what's interesting about that louvin record is how superficially cl and george jones do sound alike. but then you hear just how full jones' voice really is, even on those couple of cameos he does--he might've learned how to sing at least in part from the louvins, but jones far outclasses charlie louvin. it's a far better record than one might've thought. even with costello in there, and i have to admit that elvis sings better now than he used to, but i just basically find his voice annoying, you know?
new incredible stringdusters record "fork in the road" is excellent neo-grass; good songs in there, some they wrote, some they found, and then there's a really lame one (great idea: don't take pictures of landscapes, just remember it real well for your Beloved One; but basically lame in its final form) by john mayer. and they actually seem to halfway mean them. the instrumental stuff has its share of surprises. real listenable for this basic non-fan of bluegrass.
xp
― edd s hurt (ddduncan), Thursday, 8 February 2007 22:22 (nineteen years ago)
― fact checking cuz (fcc), Thursday, 8 February 2007 22:56 (nineteen years ago)
― don (dow), Thursday, 8 February 2007 23:19 (nineteen years ago)
― don (dow), Thursday, 8 February 2007 23:22 (nineteen years ago)
I dunno. But damn, the thing kills. 36 songs, from "Lonely Weekends" and "Big Boss Man" and "Mohair Sam" to "Behind Closed Doors" and "The Most Beautiful Girl" and beyond. My favorite in the past 15 minutes has probably been "River, Stay Away From My Door," either that or "When Something Is Wrong With My Baby." So far I love it all.
Elizabeth Cook is bugging me. Just too self-consciously retro, in a cloying way. Which I know is not a very coherent criticism. I do get the comparisons of her vocals to Dolly's. But it's a reigned-in, antiseptic version of a Dolly that hasn't existed for 30 years at least. So yeah, she still seems tepid to me. She means well, and she sings sweetly enough, but she'd be much more fun if her production wasn't stuck somewhere back in ancient history. The Dolly I like most was the Dolly that wasn't afraid to disco. So I don't get it.
In Warren Zevon's "The Envoy" (title track), Israel's attacking the Iraqis and Baghdad does whatever she please. Great, rocking song. And the ballad about Jesus and Graceland sounds better than this morning (though I still always prefer Warren drunk and kicking butt.)
― xhuxk (xhuck), Friday, 9 February 2007 02:31 (nineteen years ago)
* -- their tracks that sound like Black Crowes and Jet are okay, but it's the longer, heavier stomps like "Red River" I'm really liking.
― xhuxk (xhuck), Friday, 9 February 2007 02:48 (nineteen years ago)
― don (dow), Friday, 9 February 2007 07:51 (nineteen years ago)
the other Rich stuff I got includes "Big Boss Man: The Groove Sessions," '63 to '65, all done at RCA in Nashville. "Are You Still My Baby" kills. And then the Complete Smash Sessions, which includes the insane "Santa Claus' Daughter" and the amazing "Just a Little Bit of Time" and the even more amazing "Blowin' Town." And then I picked up the Koch reissues of "Set Me Free" and "Fabulous."
Sorta on the fence about Cook. Doesn't rock hard enough, and why not do "Lonesome Cowboy Bill" if you wanna do Lou Reed and shock the rubes? It is retro. Dunno, I guess I want to like it more than I do; I really liked it first time I played it, but then I got distracted. In fact, I'm gonna listen to it again this morning.
― edd s hurt (ddduncan), Friday, 9 February 2007 15:59 (nineteen years ago)
I always return to Behind Closed Doors thinking "this time I'll get it", and I never do. I haven't really investigated the post-Behind CLosed Doors stuff.
Except, that last LP he made - "Pictures and Paintings", something like that? - was surprisingly fine also. I love Charlie Rich.
― Tim (Tim), Friday, 9 February 2007 16:35 (nineteen years ago)
my fave moments on the complete smash sessions are probably the upbeat, garage-rocky "just a little bit of time" and the slow, somewhat complicated "the best years."
― fact checking cuz (fcc), Friday, 9 February 2007 16:46 (nineteen years ago)
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Friday, 9 February 2007 20:25 (nineteen years ago)
― don (dow), Friday, 9 February 2007 22:36 (nineteen years ago)
― pinkmoose (jacklove), Saturday, 10 February 2007 07:57 (nineteen years ago)
― don (dow), Saturday, 10 February 2007 19:01 (nineteen years ago)
― pinkmoose (jacklove), Saturday, 10 February 2007 20:21 (nineteen years ago)
― don (dow), Saturday, 10 February 2007 20:24 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk (xhuck), Saturday, 10 February 2007 20:31 (nineteen years ago)
do you have a cartoon face in mind
chucki dont wear socks
― pinkmoose (jacklove), Saturday, 10 February 2007 21:50 (nineteen years ago)
Waitin On A Train = old-timey bluegrassy strums played speedily but not especially tunefully or skilfully in any other discernible way. Boring singer with no special aptitute for power or beauty. From Pennyslvania, aparently. On The Left and George Brigman's label Bona Fide. Reputedly doing for bluegrass what the Pogues once did for Irish jigs. Not true. Basically remind me of Old Crow Medicine Show.
― xhuxk (xhuck), Saturday, 10 February 2007 22:05 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk (xhuck), Saturday, 10 February 2007 22:17 (nineteen years ago)
Album by Glenn Stewart in the mail today. His cdbaby page indicates that he used to be in an '80s band (rock, I assume) (actually, hair metal I assume even more) that had some success, but he doesn't name what the band was, and a quick google search didn't help, so maybe he's embarrassed. Nowadays he wears a cowboy hat. So far I heard one love ballad I didn't like on the album (not sure its name), one Southern rocker ("Dance Little Donna") I liked a lot, and one Bon Jovi solo style power ballad ("Love Comes Knockin'") that convinces me I was right about the hair metal part. (Also he has one track intriguingly titled "My So Called Life," but I've yet to hear it.)
― xhuxk (xhuck), Saturday, 10 February 2007 22:23 (nineteen years ago)
i really like randy travis.
― pinkmoose (jacklove), Saturday, 10 February 2007 23:19 (nineteen years ago)
Black Angel (cdbaby Stones-rock, sufficently DFX2-like so far though the song now "American Wedding" is nicely drawled late '70s Stones-country quoting "crimson and clover over and over" in its lyrics)....
Wow, Black Angel's "One Beer" on now, even better Stones-country Some Girls style; dude's singing about being a country boy down at the 7-11 on Desolation Row drinking a beer for the devil and in love with the queen of hip-hop soul. (Guess I should be posting this on the country thread instead; sorry folx.)
Anyway:
http://cdbaby.com/cd/bangel
Now they're mentioning George Jones in a song called "Country Symphony."
― xhuxk (xhuck), Sunday, 11 February 2007 00:37 (nineteen years ago)
From Glenn Stewart's myspace page:
Influences 1- Part JoDee Messina, for all the inspiration she has given me through her music and her being. To the fact she made me think out side the box when it came to my song writing. Part Cinderella, for if you stripped the "hair band" title and the gargling with razorblade vocals, they provided, raw, meaning full southern rock influence with a great feel ( especially Long Cold Winter.
His album is so far seeming too ballady for its own good, but "Brand New Day" is powerchorded hair-metal for sure.
http://cdbaby.com/cd/glennstewart
― xhuxk (xhuck), Sunday, 11 February 2007 02:34 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk (xhuck), Sunday, 11 February 2007 02:54 (nineteen years ago)
― don (dow), Sunday, 11 February 2007 04:02 (nineteen years ago)
let's just end with the song of the day for December 6, 2006, Taylor Swift's "Tim McGraw." The subject matter's been run into the ground (memories of first love, coming of age), but her words are exceptionally precise and evocative - no line in particular, just the way the details pile up: little black dress, box hidden under her bed, etc. "September saw a month of tears/And thanking God that you weren't here/To see me like that." Very skillful, makes not-quite-in-the-vernacular phrasing ("saw a month of tears") feel normal in context (ditto for "the moon like a spotlight on the lake"). She's canny in balancing wistfulness and self-assertion. She hopes that when the boy thinks of Tim McGraw he thinks of her favorite song. She leaves a letter on his doorstep to make sure he does.
let's just end with the song of the day for December 19, 2006, Taylor Swift's "Tim McGraw," which I already did a couple of weeks ago, but the song keeps getting richer and richer the more I hear it. She uses the word "bittersweet," and she's not kidding. The first time she sings the chorus, "When you think Tim McGraw, I hope you think my favorite song," it means "I hope you have warm memories of me," but by song's end it also means "I hope I haunt you, fucker, the way you haunted me. Sincerely, your discarded girlfriend, Taylor." It doesn't abandon the first meaning, just layers another one on top.
But this is what I wrote on a comments thread in my livejournal:
Best new lyrics I heard all year, I think. They balance so perfectly that anything I say probably overstates the mood one way or another; but in the first chorus when she goes "When you think Tim McGraw, I hope you think my favorite song" it's simply sweet, but by the third chorus those words carry hurt and bitterness and a whole expanse of sadness, and a hint of aggression, as well (as if to say, "may that song haunt you," though that overstates it) - while retaining the sweetness.
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Sunday, 11 February 2007 05:47 (nineteen years ago)
― Haikunym (Haikunym), Sunday, 11 February 2007 05:49 (nineteen years ago)
let's just end with the song of the day for December 16, 2006, the Wreckers' "Stand Still, Look Pretty." "You might think it's easy being me/Just stand still, look pretty," sing a couple of gorgeous exteenpoppers. With looks like that they don't know if they have a right to their distress, but they're falling apart anyway. Interesting premise, which they don't take anywhere, so the lyrics feel whiny and empty. But with a quiet rasp in the voice and with the melody hanging around an irresolute "mi" note, the sound delivers some of the sadness that the words aren't up to.
(You can find my MySpace blog here.)
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Sunday, 11 February 2007 05:52 (nineteen years ago)
― pinkmoose (jacklove), Sunday, 11 February 2007 06:52 (nineteen years ago)
Bay City Rollers quote in Glenn Stewart's otherwise Heartbreak Station-worthy "Freight Train--Here I Go": "Yes, no, maybe so, Oh no, I gotta go." Thanks to the new Sirens album for reminding me.
― xhuxk (xhuck), Sunday, 11 February 2007 14:40 (nineteen years ago)
― molly mummenschanz, Thursday, 22 February 2007 00:05 (nineteen years ago)
― whisperineddhurt, Thursday, 22 February 2007 00:59 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 22 February 2007 01:40 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 22 February 2007 01:49 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 22 February 2007 02:05 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 22 February 2007 02:07 (nineteen years ago)
― roger whitaker, Thursday, 22 February 2007 02:21 (nineteen years ago)
― Roy Kasten, Thursday, 22 February 2007 02:38 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 22 February 2007 02:44 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 22 February 2007 02:47 (nineteen years ago)
― Roy Kasten, Thursday, 22 February 2007 04:51 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 22 February 2007 12:06 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Thursday, 22 February 2007 12:07 (nineteen years ago)
― whisperineddhurt, Thursday, 22 February 2007 14:55 (nineteen years ago)
― fact checking cuz, sort of, Friday, 23 February 2007 02:34 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Friday, 23 February 2007 12:23 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Friday, 23 February 2007 12:24 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Friday, 23 February 2007 13:19 (nineteen years ago)
― xhuxk, Saturday, 24 February 2007 18:39 (nineteen years ago)