Saturday, February 28, 2009

Play It Again Records, Spritualized, Simple Minds, The Verve

I spent a LOT of time in record stores growing up. It's something I truly miss about the "good ol' days" of the music world. The record store was a safe haven away from the "pressures" of middle school, high school, and college where nothing mattered but discovering new sounds and talking music. When I was little Record Outlet used to be THE place to buy records on Orchard Lake Rd. in Farmington Hills. Everyone who grew up in the late 70's and 80's in the area remembers big Les behind the counter and people used to line up there outside to buy tickets for every big concert. In high school though the place I used to hang out at the most was Play It Again Records in Southfield on Northwestern Hwy. I spent hours browsing and flipping through used records and I discovered a lot of stuff there. Alan Kovan was the proprietor of Play It Again - his family and mine go way back. Alan is a good dude and even though Play It Again is long gone (along with so many others since record, cassette, and CD sales have steadily dropped with the advent of the Internet), there is now a Play It Again Records tribute page on facebook and Alan is hosting "Play It Again Records Nite" at the Berkley Front on Friday April 3rd. A band which he is really high on is going to play - they are called Speck Mountain, and while I've never heard of them I am excited to see them. I've always trusted Alan's musical recommendations. I actually went through my records today to try to determine how many in my collection came from Play It Again, and today I counted about 50, and that's only what I could verify by the Play It Again Records sticker still on the album (or cassette). Some great stuff from all over the musical map - mostly what they now like to call "1st Wave alternative" stuff like Simple Minds, New Order, Joy Division, The Cure, Echo and the Bunnymen, Gene Loves Jezebel, The The , Jesus and Mary Chain etc., but there was some Black Sabbath, Rick James, Grandmaster Melle Mel, Shalamar, Beatles and Zeppelin in the mix as well. Ahh the good ol' days...

So I pulled out an oldie but goodie which has never been far from my frequent play list anyway and that's New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84) from 1982 by Simple Minds. Simple Minds is in that category of "my bands" - an automatic buy of every thing they ever have or will release. They've never done anything I flat out didn't like, but their catalogue definitely looks a little like a bell curve to me for quality which peaked from about 1982 to 1985 with New Gold Dream, Sparkle In The Rain, and Once Upon A Time. The 5 albums before those 3 and the 7 since all have plenty of amazing moments, but those three represent their creative peak to me. New Gold Dream might be the best one of them all - a perfect moment captured right as the arty experimentalism started to give way to the grandiose dramatics they are so well known for. Gloriously spacey and very much synth driven but with plenty of great Charlie Burchill guitar work, this album is still one of my all time favorites and contains the best instrumental they ever laid down in my opinion in Somebody Up There Likes You (the earlier Theme For Great Cities from Sister Feelings Call is close).

Alan has also been hyping Spiritualized and The Verve on his facebook page, and he's right about them too. The only Spiritualized CD I own is the double live Royal Albert Hall October 10 1997 and I've had it shelved way too long. Epic, trippy and majestic like few recordings ever made (seriously), I think I'll be listening to that one for a good part of this year...

As for The Verve I am a huge fan which I mentioned before, but the one Verve album I haven't spent as much time with even though I've had it for a while is A Storm In Heaven. Alan has this disc listed as one of his top of all time so I took another run through it yesterday. I find it to be somewhat impenetrable at first but yesterday may be the first time I focused on it all the way through and there is plenty there that I am going to stick with and digest a little. Also very spacey and dense with Richard Ashcroft's vocals a little bit buried, but I was digging the vibe yesterday...

Monday, February 23, 2009

No wonder there has been no new Wolfmother album, Marty Willson-Piper, HBO

This is what I wrote about Wolfmother on 1/28/08...

...Anyhoo, if your head has been buried in the sand for the last year or so and you haven't picked up the Wolfmother CD yet, do it. Instant classic - curious to see if these guys have staying power. My guess is yes just because this album really is multilayered and while it threatens to sound like a hodgepodge of every rock influence these guys grew up with at times, it's still just so damn good (and damn heavy) that the Pink Floyd prog influences, Jethro Tull passages, Zeppelin attempted mysticism, and White Stripes ripoffs are all totally welcome, and still totally Wolfmother at the end of the day - a totally unoriginal original masterpiece...

So... I was just jamming this the other day and wondering to myself what the heck these guys were up to since it's been almost 3 years since this album debuted, and sure enough - they broke up in August. Arrgghh. Apparently the singer has recruited new members to form a new Wolfmother - we'll see how that goes I guess while the former bassist and drummer work on their own project. Soooo disappointing. One and done.

The last time Marty Willson-Piper was in town at the Magic Bag in Ferndale (amazing show by the way) I picked up both Noctorum discs (his side project with Dare Mason) along with his new solo album Nightjar at the show. Between the expansive catalogue of The Church and the output of the individual members it is hard to digest it all because it would practically require listening to not much of anything else. Sometimes I have to put their stuff "on deck" and work it in gradually. The third of the three I'm just getting to now is Sparks Lane - the first Noctorum album. There is some great stuff on here but I think the second Noctorum album Offer The Light is a little better all the way through. The best stuff on Sparks holds up just fine with the best of Offer, but Offer is shaping up to be one of my favorites in the Church expanded universe. It's got a little of everything - the standard Marty Willson-Piper jangly pop, sugar sweet ballads, some spacey stuff and a couple of jams that really rock. Nightjar is great as well but for Marty's solo work I might start with Hanging Out In Heaven. It's a tough call.

HBO continues to turn out the best shows by far - last night's episode of Big Love was insane, Flight of The Conchords continues to be hilarious, and the new one Eastbound and Down is AWESOME. I got into a laughing fit watching it last night after watching Kenny's display at the school dance. One of the funniest scenes I have ever witnessed on TV - laughed myself into a total mess. That's only happened to me like that a few times ever from a TV show.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Discovering more Porcupine Tree, Mr. Hand gets rattled

Not much music to comment on today - I usually like to discuss what I'm currently listening to and work was pretty busy the last couple of days so I didn't listen to much. I'm into my second listen of Stupid Dream by Porcupine Tree from 1999. It sounds awesome but I haven't digested it fully yet, and this is clearly a band whose complex works can take a while to digest. I suspect the rewards will be immense as they have been with In Absentia on this one though.

Meanwhile Fast Times was on cable tonight and I just noticed an underrated yet priceless detail - one of those you notice and appreciate after many repeated viewings. Kind of like the wasted dude way in the background at the moon tower party in Dazed and Confused who you see during the conversation between Mitch Kramer and his sister, or when it dawns on you that three major things that happen to Vincent Vega in Pulp Fiction all happen while he's in the bathroom - for those who never picked up on that think about it for a second before you read on............ The robbery in the diner goes down while he's in the bathroom, Mia Wallace OD's snorting the heroin she finds in his coat pocket while he's in the bathroom contemplating the importance of loyalty, and Vince himself gets blown away by Butch as he's coming out of the bathroom at Butch's apartment. But I digress...only because the one I just saw that made me laugh tonight is the minor detail I picked up on in Fast Times. Everyone remembers the scene where Spiccoli orders a pizza to Mr. Hand's class - priceless. The detail that had me cracking up tonight which I never gave much thought to was how Mr. Hand gets so rattled and temporarily thrown off his game by the mere fact that Spiccoli is sitting in the front row with a huge grin on his face before the pizza delivery guy arrives. It's a minor detail but it's awesome...

Monday, February 16, 2009

Here goes... (again)

Okay. So I blogged for a couple years on mySpace before facebook pretty much took over social networking for Generation Xers like me. I still go back and take a look at the stuff I posted and chuckle... I'm an opinionated guy with a ton of uselful/useless knowledge about music, history, football and University of Michigan sports. If you aren't a Wolverine you may have to slog through some stuff to get to my music reviews/recommendations. Either way, if no one reads this it will be no less therapeutic for me to get it out of my head, and if someone does hopefully they get turned on to some music, learn something about a president or a Civil War battle, get a chuckle, or get the key to the universe. Okay so maybe not the fourth one, but either way let me know what you think. If you want to just comment to let me know I'm an a-hole, you may be right in certain respects but I will probably argue with you anyway... and I'm really not an a-hole. I'm a good guy.

Anyway, I actually listened to quite a bit of music today having the day off for President's Day - I listen to music every day but today I checked out the following:
Forth - The Verve Very good for fans of The Verve - I dig it - not necessarily their best but still damn good.
Modern Guilt - Beck Beck has that ability to cover so many different styles and vibes - sometimes all at once - and yet still sound only like Beck. This album is no exception and it's one of his best.
Uninvited, Like The Clouds - The Church This one continues to grow on me...not that there was any real question. I'll say this a thousand times that The Church is the most prolific and underappreciated band in the world. Day 5 is a totally gorgeous spacey Church classic, and Unified Field and Easy are great jangly gems. The new album Untitled #23 (apparently along with the customary multiple EPs and instrumental freakouts) is coming out with a U.S. release date of May 12.
Us - Peter Gabriel I broke out this cassette (yes a cassette - played on my once prized possession Nakamichi cassette deck I paid about $350 for in 1990 or so) tonight. I love this one. I'm not a Peter Gabriel authority per se but a good album to listen to while making dinner.
Europe '72 - The Grateful Dead This was the recording I finally discovered the Dead with very late in the Spring of 1992. Not a Deadhead but I do dig their stuff and was able to see them twice. Had it going tonight during dinner...
Also listened to a Queens of the Stone Age mix I made from the first three QOTSA albums...

That's about all I've got for now. Oh - and 24 was great tonight - this has been a great season... The Jack attack is back.