Rolling Country 2006 Thread

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (2098 of them)
Not from major labels.

Thomas Inskeep (submeat), Monday, 26 June 2006 18:36 (nineteen years ago)

I've decided that I've been drastically overrating Carter Falco's album (which nobody else has even noticed existed, so no harm done) on this thread. I still like it -- he's a ramblin' man with decent tuneage -- but the dude just plain doesn't have much of a singing voice. Which might explain why he's buddies with Shooter Jennings.

xhuxk (xheddy), Monday, 26 June 2006 19:12 (nineteen years ago)

gary bennett human condition, i really like.

anthony easton (anthony), Monday, 26 June 2006 20:39 (nineteen years ago)

actually i might not, im confused by it

also anne powers is a genius:
http://www.calendarlive.com/music/cl-et-kenny19jun19,0,4820682.story?coll=cl-nav-music

anthony easton (anthony), Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:29 (nineteen years ago)

Apropos of nothing in particular I was listening to "The Bumper of My SUV" last night and it occurred to me that the little piano figure at the start (it's repeated later in the song) sounds just like the opening notes of the French national anthem, which may be some kind of melodic Freudian slip.

On a soul-country thing, (which I know we were for a little while a while back) while in the States I picked up an LP by Diana Trask called "Miss Country Soul", produced by Buddy Killen in 1969, as far as I can tell featuring largely Joe Tex-related material, sleevenotes by Joe himself. It's about as convincing as Joe's "Stone Soul Country", i.e. not completely but has some fascinating bits and some brilliant bits. Diana sings fairly straight country 1969 style (i.e. a mixture of pretty much every singing style available to humanity). She tends to fall down with the uptempo numers: SYSLJFM is a worse version even that the Q-Tips', and that's saying something.

Seeing George Jones play live to a mostly-pensionable Lancaster, PA audience was an experience, I can tell you.

Tim (Tim), Wednesday, 28 June 2006 15:00 (nineteen years ago)

Toby Keith's *White Trash With Money,* which nobody else has much talked about, really holds up. Just played it this morning for the first time in over and month or two, and I'm now rating it as the year's best Nashville country album, hands down. Is "A Little Too Late" the new single (with the reportedly antifeminist dungeon six-feet-under video, which I still haven't seen)? If so, people should try to hear it apart from the video, because to my ears it's got some of Toby's most explicit soul phrasing ever. Also, I don't think I'd noticed before how good "Can't Buy You Money" is. Only real sore spot: the obligatory numbskull political statement "Ain't No Right Way," which sounds more lame ever time I hear it, and also naggingly sincere, hence way less fun than Tony's usual numbskull politics.

Tim, you're right that that's a real good Kenny Chesney article by Ann Powers (though "Jump" is hardly Van Halen at their most metal!)

All this talk (much of it by me) of soul-country obviously makes me feel very stupid for getting rid of the Charlie Rich albums I used to own; he's clearly the father of this stuff if anybody is (though late '60s Memphis Elvis clearly figures, and I bet Glen Campbell, too.) Also, what about Joe South? I need to research him one of these days. And how good was O.C. Smith' non-green-apples stuff??

xhuxk (xheddy), Wednesday, 28 June 2006 16:46 (nineteen years ago)

TOBY'S not Tony's numbskull etc, duh.

New video still doesn't seem to be up on youtube (country youtubers are slow! or maybe just busy in the summer), but I did enjoy this description by "jerryleekersey" of the video for "He Ain't Worth Missing" (which I don't recall ever hearing/seeing before, myself):

"man, this chick in this video is HOT! i mean HOTTT! video is from toby's early days, video is about this girl sitting at the bar with her ex in the same bar and she keeps looking at her ex with his new girlfriend, while toby is just hoping to get sloppy seconds from her. video is pretty good, what would have made this video great was them two girl cats fight and toby break it up and get both of them chicks later. Be sure to check out my other videos."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57Mp4zFo7PI&search=toby%20keith

xhuxk (xheddy), Wednesday, 28 June 2006 21:34 (nineteen years ago)

ha ha, more from jerrleekersey:

"loverboy-this could be the night
04:12
i absolutely love this song!, cant get better than this one. i wished the radio station played tunes like this again. things i miss are stone washed 550 strait leg levis, velcro wallets, izod, dirt-shirts and most of all i miss my mullet!"

"rosanne cash-i dont know why you dont want me
03:21
good video, damn shes a cutie! great song, great on the eyes as well. love that spike hairdo. rare video here/ Be sure to check out my other videos.If you'd like a cd of my RARE VIDEOS for FREE you pay the shipping of the cd, let me know."

"quarterflash-take me to heart
03:32
its 4 in the morning and i am posting videos for all to see. i hope you enjoy this one, i noticed it wasnt on here, so here it is! enjoy. Be sure to check out my other videos. If you'd like a cd of my RARE VIDEOS for FREE you pay the shipping of the cd, let me know."

"lita ford-lisa
04:15
she was a babe in the day!"

"heart-stranded
04:00
This is off the brigade album. great video and song. Nancy's voice on this one equally matches Ann's. I think I actually like this song above all heart songs. NOTES: drummer looks like he's bored out of his mind. also nancy gives thumbs up at the end as if to say hey i dig that you bought this album, then she points as if to say hey security, theres the guy who is currently "stalking" me. cause i left him STRANDED! Be sure to check out my other videos. If you'd like a cd of my RARE VIDEOS for FREE you pay the shipping of the cd, let me know."

"air supply-making love out of nothing at all
05:03
soap opera acting at its best. i dig this song though. listening to air supply is like riding a moped, fun to ride just dont let your buddies catch you! girls melt when you play air supply, pour her some iced cold coke a cola with secret hint of crown royal. boom your the man! thank you air supply! blame your 1st kid on "slipping a mickie""

"julian lennon-valotte
04:16
great song and video, this is one of those songs that you can sit on park bench and watch birds poop on your lunch basket and not care. relax and enjoy this great video."

"richard marx-dont mean nothing
04:26
video is great, cynthia rhodes is one hot babe in this video, richard got the hit, got the girl, he got the money, dang! just goes to show you the mullet wasn't that bad! it worked for him, it still works for gloverboy, i say if you can grow it, go for it, you may reap the riches"

"huey lewis and the news-if this is it
04:28
recently saw huey and band, great show in memphis in may. gloverboy and i and our ladies got a little wet from rain, but IT WAS WORTH IT! i owe huey a christmas card, his show got me some from the ole'lady later that night. thanks huey! Be sure to check out my other videos. If you'd like a cd of my RARE VIDEOS for FREE you pay the shipping of the cd, let me know."

"cliff richard-we dont talk anymore
03:58
i remember hearing this song on the radio in 1981 and thought it was cool. its still cool! great all around. I used to have a shirt like that one he's wearing. I never danced like that though. but who cares, what i remember about those days is if you didnt have a jacket with the sleeves that zipped on and off you werent cool. i didnt become cool until last year when i "FINALLY" got that jacket. LOL. Be sure to check out my other videos. If you'd like a cd of my RARE VIDEOS for FREE you pay the shipping of the cd, let me know."

okay, I will stop now, I guess.

xhuxk (xheddy), Wednesday, 28 June 2006 21:48 (nineteen years ago)

MORE PLZ - that dude's awesome. i'm gonna hafta try that 'air supply + iced cold coca-cola with a secret hint of crown royal' trick.

j blount (papa la bas), Wednesday, 28 June 2006 22:13 (nineteen years ago)

ok, james asked for it; here's a few more by jerryleekersey (but I'm gonna leave out all the "get my CD of RARE VIDEOS" stuff this time). (Seeing how this is the country thread, I should note that his favorite country band seems to possibly be Little Texas. I have no Little Texas opinions, but should maybe watch their videos sometime):

rick springfield-human touch
04:31
video reminds me of a prefab buck rogers except rick and some of nasa's best jumpsuit beauties break out into dance and then captain rick pushed the wrong buttons and they have to go back into shower glasses only to emerge when rick can write another hit song.

rick springfield-rock of life
03:49
video i think rick is saying in 1988 i hate my lfe as a married man, he is also saying i miss getting young chicks so i guess i wont cut my hair! great video! pyromaniac director though!

rick springfield-bop till you drop
04:54
bop till you drop video is about "the man" deciding if you can do a good job singing than you can stay and work, maybe cleaning java the hut urinal later. great classic! i first saw this video on night flight and friday night videos back in the 80's when all we had was 5 channels on tv. dang im old!

kiss- i was made for loving you
03:56
kiss doing disco song. whats the big deal, they didnt sell out then. its a great song, great drum beat. if anything they sold out when they put back on the makeup and had a farewell tour that lasted for 10 yrs, the only thing worst is an ex girlfriend saying im leaving, im leaving, then is still standing in your doorway 15 min later. I love kiss. they are a great band.

martika-toy soldiers
04:53
when i first heard the song, i didnt know it was a song about being hooked on drugs.

lou gramm-midnight blue
03:41
classic one here, man it was hard to find this one. the person i got this video from was from australia, he said "good tidings mate"!

anita baker-caught up in the rapture
01:54
cool video all around, video is kinda short, but great song, anita baker is great, i have always been a fan, nothing better after banging out to quiet riot then play anita for your headache, easy listening!

reo speedwagon-that aint love
04:37
great song here, did i mention that all my videos i am posting are rare, well this one is rare like finding your old pair of jimmy conners adidas's in the shed and washing them and wearing them again. gloverboy knows which shoes im talking about "the green mesh ones".

The Outfield-All the love in the world
03:40
Finding this video was like finding a $20 dollar bill in an old jacket, and not telling your wife about it! just take the money and buy yourself some taco bell, hell go on a splurge with the $20.00, buy the supreme.


xhuxk (xheddy), Thursday, 29 June 2006 02:02 (nineteen years ago)

Since he's down with the cool vudeeyo, Jerlee knows from Yacht Rock, surely? (Though according to the Yacht Rock thread, it's over, gentlemen! Can't be, now that Taylor Hicks is Takin It To The Streets.). Anybody got a Rhino publicist addy? if so, please email me. I'm writing this big thing about Willie, and trying to score his Complete Atlantic Sessions, at least CD-Rs (though not CD-RWs), a best-of-the-box sampler, even. So, if yall got those or that, let's powwow. And stay smooth, in this street life.

don (dow), Thursday, 29 June 2006 03:36 (nineteen years ago)

Tim, I found that Diana Trask LP of Joe Tex songs, "Miss Country Soul," for a dollar last year. It's pretty unlistenable except for a couple tracks, but it's fun to listen to if you're in the right mood. and the liner notes by Joe himself make it worth the money. (In my case, a buck--if you ever go into the Great Escape on Broadway in Nashville, make sure to bend down and scrounge thru the dollar LPs they have on the floor--you'll find some great stuff. Actually, I found John Anderson's awesome "Tokyo Okla." LP for a dollar, at Grimey's, our local indie shop.) I just saw an amazing clip of Joe doing "The Love You Save" from this Hullabaloo comp! Wow.

Don, I might have a Rhino person for you--I'm doing something on their new Wilson Pickett two-disc bestof, and I believe someone sent me a publicist e-mail. I'll jump off here and see if I can find it; and Chuck, I just got the Toby, so I'm gonna see if you off the beam or not (what I've heard so far is pretty darned good, I have to admit, so if it's as good as you say it'll be a pleasant surprise).

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Thursday, 29 June 2006 13:14 (nineteen years ago)

Haha I paid TWO BUCKS for my copy! Ever get the feeling you've been cheated etc etc.

Tim (Tim), Thursday, 29 June 2006 13:58 (nineteen years ago)

jerryleekersey deserves his own ILM thread. And his own column somewhere.

Thomas Inskeep (submeat), Thursday, 29 June 2006 17:14 (nineteen years ago)

Yikes! I haven't posted here in 18 days.

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Thursday, 29 June 2006 18:05 (nineteen years ago)

My Review for Left Hip, will be on site sometime in July

Garry Bennett
Human Condition
Longside Records


I am young man, and I have a different set of situations then Gary Bennett. Lets say that off the bat. For me there is no one to marry, few to love, and everything is in flux. This album is a lovely artifact, about marriage, love, stability, and desire. Even in the melancholy edges there is an agreement in the general direction of the world. My lizard brain wants to call it politically suspect family values bullshit, projecting outside anything that exists with in the album.

Ignoring that reactionary tendency, and listening closer: the album's strength is to escape the rhetoric of marriage, an incredibly difficult thing to do in a culture that loathes and worships it equally in either measure. When a coal company uses 16 Tons, and more people shack up then get hitched, any album that is mostly about working class love affairs, is going to get under your skin one way or the other.

Sometimes the skin-popping fear of pair bonding can be assuaged with cheap nostalgia (Toby Keith's song The List comes immediately to mind) or hard irony (the entire of Robbie Fulk's brilliant but problematic album Georgia Hard.) Bennett's work is incredibly banal, that banality works in its favor, it is not about the grind of every day domesticity, nor is it about making the women goddesses, the situations seem real to me.

Authenticity is a bear trap, especially fort this guy. His old band (BR5 49) was all about old country being more emotionally real then anything on the radio. What I assume to be emotionally real here may be a clever rhetorical exercise. There is something too formal about the album and that makes me a bit nervous. The words come to quickly, and there is no ambiguity or start-stop stuttering that one comes to expect from the dumb struck and in love. (Even the solos, that should be used to take over when words fail, show a technical proficiency that appears removed pure feeling; the exception is Pat Henderson's subtle, melancholic accent of mouth organ on the track Heading Home)

Caught in that trap, moving my leg and bleeding out, I listen to the album on repeat for a week, remaining confused. There are lines that are moving, sections that refuse to settle, spots so tender that to poke them causes internal pain. In Steel Ball, he extends clichéd metaphors about love into something more dangerous. This time love being a gamble, he makes himself violently shook up by it "like the steel ball in a roulette wheel/ tumbling tumbling rolling down hill/searching for the number that will give him the thrill." That thrill leaves him broken and broke. My Illusion is a grown up, whiskey soaked; break up song, about how faking it is impossible. The two songs that bookend the album, are about songs that outline the working mans condition here and now, including oblique threats towards physical violence against ones employer.

Its intended for the workingman, but the workingman is buying White Trash With Money or No Shoes, No Shirts No Service. Its an NPR yuppie album, a kind of high toned slumming but sometimes work that ends up like that packs a sucker punch. I wonder if I was 30 something, worked 40-hour weeks at a job I hated, and the only thing that ever made me survive was thinking "maybe things will be getting better some day" then it would be on my top ten list. I feel trapped by it, and not released from it. That's got to count for something.

anthony easton (anthony), Thursday, 29 June 2006 18:56 (nineteen years ago)

xpost

From the teenpop thread (and I doubt that anyone else here cares nearly as much about this as I do, but "Lucky 4 You" on the first SHeDAISY album was brilliant not only in concept - the three Osborn sisters acting out a woman with multipersonalities who runs taunting and salacious rings around the man who dumped her - but in sound too, new suburban country doing fool-around multiparts as if it were doo-wop; and Hilary Duff's "Come Clean," which Shanks wrote with Kara DioGuardi, is one of those songs like "I Can See Clearly Now" that the second you hear it you think has always existed, the melody seems so right; and the Ashlee Simpson albums that Shanks produced and co-wrote and played on, while fundamentally being mainstream rock, are full of nonstop inventiveness, melodies from lounge to glam, subtle shifts in guitar timbre, etc.):

I'm doing about as poorly with this year's SHeDAISY album as xhuxk is with the Jonas Bros. Where are the hooks, where's the passion, where's the ambition, where's the wordplay? It's got powerful enough playing, the guitars ringing out, strong pop-country voices, but what's there to care about? How did this woman (Kristyn Osborn) ever create "Lucky 4 You"? How did this guy (John Shanks) ever create "Come Clean" and "Undiscovered"? You can't tell from this record.

-- Frank Kogan (edcasua...), June 24th, 2006. (Frank Kogan)

I could definitely use a second opinion on SHeDAISY's Fortuneteller's Melody. I've found a few things to interest me, such as a savvy turnaround in the meaning of the title phrase of "She Gets What I Deserve": "she" is her boyfriend's husband, first time you hear the phrase it means "she gets the man and the family I deserve," the last time it means "she gets the pain and suffering I deserve." (But that's a conventional enough country attitude; no surprise, really.) And "Kickin' In" does kick bright and hard whenever I hear it. But by the end of the track I'm still "so what" with it, as I am with the whole album.

The thing is, with any new Shanks product I have insanely high expectations, but unless he's working with one of the teenies, I also get secret satisfaction from believing its mediocre, since I can then say, "See, without Ashlee and Lindsay and Hilary he can't do it. Their talents are crucial to the enterprise."

By the way, Sheryl Crow is a co-writer on a couple of the SHeDAISY tracks, again with a so-what result.

-- Frank Kogan (edcasua...), June 27th, 2006. (Frank Kogan)

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Thursday, 29 June 2006 19:08 (nineteen years ago)

"she is her boyfriend's husband" - er, now that would be interesting; but "she" is merely her boyfriend's wife.

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Thursday, 29 June 2006 19:13 (nineteen years ago)

David Cantwell on the new version of "I Hope" on the new Chicks' album: "This is like trading in the Roman Candle you bought to celebrate our nation’s independence with a pack of those goofy charcoal snake pellets."

He goes over the top on the single, but right about the rest of the album, I think: http://www.livinginstereo.com/

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Thursday, 29 June 2006 19:27 (nineteen years ago)

That's excellent, Anthony. What's "Left Hip"?

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Thursday, 29 June 2006 19:29 (nineteen years ago)

http://www.lefthip.com/index.php

anthony easton (anthony), Thursday, 29 June 2006 20:21 (nineteen years ago)

from teenpop thread (though i just noticed that her myspace inflences list is much less country than her cdbaby influences):

vaguely country-leaning (i.e., her cdbaby page lists miranda lambert as one reference point, though hardly the only one) teenpop singer-songwriter music from an asian-american girl (album title: *american girl*) who apparently grew up in oklahoma and the phillipines and is now based in l.a. (i thought hawaii figured in there somewhere too, though i'm not sure how i got the idea -- oh wait, i guess it's the hawaii t-shirt she wears in the CD booklet); frankly, most of the CD isn't hitting me (her voice is smaller than i wish, for one thing), though i'd be curious to hear what the more shemo-tolerant (/vanessa carlton tolerant/michelle branch tolerant) of y'all think. closest thing to a great song seems to be "i'm in the way," about being drawn to bad boys (and it's got a really familiar pop melody i can't place); "2nd street" has the most r&b in it; "405" seems okay too:

http://cdbaby.com/cd/mylin

http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=70795638
---------------------------------------------------------------------Actually, her cdbaby page says "Sheryl Crow and The Wreckers meets Miranda Lambert and Keith Urban," which makes her at least 75 percent pop-country supposedly, but she only sounds maybe 20 percent pop-country if that. I don't think I hear much Miranda, Sheryl, or Keith in her sound. She sounds how I would IMAGINE the Wreckers (who I haven't heard) might, though. Her look is maybe a much softer Pink.


xhukx (xheddy), Thursday, 29 June 2006 21:37 (nineteen years ago)

Diana Trask looks lovely on the cover of her Tex-t.

Hacienda Bros. new one, just thought I'd mention it. Country-soul, pretty pro forma, but quite pretty in spots. They do not do badly with "Cowboy to Girls" (Anthony, just think of the gender-fuck time-travel possibilities of this one if someone came along and gayed it up...it'd be the real companion to Keith Anderson's tale of jailed pedlophilia "Clothes Don't Make the Man.")

And they put an accordion in producer Dan Penn's "Cry Like a Baby," which they sound too old to sing. Gaffney and Gonzalez aren't the world's best singers. This would've made a nifty EP--it sounds really good, really warm, and I do quite like about three/four songs, including their nice take on Charlie Rich's "Rebound" and one they wrote themselves that's the title track, and I like their approach to tempo. They're good, but they never quite transcend the notion of soul-with-pedal steel, and they could sound a little more greasy and stoned, I guess, and get into real Sir Dougas territory.

New Guy Clark, "Workbench Songs," isn't bad, either--he writes a real sly one called "Cinco de Mayo in Memphis" and plays the blues on "Walkin' Man." What's interesting about Clark is that he doesn't seem to draw conclusions, and sometimes I think his narratives are uninflected. Hard to pin down what it "means." I actually think his singing has improved since the days of "Texas Cooking" (which is a really fine record). I guess I just wish his music were less received, more interesting, but he's just not interested in that.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Thursday, 29 June 2006 22:40 (nineteen years ago)

xhuxk - and any others interested - I finally got to the new Trent Willmon, and it's great, definitely my country album of the year so far. It's cut from the same cloth as his debut, only much better. The songs are stronger - that's the main thing. Single "On Again Tonight" is kinda limp on CMT, but in the context of the album sounds great. Album kinda alternates a little annoyingly between rowdy-ish lovin'/drinkin' songs and ballads, and admittedly it trails off a bit at the end. But then there's the surprise smack dab in the middle, track 6 (of 11), titled (whaddaya know) "Surprise." I first heard it on my discman on the train home from work, and actually sat there with my eyes bugged out to the point where at least one person was staring at me. Trent's subject arrives home to find his wife playing the dominatrix to his best friend - I'm not kidding, he even references leather and spikes! - and then he takes up with his buddy's (now ex-)wife. It's the kinda song that Toby wouldn't do because, I think, it goes too far even for him. (Maybe, considering "Stays in Mexico," I'm wrong.) This is the country single (if it was a single, which I doubt it'll ever be) of the year. xhuxk, you really owe it to yourself to at least hear this one song, though I recommend the whole album heartily. (Great production from Frank Rogers, too.)

Thomas Inskeep (submeat), Friday, 30 June 2006 01:16 (nineteen years ago)

I think you're right about Clark's voice, Edd, and I love "Cinco de Mayo in Memphis," which could be an album cut for Chesney or whoever. Didn't he write that one with Chuck Mead? (I think the BR549 album will make my top ten country albums of the year. So light and quick and the songs are really good.) But man is that "Analog Girl" or whatever it's called song a stinker.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Friday, 30 June 2006 02:30 (nineteen years ago)

xxpost thanx for the Rhino contact, Edd, and I just emailed you about that (everybody, be sure to read the faq at rhino.com/media before trying to get anything from theeyumm) Great, Anthony, and that's a classic description of a kind of honorably confused or at least conflicted 90s/00s country album, usually under the wire, as far as good descriptions go (also sucesswise, except for small followers, many of them bargain hunters, God love us).

don (dow), Friday, 30 June 2006 04:52 (nineteen years ago)

and I just finished, anyway delivered the Jerry Jeff piece. His collection of songs from his Tried & True label, 90s/00s is a model of how to put something like that together, to carry the lesser songs via sequencing and context, and they've all flowing (smoke-cured) shades 'o blue.(Although I've never listened to him, or to this kind of album, much before, and maybe I'll get sick of it.) Just wish he still picked some nervier covers, like that Susannah Clark upthread.

don (dow), Friday, 30 June 2006 05:00 (nineteen years ago)

edd
can you digitize and send those two songs by any chance? (i know i owe you a mix, its a commin')

don
thanks

anthony easton (anthony), Friday, 30 June 2006 07:32 (nineteen years ago)

Where's that gonna JJW piece gonna be, don?

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Friday, 30 June 2006 12:53 (nineteen years ago)

man you guys are some great writers and thinkers, I cant imagine not knowing you and getting to benefit from your intelligence and passion for this music

after just almost a full listen, I'm going to say that Darrell Scott's The Invisible Man is probably my album of the year, it's deep and folky and smart-without-being-too-smart like he gets sometimes and there is no better storyteller in country music today, and the melodies are three kinds of gorgeous. (cue Chuck to tell me 'those melodies are unmelodic and his lyrics are crap', usually seems to happen when I love something like this.) plus he covers a Stuart Adamson song and takes shots at the war (again) and SUV-driving callous assholes and all that, wonders whether God or the devil or true love will care when he dies, oh a great record indeed.

Haikunym (Haikunym), Friday, 30 June 2006 13:22 (nineteen years ago)

well either that or the Dixie Chicks (whom Scott has written for) album or maybe something else.

Haikunym (Haikunym), Friday, 30 June 2006 13:26 (nineteen years ago)

wow, I guess I need to listen to Scott's album again. It made no impression. I almost always like his songs and I have a pretty high tolerance for "old coot" singersongwriters.

Speaking of which, this Eric Taylor (Nanci Griffith's ex-husband) record, The Great Divide, is killing me right now. Mickey Newbury and Lightnin Hopkins and Pall Malls are the sources. It's my old coot album of the year.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Friday, 30 June 2006 14:12 (nineteen years ago)

Roy, the Jerry Jeff shorty will be in http://www.charlotte.creativeloafing.com on July 12. Some recent longer, but also relatively well-behaved things (later loosened up for thefreelancementalists) are archived on there too: Chatham County Line (not yet blogged), Shooter,etc. Yeah, Darrell Scott contributed to the Chicks' Home and maybe earlier, I'll have to check out his album.

don (dow), Friday, 30 June 2006 15:22 (nineteen years ago)

well, guy clark's no one is frankly sort of jokey. light. i hear him as a really fine songwriter circling around meaning. it's a pretty laid-back record; i'm not sure what else there is to it. i'm not sure how much analysis his stuff can stand, or needs. i'm probably rarely in the correct mood for it, or for townes van zandt either. but those two clark RCA records are pretty choice, i must say.

i have trent right here, and now am going to put on "surprise." i've always suspected there was some dominatricks being performed in the new south exurban, hot summer, endless night; a vein of rich comedy is right here amongst us. i mean i'd probably be happy if all country music was about wife-swapping or at least serial matrimony among the two-boat, three lawn-mower and two-SUV set (and two votes for republicans, don't forget those two).

and right, don, you gotta read rhino's FAQs, get yo-self a password...

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Friday, 30 June 2006 16:15 (nineteen years ago)

well Mr. Edd, are you acquainted with "Margo and Harold"? They just keep coming over to visit their neighbor,Patterson Drive-By Hood, on Pizza Deliverance and Alabama Ass-Whuppin', which further distends butt does not disturb the evening vibe. They are adjusting to the erosion of old age (fiftysomething!), "horny and loaded," and, although fortysomething sprout Patterson's whiney little voice is very appropriate here, turns out he has shared Tupperware with them previously, so they may be uninvited tonight, but should not be unexpected...

don (dow), Friday, 30 June 2006 23:10 (nineteen years ago)

This one goes out to xhuxk:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SkkXpoObF40&search=Fulla

Rockist_Scientist (RSLaRue), Saturday, 1 July 2006 14:03 (nineteen years ago)

wow, that rules, rockist, thanks! (country and western on rai? well, probably not rai. but country/mid-east fusion has tons of potential! Where is that from, and is the country thing new for Fulla?)

i am also somewhat coming around/giving in to the trent willmon album. i swear he still sounds really staid, in some way (though not nearly as staid as that new guy clark album sounds; i'll never get these guys who have such an aversion to putting, uh, some MUSIC in their music -- too bad, because Guy's songwriting is often good.) anyway, i like "surprise" (though it doesn't strike me as THAT outlandish -- maybe it would've if I hadn't received prior warning though, I dunno) and "so am i" and "sometimes i miss ya" and the blues gloomer "lousiana rain" and probably more. i just wish Trent had more surprise in his SOUND. Or color. Or maybe even leather and whips. There's just something real held-back about him that bugs me.

xhuxk (xheddy), Saturday, 1 July 2006 14:36 (nineteen years ago)

He's a decent singer, though, and I was wrong about him being totally humorless. "Sometime I Miss Ya" is on now, and it started with a good yeee-haw and now he misses her high heels and big city lovin' and he's laid up on a creek bank with a cold one in his hand, and the whole point is usually he *doesn't* miss her. So: almost clever. And so maybe I'm wrong about him being staid, too; I'm still deciding. (Speaking of cold ones, though, his album starts with a song called "Good One Comin' On", and it's not a fraction as good as Montgomery Gentry's "Cold One Comin' On," but then few songs are.)

xhuxk (xheddy), Saturday, 1 July 2006 14:50 (nineteen years ago)

(and actually what the arabian-or-whatever* squaredance video that rockist linked to most reminds me of is border-cowboy mexipop songs and videos by people like jenni rivera, which brings us back to the whole latin/middle-eastern crossbreed that's been happening forever.)

* - and duh, the notation beside the video does indicate it's arabic. also indicates she's a bad singer, though, and as usual with arabic music, i don't really understand why, unless i just like bad arabic singers. video also brings rednex's "cotton eyed joe" to mind.

xhuxk (xheddy), Saturday, 1 July 2006 14:56 (nineteen years ago)

Actually it says she's denouncing bad singers. I only accidentally discovered this while looking for Karnatak music on youtube. The singer is Algerian. I haven't really heard too much by her. Judging by the clips I've listened to, I don't think I'd like the style of her songs too much, but I think she has a good voice and seems to have good vocal chops.

Rockist_Scientist (RSLaRue), Saturday, 1 July 2006 15:08 (nineteen years ago)

(xpost "almost clever": that really seems like what a lot of radio bait is going for--wanna whet the appetite, but if they got really clever, would raise expectations, and they'd have to get clever again, if not cleverer, the whole thing would get outta hand) No doubt has to do with power of suggestion, but now that yall mention it, easy enough to hear something African/North African-to-Iberian-to-Latin-across-the-Gulf-and-up-the-River in this song on "Jugs, Jukes & Jazz," (local radio program) right now, as I read this: the way Jack Carter of the South Memphis Jug Band rolls while he bends and stretches his notes this way and that,unable to get comfortable, singing like he's got a harmonica stuck in his throat, complaining bout this "Cold Iron Bed."

don (dow), Saturday, 1 July 2006 16:28 (nineteen years ago)

got this too late to give you the rhino hook-up, don, but where is your bit on willie running? i wrote one in a denver airport, though it came out here: http://www.citypages.com/databank/27/1334/article14484.asp

i can't recall where i put the diana trask which edd mailed me last year (it's not alone, tho i just found another edd burn, Two Yanks in Egnland just recently), but it's hard to imagine wanting to listen to anyone else sing joe's songs. perhaps it's in inverse proportion to wanting to hear joe cluelessly sing "ode to billie jo;," the part about billie joe putting a bullfrog down his pants is just so wrong. most days though, i feel like edd does about lee dorsey AND joe tex.

imbidimts (imbidimts), Sunday, 2 July 2006 14:24 (nineteen years ago)

So how stupid was I to pass on a sealed copy of Charlie Rich's 1975 Pickwick Records grab-bag/outtake/whatever-it-was album for $2 at The Thing in Greenpoint yesterday, while spending $50 total on a huge pile of other stuff by Juice Newton, Freddie Fender, Captain Sky, Marcus, and lotsa other people*? (Pretty stupid, I'm guessing.)

* -- listed entirely on the "recent purchases" thread, if you really wanna know.

Anyway, here's a description of the LP; Pickwick was obviously not to be trusted, but that doesn't mean it's not worth $2, duh....

http://www.mmguide.musicmatch.com/album/album.cgi?ALBUMID=1409502&AMGLENGTH=full#review

xhuxk (xheddy), Sunday, 2 July 2006 15:30 (nineteen years ago)

didn't see the actual songs on that pickwick link, chuck. but sounds like it's his groove sides (groove=rca's brief r&b subsid, for whom rich recorded '63-'65, with chet atkins producing. koch's "big boss man: the groove sessions" is worth tracking down, but like most koch stuff, not terribly easy to find. the smash stuff, which i actually prefer, is on mercury's '94 "complete smash sessions." for the sun stuff, i've seen repros on cd of those records, like "lonely weekends." varèse sarabande has a really compleat "complete sun sessions plus" that came out in '03. AVI's '96 "lonely weekends: the best of the sun years" is harder to find and the better buy, more concise.

"feel like going home" is the 2-disc set from sony, and a good overview. it leaves off stuff like "memphis and arkansas bridge," which appears on the "boss man" reissue of the '70 epic LP of the same name. if you gotta get just one rich disc, the koch reissue of "boss man" is the one to get--he does a great version of "nice 'n' easy" and one of his most desolate drinking songs, "i can't even drink it away," his greatest and most truly outré and rockin' story song, "memphis and arkansas bridge," and "i do my swingin'at home," his best stay-at-home-with-the-bottle-baby song.

there's an 2-LP set from '74, "fully realized," that covers his mercury/smash years very, very well--it still floats around out there.

i love his RCA stuff--i love pretty much all of it, and the willie mitchell/hi record he did of hank williams songs is supposed to be great--i don't believe i have ever heard it. if i had to pare it down to the very essentials, i guess i'd go with that "feel like going home" 2-disc set and the koch reissue of "boss man."

i am sure that pickwick LP is worth $2, though.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Sunday, 2 July 2006 17:39 (nineteen years ago)

second "feel like going home" though i wished that some of the slicked gospel had been replaced with this one song i have on mp3 somewheres called "Don't Tear (Let?) Me Down" that i can't seem to find on any "Best of..." anywhere. it's really soulful though. Rich may suffer the most from having his catalog spread across so many danged labels that they may never be under one stable roof anytime soon.

imbidimts (imbidimts), Sunday, 2 July 2006 19:36 (nineteen years ago)

on kenny chesney's summer time:

have heard his new single, four times in the last two weeks. Once in the c ar back from a family renuion, once when swimming, and twice while eating. When I reviewed the album for Stylus a couple of months ago, I liked it better. Now the time has come for it to be on the radio, there are several reasons why it should be destroyed:

1. The lyrics are really banal. Not only banal, but designed entirely in a lab to be an authentic expression of how the warm months affect the good ol boy in all of us.
2. As for the above, it is shameless in its attempt to enter the canon: Perfect song on the radio/Sing along because it’s one we know
3. None of the really excellent things about summer (ie drinking, all of the copius amounts of flesh on view) are mentioned.
4. Who the hell drinks YooHoo in the middle of July (Alan Jackson, who understands summer hits, knows what to eat from mid June to eary September, in the last great summer song: “Well we fooged up the windows in my old chevy/I was willing but she wasnt ready/So a settled for a burger and a grape sno-cone” ) Listening to Chattahoochee again, reminds me of how pure Chesney is his benders are n Greasy Cheeseburgers as opposed to whiskey, he doesnt really mention beer at all, and any fucking he does is of the wistful lovemaking variety, When Alan Jackson can out dirty you, theres a problem.
5. The closest Kenny Chesney has been to a swimming hole is the local municpal swimming pool (the second time ive heard this, was reading Alison Bechdel’s Fun House, and watching all the boys with very little clothes, wandering around the local outdoor pool, nestled in the river valley, with perfect aqua water and phone booths shaped like plastic shells–there was also a girl with the words paradise lost written in florid pink on her brown bikini bottoms; why the swimming hole, when the light reflects on such chlorinated paradises)
6. I keep wondering when people will notice how calcuated his work is, but they never do. In this weeks People, there are a dozen or so pictures of hsi summer tour, and it looks like Beatlemania, just as in several of his videos (the concert ones, as opposed to the ones shot on a caribbean beach) begin wiht crowds of hungry women, and Kenny annointing them, like the Pope or the Queen. I know that this is one of the functions of modern celebrity, and post Garth its something that we have expected in Country superstars and it should be deconstructed, and Kenny is so good at riding the wave, that hes not the one to do it but I’m bored.
7. Thats the crux of the matter. He is astonishingly popular, and beloved. America laps him up. So there must be something there, aside from his brilliant manipulating of audience expectation, but what is there are simulacrcas of down home pleasures—like Dollywood if Dolly didnt ever write songs about poverty or death.
8. Maybe thats the problem, Kenny is country music for the south of metastized suburbs–and there needs to be work like that. Sure Hank wouldnt ahve done it this way, but Hank’s lost highway is found and paved over. The problem is that though we need texts about the suburbs, written by people in the suburbs, describing the joys people find there, Chesney isnt this man.
9. Or to put it another way, how can you trust a man who claims to be of the people, when he spends 60 per cent of his time in a yacht somewhere near St Barts.
10. So I guess what annoys me the most, here, are silly things that I should have stopped caring out, personae, role, authentic voice, banality, and desire. Things that would have been a virtue on Britney or Rachel Stevens are gratingly plastic in Chesney. If I stopped considering him country and started considering him pop, maybe the previous 9 points would be rendered moot.
11. But his single from last summer: Anything But Mine is one of the great singles of country music, a tender and broken examanation of lost innonce, the longing and desire of first bloomings destroyed by time and geographical inconveince.
12. The song still annoys me.

anthony easton (anthony), Thursday, 6 July 2006 13:23 (nineteen years ago)

Chip Taylor's double album, Unglorious Hallelujah / Red Red Rose (And Other Songs of Love, Pain, and Destruction), isn't half bad, considering dude (who wrote "Wild Thing" fer chrissake) cain't saing to save his life. He namedrops Townes and Guy and John on the same track, then does songs called "Christmas in Jail" and "The Trouble With Scientists" and "Daddy, Why'd You Take My Guitar Away?" There should be more Carrie Rodriguez here, although it's always great to hear her come in on harmony like a soft breeze on a hot day.

Haikunym (Haikunym), Thursday, 6 July 2006 13:43 (nineteen years ago)

xpost "almost clever": see Dierks' "How Am I Doin'," too. (Which I like better than "Sometimes I Miss Ya," but they're clearly cut from the same cloth.)

Thomas Inskeep (submeat), Thursday, 6 July 2006 15:59 (nineteen years ago)

Gonna be a Dierks live set on CMT Sunday night, I'll watch that, and maybe Skyn on Sat, Bocephus on Fri, unless it's the other way around for these two, but def Dierks on Sun. So glad they're still working those tracks from his ancient album, sound sooo nice this summer. Yeah, Fully Realized got its title from Peter Guralnick's opinion of those tracks, he led a lot of us back to all the good Rich 50s-60s stuff, though of course "Behind Closed Doors" got him the ink to do so, like in Rolling Stone. But I dunno if those were the *most* or most of his fully realized work, cos still haven't heard all from that era. The later stuff seems pretty erratic, but the gospel album Silver Linings is pretty good, and its "Milky White Way" is indeed one of Charlie's best ever, like G. says."But I'm bored." Yeah, that's wy nobody bothers to take Chesney for a ride to the autopsy, although I think you and I sawed on him some during one of the previous Rolling years. Think of him as pop, it won't help. Andy, I'd already checked your "Full Nelson," cool. How's that unreleased live album they included?? (PS: xpost Darrell Scott and his Dad were on "Fresh Air" the other night. Mostly good talk, but their own tracks[no duets] sounded okay, except for some of Darell's lyrics, and he's produced an album for Dad, whose name is Wayne, I think)

don (dow), Friday, 7 July 2006 05:03 (nineteen years ago)

the thing is, he is capable of great power our friend chesney--and hes huge enough that someone has to critically roll him, but even my desire to fuck him is leaching out--and i have a desire to fuck a slew of dumb good ol boys...

anthony easton (anthony), Friday, 7 July 2006 05:11 (nineteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.