Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

Curby wrote:

Thanks for the kind words but don't forget this is a thread for shouts from everyone.  Not just me. 
I mentioned him earlier today in the Gary Moore thread but think he deserves a bit more promotion.  Up till now I've just skirted his output of Philadelphonic Soul.  His new album though appears to be a new direction.  Didn't know it but Mr. Love cut his teeth on the blues and with help from the Avett Brothers may have a very interesting new avenue.  I've attached the title song off the new album plus an awesome stripped down version of "Love, Peace and Happiness".  Just click the play on "Fixin' To Die" out now!  FTD is so damn energetic and the video is a good 'un.  I recommend hitting the full screen, put on the earbuds and listen at max volume.  Same instruction for the second song (LP&H).
http://philadelphonic.com/home

Picked up G.Love - Fixin to Die yesterday. Damn good acoustic bluesy album.

When I was a child I spoke as a child, But all I heard was how I should get ahead,
Now growing up it ain't anything but all This indecision with these debts and doubts
And worries hanging over my head. When I was a child I spoke as a child,
I wish I could remember what I said.

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears recently released their second album Scandalous to good reviews and I have to agree it'll scratch that funk itch for ya.  "She's So Scandalous" has got to be one of the funkier songs I've heard lately.  On Robert Johnson's "Stop Breakin' Down" Lewis and boys present a meatier cover than The White Stripes' version.  Here's the bouncy "Booty City" - I like the horns on this one.
http://youtu.be/Wry_97kOltQ

21 (edited by Curby 2011-03-29 09:31:56)

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

The Band of Heathens released a new album today that I highly recommend.  Top Hat Crown & the Clapmaster's Son is a nice mixture of musical flavors.  There's not a bad track on it and this is one purchase that won't be a download.  Here's a review I found:

The Band of Heathens new CD is 'Top Hat Crown & the Clapmaster's Son'
Monday, January 24 2011 @ 07:27 PM EST

Contributed by: conqueroo


Produced by George Reiff (Chris Robinson, Courtyard Hounds, Ray Wylie Hubbard), new album comes on heels of Austin City Limits (PBS) appearance, festivals and #1 Americana record


AUSTIN, Texas — 2010 was a year of making noise and news for the Band of Heathens. With 200-plus show dates, a fifth anniversary celebration, appearances at Lollapalooza and other top national festivals and a taping of Austin City Limits with Elvis Costello, it is remarkable that the Heathens even found time to write and record a new studio album, but they did.

The result is Top Hat Crown & the Clapmaster’s Son, a surprising, multi-faceted gem of a disc. Their third studio album and the fifth release overall, Top Hat Crown displays the wide range of classic influences fans and critics have come to admire in the band, yet they’ve added, built and grown. Producer George Reiff, celebrated for his work with the Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson, the Courtyard Hounds (Martie Maguire and Emily Robison of the Dixie Chicks) and Ray Wylie Hubbard, tended to the album’s vibe and spirit, which is reaching, rocking, bluesy, funky and enjoyable as hell, from its rocking opening to its serene acoustic conclusion.

The Band of Heathens is constantly being compared to The Band because of the musical finesse that overlays their timeless, rootsy core. And the three founding members are all skilled multi-instrumentalists who can play almost any position in the field. But TBoH has reached so many fans so fast because of the echoes of and subtle homage to so many different artists at the core of the Americana canon, including Tom Petty, Tony Joe White, the Grateful Dead, Leon Russell, George Harrison, and other rarified stylists. You can hear a little of all that at a Heathens show or on disc, and Top Hat Crown feels like the most coherent and mature encapsulation of those elements so far.

Given the timelessness of their sound, one gets the sense that Ed Jurdi, Gordy Quist and Colin Brooks would have gravitated toward the same essential feel had they met in 1975 or 2045. As it happens, it was in 2006 after each songwriter had established residency gigs on the same night of the week at Momo’s, an eclectic-minded club on Austin’s famous Sixth Street. Friendship, semi-regular sit-ins and harmony jags gelled into something quite rare: a band with three frontmen, each with enough humility and passion to invest in the larger project. The sum transcended the parts. Bassist Seth Whitney was a member from the get-go. Drummer John Chipman joined in 2007 as their road calendar got heavier.

The Heathens took their time getting their first studio album out, but when that eponymous debut was released in 2008, they proved they could write and record a coherent statement that measured up to their show. They followed relatively quickly with One Foot in the Ether toward the end of 2009. Both shot to the top of the Americana chart and remained there for months, evincing a longevity rare in any format of music. Each added songs to the band’s set lists that have become staples and favorites: “Jackson Station,” “Cornbread,” frequent set closer “Don’t Call on Me” and the rocking, cathartic “L.A. County Blues.”

Other kinds of recognition and respect rolled in. TBoH was honored as Best New Band at the Austin Music Awards and nominated as Best Duo or Group by the Americana Music Awards. The Wall Street Journal’s Jim Fusilli called theirs the best set he saw during South by Southwest 2009. And the rest of the press has been equally effusive: The Dallas Morning News calls them “a must-see show.” Maverick magazine says they’re “magnificent.”

One can anticipate similar praise for Top Hat Crown, as it stretches without breaking faith with the feel and integrity that got the Band of Heathens this far. Opener “Medicine Man” sets a hoodoo tone with slappy upright piano and a swaggering lyric sung by Gordy Quist.

Another early Quist lead is “Polaroid,” which the guys say was influenced by the Jayhawks and mid-career Beatles. It coasts along on a robust acoustic strum decorated by jangly chiming electric guitar — a pluperfect fusion of pop and roots. Ed Jurdi gets his first lead vocal licks in with “Should Have Known,” a deeply bluesy slow shake that bolsters the regret of the song. Colin Brooks evokes current events and the craziness of modernity with “Enough,” whose mantra-like lyric and mid-tempo groove will have people nodding along in time. Brooks also shines with his lead on “Gravity,” a tour-de-force of forward motion and organ-generated psychedelic colors. Then some bone-rattle percussion ushers in a glowing, single-chord jam ride and a three-part chorus that swells with love.

Fans of the band will note one familiar song here. “Free Again” was written, recorded and released as a single in a blast of energy in the summer of 2010, inspired by the mind-boggling Gulf of Mexico oil spill. It’s sincere and sarcastic, playful and chastising. And it’s part of a Louisiana theme that closes out the album and ties the whole project together. “Hurricane,” the album’s lone cover, a Nashville-written tune from an old Levon Helm album, is a poignant portrait of an aging Gulf Coast salt reflecting on storms and eerily anticipating Katrina. And “Gris Gris Satchel,” the final cut, is a gorgeous and soothing acoustic tune that evokes old New Orleans and memories of great Crosby, Stills & Nash tracks.

Like that historic group, the Band of Heathens is distinguished by collaboration and load-sharing. And while songwriting and vocal duties are chiefly handled by the three guys across the front of the stage, they are decidedly a five-man band, benefitting from the equal input of all. This can lead to a lot of deliberation and creative tension. But it also means the music that emerges has been through five filters and enjoyed the collaborative creative power of five music-loving minds. “When I write a song with Ed or Colin, I usually hear it a certain way in my head,” says Quist about the power of the process. “When we bring it in to the band, the song almost always comes out turned on its head, leaning in another direction from where it started.” Music fans nationwide will hear that distilled quality upon the release of Top Hat Crown.

http://youtu.be/nhHop1JaLXo

http://youtu.be/27Eq-sRzXYI

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

This has been a good week for music.  Along with Band of Heathens I came across Israel Nash Gripka and his fine 2009 release, New York Town.  Sounding at times like Ryan Adams and John Fogerty, Gripka is a top notch songwriter.  This album would probably fall under the Sunday morning category or a good soundtrack for a drive down a blue highway.
http://youtu.be/wOG9CvqSESk

Finally got around to listening to Deadstring Brother's 2010 offering, Sao Paulo, and have to say this band just gets better and better.  There's no avoiding comparisons to '68 to '72 Rolling Stones, but what the heck's wrong with that? 
http://youtu.be/X92Ms4vXhYk

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

Forgot to add with the others Leroy Powell & the Messengers' Atlantis album which I think is the best of the four I got this week.  The album has a real nice blend of rockers and ballads that range from psychedelic to blues to gospel to quality Southern rock.  The instrumental playing is crisp - love the tone on the guitar playing and Leroy's blessed with good pipes and songwriting skills.  The bluesy "Evil" with its wailing guitars sounds like a song Quentin Tarantino would put in one of his soundtracks.  Very cool track.   "Lookout World (I'm Coming)" sounds like a lost track from Tres Hombres and "Tumblin' Down" is a song Chris Robinson wishes he'd written.
Check out some of their songs on MySpace if you don't believe me.
http://www.myspace.com/leroypowell

24 (edited by RickB 2011-04-02 18:47:29)

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

A while back I recorded a jam with Tomo Fujita and Eric Gales. As a result, Tomo sent me his catalog. He is an outstanding musician who is a teaching prof at Berklee L.A. (the likes of Mayer and Malmsteen have been students!) His album Pure, is a jazz funk blues fusion, all instrumental and very enjoyable. It is a frequent player here now. Nice with a drink before dinner as a relaxer.
Here's the jam.  Little Wing with Eric. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cd8wjUxpVBg
Rick

Free download from Vienna! http://mbsy.co/bNLR
Lots of unique videos of Joe http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwd5vL8fXTw
Buy Joe's merchandise here. http://www.jbonamassa.com/affiliates/id … hp?id=1381

25 (edited by Brack 2011-04-18 10:35:32)

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

Curby wrote:
Brack wrote:

Check out, Adele's new album preview,  21 .... A real talent, and from these shores!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kol3IH1xRA4

Brack,

Adele isn't known by one name for nothing.  I've always said there must be something in the water to produce so many great female vocalists in your country.  I've been counting down the days for her release.  It'll be hard to top 19 though.

The Foo Fighters may have toppled Adele's 21 from the UK #1 spot, then was told to seek out Adele's front cover of Rolling Stone ... http://gossiponthis.com/2011/04/18/adel … -magazine/ ... first thought.... that's NOT our Adele! is it?? What's going on ?

A quote from Beyonce on Adele, ‘You’re amazing! When I listen to you I feel like I’m listening to God.’
Who would have thought it.... God is a female singing star ..... hmm ironic grin  hmm

Read more: http://gossiponthis.com/2011/04/18/adel … z1JtBE2YXp

GOOD KARMA - http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m3zkw … o1_500.jpg
Avatar Credit: D.Hirst,Olympic Union Flag
Adele: RAH http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Oio8V3e3WU&ob=av2e -
We Are The Champ20ns

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

Brack wrote:
Curby wrote:
Brack wrote:

Check out, Adele's new album preview,  21 .... A real talent, and from these shores!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kol3IH1xRA4

Brack,

Adele isn't known by one name for nothing.  I've always said there must be something in the water to produce so many great female vocalists in your country.  I've been counting down the days for her release.  It'll be hard to top 19 though.

The Foo Fighters may have toppled Adele's 21 from the UK #1 spot, then was told to seek out Adele's front cover of Rolling Stone ... http://gossiponthis.com/2011/04/18/adel … -magazine/ ... first thought.... that's NOT our Adele! is it?? What's going on ?

A quote from Beyonce on Adele, ‘You’re amazing! When I listen to you I feel like I’m listening to God.’
Who would have thought it.... God is a female singing star ..... hmm ironic grin  hmm

Read more: http://gossiponthis.com/2011/04/18/adel … z1JtBE2YXp


Well, well, well.......it certainly looks like Adele's gotten a SERIOUS makeover.  Can't say that bothers me.  Beyonce's comment is a bit over the top, but the new album IS HUGE for young people.  I prefer the somewhat dowdy (earlier) version with an angels voice.  Everybody knows God doesn't sing - he listens!

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

I've been listening to alot of Chris Smither, really cool acoustic blues.

28 (edited by Curby 2011-05-16 09:30:13)

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

I've been racking what's left of my brain for one last shout of new artists I've come across, and settled on this thread to conclude my input under the topic of other artists.  In my introduction when I joined the forum I believe I mentioned my love for all kinds of music.  The blues will always be my favorite, but I wonder if it'll survive when all the old bluesmen and my generation pass from the scene.  Joe is a great ambassador to the genre.  I like the way his playing has matured and there's no doubt (in my mind) he belongs in the pantheon of greatest guitarists.
Most people here are aware of my eclectic tastes and have tolerated some pretty off the wall recommendations, but the time has come to put an end to things.  I'll still continue posting here so don't start celebrating yet.....(teehee).
Anyway, here are my shouts, all three hail from the great southern state of Louisiana.

Jaryd Lane
I really like his music  and he's definitely the first Country artist I've listen to with 3 Doors Down influencing his sound.  There's some Blues in there too.  The studio version of "The Wrangler" is more an acoustic blues song but here more Southern Rock.
http://youtu.be/cD4x52tmAeE

Mike Dean
This guy's a great singer/songwriter.  He, like Jaryd are regional sensations.  Most of his songs seem to be about working people and I like the stories he tells in them.
http://youtu.be/KHlMpg1BdRs
http://youtu.be/8Wk19tkBgig

James Dupre
James got national attention via YouTube that landed him a big contract with Warner Brothers.  His first studio album is pretty good though a bit over-produced Imo.  Mr. Dobro, Jerry Douglas, both produced and plays on the album.  JD's got a great singing voice that'll take him far.  His reminds me the most of a young Jackson Browne and Browne's "For a Dancer" is nicely cover on the album.
http://youtu.be/xNEJVBoh3t0
http://youtu.be/eS2MIvj2UIE

Re: Miscellaneous Music Discoveries

Curby wrote:

I've been racking what's left of my brain for one last shout of new artists I've come across, and settled on this thread to conclude my input under the topic of other artists.  In my introduction when I joined the forum I believe I mentioned my love for all kinds of music.  The blues will always be my favorite, but I wonder if it'll survive when all the old bluesmen and my generation pass from the scene.  Joe is a great ambassador to the genre.  I like the way his playing has matured and there's no doubt (in my mind) he belongs in the pantheon of greatest guitarists.
Most people here are aware of my eclectic tastes and have tolerated some pretty off the wall recommendations, but the time has come to put an end to things.  I'll still continue posting here though so don't start celebrating yet.....(teehee).
Anyway, here are my shouts, all three hail from the great southern state of Louisiana.

Jaryd Lane
I really like his music  and he's definitely the first Country artist I've listen to with 3 Doors Down influencing his sound.  There's some Blues in there too.  The song

The bot won't let you depart without a parting swipe. Try again.  lol  lol

Free download from Vienna! http://mbsy.co/bNLR
Lots of unique videos of Joe http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwd5vL8fXTw
Buy Joe's merchandise here. http://www.jbonamassa.com/affiliates/id … hp?id=1381