May 23rd, 2024
The Lemon Twigs’ “A Dream Is All We Know” Is A Dream For The Ears New York’s power pop duo goes baroque on their new albumBy: Dylan Peggin
One would think The Lemon Twigs were captured in a time capsule from the ‘60s and brought into the 21st century. Consisting of brothers Brian and Michael D’Addario, the duo craft retro-sounding rock with influences derivative of baroque, indie, glam, and power pop. It is ludicrous for any modern artist with an obvious trace of influence from decades past to be dubbed as “passé.” The Lemon Twigs manage to take every cliche of the genres they explore into one giant... Read More
Comments: 0May 12th, 2024
The Doors Turn Out The Lights in Stockholm The Swedish broadcast finally released for Record Store DayBy: Dylan Peggin
In September 1968, The Doors embarked on a European tour, performing two sets per night (twelve shows total) over fourteen days across five countries. Things were off to a solid start with two consecutive nights at London’s legendary Roundhouse, followed by a stop in Frankfurt. Matters got hairy in Amsterdam when Jim Morrison went on a drug binge and was hospitalized, leaving the group to carry the shows out as a trio. Morrison recouped well enough for Copenhagen two... Read More
Comments: 3May 10th, 2024
Sonny Rollins "A Night At The Village Vanguard"— First Time Release Cut From the Original Master Tapes Tone Poet 3 LP Set Is One Of The Great Jazz ReissuesBy: Joseph W. Washek
In October 1957, Sonny Rollins was booked for a two month gig at New York City jazz club, The Village Vanguard. Though widely regarded as the most innovative and important saxophonist in jazz, Rollins was, in his own words, "so disillusioned with myself that I was afraid to hear myself." At the Vanguard, he was leading his own band for the first time and searching for a way to play jazz that was freer and more expressive than the bebop style of harmonic... Read More
Comments: 9For a quick musical pick me up you can't beat War. The group was born during Vietnam war time and now with this release and others, has another lease on jazz-funk life during more war time. Has there ever been a time without it? The story behind the group is at least as interesting as the music is invigorating, so much fun and on top of it all, super-well recorded.If you're of a certain age you remember these catchy as crabs cowbell infected tunes blaring... Read More
Comments: 2May 3rd, 2024
Daniel Barenboim Conducts Bruckner's "Romantic" Symphony A riveting performance from the orchestra and from the groovesBy: Michael Johnson
Anton Bruckner’s (1824-1896) Symphony No. 4 in E-flat Major, premiered in 1881, is the composer’s most popular “early” symphony, with numbers 7, 8, and the incomplete 9 being the usual headline works. It was also his first major success as a composer, before which Bruckner's renown was mostly as an organist and counterpoint instructor. Bruckner dedicated this work to Austro-Hungarian royal, Prince Konstantin, who was a major financier of cultural life in Vienna... Read More
Comments: 14May 1st, 2024
Tom Waits’ Eccentric ‘The Black Rider’ Also Ruined 30th anniversary edition is expectedly mediocreBy: Malachi Lui
Even for Tom Waits, The Black Rider is eccentric if not downright weird. He was already making odd records, but at least Bone Machine or Swordfishtrombones have identifiable rhythmic structures and some coherent melodies. Here, you’ve got intentionally grating train whistles and William S. Burroughs guiding you through what sounds like an early 20th century rendering of hell. More than any other Waits album, The Black Rider must be heard as a full record to even make sense; otherwise, it sounds like some raving lunatic is about to attack you.
Read More Comments: 9April 30th, 2024
Aram Khachaturian: Music from the Ballet "Gayne," Anatole Fistoulari, London Symphony Orchestra AMAZING SOUND QUALITY FROM EVEREST RECORDS, 1959!By: John Marks
Harry Belock blew a huge wad of cash on Everest Records, trying to "surpass" Capitol Records both in recording technology, and in quality of repertory. But, to quote John Maynard Keynes, the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent. So, here's a priceless moment in time, forever frozen in amber; or rather, frozen on 35mm magnetic film.
Read More Comments: 0April 29th, 2024
Linkin Park Curates a Prime Selection of “Papercuts” One of the 21st century’s best-selling groups releases its first singles collectionBy: Dylan Peggin
Collaborations by Aerosmith/Run DMC and Anthrax/Public Enemy bridged the gap between rock and rap. By the early 2000s, Linkin Park became the poster boys of the nu-metal movement. The muscle of Chester Bennington’s passionate vocals and Brad Delson’s crunchy guitar riffs juxtaposed Mike Shinoda’s rapping and Joe Hahn’s sampling/scratching, with bassist Dave Farrell and drummer Rob Bourdon gluing it all together. To say this fusion was a mild success is an... Read More
Comments: 1April 28th, 2024
Kronos Quartet's Deepest Album Now on Vinyl for the 1st Time Crumb's "Black Angels" and Shostakovich's 8th get double-LP treatmentBy: Fred Kaplan
As part of its 60th anniversary celebration, Nonesuch Records is reissuing several of its albums on vinyl for the first time, among them one of the greatest recordings by the Kronos Quartet, which happens to be marking its 50th year as an ensemble.The album is Black Angels, the label’s 6th Kronos album, released in 1990 and still among the most jarring and important in the entire Nonesuch catalogue and in the Kronos discography.Nonesuch and Kronos made a perfect... Read More
Comments: 9April 26th, 2024
Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’: Perversely Fascinating, Subtly Disastrous Failures at this level are rare. Enjoy them when they happen.By: Malachi Lui
Social scientists will likely spend years analyzing Taylor Swift’s retained meteoric success, but the primary cause seems very simple: pure narcissism. Swift’s music is almost entirely about her, from her perspective only; in both her music and her public presence, those around her (lovers, friends, enemies) are secondary to her and how she feels, their proximity or distance meant to prove something favorable about her. In the age of main character syndrome, Swift’s... Read More
Comments: 75April 24th, 2024
A Name to Remember, A Band to Celebrate Kahil El'Zabar's eye-opening 50th anniversary in jazzBy: Fred Kaplan
Jazz is to New York as port is to Portugal or coal is to Newcastle, yet there are great musicians who live elsewhere, many of them obscure in the metropole because they live elsewhere, and that’s a shame for us all. Kahil El’Zabar is one of those great musicians, a composer and percussionist who dwells mainly in Chicago, except when he travels through Europe, where he’s better known than he is in New York, even though he and his main band, the Ethnic Heritage... Read More
Comments: 1April 24th, 2024
Revisiting 80s Bond: The Return of John Barry LaLa Land Records Releases All the Notes in its New Deluxe EditionBy: Mark Ward
Released as a companion to its Live and Let Die reissue, this limited edition, deluxe 2CD set explores every note composed by John Barry for his return to the series, whose sound he created two decades earlier.
Read More Comments: 2April 23rd, 2024
When James Bond Met Two Beatles... LaLa Land Records' Deluxe Reissue Revisits How Paul McCartney and George Martin Re-Invented the James Bond SoundBy: Mark Ward
This is the first of two recent releases from LaLaLand Records exploring lesser-known Bond scores from the 1970s and 1980s. First up, this limited edition, deluxe 2CD release of Live and Let Die (1973), which was the first Bond film not to be scored by John Barry, and the first to star Roger Moore. While at the time of the film’s release many felt George Martin’s score was a pale shadow of Barry’s template, the passage of time has been kinder to this music, and there’s no doubting the power of Paul McCartney’s iconic theme song. Time, therefore, to follow LaLaLand Records’ cue and dive deep into the origins of “the Bond sound” and how two of the Beatles team tackled this impossible assignment to reinvent Barry’s stylings for a new era and a new leading man.
Read More Comments: 0April 19th, 2024
On Record Store Day Bernie Worrell Waves to You From His Wooniverse All-Star Friends help keyboard titan complete unfinished catalog recordings.By: Evan Toth
What are woo doing this Record Store Day? There’s always something to please almost everyone each year. One of my shopping strategies is to try to find something unique, containing music that hasn’t been heard before; I appreciate when an artist - or, their team - waits for this special annual shopping moment to drop some music that the world hasn’t yet heard; it makes it an event. This year, the record release that falls on that side of my barometer is Bernie... Read More
Comments: 2April 17th, 2024
André 3000’s Long, Strange Trip of Flute Discovery is Dopalicious in Triple LP Version "New Blue Sun" offers Time Out of Mind.By: Jan Omdahl
André 3000, one of the greatest rappers of all time, picks up the flute and makes his first solo effort in 17 years with an intriguing triple album of rap-free, mostly improvised ambient music.
Read More Comments: 0April 17th, 2024
UHQR 'Gaucho' Doesn't Right Any Original Sonic Wrongs, It Just Gets More Right the best 'Gaucho' ever?By: Michael Fremer
How can an album filled with songs about drug dealers, users, losers, the jilted, and of course the age-gapped creep famously exclaiming, "Hey nineteen, that's 'Retha Franklin" be so sparkly-enticing and such a party listen? Partly it's the twisted fun Becker and Fagan have with their cast of characters delivering mellifluous lines like, "The Cuervo Gold, the fine Colombian, make tonight a wonderful thing," seemingly disconnected... Read More
Comments: 12