Celebrating Barrington Levy's birthday with his George Phang-produced roots classic "Praise His Name" from 1983. |
Saturday, April 30, 2022
Happy Birthday Barrington Levy!
That time Alice Coltrane played Warsaw in 1987
Here's Alice Coltrane with her son Ravi Coltrane, Reggie Workman and Roy Haynes playing "Wise One," "Africa" and "Leo." |
Friday, April 29, 2022
Guy Lafleur remembered by Chris Nilan
Boston-born Bruins fan Chris Nilan grew up hating Guy Lafleur's Canadiens but eventually wound up being his teammate and pal. |
Making A Record with Duke Ellington (1937)
Here's some rare footage of Duke Ellington in this short documentary on the process of producing sound recordings from 1937. |
R.I.P. Susan Jacks of the Poppy Family
Sadly, singer Susan Jacks passed away in Surrey, BC on Monday while awaiting a kidney transplant. She was 73. |
Happy Birthday Otis Rush!
Remembering blues great Otis Rush on his birthday with a performance of "Homework" from 1994 and "All Your Love" from '83. |
One For The Weekend: Los Cuchillos
Here's Darren Merinuk's snazzy sleeve for Los Cuchillos' "Noche de Brujas en Transilvania" EP and the cauldron cookin' title track. |
Thursday, April 28, 2022
Hank Williams Jr. vs. R.L. Burnside
Bocephus got some help from Dan Auerbach in taking on "Georgia Women" by the late Mississippi blues great R.L. Burnside. |
Get yourself a copy of Hank Jr.'s new Dan Auerbach-produced album Rich White Honky Blues right here. |
R.I.P. Orchestra Baobab's Rudy Gomis, 1946-2022
Sadly, Rudy Gomis – longtime singer for Senegal's legendary Orchestra Baobab – has passed away. He'll be greatly missed. |
That time Television played Portland in 1978
Check out performances of "Marquee Moon" and "Glory" from Television's show at The Earth in Portland on July 2, 1978. |
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
The Sadies share video for "Cut Up High and Dry" off Colder Streams album
Colder Streams, The Sadies final album with the late Dallas Good, will be out July 22. Dallas penned the 'anti-bio' below in October. |
You can pre-order The Sadies' Colder Streams via Bandcamp right here. Watch the video for "Cut Up High And Dry" below.
90s Nostalgia: Jesus Lizard @ The Opera House, 1994
Here's David Yow and his mighty Jesus Lizard crew tearing up the Opera House in Toronto back on October 6, 1994. |
Happy 75th Birthday Ann Peebles!
Celebrating the 75th birthday of soul great Ann Peebles with a few classic performance clips and a BBC session from 1974. |
Tuesday, April 26, 2022
Dutch Treats: The Sound Magics
Nederbeat crew The Sound Magics feat. guitarist Rob Van Waegeningen cut "Don't You Remember" for Phillips in 1966. |
Monday, April 25, 2022
Watch John Cale on the New Music in 1979
For some reason, John Cale decided hospital orderly duds were perfectly suitable stagewear for his Toronto appearance in 1979. |
Steve Monite's Nigerian disco gem Only You getting legit reissue
Soundway Records is reissuing Steve Monite's now sought-after Only You album which failed to click on it's initial release in 1984. |
Here's the scoop from Soundway Records...
Following on from 2016’s Doing It In Lagos: Boogie, Pop & Disco in 1980s Nigeria, Soundway Records return to that blistering set for the first and only officially licensed re-issue of the highly coveted debut album from Steve Monite, featuring the single 'Only You' that recently seeped its way into popular culture. Lovingly restored and remastered for digital and vinyl.
Shooting, space-synth sounds ripple and vibrate, incessant grooves keep the tracks in motion and Nkono Teles production, a producer often overlooked for his hand in the Nigerian boogie sound, sets the LP into orbit. An album that was largely overlooked on release in 1984, the track list includes the latter day hit Only You and Things Fall Apart, the melody of which was lifted for Young Franco’s 2020 single Fallin’ Apart.
Now living in South London, Steve Monite (pronounced mon-ah-tay) was born in 1961 and grew up in Benin City, the capital of Edo State in southern Nigeria. A middle class kid, the boarding school he went to was owned by his uncle and had some famous alumni. Monite remembers the legendary Nigerian guitarist Victor Uwaifo, driving his sports car into the school yard and donating a trophy and cash prize for students to compete in musical performance.He had learned to sing in the Anglican school choir, which is where he realised that he wanted to pursue a music career. But the cultural backdrop was changing, and fast. In the late 70s and early 80s, where the end of a military dictatorship was coupled with an oil boom, Nigeria was flooded with money – and western records.
“After the Civil War in Nigeria, everybody wanted something exciting,” says Monite. Highlife, the dominant music genre, was seen as outmoded. “The educated elite were listening to American and English music,” he continues. “My role models were people like Barry White and Michael Jackson – they were young men like me. I liked the [American] funk band Brass Construction; some English pop.”
After his self-funded recording sessions in London failed in finding Monite a label home in the UK, he returned home to immediately be picked up by EMI Records in Nigeria instead. “They signed me straight away,” he says, and found himself in the EMI Studios with Nkono Teles, in the same studios where Paul McCartney and Wings recorded Band on the Run in 1973.
Monite says that Teles had lived for a time in New York, where disco music was driven by the whirr of the synth, and he’d wanted to bring that into Nigerian music. There was a Moog synthesiser in the studio and it’s what took Only You in a spacey new direction. “I was the first African artist to play electro-funk,” says Monite. “Teles was the visionary behind that song.”
Monite wrote a further three tracks, 'Welcome My Love', 'I Had A Dream’ and 'Things Fall Apart', which formed the basis of his one and only album. Monite wrote ‘Things Fall Apart’ after the military coup in 1983, when the country was yet again plunged into upheaval. “There was unemployment everywhere, food shortages, people scrambling for survival,” he says. “So many people, especially professional people like doctors, lawyers, businessmen, left Nigeria.”
In a way, the song documented the end of the golden age. With the middle classes dispersed, Nigeria’s halcyon boogie period was over. Steve Monite released his debut album in 1984 but it fell on deaf ears, including that of the label, who didn’t seem to want to promote it. “When my record came out, everything went cold.”
So much to his surprise, years later and having relocated to South London, did he find out that his music had finally found an audience he thought it always deserved. “‘Only You’ has woken up from the graveyard,” he chuckles. He found out he was famous thanks to his family in nearby Berkshire. “I went to visit my brother and my seven-year-old nephew told me, ‘Uncle, I didn't know you were a star.’ I said, ‘what are you on about?’ He said, ‘you’re an internet sensation now’. So I went on the internet, and I say, ‘Wow'. I saw Steve Monite everywhere.”
Check out Steve Monite's Only You album – the vinyl version ships in October – on Bandcamp right here. Listen to the title track below.
Sunday, April 24, 2022
Happy Birthday Tony Visconti!
Celebrating the birthday of producer Tony Visconti with his memories of recording Marc Bolan, David Bowie and his first single. |
Takeshi Terauchi's Suite Nihonkai colloboration with Chisato Yamada gets recirculated
Japanese guitar slinger Takeshi Terauchi's 1981 throwdown with shamisen ace Yamada has been reissued by Italy's Cinedelic label. |
Suite Nihonkai – Takeshi Terauchi with Chisato Yamada
Whaddya mean you don't know Anthony King
Keyboard ace Anthony Lilly cut numerous sound library gems as Anthony King, Ian Langley, Synthesizers Unlimited, etc. |
Watch Martial Solal jam with Guy Pedersen & Daniel Humair in 1970
Here's pianist Martial Solal playing a short set with bass boss Guy Pedersen and drummer Daniel Humair for French TV in 1970. |
Saturday, April 23, 2022
Happy Birthday Milton Banana!
Remembering Brazilian drummer deluxe Milton Banana with three classic trio albums from 1965, '66 and '68 back-to-back. |
Hugo Strasser vs. Hawkwind
When Hawkwind scored a surprise chart hit with "Silver Machine," German bandleader Hugo Strasser felt compelled to cover it. |
Friday, April 22, 2022
R.I.P. DJ Robert Ouimet, Montreal's "Godfather of Disco"
Sadly, legendary Montreal DJ Robert Ouimet died Thursday at the age of 74. Listen to his final sets right here and there. |
Elizabeth Fraser shares "Golden Air" from her Sun's Signature project
"Golden Air" is off the forthcoming debut EP from Sun's Signature featuring Elizabeth Fraser & Damon Reece out June 18th. |
Happy 100th Birthday Charles Mingus!
Remembering the late great Charles Mingus on his 100th birthday with performances from Stockholm in 1960 and Oslo in 1970. |
One For The Weekend: Manfred Schoof Quintett w/ Jacky Leibezeit
Here's a rare 1966 recording of Alexander V. Schlippenbach's "Blues For T." with Manfred Schoof and Jacky Leibezeit. |
Thursday, April 21, 2022
Happy 75th Birthday Iggy Pop!
Celebrating Iggy Pop's 75th birthday with his 1981 appearance on the New Music and a 1979 appearance on Old Grey Whistle Test. |
Midweek Mixdown: Sounds From The Ancient Archive w/ Nat Birchall
A typically heady mix from Nat's Ancient Archives featuring John Coltrane, Odean Pope, Dizzy Reece, Yabby You. |
Track list:
1. Nizipho - Pharoah Sanders 2. Jays - Kalaparush Maurice McIntyre 3. Dadadun - Odean Pope & Misled Children 4. Communion - Dizzy Reece 5. Dial Africa - Wilbur Harden 6. Dial Africa - Rico Rodriguez 7. Keep Your Soul Together - Freddie Hubbard 8. Nature Boy (Live version) - John Coltrane 9. Things New - George Russell 10. Communication - Dewey Redman & Ed Blackwell 11. One For Trane - Dizzy Reece 12. Voodoo Sense - Joachim Khun feat. Archie Shepp 13. Metaphysics - Hassan Ibn Ali feat. Odean Pope 14. Obidiah Iziah (aka Long Time Ago) Johnny Kool/Run Bag O' Wire - Jah Tony 15. Daydreaming Of Africa - Lloyd Jones 16. King Of Kings - Yabby You 17. Oh City Of Zion - Yabby You & King Tubby 18. Ainash Nubia Dub - Yabby You & King Tubby
Check it out right here.
Wednesday, April 20, 2022
New Brunswick's Stonemen get their rare 60s garage single reissued
The Stonemen's tough-to-find Martime label single has just been reissued by Montreal's Celluloid Lunch Records. Have a listen. |
Here's the scoop...
This space...if written by Claude Surette, could speak of growing up in the mid 1960s around "rue principal" in Cap Pele and hearing music blasting from a house unlike heard before. Or if Ron Bourgeois (The Little General), could tell of when they were on his TV show “Top 10 Plus” a number of times. Or when they were in CKCW studios on Gordon St., Bill McFadden could elaborate on all the songs they recorded and what it was like working with them.Instead, you’re stuck with me, who wasn’t there or knew them. My story starts in 1990 when Paul Roy gave me The Stonemen's "Faded Colors" b/w "In The Evening" record on the Maritime label, which he bought at Harrison Trimble High school at one of their concerts. The importance of this record wasn’t made apparent to me until I met Nardwuar the Human Serviette in 1993. Since then, their legend seems to keep growing.
From tracking down Norbert, Eric, and Danny for interviews, to Bad Luck # 13 covering the B-side, to the value of this record being boasted about on eBay and now this long-awaited reissue. There have been appearances on compilations but now for the first time, this record is once again made available.
So go back in time, get stoned, and hear what the rurals of Moncton was sounding. - Mark Gaudet
The Stonemen: Fernand Leblanc - vocals/rhythm guitar, Danny Leblanc - lead guitar, Norbert Leblanc - bass/vocals, Eric Leblanc - drums
Get a reissue of The Stonemen's rare "Faded Colors" single via Bandcamp right here.
Check it out below.
Happy Birthday April March!
Celebrating April March's birthday with both sides of her single with The Haves on Long Gone's SFTRI from way back in 1995. |
Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Acadian banjo boss Lisa LeBlanc goes full-on Chiac Disco
Some people took up baking during the pandemic, New Brunswick picker Lisa LeBlanc started recording disco tunes as 'Belinda.' |
Here's the scoop from Bonsound HQ...
Seattle's Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio hits the Horseshoe, July 4th
Tickets are on sale for Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio's Toronto debut right here. Check out their Live at Home show and last two LPs. |
Check out Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio's RSD release Live in Loveland! via Bandcamp right here. |
Peter Brötzmann vs. Klaus Doldinger in 1967
It's Klaus Doldinger taking on Peter Brötzmann's trio in the German battle of pop jazz vs. free jazz hosted by WDR in 1967. |
Monday, April 18, 2022
Happy Birthday Skip Spence!
Remembering Skip Spence on his birthday with Moby Grape's 1968 appearance on the Mike Douglas Show and the Avalon in '67. |
Ad Spotting: The Rolling Stones sell Rice Krispies (1963)
Here are two different Rice Krispies commercials circa 1963 featuring a catchy jingle by the Rolling Stones. |
Sunday, April 17, 2022
Happy Birthday Art Ellefson!
Remembering Canadian jazz saxophonist Art Ellefson with an appearance on Jazz 625 and a Ronnie Ross/Allan Ganley recording. |
Saturday, April 16, 2022
Happy Birthday Artie White!
Remembering soulful Chicago blues great Artie White with the funky Bobby Rush-penned "Gimme Some Of Yours" from 1970. |
90s Nostalgia: The Shuttlecocks w/ Allyson Baker, 1996
Here's guitarist Allyson Baker – pre-Teen Crud Combo – rockin' the El Mo with The Shuttlecocks back in 1996. |
Friday, April 15, 2022
Happy Birthday Richard Davis!
Celebrating Richard's birthday with a NEA profile, two Sarah Vaughan clips and one with Sun Ra's Arkestra. |
One For The Weekend: Beefheart & Zappa
Comic books were a great source of inspiration for Captain Beefheart as this collaboration with Frank Zappa circa 1964 shows. |
Thursday, April 14, 2022
R.I.P. Charnett Moffet, 1967-2022
Sadly, jazz bassist Charnett Moffett passed away recently after suffering a heart attack. He was just 54. He'll be greatly missed. |
Nancy Sinatra previews reissue of Nancy & Lee with bonus track "Love Is Strange"
The expanded reissue of Nancy & Lee comes with two bonus tracks, including a hipshakin' rip through "Love Is Strange." |
Here's the scoop from Nancy...
"I am thrilled to announce the first ever reissue of Nancy & Lee, my first duet album with Lee Hazlewood, on May 20, 2022. The album is newly remastered by John Baldwin and features two bonus tracks, including "Love Is Strange," which is streaming now on your platform of choice. The 20-page booklet contains photos from my personal collection, as well as an all-new interview with co-producer, Hunter Lea. Darryl Norsen worked his usual magic on the album cover. It’s never looked better!
"I love this record and I know you do too! Immodesty aside, Nancy & Lee is one of the best albums to come out of the '60s, and it pleases me greatly to finally see it back in print, courtesy of our friends at Light In The Attic Records. Thank you LITA and thank you all for still caring! Special thanks to our friends at Record Technology Inc! Thank you for hosting us during our visit a few weeks back. It was so fascinating to see the record making process.
"Pre-order Nancy & Lee on CD, vinyl, cassette tape and 8-track as well as limited edition merchandise & signed items in my Bootique now at the link right here: https://bootique.nancysinatra.com"