Sunday, November 29, 2009

Sunday Soul - Shining Star


Shining star come into view,
To shine its watchful light on you.
Gives you strength to carry on,
Makes your body big and strong.

So, if you find yourself in need,
Won't you listen to these words of heed.
Be a giant or grain of sand.
Words of wisdom- Yes, I can.

You're a shining star, no matter who you are.
Shining bright to see what you could truly be.


Earth, Wind & Fire - Shining Star (stereo) : Shining Star 7"

Earth, Wind & Fire - Shining Star (mono) : Shining Star 7" B-Side

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Why you listenin'


If you're in an alt-country, Neko Case/Stevie Nicksish mood, you could do much worse than check out the debut EP from Rock Island, IL native Lissie. It was recorded at her current home in Ojai, CA, and at Echo Mountain Studio in Asheville, NC, with her friend Bill Reynolds (of Band of Horses). The EP's lead-off track, Little Lovin', is a rousing, foot stomping rambler, and you can hear it below. From there she does a haunting cover of the old country song Wedding Bells, that is very evocative of Case's dusty voice. The mood turns gospelish with the hymn-like Oh Mississippi, and her voice begins to soar in a more soulful pop persuasion on Everywhere I Go. The EP comes to a close with Here Before, a track that really highlights her melodic voice. The five tracks do a nice job of imaging Lissie's potential and is worth a check-out for certain.






Visit her label Fat Possum Records and become her friend on MySpace.

For the Love of Pop that's not Love




El Perro Del Mar (aka Sarah Assbring) is back with her third album, Love Is Not Pop, and it's just as lovely a slice as electro-pop as you hope for coming from the Swede. For me at least, one of the fascinating aspects of her music is the almost inhuman artificiality of the instruments in her music paired against her lyrics of pure human sentiment. One of the tracks on it is her cover of the Lou Reed song Heavenly Arms, which you can watch (and listen to) above.




and an older one:



Visit her website, her label The Control Group, and become her friend on MySpace.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Rene wants to be a Matador

To start off this week I've got a fun, slightly kitschy Cake meets a twenty-first century Tito Puente slice of goodness. It's titled Johnny Wants To Be A Matador, and is from artist Rene Lopez's EP of the same title that is scheduled to come out on the first of December. I really don't know much about Lopez, but the five tracks on this EP are all upbeat Latin infused numbers (I do know that his father was a trumpet player in the renowned Latin salsa band Tipica 73). Anyway, here it is. Download it, spin it, then keep your eyes open on the 1st for the EP's other 4 tracks.




Rene Lopez - Johnny Wants To Be A Matador : Johnny Wants To Be A Matador EP




Visit his website and become his friend on MySpace.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Sunday Soul - Compared To What



i said i love the light
the light of love
hanging on
with push and shove
possession is
the motivation
hanging up the whole damn nation

looks like we always end up in a rut
trying to make it real
but compared to what?



Roberta Flack - Compared To What : First Take


Visit her website and become her friend on MySpace.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Daptone Gold


So unless you've been living under a rock for the last few years, you've got to have heard of Daptone Records. And if you HAVE been listening under a rock, I hope it's got a turntable or record player so you can listen to their latest release, Daptone Gold. It's a twenty three track collection of hits and obscurities, album favorites and unheard exclusives from the Daptone Records catalog. For those of you who've seen Sharon Jones live, you'll recognize the voice behind the album's intro, Binky Griptite. From there you'll find cut after juicy cut of soul, funk, and gospel goodness that's became their status quo. You'll hear Sharon Jones, The Dap Kings, The Budos Band, Naomi Shelton & the Gospel Queens, Lee Fields, Antibalas, Charles Bradley & the Menahan Street Band, and The Sugarman Three. To top it off, you can get all 23 tracks on a single CD for the ridiculous price of $11 OR, even better, a double LP version in a gold foil gatefold jacket for only $22 (that includes a coupon for mp3 download)!

Here are two tracks from the collection. The first is from Dap-Dippin with Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings, their debut album. The second is from a 45 RPM only release from 2006.






Visit the Daptone Records website

Friday, November 20, 2009

Nightfall




well i reached to grab the glowing rose
but instead i burned my hand
it was just a thousand moths
covering a light
hoping that they'd eat that night

life could be a luxury
if life forfeited time
cuz all that time's done to me
is give and take what's mine

well it's not mine, it's not mine
i ain't gonna waste more time
honey i'll be gone before the nightfall



This song comes from Before Nightfall, the sophomore release by Robert Francis, and a warm slice of classic, Americana rock.


Robert Francis - Nightfall : Before Nightfall

Visit his website, his label Atlantic Records, and become his friend on MySpace.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

DOOM, and his Unexpected Guests




"Listen up you punks..."

If you're a fan of hip hop, especially of innovative, noncommercial hip-hop, then DOOM is either on your radar screen or darn well should be. For old fans and new alike, his latest release Unexpected Guests is an insane collection of tracks that you'll be salivating over. Over the course of his career, DOOM has worked with the cream of the crop, artists like Talib Kweli, J Dilla, Scienz of Life, Ghostface, and many others. This album culls through his deep catalog and pulls some of the most masterful collabs that he's put together, as well as some new, unreleased ones. Unless you're a DOOM fanatic with his complete works, chances are there's a bunch here that you'll want to get your ears on. Check out a sample below (one of the previously unreleased cuts), then investigate this track line-up on your own by picking up the album.






Visit his website, his label Gold Dust Media, and become his friend on MySpace.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Malaria No More


‘Tis the season of giving, and today I have another charity project that could use your support. In previous weeks I’ve written about the Playing For Change project and Funk Aid for Africa. Today I want to share news about a benefit album that just came out today titled Indie Rocks! A Benefit Album For Malaria No More. It’s been put together by RED Distribution, and its aim is to raise money for the organization Malaria No More, whose mission, in their own words, is as follows:
Malaria No More is determined to end malaria deaths in Africa by 2015. Malaria kills a child in Africa every 30 seconds, but it doesn't have to be this way-m alaria is a treatable and preventable disease. Luckily, the world is mobilizing to end the disease. In the past few years, new tools and increased awareness have pumped new energy into the fight against malaria. Individuals all over the world are helping parents keep their children safe from the deadly bite of a malarial mosquito with a simple, $10 mosquito net. Millions of individuals across the globe are helping to make malaria no more once and for all.
The album is comprised of fourteen tracks from a wide variety of artists, some from previously released albums, some recorded especially for this charity. Here’s the listing for you to check out:
1.) Peter Bjorn & John - Summer Breeze (Exclusive)
2.) Juliette Lewis - Fantasy Bar , from Terra Incognita
3.) Jeff The Brotherhood - Bone Jam , from Heavy Days
4.) The Grates - Two Kinds Of Right from Teeth Lost, Hearts Won
5.) Third Eye Blind - Bonfire (Exclusive, Live in NYC)
6.) Dirty Little Rabbits- Hello , from Simon
7.) Wild Light - Adult Nights , from Adult Nights
8.) The Walkmen - Four Provinces, from You & Me
9.) State Radio - Let It Go , from Calling All Crows
10.) Those Darlins - Wild One , from Those Darlins
11.) Great Lake Swimmers - Pulling On A Line , from Lost Channels
12.) Kate Miller Heidke - Politics in Space , from EP Kate Miller-Heidke
13.) Yonder Mountain String Band - Fingerprint , from The Show
14.) Youssou N'Dour - Fight Malaria
Starting today, and for the next four weeks, the album will be exclusively available through Amie Street, with 100% of the proceeds going directly to Malaria No More. After that, it will be available through other digital store fronts. When purchasing the album, you’ll be able to choose your donation, starting at $10 and going up to $20, $50 or $100, again, with all proceeds going to the charity.

For a sneak peak, listen to Peter Bjorn & John’s cover of the classic Seals & Croft tune Summer Breeze below, and then consider purchasing the album.


Monday, November 16, 2009

Tumbele!

Barel Coppet et Mister Lof

There really isn't any better time to be a musical collector than the present. There are just so many great smaller labels putting out some phenomenal stuff, both new and old. An excellent example of the latter is Soundway Records. I wrote about them earlier this year, during the summer, when talking about their excellent Latin release, Panama! 2: Latin Sounds, Cumbia Tropical and Calypso Funk on the Isthmus 1967-77. Go into your local music store and I'm guessing you'd be hard pressed to find any Panamanian music (unless of course you live in Panama and you're reading this), which makes it all that much more necessary for a small label like Soundway to do the great work they do to make it available for all of us who can't fly around the world digging for records.

Well, last month, they've dug even deeper into Latin America, and as if Panamanian music wasn't getting nitty gritty enough, they've zeroed in on an even smaller target: Guadeloupe and Martinique. Heck, ask the next ten people you talk to if they can tell you where those two countries are and I'm guessing 1 or 2 of them might be on target (for your info, they're two islands which are part of the Lesser Antilles, the eastern Caribbean island chain that also includes Dominica, St. Lucia, and Marie-Galante). The two islands are overseas departments of France (i.e. I guess they're rough equivalent of Alaska and Hawaii?), and have a lengthy history of outside influence of all sorts, not just French. The musical output of these two islands far exceeds what one would expect from their size, and it's documented on Soundways' latest release: Tumbélé! Biguine, Afro & Latin Sounds - French Caribbean 1963-73.

The album's twenty tracks (all previously unavailable outside of the islands and their near neighbors) attempt to represent this varied yet distinct musical identity which draws upon French, African, and Latin influences. Accompanying the music are liner notes that detail the development of the islands' sound, as well as song by song notes explaining their origins and how they fit into the islands' musical histories. Try out two of the CDs tracks below.







Visit the Soundway Records website.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Jazz Brunch Jam - September Blues

"The premise: the loss of love. This universal theme is handled here in uniquely Ethiopian manner. The inspiration comes from an old Ethiopian song, where a woman leaves her husband just before the Ethiopian New Year (which is in September). Jorga Mesfin's sax plays a mournful refrain lamenting the loss of his love. Andrea Fabbri's playing, on the other hand, represents a former scorned lover, still seething, which boils over into a rant. By the end, both remember what it was like to love this woman, and they sing the mournful refrain together, almost as one."

- from the liner notes for The Prester John Sessions


This song is one of the most beautiful songs I've heard in a while. The first time I heard it, it struck me as something powerful, and I listened to it several times over. It comes deep in The Prester John Sessions, the first solo album from Tommy T (a.k.a. Thomas T Gobena), bassist for Gogol Bordello. Born in Ethiopia, Gobena draws upon his native's country culture to create an album here that explores his country's musical diversity, blending dub reggae, funk, and jazz into music that flows between the mystical and worldly.

The saxes in this piece, trading space back and forth, interacting, conversing, mourning, pull you through to share their sadness. Sheer beauty. Listen and be prepared for melancholy.







Visit his website, his label Easy Star Records, and become his friend on MySpace.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

A Double Dose of Nick Cave

For all you Nick Cave fans out there, I've got two Caveities to share with you. One to read, one to listen to. The first is something for your nightstand: The Death Of Bunny Munro. It's the second novel by Cave, and came out in September. For those of who familiar with Cave, this novel is everything you'd expect from his twisted mind and so much more. It opens with:


"I am damned, thinks Bunny Munro in a sudden moment of self-awareness reserved for those who are soon to die. He feels that somewhere down the line he has made a grave mistake, but this realisation passes in a dreadful heartbeat, and is gone - leaving him in a room at the Grenville Hotel, in his underwear, with nothing but himself and his appetites. He closes his eyes and pictures a random vagina, then sits on the edge of the hotel bed and, in slow motion, leans back against the quilted headboard. He clamps the mobile phone under his chin and with his teeth breaks the seal on a miniature bottle of brandy. He empties the bottle down his throat, lobs it across the room, then shudders and gags and says into the phone, 'Don't worry, love, everything's going to be all right.' "

Of course, as a reader, you KNOW that everything isn't going to be all right with an opening paragraph like that! The book chronicles the accelerating demise of it's title character, Bunny Munro, a man whose lusts guide his bearing, ultimately leading him to a cracked, premature ending. The book starts with his wife committing suicide, and although one never knows for sure, it's fairly easy to guess that it's as a result of her husband's wanton ways. He is left to handle their nine year old son, Bunny Jr. as he careens toward the death that even he subconsciously realizes is fast approaching.


While you're reading, you can also be listening - to White Lunar, the latest audio release from Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, his long time collaborator for more than fifteen years with The Bad Seeds, Grinderman and The Dirty Three. It's a double disc release and its sleeves describes itself as thus:
"White Lunar is a selection of pieces taken from various motion pictures and documentaries that we have been involved in, namely The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, The Proposition, The Road, The English Surgeon, The Girls of Phnom Penh and a variety of pieces selected from our vaults. White Lunar was recorded in Air Studios and Air Edel, London and Scuzz Studios, Ivry Sur Seine between 2005 and 2009. The first CD has the big themes, the orchestra and the songs and the second CD is fractured, haunting and sometimes badly behaved."
As presented by Cave and Ellis above, these are cinematic pieces heavy with portent. On disc one, you'll also find a sneak peak from the soundtrack for The Road, whose full soundtrack doesn't come out for another few weeks. I'm not sure you can listen to both of these atmospheric discs back to back, but they provide an ample of dose of just how powerful Cave's soundtracking efforts are. Stark, haunting, sometimes unsettling, and never trite.





Visit his website, his label Mute, and become his friend on MySpace.