Cold Temps, Cooler Finds — A Sample from the Subarctic

Growing up in Chicago as a kid forced to go to church I joke that while my Sunday mornings were spent having to listen to things I didn’t believe in, I actually passed that time worshiping at the temple of 23, thinking about the latest dazzling exploits of the two Hall of Fame heroes who wore that number and played for my two favorite teams. (Ryno for my Cubbies and MJ for my Bulls.) So with that number number in mind, it felt fitting to jump in with the first post of the year — on a weekend when one of whose bearers was celebrated in a ring of honor ceremony, along with his teammates and several former greats. When two great Americans (or one great and one solidly acceptable) are celebrated over a three day weekend. (Myself and MLK.) And when your reward for having stumbled back to this darn corner of the internet shall be two sets of three things worth listening to — the first of which were culled from one of my favorite annual traditions, scanning everyone else’s year-end lists.

We’re off to a good start so far after last year’s disappointing harvest (I think Charley Crockett was the only new acquisition I made then) and there are several acquisitions I’m working through as we speak. That needn’t delay me from sharing the first batch of winners, though, so we’ll kick things off with a find from the fan mail bag and an entry from Marinara’s list. It’s from Australian duo the Teskey Brothers who released their third studio album The Winding Way, their first in four years, this past summer. I’d heard of the brothers before but didn’t know they’d released another album, so was happy to get the nudge from our pal down in Texas to go check it out. Thankfully it finds the brothers firmly in “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it mode,” doling out another batch of really catchy time warp songs.

For those unfamiliar with the brothers, they specialize in Stax-style soul songs and blues, with frontman Josh Teskey sounding so much like the late great Otis Redding, it’s insane. Making the trick even more surprising is that the Teskeys are white boys from Melbourne, not big, burly giants of the American south singing from a place of Jim Crow segregation and pain. Those differences aside, there’s a lot of other similarities to embrace — lush, rich production with big, booming choruses, soulful lyrics of love and positivity, all sung in that glorious gravely rasp. It’s a pretty remarkable thing, to hear an album that sounds like it could easily have been unearthed in a time capsule from the 60s rather than recorded 50-odd years later. Two highlights that show what’s in store nicely are the album’s first two singles — the bright, buoyant “This Will be Our Year” and the soaring entreaties of “Ocean of Emotions.” Check out both here:

Up next comes a find from several lists (Allmusic and the ‘Gum, among others) and the debut album from Austin’s Being Dead.  This one’s another bit of time warp trickery, giving off shades of the Mamas and the Papas with its fantastic harmonies while layering in the eclectic, occasionally funny antics of the B-52s (sung partly by a guy who sounds like the lead singer of the Rapture.) That quirky mix grabs you from the outset, “merging surf rock, freak pop, and frantic punk….[that] toes the line between jest and sincerity,” according to their Bandcamp.

That’s a pretty accurate assessment as this album skates through those influences repeatedly across its thirteen tracks, often delving into several of them within the same song. (As on the opening tandem of “The Great American Picnic” and “Last Living Buffalo,” the latter of which concludes with  band members Falcon Bitch and Gumball reacting to the death of said animal in an over the top (yet entertaining) display of agony and shock.) It gets a little too avant garde and weird at times on the back half for me, but there’s plenty of goodness prior to then to keep you coming back. In addition to the aforementioned, these are two of my current faves — “Muriel’s Big Day Off” and the title track. Give em a spin here:

Last but not least of the newfound trio comes from one of the dudes at the dog park who’s been touting Vermont’s Noah Kahan for the better part of the year and his third album, Stick Season. The album originally came out in 2022, but Kahan spent last year issuing big name re-recordings of some of its songs with stars like Kacey Musgraves, Hozier, and even Post Malone, which generated a significant amount of buzz, propelling the album back to the forefront and a string of sold out tour dates. It even landed him on SNL where he performed the album’s biggest hit (an absolute knock out of an earworm and the album’s title track) and one of the six additional songs he added to the album in an expanded 2023 edition. (The almost equally catchy “Dial Drunk.”)

Keeping with the trend of the previous two artists, Kahan calls to mind several other artists as you listen — whether it’s bands like the Lumineers or Mumford and Sons on tracks like “All my Love” and “Orange Juice,” or Young the Giant or Maroon 5 on ones like “She Calls me Back” and “New Perspective,” Kahan hops among influences pop and folk alike and delivers a consistently winning set of songs. Two highlights among many include the opening “Northern Attitude” (which gives me glimmers of Peter Gabriel, as well as some of the others) and that endlessly catchy title track. See what you think here:


For the second trio we’ll shift from newfound artists to a few from established acts that surfaced again recently, courtesy of live performances I was lucky enough to attend. We’ll start with one from Lucius who I caught opening for Gregory Alan Isakov at one of the two otherworldly performances of his I saw last year. They’re a band that’s fallen off for me in recent years (as they’ve veered into Sunshine’s dreaded Synth Zone), but I still love their debut and think the harmonies of lead singers Jess Wolfe and Holly Laessig are about as perfect as you could ever want, enough to draw goosebumps on the regular.

Case in point being their rendition of the Kinks classic below that happened to pop in my feed after the show — they didn’t perform it, but I strangely DID wake up with it in my head the morning after, so maybe YouTube has achieved mind-reading capabilities now. This version is from nine years ago, but it’s still a stunner, just the two of them singing across a single mic to each other:

Up next comes one from hometowner Andrew Bird who I got to see during his annual holiday Gezelligheid residency again where he performs a series of shows at this anomalous old world church nestled at the foot of all the skyscrapers. It can be a pretty magical thing — this lovely church all dolled up for the holidays while Bird and his musicians play amongst the candles and lights to a reverent audience in the pews. Unfortunately as so often happens he got a little overly jazzy for my tastes, deconstructing songs to the point they were almost unrecognizable at times (Bird is one of those vexing cases where I love his albums — he’s shown up on my year-end lists repeatedly over the years — but I’ve been disappointed by him live too many times to keep trying anymore), but he did at least one song straight and it was a real winner.

It was a deep cut from 2012’s Break it Yourself (which landed at #5 on my year end list) and featured Bird singing alone on guitar to powerful effect. Simple and understated, yet potent. Give it a listen here:

We’ll close with a hybrid of the two sections — a new discovery from an element of an established act — and the solo work of My Morning Jacket guitarist Carl Broemel. Despite loving that band and his contributions to it (and knowing all about frontman Jim James’ solo outings over the years), I never knew that he also recorded on the side — both by himself and with bands like the Futurebirds. At least until night three of that epic run at the Chicago Theater a month or two ago (easily one of the best stretches of my year, as noted in the year-end post).

That was when he surprisingly stepped to the mike during the encore and started singing a tune. Not only did I not recognize the song, the sight of someone other than James singing was noteworthy on its own — but the song was good, his voice was winning, and then he tore into one of his customary soaring solos and sent the whole thing into the stratosphere.

It turns out the song was from his second solo album (of FOUR?!), 2010’s All Birds Say, which was my gateway into the rest of his material. It’s pretty interesting to hear those textbook MMJ runs in songs sporting a voice that’s not James’, but it works well once you get acclimated and he’s got plenty of good tunes across the albums. Aside from the song he sang that night, I’ll throw in an extra from my subsequent spelunking and a track off the most recent thing he’s done outside the band, the 2019 EP with friend Eric Hopper, Brokenhearted Jubilee. Give both a listen here:

Enjoy the long weekend, amici!
–BS

Wandering Through the Whiplash — The Best Music of 2023

If this year had a slogan it was about the unbreakable attraction of opposites. What goes up must come down. For every action there must be an equal and opposite reaction. It’s darkest before the dawn. It was a year constantly characterized by its yin yang duo of ephemeral excellence and the persistence of pests. Where every moment of happiness was accompanied by two or three confounding cotravelers — like getting a free plane ride to somewhere nice and having to sit between someone who takes off their socks and someone who starts yammering on about buttered sausage. (While also behind someone who immediately leans their seat back.) It often reminded me of that old joke about Pete and Repeat, sitting on a log. Pete falls off, who’s left? Over and over again… It was a year that tested limits and often felt like there was no refuge safe enough to avoid all the incoming missiles. This was the year the cracks started to show and I wondered whether it would all come crashing down again.

Last year’s themes centered around rebuilding — “Rebuilding, relearning, reorienting — just plain remembering” in year one of my potentially quixotic quest to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. Year two felt a lot like those rebuilding years in the sporting world (we’ve got at least five of those going here right now, so plenty of parallels to check myself against) — progress on a few fronts, but continued frustration on a majority of others as those seeds start to take root, but haven’t matured enough yet to start fully bearing fruit. And so we flitted back and forth between bright spot and dark, fun and frustration, optimism and despair, like some princely Monarch working his way through a field of prairie flowers in the spring.

The endless seesawing affected every aspect of my life. Prestige projects at work that my teams brought back from the grave time and again still ended up leaving (or sticking around at a much smaller scale). This led the company to constantly teeter between “are we going to make it” and “we’re all getting fired” to “I think we’re ok?” on both fronts. (A level of certainty that’s as comforting as a jack in the box sitting silent in front of you after cranking on the lever for 45 minutes.) Those illusions of security getting dashed by not one but TWO rounds of layoffs, including the most recent — and worst! — batch a mere week ago. (Merry Christmas one and all!)

Even my normally uninteresting health turned into a neverending carnival of ridiculous ailments. My teeth turned into those of a meth addict, requiring a handful of crowns and root canals after spontaneously dying. The ‘rona finally found me after managing to avoid it for three years, highlighting just how lucky I was because I’d likely have been toast if I didn’t as it pounded me for a good chunk of the year. I lost half my hearing for a month and a half. My foot randomly started hurting and required steroid shots and funky footwear to finally (mostly) correct. My lungs got destroyed with a barking cough that persists to this day, despite it being over six months since I got hit. There was a good stretch of the year where I hobbled around like an old man without a walker, limping on a bad foot, unable to hear out of half my head, while my teeth throbbed like the bass at hell’s worst disco.

These ongoing annoyances were thankfully balanced by the small bounty of brilliance that constantly flows from my beloved city by the lake. New restaurants, breweries, and bars were discovered to recommend to visitors and work into my routine. The flurry of fests in the summertime, which found one of my overall faves Built to Spill playing in the street mere blocks from my house in a true pinch me moment. Or Bay brats Spiritual Cramp playing on a rainy Sunday and knocking back the clouds (and crowd) with their energy. Or the Hives inexplicably playing a room the size of my studio and blowing everyone’s face off with their endlessly enjoyable antics (and songs). Or those three magical nights with MMJ at the fairytale Chicago Theater, which gave us over eight hours of music (and months of lovely memories) and drove all of us into the stratosphere.

There were boatloads of books as I continued my resurgence with reading, crushing dozens over the course of the year as it remained part of my morning workout ritual. New page turners from King or lovely, immersive older ones from Harris, Ruiz Zafon, and Vazquez.  I continued my obsession with WWII, diving into the mostly overlooked Pacific side of things this time and again marveling that we managed to win the war. I spent a ton of time in Spain rabbitholing on ETA and the civil war again, trying to understand how/why we sat on the sidelines for the latter as the fascists did a dry run for what would turn into the aforementioned world war. (Not just because it was interesting, but because it might turn out to be relevant as thoughts of surprise coups or people otherwise undermining democratic institutions stop seeming so implausible. Even moreso if they started talking about opponents as vermin who are poisoning the nation’s blood again. Not that they ever would…)

There were outstanding shows like Peaky Blinders  (sweet geezus, I still can’t stop thinking about it) and Patria (a haunting, powerful watch — the opening scene remains seared in my memory) and equally impactful movies. (The Endless Trench and Argentina, 1985 being but two of many that took me back to my grad school roots and floored me.)  And above all, as always, there was loads and loads of good music.

The seesaw action of the year impacted us here, too — for every excellent arrival or discovery there were an equal number of disappointments from some normally reliable sources. Whether long time loves like Shakey, the Kills, Woods, both Gallagher brothers, and the National — TWICE! — or newer ones like Andy Shauf, Jungle, John Miller, and Tre Burt, seasonably solid structures were blown over by the winds and we were forced to reassess our sites of solace. At least here the bright spots outnumbered the dark ones in both volume and intensity.

Fittingly for the year we’re heading into there were 24 worthy of mention here, and in line with the aforementioned lack of reliability from the stalwarts the majority of them (15) are newcomers. (This in comparison to last year’s tally of 16 old timers and 15 fresh faced ingenues.) They cover the normal eclectic spread of genres (though no rap or electro this year, as those two continue their slide into oblivion for me) and offer a range of delights for you to dive into.

There’s a few less than last year (the lowest since 2018, in fact), but still plenty to make us optimistic for the year to come.  As in that rebuild the nine wily veterans will hopefully gel with those energetic upstarts in the offseason to give us something serious to look forward to soon. As always, they aren’t necessarily the best things released this year, just the best ones I found, so if you’ve got some more I missed — on any of the topics mentioned above — please send em my way! In the meantime I hope you find some new friends and faves within the list below — I know I sure did. Here’s hoping for some major league fireworks in year three and a run for the ages soon.

11. Generationals — Heatherhead; Beach Fossils — Bunny: we’ll start out easy with a pair of albums I wrote about together a month or two ago and who for whatever reason have remained glued together in my brain the majority of the year. Part of it’s probably their coming out on the same day, so I spent a good chunk of the summer hopping back and forth between the two. Part of it’s also their similar vibe, laid back and slightly shimmery, like the surface of the water as you float downstream on a sunny day. Regardless of the reason, these two are twinned for me, similar enough to finish the other’s sonic sentences, so it’s only fitting to keep them that way here.

The front half comes from New Orleans duo Generationals, back with their seventh full length (their first since 2019’s Reader as Detective). As I wrote before, this one is “a solid set of their strongest tricks — slick synth tracks, as well as bright, lush pop tunes, all bathed in the shimmering sheen of the pair’s gauzy vocals.” I still get echoes of Richard Swift on the poppier tracks like the opening “Waking Moment” and “Faster Than a Fever,” all soaring chorus and lush production. Meanwhile the pair’s more traditional synth tracks still slink seductively towards you — whether “Elena,” “Death Chasm,” or the Cure-like “Hard Times for Heatherhead.”

For their part Brooklyn’s Beach Fossils are back with their fourth album of original material (their first since 2017’s Somersault, which landed at #6 on that year’s list) and it finds them mining similar terrain, just a bit more wistfully this time. As I wrote before, “these guys have always nailed the laid-back, swimming feeling to their songs…and while they can instantly conjure that bright, sunny vibe, you miss out if you relegate them strictly to background ‘feel good’ music.” Traditional tracks like “Sleeping on my Own,” “Run to the Moon,” and “Anything is Anything” warrant that additional attention, while those like “Dare Me,” “Don’t Fade Away,” and “Numb” do so by evoking modern influences and peers. (Dehd, REM, and the Cure, respectively. Solid returns to form by both bands.

10. Charlie Cunningham — Frame; Flyte — Flyte; Oliver Hazard — Oliver Hazard: this slot’s for the soothsayers and a trio of albums guaranteed to calm even the most frayed of nerves. (A much needed commodity throughout the year.) Each are first timers on these year end lists — due entirely to my discovering them late and not a lack of prior quality — and two of them hail from the UK. We’ll start with the kingdom dwellers, the first of which is Charlie Cunningham, back for the first time since 2019’s Permanent Way with his third album, another elegant mix of piano, acoustic guitar, and quiet, contemplative lyrics of love and faith. Sonically Cunningham is a bit of a shapeshifter — there’s touches of Nick Mulvey (“Shame I Know”), Badly Drawn Boy (“So It Seems”), and Jose Gonzales (“Watchful Eye”) here — but his lovely, aching melodies tie all the disparate influences together well.

There’s the stately, somber lullaby of loss on “Frame” (“it’s over for us, this heart bled for all the time…so much for us, this half read lullaby was nearly enough — there’s no shame in trying…”) The haunting “Bird’s Eye View,” which roils like a slowly boiling cauldron as he sings of someone who’s left him behind. (“Slip away into the night — there’s nowhere to run, go where you hide. I wish you good luck, I’ll see you on the other side…”) The burned out testament to another on “Friend of Mine.” (“Friend of mine, I’m with you and I’ll be for all time — you’re the light in which everything resides. Where do I belong? Who should I now become? Cuz this doesn’t feel right… I love to play along, if just to survive til our moment arrives.”)

Those themes of quiet contemplation and unflinching devotion are buttressed by those of doubt and anxiety elsewhere on the album. Cunningham sings to himself to soothe his inner demons on “Downpour” (“why are you still wrapped in your head…boyhood dreams pulling you down to your knees… old fears, goodbye, you’ll surely be my downfall in good time”), as well as on “End of the Night” (“the devil, you know, he hides – I say I’m fine most days but he’s always inside me”) and “Pathways.” (“I won’t be defined by this shadow of mine, this cross to bear forever if that’s enough…”) It’s another really, really pretty album from this virtual unknown — add yourself to the in crowd and thank me later.

The back half of the British bloc comes from the London duo Flyte, returning with their eponymous third album. I’ve been meaning to write about these guys for months now, having discovered their last album a while back (2021’s lovely This is Really Going to Hurt) and falling for its mix of beautiful melodies and confessional lyrics. There were touches of the late Richard Swift in there (as on the killer “I’ve Got a Girl”), as well as loads of Laurel Canyon harmonies to really sink your teeth into. That one was all about the emotional rawness that comes in the wake of a long-term breakup (that of frontman Will Taylor).

This one seems to find him/them in a much happier place, as the songs almost glow with warmth and love. There’s the lovely little ode to another in the opening “Speech Bubble” (“let me be the pencil that holds up your hair… the long legs that stick out of the bed… Heartbreak, it takes practice, but I think I’m getting better at this… I just wanna make you happy”) and a flurry of wonderful images in the ones that follow. “Our arms are going to cradle, our hips are gonna kiss” on the defiantly upbeat “Bad Days.” “You’ll be my bedtime reminder and I’ll be your wake up call — a reason to lay down beside her and dream of nothing at all” on “Wake Up Call.” Not everything is roses and kitten kisses — there’s a touch of melancholy and fear in the song of trying to protect that aforementioned other in “Defender” (“I know that you’re behind the door spiraling away from me — it’s been worse before, I’ve got a good memory… I call your friends, they say good luck and I pretend I’m strong enough to be your defender”), but writ large this is a big, warm hug of an album.

The harmonies with bassist Nick Hill give off a mix of a Beatles and Simon and Garfunkel vibe (“Chelsea Smiles” for the former, “Perfect Dark,” “Press Play,” and “Better than Blue” for the latter) while the duets Taylor does with the female guest stars also shine — whether with Laura Marling on “Tough Love” or with Taylor’s true life partner Billie Marten on “Don’t Forget About Us.” This is another act that’s almost criminally unknown — lush, lovely stuff.

Last but not least is another band I’ve had in the queue to write about for a while, but never got around to for some reason. I found their debut 34 N. River a while back courtesy of some fan mail (Mad Dog sent me their tune “Illinois” and I quickly got into the rest of the album) and I enjoyed its mix of catchy melodies and earnest enthusiasm. Then as now the band has a bit of a Lumineers vibe to them, albeit without some of the lyrical depth or gravitas (tracks like “Saratoga” here, with its “witchy women” and “shibbity bop bops” and “oh hot damns,” or “Two x Four” with its “dosey doe’s” and “doggones” sound like a steamed up Jimmy Stewart rather than modern day adults), but the melodies are strong enough you’ll be singing along rather than focusing on those minor issues.

Tracks like “Use Me Up” or the glimmering “Northern Lights” shine, while others like the opening “Ballerina” or the aforementioned “Two x Four” are perfectly passable (and enjoyable) tunes about love and loss that mask their sadness with brightness and diffidence. (On the former frontman Michael Belazis sings “I know you left me on that Sunday, I know it’s what’s best for you…I’m not angry, I’m just through,” while on the latter he sings “brick by brick I tear you down, but I’m the one underneath it all.”)

Overall there’s an old timey, “aw shucks” wholesomeness to the proceedings that’s almost a defense mechanism, trying to distract you from some real hurt or sincerity. On “Fly Right” there’s kettles on the boil and mamas with aching feet before Belazis slips in “I don’t wanna hurt you like the way that you hurt me.” On “Let Down” there’s the almost anodyne “flying off the handle” before the “spirals and alcohol” and talk of “I watched you leave the house… and the talk of the town was about how I let you down.” On “Natalie” he sings to his “honey bee” before admitting “it’s January – the bees are dead. I withhold my love instead.” This seesawing between deflection and vulnerability undermines the impact a bit and leaves you wondering how seriously to take them — but the music is catchy and winning enough you’re willing to forget (or at least not fixate on too long) some of those other elements. Solid sophomore outing and a trio of newcomers worth some listens.

9. Cut Worms — Cut Worms; Duff Thompson — Shadow People: this slot’s for the throwbacks and a pair of artists who evoke eras long since past. Up first is the return of former hometowner Max Clarke (who for whatever reason committed the almost unforgivable sin of moving to NY), back with his first album in three years and his third overall. (His last, the double album Nobody Lives Here Anymore, landed at #6 on my 2020 list.) The recipe here remains the same — early era Everlys sound, bright, back-breaking melodies and warm guitar — but this time Clarke ditches some of the melancholy that was creeping in around the edges and instead gives us a more uniformly upbeat set of songs.

Clarke starts out on an positive note with a jaunty saloon piano and his ode to being tongue tied, imploring the object of his affection, “don’t fade out on me.” He continues the conversation in the lazy luau serenade of “Is it Magic?” (“I’ve got a love and it’s gonna be true without end”) and the infectious sock hop scramble of “Let’s go Out on the Town” (“I’ll go anywhere you like…let’s go dancin’ in the bright, bright lights, keep on dancing all night loooooong, yeah…”)

A hint of darkness creeps in along the way — whether from heartache (“when you’re broken in two, not much you can do” on “I’ll Never Make It”) or the world at large (“when it gets worse all the while, how can I just take it and smile?”) it’s a less rose-colored sense of nostalgia than before. “The summer’s almost gone, never seems to last too long and the nights that were so inviting now seem so cruel” on “Living Inside.” “I don’t mind if we’re dead, only eat to be fed…don’t they always try to make you feel so bad” on “Use Your Love! (Right Now).” “Something eating at my mind that I’m doing my best not to say. Just what all we stand to lose when at last we do depart. All the dreams you never had go like shadows in the dark. Too bad we never see em at all” on the beautiful finale “Too Bad.”

Maybe it’s because he’s coming off a double album (and/or because he’s masked some of the wistfulness that was prevalent there with these more buoyant melodies), but the impact of this one’s nine song, thirty minute duration is a bit more muted than his previous outings. That’s not necessarily a knock — I still listened to it a lot and really enjoyed the majority of its songs — but for whatever reason none of them broke me open the way some of his earlier ones did. (“Last Words to a Refugee” or “Veterans Day” off his last one, for example.) That said, this one’s still got plenty to enjoy and I’m glad there’s someone like Clarke keeping the past alive by making this type of music (even if he did defect for the dreaded Big Apple…)

Clarke’s slotmate is fellow time traveler Duff Thompson, back with his second album, Shadow People. Like Clarke it’s his first in three years (his 2020 debut Haywire is a really solid listen), a relatively brisk 30 minutes long (Thompson has 10 songs to Clarke’s nine), and also has elements of early Everly Brothers to his sound. And for whatever reason, as with Clarke, despite some really lovely melodies and solid craftsmanship the majority of this one’s songs don’t penetrate the cold, dark armor of my heart (with one noteworthy exception). That said, as with Clarke’s there’s plenty of positives to embrace and keep you coming back. (Whether the iceberg of your heart thaws or not.)

It starts strong with the lurching purr of a riff on “Just Like Me,” which bolsters the blackness of the refrain (“too many dark days are killing all my friends, messing with my friends”) before shifting to the swaying “Take it With You” whose warm refrain makes you want to hoist your pints and sing along. (“If you don’t taaaaake iiiiiit with yooooou I’m gonna bring it to you…”) As I’ve noted before, the similarity to the Walkmen’s Hamilton Leithauser is still strong, particularly as this album hits its back half. Starting with the slow burning siblings “A Little Time” and “A Long Time,” Thompson croons in laid back lounge lizard mode, while tracks like “Up and Go” and the closing “For the Moment” ride along with the jaunty abandon of the plinking barroom piano.

Aside from the ethereal stunner “Shapeshifter” — as pretty a song as you’re gonna hear this year — most of the songs don’t quite pierce through emotionally. Maybe that’s a me thing or maybe I’m looking for something that’s never intended to be there (like looking for gold dust in the canister of your vacuum or profound wisdom from the latest Jackass movie), but either way it’s ok because of how good this is at conjuring a warm, nostalgic vibe. It’s like walking into a bathroom after someone’s taken a hot shower — the picture of your surroundings isn’t totally clear, but you’re enveloped by the toasty, amorphous embrace of the steam cloud and able to lose yourself in the little you see. This is another one I’m glad is out there making music like this — not a lot like him left.

8. Young Fathers – Heavy Heavy; Shame — Food for Worms: this slot’s for the kids and a couple of acts probably not intended for dinosaurs such as myself (but I love em anyway!) They’re both from the kingdom, two of my favorite album covers of the year, and another two albums I wrote about a month or so ago, so don’t have a ton new to share — but to recap, Scotland’s Fathers are back for the first time in five years (2018’s Cocoa Sugar landed at #10 on that year’s list) and similar to their previous outings this is another exciting, interesting listen.

As I wrote then, this one’s “another jewelry box full of influences and opulence” — from the excellent opener “Rice” with its bounty of African drums and chanting choruses to the throbbing pulse of “Drum” and “Holy Moly” that throw everything into the pot and shine.  Or the twitchy “Shoot me Down,” which jitters and shakes before blossoming into a TV on the Radio style track midway through. These guys remain unlike almost anyone else out there right now, which is very much a good thing.

For their part London’s Shame are back with their third album, their first since 2021’s excellent Drunk Tank Pink, which landed at #11 on that year’s list. As I wrote before, “nothing’s changed since then — they’re still dishing out taut post-punk gems, balancing furious rippers with moodier, more expansive jams.”

Tracks like “Six Pack” and “Alibis” represent the former, while songs like “Yankees” and “Adderall” showcase the latter, letting the band slowly build the tension before blowing things apart. (Guitarists Sean Coyle-Smith and Eddie Green deliver a particularly enjoyable run at the end of “Yankees,” to cite but one example.) The opening “Fingers of Steel” splits the difference and offers a slightly looser, more soaring vibe that’s reminiscent of bands like the Japandroids, while the slow burning “Orchid” calls to mind At the Drive In when it blooms at the end. This one’s a lean, mean delight from a recent fave and a pair of albums from bands that kids of all ages should enjoy.

7. RF Shannon — Red Swan in Palmetto; Angelo de Augustine — Toil and Trouble: this slot’s for the denizens of the darkness and a pair of albums that seem to soundtrack the shadows. Neither is particularly menacing or dangerous, but for whatever reason both albums call to mind the murky mysteries that occur at night rather than those that appear in the full bright of day. Both are first-timers on my year end lists and recent winners/discoveries from the sister site’s beloved ‘gram competition, #fridayfreshness. They’re also two more albums I wrote about a month ago, so will offer a quick recap in lieu of a full dissertation.

For his part Shannon is back with his third album and he sets the mood early with the sultry, sinister opener “Palmetto,” which smolders like a brush fire and could easily soundtrack the opening credits of some gritty detective show. The album is filled with alluring images and mysterious characters — the blue tattoo of a shape that goes on forever, stalking wild cats through an alley full of silhouettes on lead single “Abalone,” with its Andrew Bird style backend. Good mother Mary with her dancing boots in “Dublin, Texas.” The man with a salt dime in his left boot, jack vine in his hand on “Casinos in the Wild.” It’s all shadow and shade and disembodied spirits in the night, as in the stately “Cedar Perfume” (with its lovely notion of a chorus and a love that’s evergreen) or the luxurious “Raindance #11.” (“Let’s go out tonight and we’ll dance out in the street…”)

As I wrote before, “Shannon is something of a shapeshifter, effortlessly exuding a range of styles” including country (the slide guitar on “Midnight Jewelry,” the fiddle on “Dublin”), folksy ballads (“Raindance,” “Cedar Perfume”), and even glimpses of modern bands (Dire Straits on “Casinos,” Wilco on “So Down Low.”) Somehow it all works, held together by Shannon’s warm whisper and excellent melodies — really good stuff.

de Augustine earns his spot with his fifth album, which routinely calls to mind beloved favorite Elliott Smith. As I wrote before, his twin-tracked voice and whispered delivery perfectly capture Elliott’s spirit and sound, as do his cryptic, slightly elliptical lyrics, “which shift like sand on a dune depending on the way the winds of your mood are blowing — always a hallmark of Elliott’s best.”

There’s the frustration and despair. (“I cannot explain to you or anyone else. Like a dog that’s been suffering you need to put me down – I dare you to put me down” on “Naked Blade.”) The arm’s length defensiveness and “Angeles”-style open of “Blood Red Thorn.” (“On my own, I don’t need no one…oh my love, someday you’ll find your home. Life on the run is enough to wear one down.”) The heartache and plaintive poetry on “Song of the Siren.” (“All my thoughts come back to you like they did from the start…the love I knew, vocal and violent, uncontrollable like the inferno.”) The suffering and sarcasm of the closing title track. (“I’ll believe in anything if you take away all this pain…toil and trouble my only delights — I don’t know where I went wrong.”) There’s even hints of extreme darkness as on “I Don’t Want to Live, I Don’t Want to Die.” (“I keep a Colt 45 in my drawer if I change my mind – unpredictable, syringe and spoonful, eyes were blazing fire.”)

It’s a powerful potion when it all comes together — so much so that you almost forget you’re not listening to some unearthed trove of lost Elliott songs. The lush melancholy of “Dwomm” being but one of many gems, delivering an opening verse that is an absolute backbreaker. (“Despite all agency I’ve lost the path to love. I can read the silence on these walls that were put up. Though love is vilified it always hangs around. If you let me in someday I’ll never let you down.”) Beautiful, wrenching stuff.

6. The Nude Party — Rides On; Graveyard — 6: this slot’s for a pair that on their surface have nothing to do with each other, but everybody needs a buddy, so here we are — strange year, strange bedfellows, as we described at the top, after all… Back with their third album (their first since 2020’s Midnight Manor) the six-piece from Carolina continue nailing their homage to British Invasion bands with another batch of really catchy tunes. Along with one of the quintessential signatures of that era, the opening “Word Gets Around” adds a dash of danger behind its “bah bah baaaaahs” as frontman Patton Magee warns “I control what you hear — believe me, your nose ain’t as clean as yer ear.” (He later offers proof as a little bird has chirped about a former/current love coming out of a bathroom stall with a partner — never a good sign.)

It’s not all infidelity and mild menace, though — the effervescent lead single “Hard Times (All Around)” and “Hey Monet” quickly follow that one up and lighten things up a touch. For the former, aside from nailing the early era Stones sound (as they do so often here and on previous albums) it has such an infectious groove you joyfully ignore the ubiquity of the titular woes Magee is singing about. Meanwhile the vintage organ on the latter — which adds cow bell on top of another seriously strong groove, one infectious enough to get even the most stoic Mod moving — calls to mind bands like the Kingsmen or Standells.

This diversity runs throughout the album, both in influences/homages and instrumentation. There’s the warm neo-soul vibe of “Sold Out of Love,” which would be a welcome addition to a Houndmouth or Nathaniel and the Night Sweats set, and the Roger Miller vibe of “Tree of Love.” The weary slide guitar on “Midnight on Lafayette Park” and the plinking piano on “Polly Anne.” All of these ride alongside some incredibly vivid images — the white laced (VERY RED) cherry red knee high boots on “Cherry Red Boots,” or the old vaquero named Alfredo who rides bulls in Mexico on the title track.

It’s a really rich affair, one whose overarching feeling is one of unavoidable joy — particularly on the front half. It slows down a bit at the back with the swampy blues of “Hoodoo,” the solitary lament “where do the good times go when it’s all bled you dry” on “Stately Prison Cell,” or the mournful harmonica on the closing “Red Rocket Ride” (with its “fourteen megaton trillion dollar bomb to blow em all to kingdom come.”) In total, though, Magee and the boys have given us another set of really good songs with a load of flourishes to keep your ears satisfied for months to come.

For their part, acting as the Oscar to the Carolineans’ Felix in this aural Odd Couple, are one of two sets of Swedes on the list this year, storming back with their aptly titled sixth album (their first since 2018’s Peace) and another delicious dose of heavy sludge to pummel our ears and brains. In the five years they’ve been away the band appears to have mellowed just a smidge, offering us their most bluesy, mild mannered set of songs yet. (Mostly.) In addition to the slight shift in sound, it’s also a somewhat leaner affair with only nine songs to sink our teeth into, but they cram a lot in to every minute.

The band has always been something of a chameleon — at least if said animal’s sonic palette consisted solely of elements from the thundering greats of hard rock and metal — and they pack in a range of them again here. They start slowly, luring you in with the breezy blues of opening “Godnatt” before smashing you in the gourd with one of the best one-two combos of the year. There’s the fist in the air fury of “Twice” (“woke up this morning and I felt recharged — I’m in the graveyard getting tuned, hitting hard”) followed quickly by the ominous lurch of “I Follow You.” (“I’m in the wrong place at the very wrong time… there’s no time to sit this one out.”) These two amount to the most undeniably upbeat slammers on the album (the Sabbath-styled stomp of “Just a Drop” being the only other addition), but the overall focus on slower, more muted material still leaves plenty to enjoy.

There’s the bluesy Cream vibe of “Sad Song” (sung by guitarist Truls Mörck instead of frontman Joakim Nilsson, whose voice definitely has more of a Jack Bruce tenor to it). The soul-inflected smolder of “No Way Out” with its cooing choir of backup singers. The Zeppelinesque closer “Rampant Fields.” (“Since I’ve Been Loving You” style Zep, not “Levee.”) Despite lacking more of their characteristic juggernauts than normal, this is still a really enjoyable album.

I was lucky enough to see them live this year in their only US performance (Nilsson apparently is a bit averse to flying) and the weather perfectly suited the slower material — it was outdoors and windy AF that night so the songs picked up an additional hint of menace as gales blew the band’s hair (and riffs) helter skelter across the festival grounds as the storms rolled in, the skyline standing vigil in the background bathed in full moon. It was an awesome night and cool to see this part of the band’s repertoire flexed a little more since they’re definitely more known for the bangers. Hopefully it’s not another five years before we get another batch of tunes, slow or otherwise.

5. The Bones of Jr Jones — Slow Lightning; Josiah and the Bonnevilles — Endurance: this slot’s for the southern side and a couple of acts who evoke the sound and feel of life below the Mason-Dixon Line (even though one lives about as far north of it as you can get). Call it folk, call it Americana, call it country, I just call it good, and think you’ll do the same. We’ll start with the northerner — back after a brief pause following his excellent EP two years ago (the aptly named A Celebration, which landed at #10 on my year end list), upstate NY’s Jonathan Linaberry returns with his first full length in five years (2018’s Ones to Keep Close) and gives us a satisfying balancing act of those two outings.

Here Jones buttresses the haunting, ethereal tunes from the EP with a hearty helping of the uptempo tracks from those earlier albums. It works pretty well — personally I prefer those soul-chilling crawlers from his EP, which have a lush, pastoral feel that sound almost out of time (similar to Shakey Graves’ early stuff, where they feel like unearthed relics rather than modern material), but Linaberry’s got an ear for melody and can get things going on the uptempo tracks. (Think slightly less rambunctious BPF — particularly with the odd reliance on skeletal drum machine beats here, which sap some of the strength from the songs — but in person he can really get things cooking as he tours with a human behind the cans…)

In terms of the latter tracks there’s the funky grumble of “Heaven Help Me,” the cocksure chug of “The Good Life” (“I don’t care, I’m dancing with myself…I’ve seen the biggest dreams die out on the street — honey that ain’t gonna be me…there’s lightning coursing through these veins…”) and the shuffling, almost Margaritaville vibe of the title track. There’s the bare-hearted lyrics and jubilant “whoos” that punctuate the opening “Animals” (“I’m just a lover boy always wishing on a star…won’t you please just walk me home cuz I don’t know the way and I’d love some company…”) and the hand clap spiritual style of “I Ain’t Through With You,” each of which work well.

When the quieter stuff finally arrives it holds your attention all the more — from the stoic banjo of “Blue Skies,” the chilling howl of “Preservation” and its stately successor “The Flood,” (which sings “I ain’t trying to raise the dead” before slowly blooming into a bleary electronic buzz) this is what makes Jones so special. His voice on these tracks has a haunting, hollowed out bleakness to it that stirs something primal inside, like some ancient folk tune speaking of greater truths. (See the plaintive, plinking bar piano of the closing “Baby, Run” for one further example.) And so while part of me wishes these tunes made up the majority of the album (similar to the previous EP) it’s an all-around solid effort from one of my favorite recent finds. (And a heck of a nice guy in person, too.) Definitely check him out!

On the back half we have the actual southerner, Tennessee’s Josiah and the Bonnevilles, back with their second album of the year and third in the past two. (Their first, the aptly titled Country Covers, was full of the myriad singles they’d released recently in that vein, while last year’s equally on the nose 2022 was their last of original material.) This one returns to the latter with a pair of songs dealing with some of the mundanities of regular life — life on the job and longing for “Another Day at the Factory,” as well as suffering through the effects of a “Kentucky Flood.” (“This ole holler used to be my home and underneath that water is everything I own…now this lake in the middle of nowhere says there ain’t none of that no more” from the latter.)

There’s more typical, universal fare, too — the smoldering send off to someone who’s left him behind on “Burn.” (“If it’s the last damned thing I do I’m gonna burn this body down. I never really got over you I just learned to do without.”) The beautiful “Blood Moon,” which sings of a love (or at least connection) still in progress (“tell me that you’ll never leave, even if it’s a lie. I’ma double down on what I said in the morning light….nothing lasts forever, ‘cept maybe you and I”) while “The Line” tells a tale of unrequited love, as both parties traipse across that titular barrier. (“I drew myself a line between your heart and mine. A pretty little line, tells me I’ll be fine if I stay here on my side.”)

The band’s country side comes out most clearly on the album’s back half and its songs about the South and the Lord. “Keeping Love Alive” and the lovely love letter to their native state, the aptly named “Tennessee Song,” speak to the former (“if it runs like it’s never gonna die then it probably comes from the South” and “treasure of the world, home sweet home to me,” respectively) while the oddly affecting ode (at least for an atheist) to his mom/aunt/grandma on “A Gold Cross on a Rope Chain” and the brisk “God Made a New Chord” handle the latter. (“I just drove off, I was 17 and a day, left her holding on to her only claim to fame.” (The titular implements from the former.))

Frontman Josiah Leming channels the ghost of Tom Petty frequently here with his arresting first lines, sketching simple and straightforward images that grab you immediately — “when I think of you I think of growing old easy. Settling down real early in the evening, on a twin-sized mattress in the middle of a snowstorm” on the closing “Basic Channels.” Or “I’m lit up like the 4th of July — you’re out with one of your pretty guys who never worked a day in his life” on “Holy Place.” There are some slight missteps (the odd time traveling “Any Time or Place” with its lyrics of WWI and building the pyramids), but writ large his songwriting has gotten sharper, forming an even more solid accompaniment to his already excellent melodies. I’ve really become a big fan of these guys — really strong set of songs.

4. Guided by Voices — La La Land/Welshpool Frillies/Nowhere To Go But Up; Wilco — Cousin: this slot’s for the stalwarts and a couple of beloved bands who not only don’t seem to be slowing down in their old age, but somehow getting more prolific. For the lads from Akron this constitutes their fifth year in a row landing on my year end list (they landed at #6 in 2022 and #13 the year before) and the third time in that span they’ve released a trio of albums in a calendar year. This time around it’s La La Land, which came out in January, Welshpool Frillies from back in July, and Nowhere To Go But Up, which came out the day after Thanksgiving. Similar to recent years/outings it’s another set of good to very good songs, made all the more improbable because theyjustreleasedanalbumfivemonthsago/thisistheirthirdalbumthisyear/theireigththepastthree/theirfortiethyearasaband.

It may be a product of having been out the longest and thus having the most time to sink in, but La La Land is the most consistent of the three — from the opening “Another Day to Heal” and the sinister growl of “Instinct Dwelling” to back half tracks like “Face Eraser,” the guys can still dish out straight down the middle rock songs with the best of ‘em. Meanwhile tracks like “Cousin Jackie,” “Caution Song,” and the closing “Pockets” highlight shimmering guitar chords almost explicitly designed to make you strike poses akin to 2021’s It’s Not Them. It Couldn’t Be Them. It Is Them when you hear them. (And album midway point “Slowly on the Wheel” is another classic GBV epic that builds to an ever-satisfying flourish.)

Welshpool has a bunch of winners, too — opening “Meet the Star,” the furious churn of “Romeo Surgeon,” and the effervescent seesaw riff of “Why Won’t You Kiss Me” all sizzle, as do latter half tracks like “Awake Man” and “Seedling.” Slower burns like “Cruisers’ Cross” and the melancholic melt of “Better Odds” shine too, adding some soaring refrains beside Dr Bob’s croons. (And despite being brand new, early winners from Nowhere include “The Race is on, the King is Dead” and “Stabbing at Fractions.”)

Unsurprisingly these guys were my top band for second year in a row on the Spots’ year end review — with a listen rate higher than 99.5% of global subscribers again! — but with so much material to get through it’s really not that unexpected, particularly when it’s of such high quality.

As for Wilco it’s more of the same – another really solid set of songs, released right on the heels of another album. (Last year’s double album Cruel Country, which landed at #11 on my year end list.) Similar to their slot mates these guys almost release TOO much music — to the point where I worry I’m losing my objectivity or the ability to fully connect with the songs because they’re constantly being obscured by new things. It’s a bit like the snow that’s falling outside right now — it’s covering things I otherwise quite enjoy looking at, but the bright layer on top makes me forget them for a while and pay attention solely to the fresh things sitting atop the pile.

The last album showed this in small scale — lots of good songs, which got a bit overshadowed by the good enough — but it applies in the broader sense here as well. Tweedy is a prolific, daily writer, as I suspect GBV’s Dr Bob is. They do it out of habit, they do it as a ritual, they do it to make sense of what’s happening or to go someplace better. Tweedy for his part wrote a book on it (the predecessor to this year’s pleasant mixtape memoir World in a Song) where he convinced readers that writing a song isn’t this lightning in a bottle channeling of distant spirits (or at least it’s not only/always this). Sometimes it’s as mundane as brushing your teeth or making coffee in the morning — it’s just something you do, a habit you form on a daily basis to the point that you don’t even think about doing it anymore, it’s almost automatic.

The downside of all this production, though, is at times the polish a track receives is lower than it would otherwise be. Not that these are rough, unprofessional songs — they most definitely are not — but as with a stone that’s pulled prematurely from the tumbler, what’s lost is that high shine and glimmer that otherwise appears if you left it in there to roll around a little longer. And that absence manifests itself mostly in terms of emotional resonance here — I still haven’t fully connected with all the songs off Country and now I’ve been pulled into processing these. As this continues to happen over the years it becomes harder to fully digest things in the way I used to on earlier albums (classics like Summerteeth or Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, for example.) It’s why I can’t really name more than a couple tracks off last year’s album (“A Lifetime to Find,” “Hearts Hard to Find,” and “Tired of Taking it Out on You” come to mind immediately), but the rest run together a bit. Same with his solo album, which came out a year prior. Or Ode to Joy the year before that. They’re all quite pleasant (each of them made my year end lists, for example), but what I find myself lacking more and more is that deep click of connection with the songs.

There are a few that hit immediately here — the soaring closer “Meant to Be,” for example, which is an instant classic — but several of the others are going to take a little longer to achieve that deeper resonance. Lead singles “Evicted” and “Cousin” are upbeat bubblers (even if I don’t quite understand what Tweedy’s getting at, at least in the latter), while the shimmering “Sunlight Ends” and swirling beauty “A Bowl and a Pudding” serve as solid offerings in between. (I also quite like the opening combo of “Infinite Surprise,” with its trademark noise and tumult that build to a climax before segueing to the disarmingly warm sounding song about gun violence, “Ten Dead.”)

Writ large there are worse problems to have, that’s for sure — I’d much rather have too many songs to listen to than none ever again (a la Rage or Portishead, for example), but part of me feels like I’m not able to do justice to everything these guys (and GBV) are offering. That’s a fight I’m willing to keep waging, though — so keep it coming. In the meantime bask in the pleasant rays and try to find that more profound level of attachment before the next batch from both arrives.

3.  The Hives — The Death of Randy Fitzsimmons; Spiritual Cramp — Spiritual Cramp: this slot’s for the sh#$kickers and a pair of albums that were adrenaline shots to the jugular, able to immediately boost your spirits and energy and get you bouncing around the room in delight. First comes the riotous return of the beloved band of Swedes, back from the dead after a whopping eleven years away. It opens in irresistible fashion with the almost theatrical buildup to the simple, yet surgically sharp riff of “Bogus Operandi” before blowing the doors off the album and running wild. (The buildup is even more delicious live, as they’ve been opening their sets with this one on tour, working the crowd into an immediate frenzy.)

They quickly follow this eruption with the blistering “Trapdoor Solution,” the seductively slithering bass line on “Countdown to Shutdown” (with its jubilant “WHOOOOOOs” punctuating the proceedings), and the pep rally claps of “Rigor Mortis Radio” and “Crash into the Weekend” (both of which are unfailing party starters that positively sizzle.) The boys add some new wrinkles along the way — there’s the horns on “Stickup” and “Smoke and Mirrors,” which sports a marching band feel and felicity, and the slightly cinematic surf rock tinge of “What Did I Ever Do To You?” — but the bulk of the material remains their vintage punk and its undeniable blasts from the back of the garage.

Frontman Howlin Pelle Almqvist remains the perfect field marshal for the assault and the textbook definition of what you want a rock star to be. He’s 45 and been away for over a decade, but still acts like he always has onstage, preening and pogoing throughout the set, unleashing a barrage of high kicks while twirling the mic like it was in flames, and his antics remain hilarious. (I’ll admit to having stolen his over the top entreaties to the crowd for applause lately, furiously seesawing his arms front to back like he’s directing an airplane towards the jetway.) Almqvist actually smacked himself in the head with the mic so hard at one show it drew blood, but rather than be cowed he turned it into fuel for the rest of the show and the image was emblazoned on T-shirts for sale a few shows later. (The band’s merch/media game remains flawless — follow them on the ‘gram for additional proof/laughs.)

Neither he nor the band have lost a step in the time away, coming in guns blazing and leaving everything they’ve got on the album/stage. I got to see them in a room for maaaaaybe 150 people recently and the entire band was soaked in sweat by the time they were done, and it’s like this for every show I’ve seen of theirs — it’s honestly one of the more impressive demonstrations of stamina you’ll see. (And the crowd singing the bass line of “Hate to Say I Told You So” while he sings over it remains one of the coolest moments of the year.) Hands down one of the most consistently good times the year had to offer.

One need look no further for a second than this all out sprint of an album. With ten songs clocking in at a scant 26 minutes, this one makes its intentions clear from the outset — “I wanna know whose side you’re on,” frontman Michael Bingham blasts in the opening “Blowback.” If that side happens to be filled with folks standing around, overthinking their life choices and whether or not to cut loose, they’re about to get bulldozed. This one’s a hedonistic, almost nihilistic romp about living for the moment that’s virtually impossible not to move to (frantically).

The lyrics hit the aforementioned notes early and often and paint the picture of a protagonist who’s not quite well — there’s odes to flashy materialism (“I want the biggest house on the block with a yard” in “Slick Rick” (yeah baby say my name)) and maxing out your credit cards and living in debt on “Rick” and “Talking on the Internet.” There’s tales of going through a stranger’s drawers and rifling through their things on “Clashing at the Party.” Of getting into fights and lying to his wife on “Catch a Hot One.” Of always stressing and looking for trouble on “Better Off This Way” (or being stressed/bored/melting down/freaking out on “Can I Borrow Your Lighter.”)

It may not be the most embraceable or aspirational album as a result (“outta my way or I’ll burn you down” on “City on Fire”), but the songs are so damned catchy you almost don’t care (or even realize, in most cases) what Bingham’s saying. I got the chance to catch these guys live at one of our many neighborhood summer fests and it was every bit as exhilarating in person. (Bingham almost had to berate the crowd to loosen up at first — it was a rainy Sunday afternoon, so not entirely unwarranted with all the puddles and precipitation — but folks got the message and started churning around pretty quickly.) Like its slot mate, this one’s built for speed and one heck of a good time.

2. Queens of the Stone Age — In Times New Roman…; Cory Hanson — Western Cum: like its predecessor this slot’s another one for the rockers, but where the previous one was characterized by a need for speed, this one’s more about power. The last one was a pair of Formula One cars zipping around the race track whereas this is a set of muscle cars set to thunder you down the highway. The previous pair pummeled you with a flurry of jabs to dazzle your defenses, whereas these two unleash a series of haymakers to leave you breathlessly seeing stars from the canvas. We’ll start with the veterans and the return of the beloved sleaze of the Queens.

It’s been a tumultuous six years since we last saw these guys, riding high on the rollicking Villains (which landed at #7 on my year end list). Aside from the global chaos that’s continuously ravaged our screens and resolve since that point, frontman Josh Homme has had to deal with a very public (and very messy) divorce from his wife, which has involved numerous restraining orders and allegations of abuse. (The latter of which appear to have thankfully been dismissed as unfounded.) Unsurprisingly it’s resulted in a heavier, darker set of songs that are less dancey than the vibe at times on Villains, but no less captivating.

The allusions to his misery are there from the outset — “I don’t give up, I give in — there ain’t nothing to win…and you’re caught in the middle of what you made…empty hole where the empathy used to be” on the opening “Obscenery.” “We’ll never get back to where we were — stare into oblivion, oh it hurts…thought we were equals…” in “Negative Space.” Hold me close I’m confused, I don’t wanna go out. I told myself I could do this, but I’m having my doubts” on the killer closer “Straight Jacket Fitting.” It’s a less guarded, jokey version of Homme’s persona than we’ve seen before and it’s really effective. (There’s still some of his customary adolescent humor and puns — “rizzum jizzum” on “Obscenery,” indifference towards “what the peep hole say” on the song of the same name —but thankfully these are minor aberrations this time.)

Per usual the not-so-secret weapon for the band is thunder god Jon Theodore whose drumming here is absolutely vital. Pick almost any song and Theodore’s beats immediately grab a hold of you and draw you in. Sometimes funky, sometimes just brutal, they’re constantly engaging and get you tapping along (even if you aren’t a subpar drummer such as myself). The syncopated stutters midway through “Time and Place” or “Negative Space.” The ominous, slinky swing on “Carnavoyeur” or the closing epic “Straight Jacket.” The pure punishment of “Paper Machete” or “Emotion Sickness.” It adds a power to the proceedings that’s both pulverizing and primal, like an unavoidable heartbeat pounding in your ears after fleeing an assailant. (Or climbing a flight of stairs, depending on your circumstance/health. Stop judging me, damnit!) The force of Theodore’s kick drum here is absolutely ferocious — he’s possibly the first person since the late great Bonham whose idle toe tapping registers as seismic activity and can spark a tsunami in coastal areas.

For his part Homme remains one of the most undeniably cool people on the planet. He’s sadly left his swashbuckling phase behind and is back in his standard baby duck mode, but that more innocent appearance is belied by another set of searing riffs (his one on “Carnavoyeur” is a definite fave, just a couple notes but guaranteed to split your brain apart) and his Elvis-era hip swivels routinely make half the crowd (men and women alike) swoon. (I’m lookin’ at you, Allen…)

I listened to this one obsessively over the year (it comically comprised all five of my “Top Song” spots in my Spotify review) and was even better live. (Special shout out to their lighting guy whose elements on tour are always excellent accents to the songs instead of ancillary afterthoughts. A rare, but well-deserved salute.) These guys remain ferocious faves.

For his part LA’s Cory Hanson represents another newcomer to the list (but not the last, yet!) and a leggier, looser version of the rock their slot mates were dishing out. In a year that was a bit all over the place — it was one of the first times that I didn’t have an immediate, hands down winner for the top spot, for one thing — this was one of the few constants, an album I returned to repeatedly while others were more contained in their influence and enjoyment. (Unsurprisingly, it was also the closest to that top spot for the bulk of the year.) Stumbling upon Hanson was easily one of the year’s best discoveries — I found this and his 2021 Pale Horse Rider and constantly bounced between the two — and this one was emblematic of the year’s erraticism.

Lyrically, it’s a bit out there. He sings about solid gold binoculars and a snowman’s tears on the opening “Wings.” About “Nosferatu lost in his castle” on “Persuasion Architecture.” Of “submarines the size of sardines” in “Horsebait Sabotage” and the cocaine taped to your balls swinging around in the darkness on “Ghost Ship.” Hanson himself is a bit of an odd duck — I got to chat with him briefly before a show here and left it a little confused, almost like I was talking to someone from another planet.

But none of those things matter. They are mere pebbles bouncing off the armor of this rampaging rhino of an album. If you like guitar — and especially its classic rock deployments — then this is an absolute must listen. This album rules. It rules SO much. It is an epic love note to the power of power chords and the transcendence of soaring solos. Almost all of its songs have exhilarating dive bombing guitar sections that show off Hanson’s and the band’s considerable prowess. And as a result you will find yourself time and again muttering “FUUUUUU&*inghell” to yourself or anyone around you and bobbing your head in unison.

The proto-punk open of “Persuasion Architecture,” which starts at a furious pace before blossoming into a more laidback country vibe with pedal steel and back again, is but one example. The harmonics play in “Horsebait,” which foreshadows the furious solos and slowly segues into the wonderful weirdness of “Ghost Ship.” The delirious ten minute epic of “Driving Through Heaven,” which just keeps topping itself with one incendiary run after another before dropping us into the blissful close of “Motion Sickness.” It’s a fantastic album — weird warts (and terrible title) be damned. If you’ve ever thrown up horns or played air guitar to a tune, you owe it to yourself to listen to this album immediately. You won’t be disappointed.

1. Gregory Alan Isakov — Appaloosa Bones; Dean Johnson — Nothing For Me Please; Free Range — Practice: this slot’s for the soft-spoken and a trio of albums that aim for the heart. Two of them are newcomers and their perch at the top is a bit of a surprise — not because they’re not excellent albums. All three of them are delicate wonders that will almost certainly drive their arrows into your core. Moreso because if left on their own I’d probably have slotted them further down the list. But when I look back at the year with ALL its ups and downs, that battered but undying need for refuge and something that resonated emotionally — to things like hope, beauty, and love in lieu of frustration, disappointment, and anger — is what put them at the top. The three performed an unspoken relay race for the heart, quietly passing the baton from one to the other without losing a step, keeping the sunnier side of my nickname alive amidst a year full of shadows.

The one running anchor was Isakov’s, coming out in August and captivating my ears for the months since. It’s his first in five years (2018’s Evening Machines, which landed at #8 on my year end list) and per usual it captures the openness and feel of the west — there’s foxes and horses, coyotes and watchmen with torches, the skies flickering with lightning and the wind rustling past your ears. “Sweet heat lightning falls — blue crack of light and that’s all, calling you to sing” on the song named for said electricity. “Come midnight we’ll all be dreaming, it’s the owl who owns the evening” on “Terlingua.” “One day the waves will forget the ocean and wander their way to the shore…. One day these mountains will tire of standing, drop their shoulders into the sand” on “One Day.”

As usual Isakov juxtaposes those with songs (and images) of the heart. “Remember when the engine quit? You sparked up, began to grin — you and all your silver linings” on “Terlingua.” “Our love is untested, never arrested, slipping through our city fingers. Always dressed up, but never picked up” on “Watchman.” “Finally found us some good love, let’s see if it lasts” and “glad you found me when you did” on “Silver Bell” and the title track, respectively. There’s the lovely ode to unrequited love in the closing “Feed your Horses” (“Your crooked heart has left you to roam, looking for love, you forget to come home. I’ll wait for you, darling, like grain in the ground”) and the desolation of the hauntingly beautiful “Miles to Go.” (Something about the image of sitting heartbroken and/or homesick in a sad, empty hotel bar just wrecks me every time.)

I was lucky enough to get to see him perform twice this year and each time brought me to tears multiple times throughout the set. Isakov and his band just cast this intoxicating spell that renders the crowd almost paralyzed — they spend most of the show lowly lit or performing as silhouettes, encouraging folks to focus on the music rather than some on stage spectacle or show. It’s one of the rare instances where I actually spent the majority of the show with my eyes closed, just following the songs as they swirled around us, chasing those images around the dark night sky and succumbing to their spell. It was a bit of a magical feeling, both times it happened, and the album invites you to a similar experience at home. Close your eyes, lay back, and let this one wash over you.

Running second in the aforementioned relay was Johnson’s debut and the story here’s almost as good as the album. Comprised of songs written over the last twenty years, this is a magical little thing. Despite working as a musician in the Seattle scene that entire time (he’s the guitarist in Sons of Rainier and performs as a solo act in the area), some combination of laziness and fear (of imposing on others to help him, of failure, of such open hearted material, etc) Johnson refused to actually record the songs until 2018 (using listmate Duff Thompson as producer, no less) and then refused to put them out until five years after that. Whoever we have to thank for finally convincing him to do so deserves a holiday ham the size of a Volkswagen because this is a truly wonderful set of songs.

The lovely, languid opening track — another of the prettiest things you’ll hear all year — conjures the sights and sounds of the titular cowboy roaming on the range. (“Cattle calls and canyon walls, the jangle of spurs… Sunset over rolling hills, ghost rider sky…”) Things don’t remain that tranquil for long as the majority of the subsequent songs showcase the scathing honesty and bitterness of the heartbroken, balanced brilliantly with a mix of melodies that will make you want to weep at their beauty.

It starts immediately with the next track — “Darlin, you’ll never know in my heart the fire glows. You will not find one sign that you are always on my mind” in “Acting School.” “The past is dead, I made my bed, I’ll get it thru my head” on “Old TV.” “Back here it’s certain that no love will ever last” on “Possession.” “Too much and not enough — close enough to tear each other up” on “Shouldn’t Say Mine.” “I let my memories come in and dance with your shadow again” on the song of the latter name. “Now I know that all you said was written in the sand” in the smoldering “Annabelle Goodbye.” (One of the few with traces of anger in it.) “Eternity, I guess it’s not for me — find me the ledge” on the title track. (Which also sings about vampires?) Or the true hammer blow to the heart, “If true love hopes you’re happy, babe, I guess my love is false” on “True Love” — OOF.

It’s a time-honored trick to mask bitterness or heartache behind a blanket of bright sounds and sunny energy, but Johnson does it in devastating fashion here. The Everly Brothers were masters at it and Johnson channels their ghosts here frequently, both in sound and substance. (He name checks them in “Old TV,” just to make the influence crystal clear.) He does the departed proud, giving us a modern set of songs that extend their legacy while also speaking to the most universal of human experiences, love and loss.

Last but not least is the one that started things off, almost exactly a year ago in the dark days of winter, and did so fittingly from the same city as yours truly. It’s the debut album from hometowner Sofia Jensen, who happens to be an 18 year old kid, which only makes this album all the more impressive.

Musically it’s a lovely, muted album, one that rewards attentive listening and quiet contemplation as the lyrics of heartache and loss sink in. It’s the latter bit that’s so remarkable, though — to see someone so young address these weighty topics with such care and maturity is quite an accomplishment.

It starts with the lush pedal steel on the opening “Want to Know” (“don’t go back when you’re still the same — your intonation pushes me away”) and continues with the stately shuffle of “Keep in Time.” (“I long to feel that again, not pretend that I’m blending in with nowhere to end.”) There’s the unrequited ache of “For Me To Find” and “Forgotten.” (“Imagine that you’re reaching out a hand — you pick me off the ground and understand that I’m holding it together for as long as I can” and “To think you fought something conceived so naturally, to think I felt something believed so beautifully,” respectively.)

There’s the jaded bitterness of someone twenty years her senior on “All my Thoughts” and “Growing Away.” (“Maybe you’d tell me about how close you got to saying sorry — that’s just something I think about when I’m dreaming” and “Even when you’re out to get me, never thought that you wld come to regret me,” respectively.) Or the blurry fog of unrequited (or broken) love in “Running Out,” the title track, and the closing “Traveling Show.” (“Walking out in a daze where every color just looks the same,” “What did I see when the landscape blurred? This sound surrounds me — it took too long to realize I want you around me,” and “The day when all the colors seemed to turn, it felt enough and I just came undone,” respectively.)

For someone to sing with such delicacy about these things is feat enough, but to do so with such lovely melodies — and to do so before you’ve hit your twenties — is even more so. Really, really excited to see where she takes us in the future. For now, enjoy the heck out of this one.

That’s all for now, amici — happy holidays and we’ll see you in the new year!

–BS

 

The Other Half of the Glass — More Filings From The Fifty Fifty Club

Continuing the theme from the previous post — and frankly the bulk of the year, for that matter — I thought it was time to share some more songs from the hit and miss roller coaster we’ve been on and ride into the weekend with a few more songs under our belts. For whatever reason the overarching pattern of this year has seemed to be moments of excellence and joy quickly tempered by those of mediocrity and frustration. (Some might merely call this “life” or “adulthood,” but I suspect an international conspiracy I’ve not yet managed to unravel instead — STAY TUNED for groundbreaking developments as I manage to unearth them…)

It’s held in everything from my professional and personal lives (relentless ridiculousness at work countered by momentary innovations and wins, an ongoing bounty of delights in my beloved city by the lake juxtaposed with COVID decimation and myriad other maladies) to my musical meanderings and most things in between. It’s been so pervasive it applies both between and within these categories — lousy day at work balanced by an amazing show or meal that night. Hellacious week shadowed by a heavenly weekend. Crummy song/album or two quickly followed by a couple winners. It’s been like this the entire year, with the past few weeks being perfect examples. Increasingly atrocious work weeks attacked afterwards by some amazing off hours adventures — shows by Jeselnik, Bargatze, and the Hives, along with a visit from one of my favorite humans. Outstanding show by MMJ last night preceding what will almost certainly be the worst work week yet.

The music by and large has been mostly the same — we highlighted a handful of examples last post from some long-time favorites and I’ve found several more since, each testing the old adage of whether the glass is half full or half empty. As always I strive to focus on the former (am I not Bobby Sunshine?) and we’ll keep those efforts up here with seven sets of selections to super-size your weekend. We’ll start with the ones that test that adage the most before sliding into those more obviously overflowing examples, with the first being another pair of underwhelming albums from old faves.

The first comes from Parquet Courts frontman Andrew Savage who recently released his second solo album, Several Songs about Fire. It’s been two years since his last Courts album (2021’s Sympathy for Life, which landed at #14 on my year end list) and close to six since his solo debut (2017’s Thawing Dawn) and unfortunately this one mirrors more of the latter than the former.

Savage and his band are always an eclectic (and often amazing) listen — there’s the more straight ahead punk/indie songs of the flagship entity and the noisier, more experimental work of their alter ego Parkay Quarts, while his solo effort showed a more subtle, at times country vibe that added an interesting element to their/his repertoire. He leans into the latter here, giving just a couple tracks whose pace surpasses a lazy lope, and those end up being the ones that work best. Too often tracks meander without ever taking off (if these are songs about fire, they’re flicks on a lighter instead of sustained flames), but these two work really well. Check out “Elvis in the Army” and “David’s Dead” here:

 

Next comes the latest from NY/LA duo The Kills, back with their sixth album, God Games. It’s their first in nearly seven years (2017’s Ash and Ice) and unfortunately it deepens the slide begun there — that one had some solid tracks, but didn’t land on my year end list, breaking the streak of their previous three — yielding their most underwhelming album yet. For a duo known for its irresistible allure (they ooze cool, like my English aunt does gin fumes) and their taut marriage of slinky, slightly dangerous sounding songs, they’ve for some reason rendered the latter almost entirely impotent here. They’ve achieved this by largely stripping away half of their signature sound — Jamie Hince’s primal, fiery guitar — and instead given us an album of slower, at times almost sedated songs.

Similar to Savage’s the best tracks are the ones that most closely channel their “classic” sound. (I’m not looking to penalize artists for broadening their sound and trying something new. Not all experiments end up successes, though, and this unfortunately erases most of the things I love about this band.)  Allison Mosshart’s vocals still occasionally exude a sensuality that could stir the sensibilities of even the most steadfast of curmudgeons, but without the punctuation of Hince’s guitar (or a beat that rises above the resting heart rate of a blue whale) the songs mostly fall flat, hitting with the force of a spitball out of a soggy straw. Two in particular rise above, the opening “New York” and “103,” both of which are worth a listen. Give em a spin here:

 

We’ll start making the move to more solid footing with some mixed outings from some newcomers and a trio of former #Fridayfreshness champs from the sister site.  The first is the latest from Toronto band Zeus, back with their fourth album, Credo. It’s their first in nearly a decade (Classic Zeus came out in 2014) and as alluded to before it’s a mixed bag of an album.

The band has three different songwriters — multi-instrumentalists Neil Quin, Mike O’Brien, and Carlin Nicholson — and those disparate voices/influences lead to a somewhat incoherent feel as they bounce from style to style. There’s an 80s era Dire Straits and the Cars vibe to some tracks, while others have more modern echoes of bands like Cold War Kids and War on Drugs. None of those are bad on their own, it just prevents things from gelling quite as strongly overall — perhaps if there were a few less voices/styles vying for attention it would seem less jarring. That said there are still several solid tracks that’ve been getting stuck in my head and are worth sharing — here’s a mini EP with three of my faves: “Air I Walk,” Kickin’ up the Dust,” and “Candy:”

 

Next up comes Nashville’s Natural Child, back with their seventh album, Be M’guest. (Their last, self-titled album came out in 2020.) As I noted on the ‘Gram during their coronation, these guys mix rock, country, and blues styles in their songs and there’s everything from swampy ZZ Top and Skynyrd elements to flickers of forebears like Jimmy Buffet and Chuck Berry on the album. For some reason the variety coheres a bit better here than on Zeus’ album (maybe because the influences are cousins instead of mere cohabitants), but the Southern-inspired songs are my faves.

Tracks like the Skynyrd-flecked “Mexican Adderall” or the ZZ-esque “Check the Mirror”/”Lost and Found” are all great, with most of them showcasing some ripsh#$ little runs by guitarist Seth Murray that’re sure to get the pulse/fist pumping.  Don’t sleep on the one that won on the sister site either, “Tell Me I’m Wrong.”  A fun, light album good for getting you in a groove — give the tunes a taste here:

 

Speaking of ripsh#$ riffs — Boston’s Palehound. Otherwise known as frontwoman/guitarist Ellen Kempner, bassist Larz Brogan, and drummer Zoe Brecher, they’re the last of the former #freshness champs, back with their recently released fourth album, Eye on the Bat. (Their third, Black Friday, came out in 2019.) This one brings to mind 90s era acts like Liz Phair and Tracy Bonham with its confessional lyrics and toughness (alongside some of the aforementioned grungy guitars).

Kempner toggles between a delicate coo and a slightly more ferocious wail with her delivery and her guitar playing definitely throws off some sparks. (The rhythm section of Brogan and Brecher isn’t too shabby either…) I really dig some of the melodies, too — similar to the last two there’s a trio of faves to note here as well. Check out the killer triple play (which hit 2-3-4 on the album) of “Independence Day,” “The Clutch,” and the title track here:

 

We’ll close with another duo, this time a pair of Spots spillovers and new finds, the first of which is South Carolina’s SUSTO. Primarily the product of singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Justin Osborne (who’s since been backed by a medley of supporting musicians) the band is back with their fifth album, My Entire Life. They last released an album less than two years ago (2021’s Time in the Sun), but they’re back for more with another dozen songs here and it’s a mostly solid bunch.

This one kept coming on after I’d listen to other albums, constantly hitting me with one song or another, and after the fourth or fifth time I decided to see why the Spots was being so forceful with its recommendations. (Maybe this is part of that international conspiracy I mentioned at the top? — I’m adding it to the flow chart. We’ll get to the bottom of this yet!) Writ large this one’s got a nice feel good vibe that reminds me a bit of Mt Joy/Caamp/Oliver Hazard, and while sometimes things veer a bit too close towards Christian rock for my taste, there’s more than enough for secular heathens such as I to enjoy. Check out three of my faves — “Mt Caroline,” “Hyperbolic Jesus,” and “Cowboys” here:

 

Last but not least is another album full of good tunes, the self-titled fourth release from Athens, Georgia’s New Madrid. It’s a bit of an older album — it came out nearly two years ago — but similar to SUSTO’s it slipped in after listening to one of my other albums and immediately grabbed my ear. (Unlike the aforementioned this one only came on once, but that single listen was enough to drive me straight to the album and I’ve been obsessively listening to it ever since.)

It’s a really good album — it reminds me a bit of Vundabar and the Shins at times — and there are loads of good tunes filling its forty minutes. Opening “I Want It” and “Are You the Wind” have an effervescent energy and pace, while back half tracks like “I Tried to Wait” add some heft with its gonzo sax freakout and muscular riff. Three of many faves include “It’s OK (2 Cry),” “Queen for a Day,” and “Q&A” — give each of em a listen here:

 


We’ll close with some reading material, walking us through some recent anniversaries of some classic albums. First up is the 30 year (holy fu#$, how is that possible) anniversary of the Smashing Pumpkins’ monster breakthrough Siamese Dream. The article does a good job highlighting both the importance of the album, as well as the issues frontman Billy Corgan causes fans (then and now). He’s undeniably been the driving force behind the band since the beginning (although I’ll argue drummer Jimmy Chamberlin might be the most important), a fact that’s done almost as much damage as good, particularly in recent years — the right-wing conspiracy theories, marrying someone he himself joked seemed young enough to be his daughter (in his own wedding speech!), and just misunderstanding what made albums like this so special and beloved.

It wasn’t just how hard it rocked, it was how it balanced that with sweet, swirling subtler notes and sincere, vulnerable lyrics. (See Zeitgeist for what an album solely full of rawking Pumpkins sounds like.) For years I took it for granted how great this band was — Corgan went to the high school across town and the band was constantly on local radio before they blew up and dominated MTV — but albums like this remind you why they were never going to stay secret for long, the songs were simply too good. Take a listen to two of my faves, the thundering “Quiet” and the understated “Spaceboy” here:

 

Up next comes the other side of the coin and what should have been a monster band — NY’s The Rapture and the 20th anniversary of their masterful Echoes. The fact these guys didn’t become sustained superstars remains something of a headscratcher, though the article (as well as the fantastic Meet Me In The Bathroom, which is required reading for any fan of 00s indie music) do a good job giving a glimpse of why — bad timing of the album’s release, battling egos and oversized personalities, etc — which only makes it more unfortunate when you listen to this album.

This remains among my top five albums from that era and one of my overall faves — it still sizzles 20 years on, and that’s even if you ignore the irresistible juggernaut that is “House of Jealous Lovers.” (Which you can’t do, even for a silly hypothetical exercise — the track is that good.) Frontman Luke Jenner’s nasally, slightly deranged falsetto was the perfect foil to the rest of the band’s sledgehammer grooves — he’d draw you in on slower songs like “Open up Your Heart” and “Infatuation” and then soundtrack your screams as your brain broke down on jagged bangers like “The Coming of Spring” and “Heaven.” (He also stars in some of the funniest stories/has some of the best lines in Bathroom — yet another reason to read that fantastic book.)

The band mostly kept the groove going for their follow on Pieces Of The People We Love, but by the time they recorded their final album In the Grace of Your Love they were almost a completely different band — far more subdued and spiritual, with barely a glimpse of the punky dancefloor destroyers they used to be. (Still a good album — it landed at #8 on my 2011 list — just a completely different feel, like going to church Sunday morning instead of the club the night before.) Like I said, it still bums me out 20 years later, but we’ll always have this gem to hold onto — crank up the title track and the equally unstoppable “Sister Saviour” and remember why here:

 

Last but not least we’ll close the library with another 20th anniversary remembrance, this time for the beloved Kentucky quintet My Morning Jacket and their perennial classic It Still Moves. As the eight of you occasional readers are abundantly aware, this is one of my favorite bands — their albums often end up on my year end lists (their last two landed at #4 in 2021 and #10 the year before), I’ve ranked all their albums and even given a concentrated starter kit for which songs the uninitiated should listen to first. In short, I love them, and this album (as the article notes) remains the pinnacle for a great many fans. (Including me.)

I’ve enjoyed the odder, funkier moves they’ve made since (the outer space explorations of Jim (or Yim’s) cape era) as well as their frequent returns to the warm, pastoral elements so often in view here, but it’s this album’s masterful collection of the latter which remains the high point. Its songs remain a stalwart of the live shows, accounting for anywhere from 15-20% of their setlists even now, despite having released six studio albums since then. I had the distinct pleasure of seeing them perform the album in its entirety the other night and it was every bit as transcendent as it’s so often been over the past 20 years. (This is a band that knows how to nail mind-wreckingly uplifting live shows — they’re flat out one of the best performers out there — but even having seen them do it a dozen times or so over the years, this show was on a whole other level.) It’s almost impossible to pick a favorite, but here’s two I always come back to, the slowly building face melter “Run Thru” and the fall on the floor beauty “Steam Engine.” Give em (and then the entire album) a spin here:

 

Finally I’ll leave you with the speech from Tom Morello last weekend for Rage Against the Machine’s induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Morello was there on his own — not entirely unexpected for Zach to be absent (although he did induct Patti Smith in 2007), but I was somewhat surprised that Brad and Tim weren’t there. Nevertheless, the Rage guitarist delivered an outstanding speech, a call to arms every bit as undeniable as the band’s songs. If you aren’t moved to do something — start a band, run for office, protest (or stir up a SH#$load of trouble) — I don’t know what’s wrong with you. So do as the man says — crank up the Rage and go make this place something worth shouting about.

Until next time, amici… — BS

A Series of Stumbles — Six Stars, Slightly Dimmed, Yet Still Shining

Normally I try to live up to the sunnier side of my nickname and focus on the positives here in lieu of the sarcastic side and its shadows, but as I’ve spent the better part of the last three weeks watching my Cubs self-destruct (losing 13 of the last 19 to almost certainly torpedo their post-season chances), the Bears continuing a year-long tradition NO one in town thinks is wise (losing thirteen in a row with a possible fourteenth in line tomorrow, as they’re somehow underdogs AT HOME to a team that just got lit up for 70 points), and work remaining an almost perpetual infuriation (bringing flashbacks to the 12-14 hour daily dances with the DPM when I worked for Uncle Sam) I’m struggling to fulfill that goal a bit. As such I thought I’d take a moment to dip into the darkness, engaging a string of recent albums from artists I normally love that’ve been a bit disappointing to highlight the bright spots and try and drag things back into the light. After all, there are still two games left for the Cubbies — and fourteen for the Bears! — so you never know what’s going to happen.  Who knows, maybe even work can turn things around after nearly four years of momentum and certain people’s perpetual prickishness/stupidity. NOTHING’s impossible, after all — or I’m not Bobby Sunshine!

We’ll start simply — with bands whose stuff I’ve enjoyed over the years, but who don’t have as much material under their belts as the others — before diving into the deeper cuts (both in terms of catalogs and subsequent wounds). First up comes the latest from Boy and Bear, the Aussie band whose first two albums (2011’s Moonfire and 2013’s Harlequin Dream) won me over before their next two committed the dreaded Sunshine Sin and amped up the synthesizers. (Thankfully not on every song, just enough to buck me off the bandwagon.) The new one continues that trend some, sprinkling that slick 80s feel in more than I care for, but there are a few tracks that still caught my ear — the opening “Strange World” and the bouncy “Silver Moon.” Both sport some catchy little riffs and frontman Dave Hosking’s voice remains as warm and inviting as ever (the former even surpasses the knock of a little synth!) Check out the duo here:

Next comes a duo of dancers — or what used to be acts that inspired said activity — and a pair of pairs, both of which beam in from Britain. The first is the relative newcomer Jungle, back with their fourth album, Volcano. (Their last, 2021’s Loving in Stereo, landed at #16 on my year-end list.) Despite the fiery name, the thought that most comes to mind for this one is “remarkably unremarkable” — the songs, while pleasant enough, sound so similar to one another that they all sort of run into one another after awhile. This unfortunately is something that has plagued the band before — their sophomore album For Ever was also an uneven disappointment after their exciting debut — but I’d thought they’d recaptured the magic after their last outing. Unfortunately not (maybe this is just an on/off band who alternates albums every other time), but there were fittingly two tracks that stuck out to me — the buoyant “Candle Flame” and the bright “PROBLEMZ,” which sounds like a Caribbean disco. They both stand out amongst the otherwise underwhelming remainder — give em both a spin here:

Next comes the latest from the legendary Chemical Brothers, back with the tenth album of their illustrious career. And while the boys can almost always be counted on to boost the mood and raise the temperature of whatever room they’re playing in, this one feels much more muted in its impact. Almost every Chems album plays like a mixtape or DJ set in miniature — slowly building you to a series of climaxes before ultimately setting you on your way with a nice, soft landing. (Their last landed at #12 on my 2019 list.) This one feels more like an extended session from the tail end of one of those sets, though, largely keeping things subdued and serene, like a nice long cooldown after a leisurely jog. There’s hardly any vocals and scarcely a single celebrity (Beck, who adds some croons to his tune towards the album’s end, being the sole anomaly) and while what’s here is the typically well-made music you’d expect from someone doing this for nearly thirty years, it lacks the punch of their more memorable material. That said there were a trio of tracks I thought were reminiscent of their old glory and possible harbingers of the album kicking into a higher gear — “No Reason” with its tribal drum breakdown at the end, “The Weight” with its “Block Rocking Beats” style bass, and “Feels Like I Am Dreaming” with its jittery “Under the Influence” style squelches — but they never really erupted into a characteristic explosion, more serving as momentary exclamation points before settling back into the soothing post-run stretch. Still worth giving them a listen, though — cue em up here:

Batting fourth are New York’s Woods, back with their eleventh album Perennial, their first since 2020’s Strange to Explain, which landed at #13 on that year’s list. This one finds them mining similar territory — toggling between pastoral homestead and spaced out dreamscape, as I wrote then — but this time the balance isn’t as sharp and the album suffers as a result.  Here they veer more towards the latter with a series of instrumentals and songs that essentially are, sporting the barest of vocals before dropping back into the groove. As a result they (and the album) never quite take off, squandering the momentum generated by the more “traditional” songs, which are quite good. “Between the Past” has that blissed out hypercolor vibe the band’s best songs often evoke, while “Sip of Happiness” and “Weep” have a slightly darker sense of propulsion that’s equally irresistible. They definitely sparkle against their otherwise nondescript surroundings and leave you wishing there was more like them — see what you think here:

Fittingly up fifth is Austin’s Shakey Graves, who recently released his fifth album overall and his first in five years, Movie of the Week. (His last was 2018’s equally disappointing Can’t Wake Up.) As I recently wrote on the ‘Gram I was 50/50 on the tracks he’d released thus far — the excellent “Ready or Not” and the gonzo drum freakout of “Playing Along” being two distinct faves — and sadly that ratio has largely stayed the same upon listening to the full album. Graves is still spending more of his time with his more modern sounding music — which could, in fact, lend itself nicely to the soundtrack of various movies or TV shows, as the title seemingly implies: it’s pleasant, it’s innocuous, and it’s almost tailor-made to be the secondary focus of whatever scene it’s supporting.

There’s none of the emotional fire and potency that propelled so much of his earlier material — when it was just him onstage with his acoustic and suitcase kick drum.  Strangely the more musicians Graves has surrounded himself with (he now tours with a five piece supporting him), the more diluted and disconnected his music has become. This is a tremendous disappointment, as he was one of my favorite discoveries of the past decade, sounding like some unearthed treasure from a time capsule or tomb. (He made my anniversary list for the best albums of the past 15 and has made the year-end list several times, most recently in 2017.) There’s still glimmers of that past, but they’re sadly becoming more of a rarity, so we’re left to savor those scant glimpses when we get them. In addition to the previous two songs posted on the ‘Gram, I also enjoyed “Evergreen” and “Century City,” which are actually much more in line with his recent material (at least the latter), but catchy nonetheless. See what you think here:

Last comes the latest from the National — a band that used to be one of my absolute faves, but one that has lost a lot of its luster in recent years. Five, ten years ago hearing that I’d get not one, but TWO albums from this band in a six month period would have been enough to send me into the stratosphere — Boxer remains one of my top shelf, close to the heart listens and Alligator isn’t far behind, and the guys have made my annual lists several times since then. (They last did so in 2017 with Sleep Well Beast, which landed at #9.)

Unfortunately they seem to have lost their way recently — the first signs of danger were when they did the typical veteran rock band thing and invited a bunch of guest musicians in to spark some new ideas on their previous album (the flurry of female vocalists from 2019’s disappointing I Am Easy to Find).  The fact they did so again for this year’s outings only furthered the concern, broadening it to both genders this time with the likes of Bon Iver, Sufjan Stevens, Taylor Swift, and Phoebe Bridgers showing up. And despite some solid efforts by those artists, what’s left is less than you’d expect from all that firepower — songs feel somewhat diminished and diffuse in their impact and almost as easily forgotten.

I struggled with the first album a lot this year — more than almost any other so far — in part because guitarists Aaron and Bryce Dessner contribute some of their best work in years. The riffs on songs like “Eucalyptus,” “Tropic Morning News,” and “Grease in your Hair” all soar and immediately draw you in. Unfortunately frontman Matt Berninger’s lyrics and his croaky delivery all too often counteract those elements and grate. Berninger has been known to be somewhat cryptic before, however here his choices are esoteric to the point of being exclusionary.  Mentions of tangerine perfume, Japanese novelty bongs, talking to sharks in a Kentucky aquarium, and water balloon eyes seem deliberately inscrutable and sap the songs of their relatability by being too specific. Before it didn’t matter where the nearest city middle was (the one where they hang the lights), you just knew you wanted to go there (maybe looking for astronauts or the geese of Beverly Road on the way.) Now Berninger — potentially in an attempt to shake the writer’s block he said he’s had for several years — seems to have overcorrected, bearing down on details to the point that he’s left with an audience of one. Gone is the slightly fuzzy universality of his most affecting, emotional stuff, where you might not understand everything he referenced but could easily find something comparable from your experience or share the feelings he exuded in his delivery. Now the pictures he paints feel superficial in spite of the precision and unnecessarily narrow, draining them of a much broader appeal and impact.

And yet I keep coming back, unable to fully shake it — just like the aforementioned teams at the top.  Maybe this bodes well for them — if I can come around on these albums, finding positives amidst a pool of problems, maybe they can too for? Probably not (at least not for the Cubbies — time’s just too short at this point), but it’s worth a shot. Maybe once the dust has settled we’ll find a few more highlights to hold onto for next season. (Or the next listen.) Either way, check out a few of my favorites from the two albums — “Once Upon a Poolside,” “New Order T-shirt,” and “Deep End (Paul’s in Pieces).” Give all three a listen here:

That’s all for now, my friends…
–BS

 

Battle of the Band(camp) — A Holiday Hit Parade

In honor of the long weekend and my fervent hope that we can celebrate the titular labor by not doing any — the eight of you fair readers, and most certainly myself — I thought I’d drop in with some recommendations to hopefully incentivize that activity and soundtrack your lazy days. And since this week was Bandcamp Friday thought I’d offer some of the highlights from the horde of treasures I managed to stash away — thirty albums and two hundred bucks worth by the time I was all done! (Don’t worry, we won’t do anywhere close to that many — remember: it’s a no work weekend!)

First up comes last year’s album from Josiah and the Bonnevilles, the aptly named 2022. These guys were the product of another Spotify spillover, coming on after listening to one album or another recently (I think it was either Isakov’s or Oliver Hazard’s new ones, which are fair comparisons) and I was immediately drawn to their hooky melodies. The backstory on the band is its founder, lead singer and songwriter Josiah Leming, dropped out of high school to tour the country, living out of his car while doing gigs, and eventually was noticed nationally when he became a contestant on American Idol.  He didn’t make the cut, but was given a record deal anyway (heck of a consolation prize!), however when his debut failed to make waves (2010’s Come on Kid) the label dropped him.

Undeterred Leming moved back to his native Tennessee, added guitarist Stephen Johnson and bassist/percussionist Josh Nyback as the aforementioned Bonnevilles, and eventually shifted their sound to a mix of spare, simple folk and unobtrusive country.  It works really well — Leming’s pinched, nasal delivery has a touch of early Dylan to it and the band’s songs toggle effectively between those two genres, highlighting the allures of both without succumbing to some of their cringier elements (particularly those of the latter).  The album is a mix of singles they released throughout the year, some originals and some choice covers that appear both here and on the again aptly titled Country Covers album they released around the same time. (Their Taylor Swift cover of “Anti-Hero” appears on both, alongside covers of tracks from Bon Iver, Kate Bush, and Glass Animals on the latter.)

Two of my favorites come one a piece from those aforementioned categories — the first is an original, one that lies more in that traditional country vein, both lyrically and tonally. It’s another song about lovin’ n’ losin’ and that duo’s perennial pal alcohol, this time remembering when the narrator used to fall in love without it. It’s a solid, forlorn little ballad that’ll have you singing along in sympathetic misery (just as the best country tunes always do). The second comes from the cover category and similar to Swift’s appears on both the band’s albums last year. It’s a cover of Justin Bieber, of all people, and their really nice version of his song “Ghost.” Existential questions around what my liking this song means aside (am I a Belieber now? Do I need to register with the local police or something?) it’s a really nice song, whether you know its origins or not. Check both of them out here:


Next comes a track from recent #fridayfreshness champ Duff Thompson and his 2020 debut album Haywire. Thompson won the competition on the backs of the first single from his upcoming sophomore album Shadow People (due out Oct 27) and this was a compelling enough listen to drive me down the rabbit hole to his other material, which amounts to this album at this point. Based on the little I can find it seems Thompson began his musical career as a producer, only starting to perform as a solo act in 2016, but those early outings encouraged him to keep writing original material, which culminated in a really nice debut a few years later. On it he draws from some of the best elements of his native New Orleans, with his music being described as “a swampy blend of folk, pop, and garage rock.

You clearly get hits of all those flavors on the album’s brisk 10 track, half hour duration and its brevity definitely leaves you wanting more — a positive sign for the upcoming October release. Thompson’s voice reminds me a bit of Richard Swift’s and Hamilton Leithauser’s and his channeling of those guys’ warmth and (at times beleaguered) charisma carries you through what often sounds like a relic of another era, as his weathered voice and production give the songs a vintage feel far beyond their modern origins. Two of my favorites straddle the folk/pop and garage rock divides mentioned earlier and serve as bookends to the album — the former yielding the dusty opening gem “Sleight of Hand” and the latter the rollicking, foot stomping finale “The Long Haul.”  Give the pair a listen here:


Last entry from the highlight reel is the 2019 debut from Utah quartet The Backseat Lovers, When we Were Friends. I found these guys thanks to a recommendation from one of the Sunbeams, Doc, who amazingly doesn’t even remember making said suggestion. (When I told him I was really digging the rec he made he was stupefied — didn’t recognize the song, denied that it was him, and still has no recollection even when I showed him the conversation to jog his memory (Public Service Announcement — drinking on the job is a dangerous pastime, kids, and not something you should EVER do — even if you only work at a tech startup and not as a paramedic or pilot or something…)) His amnesia actually makes finding these guys seem even more fortuitous — like the cosmos used him to channel this information to me for whatever reason — and I’m grateful for their intervention as I’ve really enjoyed listening to them the past few months.

The band formed five years ago when lead singer/guitarist Joshua Harmon and guitarist Jonas Swanson met while waiting in line for an open mic night in their hometown Provo, Utah. The pair hit it off, decided to form a proper band rather than continue their solo efforts, and added drummer Juice Welch and bassist KJ Ward to the mix shortly thereafter.  The four began practicing and writing their own material, winning a local battle of the bands later that year before self-releasing their debut EP Elevator Days by year’s end. They continued writing and recording, performing in and around Utah before self-releasing their aforementioned full length the following year. The early stuff reminds me a lot of Catfish and the Bottlemen and the Districts — full throated, high energy anthems with big bleeding hearts — while their more recent material (last year’s Waiting to Spill) is a little more subdued and experimental, giving off more of a Radiohead vibe at times.

It’s these early songs that are most irresistible to me and two of my current faves are “Kilby Girl” and “Sinking Ship.” The former is pure Catfish — just a huge, straightforward track about a 19 year old with a fake ID and a nose ring with all the necessary angst that you’d imagine. The latter gives off more of a Districts vibe with its slowly building tension, erupting with an absolutely epic ending that is great on album, but even more spectacular live. (I was really surprised at how good the band is live — the albums are undeniably solid and catchy, but I was floored at how much they open up when I caught them at Lolla recently and the songs become these enormous, leggy things. Super impressive…) Both are worth repeated listens — give em a spin here:

 


We’ll close with a handful that didn’t make the cut for the Bandcamp massacre, as they were uneven and/or slightly disappointing affairs, but still have a few tracks worth listening to. In no particular order:

    • The Country Westerns’ sophomore album Forgive the City doesn’t pack the punch of their solid debut, finding the trio stuck in a somewhat monotonous Replacements-style rock mode, but I really liked this one, which is more in line with their earlier material — check out “Speaking Ill of the Blues:”

    • Similarly disappointing was Noel Gallagher’s latest from his High Flying Birds enterprise, Council Skies, and while a lot of the big, sweeping cinematic feel is gone from their last album, there’s still a few that capture that compelling vibe — give “Pretty Boy” a listen here:”

    • Up third is the latest from Mapache, Swinging Stars. This one may be less monochromatic than the previous two albums in this list, but it lacks a cohesive sense of self, which is its downfall — there’s songs in Spanish, instrumentals, country songs, folks songs, songs that sound like the Beatles. It jumps around too much for its own good, which takes away from some strong songs on their own — my current fave is “People Please:”

  • And last but not least is a track from Justin Vernon (aka Bon Iver’s) solo album Hazeltons, which just got released on the Spots. It apparently comes from 2006 with the lead/title track serving as the genesis of the sound he would perfect on the amazing For Emma, Forever Ago. Other tracks are more in line with his more eclectic (some might say annoying) later material, but there are a handful of quiet, contemplative songs on here worth a listen. None moreso than that opening salvo, though — check out “Hazelton” here:

That’s it for now, my friends…
–BS

The Bobby Bash: A Festival for the Rest of Us

In honor of what used to be one of my favorite weekends of the year — Lolla’s three (now four) day extravaganza of excellent tunes — I thought I’d offer my own slightly more contained alternative, now that that festival’s lineups remain an almost overwhelming disappointment the past few years. (I think there were about five bands I’d like to have seen this year and that’s pushing it.) As a result, I’ve pulled together some of my favorite things I’ve been listening to lately for the inaugural SunChine Festival — so load up the Spotify queue, pour yourself a frosty beverage, and put on your favorite romper (it wouldn’t be a festival without them!) cuz the festival is about to begin!

We’ll start with a pair of albums that exemplify the season, exuding endless rays of sunshine and light. The front half comes from New Orleans duo Generationals, back with their seventh full length, Heatherhead.  For fans of the band it’s a solid set of their strongest tricks — slick synth tracks, as well as bright, lush pop tunes, all bathed in the shimmering sheen of the pair’s gauzy vocals. I’d lost touch with the band after the strong two year run of Heza and Alix (released in 2013 and 14, respectively), as they subsequently underwent a four year stretch without releasing any albums. I completely missed their return with another one-two punch of back to back albums (2018’s State Dogs and 2019’s Reader as Detective, which I’ve slowly been acquainting myself with) before again going dormant for four years.

Thankfully this one caught my eye, trumpeting their return and finding them in as good a form as ever. The pop songs have a bit of Richard Swift to them with their soaring feeling and luxuriant sound — tracks like the opening “Waking Moment,” “Eutropius (Give Me Lies),” and “Faster Than a Fever” are all excellent examples (just try not singing along with the chorus on the last one — positively huge) — while the pair’s more traditional synth tracks slither out of the speakers (songs like “Elena,” “Death Chasm,” and the (sorta) title track “Hard Times for Heatherhead” (with its killer Cure-like riff) all sizzle.) It’s a really good listen — perfectly paired with this next one, the latest from Brooklyn’s Beach Fossils.

These guys are back with their fourth album (their fifth if you count the jazz album they did reinterpreting their songs as piano ballads two years ago) and it’s thankfully an extremely solid return to form after that momentary diversion. It’s their first album of original songs in six years (2017’s Somersault, which landed at #6 on that year’s list, was their last) and it finds them mining the same sonic groove, albeit with some more melancholic lyrics this time around. Similar to the previous band these guys have always nailed the laid-back, swimming feeling to their songs (sometimes dubbed “surf pop”) and while they can instantly conjure that bright, sunny vibe, you miss out if you relegate them strictly to background “feel good” music.

Traditional tracks like “Sleeping on my Own,” “Run to the Moon,” and “Anything is Anything” all glow with the heat of the summer sun, making you want to lie down and let the waves break over you, but other tracks sport some interesting influences worth paying more attention to. Songs like “Dare Me” call to mind modern acts like Dehd, while tracks like “Don’t Fade Away” and “Tough Love” bring out early REM. (For their part “Feel So High” and “Numb” evoke The Cure.)  It adds some interesting wrinkles to the band’s sound and really rounds things out well. Check out the aforementioned “Don’t Fade Away” (and the opening “Waking Moment” from Generationals) here:

Next we’ll skip across the pond for the latest from the Scottish hip hop trio Young Fathers, back with their fourth (or sixth) album, depending on how you count, their first in five years. (2018’s Cocoa Sugar, which landed at #10 on that year’s list, was their last.) In their absence we’ve seen similar sounding acts spring up and grab the spotlight — from fellow citizens of the crown such as the mysterious Sault with their eclectic, powerful messages to multinational masses like Brockhampton with their polyphonic hip hop.  And while each of those acts have positive elements and outings, these guys sport something they’ve both lacked — consistency. Each of this act’s previous outings have been exciting, interesting listens, almost without fail, and this one’s no different.

Another jewelry box full of influences and opulence, this one starts off with the killer “Rice,” full of African drums and chanting choruses, and doesn’t look back until the closing “Be Your Lady” with its drum and bass style percussion and crooned verses. In between there’s a medley of other sounds — there’s the soaring, smoldering spiritual “Tell Somebody” and its companion, the joyful instrumental “Ululation” (featuring almost nothing but the titular bellows), there’s the twitchy “Shoot me Down,” which jitters and shakes before blossoming into a TV on the Radio style track midway through, and there’s ones like “Drum” and “Holy Moly” that throw everything into the pot and shine. It’s another really solid outing from the band that still doesn’t have many sonic peers — check out “Sink or Swim” here:

We’ll head south towards the palace and the third album from England’s Charlie Cunningham next, back for the first time since 2019’s Permanent Way. I first found Cunningham thanks to the bushels and bushels of fan mail I get (tip of the cap to the Mad Dog for this one) and immediately was drawn to his spare, lovely arrangements and his warm, angelic voice. There’s plenty of those here across the album’s eleven song span, along with some fond echoes of other artists to draw you in.

There’s touches of Nick Mulvey (“Shame I Know”), Badly Drawn Boy (“So It Seems”), and Jose Gonzales (“Watchful Eye”) here, as well as several songs of Cunningham strumming away with scarcely more than his acoustic guitar.  (“Friend of Mine,” “End of the Night”) The plaintive piano songs also shimmer, from the subdued “Starlings” and “Frame” to the slightly more upbeat elegance of “Pathways.” Top to bottom it’s a really pretty listen, none moreso than this one, the slow burning slinkiness of “Bird’s Eye View.” Check it out here:

We’ll stay in the kingdom for one more act, that being the Londoners of Shame, back with their third album, Food for Worms, their first since 2021’s excellent Drunk Tank Pink. (Which landed at #11 on that year’s list.) Nothing’s changed since then — they’re still dishing out taut post-punk gems, balancing furious rippers with moodier, more expansive jams on another album that’s certain to show up at the end of the year. Tracks like “Six Pack,” “Alibis,” and “The Fall of Paul” represent the former category with frontman Charlie Steen again offering some of the most satisfying moments as he spits out lines like “NOW YOU’VE GOT A SIX PACK” with almost utter derision.

Meanwhile songs like “Yankees,” “Adderall (End of the Line),” and “Orchid” show the band stretching out, slowly building the tension before blowing things apart in some truly satisfying climaxes. Guitarists Sean Coyle-Smith and Eddie Green continue to sprinkle songs with some sizzling riffs, as on the opening “Fingers of Steel” and “Different Person,” and the rhythm section of drummer Charlie Forbes and bassist John Finerty remain stolid supporters throughout. This one’s a lean, mean delight (it also sports one of my favorite album covers thus far, along with Young Fathers) — check out the scorching “Alibis” as proof:

We’ll head back to the states for the next act, Austin’s RF Shannon, who was a recent discovery as part of the sister site’s beloved ‘gram competition, #fridayfreshness. Shannon won thanks to the strength of single “Abalone,” which is a slinky slice of AM radio and was the gateway to me checking out the rest of the album when it dropped in May. It’s been in frequent rotation since then and doesn’t show signs of stopping. (It’s his third overall and his first in four years.)

From the sinister, sultry opener “Palmetto” to the stately, somber closer “Heathen Nights,” Shannon is something of a shapeshifter, effortlessly exuding a range of styles across the album’s nine tracks. There’s country notes (the slide guitar on “Midnight Jewelry,” which marries with a slowed down disco style Chic riff to winning effect, the fiddle on “Dublin, Texas,” which adds in a traditional Irish folk feel beyond the town’s name), there’s folksy ballads (the luxurious, lovely “Raindance #11” or the stately elegance of “Cedar Perfume”), there’s even touches of bands as disparate as Dire Straits and Wilco. (“Casinos in the Wild” and “So Down Low” being two respective examples.) Somehow it all works, held together by Shannon’s warm whisper and excellent melodies — really enjoying this one. Check out “So Down Low” here for a taste:

We’ll head west for the next visit, that of California’s Angelo de Augustine, another winner of the fabled #fridayfreshness crown. He won thanks to the lead single from his fifth album, Toil and Trouble, the wonderful, haunting “Ballad of Betty and Barney Hill.” That one called to mind fave among faves Elliott Smith and that memory/inspiration fills the majority of the album’s eleven other songs. It’s jarring at times just how well he’s channeled Elliott’s spirit and sound — his twin-tracked voice and whispered delivery are just the start (though perfectly captured).

There’s also the cryptic, slightly elliptical lyrics on songs like “Memory Palace,” “Song of the Siren,” or “Blood Red Thorn,” which shift like sand on a dune depending on the way the winds of your mood are blowing — always a hallmark of Elliott’s best. They also sport melodies that echo those found on Elliott songs (though just enough to remind you of their forebears vs ripping them off wholesale.) When it all comes together you almost forget that you’re not listening to him and some unearthed trove of lost songs. It’s a powerful potion, one that is enjoyable on its own merits while also simultaneously sad for reminding you he’s been gone for a staggering twenty years already. This one almost certainly will show up at year’s end as well, but in the meantime enjoy the bewitching time warp of a title track here:

We’ll hop up north to Canada next, visiting America’s fiery crown and the ever-lovely enigma that is Feist. Back with her sixth studio album, Multitudes, Ms Leslie returns after six years away with what is writ large her most subdued album yet. (Her last, 2017’s Pleasure, landed at #4 on that year’s list.) Aside from the opening “In Lightning” and back half gem “Borrow Trouble,” Ms Leslie spends the majority of the remaining time singing softly to her acoustic guitar with almost nary another accompaniment to be found.

For those who spent the pandemic streaming various artists’ impromptu shows (RIP the Tweedy Show, Gibbard’s gabs, and the Morbzahatchee Rodeos) it’s reminiscent of the videos Feist intermittently posted of her playing guitar on a radiator or in a random basement. They were quiet, contemplative, and witheringly pretty, as Ms Leslie’s best stuff always is, and there’s several songs here that live up to those standards. There’s “Forever Before” and its look at loneliness and solitude, the self-explanatory “Love Who We Are Meant To” and “Song for Sad Friends,” and the introspective ode of “The Redwing.” All draw you into their quiet splendor and the rare moments where Feist does throw in some additional elements they resonate all the more — the backing chorus of “Hiding Out in the Open” or the orchestral swells on “Of Womankind,” in addition to the aforementioned anomalies of “Lightning” and “Trouble.” It’s a slightly different listen than her previous outings, but a satisfying one nonetheless. Check out “Redwing” here:

We’ll close up shop in Chicago, fittingly bringing our festival to an end in the only place we’d ever think to hold it, our beloved city by the lake (#GPOE!) and we’ll do so with one of our own, 18 year old Sofia Jensen, who performs as Free Range. As if her age wasn’t enough of an indicator, Jensen is something of an anomaly — similar to several of her postmates she’s a former #fridayfreshness champ, but she’s one of the few to have won the title twice. The fact that I found her at all is something of a miracle — that one of her songs found its way into the limited space of the new release queue late last year (one of maybe three total she had ever recorded, as her album was not yet out) is surprising enough, but that I liked what I heard enough to win that competition (twice!) is even more improbable.

And yet that’s not all — almost as miraculous, her debut album somehow surpasses those surprises and exceeds expectations, giving us a top to bottom winner filled with really pretty songs. The two former champs (“Want to Know” and “All my Thoughts”) remain highlights, but they’re joined by a flurry of equally excellent songs — from the Fleetwood Mac-ish vibe of “On Occasion” to the loose, leggy “Growing Away” or “Running Out,” Jensen shows she’s got more tricks than simply the stabbing, solitary numbers. (Although those are real good when we get them — “For Me To Find,” the eponymous “Free Range,” and the beautiful “Traveling Show” are a few shining examples.) It’s a heck of an achievement — for anyone, let alone an 18 year old just getting started — and has been something I’ve listened to a ton lately. Really excited to see how she grows as a musician in the coming years. Close your eyes and check out “Traveling Show” — you won’t be disappointed (there’s only a live version posted, but it’s worth checking out — then go listen to the whole album and enjoy it even more):

That’s all for now, my friends — until next time… –BS

Star Spangled Bangers — Classic Rock and a Four-Pack Finale

It’s been a busy couple of weeks — parades, festivals, races, culminating with even the simple act of breathing turning into an arduous affair — but with the prospect of crawling into a long weekend thought it was time to finally surface again so the legions of fans who hang on my every recommendation could enjoy their time away without stress. (More importantly, if there’s anything as synonymous with mindless celebration and endlessly transmitting your thoughts as wisdom as this country on its birthday, it’s the unsolicited, unread ramblings I pass off as posts.) As such, get ready for your own personal fireworks display as I share some of my favorite finds of late, certain to brighten your barbecue and dazzle your days off.

First I wanted to share some reading material for those of you who may be heading to the beach for the long weekend. I recently finished Steven Hyden’s Twilight of the Gods: A Journey to the End of Classic Rock, which was one of many recent finds at my newest used book store. It’s a really fun read — Hyden (who used to write for the AV Club here and has several other books in my queue — one on Radiohead, another on Pearl Jam) systematically explains his love of classic rock by taking us on a tour of some of the biggest names in the genre. It’s part history lesson, as he talks us through dozens of legendary acts — from Springsteen and Dylan to the Beatles, Stones, Who, AC/DC, Aerosmith, Sabbath, Neil Young, the Dead, and even less respected acts like REO Speedwagon, Styx, and Phish. (Hyden says classic rock starts with Sgt Pepper and ends with NIN’s The Fragile, just to bound the debate.) It’s also part travelogue, as the topics often surface based on Hyden’s trips to the endless nostalgia/reunion tours these acts put on, part of his decades-long dedication to them, whether past their prime or not.

I almost categorically refuse to go see shows like this — the bands are often years (sometimes decades) past putting out new material (or material that’s any good, at least) and often have undergone so many lineup changes the only original entity left sometimes is the second bassist from the third album and the sound guy from the 60s. As such, they’re shells of their peak incarnations and thus almost always recipes for disappointment for me — so to hear some of the arguments from a fellow fan as to why he keeps going was interesting and enjoyable. (And I’m not made of stone — I briefly bypassed my boycott and went and saw the Walkmen recently, as I wrote about last time, and that was a solid showing from a long dormant fave.)

The whole book has that loose, engaging feel, as if you’re at the bar having a rolling debate with a similarly obsessed best friend. “Are you insane? There’s no way *** is a better band/album than ***!” or “That’s what I’ve been saying for years! *** really IS the best band/album!” (At least for me — though I am a similarly obsessed music fiend who’s spent decades writing a blog that next to no one reads, so maybe I’m the narrowly targeted demographic here…)

Sometimes he’s just debating himself — his internal dialogue over Pearl Jam vs Wilco (and subsequently Ed Ved vs Tweedy), provoked when he has to choose between which show to see as both bands are playing in his town on the same night, is fantastic. (Verdict — he chose to see Pearl Jam, but feels Wilco has the better discography, listens to it more often, and wishes to apologize to Mr Tweedy and the rest of the band as he feels guilt and remorse (though not regret) about his choice.) For the most part, though, it feels like Hyden is having the conversation with you, teeing up topics and statements almost guaranteed to generate a response.

He starts by establishing common ground, gradually growing into his potentially more provocative statements as the book carries on. Hyden’s early encapsulation of what drew him to the music is an example of the former and was particularly resonant to me — “What I loved about classic rock as a kid is it seemed to have been around forever. Classic rock was there before I was born, and I was sure that it would still be there long after I was gone. Plugging into that made me feel part of classic rock’s impermanence. Classic rock represented a continuum that had started long before me and reached all the way to the grunge bands that I loved in the present moment. It felt like the opposite of pop music, which was proudly disposable and all about the here and now. Pop was inherently nihilistic, whereas classic rock had roots that you could trace back as far as you cared to go.”

As a kid classic rock was this amorphous thing that I knew from listening to ‘CKG on the radio and from the records my mom and dad endlessly played around the house. The Beatles and Boss for mom, the Stones, Who, and Zep for Pops.  Plus countless other bands whose songs I knew all the words and melodies to, but took years to eventually learn who they actually belonged to, as my parents and the radio didn’t announce every track they played. (Or they got tired of me endlessly asking “who was that? Ooh who was that?” after something caught my ear.)

It was this established lineage that first appealed to my investigative spirit — this band was influenced by this one who had this guy on their album who worked with this other artist who used to be in this other band who opened for this other gal who was the daughter of this guy and on and on it went — you just kept pulling the thread and chasing it down countless rabbit holes until something else sparked your interest and sent you traipsing down other trails. This, in contrast to popular music of the day, which seemed either manufactured in a lab or deliberately opaque (or worse, actively rejecting the things that drove them to make music in the first place).

Fittingly — as they were the first classic rock band that felt like my own as a kid, as I wrote about a few posts ago — there’s a chapter early on about Zeppelin and it’s a good example of what’s in store for the other acts that follow. There’s clever, funny observations — “Led Zeppelin IV was so cool that it wasn’t technically called Led Zeppelin IV — it didn’t have a proper title…Fans called it Led Zeppelin IV, as opposed to Led Zeppelin 4, because Zeppelin albums had the weight of Super Bowls.” Or “Most albums — even others recognized as Greatest LPs of All Time — typically…[have] at least one or two tracks that are considered filler…but that’s the thing about Led Zeppelin IV — every song is important…Side one of Led Zeppelin IV is so great that it’s actually a little dull to talk about…it’s like explaining why oral sex is an enjoyable pastime — don’t blowjobsplain, dude…”)

There’s rules and structure to the analysis — “There are two unwritten rules about Led Zeppelin IV and the first is that your favorite track must come from side two. The other law is that Led Zeppelin IV is too popular to be your favorite Zeppelin album; this is why rock critics who try too hard always make a case for In Through the Out Door being Zeppelin’s best.” (In no way, shape, or form is this last bit even remotely plausible — gun to my head I still think I pick the original, just for top to bottom brilliance and overall importance (you never forget your first love, I guess), but NO ONE can make an argument for Out Door that isn’t laughable. To riff off his earlier analogy, that’s like someone talking about all the oral sex their ‘friend’ is having and how you don’t understand the obsession/mind that you don’t get any/want it even if offered — just ask nicely and maybe you’ll get what you’re after, buddy, but please stop spouting nonsense…)

And there’s just flat out great lines (which also double as good topics for separate debate) — “‘Stairway’ is what happens when the lights are on; ‘Levee’ is strictly lights-out material, conjuring the feral sound of pure sexual and spiritual foreboding. Never in recorded history has [something] seemed so seductive and terrifying.” (FWIW I pass both this and his previous test as “Levee” has always been, and probably always will be, my favorite Zeppelin track — and not just on IV — whereas I skip “Stairway” to this day when it comes on. The haunting harmonica and those incredible, otherworldly drums — which as we know from the Bonham post was a miracle we almost didn’t get to enjoy — destroyed my brain the first time I heard them and have continued to after decades of listens.)

Hyden has similar highlights for scads more bands/things along the way, almost always inviting a response as you read — here are a few others (along with my thoughts in parens, essentially capturing the dialogue I was having with the inanimate book in my hands as I read — and people say I’m crazy…):

On the importance of albums“I still care about albums, because I want to believe in albums…Our current world is a place where algorithms help us find an approximation of what we think we want. But the best albums deliver something you never knew you wanted. And it might take years of listening to the same record — over and over, because it hasn’t yet quite connected — before you finally get it.”

(There have been lots of these for me over the years — notable ones I remember being Portishead’s debut, which I loved the single from but couldn’t quite wrap my head around the rest of, before ultimately becoming one of my ongoing obsessions in college and overall faves. Or Nirvana’s In Utero, which I thought was good, but was so loud and raw sounding compared to Teen Spirit that it took me a while to come around to (its singing about turning black from cancer while my mom was slowly being destroyed by the same disease didn’t help either) but now I actually prefer to its predecessor.

Or NIN’s Downward Spiral, which I almost took back immediately after buying it at Best Buy and listening to it on the drive home. I loved the single there, as well, but the rest was just so different. So ANGRY. I hadn’t yet been knocked onto the path of grizzled, almost obstinate resistance and fighting that would characterize my following two-plus decades, so wasn’t ready for that level of ferocious rage. (I would be very shortly thereafter when Moms finally succumbed to her near-three year fight — then that album (and Rage’s first two — two other examples I didn’t really like/get at first) would become veeeeeeeeeeeery close friends…))

On guilty pleasures — “Now there’s even cachet associated with appreciating joyously inane mainstream culture. Which means that if you’re a forty-five-year-old man who loves Carly Ray Jepsen, you probably don’t ever shut the hell up about it. However, guilty pleasures haven’t completely gone away, the definition has just shifted. There are plenty of music opinions that you’re not allowed to share publicly without shame, it’s just that most of them have little to do with silly, frothy pop. Loving Carly Rae Jepsen is now acceptable, but loving, say, the jam-band stylings of Phish is not. I know this because I love Phish, and I can already feel you judging me about it…Phish proves that it’s possible to be well-known without being famous; for decades, they have existed in a bubble that has only slightly grazed the mainstream on a small handful of occasions. The only thing most people know about Phish is that they hate Phish.”

(I’m not a big fan (phan?) of the band — though I do still really like disc one of the double live album that came out when I was in college. And I DID spend a summer on the road serving pizza at shows on their (then) farewell tour, sleeping in the back of my Honda Civic and mesmerizing stoners with my dough tossing skills (and the stuffed crust pizza I created with them, subsequently stolen by the evil corporate henchman of Pizza Hut). And while I’m probably never going to say “hey let’s put on a Phish album” or go to another show, I appreciate the enthusiasm their fans have and the happy, joyful vibe of their shows.

Case in point, one of the shows during that summer was at a cow farm somewhere in rural Pennsylvania (or maybe New York? Or Vermont? It was a LONG summer) and as a result there was a literal mountain of cow shit right next to the camping grounds — maybe two, three stories tall and half a city block wide (or at least that’s how it looked/smelled when you sized up its impact.) It had rained (and continued to) for about 24 hours straight, turning the ground into a soupy, smelly miasma that everyone had to miserably trudge through — to get to their tents, to the port-a-potties, to the stages and back — and it was a hundred degrees outside once it finally stopped downpouring.  So the conditions were miserable, every person/thing was covered in a mix of mud, sweat, and liquid cow shit (and the swarms of flies and mosquitoes prone to feed on said substances), and yet somehow almost everyone was in a great mood for the affair. People were pumped for pizza, pumped for Phish, pumped for LIFE, maaaaaan!  Which taught me two very important lessons — a) some people — either thanks to their wiring, discipline, and/or sheer obliviousness — are able to be happy even in the most miserable conditions, which is something laudable to remember and strive for and/or b) marijuana is a hell of a drug, able to lift your spirits even if they’re drowning in a sea of patchouli and manure.)

On the Beatles — “Sgt Pepper is to Magical Mystery Tour what Is This It is to Room on Fire — the first Strokes album gets all the hype, but the follow-up that everyone always dismisses as crap is actually stronger.”

(I get what he’s saying here and mostly agree — both these second albums catch sh#$ for being disappointments, particularly in light of their much-hyped predecessors (although who in their right mind is going to say Room is a BAD album and dismiss it as crap?! That’s just ridiculous.) And I may actually prefer Mystery to Sgt Pepper (or at least don’t go back to the latter much, but do occasionally spin the former), but there’s no way Room on Fire is better than Is This It. At best you might be able to get me to entertain it as a close second, but there’s zero chance you’re going to get me to agree that it’s BETTER than that debut. I still have the British version of that one on a burned disc somewhere (before they re-recorded/balanced it for the US version, stripping out the rawness (and “NYC Cops”) and it’s still a near-perfect listen. So while I agree Room on Fire is a really GOOD album (“Automatic Stop” is still one of my absolute favorites) you’re out of your mind if you think it’s better than that classic.)

On Dylan“Dylan’s methods have always been primitive and slapdash compared with the pop geniuses of his time. He gets bored playing anything more than once. He’s quick to say ‘good enough…’ For years he routinely left some of the best songs off his albums…It’s not an exaggeration to suggest…that bootleggers have had better taste in Dylan’s music than Dylan himself.” [Which begs the question] “Does Dylan intentionally make it hard for his most ardent followers to hear some of his best material? Or is it possible that he’s held back so much music because he honestly believes that the best versions of his songs don’t yet exist?”

(Dylan, for me, is something of a mystery. I understand the importance and like some of the albums/songs — Blonde on Blonde, Bringing it All Back Home, and Highway 61 are albums I listened to a bunch in college and the greatest hits albums were filled with good stuff, but nothing since the 70s ever caught me and I don’t often find myself going back even to the aforementioned ones much — but don’t get the undying devotion so many folks show. (And definitely don’t get the continued “genius” critiques — or Grammy noms/wins — for recent outings.) I guess he’s sort of like the pyramids to me — they’re iconic, they’ve been around forever, and were the site of worship to a dedicated band of followers, but they look (/sound) a little ragged now and I’ve no real interest in seeing them in person.)

On women“Since the beginning of time, women have been the greatest rock fans. No band has ever formed with the intention of attracting a room full of guys. A guy-heavy audience is the absolute worst for rock ‘n’ roll — who wants to play for plain, basic, boring-ass dudes? Women dance. Women scream. Women look glamorous when they’re sweaty — unlike men, who just look sweaty. Women also have the best taste….Women will stand by you even if you’re considered uncool by so-called experts. They’re always the ones you want in your corner.”

(Women are great — no argument here. If you know any who love music, Chicago, and bald dudes with bulldogs and beards, let me know.)

On the irrepressible allure of Fleetwood Mac“Just try to find an uncompelling photo of Fleetwood Mac taken at any point between 1975 and 1987. I’ve spent hours scouring Google Images in search of a single Fleetwood Mac band photo to which I am not sexually attracted, and failed every time.”

(This is an attractive band — no argument here either. Let’s drink some cranberry juice and just bliss out to “Dreams,” shall we?)

Over the course of all these conversations I very rarely was not nodding my head in agreement — I’m still not a huge Springsteen fan (though obviously respect the craft, impact, and dedication to playing 3-hour shows every night for this many years), nor do Dylan or Phish do it for me (though really enjoyed both those chapters, as cited above). The one exception probably was when he took a shot at the Prodigy (“Virtually nobody remembers them now, but for about six months in 1997, some very overexcited music critics tried to convince readers that the Prodigy were the Sex Pistols of electronic music.”) (A) I very much remember them and B) still think their ’97 album Fat of the Land i) rocks and ii) remains a classic of the genre. (And there are plenty of good tracks off their first two albums — and the follow-on to Fat — too, which actually makes them more productive than the Sex Pistols, even if those other albums didn’t shred quite as hard as that big one.)

Overall, though, whether you like the bands/artists he’s describing, I think you’ll undeniably enjoy the journey — and maybe even be enticed to go back and revisit some of these bands, just to see if maybe you missed something before. Hyden’s summation at the end on the continued importance of classic rock brings it all home nicely — “When I was a kid, classic rock was a fantasyland populated by the impossibly cool and occasionally wise, where revelatory feats of daring and moxie were perpetuated in smoky concert halls and expensive recording studios by damaged geniuses and noble fools. Inside every album lay mystery, danger, sex, laughs, and maybe a good tip or two on how to live. It was a seductive place that I never wanted to leave, even after I grew up. And, I guess, I never did.”

So the next time you see an announcement for one of those ancient acts of your parents’ adolescence coming to town, don’t scoff and speak of them derisively — think of the Stevens in the crowd (or the Phish pholk!), showing their gratitude for what they were, not necessarily what they now ARE, and if nothing else maybe give them another listen. You might remember something you’ve loved/left behind!


In honor of the 4th we’ll close with a quartet of albums getting frequent spins lately — the first of which comes from RTJ fave Killer Mike, back with his first solo album since 2012’s R.A.P. Music. It’s got a bunch of guest appearances (including from the elusive Andre 3000) and has some solid beats to back up his ever-impressive verses, but gets a bit preachy for me at times (lots of talk about the Lord and what she’s done for him). That said, there’s enough good stuff outside of that to keep you coming back for more. (On album or otherwise, Mike almost always has something interesting to say, whether you agree with him or not.) The track with fellow jewel runner El and the opening track with former Goodie Mob mate Cee-Lo are two of my faves — give both of em a spin here:

 

Next we’ll jump to the opposite coast and a polar opposite in terms of tone and content — from Atlanta to Seattle and from rap to folk, courtesy of singer/songwriter Dean Johnson. I posted about him over on the ‘gram a few weeks back (lead single and #fridayfreshness champ “Faraway Skies” remains a little slice of heaven) and thankfully the rest of the album is every bit as good as that opening foray hinted. It’s Johnson’s debut, and a bit of an odd one at that (apparently he recorded its nine songs five YEARS ago?!), but is well worth the wait. Johnson’s voice is great (“soothing and pure like a soak in a cool, crisp creek,” to cite myself) and his playing is as steady and stately as that cowboy on the range conjured in the aforementioned single.  “Acting School” and “Shouldn’t Say Mine” are two faves on a rather flawless half hour — check em out below!

 

Next we’ll shift to the south and LA’s Cory Hanson whose recently released third album (the terribly titled Western Cum) just dropped and has been beguiling me ever since. In contrast to his last one (2021’s lovely Pale Horse Rider), this one finds Hanson plugging in his guitar and rattling off heroic rounds of riffage across the album’s eight songs. (None moreso than on the epic “Driving Through Heaven,” which stretches for over ten glorious minutes.) His voice is a chameleon — at times I get Chrissie Hynde, others Thom Yorke or Neil Young. As such, the songs sometimes call to mind early Radiohead or Crazy Horse, as well as Wilco, White Denim, or even Skynyrd as the guitars double or triple up their attack.  And just as soon as you think you’ve got it pegged, you hear a different influence coming to the fore as it shifts off in another direction. No matter who you’re hearing, it’s a really good listen — my favorite has shifted almost daily ever since I started listening, but these two remain high on the list. Check out “Wings” and “Motion Sickness” below:

 

Last but definitely not least we’ll close with the one I’ve been listening to most, the eighth studio album from faves Queens of the Stone Age, which has been a bit of a grower. Initially, aside from a couple of tracks I was a bit disappointed — there weren’t as many immediate face melters as on previous outings and what surrounded them was a somewhat underwhelming mix of Homme’s corny puns (“Obscenery,” “I don’t care what the peephole say” as replacement for “what the people say,” etc) and the band’s dark carnival music. At least at first. Then this thing sank its claws into my brain and I’ve been listening to it obsessively ever since. Thundergod Jon Theodore’s drums on “Negative Space” and the closing jam “Straight Jacket Fitting” got in first, then the blistering guitar riff on “Carnavoyeur” or rollicking bass on “Peephole.” Basically everyone got a turn after that. (Though I still kind of hate “Made to Parade”) The two that grabbed me immediately remain on constant repeat, though — so give “Paper Machete” and “Emotion Sickness” a listen and get your fireworks started early:


That’s all for now — enjoy the holiday, amici…
–BS

Scooting in the Sunshine: A Walk(men) Down Memory Lane

It was a big music week this week with a slew of tickets to coveted upcoming shows being acquired (MMJ, the Hives, Damien Rice, Gregory Alan Isakov), as well as a pair of shows from long-time, frequently seen faves that made for some good nights on the town (Jeff Tweedy, the Walkmen), and it’s the back half of this latter section that inspired me to pop in and ramble for a bit.  Not simply because it was solid show from one of my overall faves (every album they released during the blog years has landed on my year-end lists, and at least two of the three that predate it likely would have as well), but moreso because for a long time it seemed like it would never happen again.

That’s because the band stopped releasing music a decade ago and while they insist they never broke up (the term bassist Peter Matthew Bauer used at the time was “extreme hiatus”) it certainly seemed like there was little to no desire to form back up. (For what it’s worth the confused vehemence shown to those who said they’d broken up never made much sense to me — if you left your marriage or job for ten years and spent the time fu#$ing/working for others, I’m pretty sure neither your spouse nor employer think you’re coming back…) Frontman Hamilton Leithauser walked even farther down the path charted on the band’s last two albums and became a full-on crooner, releasing three solo albums. (Four if you count the 2015 collab he did with guitarist Paul Maroon that was only released widely this year, Dear God.) Drummer Matt Barrick played with bands like the Fleet Foxes, Sharon van Etten, and the excellent Muzz.  (Their debut landed at #4 on my 2020 list, as well as my “best of 15” one.) Pianist/organist Walter Martin started making children’s music. The aforementioned Maroon moved to Spain and started recording classical music, while Bauer recorded three solo albums of his own. (The latest of which landed at #12 on last year’s list.)

All of this gave the very reasonable appearance that the beloved band of gunslingers known as the Walkmen was a thing of the past — exceptional for the duration of their five-albums-in-eight-years run, but no more. So when word suddenly came out last year that they were going to do a small number of reunion shows, it seemed too good to be true. At first it was just going to be a handful of shows in NY, their base of operations before the band made it big. When those two shows quickly sold out, they added a third, then a fourth, then a fifth. When all those sold out, they decided to hit a few other choice locations — some shows in Philly where Barrick now lives (one night became two became three), some shows in DC where Leithauser and Martin grew up and the band cut their teeth in earlier incarnations (one night quickly became four), some shows in Chicago where everyone knows the smartest, best looking, and hardest working humans live (one night also became four). And so on.

Add a few noteworthy festival slots — first just at home in Boston and Atlanta, then a few abroad — and the snowball just keeps going. Reception has been so good the band just added a third (and final?) leg to their tour, heading out west for some shows in California, Oregon, and Washington after a small number of additional shows around those overseas festivals. So it was against this backdrop of surprised gratitude that I went to the opening show of their four night stand this week, not expecting the fiery performances of a decade prior, but just a pleasant reunion with a long-lost fave.

And despite not practicing before their tour (the band somewhat proudly boasted of not rehearsing before their televised return on Colbert to kick off the tour) the band more than met my expectations.  Ham’s ability to unleash the unbridled banshee wails of yore appears to be largely gone, which is unsurprising even without the rust logically accrued in a ten year absence (going to see the band always involved a bit of mystery as you were never sure which version of his voice would show up — the one that could nail those notes in the stratosphere and send shivers down your spine, or a slightly diminished one that would hoarsely, gamely try anyway). And while that element may have mostly been missing (he still managed to bring it on a few of the songs), the rest of the band was more than able to conjure that murky, underwater atmosphere that was such a key element to their sound around him.

They played over twenty songs, leaning heavily on their two crown jewels Bows + Arrows and You & Me (more on these in a second), but pulled at least a track or two from all five of their albums so gave a good reminder of the highlights from their exceptionally solid catalog. What was new was the sincere sense of gratitude the band seemed to have with Leithauser relating their surprise at how many folks were excited to see them and the number of shows they were selling out, necessitating their multi-night stands during his between songs banter.  (One of the reasons he cited was his and the other bandmates’ kids not knowing about the band and wanting to show them some of the old shine — the age old parents’ conundrum. (“Oh you think I’m lame now, eh? Well you shoulda seen me when…”))

In honor of this unexpected return, I decided it was time to play not one but two of our favorite games here — “WHO’S ON TOP?” and “Gimme Three Steps.”  Not simply because they’re one of my favorite bands, but because I also sold one of my tickets to someone who like the band’s kids had never listened to them before and I wanted to let them know what they were walking into. (Not that I think anyone in their right mind would want to pull the ripcord after hearing these guys live, but I wanted to make sure just in case.) As a result, I enlisted the help of fellow diehard (and former Sunbeam) Scooter to pick not only our three most representative songs for the band so this person didn’t go in cold, but also to rank their albums to guide their, and any other new initiates’ listening.

We’ll start with the latter, the three song prelude we gave them before the show. For those who might not remember, the rules of the game are simple — no obvious hits, no doubling up on albums, and no fixating on a single element of a band’s/artist’s style. You’ve got to assume people already know the hits and if you focus too much on a single sound or album you might lose your argument if that doesn’t resonate with the person you’re pitching.  You really only need to connect with one song, not all three, to potentially make them a fan and change their life forever. (No pressure.) So with that seemingly simple backdrop — just pick three songs! — Scoot and I struggled to come up with the below recommendations.  And unlike in some other iterations of this game (“you picked what?! You’re insane…”, I fully endorse his picks and nearly had several of them in mine.

The Drawing of Three:

  • New Year’s Eve, All Hands and the Cook, Canadian Girl (Scoot)
  • We’ve Been Had, Little House of Savages, Red Moon (Sunshine)

And because the task was so hard and we went back and forth so much with our selections, we both actually had an alternate set at the ready that I thought I’d share as well (honestly there’s about five other iterations I could dole out here and I’m sure the same goes for Scoot):

The Drawing of Three, Part II:

  • On the Water, Victory, Stranded (Scoot)
  • Thinking of a Dream I Had, Four Provinces, Torch Song (Sunshine)

Now that the “easy” part was finished it was time to tackle the far harder task of ranking the band’s albums. As I mentioned before, three of the six landed on year end lists here (including one at the top) and arguably each of the ones that predate the blog would have done so as well. It’s partly why their departure was such an unfortunate, unexpected thing — from the time they got started the band released a new album every two years like clockwork and then — POOF — they were gone.  And I must say, we’ve played this game a few times before (in print, at least) — for MMJ, for Radiohead, for Tweedy’s Wilco — and it’s never been as contentious as this. Several of these albums could easily switch places depending on the day and/or be deemed ties (which they very nearly were in several cases), so think it’s worth noting just how solid they all are — you really can’t pick a bad place to start.

And so with that, here’s the breakdowns to guide future listens (for old-timers and noobs alike) — since he’s the guest, we’ll start with Scoot. We’re pretty comparable at the end of the day — we agree on the top and the bottom, but have some differences in the middle to keep things interesting. I put his comments in parenthesis because I had many of the same conversations in my head as I went through this:

Scooter’s Six:

  1. You & Me (“By a nose hair. I think it is the perfect bridge between the old and new sound. Bow + Arrows at its best is better, but this album is deeper IMO and is so strong top to bottom”)
  2. Bow + Arrows (“Quintessential Walkmen sound. I went back and fort several times here and would list them as a tie if I were looking to cop out.”)
  3. Lisbon (“Shoulders above anything else that follows and the peak of the crooner era.”)
  4. Heaven (“This was also a near tie [with the following album]. Thought it was soft at first but it grew on me. Some lame songs, but tons of ear worms here too.”)
  5. A Hundred Miles Off (“Still a great album with some of my favorite sleepers on it. If you asked me again it could be #4.”)
  6. Everyone who Pretended to Like me is Gone (“This album never did a ton for me. maybe a little too rough around the edges. Still some great moments, but also has the most stuff I don’t want to listen to. “We’ve Been Had” is an awesome song though.”)

El Seis de Sunshine:

  1. You & Me — similar to Scoot, this one gets the edge over Arrows by the narrowest of margins. Ultimately it wins because of the breadth of sound — this very much is the band transitioning into its elegant, languid crooner era of the final two albums — but I think its high points actually surpass those of Arrows and it stands as the perfect representation of the band’s signature sounds: part lurching, ominous excavation of some deep sea creature, part taut, anxious attack of fiery guitars and vocals.  As I wrote before, this one’s “pure smoldering brilliance.”
  2. Bow + Arrowsthis one contains their biggest hit, but it succeeds for me almost in spite of that ubiquitous track. As I wrote before, this is “the height of the shambling days of yore with songs that sounded like the band woke up on the floor of the bar and started playing whatever instrument was nearest them.” This is the epitome of what a hangover sounds/feels like — bleary-eyed, exhausted, and aching.
  3. A Hundred Miles Offthis one is a bit of a lightning rod. It was pretty universally panned as “a disappointment” at the time, but I’ve always loved it for several of the things folks criticized — its high, at times unhinged energy (the often overlooked Barrick’s drumming is absolutely ripshit here. Just listen to tracks like “Tenley Town” and “Always After You” and try to keep up. Positively furious…), which are matched if not surpassed by Ham’s throat-shredding vocals (another closet fave is “This Job is Killing Me,” which I’ve tried to mimic several times over the years when my job was doing the same to me). It also has some of the elements that would become more pronounced in later years — the horns of “Louisiana,” the “sad prom” (according to Ham) crooning of “Another One Goes By” and “Brandy Alexander.” Both in title and sound this one always struck me as a deliberate departure from the acclaim that came from their previous outing’s hit (a la Nirvana on In Utero) and I’ve always loved the messy rawness of this one. (It speaks to my inner rebel/punk) It’s when the hangover of Arrows hits its angry/awful afternoon hours…
  4. Lisbon — this one was the second near-tie of the list, just getting edged out by its predecessor. As Scoot notes it’s the peak of the crooner phase of the band’s last two albums and easily my favorite of the two (though ironically Heaven landed higher on the year-end list). As I wrote at the time, this is “the sonic equivalent to blissfully floating downstream, bathed in full sunshine…These slink out of your speakers and put you out to sea, flat on your back and smiling.” Who’s gonna argue with that?
  5. Heaven  — if the previous album was the sound of a band boldly starting a new chapter, this was the sound of them drawing it all to a close. You didn’t need to know about all the difficulties recording over the years and the fatigue from constant touring — just listening to this one you could tell the band was maybe thinking it was time for a break. Thankfully it’s not in the form of a slew of subpar songs, but rather a band drawing on all its elements as a final summation for the record. As I wrote at the time, “What makes these guys so amazing is how they’ve incorporated and sharpened those early elements — the dark, nervous moodiness, [Ham’s] soaring vocals, the killer guitar work and drumming — into their new sound [“the smooth, self-assured, almost lounge-y vibe”] and added to it, shifting effortlessly between the styles from song to song.” This was a band going out on their own terms, with full command of their many powers.
  6. Everyone who Pretended to Like me is Gonedespite landing at the bottom for both Scoot’s and my lists, that’s in no way to indicate it’s a bad album. There’s definitely the roughness that Scoot mentioned that’s evident — it’s clearly a band still tinkering with the formula, but not quite mastering the levels yet. That said, it has some killer tracks on it — aside from the aforementioned “We’ve Been Had” and “Wake Up” (the album’s two best known songs and the first two things they wrote, amazingly, according to Ham at the show the other night) there’s also winners like “The Blizzard of ’96,” “French Vacation,” and the title track to draw you in. It’s a solid glimpse of what’s to come…

Beast of Burden — Bonzo, the Lips, and a Pair of Perennials

In order to complete the annual springtime trifecta of Thursday’s “May the 4th be with you” (which spawned this fantastic trailer, made even more amazing by the fact it was apparently created completely by AI(?!?)) and Friday’s Cinco de Mayo (celebrated with tacos, pambazos, and chicharrones like a good member of La Raza) it’s time for the much-awaited dawning of the sun(shine) and an appearance from yours truly. (The Kentucky Derby is today, too, but we all know I’m the real show pony here…) As such, wanted to share some recent finds with my beloved sunbeams (aka the eight of you who still check in here every once in a while), the first of which is the biography of the legendary John Bonham that I happily stumbled upon recently.

Aptly titled Beast (which you learn was the name the band/crew had for Bonham’s destructive drunken alter ego — ie “I wouldn’t go in there, the Beast is out tonight”) it takes us from his early life in rural Worcestershire, England through his rise into the stratosphere with the legendary Zeppelin and his unfortunate, untimely death at the appalling age of 32. Somehow it’s the first biography on Bonham and it fittingly comes with a foreword from living legend Dave Grohl (an homage from the best rock drummer of this generation to the best of the one before). It’s a solid read for any fan of the Zep (which should include 95% of the population — the other 5% being deaf) or anyone who’s ever been enchanted by (and/or wanted to play) the drums — because Bonham is almost always held to be the best there was. (I can’t remember which musician said it in an interview, but essentially their answer was “the right question to ask is ‘who’s the next best drummer’ — because obviously he’s alone at the top.” It might have been Grohl himself, actually — doesn’t really matter, though…)

It’s thanks to that universal acclaim I was so surprised there’d never been an official biography on him to date, and even more so to find this sitting unannounced on the shelf at the book store as I hadn’t heard a peep about it on any of the music sites I regularly traffic — but there it thankfully was.  Even if you’re a huge fan of the man/band and think you know most of the story, author Kushins has plenty of wonderful little nuggets in here to round out your appreciation. Things like the night Bonham and JPJ were in an airport bar in Brisbane and ended up singing Everly Brothers songs to the Fijian Police Choir while they waited for their plane. Or when he went and saw Bob Marley in concert with Ringo Starr and Keith Moon because they were all such fans. Or when he was mistaken as a farmer by Stones bassist Bill Wyman’s girlfriend because he was going on and on about his prized livestock one night at dinner. Or when he jumped onstage and dragged the drummer off the kit at a Chuck Berry concert because he wasn’t doing his beloved icon justice, filling in for the rest of the show. Or his love of the Police (the band, not the civic servants) and how he took his siblings to see them in concert, nearly getting into a fistfight with Sting backstage. These little details serve as bright contrasts to the contours of the more well-known, darker story, which Kushins effectively portrays in all its sad destruction.

Yet even that story had some unknown elements (at least to me), which help make more sense of that broader narrative. Yes, Bonham (and his bandmates) are almost as legendary for their off-stage antics as their timeless tunes, destroying innumerable hotel rooms and imbibing inhuman amounts of alcohol and drugs over the course of their meteoric rise. What I didn’t know was how this behavior was apparently driven not by boredom or an impish (some might say immature) sense of humor, as was the case with fellow icon and friend Keith Moon (who also died at the ridiculously cruel age of 32 and whose equally good biography this one now sits alongside on my shelf), but by a debilitating sense of homesickness.

Over and over throughout the book Kushins paints a picture of a somewhat reluctant superstar — someone who hated to be away from his wife and baby son rather than out carousing with the seemingly infinite number of groupies (and other illicit substances) at his disposal. Someone who was equally (if not moreso) comfortable working construction jobs and tending to the livestock on his farm rather than touring the globe and playing to hordes of thrilled fans onstage every night. Someone who would get panic attacks before shows as late as ’75 when they had long since become the biggest band on the planet. (And when when he would regularly command the spotlight for 20-30 minutes each night on his own with his epic “Moby Dick” solos. )

It’s against this backdrop that the well-known drinking and destruction take on a new light and become inordinately sadder — not just for how they end with Bonham’s early demise, but for how unnecessary and avoidable it all seems. The most agonizing section comes with the “never ending tour” of 1975 when the band was essentially exiled from England in order to avoid its crushing tax codes. (A topic which British bands from the Stones, Beatles, and Radiohead have all covered over the years.) Time and again Kushins relates instances where Bonham was drinking too much (literally ordering and consuming dozens of drinks in one sitting before heading to another bar to do it all again), acting out (whether smashing hotel rooms, driving/crashing cars, or storming stages/getting into fights with other bands he’d go see), and just going further and further down his dark spiral, unable to return home and just lashing out as a result.

Today you feel like he’d have hopefully gotten medical help (either for the anxiety, depression, or alcoholism, if not all three) and his family would have maybe flown to be on tour with him rather than stayed in the UK, making matters worse. (Plant and Jones also apparently were much more family oriented and homesick than I’d known — although far less destructive than Bonham — so maybe in today’s age we’d have had a different version of the touring band. Sure, we’d be deprived of the depraved decadence and excess that’s detailed in Hammer of the Gods, but I’m sure every single fan would gladly trade that in if it meant saving Bonham and giving the world more years of music.) The security situation around the band would likely also have been different — they apparently regularly received death threats, which aside from being inscrutable and confusing (why would you possibly want to threaten one/all of these guys — just on account of their fame?) also fed this sense of isolation and paranoia that apparently ran in the background and fueled some of the more destructive behavior. (And also helped keep the family members away, one would assume, only making matters worse.)

It all fed into this reinforcing cycle of bad behavior — another town, another show, another death threat, another stretch of hours without family or the comforts of home, which garnered more booze, more drugs, more destruction to distract himself (themselves) and make him/themself feel more calm. It’s tough to keep reading after a certain point (I can only imagine how horrible it was to see firsthand) and by the time the band is touring in ’77 it leads to the official “Rules of Engagement,” which were sent ahead to all venues/journalists prior to the band’s arrival. Rule number one? (Actually 1a) “Do not make any sort of eye contact with John Bonham. This is for your own safety.” That this went on for another two and a half years speaks to both his (and the band’s) capacity for punishment and their love of making music (and money, I’m sure). The band was still pushing themselves and evolving, trying new sounds and arrangements instead of just coasting on their immense fame and laurels — if only they could have better controlled their inner demons, things might have turned out differently…

————-

My love of the band dates back to middle school and idolizing Bonham’s playing was one of the primary reasons I wanted to learn the drums. (Note to anyone aspiring to play drums (or any instrument, for that matter) — do not start out by trying to play Zeppelin songs. You will immediately become disheartened and want to quit because of how good a musician each of them were on their respective instruments.)  Zeppelin was the first band from my parents’ era that felt like my own — my mom was always playing Beatles songs while Pops was a huge fan of the Stones — but these guys I found on my own. (Sure, I heard their songs a lot on the radio when the local station would “get the Led out,” but I never really knew who they belonged to.)

I vividly remember finding the first album in their record collection — the one with the iconic flaming Hindenburg photo on the cover in eye-catching black and white — and instantly being converted when I put it on up in my room.  By the force of the sound, sure, but also by that first irresistible lick of a riff — DUH DUH……DUH DUH…. — it was like the Jaws theme being played on a fuzzed up guitar and only got better from there, with Bonham slowly slipping in to pummel you shortly thereafter.  I remember listening to Houses of the Holy while I contentedly drew comics at my desk, thinking “this is the sexiest sh#$ I’ve ever heard” without having any clue what sexiness actually was. (I was in middle school after all — not that I’m much more savvy now.)

I remember laying on the carpet with the shades down, the smell of lilacs and the summer breeze blowing over me from the open window, while “How Many More Times” or “Levee” blasted out at high volume and Pops coming in to say, “I love what you’re doing here — really, I do — but we’ve got to turn it down.  The neighbors are complaining” with a proud twinkle in his eye. (Incredibly, I learned here that the version of “Levee” we hear on their fourth album — the one with the miraculous, cacophonous sound of Bonham’s drums, quite probably the most emblematic example of his prowess — was the only recording of their initial sessions that survived. All the rest — “Black Dog,” “Rock and Roll,” etc — were lost and subsequently had to be rerecorded, but thankfully those iconic, incredible drum sounds on “Levee” were spared.)

In recent years I’ve begun revisiting some of their later albums, spending time with some of the ones I didn’t wear out in the years since middle school. Physical Graffiti has been a primary target — one I’d always thought was a little disjointed and just felt off compared to the others (which I now know may in part be because it’s at least half pulled from remnants of earlier recording sessions, possibly accounting for that differing feel as the Zep of the first album had changed quite a bit by the time of this one). And while I still think it pales a bit in relation to some of those flawless earlier albums, there are some killer tracks on there I’ve been wearing out again, particularly after reading this book — none moreso than “In My Time of Dying” and “The Wanton Song.”

I was recently down in Austin (more on this in a minute) and was drunkenly gushing to my buddy about how bananas Bonham’s kicks are in these two, particularly the latter. Known for his furious triplets — which I learned in this book were not the product of him using a double kick as I’d long assumed, but even more astoundingly were just done with a single pedal — he throws down an almost unending string of quartets in the latter, something we flailingly tried to replicate on my buddy’s kit at two in the morning, avoiding both a half-decent approximation of the drumming (not a surprise), as well as having the police show up. (A borderline miracle.) It’s worth giving both another listen (as well as those aforementioned classics that annoyed the neighbors 30 years prior), and checking this book out when you’re done. Long live the Beast…


We’ll close out with a few more recs, first this list of Depeche Mode’s 30 best songs, according to the gang over at the Onion. It was compiled in anticipation of their recently released Memento Mori, their first since the death of keyboardist Andy Fletcher last year. The list does a pretty solid job of sampling from the band’s fifteen albums, appropriately centering on the run from Music for the Masses to Violator and Songs of Faith and Devotion as the best of the best.

As always happens with these types of lists there’s a few I would have included that they didn’t (and vice versa) — songs like “Pleasure, Little Treasure,” “In Chains” (a fantastic opener that I got to see them play — appropriately to open their set — years ago at Lolla, which was a definite bucket list moment), and the sultry, sinister “I Feel You,” one of my all-time faves. Overall, though, theirs makes for a heck of a playlist, so give it (and my omitted trio) a listen when you can. In the meantime enjoy this one from the new album — it sounds like Depeche channeling Massive Attack, which is every bit as tasty as it sounds. Give it a ride here:


Up next comes one of the reasons I flew down to Austin (other than to spend time with two of my favorite humans) — Toronto’s Wine Lips, who were playing at the stacked second day of Psych Fest. Even if my best friend and wife didn’t live there it would have been hard to pass up — the evening run went from Night Beats (a solid mix of garage rock and spaghetti Western sounding tunes) to a 13th Floor Elevators tribute, the Raveonettes (playing their stellar debut, Whip it On, in its entirety to start the set), hometown faves the Black Angels, and the ever-awesome BRMC to close it out.

In the middle were the scrappy Lips in all their trashy glory, playing a blistering set that crammed about 100 songs into its scant thirty minutes.  They remind me a bit of Bass Drum of Death (before he added synths and polish) and are every bit as high energy/attitude as that act at their best. We got to chat with half the band afterward and they seemed lovely, more gracious and down to earth than you might expect from a band playing this type of brash, snotty punk music. I’m a big fan — I’ve been listening to their most recent album, 2021’s Mushroom Death Sex Bummer Party, a ton lately, and it grabs you from the outset with the killer blast of fire that is the opening “Eyes.”  Give it a listen here and go see them if they come to town — it’s a hell of an enjoyable workout:


We’ll close with a track from one of my all-time faves, the ever-epic Built to Spill, who I got to see live again this week. It’s the final leg of their tour for the latest album, When the Wind Forgets your Name (which landed at #6 on my year-end list last year), and possibly the final time touring with bassist Melanie Radford (normally from Blood Lemon) and drummer Teresa Esguerra (normally in Prism Bitch, who were opening for the band). The two have been with Doug since the tour for his Daniel Johnston cover album (which landed at #10 on my 2020 list), though they didn’t appear on that or the following album for whatever reason. That said, they more than meet the bar set by the previous three piece incarnations of the band — Radford even took the lead and sang vocals during a cover of the Heartless Bastards’ “The Mountain.”

It was a solid run through the majority of the band’s history — six of their nine albums were represented — but I almost didn’t go because of how little they were playing from the new album.  One of my favorite things to do is see how new music from long-running bands stands up next to perennial favorites — particularly from albums I enjoyed/enjoy as much as this one — so was a bit bummed to see how little was showing up from their latest outing. (Don’t get me wrong — I love this band and have seen them dozens of times (and will continue to for as long as they keep touring), but always like to hear the new stuff as much as I can since it’s not like they tour every year.)

Perusing the recent setlists they didn’t appear to play more than three songs from it a night (sometimes only one!) and they’ve never played the epic closing track, which is fantastic and screams to be heard live, stretched out even further by one of Doug’s deliriously leggy benders. Sadly they didn’t that night either, but the pain of omission was dampened because they DID close with “Broken Chairs,” one of my all-time faves (and one of my three selections from our game Gimme Three Steps for why someone should listen to this band). I listened to that and the missing track multiple times on the ride home (and several more times the following day) so feels appropriate to share and close with here. Check out “Comes a Day” here:


That’s all for now — until next time, my friends…
–BS

 

Surfacing for Air: Coal Miners, Cats, and Elephants

I’ve been off burrowing down rabbit holes the past month and change — diving into Pacific campaign documentaries and foreign resistance films during WWII, binging the between war exploits of the folks in Birmingham, and catching up on other compelling revisionist histories — but today felt like a good time to resurface for my primary obsession, serving the non-existent fanbase here to talk music. We’ll start with one that’s been sitting in my queue to talk about for months now, the Bozeman-based Richy Mitch and the Coal Miners. They’re another of the Spotify spillovers, discovered when one of my playlists ended and the algorithm helpfully suggested another artist/song to keep the thread going (fittingly, the playlist I was listening to at the time was the one for this page — Sunshine Radio, available at all times on the right-hand side of the page) and they immediately grabbed my ear.

Sounding a lot like early Local Natives (before that band devolved into the glossy synth pop terrain I loathe so much) these guys have a great sound and laid back vibe. The trio (originally from Colorado, having had an additional member or two prior to their current three-piece setup it seems) consists of singer/songwriter Mitch Cutts, guitarist Nic Haughn, and drummer Jakob Evans who have  known each other since high school. At that time their goal (according to their website) was to write and record an album before their senior year concluded, which became their self-recorded, self-titled debut, RMCM, released on their graduation day in May 2017.

It’s a fantastic little album, mostly consisting of Cutts at the piano and Haughn on acoustic guitar, giving it an extremely intimate feel — tracks like “Lucerne” and “Porcelain” are lovely little tunes, drawing you into their quiet cocoons with their beautiful melodies and harmonizations, while those like “Evergreen,” “Sweetwater,” and “Iodine” add in some Bon Iver-style flourishes to positive effect. (To say nothing of absolute kneebucklers like “Lake Missoula” and “St.Paul,” which are the best of a really good bunch.) Their second album Solstice came out the following year after the three had split up and gone off to college, recording the album “on breaks and weekends.” It shows no signs of that disjointedness, sonically sounding like a companion to their debut — the hushed introspection of the title track and “Florissant” could easily have originated there and they sit perfectly next to slightly more upbeat offerings like “ACT!” and “Silo.” (And all benefit from their proximity to songs like “Chakra in Basel,” this album’s absolute beauty.)

Their latest was 2019’s Subliming, which the band says took them “over two years of long distance to create and perfect.” It’s their briefest overall, clocking in just a bit beyond a half hour, but it’s another solid outing. I get glimpses of the Cure from the riff on “WET SOCKS” and a hint of Coldplay on “Somersault” to go along with their more traditional sound on songs like “backburner” and “Bins.” (Or this album’s slice of lush perfection, “BC, Victoria.”)

It’s been mostly quiet since then, with a handful of singles finally appearing this past year. Hopefully that’s a sign another album is on the way soon. In the meantime we’ve thankfully got these three to keep us company, which are a lovely triptych to immerse yourself in this weekend. Start at the beginning with my overall fave and its stunning “St.Paul.”


We’ll shift gears to close with a trio of readers, two remembrances of recent anniversaries and the other of a recent passing. We’ll start with the latter, a really nice writeup of Television frontman and transcendant guitarist Tom Verlaine who passed away at the end of January. The article does a good job of highlighting his importance (if for some reason you’ve never been convinced just by listening to the flawless majesty of the title track from their debut Marquee Moon.) I particularly loved the description here — “There was something nearly pitiless in the precision of his fingers… He seemingly trapped notes, agitating and destabilizing them before letting them go.”

It’s a wonderfully apt characterization from a man/band whose music is undeniably worth remembering. Check out another example of that prowess and another of my faves, the pristine shine of “Prove It” here:

Up next comes the recent 20 year anniversary of Cat Power’s You Are Free, an album I used to spend a lot of time with back in the day and still my favorite of hers overall. The article does a good job reminding us both about the uncertainty surrounding the album (it was her fifth of original material and her first in as many years, having contemplated quitting after the surge in popularity generated by 1998’s Moon Pix) and the ongoing struggle she faced during performances. (Like the author, I never saw her during one of the oft-reported meltdowns or back-to-the-audience affairs, but it was abundantly clear she was not one who thrived in the spotlight at the time — something she seems to have managed to surmount in recent years, thankfully.)

At the time I was more drawn to those haunting piano ballads, just Marshall pouring her heart out into the discomfort and darkness, but those songs had solid counterpoints this time with more muscular, slightly angrier tracks like “Free,” “Speak for Me,” and “He War.”  Those got her more radio play and made for a livelier show, but it was (and is) always those ballads that stopped you in your tracks. From the opening “I Don’t Blame You” to tracks like “Fool,” and “Babydoll,” Marshall regularly reminds us of this dynamic from the piece — “[she] digs deep into the depths of human desperation and depravity, but she always makes it sound so beautiful. Marshall’s voice — soft, honeyed, always somewhere flickering in the distance — still casts its spell even when she’s singing in an expensive studio.”

Nothing highlights that better than her flawless cover of Michael Hurley’s “Werewolf,” a track whose brilliance is directly disproportional to the smoldering sensuousness and ferocity she quietly conveys. She more than makes the song her own and it remains a highlight on a really good album. Give it a listen here:

Last of the readers is the writeup of the White Stripes’ masterful monolith, Elephant, which also turned 20 recently. This one represents the brash, unabashed half of our anniversaries, every bit as loud and punishing as Marshall’s was quiet and soothing, and man what an album it is. This was the Stripes’ massive, undeniable swing for the fences and geezus did they nail it. As the article reminds us, it STARTS with “Seven Nation Army” — as clear and unequivocal an opening statement as you’re likely to receive. There’s no slowly slipping into the album, letting the listener adjust to their surroundings before punching them in the face by the third or fourth song. No, this was a both barrels blast to the face from the outset, throwing the listener into a shark-infested wave pool with a suit full of chum. “If you can survive this, you can survive anything…” they seem to be saying, almost daring you to level up as much as they had.  And if you manage to meet them in the stratosphere, it’s a hell of a trip through the heavens.

Besides that monster of an earworm “Army” there are innumerable other headwreckers on display — there’s Jack’s blistering solo in the rollercoaster ride of “Black Math,” the facemelting gospel chorus at the end of “There’s No Home for you Here.” The sex god swagger of “Ball and Biscuit’s” seven minute duration balanced by the breathless, all out sprint of “Hypnotize’s” sub-two minute span. The deranged glee of “Girl, You Have no Faith in Medicine” with its unexpected delight at shouting “acetaminophen” at full volume. There’s nary a bad note to be found (although I, like the author, also tend to skip the closer, the power and perfection of the album having long since been cemented by then.)

The pair would never reach these heights again, leaning into the stranger aspects of their sound on 2005’s Get Behind me Satan before closing out strong on 2007’s Icky Thump, which recaptured some of this one’s thunder before they broke up, just in far smaller doses. (And Jack himself would repeatedly show the true value of Meg on his subsequent solo outings, working with potentially more technically skilled drummers, but never coming close to the primal bashing and emotion generated by his former partner.)

Thankfully we’ve still got things like this to go back to, aptly named monsters that allow us revel in past glories and joy no matter how many times we return to them. As the article notes, “An elephant is a noble beast with a long memory, and maybe that’s how the White Stripes saw themselves — history-minded congregants carrying the flame for dying traditions on a crass and heedless age. But an elephant is also a big motherfucker who will stomp you to death, and that’s what we hear on “Seven Nation Army.” (And the rest of the album, for that matter.)

Crank up that insane choir in the aforementioned “Home” and see if you survive:


We’ll close with one last item, a new song from another old fave, fittingly returning after a long spell in the dark. The band are the legendary Underworld, those UK electroheads who’ve been giving us amazing tunes for well over 30 years now. They’re back with new material, their first since 2019’s very cool Drift project, which found the duo releasing new songs/art/videos every week for the entire year. That was by and large another solid affair, but they’ve been quiet since then, only recently resurfacing for some live shows where they debuted some new tracks. One of those is this one, a front to back banger of old, which is hopefully a sign that more is coming from the pair soon. In the meantime, enjoy “and the colour red” here:


That’s all for now — until next time…
-BS