Rolling Country 2006 Thread

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i'm still trying to make up my mind on the new calexico. i feel like it has tangible melodies and i think its a little more sophisticated than their other output. while i think there's a couple of really snoozy cuts (plus, that really aweful french track), it's pretty and i'd like to drive to it. the whole i&w collab from last year may have dulled what might've been an otherwise sharper set, but 'garden ruin' is still likeable. i like "panic open string," "letter to bowie knife" and "all systems red" the best.

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Monday, 27 March 2006 20:33 (eighteen years ago) link

Katie, I have heard so much great Brazilian jazz lately, you would FREAK OUT about it. I might start a new thread.

I have never heard a single note of Calexico. That is kind of weird.

Haikunym (Haikunym), Monday, 27 March 2006 20:38 (eighteen years ago) link

HAVE YOU EVER HEARD THE DESERT PLAINS? THEN YOU'VE HEARD CALEXICO.

just kidding. they're one of the bands that i like but wish they were just, overall, better.

i will lurk the sh*t outta your brazilian jazz thread. ;)

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Monday, 27 March 2006 20:44 (eighteen years ago) link

my problem with the new calexico is that i *don't* hear the desert in it anymore (as i say upthread somewhere.) hmmmm...

>. kaci brown *instigator* 2005 $1.99 (who is she? she looks young. and i'm assuming she's country because that's where three copies of her CD were filed, and i think i heard of her before, possibly either in billboard or on one of these rolling country threads.)<

well, album definitely seems more like "r&b-leaning teenpop" (pretty ignorable so far, though that may change) than c&w. AMG's explanation:

>Kaci Brown grew up in Sulphur Springs, TX, and was singing at a very early age. Throughout her youth, she performed across her home state, appearing just about anyplace that would have her. To further her career, her family moved to Nashville in 2001 — remarkably, before attaining a record contract, she had a publishing deal and was writing for country artists. Though she intended to be a country artist, she was repeatedly told that she'd fare better with pop. By the end of 2005, she had summer touring dates with the Backstreet Boys, in addition to her Interscope-released debut album, under her belt. All of this happened before she passed her teenage years. A few of the things she adores, as noted on her website, include "love," "purple anything," "boys with guitars," and "boys in general."<

xhuxk, Monday, 27 March 2006 21:33 (eighteen years ago) link

Okay, so assuming anybody cares anymore about a record from last year that's already completed its chart cycle, I guess I overstated the love-ballad-heaviness of Toby's *Honky Tonk University* to a certain degree. "She Left Me" is actually kind of speedy two-step that turns into southern rock at the end, and "You Ain't Leavin' (Are Ya)" keeps (somewhat clumsily, I think) turning into swinging music during its chorus, and both of those are clearly halfway comical songs about being happy about being dumped; in fact (and this goes along with the perfunctoriness of much of the album), in both of them, Toby's girl leaves with his guitar. Though in the first one she leaves with his best friend Jake too and accidentally leaves her laptop behind so when she comes back to get it Toby'll be in a hottub full of hotties, and the latter she also takes his Lay-Z Boy recliner. The rest *is* mostly ballads, though. The Merle Haggard duet is fine (country needs more songs about going *off* the wagon these days, good); Toby sings the hell out of "Knock Yourself Out" in his old Billy Ray Cyrus-style "How Do Ya Like Me Now" gutbusting baritone (which he rarely uses anymore) and doesn't make me care about the song one way or the other; "Your Smile" is Toby in easy-as-a=Sunday-morning soul mode I guess (just a descrption; I'm not comparing it to Lionel), and I like that one a lot. A few others (including one where Toby gots it bad and another where we catch him at a bad time -- songwriting getting kinda redundant again!) go in one ear and out the other. "Honkytonk U" is the only track where he's much of a belicose asshole supporting the troops, and I still like it just fine, though why was I under the impression that he actually climbed *higher* than semi-pro football? (Maybe he just attending NFL training camp once or something like that?) "Big Blue Note" and "Just the Guy to Do It" both have that certain light Caribbean lilt that always serves Toby well; I like them both a lot, the latter more than the former, and I kind of gave the wrong impression above when I suggested it's about picking a fight with a knucklehead in a bar -- really, Toby's talking to some girl, and her boyfriend is flirting with some other girl at the other end of the bar, which makes that guy a knucklehead, but wait, how come the girl's not just as knuckleheaded for flirting with Toby? (Though maybe their flirting isn't mutual; you can't really tell. Real good song, either way. "Do blondes really have more fun or are they just easier to spot in the dark?," ha ha.) And "As Good As I Once Was" is the album's best song, and one of Toby's best hits ever.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 28 March 2006 13:20 (eighteen years ago) link

I think Jamey Johnson's "Flying Silver Eagle" is better than "The Dollar," from his debut record. I also like "Ray Ray's Jukejoint," and I like the way Buddy Cannon used gospel voices on the record, I wish he had done more of it. "The Dollar" has turned out to be a substantial hit, but I find it somewhat more simplistic than "Flying Silver Eagle," maybe because it's easier to jerk heartstrings with kids who don't get enough attention (the subject of "The Dollar") than with the adult, sordid tale of Jamey-everyman who loses his wife to a rich banker, in "Silver Eagle." but I think it's one of the best country records so far this year, in my book--I need to get the Dale Watson, though.

and it turns out Moody Scott, who we were discussing upthread, recorded in Nashville for Sound Stage 7 in the '60s, had some regional hits. there's a new comp of his SS7 stuff just out, called "Bustin Out of the Ghetto." now Moody lives in Las Vegas.
xps

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 13:39 (eighteen years ago) link

bearfoot hookers, self-procaimed "beer drinking gospel" (but really more blues and boogie etc) cdbaby band from georgia - these guys aren't doing it for me, though they do seem to have moments, more on their '05 *life at the bar* album than their less rocking '04 *sweet pickle grits*. "me and the devil blues" is boogiefied heavily enough, and "gettin' ready for the show" (by drinking, mostly) is a decent skynyrd rip, getting more of skynrd's rhythm than the drive by truckers usually do. but most of the slower songs are either drive by truckers without the songwriting or so-what low-energy bar band blues or so-whatter grateful-dead-fan snooze. "i feel fine" on *life at the bar* starts heavy but gets dull; "tequila love song", same album, at least ends with an obligatory tequila'd up sloppy singalong from the "EFH piss drunk choir." and the first album bored me way quicker than the second one did. i'd be interested to see if george or don hear anything I don't, though; here's where to check these guys out:

http://cdbaby.com/cd/bearfoothookers2

http://cdbaby.com/cd/bearfoothookers1

xhuxk, Tuesday, 28 March 2006 14:29 (eighteen years ago) link

Blimey I'd never heard of Aim Records until now, they seem to be putting out big chunks of SS7 / Seventy Seven material. Like, a double CD of Geater Davis!? I had no idea there was that much material, and I had kind of assumed that the Charly LP from '87 or whenever contained all of his SS7 stuff I would ever hear. To tell the truth I suspect I'd be more excited if someone would drag together a bunch of his best non-Richbourg recordings: I have one single on House of Orange which is great but a dreadful pressing, I bet there's lots more good stuff.

I'm getting a lot of mileage out of this Miko Marks CD, I keep being surprised by her voice, at moments when I'm not expecting to be surprised (I suppose that's a pre-requisite of being surprised, but still). Less so from Dierks Bentley, which I was expecting to like more than I do. The only bits I find myself responding to are the sappy bits, which I suppose isn't that unusual for me.

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 14:42 (eighteen years ago) link

bearfoot hookers xp:

Yeah, replaying the first album, I'd say it's definitely more alt-country than the followup, though fairly often the rhythm does pick into a passably sprightly mid-tempo waltz or choogle for the aging longhair dancefloor. Still more Dead than Skynyrd, though "Dirty Whore Blues" does okay with the latter; she leaves his member sore and he tells her "woman don't come around here no more," you get the idea -- and this is one of their better songs, actually. They're not too complimentary of the gal in "Damn She's Fat" (5'2", 300 pounds) either. (But the album covers kind of remind me of Michael Hurley's.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 28 March 2006 14:48 (eighteen years ago) link

bearfoot hookers sound like the drive by truckers and an ounce of uncle tupelo... while i can't entirely back it up, some of it just doesn't sound very sincere, like they know what southern rock is supposed to sound like, but the delivery just seems off. nice tunes in there, though.

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 14:53 (eighteen years ago) link

Ooh, I must get that Geater Davis - presumably it includes one of the great versions of my favourite song, For Your Precious Love.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 15:19 (eighteen years ago) link

Here you go, Martin: http://www.aiminternational.com/newr.htm#geater

No FYPL though, I'm afraid, though I have the 7" on House of Orange if you don't mind a bit of off-centre pressing and the consequent wow (or is it flutter?).

If I'd had the choice, I'd have prioritised Ella Washington or Ann Sexton, but I don't know how the licensing works so I shouldn't criticise. I'm glad someone's doing it.

(This made me go and check to see what Ella Washington CDs are available, and there seems to be one containing at least some SS7 stuff, though it doesn't have the outrageously good "If Time Could Stand Still", which is a shame. Not such a shame that I haven't ordered it, obv.)

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 15:37 (eighteen years ago) link

Shannon McNally was briefly mentioned upthread by Don, and I'm listening to her '05 studio release Geronimo right now (she just put out a live one last month that I need to get). Like a tougher, bluesier, occasionally honky-tonkin' ("The Hard Way," "Miracle Mile") version of Sheryl Crow. Good stuff.

Josh Love (screamapillar), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 16:50 (eighteen years ago) link

so i already mentioned it in even more passing way than this on the psychdronefreak thread, but i've been very much enjoying this sunbeam records reissue of a 1973 post-fairport brit-folk album by a band called lazy farmer, the best parts of which consists of gentle but lively and lovely interpretations of anthology of american folk music type reels and jigs like "the cuckoo" and "soldier's joy/arkansas traveler" (the music of which i swear michael hurley swiped for either the auntie griselda song or the one about france on *have moicy!*) and "johnson boys" (who go to town and are so shy they don't know how to talk to girls and come home late so shame on them, lazy farmer say). also includes a ralph mctell song about standing in new york and a closing original about leaving berlin. not pyschdronefreaky at all, really. nice (though the also-sunbeam lady folk singer '70s reissue that came in the same package as this one, despite joni mitchell press-release comparisons, reminded me way too much of mary poppins.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 28 March 2006 16:54 (eighteen years ago) link

xxhuxx=dayumn closet hippeh, lak xgau, but this'un even lives in **Sunnyside**! Butt pot to kettle, cos I'm getting to be a rasta for Jessi's Texastential cosmic groove thang. (You think she knows about the Mollys? Mebbe I'll send her some.) Good interview today:
Http://www.cmt.com/news/articles/1527250/20060328/colter_jessi.jhtml?h

don, Tuesday, 28 March 2006 22:51 (eighteen years ago) link

Anybody know anything about some group called Whip Hill Folk Club? I was clearing out my iTunes library, came acroos this tune called "Angels," and despite my aversion to songs that mention angels, especially in the title, it's a charming, front-porch ballad that sees the light on the fiddler's green and has good harmonica and accordion and harmonies. But I have no idea where I got this song. Maybe I should just post a query to ILM at large....

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 23:11 (eighteen years ago) link

(dang, why didn't that link? Maybe this will:)
http://www.cmt.com/news/articles/1527250/20060328/colter_jessi.jhtml?h/

don, Wednesday, 29 March 2006 01:56 (eighteen years ago) link

>needs more songs about going *off* the wagon these days, <

Oddly enough, the *newest* bearfoot hookers CD single (which I hadn't noticed in my pile til now -- one of those thin paper sleeves, you know how it goes) is called "I'd Rather Two-Step Than 12 Step," ha ha, funny title, and one of its lines is actually about "falling off the wagon." So good for them, but the title's the only really clever thing about the song, which is your usual alt-country joke hokiness.

Rachel Williams CD single from cdbbay: First song "Some Things Make Her Cry" mentions Springsteen and the 49ers (presumbably the football team not the old house music group); second song "Get Home" has gospel backup. Not bad, but not enough. Nice voice, forgettable tunes.

xhuxk, Wednesday, 29 March 2006 12:50 (eighteen years ago) link

Thanks, Tim - I have Geater's FYPL on tape, I was just after a nice digital copy.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 16:49 (eighteen years ago) link

Steroid-gobbling wrestler on Nashville Star last night. Shook his finger and flexed his biceps at the camera and every contestant while wearing a baseball cap. Why wan't it on backwards?

Am reading Kevin Phillips' American Theocracy and I'm at the bit on America's official religion and its intolerance and "disenlightenment." And that's Pentecostalism now and the Southern Baptist Convention he says, sounds right to me, so when the one contestant admitted to his P-ism to Wynonna like he should get a pat on the back, I naturally began to hate him. Even though he still sounds like a pro and does as good a job as all the others.

But the show's highpoint was its first episode and now it's just going through the motions, whittling away at the stick, everyone saying "I so do want that recording contract" like the song "All I Want for Christmas is my Two Front Teeth."

George 'the Animal' Steele, Wednesday, 29 March 2006 17:09 (eighteen years ago) link

New in town: Ashley Monroe, small, intense, blonde; looks and sounds in there between needy McReady and latterday Womack. T-R-O-U-B-L-E.

don, Wednesday, 29 March 2006 17:12 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah, I really like the single, "Satisfied." More demure than Miranda, with a sweet voice that reminds me of Kasey Chambers, but she doesn't play the little girl card too hard. She's, what, 19? I hope the single gets a push, as country radio hasn't been happening for me of late. Every song I like seems to be from last year or the year before.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 18:13 (eighteen years ago) link

That ever-slowass "major" label country release schedule, movin' even slower than Uncle Joe at the Junction nowadays. Is it any wonder this thread has gotten so CDBaybeee

don, Thursday, 30 March 2006 01:14 (eighteen years ago) link

& more & more, that's where the quality well as quantity is (and may stay, though some still hope for what's left of the majors, no doubt)

don, Thursday, 30 March 2006 01:18 (eighteen years ago) link

im out east for the week, and i know chucks from new york, but its damn hard to find country here, and maybe its my circle, but i qouted pop country twice this week, and people were shockingly suprised..

how much of this shit is geographic

anthony, Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:01 (eighteen years ago) link

JOSH ARE YOU GOING TO THAT MIRANDA LAMBERT SHOW AND DID YOU GO TO THE LAST ONE AND HOW WAS IT IF YOU DID?

j blount (papa la bas), Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:05 (eighteen years ago) link

When I was last in NYC, I was hanging about with a long-time local who I consider to be a world-class record shopper. I said "I wouldn't mind going to a shop with a good selection of country". He looked puzzled for a minute, and suggested Tower. (If there are such places and he just didn't know about them, I'd be delighted to hear where they are before my next trip there, in June).

The upside of this is that I get to see Lee Ann Womack on Staten Island, in a theatre with a capacity of a couple of thousand. I imagine this venue to be smaller than she would regularly play in towns more receptive to country music.

Tim (Tim), Thursday, 30 March 2006 10:07 (eighteen years ago) link

>chucks from new york,<

No, no, no, I'm *IN* New York. I am not now and have never been and will never be "from" here, no way. And New York's illiteracy about country has indeed given me the opportunity to see excellent Miranda Lambert, Shelly Fairchild, Lee Ann Womack, Montgomery Gentry, and Big & Rich shows in rather small venues. (I even saw Toby Keith do some industry-only sitdown-and-strum thing maybe five years ago, before I knew who he was! Though I mainly went for the free food, I think.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 30 March 2006 12:32 (eighteen years ago) link

RIP Cindy Walker. She was 87 years old. Willie's tribute to her this year is good and timely. "You Don't Know Me" is a desert island song, in more ways than one.

Quite right. We've been talking a bit more about her on this thread.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 30 March 2006 14:59 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm thinking about going, James, haven't seen her before though, didn't even know she'd been through town before in fact.

Josh Love (screamapillar), Thursday, 30 March 2006 15:13 (eighteen years ago) link

speaking of country/new york, anybody else going to the CasHank hootenanny tonight at buttermilk? ;)

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Thursday, 30 March 2006 15:33 (eighteen years ago) link

Man Katie, back in my lower Park Slope (aka South Slope aka South Park aka Greenwood Heights aka EHODE as in East of the Home Depot days), Buttermilk was basically my neighborhood bar, just around the corner from where I lived. By home is Queens now, sigh. Someday I'll go back...

xhuxk, Thursday, 30 March 2006 15:59 (eighteen years ago) link

i really like their tuesday vinyl nights -- my bf lives down the street so whenever i'm in his hood we either go there or bar 4 (which has a good open mic night). you should make tonight your proud return. :)

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Thursday, 30 March 2006 16:05 (eighteen years ago) link

Rodeo Bar still happenin?

don, Thursday, 30 March 2006 19:34 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah, I was at actually at Rodeo Bar a few weeks ago and saw (by accident; basically I'd just been in the neighborhood and wandered in) another secret non-Little Willies Norah Jones side project whose name and sound I don't remember much about though if somebody jogged my memory I probably would. They covered lots of old standards by Hank Williams and "people like that" (not all country though), surprise surprise. Norah was one of the backup singers, and had a baseball cap on in a way that people in the audience had no idea it was her.

Anyway.

http://cdbaby.com/cd/tiffanyjoallen2

"Youngest to hit #1 on the Nashville Western Chart!", the cover says. Which is to say she hasn't even been a teenager very long. First song on her album. "Dear Carl," sounds great and wise and detailed and intense, and would have made more sense sung by somebody at least three times Tiffany Jo's age, but she pulls it off. (Unfortunately I listened to it a couple hours ago and can't remember per se' what exactly the details *are,* just that they're there.) Covers of "Blue Moon of Kentucky," "Louisiana Saturday Night" (hey maybe we should talk about Mel McDaniel, he was cool!), "Walkin After Midnight", and "Jambalaya" are well-chosen and done fine; "Living the Life of a Celebrity" seems not bad either. Seems a bit of a gyp that Tiffany Jo doesn't actually *yodel* til the eighth song, "Cowboy Sweetheart," and I'm happy when she finally does, but that's not to say I necessarily wish she yodeled more. "Hero In the Dark" is a sappy ballad that I could totally live without, about how everybody wants to change the world but the ones who do are ones who do it behind the scenes or whatever. Tiffany Jo's got vocal range many would die for I assume, and actually has a rich lower register, though sometimes when she drops down there I get the idea she's saying "Listen, I'm going to go into my rich and bluesy beyond my years lower register now, so watch out and prepare to be impressed." My intern Max just said she sounds like Leann Rimes; and he may well be right -- I've actually never paid attention to Leann's teen era stuff as much as her later dance stuff. (I've always assumed Leann got more interesting later; am I wrong?)

xhuxk, Friday, 31 March 2006 16:58 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah, when her Daddy was pulling the strings, more of a novelty act: "Look, Granpa, a little girl who sings like Patsy! And just so you won't get the wrong idea, you ol devil, now she's doing 'God Bless America!'" (But he may've also been the one who authorized some good dance mixes.)

don, Friday, 31 March 2006 17:42 (eighteen years ago) link

oops, this is the actual tiffany jo CD I have, not the other one:

http://cdbaby.com/cd/tiffanyjoallen1

xhuxk, Friday, 31 March 2006 17:49 (eighteen years ago) link

What I left out is that Tiffany Jo (in her celebrity song, I believe, and other places) seems to have more of a rockabilly bent than Leann and most other Nashvillians tend to. Which I appreciate. (Is that what makes her music "western," or just the yodeling and oldie covers?)

xhuxk, Saturday, 1 April 2006 19:42 (eighteen years ago) link

Now listening to the new Candi Staton album, *His Hands,* which both Don and Edd talked about a couple months back. A sound record, not a song record, near as I can tell - what do you want, it's on Astralwerks, right? Also as much a gospel record as a country or soul record, to my ears; as as gospel records go, not unplayable I guess. Decent ebb and flow, not much if anything to get excited about. "You Don't Have Very Far To Go," "How Do I Get Over You," and "Running Out of Love" make their presence felt more than most of the tracks, I guess, but I doubt I'll play this again unless somebody convinces me otherwise.

xhuxk, Sunday, 2 April 2006 13:56 (eighteen years ago) link

huh...so it turns out that who the sensibility that parts of tiffany jo's album (especially the sensibility of the opener "dear carl," where early-adolescent tiffany gets tired of washing her "husband"'s underwear and finds he's got a grey hair so she says "i'm young and pretty and i'm moving to the city" then signs the letter "your ex-wife" then her much older-sounding blues-talking husband comes in and watches the sky turn black and hears thunder crack then sees God who's white as a ghost and tells him he better buy a Maytag and learn to cook and take his young wife to a beauty salon or he's gonna leave her; but also to a somewhat lesser extent the rockabilly sensibility of "living the life of a celebrity" and "i love my guitar" and some of the covers especially "blue moon of kentucky" going from slow to fast) reminds me of is WHITE STRIPES. Interesting -- maybe even intentional?

xhuxk, Monday, 3 April 2006 13:11 (eighteen years ago) link

I like folky busker Tim Easton's new one, Ammunition: it's a very modest record, a word record for sure, music mostly there in his more-alert J.J. Cale-ish or maybe younger Priney voice (if Prine had survived throat cancer at 25), but the messages aren't boring. My favorite, " J.P.M.F.Y.F.", translates as Jesus Protect Me From Your Followers.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Monday, 3 April 2006 21:45 (eighteen years ago) link

Listening to the new Toby Keith (barely a week after I finally got his previous one), and holy shit it is sounding great. He split with DreamWorks, got Lari White (who put out her completely slept-on more-soul-than-country-and-it -said-so *Green Eyed Soul* on an indie label last year) (how many female producers are there in Nasvhille or anywhere else for that matter, especially producing macho men like Toby??), and she's filled it up with Dixieland horns and put *Dusty in Memphis*-style orchestrations here and there and she's emphasizing the laid-back *ease* Toby's always been capable of in his singing, and what you get is his most soul-music album ever, as far as far as I can tell. That laid-backedness might mean that some of the songs will detonate less on immediate impact the way his hits always have in the past, but they *sound* so good that they'll have no problem seeping in before long -- Toby's just a way more assured singer than Lari (or probably any other would-be Dusty this decade I could name), so this won't wind up just perty background music. "Note to Self" on now; sounds great. "Get Drunk and Be Somebody" is *less* laid-back, but almost in an old minstrel jazz kind of way; I can't place who it's reminding me of but I will -- one thing I *will* say though is that the way he says "BE somebody" makes me think he''s listened to Ol' Dirty Bastard at least once or twice. Damn, I'm going to be playing this a lot this summer. Could wind up being his best album, period, but I don't want to go out on limb. Right now, I'd say his best since *Unleashed* at least. (Though okay, I just noticed "Ain't No Right Way," partially written by Dean Dillon, which says ethics are black and white and seems to be anti-choice and anti-"people saying our kids aren't allowed to pray in school", what horseshit. So maybe I won''t wind up liking that one. Or maybe I will. With Toby you never know.) (And okay, "Brand New Bow" now, this is country jazz like Merle... what is that, a kazoo? Hoosier Hotshot revival in full force!) (Last song, about sex with an overweight girl, might also be iffy, but again, iffy in a country-jazzy way. Not sure if it's good-hearted yet.) (Last three songs are more of his "bus songs," I just noticed.)

Cool stuff happening at the bottom of the Billboard country songs chart this week:
#58) Hot Apple Pie, "Easy Does It," their Lionel Richie imitation
#59) Ronnie Milsap, "Local Girls," not a Graham Parker cover apparently but Billboard says "tropical flavored" and his first chart spot in six years. I haven't heard it, but I'm guessing I might like this. I should really investigate Ronnie someday -- he's another one of those soul-music-as-country guys. Always loved his "Any Day Now".
#60) Carrie Underwood, "Before He Cheats", her punk rock revenge song!
#61) Cledus T. Judd parody of Three-6 Maffia's current hit, on how soul food is an excellent fiber source: "Ever Since I Could Remember I Been Poopin' my Collards." Okay, I just made that one up. Sorry.

I wonder how much those Hot Apple Pie and Carrie songs are getting radio-played. More promising titles: "The Seashores of Old Mexico" George Strait #21, "If You're Going Through Hell (Before the Devil Even Knows)" Rodney Atkins #32, "Chicken Fried" the Lost Trailers #52. Anybody heard any of these? And who are the Lost Trailers, anyway?


xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 12:15 (eighteen years ago) link

http://cdbaby.com/cd/kidmans

OK, I want FRANK to listen to this one and figure it out. Are you out there, Frank? Three harmonizing Christian sisters who seem to want to look like the Dixie Chicks, all majoring in music at the University of Arizona, none of whom EVER seem to smile in any of their pictures. The first SEVEN (out of ten) songs on their album, including their uncharacteristically (at least comparatively) upbeat cover of "Ticket to Ride", all seem to be breakup songs. The first few, especially, strike me as very very dark, not to mention souped up with tons of Jim Steinman doing Bonnie Tyler melodrama. Opener "You're All I See" is the most over-the-top bombastic of all, but the close triple harmonies in it (is this a classical-training thing? a puritan Protestant church choir thing?) come off to me almost like some *Saturday Night Live* EZ-listening skit making fun of middle-aged ladies and their square square music, and its words are about going insane and feeling like you're locked in a cage in the heat of the desert, and after a stab at Spanish guitars, at the end the harmonies climb toward an almost operatic climax. Second song, right off the bat, concerns a disabled person and a suicide, so even darker, and though angels save the day they don't make the song any more cheerful. Next few songs are almost as dour, though "Marble Rain" seems to have a little bit of Stylistics or something in its melody, and the mood picks up a little for "Ticket to Ride" then the quite poppy "Between the Lines," which are still breakup songs nonetheless as far as I can tell, so by then you're wondering if they all broke up with the same guy (Jesus, maybe??); either way, they've got issues and they seem to want us to know it. Finally track 8 "Arizona Sunsets" is about finding an escape from climbing the ladder of success to the glass ceiling (they actually say "ceiling"), and the album closest with its funkiest track, a cover of Stevie Wonder's "I Just Called to Say I Love You" which, like the Beatles cover, is forgettable but not bad. Their cdbaby page seems to suggest they self-identify as country (where else would they find an audience these days?), but I honestly don't hear much country here. And I honestly don't LIKE it much, but I'm still kind of in awe -- especially of that first song, which strikes me as fairly ridiculous, but also fully audacious in a way that I may not quite be getting.

xhuck, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 17:15 (eighteen years ago) link

Oops, Arizona State Universiry not "U of A" (does anybody call it that?)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 17:17 (eighteen years ago) link

and ok, on their actual website, they do smile sometimes. but the photos where they really look sad or pissed-off definitely get priority.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 18:14 (eighteen years ago) link

the four new songs on tim mcgraw's *greatest hits vol. 2* seem okay, but not great. the ryan adams cover, "when the stars go blue," is probably my favorite of the bunch; it's really pretty, and i'm guessing tim (who i bet sings it better than ryan does, but i don't remember ever hearing ryan's version so who knows?) likes the song for same reason he liked "tiny dancer," whatever that is. "my little girl" hits my heart a little since i'm the dad of a daughter big deal, but it's another one of those dorky songs that will piss frank off since it rests on the assumption that tim's daughter will definitely want to grow up to get married, and to a (gag) "man's man" no less. "i've got friends that do" is do-gooder "i'm not a junkie or in prison or poor or jesus but i can sort of empathize with them a little so i won't judge them" sap, slightly soft-rocked, who cares. "beautiful people" (as in here is the church and here is the steeple open the doors etc etc etc) is neglible (though better than the marilyn manson version.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 19:35 (eighteen years ago) link

>You're All I See"... words are about going insane and feeling like you're locked in a cage in the heat of the desert<

..'cause you're haunted by the memory of the dude you just broke up with, and no matter what you do you can't shake the obsession (i meant to say.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 20:36 (eighteen years ago) link

the most over-the-top bombastic of all, but the close triple harmonies in it (is this a classical-training thing? a puritan Protestant church choir thing?)

Sounds to me like an Auto-Tune thing. It's kinda hard to tell though over the net, but the harmonies have that flattened out quality. That's not necessarily a bad thing, I guess, but I'm not sure it's so good either. I like the version of "Ticket to Ride" though.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 21:15 (eighteen years ago) link

I think it's interesting how the country audience has moved from being primarily poor, rural, whites, to largely urban grups.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 22:00 (eighteen years ago) link

[MOD NOTE -- the below is not an actual quote from sara evans, but a tasteless parody.] "We know your husbands are dead, but here's a song to help you widows
remember the good times, when they would get home from work and you would make dirty love with them till it was time for 'em to get up and go to work again. You
did all do that, right?" -- Sara Evans dedicating "Coalmine" to an audience in West Virginia

Her intentions are admirable, but the sign outside her mind reads Vacancy.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 23:15 (eighteen years ago) link


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