November 30th, 2022
Grant Green Has a Spiritual Awakening as close to "easy listening" as Blue Note getsBy: Michael Fremer
This must have been a "walk in the park" session. As the annotation says, "Surely all the songs played are too familiar to necessitate comment," although like looks, sounds can be deceiving. All of the familiar tunes—including "Just a Closer Walk With Thee","Go Down Moses" and "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child" are taken at an unhurried pace and while at first it may sound simple, relaxed and self-evident, pay... Read More
Comments: 0November 29th, 2022
"A Charlie Brown Christmas" Deluxe Edition the original stereo tape was "transparent" (as in you could almost see through it)By: Michael Fremer
This charming, mood enhancing television special soundtrack has for decades been a favorite Christmas album. Lighthearted and breezy, sometimes sentimental and occasionally deep—as when the children's chorus of San Raphael's St. Paul's choir so innocently sings "Hark, The Herald Angels Sing". How the television special came to be and a soundtrack album produced is almost as charming as the end product itself. It's told in the gatefold... Read More
Comments: 0November 28th, 2022
Newvelle Records Co-Founder, Pianist Elan Mehler Steps Out of the Producer's Booth thoughtful, late night listeningBy: Michael Fremer
With eleven previous album releases to his credit as leader, recording with some of the best known names in contemporary jazz, it's not as if Elan Mehler is new to this, but if you didn't know and relied solely on his very personal annotation, you might think otherwise.He dedicates the album—the music—to his late mother who was a religious adventurer and traveler who he describes as "a mystic" whose collection of Sufi Mystical Islamic texts he... Read More
Comments: 0November 28th, 2022
Goat's "World Music" Re-Issued A 10th Anniversary Reissue Re-Mastered At Abbey RoadBy: Mark Dawes
The mythology that has been purposefully built up around Goat is sparse but compelling. An anonymous masked voodoo collective playing psychedelic afrobeat-tinged rock, from a village called Korpilombolo in northern Sweden? It’s a nice yarn, and whether it is true or not seems irrelevant when the potency of the music itself blows away the need for a good origin story. (It turns out they actually are from northern Sweden.) If you have seen Goat perform live, you will... Read More
Comments: 0November 27th, 2022
"Thriller" Ala Mobile Fidelity The 40K One-Step Is a Mixed Sonic BagBy: Michael Fremer
Trackingangle's purchased at retail copy of MoFi's "Thriller" arrived just the other day, but editor Michael Fremer was well-prepared for the review, having served as an expert witness in Quincy Jones's lawsuit against the estate of Michael Jackson. He'd spent a lot of time listening to the trio of Q produced Jackson albums.
Read More Comments: 0November 23rd, 2022
A Nondescript Album of ‘Christmas Songs’ The various artists LP ‘Christmas Songs’ lives up to the name, but how good is it?By: Malachi Lui
Last year, when I reviewed the Yen Records holiday LP "We Wish You A Merry Christmas", a reader recommended another Japanese Christmas LP, simply titled 'Christmas Songs.' Released in 2010 by Ryuichi Sakamoto’s Commmons label, 'Christmas Songs' is a various artists LP of then-new recordings mostly of Christmas standards by a diverse range of artists, among them all three members of Yellow Magic Orchestra (albeit on separate tracks).... Read More
Comments: 0November 23rd, 2022
Suspended Memories Defines The Essence Of “Musique Nouvelle” In The 90s From the archives: Remember the supergroups? Sure you do!By: Tracking Angle
(This review, written by Glenn Hammett, originally appeared in Issue 7, Spring 1996.)Remember the supergroups? Sure you do! In the late 60s, if a musician had a successful backlog of material, or simply looked the part, he could combine his talent with others of similar rock-royalty status. After months of grooming and preparation, they would announce themselves to the world as the next best thing. Shortly thereafter, egos would flare and they’d break up (usually to... Read More
Comments: 0November 21st, 2022
UHQR “Rastaman Vibration” Gets the Riddim Right! Only around 300 copies remain of this limited to 3500 copies releaseBy: Michael Fremer
By the time “Rastaman Vibration” was released in 1976, Bob Marley had already released seven albums, the first four of which had limited distribution outside of Jamaica. “Catch a Fire,” his first for Island, released in 1973 with the famous Zippo lighter flip up jacket, was a big deal in American reggae-loving outposts like Boston, where the 1972 low budget film “The Harder They Come” starring Jimmy Cliff had been a major sensation running throughout the summer of... Read More
Comments: 0November 20th, 2022
"Revolver" Remix Makes Strong Case For Original Mono Mix says as much in the indispensible hard covered bookBy: Michael Fremer
"Welcome Klaus! Come have a listen", George Martin invited. "You can sit in my chair," he said to Klaus Voorman, bassist, artist and long time friend of The Beatles. This and other excerpts from Voorman's graphic novel birth of an icon REVOLVER tells the story of how and what moved Voorman to draw the now iconic, possibly influenced by Aubrey Beardsley pen and ink black and white cover—visually a polar opposite of Rubber Soul's inviting... Read More
Comments: 2November 18th, 2022
Intervention Reissues the Short But "Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark" it's never sounded better than this!By: Michael Fremer
It runs less than 1/2 hour but "The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark" is worth its weight in choose your favorite precious whatever. Crazy magic happened in the "small, lonely L.A. studio" A&M's Bob Garcia describes in the liner notes. Obviously the small budget or a previous booking didn't allow Gene Clark, Doug Dillard, Bernie Leadon, Chris Hillman and the others to record at the big A&M Studio, but no matter,... Read More
Comments: 0November 17th, 2022
"Monty Alexander The Montreux Years" Highlights 20+ Years of Onstage Excitement recordings from four different Montreux venuesBy: Michael Fremer
Monty Alexander's long association with the Montreux Jazz Festival produced many stellar musical moments. This double LP set culled from performances from 1993 through 2016 highlights many of them. There's a video interview with Alexander conducted by TrackingAngle editor Michael Fremer the day this review posts.
Read More Comments: 1November 17th, 2022
Aimee Mann's 'I'm With Stupid' Offers Up A Set Of Thoughtful Observations From the archives: Not since Moby Grape has so much talent been victim to dumb circumstanceBy: Michael Fremer
(This review originally appeared in Issue 7, Spring 1996.)Not since Moby Grape has so much talent been victim to dumb circumstance. Mann hit it big out of the gate with ‘Til Tuesday’s 1984 hit “Voices Carry.” You’d think two gold records would vindicate her pop musical instincts, but when Mann begin edging away from the drum machine/synth rut she’d dug for herself, towards folkier, acoustic guitar-based music, her label resisted, ultimately killing the group’s third... Read More
Comments: 0November 15th, 2022
Cool Multi-Artist Bowie Tribute LP "David Bowie In Jazz" Found in the Bins French jazz release shows up in U.S. vinyl supply chainBy: Larry Jaffee
“David Bowie in Jazz"'s Aladdin Sane-era cover art might lead you to believe this Bowie tribute record is tied in with or is somehow connected to Bret Morgen’s feature-length "Moonage Daydream" documentary released September, 2022 in IMAX and standard theater formats and currently available for streaming and purchase on Amazon, itunes and other sites.The scant credits, however, indicate that the French Wagram Music label marketed and distributed... Read More
Comments: 0November 8th, 2022
Stevie Ray Vaughan's 'Greatest Hits' Provides A Good Discography Overview From the archives: SRV's 'Greatest Hits' is a good snapshot of the singer/guitarist at his bestBy: Tracking Angle
(This review, written by Carl E. Baugher, originally appeared in Issue 5/6, Winter 1995/96.)The lineage of American electric guitar is a long, rich, exciting thread. It runs through Muddy Waters, Albert King, Albert Collins, B.B. King, Jimi Hendrix and the kid from Texas, Stevie Ray Vaughan. A plane crash in late August 1990 took Vaughan way too soon but his music sounds just as fresh and vital today as ever. Stevie never made a bad album so putting together a... Read More
Comments: 0November 5th, 2022
UHQR "Can't Buy A Thrill"—You Can Buy a Thrill a remarkable "pick up" band's assured debutBy: Michael Fremer
When Steely Dan recorded "Can't Buy a Thrill" it was more of a "pick-up" studio band than a "group". As Donald Fagen recounts in the notes accompanying this new UHQR release sourced from the original master tapes (shown on the notes insert), Fagen and Walter Becker had failed as ABC Dunhill "staff composers" and decided it was time to live the dream leading a real band.The pair called their friend New York guitarist Denny... Read More
Comments: 3November 4th, 2022
An Extended Suite For Musical Insanity From the archives: Michael Fremer reviews Mr. Bungle's 'Disco Volante'By: Michael Fremer
(This review originally appeared in Issue 7, Spring 1996.)An extended suite for musical insanity and sonic meatcleaver that mutates The Bonzo Dog Band, Spike Jones, Nino Rota, Frank Zappa, Alvin Cash, The Art Of Noise, surf music, exotica, industrial heavy metal sludge, the tango, methedrine, Metallica, Don Van Vliet, and just plain old fashioned wise-assery into a rip roaring roller coaster ride through a double E ticket musical and sonic fun house. That these guys... Read More
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