Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Another posthumous Alan Vega album, After Dark, due July 30

Alan Vega After Dark features the Suicide frontman backed by members of Pink Slip Daddy.

Here's the scoop...

2021 is shaping up to be the year of Alan Vega. Every year should be but, this year is definitely it. The announcement of the opening of the Alan Vega archives, which will be unleashing an untold amount of unreleased material dating back to 1971 via Sacred Bones, the release of Mutator (a lost album from the mid 90’s) which has gained rave reviews, a massive feature in the New York Times…Alan has been celebrated everywhere of late. In The Red is over the moon to participate in this celebration with the release of Alan Vega After Dark - an album that captures a late night rock n’ roll session with Alan backed by Ben Vaughn, Barb Dwyer and Palmyra Delran (all members of the incredible Pink Slip Daddy as well as countless other cool projects). This album serves as a reminder that Alan Vega was an incredible rock n’ roll/blues/rockabilly vocalist. He was one of the best. 

Check out "Nothing Left". Pre-order a copy of Alan Vega After Dark using the link below. 



From the desk of Jason P. Woodbury 

I only spoke with Alan Vega once. It was over the phone and the topic of discussion was the 2015 reissue of Cubist Blues, the phenomenally out there album he’d originally released with collaborators Alex Chilton and Ben Vaughn in 1996. I was in a noisy stadium for reasons that no longer matter at all, on a cell phone, but even with all that extra noise considered, Alan was exceptionally difficult to understand. At first at least. He’d suffered a stroke a few years earlier, in 2012, which still had lingering effects on his speech. But even before that, his heavy East Coast accent had sometimes made him hard to decipher, lending his voice the character of “a cab driver describing fine art,” Vaughn says. If you weren’t from New York—specifically Alan’s New York, an older version of Gotham that may have died with him on July 16th, 2016, when he passed on his sleep—it could be hard to keep up. But after a few minutes, I adjusted to the rhythm. Suddenly, without warning, I found myself able to dance to the peculiar beat of Vega’s jutting back and forth, his Jewish mystic cadence, the kind you hear in gasps and yelps on the transgressively savagely conceptual records he made in the late ‘70s with Martin Rev as Suicide, or the solo records he made starting in the 80s and continuing through to his final studio album "IT" finished in early 2015 and released posthumously in 2017, collages of machoismo-powered rockabilly, space cadet hard rock, renegade cowboy soul, and neon-drenched pop art Americana. You acclimate and then boom: You’re immersed in the “one-man subculture,” to borrow Vaughn’s description, of Alan Vega.  

Though his relationship to the mainstream was flirtatious but never a fully committed one, Vega’s sub rosa influence on a disparate but extensive list of punks, new wavers, industrial deconstructionists, garage rockers, and pop stars is clear. His admirers included Ric Ocasek of the Cars, a frequent collaborator, and Bruce Springsteen, whose 1982 album Nebraska, particularly the creeping song “State Trooper,” explored the same haunted backroads Vega sang about. “The bravery and passion he showed throughout his career was deeply influential to me,” Springsteen noted on his Facebook page, memorializing Vega. “There was simply no one else remotely like him.”  

No one else like him. That was certainly the case in 2015, when Vega decamped to Renegade Studio in New York City’s West Village with Vaughn on guitar, bassist and keyboardist Barb Dwyer, drummer (and Sirius XM DJ) Palmyra Delran, and engineer Geoff Sanoff. Sporting sunglasses, a knit cap and long rider coat, Vega looked tough as nails in his 78th year, and as always he was dedicated to the moment, to capturing the ghosts for what would prove to be his final live band recording.  

Years before, the stroke had slowed Vega down, but he’d recovered and continued making music, often remotely, vocalizing over pre-recorded tracks by electronic musicians. He wanted a different feel for this project, wanted “to feel connected,” Vaughn says, to the musicians in the room, the way it had worked when they made Cubist Blues with Chilton, a music industry rebel in his own right. That record had taken two frenzied, off-the-cuff nights, this album required only one. “We got better at it,” Vaughn says with a chuckle, his velvet voice—the one I’ve so often heard on his essential and always joyous radio program and podcast The Many Moods of Ben Vaughn —underserved by my cellular telephone (once again). 

Vega was obsessed with the enormity of any given moment, and to that end, he insisted the band be assembled with absolutely no preparation. They would be responsible for creating, ears tuned to each other and Vega’s incantations, a spontaneous space for his magical recitations. “It’s the only way I’ve ever worked with him,” Vaughn says. “We would start playing, and Alan would wait a little bit,” drawing in a notepad the entire time, working on his “zillions of sketches” — potential self-portraits, though he’d be loathe to indulge you asking if they were — or reading his copy of the New York Post. Eventually he’d rise to the microphone. “Some of the stuff he comes up with, it’s really unbelievable,” Vaughn says, citing the elementally profound lyrics for “River of No Shame,” delivered for the first time as the band churned on. “The animals are hunting, the animals are hunting/Making a break for the river/Making a break for the river/The river of no shame,” Vega riffs, over a motorik groove that’s somehow equal parts Neu! and John Lee Hooker.  

Vega didn’t consider the marketplace at all, never considered what would become of his art after he made it, living like the embodiment of what visionary director David Lynch would describe as “the art life.” For Vega creating was the sacred act. Creations? He could take them or leave them. “Liz, Alan’s wife, has told me that when he would finish a painting, he’d immediately paint over the canvas — she’d have to snatch them away from him,” Vaughn says. 

Luckily, Vaughn and company have been able to do something like that with Alan Vega After Dark, a set of songs that exist fully in their genesis, realized and recorded one night in New York City. They snatched one away from Alan, so we can pore over it. Listening to it, Vega’s words sometimes slip past me, like they did early in our single phone call. Wait, what was that he just said? It might have been the secret of the world! But I have the luxury of knowing that even as I can return to the LP over and over again, I’ll never hear the same thing twice. “Alan was writing from the future,” Vaughn says. I think back to 2015 when, during my interview for Aquarium Drunkard, Vega swatted away my inquiries about where his visions originated: “I don’t know where it comes from. People ask, ‘Why?’...There is no why. Who gives a shit? It’s not supposed to be why. It’s supposed to be the world. The mystery.”

You can pre-order a copy of Alan Vega After Dark directly from In The Red right here



Happy Birthday Walter Daniels!

Celebrating the birthday of harp hero Walter Daniels with a 1997 performance of "Do The Milkshake" with The Oblivians. 



Midweek Mixdown: Sounds From The Ancient Archive

Check out Nat Birchall's stellar 2 hour selection of deep jazz and roots reggae from his own stash below. 


TRACKLIST 
1. Malaguena - Pete LaRoca (Blue Note) 
2. In The Beginning There Was Africa - Joe Henderson (Milestone) 
3. Ptah The El Daoud - Alice Coltrane (Impulse) 
4. African Challenge - Zoot Skully Simms (Studio 1) 
5. Black Is Black - Im & David (Bamboo) 
6. Free Black People - Burning Spear (Tribesman 12") 
7. Variations In Blue - Bill Barron (Dragon) 
8. Mavichavel - Tchangodei & Archie Shepp (Volcanic) 
9. Hully Gully Rock - Roland Alphonso & His Alley Cats (Blue Beat) 
10. Love And Devotion - Slim Smith (Black Solidarity) 
11. Love Land - Sound Dimension (Studio 1) 
12. Jericho Skank - Ernest Ranglin & Jackie Mittoo (Studio 1) 
13. Ouagoudougu - Clifford Jordan (Strata East/Polydor) 
14. Through The Ages Jehovah - Andrew Cyrille (Soul Note) 
15. There Is A Balm In Gilead - Odean Pope (CIMP) 
16. Brain Wash - Conscious Minds (Soul Beat) 
17. Life's Experience - Hopeton Crawford (Faithful Few) 
18. Life's Dub (Faithful Few) 
19. Bwaata - Joe Henderson (Milestone)

Check out Sounds From The Ancient Archive on Mixcloud right here. 






Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Rick White previews Where It's Fine with "Underneath"

Guitarist/songwriter Rick White used his time during lockdown to cut a new psych epic Where It's Fine and paint the trippy sleeve. 

Here's the scoop from the Blue Fog label...
Rick White's latest album, Where It's Fine, boasts 10 catchy new fuzzy psychedelic tunes like only Rick could make. Recorded between April 2020 - April 2021 and pressed on neon purple vinyl with a crazy colourful new painting on the cover. Limited pressing of 500.
Pre-order it directly from Blue Fog right here

Check out "Underneath," the rippin' first song from the new album followed by Rick White's 2019 appearance on the Kreative Kontrol podcast below. 



Alejandro Escovedo's La Cruzada album gets wider release

La Cruzada, the Spanish-language version of Alejandro Escovedo's acclaimed album The Crossing, is out Aug 27 via Yep Roc.  

Sez Alejandro...

“I began developing this story about a southern Italian boy named Salvo and a young boy named Diego from Saltillo, Mexico, who meet in Galveston, Texas while working in an Italian restaurant,” says Escovedo. “They set out on a journey in search of the America created by beat poets, rock ‘n’ roll savants, new wave films, and the underground garage. The America they discover is a very divided and unwelcoming land filled with racism and unrest. La Cruzada is the realization of a dream that I’ve always had to record an album in Spanish in honor of my father’s heritage, and it has finally come to life.”

Pre-order La Cruzada from Yep Roc Records right here. Check out "Algo Azul" followed by a list of upcoming fall tour dates. 




Monday, June 28, 2021

Happy Birthday Honeyboy Edwards!

Remembering delta blues great Honeyboy Edwards with a rare street corner performance of "Army Blues" from 1942. 



Stars come out for salute to NRBQ's Joey Spampinato

Party For Joey, a Sweet Relief tribute album celebrating the work of NRBQ's Joey Spampinato, is out now via True North.

Here's the scoop from True North...

True North Records has just released Party For Joey: A Sweet Relief Tribute to Joey Spampinato, which features a lengthy list of friends and fans of the NRBQ founding member/bassist saluting him with 14 versions of their own previously unreleased versions of Spampinato-penned songs.

A Sweet Relief Tribute to Joey Spampinato is an inspired album recorded by an astounding group of musicians including Los Lobos, Bonnie Raitt, Peter Case, Ben Harper, The Minus 5, Buddy Miller & Jim Lauderdale, Chris Spedding, Robbie Fulks, Deer Tick, She & Him, Steve Forbert and Al Anderson who are all generously donating their proceeds from these recordings to the Sweet Relief Musicians Fund to support Joey with his current health issues. The Sweet Relief Musicians Fund provides financial assistance to all types of career musicians and music industry workers who are struggling to make ends meet while facing illness, disability or age-related problems.

Joey Spampinato, a singer, songwriter and bassist, was co-founder of the legendary NRBQ, a rock quartet whose genre-defying music continues to inspire generations of music fans and fellow musicians. Many of those musicians answered the call from Joey’s wife Kami Lyle and producer Sheldon Gomberg when they contacted them about recording one of Joey’s songs for an album to help raise funds for Joey when it was revealed he was battling cancer.

Check out the contributions from Peter Case, Ben Harper (with Keith Richards, Charlie Musselwhite, Don Heffington & Benmont Tench), Buddy Miller & Jim Lauderdale, The Minus 5 and Al Anderson following the complete track listing below. 


Party For Joey: A Sweet Relief Tribute to Joey Spampinato 

Al Anderson – “You Can't Hide” - Original Release: 1980 on Tiddlywinks 

Los Lobos – “Every Boy, Every Girl” - Original Release: 1987 on God Bless Us All

Deer Tick – “That I Get Back Home” - Original Release: 1980 on Tiddlywinks

Ben Harper with Keith Richards, Charlie Musselwhite, Benmont Tench, Don Was & Don Heffington – “Like a Locomotive” - Original Release: 1989 on Wild Weekend

Peter Case – “Don't Knock At My Door” - Original Release: 1972 on Scraps

She & Him – “How Can I Make You Love Me” - Original Release: 1983 on Grooves in Orbit

The Minus 5 – “Don't She Look Good” - Original Release: 1979 on Kick Me Hard

Steve Forbert – “Beverly” - Original Release: 1986 on Uncommon Denominators

Buddy Miller & Jim Lauderdale – “How Will I Know” - Original Release: 2013 on Smiles

Bonnie Raitt & NRBQ – “Green Lights” - Original Release: 1978 on At Yankee Stadium

Robbie Fulks – “Chores” - Original Release: 1979 on Kick Me Hard

Penn And Teller – “Plenty of Somethin’” - Original Release: 1997 on You’re Nice People You Are

The Nils & Chris Spedding – “That's Alright” Original Release: 1977 on All Hopped Up

Kami Lyle with Joey – “First Crush”






R.I.P. Lou Courtney, 1943-2021

Sadly soul singer & songwriter Lou Courtney – born Louis R. Pegues in Buffalo – has passed away. Here are a few of his gems.  






Energy: A Documentary About Damo Suzuki in the works

Director Michelle Heighway has been working on her film about the CAN frontman since 2014 and could use your help to finish it.
 


Energy: A Documentary About Damo Suzuki

Critically-acclaimed director Michelle Heighway has been working with iconic musician Damo Suzuki since 2014, culminating in ENERGY. 

The film shows five years of Suzuki’s life in Germany and the United Kingdom as he confronts cancer and attempts to continue a never-ending global tour. 

We are now crowdfunding for the final phase of the film: archival copyright fees and music licensing which will allow us to honor Damo’s story with the documentary it deserves.

“ENERGY is a wonderful story of hope,” says Heighway. “It’s a personal portrait of an iconic musician, a nomad and a person who connects others all around the world.”

The film examines the past, present and future of Suzuki’s influential music, from his beginnings with legendary band CAN, to his singular outlook on life, creativity, and protest.

A crowd-funding campaign has been launched by Heighway via Indiegogo to raise funds to help complete the film with contributions helping to pay for music licensing,  archival photos and footage rights, graphics, sound mixing, mastering, colour/sound correction and other post-production costs as well as distribution.  

For those who'd like to help out with a donation and get a signed photo of Damo, digital stream of the completed film, a limited edition coffee mug, t-shirt or DVD, go here. Check out the trailer below. 


Sunday, June 27, 2021

R.I.P. Jon Hassell, 1937-2021

Sadly, avant-garde composer and trumpeter Jon Hassell has passed away at the age of 84. He'll be greatly missed. 




David Hasselhoff vs. Iggy Pop

David Hasselhoff takes a crack at Iggy's "The Passenger" for his new album Party Your Hasselhoff... no, we're not making this up.



That time Nathan Davis sat in with Booker Ervin in Brussels

Here's some great footage of Booker Ervin with Pony Poindexter and Nathan Davis in action from May 1966. 


Set list
00:00 Milestones  
06:27 All Blues
13:40 The Leopard  
20:26 Straight No Chaser   
26:06 Margo  
31:10 French Market  
35:38 Yesterdays  
41:35 Walkin'  

Booker Ervin (tenor saxophone), Ted Curson (trumpet),  Pony Poindexter (alto saxophone),  Nathan Davis (flute), Kenny Drew (piano), Jimmy Woode (bass), Edgar Bateman (drums).



Saturday, June 26, 2021

Elvis Costello talks about his encounters with Chet Baker

Here's a revealing Elvis Costello chat about finding a Chet Baker 10" at Village Music and later working with him. 




Happy Birthday Reggie Workman!

Celebrating Reggie Workman's birthday with a discussion of his time with Coltrane and Blakey followed by two performances.  




Jad Fair & Kramer reunite for The History of Crying (Revisited)

Jad Fair & Kramer's new album The History of Crying, Revisited is out now. Check out the video for "I Wanna Make A Movie" 


Here' s the scoop...

Indie rock duo Jad Fair & Kramer just shared a video for "I Wanna Make A Movie" to coincide with the release of their new collaborative album The History of Crying (Revisited) on Shimmy-Disc/Joyful Noise. Watch the entertaining black & white video co-directed by Kramer and acclaimed Scottish filmmaker Grant McPhee below. 

On "I Wanna Make A Movie," Kramer says: So one of the 12 song titles i sent to Jad for this LP (hoping he'd write some great lyrics for it) was "I Wanna Make A Movie."

And a few hours later he sent me some lyrics in his truest style...with "happy endings", and "starring you and me", and "action packed and thrilling". all things that reflected his lifelong, unbreakable optimism and love for everything and everyone around him and all around the world. Jad is Joy. Jad is Hope. Jad is Love.

But i knew from personal experience that the world of movies was filled with jealousy and rejection and a sea full of vindictive people who will stop at nothing in their unholy crusade to destroy the lives of others, their livelihoods, even destroying their own love for the cinema itself in the process of destroying others. I have seen it. some people will stop at nothing when their goal is to stop you. it's the air that they breathe. they'll wither and die and blow away if they don't have someone to destroy.

So i added some lyrics that reflected MY feelings about the world of movie making. Lyrics like, "I am a power couple, like Angelina Jolie, and Mr. Pitt will call me, he says he'll work for free", and, "my head is big as Texas, my ego bigger still". stuff like that. I felt this brought some realism to the proceedings that the music was screaming out for, and Jad was fine with us co-writing lyrics whenever i felt compelled to put my two cents in. and i thought to myself...no one's ever going to think that Jad wrote a line like, "I will die in a car crash, and have my dreams fulfilled."

i mean, that's not Jad. not in a million years. That's me.

"And he can go climb a tree."

So it is with the deepest reverence that Jad Fair and I (and guitarist Paul Leary) give you this song, in dedication to all the great songwriters who'll never make a record, and all the great actors who'll never get the shot they deserve, all the great directors who never got to make their movie, and all the great singers who never saw a microphone. Their stories are fully half of the stories in THE HISTORY OF CRYING.    – Kramer, June 2021

This is Jad Fair & Kramer's third collaboration (and first in almost 20 years): The History of Crying, a 12-track record produced and recorded by Kramer at his studio in Florida, Noise Miami. Long-time fans of Jad Fair will be blown away by his vocals on the album, and fans of Butthole Surfers will go "hog wild" for Paul Leary's fiery guitar solos across the record. Kramer's music & arrangements glue it all together in a startling mix that pulls his entire history as a producer into a single glorious celebration.




Jad Fair & Kramer – The History of Crying (Revisited) 
1    Red Red Sun    
2    I Wanna Make a Movie    
3    The History of Crying    
4    I Won't Eat 'Til You Come Back To Me    
5    I'll Give You The Moon    
6    Pickpockets Of Love    
7    Show Me The Way To Nowhere    
8    Do You Really Need a Map To My Heart?
9    All I Need Is a Kiss    
10    I Miss My Analog Warmth    
11    You Cripple Me    
12    Tearjerker




Friday, June 25, 2021

Happy Birthday Clifton Chenier!

Remembering zydeco great Clifton Chenier with a couple of fantastic performances from 1969 and 1977.



R.I.P. Timothy Parker aka 'Gift of Gab', 1971-2021

Sadly, Timothy Parker, aka Blackalicious MC Gift of Gab has passed away at the age of 50. He'll be greatly missed.  




Beth B's Lydia Lunch doc The War Is Never Over opens June 30

Beth B's feature-length film about Lydia Lunch, The War Is Never Over opens at NY's IFC Center Wednesday. Watch the trailer.

Here's the scoop...
Turning trauma into precise and angry feminist rock, American singer, writer and actress Lydia Lunch helped birth the No Wave music scene in the late 1970s and early ’80s—and she’s still killing it today. Fellow No Wave pioneer Beth B constructs a lively portrait of this innovative performer, whose confrontational artistry resonates loudly in today’s feminist landscape. Critics, filmmakers, musicians and friends discuss the relevance of Lydia’s brilliantly vitriolic world. 

If you are in the New York area, tickets are now on sale for the first two days of the IFC Center screening of Beth B's film: Lydia Lunch: the War is Never Over. Beth and Lydia will be present at the 7:40 PM show on June 30. https://www.ifccenter.com/.../lydia-lunch-the-war-is.../

 More about Beth B.

In the 1980s, Beth B was one of the most prominent creative voices living and working in downtown New York. During this period, she made large-scale installations and Super-8 films. This film work which included G-man and Black Box made her a key player in the Cinema of Transgression film movement. Since the 1980s, she has released numerous documentaries and features for screen and television.

Her non-fiction feature, Exposed, about burlesque premiered in the Panorama section at the 2013 Berlin Film Festival. Beth's documentary, Call Her Applebroog, chronicles the life and work of her mother—renowned visual artist Ida Applebroog. Call Her Applebroog premiered at MOMA’s Doc Fortnight in February 2016.  Beth has also written and directed narrative features such as the great Salvation!: Have You Said Your Prayers Today?, and Two Small Bodies. 

Listen to Lydia Lunch's interview with Beth B and the documentary on her Lydian Spin Podcast right here. Watch the film trailer below. Find out more about Lydia Lunch: The War Is Never Over and upcoming screenings right here: https://www.lydialunchmovie.com.
 

One For The Weekend: Phosphorescent

Here's a spare acoustic version of "Song For Zula" from 2013 off Phosphorescent's The BBC Sessions out now. 


Thursday, June 24, 2021

Heartbreakers' L.A.M.F. LP to be reissued from 'found' master tapes

A cleaner version of L.A.M.F., pressed from the recently discovered tapes, The Found '77 Masters will be out for RSD July 17th. 


Here's the scoop from Jungle Records...

Johnny Thunders & his Heartbreakers crew
FOUND IN AN ATTIC - a punk rock archaeological discovery: a copy master of the original 1977 Track Records tape, without 'mud'!  This classic punk album, recorded in London by the New York band featuring two New York Dolls, was always controversial - and not just for the acronym.  Upon release on Track Records in 1977, it was universally condemned in the music press for having a 'muddy mix' - later found to be a mastering fault.  When Track went bust the following year, manager Leee Black Childers managed to burgle the Track Records' Carnaby Street office and liberated the tapes that belonged to him and the band - he found everything except the master-tape.

Subsequent releases were remixed from the multi-tracks ('Revisted', 1984) or compiled from outtake mixes - the 'lost '77 mixes' (1994) being the version most known since.  A lift from the vinyl for a 'definitive' box set still didn't achieve much clarity.  Meanwhile, fans found the 1977 cassette version didn't have the infamous 'mud', nor did certain European vinyl matrixes.

Unexpectedly, in 2020 a chance meeting led Jungle to Daniel Secunda's archives.  Danny was an old-school music biz pioneer who became a Track Records director - and the Heartbreakers 'L.A.M.F.' co-producer.  In amongst his archives stored in his attic were numerous tape boxes, including two with no artist name, marked: 'Copy Master 12.7.77'.  They turned out to be a crystal-clear 'L.A.M.F.', just as the band and producers intended it. 

Sadly, in August 2020 the Heartbreakers co-lead vocalist, guitarist and songwriter Walter passed away.  He was the last of the Heartbreakers 'L.A.M.F.' line-up - Johnny Thunders died in 1991, Jerry Nolan in 1992, and Billy Rath in 2014.  Walter's punk memoir autobiography is to be published in paperback in June 2021, and his band The Waldos also get their album 'Rent Party' reissued on blue vinyl for Record Store Day's RSD Drop2, followed by a CD reissue.

L.A.M.F. - the found '77 masters is to be released for Record Store Day 2021 RSD Drop2 on July 17 as a limited edition in transparent purple vinyl.  It has an inner bag with new notes by Simon Wright, plus a 12" poster of a Roberta Bayley cover outtake pic.  A CD version will be announced when details are confirmed.

So, is it much different?  Vive Le Rock's Joe Whyte's review says: "the sound is clearer, sharper, more focused but it's fairly subtle too. If the songs are ingrained in your DNA, you'll feel the difference straight away.  Punchier and clearer with Nolan's drums and cymbals cutting through, Billy Rath's bass slinkier and ballsier than the original mixes.  The buccaneering guitar licks of Thunders guitar are right in your face, and Walter Lure's choppy, sinuous leads wind in and out."  

An example: 'It's Not Enough' - when choosing tracks for 'the Lost mixes' from the attempts at assorted studios, we found only two versions to choose from.  One had vocals mixed far too high; the other very low.  We went with the low vocals version - they almost fade away at one point.  Now, we can hear the correctly balanced mix.

Tracks: Born To Lose, Baby Talk, All By Myself, I Wanna Be Loved, It's Not Enough, Chinese Rocks, Get Off The Phone, Pirate Love, One Track Mind, I Love You, Goin' Steady, Let Go, Can't Keep My Eyes On You, Do You Love Me. 

Listen to "Born To Lose," "All By Myself" and "Chinese Rocks" following the release trailer. 





Happy Birthday Frank Lowe!

Remember saxophone great Frank Lowe with his One For Jazz album with Billy Bang.


Bacao Rhythm & Steel preview Expansions with "Raise It Up"

Listen to Bacao Rhythm & Steel's version of the Slum Village classic "Raise It Up" off their new Expansions LP. 

Here's the scoop...

Bacao Rhythm & Steel Band, the mysterious steel pan outfit hailing from Hamburg, Germany have amassed a cult following around the globe. With a slew of classic 7”s and two critically acclaimed full length albums, they set a high bar for themselves, one they clearly intend on pushing even higher with this new offering. On their third album, aptly titled Expansions (out July 16), BRSB are back with more of the same, but more of the same with them is inherently different. Covering songs that span genres and range from mega hits to album cuts, they make them their own with their unique approach to the traditional steel pans of Trinidad and Tobago. 

Part of the allure of a new record from Bacao is finding out what covers they chose. However, die hard fans are also waiting to hear the original numbers like the stellar album opener “Tough Victory”. Its airtight rhythm section, brass arrangements, and layers of steel pan melodies make the term “cover band” a shoe that could never fit Bacao. Within the next three songs they go from Jazz (Galt MacDermot), to Hip Hop (Slum Village / J Dilla), to a dance floor classic (Grace Jones) taking them all on with their signature style, expanding on the originals. An easy crowd favorite is their gritty, gully, and neck snapping cover of the Timbaland produced Jay-Z club hit “Dirt Off Your Shoulder”. The infamous crushing Bacao drums start the show and the moment they start playing the top line on the pans, all bets are off. Sure to become a dance floor filler is their bottom heavy, four on the floor version of Sylvester’s classic “I Need Somebody To Love Tonight”. They venture into some gutbucket funk with Ike Turner’s “Getting Nasty” and bring the steel pans to Minnie Riperton’s Jazz classic “Les Fleurs”. Digging deeper in the modern canon and paying tribute to a tribute, they cover Erykah Badu’s homage to the late great J Dilla, “The Healer”. This is the type of thing to make Spice Adams jump on his kitchen counter and scream. From the second the beat drops they give the original Madlib production a run for its money, shaking subwoofers with the eerie tremolo bass while the pans play E. Badu’s vocal melodies. 

By the time the album is through Bacao has taken the listener on a journey that spans a myriad of energies, tempos, and moods while somehow managing to keep it all under one umbrella. For all that, these songs are alive, and they will be taken out of the context of this album and sewn into the fabric of DJ sets around the globe for many years to come. Bacao Rhythm & Steel Band is breathing renewed life into the originals and continuing to push the boundaries of steel pan music, or, as the title suggests, expanding on it. 

You can pre-order a copy of Expansions via Bandcamp right here. Check out "Raise It Up," "My Jamaican Dub" and "Dirt Off Your Shoulder" followed by the track listing.  

Bacao Rhythm & Steel Band - Expansions
1. Tough Victory
2. Space
3. Raise It Up 
4. My Jamaican Dub 
5. I Need Somebody To Love Tonight
6. Dirt Off Your Shoulder 
7. Getting Nasty
8. Blow Your Cover
9. Represent
10. The Healer 02:50
11. Les Fleurs
12. Squaring The Circles
CD bonus tracks: Juicy Fruit, Kaiso Noir, Look Out Baby (Here I Come)


Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Happy Birthday Sahib Shihab!

Remembering saxophonist/flautist Sahib Shihab on his birthday with a fantastic 1965 session with the Danish Radio Jazz Group. 


90s Nostalgia: GBV's Bee Thousand

Since Bee Thousand's songs were taken directly from Robert Pollard's 4-track demos, it made the mastering a challenge.



Midweek Mixdown: Veronica Vasicka's Minimal Wave

Veronica Vasicka spins an intriguing 2-hour selection of rare 80s electro on her Minimal Wave show.

Veronica Vasicka presents a monthly 2-hour show on NTS Radio featuring the lost synth-wave treasures she has archived from the late 70s and early 80s, along with other iconic underground electronic music drawn from over four decades. Expect to hear exclusive tracks from releases on her seminal Minimal Wave and Cititrax labels plus cassette-only and private press rarities.

Featuring: Anne Clark, Conrad Schnitzler, Strafe, Vicious Pink, Skinny Puppy, Crash Course In Science, The Neon Judgement, A Split-Second, Nine Inch Nails, Das Ding, The Human League, Soft Cell, Gerry and the Holograms, Stephan Eicher, Deux, The Residents, Chris & Cosey, Propaganda.

Listen right here




Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Happy Birthday Eliades Ochoa!

Celebrating the birthday of the Buena Vista Social Club keyman with the excellent documentary "From Cuba To The World" 



 

Watch what the Black Keys do with RL Burnside's "Goin' Down South"

The Black Keys' crack at RL Burnside's "Goin' Down South" is on their new Delta Kream album. Check RL's versions below.




Lara Hope & The Ark-Tones release "Here To Tell The Tale" on Friday

Check out the title track and the rockin' "Let's Go!" from Lara Hope & The Ark-Tones' Here To Tell The Tale album available here





LINK
Barry On The Beat Lara Hope interview



Monday, June 21, 2021

Foo Fighters go disco as the Dee Gees with Hail Satin album

Dave Grohl and pals redo Foo songs disco style and add a few Bee Gees faves on Hail Satin out Record Store Day, July 17th. 


Here's the scoop from Sony Music Canada: 
It’s Record Store Day Night Fever as the Brothers Foo Gibb it to you good with HAIL SATIN, the high Travoltage debut album of Foo Fighters’ disco alter ego the DEE GEES.

Out July 17 as a limited edition vinyl album packaged era-appropriately in a dazzling rainbow mylar sleeve, HAIL SATIN is the bipolar party record of the summer. Side A features Grohl, Hawkins, Mendel, Smear, Shiflett and Jaffee lighting up the floor at Foo Fighters’ 606 studios with faithful renditions of five stone cold Brothers Gibb classics — Bee Gees bangers “You Should Be Dancing,” Night Fever,” “Tragedy” and “More Than A Woman” + Andy Gibb’s “Shadow Dancing” — while side B literally rocks the party with live at 606 renditions of roughly half of Foo Fighters pandemic panacea album MEDICINE AT MIDNIGHT.

Check out the video for "You Should Be Dancing" followed by a couple of recent Dee Gees live appearances below. 






The Dee Gees – Hail Satin 

Side A
You Should Be Dancing
Night Fever
Tragedy
Shadow Dancing
More Than a Woman

Side B — LIVE at 606:
Making A Fire
Shame Shame
Waiting on a War
No Son of Mine
Cloudspotter



Happy Birthday Lalo Schifrin!

Celebrating the birthday of film and television composer extraordinaire Lalo Schifrin with a couple of his gems. 






Producer/engineer David Ferguson shows 'em how it's done

David Ferguson – known for his work with John Prine & Sturgill Simpson – steps up to the mic for Nashville No More. 



Listen to David Ferguson chat about his overdue debut album on the Hippies & Cowboys podcast right here


LINKS


Sunday, June 20, 2021

Happy Birthday Lazy Lester!

Remembering Louisiana harp hero Leslie "Lazy Lester" Johnson with a couple of classics performed at Antone's Records in Austin. 



R.I.P. guitar great Takeshi Terauchi, 1939-2021

Sadly, innovative Japanese guitarist Takeshi Terauchi has passed away. Here are just a few of his amazing recordings.





Edgar Breau's "Mad River" gets a Bob Bryden video treatment

Since it's Father's Day, here's a video for Edgar Breau's "Mad River" tribute to his dad, Edgar Joseph Breau. 


Writes Simply Saucer's Edgar Breau...
"Here's a newly minted video of 'Mad River,' a homage I wrote to my father and his Acadian roots. Many thanks to the multi-talented Bob Bryden for capturing the very personal and idyllic nature of the lyrics blending them perfectly with his haunting photo montage. Recorded by J.P. Riemens at Grant Ave. Studio. Edgar Breau acoustic guitar and vocals, Kevin Christoff, electric bass, Compton Roberts, backing vocals and Paul Panchezak drums. This is for you EJB."

Get a copy of Edgar Breau's Canadian Primitive album from 2004 right here. Watch Bob Bryden's new video for Edgar Breau's "Mad River" below. 





 

First Takes: P.F. Sloan's "Secret Agent Man"

P.F. Sloan's initial crack at "Secret Agent Man" was written for the TV series under it's original British title "Danger Man" 


Saturday, June 19, 2021

Danko Jones shares new video for "Saturday"

The straight-up rockin' "Saturday" is off Danko Jones' forthcoming Power Trio album due August 27th. 


Jackson Browne vs. Buffy Sainte-Marie

Check out Jackson Browne's version of Buffy Sainte-Marie's "Piney Wood Hills" followed by Buffy's original 1965 recorrding.



Friday, June 18, 2021

Trevor Noah follows the money in music streaming

Trevor Noah looks into why streaming songs by your fave obscure artist isn't making them rich. Find out who's really getting paid.