Thursday, November 30, 2023

R.I.P. Scott Kempner, 1954-2023

Sadly, guitarist Scott Kempner – of The Dictators, Del-Lords, Tenement Angels – has passed away. He'll be greatly missed. 

Remembering Scott Kempner aka "Top Ten"

Eric Ambel of The Del-Lords: Scott Kempner’s love of rock and roll really came from his heart.
He wasn’t studious about it.  It was a feel thing.  His taste was all over the place but it was all real.  He stayed way more up on the new stuff than I could.  When Scott, Frank, Manny and I first started The Del-Lords he made really amazing mix tapes.  I still have them.  Stuff like “Elvis - Sun vs RCA”.  Our two guitar thing worked right off the bat.  His version of rock and roll guitar was more ’60’s/surf’ where my rock and roll was leaning on ‘blues and country’.  We were doing the weave before we knew what it was. 
Scott had really learned what it meant to be in a band, a real band, from his time in The Dictators where he functioned as “the heart”.  He was funny.  He’d been in professional bands his whole life but he could barely turn his own rig on but that was ok because he came with songs.  Great songs that he wrote for our band.  Songs that were informed by our lives together.

We stayed in touch after the Del-Lords, both doing our own things.  When a Spanish promoter made us an “offer we couldn’t refuse” over 20 years after our first run had ended it really turned into a gift to ‘get the band back together’.  We all enjoyed it and I got to use what I had learned as a producer to make the Del-Lords record that delivered on the sound that I had in my head for the band.  We had a great time working on Elvis Club at my studio and that included a lot of lunches and dinners.  After the record came out and we went to play the gigs with Mike DuClos and then Steve Almaas on bass.  Scott and I were not the ‘saving my per diem types’ and we’d often enjoy fall back dinners like spaghetti bolognese with a bottle of red wine after a “don’t call it a day off travel day”.  

Scott loved his friends, and he had a lot of them.  He loved animals always.  Cats and dogs!  When he reunited with Sharon it was the coolest thing I’d ever heard of.  Scott was lucky to have such a wonderful sister in Robin.  As I knew from experience with my mother’s Alzheimer’s-Dementia his family would have tough times ahead but they never, ever failed to do the very best for him negotiating this horrible disease.  Scott called me his “Guitar Brother” and brothers we were.  
Thank you all for your messages.  I know that all of Scott’s family, friends, bandmates and collaborators appreciate them greatly.

I’m missing my guitar brother now.  I have a lot of stuff I’d like to tell him about, like hanging out with Bernie Williams from his beloved Yankees at the Bohemian Grove talking about guitars, but for now I’d just say I miss you Top Ten.   


Elliott Lefko, concert promoter: In the mid 80s one of the owners of The Bamboo club in Toronto asked me to program a week of Country music. The real country as in Patsy Cline or Hank Williams. I headed down to NYC where I had heard there was a roots scene and met Jeremy Tepper who had an excellent band The World Famous Blue Jays and also edited a trade magazine about jukeboxes and put out compilations of trucker music. He knew all the good bands. So I quickly signed up hot acts like Last Round Up and The Del Lords. I also got early gigs from Blue Rodeo and Handsome Ned and even Kinky Friedman and The Texas Jewboys (although it was a Toronto version led by the late great guitarist Seb Agnello). 

The week was incredible and on Saturday, the Del Lords  took the stage. They were tough and serious with amazing songs and glorious harmonies. The band were dressed in dark jackets except for the singer Scott Kempner in white with a sleeveless t shirt. This was The Clash by way of Nashville and Lou Reed’s New York. The stage presence was pouring out of them. And Scott outspringsteened Springsteen. In his slicked back hair and bandana around his neck and his boot, he was that urban gipsy on a hydrant-drenched summer night. 

After the gig the band wanted to party and Scott and Eric “Roscoe” Ambel stayed up all night, high on a crazy sold out gig on their first Toronto show. Years later I saw Scott when he worked at Amoeba Records in LA. He could not have been nicer. Scott died this week. The tributes from people like Dion and Adny “Dictators” Shernoff were so beautiful. If there ever was a real hall of fame, like on the wall of one of Eric Ambel’s dive bars, then Scott would be up there with the best of them.

Miriam Linna, Norton Records: 16 FOREVER Scott Kempner was always "Top Ten" to me. His absence due to illness has left a giant hole, and now his passing is such an enormous loss to his friends, fans and family. He truly was, and anyone will attest to this, a real rock n' roll heart, and one of the kindest of those hearts that I have ever known. 

He was, to me, first and foremost, a Dictator and secondlly, a fellow  Flamin Groovies fanatic. Before Billy and I had the enormous privilege of issuing several lost Dictators tracks on 5,7, and 12 inch formats, I made him the Fan Of The Month in the third issue of the Flamin Groovies Monthly (October 1977). All layouts went underwater in hurricane Sandy and all I have left are these moldy pages. If someone has the color cover of Scott, please send it along. He was a force of nature, and I know he is getting his well earned props in the music papers today. 

Friends will remember Scott for his massive presence in the Dictators, the Del-Lords, with  Dion, and his solo work- his guitar playing, songwriting, and most of all, his rock n roll heart. I'm showing these fan pages from the Groovies Monthly, but I need to add that he was absolutely instrumental iin getting the lost Dion Kickin Child album out on Norton, and his liner notes show him as a thoughtful, thorough, astonishing writer and historian  as well. There is much to say, and many images and tons of music to memorialize and celebrate  our memories of Scott Kempner. I'll also always remember the pride and beauty of Scott taking center stage to sing  Tallahassee Lassie - not so much for Freddy Cannon as for the Groovies blistering version. And the Dictators would deliver it with Scott , right into the center of our hungry little souls.  Heartfelt sympathies to sister Robin, Andy Shernoff, Ross the Boss, Handsome Dick Manitoba, Eric Ambel, Ritchie and everybody else. 

Cary Baker, publicist: I can’t pretend we were lifelong friends. When Bronx-weaned Scott Kempner, then known as Top Ten, was recording and touring with New York's Dictators, I was in college in Illinois – albeit listening to the Dictators' debut album and reading about them at every turn in Creem, Rock Scene and other 'zines du jour.

It really wasn't until I had my indie publicity company, Conqueroo, that Scott was brought to me as a possible artist for representation by a gent named Abe Bradshaw who had a label called 00:02:59 (the label's name alluding to the perfect length of a pop song per The Clash). The project was Scott's 2008 solo album 'Saving Grace.' Naturally, I accepted the project with alacrity. And with Scott by then West Coast-based, I got together with him a few times and attended his local shows.

I recall one day, Sharon (i.e., MY wife Sharon – his wife was named Sharon also) and I had driven the length of Pacific Coast Highway (PCH) from Santa Monica to...Oxnard, Calif. PCH goes from being one of America's most picturesque stretches of highway to an abrupt end at the foot of a military base in Oxnard. Anyway, there we were in Oxnard. "What can we do here?" I wondered out loud. "Hey, wait, Scott Kempner lives here!" (Yes, an unexpected location for a Dictator or Del-Lord.) It was around noon and I called him to see if he had lunch plans. He was available and willing indeed. So we swung by his and Sharon's condo (Sharon was working that day) where we received quite a greeting not only from Scott but from his beloved dog Sally. And off to lunch we went – somewhere in a strip mall, but it was about the company, not the haute cuisine. Life stories were told, and laughs were had.

I was then called upon to work the Del-Lords' 2013 reunion album 'Elvis Club,' which (if I'm not mistaken) brought them to SXSW and one of the Guitartown/Conqueroo day parties I long promulgated with partner Li'l Deb Williams. More laughs and adventures ensued, and I became friends with the band's other frontman, the great Eric Ambel (like myself a Chicago area native). Eric and I later worked together on Sarah Borges' projects.

The final time I saw Scott was at one of reissue innovator, philanthropist and all-around mensch Gary Stewart's legendary Christmas night parties in Santa Monica. As the hour grew late, Scott and his Sharon and me and my Sharon were walking to our cars at the same time – both parked near McCabe's Guitar Shop, which was nearby to Gary's abode. We avowed to get together soon, but alas, as happens, we never did.

Then came news – along with an edict to keep it under my hat – that Scott was suffering early onset dementia and had moved back east, where his sister could look after him. Say what??? This was heartbreaking news – Scott was so talented, witty and vibrant. The silver lining was that, at least for a while, he could still play the guitar.
This week's news of his mortality was heart-rending if not entirely unexpected. I'll always remember Scott as one of the coolest cats I encountered in my music biz career, and in my life.

I like to think of him reunited with Gary Stewart among other departed pals, carrying on a spirited conversation about music, laughing at the limitations of terrestrial life. And while I'm in no hurry to arrive at that party, I look forward to joining in that conversation when the time comes.
Rock on, Top Ten!

 

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Listen to Nat Birchall's Afro Trane album

Check out Afro Trane, Nat Birchall's 2022 self-released salute to the music and inspiration of John Coltrane. Get it right here


Happy Birthday Sally Timms!

Celebrating Sally's birthday with performances accompanied by The Sadies at The Horseshoe and The Hideout and more. 






If you happen to be in Brooklyn on Dec 4, Sally and sidekick Jon Langford are playing The Good Fork Pub at 7:30pm!




Midweek Mixdown: Andy Votel's Sit & Bun Mix

Check out Andy Votel's swingin' hour-long Sit & Bun mix for Manchester's Finest below. 

Here's the scoop...
Andy Votel, is a musician, DJ, record producer, graphic designer and co-founder of Twisted Nerve Records and the reissue label Finders Keepers Records.

Votel, an acronym for Violators of the English Language, Votel began mixing psychedelic music with jazz and hip-hop records at clubs like The Hacienda and Home And South from the early 1990s.

As a graphic designer, he’s created over 150 record sleeves on top of designing campaigns for Adidas, Stüssy, Levi, and Adam Et Rope.

The record collection he brought with is filled to the brim with deep cuts of rare and experimental music. This one is a bit ‘out there’ but the execution is flawless. 

Check out Andy's "Sit & Bun" mix right here. As for the tracklisting? Well, they don't call him Andy "No Tell" Votel for nuthin'. 




Tuesday, November 28, 2023

R.I.P. soul singer Jean Knight, 1943-2023

Sadly, New Orleans born soul singer Jean Knight, who hit with "Mr. Big Stuff" in 1971, has passed away at the age of 80.









Author T.J. English talks about Dangerous Rhythms: Jazz and the Underworld

Watch T.J. English discuss his great new book Dangerous Rhythms: Jazz and the Underworld with Trey Elling in a 2-part interview. 

Here's the scoop on Dangerous Rhythms...
Dangerous Rhythms tells the symbiotic story of jazz and the underworld: a relationship fostered in some of 20th century America’s most notorious vice districts. For the first half of the century mobsters and musicians enjoyed a mutually beneficial partnership. By offering artists like Louis Armstrong, Earl “Fatha” Hines, Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Lena Horne, and Ella Fitzgerald a stage, the mob, including major players Al Capone, Meyer Lansky, and Charlie “Lucky” Luciano, provided opportunities that would not otherwise have existed.

Even so, at the heart of this relationship was a festering racial inequity. The musicians were mostly African American, and the clubs and means of production were owned by white men. It was a glorified plantation system that, over time, would find itself out of tune with an emerging Civil Rights movement. Some artists, including Louis Armstrong, believed they were safer and more likely to be paid fairly if they worked in “protected” joints. Others believed that playing in venues outside mob rule would make it easier to have control over their careers.

Through English’s voluminous research and keen narrative skills, Dangerous Rhythms reveals this deeply fascinating slice of American history in all its sordid glory.

Get a copy of Dangerous Rhythms right here. Watch T.J. English's chat about the mob's connection with jazz below. 
 


Monday, November 27, 2023

Captain Sensible kicks off the holiday music blitz with "A Stupid Xmas"

The Captain is joined in The Sensible Gray Cells by Paul Gray (The Damned) & Marty Love (Johnny Moped). Watch the clip. 


Happy Birthday Robert Scott of The Bats!

Celebrating Robert Scott's birthday with a couple of interviews and "Lazyboy" from his 2014 album The Green House and more. 









R.I.P. guitarist Brian Godding of Blossom Toes, 1945-2023

Sadly, guitarist Brian Godding – who played with Blossom Toes, Ingoes, Mirage & Centipede – has passed away.   Photo: Steven Krakow





Sunday, November 26, 2023

Happy Birthday Davey Graham!

Remembering guitarist Davey Graham with a 1963 performance of "She Moved Through The Fair" & "Moanin'" and more.






Whaddya mean you don't know Jimmie Tarlton

Apparently, freight-hopping guitar picker Jimmie Tarlton was writing and singing about the life he knew. 







Saturday, November 25, 2023

Remembering blues guitar great Jimmy Johnson

In honour of Jimmy Johnson on his birthday, here's his mid-60s swinger "Get It" b/w "Work Your Thing" on Stuff Records. 



Happy Birthday Mark Lanegan!

Remembering Mark Lanegan on his birthday with Screaming Trees' post-brawl performance of "Nearly Lost You" on Late Night. 


Grab a copy of the Screaming Trees' 1991 live-in-the-studio album Wrong Turn To Jahannam out now.  


Quantic goes full-on disco with Dancing While Falling

Will Holland wanted to experiment with new sounds and grooves inspired by the work of Bohannon and Larry Levan.

 

Here's the scoop...

The new album by Quantic aka multi instrumentalist, DJ, composer and producer Will Holland is in many ways an evolution. Now 20 years into his career, ‘Dancing While Falling’ is the British born New York based artist’s most live sounding, euphoric and, in his own words, grown up release to date. 

Predominantly recorded at his own Brooklyn studio, Selva, Quantic’s initial idea for his new album was to experiment sonically. However, after a while, he changed direction and realised that the record needed to also relate to the human condition not just his “singular pandemic wormhole”. The demos, then, started off as symphonic, loosely disco era dance music a departure from his previous Latin and Spanish instrumental releases. Influenced by legendary artists in the scene like Bohannon and Larry Levan, Quantic wanted to make a disco leaning album at first. “I’m really interested in Latin music and Afro Caribbean rhythms and I think there's a really amazing point in history where the emergence of those rhythms and its combination with American soul sparked what we now know as disco,” he says.

Get a copy of Dancing While Falling via Bandcamp right here. Listen to "Run" feat. Andreya Triana, "Unconditional" feat. Rationale and the instrumental "Tikurin" below. Check out a recent Juno Daily interview with Quantic talking about the new album right here.  




Will Holland and his partner Aziza Ali at their Selva studio space in Brooklyn.


Friday, November 24, 2023

Happy Black Friday from Gigi Gryce, Richard Williams and crew!

We're celebrating Gigi Gryce's birthday a few days early with "Rat Race Blues" for Black Friday shoppers braving the crowds. 




Screaming Trees' live-in-studio album Wrong Turn To Jahannam out today

The Screaming Trees ripped through a few songs at Egg Studio in 1991 prior to their major label debut. Hear "Orange Airplane."



LINKS 


One For The Weekend: Lori Yates w/David Baxter

Check out the new Lori Yates single "Alive" right here. Drop by Hey Stella's tribute to David Baxter at the Cameron on Dec. 9th. 


For more info, check the post on Hey Stella's Last Hurrah salute to David Baxter right here

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Happy Birthday R.L. Burnside!

Remembering Mississippi blues great R.L. Burnside on his birthday with a stellar performances from 1984 and 1978.





Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Happy Birthday Hoagy Carmichael!

Remembering singer/songwriter and pianist Hoagy Carmichael with a 1961 appearance on the Tennessee Ernie Ford Show. 


Bevis Frond releasing Focus On Nature double album in February

The Bevis Frond's much anticipated 19-track Focus On Nature album will be out February 1st. Check out the title track below. 

Here's the scoop from Nick Saloman...

Hi Folks, I should have announced this first thing today, but I spent half the day at EE getting my mobile fixed (new SIM card required). So now, a little belatedly, I can reveal what you probably already know. The estimable Fire Records will be issuing a new studio album by The Bevis Frond early next year. It's a double (of course) called 'Focus On Nature' and it features the full band, plus a couple of guest artistes. I'm really happy with it, and hope that anyone who decides to buy a copy will also think it's pretty good. 



The Bevis Frond – Focus On Nature
 

Focus On Nature is the new studio album from celebrated post-psyche singer songwriter Nick Saloman and his band The Bevis Frond. Seventy-five minutes of glorious melodies that span 60s psych, English folk, Seattle art-punks The Wipers, the buzzsaw pop of Dinosaur Jr and Hendrix-esque explorations. There’s always an element of playful Englishness to their music. 

Heavily influencing the likes of Teenage Fanclub, Elliot Smith, Pavement and Dinosaur Jr, the cult icons have produced another off-kilter mix of melodic piano-led melancholy, acoustic ruminations, scratchy garage rock with a punky edge and full-on guitar histrionics. 

Like its much-praised predecessor, ‘Little Eden’, the new record studies the world’s weariness but fills out a bigger canvas; fast food and global warming, broken hearts and long gone nights out, everyday immortality and being God’s gift all share space. It’s like Townshend at his most thematic; Big Star in all their acoustic glory, perfectly balancing the punky garage rock combo who end up running on ‘Empty’ with Gilmour breaks that elevate it all to grandeur. 

You can pre-order a copy of The Bevis Frond's forthcoming album Focus On Nature from your platform of choice right here. Check out the kinder, gentler title track following the fancy trailer. Incidentally,  those who find themselves in Bavaria on this weekend can catch The Bevis Frond at Cairo Jugendkulturhaus in Würzburg, Germany on Saturday, November 25 where the rippin' 2017 performance (below) was captured.  




Midweek Mixdown: Steve Gunn's Folkways selection

Listen to a selection of Steve Gunn's favourite recordings from the Folkways archive right here. Tracklist below.  

Tracklist...
THE ENTOURAGE MUSIC & THEATRE ENSEMBLE 
Euphoric Bells

KIM LOY WONG, THE UNIVERSITY SETTLEMENT STEEL BAND 
Piano Concerto

GANDRUNG BULO (BAMBOO DRUMS)
Celebes

MICHAEL HURLEY
Blue Mountain

ANN MCMILLIAN
Part 1 Whale

THE ENTOURAGE MUSIC & THEATRE ENSEMBLE 
Piece For E-Flat Soprano Saxophone, Guitar, And Thumb Piano

GAMELAN SON OF LION
DNA

USSACHEVSKY 
Sonic Contours

PEDRO ROCHA Y LUPE MARTINEZ
Jesusita

ROBERT PETE WILLIAMS 
So Much Is Happenin' In This Wicked World

GRUPO QUISQUEYA 
Pobre Gaviota

JOSEPH SPENCE 
Jump In The Line

AZTEC VIOLINIST, GUITARIST, RITUAL SPECIALISTS, YOUNG GIRLS, DANCERS
Dance Of The Tlamatiketl

HWANA
Metal Pluriarc With One Woman's Voice

BAMBOUSHAY STEEL BAND
Kingston Town

TONY KU 
Aloha Oe

BANDA TÍPICA DE MAZATLÁN 
La India Bonita

PALOMA BLANCA
Unspecified

JON APPLETON 
Hommage To Orpheus (1969)

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Hulagoons bring the sunny sounds of Hawaii to Reposado, Tuesday

Burke Carroll and his Hulagoons offer a twangy island escape on cold 'n' damp Tuesday night at Reposado (136 Ossington) at 9 pm. 




Watch PJ Harvey play a Tiny Desk Concert

Here's Polly Harvey and pals John Parish and James Johnston knocking out a few new tunes in a recent Tiny Desk Concert. 


Monday, November 20, 2023

Happy Birthday Esquerita!

Remembering the amazing Esquerita on his birthday with a couple of his house rockin' gems. 





Mankunku Ngozi's 1975 South African soul-jazz LP with The Cliffs gets reissued

Toronto's We Are Busy Bodies are recirculating the Alex Express album by The Cliffs feat. saxophone great Mankunku Ngozi.


Here's the scoop...
Hailing from Cape Town, tenor saxophonist Winston Mankunku Ngozi (1943-2009) is a venerated figure in the pantheon of South African jazz. Inspired by Coltrane while rooted in indigenous folklore, he released the classic album Yakhal’ Inkomo at the outset of his career with the Mankunku Quartet in 1969. Backed by the Cliffs, Alex Express documents Mankunku’s return to the studio in 1975 with a handful of new and original compositions and his inimitable tone on full display. Shaking off the burden of Yakhal’ Inkomo, which was heralded as an earnest manifesto for modern South African jazz, the album is a carefree affair that leans into township grooves with joyful exuberance. In addition to a collaborative project with Mike Makhalemele entitled The Bull and the Lion, Alex Express is the first of just two rare snapshots of Mankunku in the 1970s. Disillusioned by the recording industry, it would take until his resurgence in the 1990s for Mankunku to flesh out his recorded legacy. 

Get a copy from We Are Busy Bodies via Bandcamp right here. Listen to the album following the credits below. 


The Cliffs featuring Mankunku Ngozi - Alex Express
1. Alex Express 3:39
2. Over The Cliff 6:16
3. Gu Gu Lethu 4:07
4. Ever Green 5:13
5. Revelation 6:40

Credits:
Alto saxophone – Winston Mankunku Ngozi 
Trumpet – Stompie Manana 
Trumpet – George Tyefumani 
Organ – Roger Khoza 
Guitar – Allen Kwela 
Bass – Philip Kiti 
Drums – Peter Jackson 

Originally issued in South Africa by The Record and Tape Company in 1975. 
Remastered by Noah Mintz at Lacquer Channel Mastering. 
Artwork Restoration by Steve Lewin.
 

Remembering David Baxter with Hey Stella! @ The Cameron, Dec 9

Lori Yates and Hey Stella! will be paying tribute to their late bandmate David Baxter with special guests on December 9th. 


Here's the scoop from Lori Yates...

Please join us at the Cameron House for the first of two celebrations to honour our friend David Gavan Baxter! 

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9 

Hey Stella!  - The Last Hurrah 

Cameron House (408 Queen St. West). 1pm to 6pm

We’ll be joined by many of David’s guitar slinger friends including: Ken Kelley, Kevin Breit, Nichol Robertson, Derek Downham, Champagne James Robertson, Terry Wilkins, and more! 


THURSDAY JANUARY 11   

David Gavan Baxter Memorial Celebration

The Cameron House (408 Queen St. West). 2pm to 8pm. 

Performances by: Justin Rutledge, Blake Manning, Treasa Levasseur, and more!!

PLEASE COME TO BOTH!! ❤️❤️




Sunday, November 19, 2023

Happy Birthday Pete Kember aka Sonic Boom!

Here's Pete performing his fave covers as Sonic Boom at Toronto's Sonic Boom in 2008 and a couple of more recent interviews.  




That time Commander Cody & crew made a cameo on Police Woman in 1975

Here's Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen as "Chromium Skateboard" on Police Woman with guest star Frank Gorshin! 



Commander Cody's Bill Kirchen plays his Honky Tonk Holiday Show at Hotel Wolfe Island on Dec 6. Get tickets right here.


Jabras Mariz's rare Transas do Futuro EP from '77 getting reissued

Check out the Jabras Mariz 4-song MPB EP cut with keyboardist Guilherme Coutinho for Brazil's Erla-Estudio Rauland in 1977.

Here's the scoop from Mr. Bongo...

1000 miles away from the beating musical hearts of Rio and São Paulo in the late ‘70s, the Brazilian city of Belém gave rise to a little-known record label called Erla - Estudio Rauland. Though not prolific in its output, the label made up for it in quality and experimental offerings, with several records on the label now becoming sought-after pieces among collectors. One such release is the sublime four-track psych, MPB, rock EP by singer-songwriter Jarbas Mariz.

They say never judge a book by its cover, though on this occasion you pretty much can. The wonderful tripped-out ‘70s artwork by Baby is a sure-fire indication of the music lying within. Though the EP was recorded in ‘77, it clearly gained inspiration from the psychedelic hippy idols of the previous decade and could easily have been a soundtrack to an acid trip scene in an obscure Brazilian movie. 

Low-fi and quirky, there are moments of beauty and splendour but also hints of darkness; with a sublime balance of music and styles throughout. At points Jarbas will have you drifting through a folk flute daydream, the next moment a growling, psych-distorted guitar breaks and parts the calm. An ability to make those elements blend cohesively is where Jarbas’ true brilliance shines through.

Jarbas played, and still plays, with some of the key figures in Brazil's musical underground. Guilherme Coutinho (whose Guilherme Coutinho - E O Grupo Stalo album from ‘78 was also re-issued on Mr Bongo) features on electric piano for this release, with fans of his work being able to pick out his tones and playing style. Elsewhere, Jarbas also collaborated with the late great Lula Côrtes on the 'Bom Shankar Bolenath' album from 1988 and 'Rosa De Sange' from 1980. He was a member of the wonderful Cátia de França band and is a regular in the legendary Tom Zé group. 

'Transas Do Futuro' is a special record and one we are honoured to be reissuing in February. Pre-order a copy right here. Have a listen below. 
 

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Watch Sheila Jordan live at Mezzrow Jazz Club

Toasting jazz singer extraordinaire Sheila Jordan on her 95th birthday with a recent performance backed by Alan Broadbent. 


Here's Sheila Jordan celebrating 95 with her birthday cake. 

Happy Birthday Bonnie St. Claire!

Celebrating the birthday of Dutch pop star Bonnie St. Claire with her 1968 Nederbeat pounder "I Surrender" and more.




Cat Power reimagines Bob Dylan's 1966 Manchester Free Trade Hall show

Chan Marshall felt that the songs Bob Dylan played at Manchester Free Trade Hall in 1966 could use a Cat Power-style update. 


Here's the scoop...

Recorded November 5, 2022 at London’s vaunted Royal Albert Hall, Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert sees Marshall paying tribute to Bob Dylan with a complete live reimagining of his legendary performance at the Manchester Free Trade Hall in May 1966. Long known as the “Royal Albert Hall Concert” due to a mislabeled bootleg, the original performance saw Dylan switching from acoustic to electric midway through the show, drawing the ire of folk purists and forever altering the course of rock ‘n’ roll. Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert both lovingly honors Dylan’s imprint on history and brings a stunning new vitality to many of his most revered songs, including the recently released “She Belongs to Me” and “Ballad of a Thin Man,” both available everywhere now.

“More than the work of any other songwriter,” says Chan Marshall, “Dylan’s songs have spoken to me, and inspired me since I first began hearing them at 5 years old.”

The artist otherwise known as Chan Marshall will mark the new album’s arrival with three sold-out West Coast performances of Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert, set for West Hollywood, CA’s world-renowned Troubadour (November 6 and 7) and Los Angeles’s historic Palace Theatre (November 8). The upcoming dates mark the show’s first-ever U.S. performances following sold-out shows at London’s Royal Albert Hall in November 2022 and Sydney, Australia’s famed Sydney Opera House in May 2023. “Now we know how much applause it takes to lift the Albert Hall,” wrote The London Times of the debut performance, while The Telegraph summed it up as “pure celebration” in its 4-out-of-5-starred review. Sydney’s Time Out praised “the sheer transcendence” of this spring’s Opera House performance, hailing the experience as “spiked with a deep and enduring sense of timelessness, made all the more potent through Power’s pure vocals. We could’ve been anywhere, at any point in history, anywhere in the solar system…Magnificent.”

There are few voices more deeply embedded in the iconography and mythology of American indie rock than that of Chan Marshall. Under the musical nom de plume of Cat Power, Marshall has released music for nearly 25 years now and her prowess as a songwriter, a producer, and most notably – as a voice – has only grown more influential with time. Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert marks the latest in a series of albums that see Marshall reimagining classics from the American Songbook, rock ‘n’ roll history, and beyond, including 2000’s The Covers Record, 2008’s Jukebox, and 2022’s Covers, the latter of which was hailed by Pitchfork as “her widest ranging yet, illustrating her talent for radical reinvention.”

Now Cat Power recreates Dylan’s epochal 1966 concert – a 15-song set featuring classics like “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue,” “Mr. Tambourine Man,“ “Like A Rolling Stone” as well as several cuts from Blonde on Blonde including “Just Like A Woman” – with both heartfelt reverence and a deep understanding of the delicate nature of song interpretation. Like the original concert (and all of Dylan’s 1966 world tour), Marshall kept the first half of her set entirely acoustic, then went electric for the second half with the help of a full band including guitarist Arsun Sorrenti, bassist Erik Paparozzi, multi-instrumentalists Aaron Embry (harmonica, piano) and Jordan Summers (organ, Wurlitzer), and drummer Josh Adams. In her own rendition of that historic night, Marshall inhabits each song with equal parts conviction and grace and a palpable sense of protectiveness, ultimately transposing the anarchic tension of Dylan’s set with a warm and luminous joy.

“I had and still have such respect for the man who crafted so many songs that helped develop conscious thinking in millions of people, helped shape the way they see the world,” says Marshall. “So even though my hands were shaking so much I had to keep them in my pockets, I felt real dignity for myself. It felt like a real honor for me to stand there.”


 

Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert

She Belongs To Me 

Fourth Time Around 

Visions Of Johanna 

It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue 

Desolation Row 

Just Like A Woman 

Mr. Tambourine Man 

Tell Me, Momma 

I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) 

Baby, Let Me Follow You Down 

Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues 

Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat 

One Too Many Mornings 

Ballad Of A Thin Man 

Like A Rolling Stone 


Cat Power on tour:

Renowned singer-songwriter Cat Power has announced a wide-ranging headline tour that will see her celebrating her acclaimed new live album, Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert, with complete performances of the 15-song concert around the world. North American dates get underway February 12, 2024 at Red Bank, NJ’s historic Count Basie Theater and then continue through mid-March. Highlights include a sold-out performance at New York’s legendary Carnegie Hall (February 14) as well as newly announced shows at Nashville, TN’s Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s CMA Theater (February 25), Los Angeles, CA’s The Theatre at Ace Hotel (March 7), San Francisco, CA’s Herbst Theatre (March 8), and Portland, OR’s Revolution Hall (March 11). EU/UK dates follow in April, with stops set for prestigious venues in Sweden, Norway, Germany, France, and the United Kingdom. North American tickets go on sale this Friday, November 17 at 10am (local). For complete details and ticket information, please see www.catpowermusic.com/#tour.

In case you missed it,  Cat Power performed “Like A Rolling Stone” on NBC’s The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon which you can watch below.