Cheers to Van Morrison who turns 74 today – here's a clip of Them performing "Mystic Eyes" and "Gloria" in 1965. |
Saturday, August 31, 2019
Happy Birthday Van Morrison!
That time Atomic Rooster played Beat Club in 1970
Friday, August 30, 2019
Watch Mark Lanegan's new video for "Night Flight to Kabul"
"Night Flight to Kabul is off Mark Lanegan's forthcoming album Somebody's Knocking due October 18th from Heavenly Recordings. |
Mark Lanegan reunites with director Dean Karr
Says Mark Lanegan about the video: “The artistry and genius of Dean Karr is what made this video happen. 5,000 still photographs taken in eight hours were painstakingly put together to give the appearance of a strange wraithlike figure moving weirdly through the desolate landscape of the Salton Sea. My third video with Dean in three different decades and I have to say this was the best. The most artistically challenging and satisfying.”Director Dean Karr adds: “We had been talking about doing this video for Night Flight to Kabul for a month or two and my only concern was how could I pull this off with such a challenging budget for my friend? Being a photographer before I was ever a director, I decided to use my Nikon D810 still camera for the entire music video and turn it into animation throughout the entire clip. What a simple solution! There's lots of post work involved, which was done by editor and FX artist Joel Nathaniel Smith. There's alot to be said for the simplicity of working WITHOUT a crew, it was just Mark, myself and a fan of Mark's (Jason Hall) who drove 3 hours out of his way to meet us at the The Salton Sea, CA to help us shoot a beyond unique video! I think this is one of the freshest looking things out there today and love the ‘melty’ moments, which remind me of doing hallucinogenics back in the day!”
Happy Birthday Kenny Dorham
Thursday, August 29, 2019
R.I.P. Pedro Bell, 1950-2019
Parliament-Funkadelic album illustrator Pedro Bell passed away on Tuesday. His incredible art work will live on! |
LINKS
Chicago Reader: Pedro Bell Made Art To Embody Funkadelic's Grooves
Watch Daniel Johnston perform "I Live My Broken Dreams" and "Funeral Home"
Happy Birthday Sterling Morrison
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Simply Saucer splinter group The Shangs return with "Golden Hits"
Early Simply Saucer guitarist David Byers (right) is joined by fellow Saucer members on The Shangs' latest release. |
Since 1993's self-released Longet album, not much has been heard from The Shangs but Byers and the O'Neil brothers are back with Golden Hits of The Shangs and their Simply Saucer pals Edgar Breau, Kevin Christoff along with Paul Colilli (who passed away in 2018) are credited with musical contributions on the 15 track out now on the band's own Judy Gee! label. Once again, the inspiration of 60s girl groups – specifically The Shangri-Las and The Feminine Complex – figures prominently in the songwriting but Byers found time to pen a few tributes to his cult film heroines.
Along with the previously released "Claudine" concerning singer/actress Claudine Longet who was convicted of negligent homicide in the fatal shooting of her then boyfriend, Olympic skier Spider Sabich, "Patch of Blue" is dedicated to Elizabeth Hartman who was the youngest Oscar nominee for Best Actress for her role in 1965's A Patch Of Blue, "Blue Star" is a homage to troubled stage actress Peggy Entwhistle who infamously killed herself by jumping from the "H" in the Hollywoodland sign in 1932. "The Spell of Arlene Tiger" is actually a nod to the wistful stylings of Brazilian singer Astrud Gilberto which wouldn't seem out of place on the Clay Pitts' Orchestra's soundtrack to 1970's Female Animal starring Arlene Faber aka Arlene Tiger. So it all makes sense.
Perhaps most intriguing is "What Ever Happened To Carol Wayne?" which alludes to the mysterious 1985 death of film and television actress Carol Wayne (I Spy, Hollywood Squares, Bewitched, The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson) who went on vacation with television/film director David E. Durston (Playhouse 90) in Manzanillo, Mexico. Soon after she was found dead in a shallow bay. A coroner's autopsy found no sign of drugs or alcohol in her blood but ruled the death accidental. Incidentally, in 1970, Durston directed I Drink Your Blood starring the aforementioned Arlene Faber and both Carol Wayne and Claudine Longet appeared in Blake Edwards' 1968 film The Party. Listen to a few tracks from Golden Hits of The Shangs below.
LINKS
The Shangs site
VIEW Golden Hits of The Shangs
R.I.P. Donnie Fritts, 1942-2019
Midweek Mixdown: 1960s Nigerian Calypso 45s
Tuesday, August 27, 2019
Happy Birthday Sonny Sharrock
R.I.P. Neal Casal, 1968-2019
That time Soft Machine played the NDR Jazz Workshop with Gary Boyle
Monday, August 26, 2019
Just announced: The Jayhawks @ The Horseshoe, November 20 & 21
Tickets for The Jayhawks' two night stand at The 'Shoe go on sale Thursday (August 29) at 10am right here. Watch 'em play three songs in NYC below. |
It was 50 years ago: Blind Faith
Alejandro Escovedo's With These Hands getting overdue vinyl release
Alejandro's fantastic 1996 album With These Hands is finally being released on vinyl by Run Out Groove in December. Pre-order it here. |
Sunday, August 25, 2019
Watch Agitation Free live in Paris, 1973
Country soul hold-out Jeb Loy Nichols keeps it simple on new album
Jeb Loy Nichols forthcoming album June Is Short, July Is Long is due October 4 from Compass Records. Listen to "You Got It Wrong" below. |
Here's the scoop...
Jeb Loy Nichols, the UK-based, Wyoming-born graphic artist and songsmith, has been putting out his own singular brand of smoky retro soul for over two decades, gathering a fervent cult following along the way. Nichols, backed by his touring band, the Westwood All-Stars, will release his latest album June Is Short, July Is Long in Canada on October 4th via Compass Records distributed by Outside Music.
Having spent brief periods in Missouri, Texas, New York and London, Nichols found his home in a remote smallholding in the Welsh hills in the ‘80s. This back-to-basics, rural lifestyle is mirrored in his approach to music and the art that graces his album covers and informs his videos. His eleventh solo release, June Is Short, July Is Long is a cross-genre collection that documents his journey from being born and raised in the American Midwest through to his current life in the rolling hills of rural Wales.
“It’s full circle,” he says. “I started off in the Ozark hills and now here I am, in the hills again.”
His new music is a record of that journey. Raised on bluegrass and country & western music, Nichols discovered southern soul when he was a teenager. From there it was off to New York City and hip-hop, then over to London and reggae and dancehall. It was this potent mix of genres – his love of classic American roots music and Jamaican reggae, dub and dancehall – that’s since been his signature. He’s spent the past 25 years making music, of which he smiles and says, “It’s all roots music. Three chords and a good story. Don’t overthink it ... just get in the groove and let it happen.”
June Is Short, July Is Long was recorded in Wales with The Westwood All-Stars for an organic, capturing-a-moment feel. “It was all done in five days," he says of the sessions. "One day setting up, one day learning the songs, three days recording… it was great. The best music is a conversation, and this was a conversation between old friends.”
The resulting “musical conversation” has the lived-in, comfortable feel of a classic. It could sit comfortably alongside vintage albums by Ry Cooder or Van Morrison with its stripped-down, real-deal mix of joy and pain. “If you keep it simple,” he says, “there’s less to go wrong.” The resulting collection of songs proves his point. “You take a little country, some soul, some old friends and few good stories, and what can go wrong?” Listen to the album's lead off track "You Got It Wrong" following the album release trailer below. Pre-order a copy of Jeb Loy Nichols' forthcoming album right here.
Saturday, August 24, 2019
Blood Ceremony w/ Pagan Altar, Cauchemar, Smoulder @ Lee's Palace, Saturday
Watch the new Redd Kross video for Beyond The Door
That time Miles Davis challenged Hermeto Pascoal to a boxing match
Friday, August 23, 2019
Remembering 1980's Heatwave Festival in Toronto
Happy Birthday Linda Thompson!
Thursday, August 22, 2019
Eleni Mandell, Lily Frost @ The Drake Hotel, September 15
Get tickets for Eleni Mandell's much-anticipated Toronto return right here. Watch the video for "Ghost Of A Girl" by Beck co-hort Steve Hanft. |
Eleni Mandell's fab new Wake Up Again album is out now on Yep Roc. |
Watch Billy Childish in Hamburg, 1992
Wednesday, August 21, 2019
Metallica guitarist showcases his amazing horror film posters at the ROM
Since the 80s, Kirk Hammett has been collecting the stunning artwork from the golden age of horror and sci-fi films. |
These are just a few of the rare original posters on display as part of It's Alive! Classic Horror and Sci-Fi Art from the collection of Kirk Hammett. |
Midweek Mixdown: Jean-Claude's Deep Jazz Vol. 3
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Little Brother's Phonte & Big Pooh are back with May The Lord Watch
Alex Cuba releases new duets album Sublime in September
Alex Cuba connects with Latin legends Omara Portuondo & Pablo Milanés along with future stars Silvana Estrada and Alex Ferreira on his latest project. |
Here's the scoop...
The spark of creation is a rare and special moment. That’s Alex Cuba’s favorite part of music-making: when inspiration strikes at 3 AM, stepping out into the little studio in his garage, turning on the heater (he’s made a home in the far north of British Columbia, far from the Cuba of his birth), and being alone with a new musical idea. His new album, Sublime (out September 20 on Caracol Records), is all about “capturing that magic, while it’s still hot,” as Alex says, “in that moment of higher truth.”
Alex Cuba wanted to find just the right title for this new project. It had to strike a chord with his Spanish- and English-speaking listeners. It had to reflect the way he’s been distilling the Alex Cuba sound down to its pure essence. “One day I was listening to the masters, having a coffee, and all of a sudden the word crosses my mind: “Sublime,” he recalls. In Spanish, English, and even French, that title captures Alex’s goal: to find the spirit at the heart of his music, leaving out everything that doesn’t need to be there.
What’s left is that sound that brings together Afro-Latin influences into one distinctive voice, the sound that has already won him Latin Grammys, Junos, and three Grammy nominations. It’s purely Alex Cuba, while leaving space for Alex’s signature duets with artists both well known and about to break out.
For one thing, it’s Alex playing every instrument you hear on Sublime. “I’ve recorded with incredible musicians for previous albums,” Alex recalls, “but the vulnerability of these songs led me to this choice. It’s so simple, and yet so strong, I wanted to express all that myself.”
Digging deep into his essential sound requires a certain maturity and honesty. As Alex’s musical career has progressed, he’s learned his strengths. “For years I was a rocker, a funky guy, but I know that my voice calls people to reflect on their own lives. The songs that stay with people are the ones that bring peace and calm, so I wanted to embrace that and be completely naked and intimate.”
That intimate feel, the careful attention to songwriting, and the largely acoustic sounds lend Sublime a vibe that could be called retro, and that’s okay with Alex. “Acoustic music just goes with my soul,” he explains. “I’m not against synths and electronics, but I’m not interested in just making a big noise and getting people to dance. I wanted the songs on this album to have some breathing space. I suggest things, leave things at a subliminal level. Every listen will tell you something else.”
Alex may be focused on his own sound and songwriting, but he still relishes collaborating with other artists. Duets with Ron Sexsmith and Nelly Furtado were instrumental in his career, after all. This time around, Alex pairs his voice with some of Cuba’s brightest lights: Pablo Milanés, a founder of the Nueva Trova sound; Omara Portuondo, the vocalist of the legendary Buena Vista Social Club; and singer-songwriter Kelvis Ochoa, the Cuban vibes king. “This album has the most important duets of my career,” Alex says. “Pablo shaped my generation in Cuba. I listened to his music almost every day of my life, so recording “Hoy Como Ayer” (out Friday, August 23) is a dream come true.”
Alex recorded Sublime in Canada and Cuba, the places he calls home, and also in Mexico and Spain. Sublime is graced by duets with artists in Mexico City’s music scene, both superstar Leonel García (one half of the duo Sin Bandera) and up-and-comers Silvana Estrada and Alex Ferreira. These songs came out of spontaneous collaboration, capturing ideas and emotions by bouncing ideas around together. “It is a wonderful thing to share,” Alex muses. “When you do it with the right people who think and feel alike, it’s an empowering thing to do. It’s like you expand your musical universe.”
From the pensive heartbreak of “De Los Dos” to the insistent groove of “Yo No Sé,” from the frenetic “Ciudad Hembra (La Habana)” to the easy optimism of “Dividido,” Sublime sees Alex Cuba pull off two simultaneous feats: honing his sound down to a sharp edge while expanding his musical universe.
Happy Birthday Sky Saxon!
Monday, August 19, 2019
Ken Boothe, Jay Douglas @ CNE Bandshell, Wednesday
Bro David's Belizean funk recirculated by Cultures Of Soul
Here's the scoop...
Cultures of Soul is proud to take part in documenting Bredda David’s journey into the soul of Belize with an anthology of his early recordings including tracks from No Fear, Cungo Musik (1987) and We No Wa No KImba Ya (1990) albums.
Bredda David’s kungo is hard to describe exactly—its various ingredients make it feel somewhat familiar, but the recipe with which he blends them is slightly strange, fresh and intriguing. But one thing is for certain, it is sure to electrify the dance floor and make everybody jump up and bruk down! Housed in a gatefold jacket with extensive liner notes by Uchenna Ikonne. Bro David's Modern Music From Belize anthology is coming out on September 27th on Cultures Of Soul.
Listen to Bro David's floor filler Dancin' following the preview trailer.
Sunday, August 18, 2019
Watch Shawn Sahm & Margo Price salute Doug Sahm in Austin
Comprehensive Bea & Baby Records box assembled by Earwig
Earwig's Cadillac Baby's Bea & Baby Records anthology (1959-71) includes 101 R&B, blues & gospel tracks over 4CDs. |
The Cadillac Baby's Bea & Baby Records box is a one-stop history of the legendary '50s/'60s blues label from the heart of Chicago’s South Side. Earwig's massive set includes 4 CDs plus a 128-page hardbound book with rare photos and liner notes. Among the artists: Andre Williams, Hound Dog Taylor, Sleepy John Estes & Hammie Nixon, Earl Hooker, Little Mack Simmons, Sunnyland Slim, Eddie Boyd, James Cotton, Detroit Junior, T. Valentine, Arelean Brown, Homesick James, The Pilgrim Harmonizers, and many more. Gospel, soul and doo-wop too. Check out the complete track listing along with clips below. Order a copy directly from Earwig right here.
Cadillac Baby's Bea & Baby Records: The Definitive Collection (Earwig Music)
Disc: 1
1. Welcome to Cadillac Baby's Show Lounge - Cadillac Baby
2. I'm Commin' Home - Eddie Boyd
3. Thank You Baby - Eddie Boyd
4. Nitwit - L. C. McKinley
5. Sharpest Man In Town - L. C. McKinley
6. Mad House Jump - The Daylighters
7. You're Breaking My Heart - The Daylighters
8. I Need Him To Love Me - Faith Taylor and the Sweet Teens
9. I Love You Darling - Faith Taylor and the Sweet Teens
10. Trying To Make A Living - Bobby Saxton
11. Dynamite - Earl Hooker
12. The Legend Of Cadillac Baby - Cadillac Baby
13. Blue Monday Blues - Eddie Boyd
14. The Blues Is Here To Stay - Eddie Boyd
15. Come Home! - Eddie Boyd
16. You Got To Reap! - Eddie Boyd
17. Times Are Getting Tougher - Little Mac
18. Don't Come Back - Little Mac
19. Little Lu-Lu Frog - T. Valentine
20. Teen-Age Jump - T. Valentine
21. How Detroit Junior Got Famous - Cadillac Baby
22. Money Tree - Detroit Junior
23. So Unhappy - Detroit Junior
24. Come On Home - Eddie Boyd & the Daylighters
25. Reap What You Sow - Eddie Boyd & the Daylighters
Disc: 2
1. My Baby Is Coming Home - Hound Dog Taylor
2. Take Five - Hound Dog Taylor
3. You Mistreated Me - St. Louis Mac
4. Broken Heart - St. Louis Mac
5. It's So Hard - Phil Sampson
6. Sampson - Singing Sam featuring Phil Sampson
7. My Story - Singing Sam
8. Calvins Reserve - Singing Sam
9. Worried About My Baby - Sunnyland Slim
10. Drinkin' And Clownin' - Sunnyland Slim
11. All The Way - Eddie Boyd
12. Where You Belong - Eddie Boyd
13. Cadillac Baby Gets Into The Record Business - Cadillac Baby
14. Please Baby - Lee Jackson
16. Juanita - Lee Jackson
17. Please Give Me A Chance - Andre Williams
18. I Still Love You - Andre Williams
19. I'm Your Fool - Little Mac
20. Let Hootenanny Blues (Out Of Jail) - Little Mac
21. One More Mile - James Cotton
22. There Must Be a Panic On - James Cotton
23. Your Love - Kirk Taylor and the Velvets
24. This World - Kirk Taylor and the Velvets
25. Joe's House Rent Party Part I - Tall Paul Hankins and the Hudson Brothers
26. Joe's House Rent Party Part II - Tall Paul Hankins and the Hudson Brothers
27. It's You I'm Going To Miss - Willie Hudson with Tall Paul Hankins on organ
28. Red Lips - Willie Hudson
Disc: 3
1. The Christmas Song - Lee Jackson & Cadillac Baby Specials
2. Santa Came Home Drunk - Clyde Lasley & Cadillac Baby Specials
3. One More Chance - The Chances
4. It Takes More Than Love Alone - The Chances
5. Mother-In-Law Blues - Little Mack & The Hipps
6. Woman, Help Me - Little Mack & The Hipps
7. The Sky Is Crying - Little Mack Simmons
8. I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man - Little Mack Simmons
9. Trouble No More - Little Mack Simmons
10. I'm Tore Down - Little Mack Simmons
11. I Love My Man - Arlean Brown
12. Hello Baby - Arlean Brown
13. House Rock - Sunnyland Slim
14. She Got That Jive - Sunnyland Slim
15. Little Girl - Sunnyland Slim
16. Too Late To Pray - Sunnyland Slim
17. I Done You Wrong - Sunnyland Slim
18. My Baby's Gone - Homesick James Williamson
19. My Kind Of Woman - Homesick James Williamson
20. Homesick Sunnyland Special - Homesick James Williamson
21. Lost In the Jungle - Andrew "Blue Blood" McMahon
22. Special Agent - Andrew "Blue Blood" McMahon
23. Worried All The Time - Andrew "Blue Blood" McMahon
24. Potato Diggin' Man - Andrew "Blue Blood" McMahon
Disc: 4
1. Somebody Changed The Lock - Willie Williams
2. 38 Woman Blues - Willie Williams
3. Raise Your Window Baby - unknown blues band and vocalist
4. Jump This Morning - unknown blues band and vocalist
5. 7402 - "3D" aka Richard Davenport
6. Here We Go Chi-Town - "3D" aka Richard Davenport
7. Just In Case That You Got a Case - unknown artist possibly Clyde Lasley
8. I Bet I Don't Die Tired - unknown artist
9. The Preacher, A Deacon & A Razor - unknown artist
10. Cadillac Baby Passed So Fast - Sleepy John Estes and Hammie Nixon
11. Worry My Mind Sleepy - Sleepy John Estes and Hammie Nixon
12. Spirit Don't Leave Me - Sleepy John Estes and Hammie Nixon
13. Lay My Burden Down - Sleepy John Estes and Hammie Nixon
14. I Did A Lot Of Spiritual Records - Cadillac Baby
15. Search Me Lord - The Glory-Airs
16. Now Lord Don't Drive Me Away - The Glory-Airs
17. Holy Place - Eddie Dean & the Biblical Aires
18. God Has Prepared - Eddie Dean & the Biblical-Aires
19. He's A God - The Norfolk Singers
20. Testimonial - The Norfolk Singers
21. Witness There Too - The Pilgrim Harmonizers
22. Over The Hill - The Pilgrim Harmonizers
23. Climbing High Mountains - Rev. Samuel Patterson
24. Judgment Day - Rev. Samuel Patterson
25. Blues Is My Soul - Cadillac Baby