,
José Prates,
Nana Imboro,
Polish jazz
Thursday, September 28, 2017
Watch The Limiñanas video for "Istanbul is Sleepy" w/ Anton Newcombe
The Limiñanas "Istanbul is Sleepy" 4-song EP is out November 17th with ace artwork by Thierry Guitard. |
"'Istanbul Is Sleepy' is like the classic dream where you become the hero, the Captain Blood or Midnight Sultan – the one who rescues and seduces Maureen O’Hara or Ava Gardner," explains Lionel Limiñana about recording with the Brian Jonestown Massacre mainman. "Anton is singing and playing guitar on the track. He was inspired, in particular, by The Cult during their ‘Rain’ period. Last year, Mojo magazine asked us to record a cover for a special Kinks tribute. We chose ‘Two Sisters’. Marie and I were thinking for the vocal part it would be great to approach Anton Newcombe, having opened for The Brian Jonestown Massacre at Le Trianon in Paris. The work began like that. We had an album to record and we decided to finish it with him. During the Christmas week we took our demos, flew to Berlin and recorded at Anton’s studio. Six days later we had a finished album.”
Antone Newcombe added, "I really enjoyed work from scratch with The Limiñanas to create this song. From the composition phase to the way of singing on the track, I had the idea of singing like David Bowie, singing like Iggy Pop who try to sing like David Bowie... It was really exciting to take part of all the creative process of this record." Watch the video below.
Lionel et Marie make a splashy London debut with DJ Andy Weatherall on October 5. |
That time Daniel Johnston sang Devil Town in Hamilton
Here's Daniel leading the crowd at The Underground in an a cappella version of Devil Town on May 8, 2007. |
Labels:
Daniel Johnston,
Devil Town,
Hamilton,
The Underground
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Monday, September 25, 2017
Happy Birthday Sam Rivers
Remembering the great Sam Rivers on his day with a 1979 performance joined by Dave Holland & Thurman Barker. |
Labels:
Dave Holland,
Sam Rivers,
Thurman Barker
Watch Nucleus live in 1972
Here's Ian Carr with Dave McRae (keys), Karl Jenkins (oboe), Roy Babbington (bass) and Alan Jackson (drums). |
Sunday, September 24, 2017
Happy birthday Jack "Mr. Bongo" Costanzo!
Celebrating Jack Costanzo's 98th birthday with a 1955 clip featuring one of his more famous percussion students. |
Saturday, September 23, 2017
One For The Weekend: Wildflower
The Wildflower debut of Leon Brichard, Tom Skinner and Idris Rahman is sold out on vinyl but you can hear it below. |
Labels:
Idris Rahman,
Leon Brichard,
Tom Skinner,
Wildflower
Happy Birthday John Coltrane!
Toasting Trane with a hard swingin' performance of Franz Lehár's Vivias recorded live at Birdland on March 6, 1963. |
Labels:
Franz Lehár,
John Coltrane,
Vilia,
Vivias
Friday, September 22, 2017
Thursday, September 21, 2017
Whaddya mean you don't know Snapped Ankles
Check out this rarely seen footage of Snapped Ankles in their natural habitat somewhere in Brighton. |
Robyn Hitchcock @ The Drake Hotel, Thursday & Friday
Red Rocket fan Robyn Hitchcock is back in town for two nights. Here's Autumn Sunglasses off his fab new album. |
Labels:
Emma Swift,
Robyn Hitchcock,
Yep Roc
Wednesday, September 20, 2017
Rare footage of Max Roach w/ Billy Harper live in Norway
Billy and Max were joined by Cecil Bridgewater and Reggie Workman for this 1977 performance in Molde. |
Labels:
Billy Harper,
Cecil Bridgewater,
Max Roach,
Molde,
Norway,
Reggie Workman
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Mike Judge's Tales From The Tour Bus debuts September 22
The legends of George Jones, Billy Joe Shaver & others are the raw material for Mike Judge's new Cinemax series. |
Monday, September 18, 2017
Watch the Stranger Cole documentary Ruff and Tuff
The short but enlightening film explores the entrepreneurial Jamaican singer/producer's time in Toronto. |
Jamaican Ska and Reggae legend Stranger Cole moved to Toronto in the early 1970s leaving stardom behind. Despite his talent he was forced to work at the Tonka Toy factory and as a security guard at Eaton's to make a living. He eventually established the first Caribbean business in Kensington Market - a record store and label at 58 Kensington Ave. Some 40 years later, Stranger Cole took some time off from his busy tour schedule to visit his old neighbourhood. Watch Chris Flanagan and Graeme Mahieson's mini-doc Ruff and Tuff below followed by a video for Stranger Cole's latest recording "Step Up" with the Kingston All Stars.
The Jackets @ Montreal's Divan Orange, Friday
Don't miss Swiss garage rippers The Jackets play a rare Canadian date with Les Envahisseurs & The Dirtbags. |
Sunday, September 17, 2017
Yep Roc readies "re-imagined reissue" of classic Cajun/zydeco comp
Yep Roc's new version of Swampland Jewels – out Sept 22 – comes with the iconic original Goldband sleeve art. |
Inspired by the original Swampland Jewels LP on Goldband Records in 1979, and the expanded CD reissue from '91, Yep Roc's 19-track alternate version of the classic anthology of vintage Cajun, zydeco, rock ‘n roll and R&B music from East Texas and Southwest Louisiana hits the streets on September 22.
Now available for pre-order with an instant download of Cleveland Crochet's jukebox fave “Sugar Bee,” Swampland Jewels is the first full-length from Yep Roc Records partnership with the Southern Folklife Collection at the Wilson Special Collections Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Produced by Steven Weiss, Curator at the Southern Folklife Collection, and remastered from the original tapes by Brent Lambert at The Kitchen Mastering in Carrboro, NC, the compilation features tracks drawn from the original LP and CD releases, along with seven newly discovered recordings, liner notes by Weiss on the history of Goldband Records and founder Eddie Shuler. Fans of the 1979 release will be relieved to hear that the folks at Yep Roc had the good sense to go with Goldband's goofy-great original crawfish ridin' sleeve art.
On October 1, a live performance event will be held at the Arts Center in Carrboro, NC. Featuring a lecture by Cajun music scholar Barry Jean Ancelet (University of Louisiana, Lafayette), the event will also include performances by Jo-El Sonnier, a featured performer on the compilation, and Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys.
After comparing the two-track album master of the original ‘70s release to the album master, Weiss decided to rebuild the compilation from the high-resolution transfers of the un-overdubbed original session tapes. The release retains as much of the raw element as possible while keeping the dynamic range of recordings, which were recorded live, straight-to-tape, without overdubs.
“I researched the Goldband collection to find the original single or session masters for all the songs,” says Weiss. “It was a thrill hearing the raw recordings with studio talk, count-ins and unissued takes that captured the way Eddie worked and the immediacy of studio recordings in the 1950s and ‘60s. The original tapes also captured a strong sense of place.”
While hopeful to recreate the original LP track list, Weiss was unable to find acceptable masters for some of the tracks that would match the sound quality of the new transfers. Notably absent on the new release are Joe Bonsall's version of Jolie Blon, Jay Stutes' take of Kaw-Liga, Robert Bertrand's Jambalaya and Iry LeJeune's Evangeline Special. In place of those tracks, he chose newly discovered songs that matched the scope and feel of what he felt was Eddie Shuler’s original intent. Much like the early ‘90s CD reissue, this re-imagined reissue of Swampland Jewels features an expanded track list (see below). Somewhat oddly, the new set doesn't include any tracks by the hugely popular LeJeune who played a key role in returning the accordion to prominence in cajun music of the late 40s and early 50s. To find out what you're missing, hunt down the excellent Iry LeJeune – The Definitive Collection compiled by John Broven and issued by the UK-based Ace label without the ludicrous electric bass overdubs added posthumously by Shuler.
One of the most vital and important documentarians of endemic southern music in the 20th century, Goldband Records was located in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and produced recordings of some of the South’s most important and distinctive musical styles and sounds, including Cajun, zydeco, blues, rhythm and blues, rockabilly, and swamp pop. For years, fans, collectors and scholars have lamented the use of later overdubs Eddie Shuler employed on the original LP release in order to update the original ‘50s and ‘60s recordings for the late-‘70s marketplace.
In the mid-90s, the Southern Folklife Collection acquired the archives of Goldband Records, which included sound recordings covering the label’s 50-year history. Moldy and in need of extensive cleaning before they could be digitized for preservation and access, the Goldband tapes required thousands of hours of repair. Through a series of grants from the GRAMMY Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities, all recordings were cleaned and digitized, preserving the content and making the recordings accessible for research and release.
Digitized by the Southern Folklife Collection staff engineers Brian Paulson and John Loy using modern open reel tape decks optimized with custom playback heads for archival work, the audio was captured at a high-resolution bit depth/sample rate of 24bit/96kHz. The end result of this work revealed content of never-before-heard tapes in high quality and many hours of unreleased takes.
Swampland Jewels
“Paper In My Shoe” – Boozoo Chavis – on original LP and CD, new remix from original master
“Boss Cajun” – Shorty LeBlanc – on original LP and CD, new remix from original master
“Fee Fee Poncho” – Sidney Brown and Jo-El Sonnier – on original LP and CD, new remix from original master
“Sugar Bee” – Cleveland Crochet and Jay Stutes – on original LP and CD, new remix from original master
“You’re So Fine”- Pee Wee Kershaw – new to collection
“My Girl of the Village” – Sidney Brown and Jo-El Sonnier – new to collection
“La Cuca Rochman” – Joe Bonsall – on original LP and CD, new unreleased edit
“Good Morning Blues” – Cleveland Crochet and Jay Stutes – on original LP and CD, new previously unreleased edit, remastered from original single master
“My Little Cabbage” – Shorty LeBlanc – on original LP and CD, remastered from original master
“Yard Dog” – Al Ferrier – on original LP and CD, remastered from original master
“Telephone Won’t Ring” – Boozoo Chavis – new to collection
“La Valse de Bo Sparkle” – LeRoy Broussard – new to collection
“Creole Song” – Joe Bonsall – new to collection
“Always There” – Geno Thibodeaux and Robert Bertrand – on original CD release, new remix by Brian Paulson
“My Blue Letter” – Jo-El Sonnier – on original CD release, new remix
“Lemonade Song” – LeRoy Broussard – new to collection
“Mois Cinquantas Sous (My Fifty Cents)” – Jo-El Sonnier & Robert Bertrand – on original CD release, alternate take, remastered from original master
“Bon Ton Roula” – Herman Guiee – on original CD release, remastered from original master
“Pauve Hobo (Poor Hobo)” – Joe Bonsall – new to collection
Labels:
Eddie Shuler,
Goldband,
Swampland Jewels,
Yep Roc
Saturday, September 16, 2017
RIP Harry Dean Stanton, 1926-2017
Remembering the amazing Harry Dean Stanton with a couple of moving performances of Mexican folk classics. |
Labels:
Harry Dean Stanton,
Paris Texas
Friday, September 15, 2017
Thursday, September 14, 2017
Souljazz Orchestra vs. Dur-Dur Band
You can hear the Souljazz Orchestra's studio version of "Is Yeelyel" on Under Burning Skies out September 22. |
RIP Grant Hart, 1961-2017
Grant Hart, longtime Hüsker Dü drummer, singer and songwriter has passed away after a battle with cancer. |
Labels:
2541,
Grant Hart,
Hüsker Dü
Wednesday, September 13, 2017
Tom Waits joins Mavis Staples on stage in Petaluma
Tom Waits turned up to lend Mavis Staples some vocal support on the Staple Singers classic Respect Yourself. |
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Monday, September 11, 2017
Far Out label uncovers lost Hermeto Pascoal session from 1976
Recorded at Rogério Duprat's studio, the '76 session captures Brazilian maestro Hermeto Pascoal at his creative peak. |
According to the Far Out announcement...
There have been few musicians to ever reach the stature of Hermeto Pascoal. A true maestro and a cultural icon, he represents the highest level of musical evolution; as a multi-instrumentalist, as a composer and as an arranger. Once described by Miles Davis as “the most impressive musician in the world”, there is good reason (beyond his Gandalf-like appearance) why he is known as "O Bruxo" (the Wizard).
For the label’s 200th release, Far Out Recordings proudly presents a previously unreleased album by Hermeto Pascoal and his ‘Grupo Vice Versa’: Viajando Com O Som (the lost ’76 Vice Versa Studio Sessions).
Recorded in just two days in 1976, at Rogério Duprat's Vice Versa Studios , São Paulo, the sessions featured Hermeto’s go-to ‘Paulista’ rhythm section of the day: Zé Eduardo Nazario (drums), Zeca Assumpção (bass) and Lelo Nazario (electric piano), as well as saxophonists Mauro Senise, Raul Mascarenhas and Nivaldo Ornelas, guitarist Toninho Horta and vocalist Aleuda Chaves. Hermeto decided he would record with this particular group following a show at Teatro Bandeirantes, during which an almost spiritual musical connection amongst the group was realized. The performance lasted hours, without any breaks, and Hermeto saw the potential for his compositions to reach a ‘higher level’ as the music organically moved from structured compositions to ‘freer’ improvisational works.
In the studio, the sound engineer Renato Viola understood that things needed to happen quickly. Almost everything recorded on the first take ended up staying in the final mix. After the mixdown, Lelo Nazario would ask Renato to make him a copy of all the material, from machine to machine. As far as we know, the master tape eventually got lost over time, but Lelo kept his copy in his studio’s archives, where it stayed for over forty years.
With the tape rescued and restored, this release fills a void in time. Recorded at an especially experimental period in Hermeto’s career, it’s a compelling insight into the incredible efforts of this group, who under Hermeto’s revolutionary vision, created a unique musical language which would have a profound influence on countless artists to come.
Nowadays, the 1970s is indeed considered a golden age of Brazilian music, but it’s often forgotten how desperately hard it was for artists to get their music past the military dictatorship’s censorship efforts throughout the decade. Yet in 1976, despite the often musically radical nature of Hermeto Pascoal’s compositions, he was in a typically productive phase of his career. The year before the release of his seminal album Slaves Mass, ‘76 saw Hermeto amass performance credits on Flora Purim’s ‘Open Your Eyes You Can Fly’, OPA’s ‘Goldenwings’ and Cal Tjader’s ‘Amazonas’ to name just a few.
The release of Viajando Com O Som re-writes the already remarkable story of one of the world’s most supernaturally talented musicians, whilst illuminating a truly magical, yet hitherto lost and forgotten, moment of Brazilian musical history.
Sunday, September 10, 2017
Saturday, September 9, 2017
One For The Weekend: The Sadies
Check out the new video for The Sadies' Through Strange Eyes. Group portrait courtesy of Jeremy Bruneel. |
Labels:
The Sadies,
Through Strange Eyes
Friday, September 8, 2017
Antibalas, A Man Called Warwick @ The Mod Club, Friday
Check out the Antibalas cover of "Heaven (Is Not For Everyone)" not on their new album Where The Gods Are In Peace. |
Thursday, September 7, 2017
Record shopping with Neil Young in 1972
Neil's unreleased Hitchhiker album is out Friday. The cover shot could've been taken while looking for records. |
Labels:
Hitchhiker,
Neil Young
Tommy Stinson's post-Replacements debut gets deluxe reissue treatment
Omnivore's reissue of Bash & Pop's Friday Night Is Killing Me comes with a bonus disc of demos & rarities – like this. |
Wednesday, September 6, 2017
Watch Ted Leo's K-Tel inspired video for Can't Go Back
Full marks to director Rachel Lichtman for getting the proper 70s TV ad look for Ted's new clip (below). |
The Hanged Man LP is out September 8. Ted Leo plays Lee's Palace September 19. |
Labels:
Can't Go Back,
Rachel Lichtman,
Ted Leo,
The Hanged Man
RIP Holger Czukay, 1938-2017
Sadly, Can co-founder Holger Czukay died at Inner Space Studio in Weilerswist. Here's a 2014 interview. |
Labels:
Can,
Holger Czukay
Tuesday, September 5, 2017
Watch the Dream Syndicate's video for Filter Me Through You
The Dream Syndicate's How Did I Find Myself Here album is out Sept. 8. And yes, that's a 1968 Bonneville. |
Labels:
Dream Syndicate
New Hüsker Dü set explores Minneapolis trio's punk roots
Numero's 3CD/4LP Savage Young Dü box boasts 47 unreleased tracks from the original analog tapes. Stream it here. |
Hüsker Dü – Savage Young Dü
DISC 1
1. “Do You Remember?”
2. “Sore Eyes”
3. “Can’t See You Anymore”
4. “Picture Of You”
5. “The Truth Hurts”
6. “Do The Bee”
7. “Nuclear Nightmare”
8. “All I’ve Got To Lose Is You”
9. “Chinese Rocks”
10. “Uncle Ron”
11. “Data Control”
12. “Insects Rule The World”
13. “You’re Too Obtuse”
14. “Outside”
15. “Sexual Economics”
16. “What Went Wrong”
17. “Statues”
18. “Amusement”
19. “Writer’s Cramp”
20. “Let’s Go Die”
21. “Walk With The Wounded”
22. Industrial Grocery Store”
1. “Drug Party”
2. “Call On Me”
3. “Termination”
4. “I’m Tired Of Doing Things”
5. “Stick It To Me”
6. “Wheels”
7. “All Tensed Up”
8. “Don’t Try To Call”
9. “I’m Not Interested”
10. “Guns At My School”
11. “Push The Button”
12. “Gilligan’s Island”
13. “MTC”
14. “Don’t Have A Life”
15. “You’re Naive”
16. “Strange Week”
17. “Big Sky”
18. “Ultracore”
19. “Let’s Go Die”
20. “Won’t Say A Word”
21. “Don’t Try It”
22. “Private Hell”
23. “Diane”
24. “Sex Dolls”
1. “In A Free Land”
2. “What Do I Want?”
3. “M.I.C.”
4. “Target”
5. “Signals From Above”
6. “From The Gut”
7. “Blah, Blah, Blah”
8. “Punch Drunk”
9. “Bricklayer”
10. “Afraid Of Being Wrong”
11. “Sunshine Superman”
12. “Signals From Above”
13. “Everything Falls Apart”
14. “Wheels”
15. “Target”
16. “Obnoxious”
17. “Gravity”
18. “Do You Remember?”
19. “Travel In Opposite Car”
20. “It’s Not Funny Anymore”
21. “Real World”
22. “Out On A Limb”
23. “It’s Not Fair”
Labels:
Hüsker Dü,
Numero Group,
Savage Young Dü
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