Before Dean and Gene Ween became darlings of the jam-band crowd, they toured as a twosome backed only by a dat machine. This recording of an early show at a tiny Chapel Hill, North Carolina, venue captures the jokester "brothers" in all their ragged glory, as they share nutso lyrics, epic guitar licks, and witty repartee with the crowd. Matt Hendrickson
Monday November 24, 2008
ROCK & ROLL HALL OF FAME'S SOHO OUTPOST
Photograph courtesy of Retna Ltd.
The Velvet Underground. Blondie. The Ramones. The music of New York gets its due tomorrow when the Cleveland-based Rock & Roll Hall of Fame opens its first annex, in SoHo. In addition to memorabilia like Bruce Springsteen's 1957 Chevy and John Lennon's Record Plant piano, the annex features an interactive map that guides you to Manhattan music landmarks like Studio 54, the Chelsea Hotel, and the former CBGB. Katie Hintz
Tuesday November 11, 2008
60 SECONDS WITH DAVID COOK AND DAVID ARCHULETA
Photograph by K Mazur/TCA 2008/WireImage.com
Got a minute? Last season's American Idol winner David Cook and runner-up David Archuleta dish about their upcoming albums (out November 18 and today, respectively) and panty-throwing fans.
Q: You guys are putting out albums right after a huge election. Do you keep your political beliefs to yourselves?
Cook: I think voting is a personal right and a privilege. For me it's less about alienating anybody and more about not trying to be a persuasion. People need to vote based on their own ideas. Archuleta: I try to stay away from taking sides in politics, sportsanything competitive, really, because fans get so into that. I don't want people to base their opinion of me on a small comment I make.
Q: So you'd rather have them judge you on your new albums. What can we expect?
Archuleta: It's a pop album with a little R&B flavor. There's a nice variety, because I didn't want to pigeonhole myself. Being a teenager, I'm always changing my mind. Cook: Mine is very eclectic, although it's a rock record for sure. There are heavy, guitar-driven songs, very delicate piano songs, and everything in between. I had a chance to work with people I admire, like Raine Maida from Our Lady Peace, Kevin Griffin from Better Than Ezra, Johnny Rzeznik, Zac Maloy. It was great for them to treat me as a peer.
Q: What albums did you look to for inspiration?
Cook: I tried to keep outside influence to a minimum. I found myself relying more on self-evaluation than anything. I wanted to be fresh and untainted. Archuleta: I listened to Jordin Sparks' first album, because she's another artist my age and she mixed it up, which allowed her to do more with her next album. The guy who wrote "My Hands" on my album actually wrote "No Air" for Jordin.
Q: What's the craziest fan experience you guys have had?
Archuleta: My fans don't do freaky things. They throw stuffed animals. One time, Cook got some underwear, and he threw them on me. I was like, "Oh, nasty!" I freaked out. Cook: For the record, yeah, I did. But they were thrown at me by a fan first. Katie Hintz
The Smiths have released more greatest-hits packages than original albums. For those new to Morrissey's melancholy, this two-CD set is the best intro yet, but serious fans should stick with 1987's Louder Than Bombs. Matt Hendrickson
The music video for "Panic," one of the tracks on The Sound of the Smiths
On their third album, the EODM prove they're more than a novelty sideshow to drummer Josh Homme's other project, Queens of the Stone Age. Homme's songwriting with partner Jesse Hughes is tight and sadistically funny, especially on "I'm Your Torpedo." Matt Hendrickson
The music video for "Wanna Be in LA," from the new album
One of country music's cleverest lyricists, Paisley seems determined to show he can also play a mean guitar. The guest vocal spots by Keith Urban and B.B. King are pedestrian compared with the frenetic jams on "Turf's Up" and "Playing With Fire." Matt Hendrickson
A preview of Paisley's guitar album
Tuesday November 04, 2008
COBAIN UNSEEN
Photograph courtesy of the estate of Kurt Cobain
Seattle writer Charles Cross first saw the storage facility containing the late Kurt Cobain's quirkiest possessions while researching Heavier Than Heaven, his 2001 biography of the Nirvana frontman. Cross recently sifted through those boxes of journals, recordings, artwork, and trinketsor what the author calls "a never-before-seen dark museum of fucked-up-ness"to produce the new photo book Cobain Unseen (Little, Brown, $35). Accompanied by a CD of spoken-word recordings of Cobain unearthed by Cross, the book's 150 still lifes offer a haunting testament to Cobain's creativity. As the musician wrote in his journal, "Look at my stuff and figure me out." Matt Hendrickson
Tuesday October 28, 2008
THE MATTHEW HERBERT BIG BAND, THERE'S ME AND THERE'S YOU
Herbert combines his trademark bizarro samples with a 17-piece band and vocals by U.K. jazz singer Eska for a symphonic-electronic blend that is more sublime than overpowering. Matt Hendrickson
Tuesday October 28, 2008
SCHOOL OF SEVEN BELLS, ALPINISMS
School of Seven Bells, Alpinisms [Ghostly International]
Our rating: 3 out of a possible 5
Former Secret Machine guitarist Ben Curtis trades psychedelia for something with more thump. At times, the bass-driven sound fights with the cooing vocals from Alejandra and Claudia Deheza, but if ethereal rump-shakers are your thing, you could do worse. Matt Hendrickson
The band performs "Sempiternal" at a concert in New York City.
Monday October 27, 2008
THE CONSPICUOUS ABSENCE: THE MALE SOLO ARTIST
Photographs courtesy of Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage.com, Sarah Cass, Jeff Vespa/WireImage.com, and Joey Foley/FilmMagic
This year the crooner throne has been occupied by ladies: Katy Perry, Duffy, Adele, Kate Nash. So where are the dudes? Here's a guide to the new male singers trying to make it to the top of the charts. Matt Hendrickson
1. DAVID ARCHULETA
Hype: The American Idol runner-up possesses a syrupy voice, and he sets it free, Chris Brown-style. Hit Potential: Highif he follows up his chart-topping "Crush" with some upgraded dance moves.
The music video for "Crush," Archuleta's hit single
2. BON IVER
Hype: This Wisconsin folkie (a.k.a. Justin Vernon) won blogger love for his debut, For Emma, Forever Ago. Hit Potential: Low. His lonesome sound doesn't lend itself to chart-climbing.
Iver performs "Flume," from his last album.
3. TEDDY GEIGER
Hype: The 20-year-old New Yorker is John Mayer-meets-Jason Mraz. Hit Potential: High. He lacks that winning, self-deprecating sense of humor, but the chicks dig him anyway.
Geiger covers Sean Kingston's hit "Beautiful Girls."
4. DAVID COOK
Hype: The Idol champ travels in the same circles as Nickelback, and mom-rock fans can't get enough. Hit Potential: Middling. There's always room for another generic rocker, but Cook won't be anything more than that.
"Fall Back Into Me," from Cook's first solo album, Analog Heart
On their third release, America's top psychedelic rockers deliver more of the druggy jams (like "Nothing Ever Happened" and "Activa") that have won them a cult following. But they also unveil their most accessible sound to date with the gentle, lilting "Agoraphobia." Matt Hendrickson
The band performs "Nothing Ever Happened" at a September concert in Los Angeles.
Thursday October 23, 2008
60 SECONDS WITH COOLIO
Photograph courtesy of NBC Universal
Got a minute? Nineties "Gangsta's Paradise" rapper Coolio discusses his new album and reality show, and why he's not down with Bobby Flay.
Q: First off, are you keeping the braids?
A: Yeah. People say, "Your braids are played out," but 50 percent of people are going to like you and 50 percent aren't. So cater to the ones that do, and the other halffuck 'em.
Q: You have a new album, Steal Here (October 21). Were you inspired by guys like Lil Wayne and T-Pain who currently rule the rap charts?
A: Hell-to-the-no. I'm not really listening too much hip-hop because I'm not feeling a whole lot of it besides Kanye and T.I. I'm motivating myself.
Q: How does your new reality show, Coolio Rules (October 28 on Oxygen), compare to the other father-knows-best shows like Run's House and Snoop Dogg's Father Hood?
A: There's a lot more reality in our show than other shows. I didn't want people to look at it and say "This is scripted" or "That's some bullshit." I just tried to be myself as much as I could. I preach to my four kids to be yourself. I tell them don't be a wuss and don't let people hurt your feelings.
Q: Your first foray into reality entertainment was with your online cooking show, Cookin' With Coolio. What's your specialty?
A: Making something out of nothing. I go in the refrigerator and whatever's in there I'll make a meal from, and it'll taste gourmet. It's not elitist cookingit's cooking for the everyday man. I can go buy a regular ol' piece of steak from Ralph's and make it taste just as good as kobe beef. I'm the leftover king, too.
Q: How do you feel about the star chef craze?
A: I've eaten at one of Gordon Ramsey's restaurants, and I really wasn't that impressed. I thought his food was bland and very English. I'm an Emeril fan. He'll go out on a limb and take chances. I like Wolfgang Puck. All Bobby Flay does is recreate traditional dishes. I take chances when I'm in the kitchen, just like I do with music.
Q: Do you want to try the restaurant thing?
A: Definitely! I want to do my own spices, the whole shebang. I'm going to go Paul Newman on they ass. And rest in peace to him. I love his damn lemonade. And his salad dressing. Katie Hintz
A preview of Coolio's new reality series
Thursday October 16, 2008
LUCINDA WILLIAMS, LITTLE HONEY
Photograph by Danny Clinch
With a healthy relationship and a creative spurt she calls the most prolific in her career, alt-country's queen of pain and heartbreak sounds sweetand shockingly upbeaton her ninth studio album, Little Honey. Here, she gets in touch with her feminine side.
Q: You do a cover of AC/DC's "It's a Long Way to the Top" on the new album. Are you a closet headbanger?
A: I was into a lot of the blues-based rock bands like Cream, the early Stones. The punk thing flew right by me, but the metal bands like AC/DC were holding on to that blues stuff. I also got into Tool, Audioslave, Machinehead.
Q: You take brat rockers like Pete Doherty and Amy Winehouse to task on "Little Rock Star." Was there a particular inspiration?
A: It's not really about Pete Doherty, but I just kept seeing his face popping up all fucked up when I was writing. Amy Winehouse is terribly disheartening, bless her little disheveled soul. Really, the song had a lot to do with Ryan Adamshe's a friend of minebefore he sobered up.
Q: Do you feel like the weary rock matriarch dispensing advice?
A: I'm 55 years old, and Patti Smith and Chrissie Hynde are the only women in my age group who are doing this thing. It's shocking. But I'm in the best place in my whole life on every level. Except I don't look as good as I used to. Matt Hendrickson
Williams performs "Real Love" on the Late Show with David Letterman
The eighties phenoms' first album in six years is a dusty twangfest that veers between wispy, mournful ballads ("Almost Perfect") and gritty fist-pumpers ("Boots of Chinese Plastic") whose high-energy throb proves that Chrissie Hynde is still a badass. Matt Hendrickson
The music video for "Boots of Chinese Plastic," from the band's new album
After an agonizing divorce, Folds blows off steam on his third solo album. His deadpan humor still shines through on "Dr. Yang," a frenetic ode to gurus, and "Bitch Went Nuts," about an ex who stabbed his basketball. Matt Hendrickson
The music video for "Cologne," one of the tracks on Way to Normal
The gravelly-voiced singer, a grittier version of John Mayer, cuts loose with a full band for the first time, turning out stark country, dirty blues, and melancholic folk. But the album's not all gloomits best track is an upbeat, boot-stomping love letter to White Stripes drummer Meg White. Matt Hendrickson
A photo slideshow set to "Let It Be Me," from LaMontagne's new album
Leave it to Damon Albarn of Gorillaz to produce the soundtrack to a half-live-action, half-animated Chinese circus opera. His fusion of electronica and traditional Eastern rhythms evokes the controlled chaos of a Hong Kong market. Matt Hendrickson
Deadheads rarely mention the year 1978, but 30 years ago the band played epic shows at the base of the Great Pyramid. The remastered versions of these tracks are transcendent, thanks to Jerry Garcia's guitar work. Matt Hendrickson
The Grateful Dead performing "Terrapin Station" in Egypt
Thursday October 09, 2008
60 SECONDS WITH KEANE'S TIM RICE-OXLEY
Photograph courtesy of Universal Music Group
Got a minute? Keane songwriter and jack-of-all-instruments Tim Rice-Oxley discusses the band's new album, the Ting Tings, and why he's not cut out to be a frontman.
Q: Keane made a name as a piano-rock band, but on the new record, Perfect Symmetry, you use a synthesizer, saxophone, and musical saw. What made you bring more sounds into the mix?
A: I have no idea, really. We were just following our noses. We set out to please ourselvesnot to worry about record sales or radio play. The musical saw in "Love is the End" was inspired by the film Delicatessen. There's a beautiful bit with a cello-and-musical-saw duet. It just worked. In the past, we might have been too scared to try those things, but we embraced the fear. The bands that we worshipRadiohead, the Beatles, the Talking Heads, U2, and Bowiechange all the time.
Q: You released the synth-driven "Spiralling" online in August. Does the song epitomize the band's new sound?
A: We just released it because we finished it first. We were still mixing the record at that point and thought, Why don't we put it on the website? We never intended for it to be a radio track at all, but it blew up into this big thing.
Q: Were you concerned about alienating your fans with this departure?
A: [Laughs] We certainly didn't worry about it while we were making the record. But once you put it out, you think, Oh shit, someone's actually going to listen to this and judge it.
Q: What was it like working with Jon Brion, who has produced songs for artists as diverse as Kanye West, Fiona Apple, and Rufus Wainwright?
A: That's what we loved about him. We didn't want someone who was going to bring us the sound of a particular band. We wanted to push what a band like us is supposed to be able to do. We spent more time talking than we did making music.
Q: In 2004, you guys were the band to watch. What new groups do you think have potential for long-term success?
A: It's been a great year for new music on both sides of the Atlantic. My favorite band this year is the Ting Tings. They're intelligent pop, and they have that energy that comes from making music in a bedroom without fear of being judgedvery much the way we made our record. The MGMT record was also great.
Q: Would you ever consider going solo?
A: I've got my hands full trying to play all the keyboard parts. Tom Chaplin is set to be one of the greatest singers of all time, so that's a lot to compete with. I'm happy in the background, doing my thing. Ryan Wenzel
The music video for "Spiralling." Keane's new album, Perfect Symmetry, hits stores October 14.
It's a trusted gimmickpairing a legend with some radio-friendly younger talentand the bluesman had the sense to recruit more quality collaborators (Los Lobos, Ben Harper) than not (Jack Johnson). Too bad none of the powwows live up to the master's solo work. Matt Hendrickson
The lady could do it all: blues, pop, soul, gospel, jazz. This three-CD-and-one-DVD set spans her 30-plus-year career and includes eight previously unreleased tracks and a slew of sublime live recordings, such as an 18-minute cover of George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord." Matt Hendrickson
Simone performing "Ain't Got No, I Got Life" in Harlem in 1969
Monday September 22, 2008
GIRL TALK, FEED THE ANIMALS
Photograph by Karl Walter/Getty Images
In a world of cut-and-paste music, nobody wields the sonic glue gun as boldly as mash-up artist Gregg Gillis, a.k.a. Girl Talk. On his frenetic, fist-pumping fourth album, Feed the Animals, the 27-year-old Pittsburgh native blends almost 300 samplesand proves that Soulja Boy and Thin Lizzy can live side by side in perfect harmony.
Q: You released Animals digitally, with a pay-what-you-want structure, and followed with a CDlike Radiohead. Would you have done it if they hadn't?
A: No. It wasn't a legitimate model until they did it. But it's also the first time I've had an audience who was hungry for a new record, so someone would have leaked it. It's just better to be up-front with people.
Q: You sampled In Rainbows. Did you pay for the download?
A: Nope. The industry tries to scare people into thinking it's illegal to use any copyrighted material. But there's fair use.
Q: Do you get pissed when people call you a DJ?
A: I'm not a DJ, but I see why people feel the need to label what I do. I've never played a dance club. My gigs are at the same scuzzy places as rock bands'. I don't just get up there and push play.
Q: Your shows are notoriously anarchic, with crowds dancing onstage. Do you ever worry about the safety of your laptop?
A: Yeah, I went through three last year. Lately I've been using this Panasonic Toughbook. They say you can't break it, but I broke it in Tulsa this summer. Pretty good, thoughlasted me six months. Matt Hendrickson
"Play Your Part," the opening track on Feed the Animals
For their second effort, this foursome from the O.C. draw more heavily from blues joints than piano bars, resulting in a smokier album with slow, grinding gems like "Mexican Dogs" and "Dreams Old Men Dream." Another sophomore slump avoided. Matt Hendrickson
Cold War Kids performing "Something Is Not Right with Me," from their new album, at New York's Webster Hall.
Monday September 15, 2008
COLLEGE ROCK REDUX: CHESTER FRENCH
Photographs courtesy of Retna UK/Universal Music
In the early to mid-eighties, college rock referred to scruffy bands like the Replacements, 10,000 Maniacs, and the Violent Femmes. Today's iteration harks back to that time but in a Rob Lowe-meets-Duran Duran sort of waywhich makes sense, since college rock circa 2008 is crisp Ivy League-born pop. Following the success of Columbia grads Vampire Weekend, the effervescent new It band Chester French, a Harvard-educated duo, are finally releasing their springy, much-hyped debut. Here, a look at college rock's valedictorians, then and now.
THE SOUND The Replacements: A blistering mix of punk, rock, and heartfelt songwriting Chester French: The Zombies if they hung out at hip-hop clubs
THE STUDIES The Replacements: Beer for breakfast (later a song title). None of the original members graduated from high school. Chester French: D.A. Wallach majored in African-American studies, Maxwell Drummey in social anthropology.
THE LOOK The Replacements: Flannel shirts and the occasional diaper (worn onstage by lead guitarist Bob Stinson) Chester French: Pastel plaids and boat shoes
THE VENUES The Replacements: Basements, dive bars, and even divier bars Chester French: Their dorm-basement recording studio and college bars
SMART CAREER MOVE The Replacements: Deciding to sign with a major label, Sire Recordssix years in Chester French: Getting a demo into the hands of Kanye West's manager
MUSICAL HIGHLIGHT The Replacements: Of all their now classics, none is better than "Color Me Impressed," from 1983's Hootenanny. Chester French: It's early, but their ode to high-maintenance girlfriends, "The Jimmy Choo's," is insanely catchy.
CELEB FRIENDS The Replacements: R.E.M. The two upstart groups toured together. Chester French: Pharrell Williams, who signed them to his label after a fierce bidding war with West and Jermaine Dupri
THE GROUPIES The Replacements: Twentysomethings in white Hanes tees and tattered $10 jeans Chester French: Twentysomethings in white Ray-Bans and tattered $300 jeans
"She Loves Everybody," set to pictures of the band.
On this ambitious concept album about life in L.A., the former Beach Boy mixes his trademark shimmering harmonies (the standout is the spine-tingling "Midnight's Another Day") with wild, poetic spoken-word interludes. Somehow it works, and this old surfer continues to prove he can ride new waves. Matt Hendrickson
A Shakespearean actor turned folkie? Don't worryFlynn is like Damien Rice but with cojones. His mix of traditional English melodies and American blues is catchy without being preciousespecially on the Pogues-like romps "Leftovers" and "Sally," which reek of the booze in which they were born. Matt Hendrickson
Blander than LCD Soundsystem and funkier than the Rapture, the Faint occupy dance-rock's middle ground. Their fifth album is edgier (see "The Geeks Were Right"), but still between fire and icewhere, as Spinal Tap's Derek Smalls says, you find lukewarm water. Matt Hendrickson
The band performing "The Geeks Were Right" in concert
A jazz pianist who takes riskshe's covered Radiohead's "Knives Out"the 25-year-old Parks is a wonder on his major-label debut, raining down notes at a punishing pace, then pulling back (as on the slow-burning epic "Peaceful Warrior") without disrupting the groove. Matt Hendrickson
On her ninth solo effort, the alt-rock goddess sheds her insecurities and turns out her most searing lyrics to date on tracks like "Shining On" and "Just Lust," in which she swears off drunken one-nighters. It's as if she wrote this over drinks with Liz Phair and PJ Harvey. Matt Hendrickson
The music video for "This Lonely Love," from Hatfield's new album
Tuesday August 05, 2008
BUZZIN' FLY 5, GOLDEN YEARS IN THE WILDERNESS
Buzzin' Fly 5, Golden Years in the Wilderness [Buzzin' Fly]
Our rating: 4.5 out of a possible 5
Everything But the Girl's Ben Watt has spent the past half-decade releasing exceedingly cool house