May 6th, 2023
John Lee Hooker "Burnin'" Reissued by Craft Records in Stereo Hooker meets the Motown Funk BrothersBy: Joseph W. Washek
In 1961, John Lee Hooker recorded "Burnin’", an album accompanied by an early version of Motown's legendary Funk Brothers band for Vee Jay Records in one session, probably four hours in length. Vee Jay was an independent label based in Chicago, owned by an African American married couple, Vivian Carter and James Bracken, which had achieved considerable success selling R&B, blues, gospel, and jazz records to Black audiences. Hooker had been recording... Read More
May 4th, 2023
Olivia Jean Summons A Raving Ghost The Detroit garage rocker delivers her heaviest offering to dateBy: Dylan Peggin
Olivia Jean is a jack of all trades. When a demo of Olivia Jean’s material found its way into Jack White’s hands in 2009, she relocated to Nashville and joined Third Man Records’ (founded by White) stable of artists. After carving her way as a session musician for the likes of Wanda Jackson and Karen Elson, in 2010 Olivia became the lead vocalist/guitarist/primary songwriter of the all-female garage goth band The Black Belles. The material that didn’t quite fit the... Read More
May 3rd, 2023
"Tár"- Music From and Inspired By The Motion Picture Hildur Guðnadóttir and Todd Field assemble an interesting sonic companion to their 2022 arthouse sensationBy: Michael Johnson
Back in 2014 when I was an undergraduate student at the Manhattan School of Music, I remember the Jazz department in a perpetual uproar over the release of the film Whiplash. It seems every Jazz musician I knew had something to say about that movie, from praise to condemnation, from astonishment at what it got right, to a laundry list of everything it got wrong (it didn’t help that supposedly the fictional “Schaefer Conservatory” was based on our own institution).... Read More
May 3rd, 2023
Harold Vick's Blue Note Session Leader Debut And Finale with Blue Mitchell, Grant Green, John Patton and Ben DixonBy: Michael Fremer
Why saxophonist Harold Vick's Blue Note debut as bandleader was also his last, isn't clear. It certainly couldn't have been because the session was a musical disappointment. Far from it! Maybe it's because the date produced an album closer to the hard charging warm up for an r&b review than what Blue Note was typically releasing in 1963. Vick had played with all here but trumpeter Blue Mitchell and all had played in or skirted the r&b... Read More
April 26th, 2023
Absolutely Astounding New LPs From Yarlung Records Violinist Petter Iivonen and mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke Each Deliver Mesmerizing PerformancesBy: Jacob Heilbrunn
April 26th, 2023
Verve's By Request Series Releases Gabor Szabo's "The Sorcerer" Szabo Conjures Up Magic in 1967By: Evan Toth
Live albums aren’t always my preferred format. Sure, there are certain tracks that I’ve grown accustomed to hearing performed in the live vein, but I’m not often excited about the prospect of an album “captured” in a live setting, or of a particularly excellent live recording. I’m primarily interested in music that’s created in the studio; that’s what I consider the recording artist's ultimate canvas. However, Hungarian guitarist Gabor Szabo is one of my... Read More
April 24th, 2023
Deep Catalogue Gems from Wheeler and Vasconcelos Lead Off ECM Reissue Series Arvo Pärt, Keith Jarrett, Jan Garbarek and others to followBy: Jan Omdahl
ECM is arguably the most influential jazz label since the heydays of Blue Note and Impulse!. The German label recently announced Luminessence, its first ever audiophile vinyl reissue series. The two first releases, reviewed here, are Kenny Wheeler's Gnu High and Nana Vasconcelos' Saudades.
Read MoreApril 23rd, 2023
The Ducks Flew High in Santa Cruz '77 Neil Young's Bootleg Series Disc 2 is hard rocking' funBy: Michael Fremer
Ducks aren't an endangered species but in 2023 feedback drenched, electric guitar driven 4/4 rock music so popular in the 1970s seems to be just about over, Jack White and a few others notwithstanding. While Crazy Horse is Neil Young's best known live collaborator, the Ducks prove they are equally worthy on this adrenaline producing 3 LP live set recorded summer, 1977, Santa Cruz, California—and the sound recorded by Tim Mulligan is remarkably hi-fi... Read More
April 22nd, 2023
Previously Unreleased Chet Baker Sessions Make For a Sweet Record Store Day Release 1979 Vara Studio sessions are a dutch treatBy: Michael Fremer
Zev Feldman's Jazz Detective label lived up to its name with the discovery of two previously unreleased and unheard since their first airing in 1979 on Dutch Radio, Chet Baker performances, released for RSD 2023 as a double LP set. Unlike many newly discovered recordings, this one's excellent sound matches the quality of the music.
Read MoreApril 19th, 2023
The Flaming Lips Battle History 20th anniversary deluxe deep dive from Oklahoma's favorite sonsBy: JoE Silva
As someone who’d missed the early psycho-garage days and didn’t care all that much for the “Jelly” song, I was fully unprepared for the full force of what the Flaming Lips had become when they touched down in Athens, Georgia in September of 2000. Sure, the LSD helped, but long before we were inside of its fluorescent metallic grip, it was clear that the Category-5 euphoria of their live show could not be denied. Let’s remember that at the time, they were performing as... Read More
March 31st, 2023
More Monkey Business From Gorillaz Cartoon Pop Heroes Kick Off New PhaseBy: JoE Silva
After a failed Netflix deal to put Gorillaz cartoon band members into a full length film, Damon Albarn and illustrator Jamie Hewlett regroup under a slick pop banner to deliver album number eight with the help of mega-producer Greg Kurstin.
Read MoreMarch 31st, 2023
The Zombies Play a "Different Game" The British Invasion Stalwarts Enjoy an Energetic Creative BurstBy: Evan Toth
Upon reaching a certain age, it’s inevitable to ponder the impending end of the run, to embrace - as Warren Zevon once wryly observed - the importance of enjoying every sandwich. Unfortunately, these thoughts aren’t reserved only for card-carrying members of the octogenarian or nonagenarian membership club. The reality is that this experience of life is something that humans of all ages should appreciate, explore and enjoy. After all, one never knows how long a life... Read More
March 16th, 2023
Hill's "Dance With Death" Is A Lively Set! why this 1968 recording, a new "Tone Poet" series release, sat on the shelf until 1980 is a mysteryBy: Michael Fremer
No one knows why this Andrew Hill album recorded October 11th 1968 wasn’t released until 1980 as part of a Michael Cuscuna produced series. “Tone Poet” Joe Harley doesn’t know, nor, he told me, does Cuscuna. Harley posits a few possible reasons, none of which have anything to do with the music here, which in 1968 clearly was release-worthy. The vinyl revival/resurgence whatever you wish to call it has been a boon to artists like the late composer/performer/academic... Read More
March 14th, 2023
A Sonically Spectacular Percussion Record Worth Repeated Plays compositions by Lou Harrison and Steve Reich plus a world premier co-commissioned by the EnsembleBy: Michael Fremer
Recorded during the same 2011 and 2012 Zipper Hall, Los Angeles sessions that produced the remarkable percussion record “Smoke & Mirrors” (Yarlung 17255-195V), “Earth & Wood” is another sonic spectacular recorded directly to tape using a single AKG C24 stereo microphone (with Elliot Midwood mic amplification). The one-mike recording technique required “just so” placement of both it and the seven member Smoke and Mirrors Percussion Ensemble that performed the... Read More
March 10th, 2023
A Box Set That Delivers Well Beyond the Expected Enhanced Version of the Classic Collaboration A video review of a brilliantly curated and executed compilationBy: Michael Fremer
Rather than writing the usual written review of this extensive, well-produced and brilliantly curated set, I chose a video review to better show the box and associated records. The set includes a double LP containing the Painted From Memory collaboration spread to 3 sides. Side 4 contains selected songs from the never fully realized Bacharach/Costello musical Taken From Life performed by various artists including Cassandra Wilson and Bill Frisell, Audra Mae and of... Read More
March 10th, 2023
Van Morrison’s Backward Tumble Is Fully Underway From the archives: You're best waiting for Van to get energized againBy: Tracking Angle
In commemoration of Van Morrison's new album Moving On Skiffle, we revisit a past era of Van mediocrity via our archive review of 1996's How Long Has This Been Going On?
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