Sunday, July 24, 2005

My Morning Jacket's Upcoming Album "Z"

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My Morning Jacket at Penn's Landing, Philadelphia, PA

Jim James of My Morning Jacket discusses the new album titled "Z", to be released on October 4, with Kavitha Chekuru on Pitchfork. Chekuru writes:
"To try to lump the band into one musical genre doesn't seem fair, as rock-country or alt-country or anything else would never cover all the bases. And with a band that seems perfectly able to channel Neil Young as much as Wayne Coyne, it is difficult to anticipate what's to except from this album, particularly as it features two new members (Bo Koster on keyboards and Carl Broemel on guitar)."

My Morning Jacket's drummer Patrick Hallahan comments on the new album's sound:
"This one is totally different from everything else. It's the first album with two new members from the band...two new people and that's definitely going to change the sound a bit. They've opened up some new areas. It's a result of all of us growing up quite a bit. It's kind of a reflection of our attitudes on the state of the world. We could choose the low roads and be depressed; but we're choosing to be really positive. It's more spacious, as we took a kind of 'less is more' approach. More danceable, so to speak, but there are definitely rocking moments. We like music that moves you. That's definitely in there as well. This album is all over the place really."

More on My Morning Jacket.

Saturday, July 23, 2005

Lucinda Williams' Live At The Fillmore West Influenced by Neil Young's Live Rust

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From an interview with Lucinda Williams in the Rocky Mountain News by Mark Brown, Williams discusses the influence of Neil Young's Live Rust on recording her latest CD Live at the Fillmore.
"I was trying to put something together that I'd want to listen to myself. I don't listen to live records for two reasons: There's just too much talking going on, or it just doesn't sound good because of the way it was recorded. Those were the two things I was trying to make sure weren't going to happen."

lucinda-williams-stairs.jpg Lucinda Williams has also been influenced by Bob Dylan's music, as well.
"Bob Dylan inspired me a lot in that area. Remember those songs he was writing in the '60s, Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands, It's Alright Ma? Look at the difference between that and those songs on Time Out of Mind."

More on Lucinda William's music and influences.

Friday, July 22, 2005

Elvis Costello and Emmylou Harris in Concert

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Elvis Costello and Emmylou Harris are touring together and the concerts have been receiving strong reviews and surprising fans.

Elvis Costello once famously said "writing about music is like dancing about architecture -- it's a really stupid thing to want to do." So here we go....

From an interview in the New Haven Advocate, (link via Chromewaves) Elvis comments on the role of his new album "The Delivery Man":
"Emmylou and I share a repertoire. And The Delivery Man has a story going through it, with a beginning, a middle and an end. So we're trying build a [new] story that incorporates all of that. You shouldn't assume all the songs in the repertoire [on this tour] are country. There are great harmony songs. There's a real rolling feel to it."

Bill Ladd writes on MSNBC.com on Elvis Costello/Emmylou Harris show at the Tower Theatre in Upper Darby, PA:
"As a big fan of Elvis, I expected to politely sit through Emmylou's opening act waiting for Mr. C. Boy, was I wrong. Bounding out on stage only minutes later than the 8:00PM showtime, Elvis ripped through 45 minutes of his back catalogue, with some selections from his latest release thrown in. At that point, he brought out Emmylou and a multi-instrumentalist (whose name escapes me) for more then an hour. Singing duets, taking turns on lead vocals, covering Johnny Cash and George Jones tunes (along with some of their own work) Elvis and Emmylou clearly loved working together. Elvis finished up the show ripping through 10 or so of his own songs before bringing Emmylou out for both encores, the first lasting for 6 or 7 songs. The show lasted 3+ hours and must have had 40 songs. I was so blown away, it disturbs me that the venue didn't appear to be sold out. If this is the case for their upcoming shows together, tell your readers to get out there and catch this act while they can. Emmylou is only spending two weeks on the tour, with the last date July 31st. Get there if you can!"

Also, see concert review and photos of Elvis Costello & Emmylou Harris at Wolf Trap, Vienna, VA on July 31, 2005.

More on Elvis Costello and Emmylou Harris.

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Son Volt's New "Okemah and the Melody of Riot" - Jay Farrar Channels Woody Guthrie

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Jay Farrar seems to be channeling Woody Guthrie's spirit on Son Volt's latest CD "Okemah and the Melody of Riot". Here's a MP3 of "Atmosphere" on Bars and Guitars. Much as Jeff Tweedy & Billy Bragg channeled Woody Guthrie on Mermaid Ave. in 1998, "Okemah" contains the spirit of folk legend Guthrie. Okemah, Oklahoma was the birthplace of Woody Guthrie, author of one the "most scathing American ballads ever written 'This Land Is Your Land' ".

"Okemah and the Melody of Riot" is on DualDisc with a documentary "Break Through The Lens" on the flip side. The DVD has studio footage, an interview with Jay Farrar and a live performances of "Afterglow 61", "Atmosphere", "Medication" & "Joe Citizen Blues".

From Lexington Herald-Leader:
"Guitars grope and dive like the vintage Crazy Horse records of Neil Young. Farrar almost passively describes such a sound on Okemah's "Afterglow 61" as "electrified traditional."

Pitchfork Review by Stephen M. Deusner (via DiatribeR):

"Okemah proves to be not just 13 protest songs, but 13 songs about protest songs. Farrar believes unquestioningly in music's ability to affect tremendous social change, soothe a nation, or stop an "endless war with no moral face." That idea still sounds as attractive and optimistic now as it was 70 years ago when Guthrie sang about the Dust Bowl, and although he doesn't seem to consider that perhaps reverent hindsight grants protest music most of its power, Farrar wants to resurrect that musical populism as a weapon against the current administration."

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The spirit of Woody Guthrie infuses Son Volt's "Okemah and the Melody of Riot"


The channeling of Woodie Guthrie even goes right to the CD cover's design which evokes the famous line "This Machine Kills Fascists".

Over on SOUND THE SIRENS in a review by Luke Daniel Rush who is a little less fond of protest songs:
"Farrar spends a fair amount of time grinding his rusty ax against that great immovable object known as the United States government, but after seven years on the sidelines and two contentious elections by the boards, you'd expect that he might have a missive or two tucked away in the coffers. It might have been a more noble artistic motion had not Farrar drawn such a high number at the Protest Song deli counter. Simply put, it ain't as fresh a topic as it used to be. For each pertinent lyric like "Piecemeal solutions will only leave scars / Bandages for nosebleeds," there's a simple, unveiled screed like "His daddy has a job in Washington / Wants to raise a Harvard son / Junior liked to let his hair down / Only trouble is, word gets around..." Fortunately, it becomes easy to revel in the power chords on "Jet Pilot" even as Farrar invokes silly lines like "everyone needs a hunting pal" and the well-worn "the revolution will be televised."


Jay Farrar and Son Volt pick up on the resurgence of the good old fashioned American protest song similar to Green Day's "American Idiot" and Steve Earle's "The Revolution Starts Now!"
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Woody Guthrie as an album cover design theme


A review in the Washington Post - Son Volt, a Reenergized Force by Allison Stewart:

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"There are enough great, unadorned rock tracks here to cover a multitude of sins: "Who" and the full-tilt version of "World Waits for You" (the latter also shows up as a piano ballad, equally fine) are Farrar at his best, streamlined and solid, while "Afterglow 61" is the latest in an illustrious line of Son Volt highway songs.

Like the rest of "Okemah," "Afterglow 61" functions on two levels, with varying degrees of success. As a travelogue through the mythic Middle America of Woody Guthrie and Mark Twain, it's terrific. As a solemn index of present-day wartime indignities, it's a bit of a muddle.

Farrar typically traffics in gently opaque songs about love and doubt dispensed in a kindly, craggy tenor that falls somewhere between Ron Wood and Hal Holbrook in "Mark Twain Tonight!" But "Okemah" has teeth. It's a high-minded, resolute indictment of the Iraq war that faces the same near-insurmountable difficulties as all political albums: Make your references too topical and risk a limited shelf life; make them too vague and risk no one noticing. With an acrobatic impressiveness, "Okemah" manages both. It's too specific in some places (the protagonist of "Jet Pilot" "found a way to get a passing grade / Made it to the world stage / A hemisphere away death is on display." Go on, try to guess whom it's about), too vague in others ("Atmosphere," with its allusions to "smoke plume twilight / American tears," seems to be referencing Sept. 11, 2001, but it's anybody's guess)."

From a review on KINGBLIND on the album's lyrics and Farrar's songwriting:
"Farrar evokes Guthrie as a muse even in the album's title—Guthrie's birthplace is Okemah, Oklahoma—but it's in his passionate songwriting that he captures the soul and the sense of greater purpose that characterized Guthrie's work. "The revolution will be televised," Farrar promises on the blistering "Jet Pilot," as loaded and furious a political protest anthem as has been written during George W. Bush's second term so far, and he spends the album's 11 other tracks (12, technically, with two different arrangements of "World Waits For You") laying the groundwork for that revolution. He tackles matters of broad social unrest (calling out "madmen on both sides of the fence" on "Atmosphere") and profound personal disquiet (offering an insightful autocritique on "World Waits for You" when he sings, "Find strength from the words/Of those that went before/Take what you need/But leave even more") with equal gravity and aplomb."

And in review on EARVOLUTION by Morgan Clendaniel, he takes on the ghost of the legendary Uncle Tupelo and the spell it has cast on the "no depression" sounds' progenitors:
"It's really not fair, at this point, to continue using Uncle Tupelo as a barometer of either Farrar or Jeff Tweedy's solo success. Let's just say this: Farrar has made an album with as much volume, and as much anger, as any Tupelo record. There are no snippets of "found sound" or studio tricks here. But, let's also note that Son Volt and Wilco are a lot closer in attitude and style than either Farrar or Tweedy would like to admit. But maybe now it's time for Farrar's music to get a closer look, after a near-decade of Wilco-madness. And with Okemah and the Melody of Riot, Son Volt should reclaim some of the spotlight that unjustly dwindled in recent years."

More on Jay Farrar, and Uncle Tupelo and their relationship to Neil Young's music.

Lastly, got a nice timely note from the band called Okemah. Damian writes: "Your efforts have influenced my view on music due to the artists I have discovered through your site. Me and my friends have put together a musical collaboration (Okemah) in tune with much of what you are doing. We are just getting off the ground in this humbling experience of music and the music world."

Check Okemah out.
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The band Okemah performing live

Randomly Blogged - Beck, Tegan and Sara, Pitchfork Stuck,

SomeDepression has download's of Beck MP3's from "Fresh Meat and Old Slabs

Largehearted Boy clips Tegan and Sara talking to the Boston Globe on "Women in
Rock"


Vinyl Mine's Coffee and Cigarettes MP3 Mix: I Almost Cut My Hair Today with Skeletons and Girl-faced Boys

songs:illinois covers the Pitchfork Controversy over the "Say Hi To Your Mom" bad review. Includes one of the most amazing letters to the editor

Monday, July 11, 2005

Kathleen Edwards: An Unknown Legend?

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Just came across a nice cover of Neil Young's "Unknown Legend" by Kathleen Edwards from the KCRW 's Morning Becomes Eclectic program (direct link to Real Audio file.) "Unknown Legend" starts at about 35:00.

If you need convincing to listen to the in-studio performance, here's Tucson Weekly on Canada's other Unknown Legend by WILL K. SHILLING:
"Back to Me is her follow up to Failer, her ironically titled, Lucinda Williams-meets-Neil Young debut. But Back to Me shows her growth, not just as a confident singer-songwriter, but as a bandleader."

Live, as Edwards is archived on KCRW.org, the Canuck chanteuse and her unnamed band can be most compelling. Covering hero Neil Young, she can twist ephemeral into spectral, infusing Young's purple rural poetry with an innocence and innocuous knowledge of art and setting that borders on both cute and scarily advanced at the same time. Edwards is decidedly unconscious at those moments, blissfully unaware of her power, and that's a good thing. Even with the wink-wink intro ("I won't tell you who this one's by ..." she giggles), it's a transcendent moment, and it's easy to see what the folks at oh-so-hard-to-please Rounder Records heard and saw in her as an unknown just a few years ago."

Saturday, July 09, 2005

Willie Nelson Goes Reggae on "Countryman"

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Sounds like Willie Nelson has gone reggae on his latest CD "Countryman".

Willie does a great cover of the Jimmy Cliff classic reggae tune "The Harder They Come" (MP3).

From Miles of Music:
"After nearly a decade of gestation, Willie Nelson's long-lost, and first, reggae set is at last complete. The seed of this project took root in late 1995, sprung from the mind of famed producer Don Was. Nelson and his manager Mark Rothbaum flew to Jamaica to meet with Island Records president and founder Chris Blackwell. Don had been speaking with both Blackwell and Nelson about the prospect of creating a reggae-infused country album and both men were intrigued. Countryman is Willies impassioned tribute to the upstroke sound of Jamaica, an irie voyage to the land of dub and dreadlocks. Willie takes a handful of his own classics and filters them through a reggae prism, peppering them with his nylon acoustic guitar, pedal steel, Dobro, harmonica and the familiar comforts of country, while bringing drums and bass to the forefront, yard style."

willie-nelson-countryman-walmart-cover.jpgBut if you pickup "Countryman" at a Wal-Mart store, the album cover replaces the marijuana leaf with a palm tree?

"They're covering all the bases," Nelson joked in an article in the Washington Post about Wal-Mart/Sprawl-Mart's decision to request an altered "politically correct" album cover.

More on Willie Nelson and Bob Dylan in concert this summer on the baseball stadium tour and 19 true stories about Willie Nelson.

Saturday, July 02, 2005

Live8 Rocks The World

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The Live8 concerts have started this morning. Feeds are now coming in from London, Berlin & Rome. Paris, Philly & Toronto are scheduled to come in shortly. Millions in person, tuned in on-line, and watching.

The worldwide July 2nd Live 8 – The Long Walk to Justice concert will be held at eight locations and are being organized to put pressure on the G-8 nations' leaders to come up with more aid for Africa.

Lots of folks blogging coverage. Certainly beats the 1985 televised coverage with infuriating commercial cutaways. Technorati has continuous blog updates from around the world on the Live 8 concerts.
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U2 & Paul McCartney

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Live 8 London stage

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Bono & Paul

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Coldplay with Richard Ashcroft in London

Onstage now in London's Hyde Park are Coldplay with Richard Ashcroft doing "Bittersweet Symphony". Lots of crowd shots. Looks like a big crowd of hundreds of thousands.
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Good Charlotte in Tokyo

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Elton John in London

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Audioslave in Berlin

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Live 8 Berlin stage

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Green Day in Berlin

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Sarah McLachlan in Philadelphia

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Maroon 5 covers Neil Young's "Rockin' in the Free World"

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Dave Matthews Band in Philadelphia

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Linkin Park & Jay-Z in Philly

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Live 8 stage at Philadelphia Art Museum -
1 Million Attend according to Mayor

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Roger & Pete - The Who in London
"Won't Get Fooled Again"

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Pink Floyd & "Comfortably Numb" in London


From MSNBC.com:
"Concerts held more or less simultaneously in 10 venues are next to impossible for television to get its arms around.

And part of it was also MTV's failure to really try. There were as many commercial breaks as performances, and MTV's stable of correspondents spent more time talking about what a fantastic event it was instead of showing it.

With a click of the mouse, America Online visitors could jump from a video feed of the London concert to one from Philadelphia, Berlin or Rome. The performances were shown in their entirety. By mid-afternoon, AOL had set a record with 150,000 people simultaneously viewing video streams, the most ever, according to AOL programming chief Bill Wilson."

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The blogosphere exploded with rage over the inept MTV coverage of VJ's instead of music. Here's Jukebox Graduate's take on MTV's coverage: "It was childish, moronic, disrespectful, inappropriate, and just plain LAME."

And the bashing of MTV's Live 8 coverage continues in The Los Angeles Times by Robert Hilburn:
"Everyone knows MTV has long lost interest in pop music, so why doesn't the cable channel just admit it and leave the coverage of historic events, such as the humanitarian Live 8 concerts, to someone with respect for the music and its audience?

MTV's coverage of Saturday's event, designed to combat poverty in Africa, was beyond embarrassing. It was pitiful."

So. A day that combined a good cause and the best and worst that technology has to offer. In moments, the whole thing will be ripped and re-streamed as MP3's, bootlegs, bit-torrents and downloads. This blog sums it all up pretty well:
"Don't get me wrong, LIVE 8 was an amazing media feat. Yes, it may be an inflection point, from cable to the net, from MTV to remix your own. That, itself, is a victory for consumers. But isn't there a certain irony for celebrating a victory for more consumer choice and control for a handful -- around an event on global poverty? Is the highpoint of net-enabled media a mass entertainment event that draws us to SMS or click on a petition and feel we have done our part?

We love our technology and models of media, but we can't forget the cause (no matter how complex) and what we can do."

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Neil Young Closes Live8 Concert in Canada


More on Live8 Finale: Neil Young Rocks the Free World.