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Feeling Nostalgic? The archives > What Are You Listening to Right Now?

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message 1651: by ms.petra (new)

ms.petra (mspetra) Tift Merritt: See You On The Moon


message 1652: by [deleted user] (new)

King Dinösaur wrote: "

Recorded entirely inside a 1965 Rambler. How can you not admire something like that?"


Ben Vaughn SHOODA been huge.


message 1653: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments best coast - crazy for you



message 1654: by Brittomart (new)

Brittomart Two songs in, and I'm really feelin' the new Arcade Fire album.


message 1655: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments ms.petra wrote: "Tift Merritt: See You On The Moon"

She just played her Saturday, I'm kind of regretting missing her...


message 1656: by [deleted user] (new)

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By design or default, Downey, California’s Blasters took a humbler grass roots approach to plying their craft and navigating the music biz than the genetically-engineered-for-the-MTV-crowd Stray Cats, paying their dues with a bare-bones, rough-and-tumble, indie-label debut on Rollin’ Rock before being called up to the bigs for their initial release on another indie, Slash (with a leg up via Warner distribution), unwittingly putting into place a template for all that neo-rockabilly/roots rock/Americana/alt.country would become for the next two decades and change.

Despite the grimacing visage of Phil Alvin on the cover, “The Blasters” is a very easy pill to swallow, a great, upbeat beer-drinking album and about an appealing a mash-up of country, rock and roll, swing, and R&B as you’re likely to find anywhere. Dave Alvin’s songwriting and guitar playing are timeless, immediate, confident, inspired, and earthy, while Phil’s croon digs into an apparently bottomless bag of countrified tricks.

With something as simple and real as bass guitar, drums, piano, and saxophone, Bill Bateman, John Bazz, Gene Taylor, and Lee Allen straddle time and create something modern and ripe on several sturdy touchstones of the Blasters canon; “Border Radio,” So Long Baby Goodbye,” “Marie Marie,” “American Music,” and the low-riding “I’m Shakin’.”

I’d place “The Blasters” reverently amongst my top ten albums of all time. I’ve played it a few hundred times and I just know I’ll never tire of it, becoming an old pal of a record that will never let me down.

Now where’s the CD release?


message 1657: by janine (last edited Aug 04, 2010 06:02AM) (new)

janine | 7709 comments broken bells - broken bells


black rebel motorcycle club - beat the devil's tattoo
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midlake - the courage of others



message 1658: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments Clark - I love love love the Blasters.
I'm Shakin' is one of my favorite songs ever.


message 1659: by [deleted user] (new)

Sarah Pi wrote: "Clark - I love love love the Blasters.
I'm Shakin' is one of my favorite songs ever."


I wouldn't expect anything less of you, SP!

Live in the early 80's, they were a true force of nature. Saw them play several small-club gigs back then and those shows were like the last day of school, the best night of my life, and Christmas morning all rolled into one. Even the walls were dripping with sweat.


message 1660: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments Heh. I just saw this magnet and thought of you:



message 1661: by [deleted user] (new)

Sarah Pi wrote: "Heh. I just saw this magnet and thought of you:
"


Hah! Thank you, Ms. Sarah. But it should be appended to read, "And plenty of shitty ones as well." Sugarcubes, Flock of Seagulls, or Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, anyone?


message 1662: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments I've never had any desire to see CSNY but I do deeply regret never ponying up to see Y w/ Crazy Horse.


message 1663: by ms.petra (last edited Aug 06, 2010 05:04AM) (new)

ms.petra (mspetra) if I had all the vinyl like Clark, I would buy the reissue on vinyl of John Coltrane's My Favorite Things.


message 1664: by [deleted user] (new)

Sarah Pi wrote: "I've never had any desire to see CSNY but I do deeply regret never ponying up to see Y w/ Crazy Horse."

Me too. :(


message 1665: by [deleted user] (new)



For your consideration, one of the great lost power pop albums - straight out of Cleveland - with enough feathered hair, disco suits, and hooks (see title cut and "Can't Stop Pretending'" for starters) to satisfy any Pezband or Raspberries fan.

But Artful Dodger's lack of a gimmick, a brand image that would get them noticed and out from under the giant shadows cast by Kiss, Cheap Trick, and a legion of leather-jacketed, day-glo new-wavers, spelled their doom at the cash registers, despite ties to both Jack Douglas and Bob Ezrin. Sad, because these guys deserved to transform into teen heroes everyone could be proud of, respectful of the rock and roll verities in a dynamic rather than nostalgic way, with an instrumental wallop powerful enough to keep them in there with the heavies, but deft enough that their lyricism is left untouched.

This one's never been available on CD and that's just not right.


message 1666: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments what itunes dictates me:

the national - lemonworld
dead man's bones - in the room where you sleep
cass mccombs - that's that
fiona apple - extraordinary machine
adam green - mozzarella swastikas
the flaming lips - it's summertime
múm - flow not so fast old mountain radio
vashti bunyan - 17 pink sugar elephants
the flaming lips feat. karen o - watching the planets


message 1667: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments Sarah Pi wrote: "Heh. I just saw this magnet and thought of you:
"


Oh, that's awesome...I need that for my office door.


message 1668: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments andre williams is the black godfather
[image error]

seriously


message 1669: by [deleted user] (new)



Due to the late John Peel's plug, "Teenage Kicks" gets most of the attention, but "Get Over You" may be the best thing The Undertones ever came up with, compacting the sorrow of a broken teenage romance into a two-minute pop thunderbolt.




Forget about the fey picture sleeve of world-renowned gerbil wrangler Richard Gere for a minute. Within the grooves here is all the evidence you'll ever need that X guitarist Billy Zoom is a rockabilly dude in punk clothing, spitting fire, shitting brimstone, and tearing the guts out of this old Otis Blackwell - via Jerry Lee Lewis - chestnut. Blink and it's over much too soon at two minutes plus change.


message 1670: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments The Undertones were fun, no doubt. The second album cover is terrifying.


message 1671: by [deleted user] (new)

They reunited several years back with a new singer. Bad idea...


message 1672: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments We covered Teenage Kicks a few years ago. We had a two night stand as the band after a play, so we wanted to break out some surprises. Surprise to us was that nobody knew that one.
Darlin' Nikki went over better the next night.


message 1673: by Mary (new)

Mary (madamefifi) Arrrgggghhhh, why did you post the Blasters, Clark?? Now I am obssessed with replacing all my old rockabilly albums with CDs which is going to be difficult and expensive.

In the car:




message 1674: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments my 10:

the black keys - the go getter
LPG - this is your power
palace - no gold digger
iron & wine - love song of the buzzard
extince - makkelijk praten
eels - souljacker part II
we'll make it right - some say
vashti bunyan - love song
mc honky - my bad seed
nick drake - river man


message 1675: by Paul (new)

Paul  Perry (pezski) | 79 comments Just bopping along the Sleater-Kinney's 'Call the Doctor' album. yeah!


message 1676: by [deleted user] (new)

Call the Doctor is such a great album. But I love Dig Me Out even more.


message 1677: by Paul (new)

Paul  Perry (pezski) | 79 comments ashamed to say I don't have that one, i only have Call the Doctor, Sleater-Kinney and The Hot Rock.

now, when can i next buy myself a present...?


message 1678: by [deleted user] (last edited Aug 12, 2010 08:39AM) (new)

Def. get Dig Me Out, for my money, the best album S-K recorded. Their last album, The Woods, is also a shit-stomper, but it doesn't seem to get the love it should, because it veers towards arena rock, and not that they're anything wrong with that, because underneath their love for punk is a deeper love for bands like The Who and Led Zeppelin.


message 1679: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments I liked The Woods a lot.


message 1680: by Paul (new)

Paul  Perry (pezski) | 79 comments They've both been on my wish list for ages, I think i'll have to treat myself at the next opportunity


message 1681: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments When I was in Washington I drove past Sleater-Kinney, the place, and figured out, um, it's also a place.

eels - souljacker part II

This is one of my top five eels songs.

Janine, have you heard Wild Nothing? They're pretty good and remind me of something you would like:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wGhGpc...


message 1682: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments RandomAnthony wrote: "When I was in Washington I drove past Sleater-Kinney, the place, and figured out, um, it's also a place.

eels - souljacker part II

This is one of my top five eels songs.

Janine, have you heard W..."


i know that song! the band name didn't sound familiar, but i looked them up and discovered i have listened to their album gemini. i like them.


message 1683: by [deleted user] (new)

Mary wrote: "Arrrgggghhhh, why did you post the Blasters, Clark?? Now I am obssessed with replacing all my old rockabilly albums with CDs which is going to be difficult and expensive."

I'll come and visit you in debtor's prison, Mary.


message 1684: by [deleted user] (new)

[image error]

Despite a sonic palate that occasionally causes some to wonder if I'm the first generation of my family to walk upright, I do enjoy me the occasional bit of synth pop. No lie.

Deep thinkers cozying up to that hoary old theory that living in Detroit for nearly 53 years has made me receptive to anything approximating the sturm und drang of a factory would probably raise their eyebrows to learn that my only visit to one - Ford's Rouge Plant - scared the bejeebers out of me, as much for the toil on display as the cadaver shuffle of the workers. If there had been a window, I certainly would have jumped.

Nah, what really draws me to "Architecture & Morality" is the magnificence of the album's core - "She's Leaving," "Souvenir," and "Joan of Arc" - as majestic as you're ever likely to hear from what amounts to a pile of wire, tubes, transistors, and circuits.



It's easy for lazy asses like me to play "spot the influences" when it comes to a group of guys in a band staring at the back of a woman handling the lead vocal chores. It's easier still to throw out references to Joan Jett, The Muffs, and The Pretenders to describe Wendy Case's hooker-with-a-heart-of-gold caterwauling, which hits somewhere in the vicinity south of your belt and north of your knees, but it's probably safe to say that Chrissie Hynde has to be crying over her tofu burger somewhere out there.

"Knock Loud" is a brash set which alternates between sloppy and melodic, with big power pop hooks lurking in the ether, and although we've heard these same three chords a million times over, they never get old when delivered with such enthusiasm, bravado and swagger. In a perfect world, songs like "Black Girl," "If I Fell," and "Don't Lay It On Me," all of which tread a fine line between perfect pop sensibility and an all-out assault on your inner ear, would be all over the radio, although it's unlikely staid programmers could handle the afterburn. Marco Delicato, guitar set on "stun," leads the fray behind Case and bassist John Szymanski and drummer Mike Latulippe lay down a thunder akin to that car wreck two lanes over on I-75 last Labor Day weekend.

Remember all of the hype a while back about Detroit's much-ballyhooed "garage rock scene" (quotes are mine), complete with predictions about this ham-and-egg, shot-and-a-beer burg becoming the "next Seattle"?

Screw that. Let's just dance!


message 1685: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments OMD were way underrated, I agree. A lot of synth bands were.


message 1686: by [deleted user] (new)

RandomAnthony wrote: "OMD were way underrated, I agree. A lot of synth bands were."


Agreed. It just seems that the ones that got all of the press soured everyone on the ones that didn't.

Still one of my favorites, a flat-out great little pop song:



Just don't ask me to name any of their other songs.


message 1687: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments itunes:

vashti bunyan - girl's song in winter
the dandy warhols - hells bells
the unicorns - tuff ghost
fiona apple - get him back
andre williams - the dealer, the peeler and the stealer
sigur rós - ára bátur
black rebel motorcycle club - evol
sparklehorse - all night home
iron & wine - promise what you will
iron & wine - passing afternoon


message 1688: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments today's menu:

elizabeth & the catapult - taller children

impulse loan from the library i'm very happy with.

anthony and the johnsons - the crying light


fiona apple - tidal


arctic monkeys - humbug


dan auerbach - keep it hid



message 1689: by [deleted user] (last edited Aug 18, 2010 05:50AM) (new)



We had this pegged as "punk" because, well, it was from England and it was 1977 and any single with a chunky, semi-fuzzed guitar up high in the mix and a chorus which sort of sounded like the Bay City Rollers' "Saturday Night" recorded in a drunken dole queue somewhere in Blighty ought to be filed under "P."

Turns out we had it under the correct letter, but should have tagged it as "pub."

Regardless, TRB never again soared as high. One of the great singles of the era, the royalties from which should keep Robinson safe and happy until the Rapture.



"Talk to Ya Later" - The Tubes. Just when I'd given up on these guys, they strike like lightning with one of the gems of their catalog, a tale of a boy-girl relationship gone way south ("It's been six months/She hasn't shut up once").

With power chords, of course.


message 1690: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments do you want us to guess what you're listening to?


message 1691: by [deleted user] (new)

janine wrote: "do you want us to guess what you're listening to?"

Huh?


message 1692: by [deleted user] (new)

Your album cover isn't showing.


message 1693: by [deleted user] (new)

Hmmm... Funny. I can see them just fine.

How about now?


message 1694: by [deleted user] (new)

Good to go.


message 1695: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments I love that Antony and the Johnsons, Janine...


message 1696: by [deleted user] (new)

Blowin' the dust off the vinyl archives:



Snot-nosed Philly punks test Clive Davis's patience at Arista with "Teenage Jerk Off."



Unlike big brother David, Shaun Cassidy couldn't carry a tune in a bucket, but had much better taste in material and musicians, here covering the likes of David Bowie, Pete Townshend, and Ian Hunter, and roping in Todd Rundgren to produce (and write) and Utopia to back him. A gutsy move, considering his teen dream pedigree.



Indiana mook captures lightning in a jar for a quick 15 minutes with "I Wish I Had a Girl."



These guys had it all; teen-dream looks, charisma, and power-pop hooks big enough to hang their reputation on. Why they weren't huge beggars belief.



Australia's Sports came up with some of the most volatile, swingin' pub rock of the era - in particular the shooda/cooda/wooda monster "Who Listens to the Radio" - but it all fell on deaf, dimwit ears.


message 1697: by janine (last edited Aug 23, 2010 04:55AM) (new)

janine | 7709 comments eels - tomorrow morning



message 1698: by [deleted user] (new)


After a quick stroll through the Mott the Hoople discography, you’d certainly be forgiven for believing nothing much ever mattered to these guys except for life in a band - on stage and off - but there’s no shame in single-minded devotion to a common cause, is there?

Historically, “All the Young Dudes” gets all of the ink as far as Mott singles go, more for David Bowie’s involvement than anything else, but “All the Way From Memphis” surely trumps it, another band travelogue with an instantly-recognizable, naggingly insistent, cascading piano tag line, an Ian Hunter proto-rap tour diary, and a closing Mick Ralphs solo that howls like a hormonally-crazed banshee before giving way to Andy Mackay’s honking sax coda, spiraling headlong in free-fall madness toward the run-out groove.

Perhaps their finest moment.


Forget everything you know about "Bohemian Rhapsody" for a minute. Sure, it was amusing the first 10,000 times you heard it, but let's face facts: Queen never rocked as hard as they did on "Sheer Heart Attack," except for maybe "Tie Your Mother Down."

In many respects, this is the gem of the Queen catalog that "A Night at the Opera" usually receives credit for. "Brighton Rock," "Now I'm Here," and "Stone Cold Crazy" cut right to the quick, with guitar-hero-in-training Brian May picking and power chording his way into your heart with a multi-layered (and probably infinitely overdubbed) attack on his homemade guitar.

The summation of all that was prog, metal, glam, and pop, but alas the end of an era for the band as vocalist Freddie Mercury wrestled control of the band from May.


message 1699: by RandomAnthony (last edited Aug 24, 2010 06:51AM) (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments janine wrote: "eels - tomorrow morning
"


I haven't listened yet! How is it?

I'm listening to The Pixies-Doolittle.


message 1700: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments RandomAnthony wrote: "janine wrote: "eels - tomorrow morning
"

I haven't listened yet! How is it?

I'm listening to The Pixies-Doolittle."


you should! i like it.

http://3voor12.vpro.nl/speler/luister...


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