6,877 (edited by Curby 2023-04-07 23:21:47)

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

I believe someone has already mentioned this band (maybe BansheeUK) but I'm enjoying The Heavy Heavy's recent re-release of last year's record Life and Only Life and called it the Expanded Version.  There's one certified cover though the whole album is a time warp of 60's/70's stoner rock, both psychedellic, blues and country.
Here's the lone cover played a little faster than the exquisite original...


https://youtu.be/fW8P9VUwsVk

https://youtu.be/nmSvyiA9z4I  Pretty interesting stuff.

https://www.youtube.com/live/EOHb1OWAU9M?feature=share
'

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Curby wrote:

I believe someone has already mentioned this band (maybe BansheeUK) but I'm enjoying The Heavy Heavy's recent re-release of last year's record Life and Only Life and called it the Expanded Version.  There's one certified cover though the whole album is a time warp of 60's/70's stoner rock, both psychedellic, blues and country.
Here's the lone cover played a little faster than the exquisite original...


https://youtu.be/fW8P9VUwsVk

https://youtu.be/nmSvyiA9z4I  Pretty interesting stuff.

https://www.youtube.com/live/EOHb1OWAU9M?feature=share
'

mmMM, that good sounding stuff. If anyone is interested, these guys are touring in the US very shortly: -

Apr 12, 2023 Wed 8:30 pm The Sinclair Music Hall - Cambridge MA
Apr 16, 2023 Sun 8:00 pm Thunderbird Cafe - Pittsburgh, PA
Apr 18, 2023 Tue 8:00 pm  The Basement East - Nashville - Nashville, TN
Apr 19, 2023  Wed 8:00 pm  Grey Eagle - Asheville, NC
Apr 20, 2023 Thu 8:00 pm  Terminal West At King Plow Arts Center - Atlanta, GA
Apr 21, 2023 Fri 8:30 pm  Birmingham - Birmingham, AL  (2 tickets left starting from $51.00)
Apr 27, 2023  Thu 7:00 pm  Brooklyn Made - Brooklyn, NY
Apr 29, 2023  Sat 8:00 pm  Brooklyn Bowl - Philadelphia - Philadelphia, PA

Jun 9, 2023  Fri 7:00 pm  Gerald R. Ford Amphitheater - Vail, CO
Aug 25, 2023  Fri 8:30 pm  Thalia Hall - Chicago, IL

Think a lot of the dates are limited ticket numbers....

This is where it gets confusing; I think we've talked about a band called The Heavy, (only one "Heavy") who are a UK indie/soul band.

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

6,879

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Here’s an attachment about The Heavy Heavy.  They are not The Heavy.
They are a UK based band from Brighton that has more in common to Sixties psychedelic, pop, country and blues than anything else. 
Very promising and talented.  A band to keep your eyes on.

https://www.theheavyheavy.com/

6,880

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

I am listening to Beth Hart. She is breaking through my walls, levees and defenses. She speaks to me. No other female singer did it for me before. Maybe they are too sane and down to earth to become immortal.

6,881

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Been listening to a lot of Metallica's new album 72 Seasons. I like it! I don't think the writing is as tight as Hardwired, but there are some great riffs and cool songs.

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

New single from Laurence Jones' upcoming album - his new look "power-trio" format.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BssNa-yeqy0

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Newcastle Cluny - 29th April 2023

Not long back in from another hot & bouncing Saturday night down at The Cluny. This time it was something a little "off the reservation", someone I've been wanting to catch for a while, Si Cranstoun making a rare visit up these parts.

So quick question, what does Si have in common with Chrissie Hynde? This was my 2nd Cluny gig this year that was an total sell-out: the place was packed to the rafters. So busy, if you went to the bar for a pint, you'd have to drink it there and then as there was no way you could get back to your spot with more than a half full glass (if indeed you could get back to your spot); all the folks dancing and clapping....

Si's style is, in a thumbnail, best described as "retro": my first thought was "Bobby Darin".  He seamlessly manages to fuse his influences of 1950s and 1960s rock and roll and R&B music, obvious by kicking off the show with the likes of Frankie Ford's Sea Cruise and Sam Cook's Wonderful World, before mixing in his own compositions such as Coupe De Ville. He also manages to mix in a nod to his father's love and promotion of Jamaican music (Ska). And other great self-penned numbers, Dance Forever More & Caught In The Moonlight that almost got Si catapulted into the next league after being picked up on [BBC] Radio 2

As a performer, with his 4 piece band, (drums, bass, guitar & baritone sax) he's absolutely electric; hardly ever still, always with a smile and giving off enough energy to charge the audience's electric vehicles.

Some Live clips from other recent dates:-

Be My Guest - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9lrro01JNw
Kiss On The Lips - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7FOMjYqB6BQ
Reet Petite - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOiWA8rkxgA

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Morganway - Back to Zero  (2023)

Taken a while to give this the spins it deserves, but then good things are worth waiting for, so they say.

Stumbled on to this band last year after a recommendation from a local venue, and been hooked since. A couple of weeks ago, got a chance to see them again, this time touring this, Back To Zero, their latest [third] album. They're not a Blues band, i can say that; they hover somewhere between Folk Rock and Country, or as we'd label; "Americana". However, their "sound" is more crystalised now, and for US friends, I'd say they bare closer comparisson to Lady A[ntebellum].

There is a kind of split in the bands songs, between most of the writing done between the twins Kieron & Callum Morgan who share guitar & bass duties: Keiron tends to write more with vocal powerhouse SJ Mortimer where as Callum bounces off non-band member George Nicholson, as well as other band members. The results swing between the dramatically powerful ballads and the irresistibly catch sing-a-longs. It's certainly a potent mix, if you can't get to see them, there is a brace of "live" CDs on their website that give a good flavour.

Back To Zero - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOBOGbBd46E
Come Over - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ng7lGaOrZhw&t=1s
Let Me Go - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOuDl0ncMzM

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Si Cranstoun - Smokehouse Sessions  (2013)

One of a clutch of albums I picked up in a deal the other night...  This was recorded "live" over a 2 day session in Si's home ground ay the Smokehouse, London. A mix of self-penned and standards that really bounce in a style that wouldn't have sounded out=of-place back in 1958; just a whole lot clearer with today's recording technology, though the telecasters and amp would probably be period...

It ain't rock'n'roll, but close enough for jazz...

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

The Commoners - Find A Better Way  (2022)

Another album that's been fighting for rotation since I picked it up at the Cluny gig a few days back by the noisiest & hairiest band I've seen come out of Ontario many a year (certainly helps distinguish them from Manitoba's Bros. Landreth).

Now then, do you call these guys Northern "Southern" Rock, or "Heavy Country"? Whatever, it's got an aged whiskey smokey-edge, like Black Crowes jammin' with Allman Brothers. The guitars howl, the vocals soar and the Hammond swirls, all bound together by driving bass and thundering drums. It may not be genre defining, it probably won't change your life, but at the right volume, it'll make your neighbour's windows rattle....

A crackin' good first effort from a band that's just made a mighty impression over here, and a taster of more to come...

Fill My Cup - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMM4G822EC8
Too Much (live) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n22ATsSdYm4&t=4s
Shake You Off (live) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQTEGB2QWC8&t=4s
Find A Better Way - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDZYk2VJt9k&t=1s

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

The Church - The Hypnogogue (2023)

The 26th album from one of my favourite bands, that a lots of you have probably never heard of. well, they are a bit "alternative", some call them "Goth", but that is a bit of misnomer even though in their day, they walked the ground somewhere between The Cure and The Mission.

Anyway, that's a digression. The Hypnogogue is a concept (okay, deep breaths...) album that is set in 2054… a dystopian and broken down future, Invented by Sun Kim Jong, a North Korean scientist and occult dabbler, it is a machine and a process that pulls music straight of dreams. The album is about Eros Zeta the biggest rock star of 2054 who has travelled from his home in Antarctica (against his manager’s advice) to use the Hypnogogue to help him revive his flagging fortunes.. In the midst of the toxic process, he also falls in love with Sun Kim and it all ends tragically (of course…as these thing often do).

Heady stuff... So what's it actually like? Well, Steve Kilby, the only original and guiding light of The Church is back on top form. The vocals have that distant Berlin-period Bowie feel, though in a deep register; the music sways from the jangly to the ethereal, but a little discordant, with the feel of the concept.  The classic Church sound is given a modern, edgier twist whilst embracing a more retro "proggy" twist.

Making up The Church these days, the 2022 epic five-piece line-up is bassist, vocalist and founder Steve Kilbey; with long-time collaborator Tim Powles, drummer and producer across 17 albums since ’94; guitarist Ian Haug formerly of Australian rock icons Powderfinger, who joined the band in 2013 and Jeffrey Cain (Remy Zero), touring multi-instrumentalist who is now a full-time member of The Church since the departure of Peter Koppes in early 2020. The band have also recruited Ashley Naylor, long-time member of Paul Kelly’s touring band and one of Australia’s finest and most respected guitarists (Even, The Grapes, The Stems).
So, not one for the feint of heart, but the band at their best in quite some time, so worth a late-night exploration. (And an album I'd love to hear "live" in it's entirety.
The Hypnponogue - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1_zkH4d3ITU&t=5s

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Marillion - Season's End (2023 Special Edition)

Don't know why they've been doing these releases out of order, but happy to report that Marillion have given their 5th album, Season's End a good working over. This was a bit of a "crunch" album as it was their 1st without Fish, and though a great deal of the music had been written, who was going to fill the big man's shoes? The booklet tells the whole story, and even I'd forgotten that Viv Stanshall was considered at one point.

Happily though, up stepped "h" (NOT to be confused with "H", or it could have been a very different story. Wit his good looks and a voice like Peter Gabriel on steroids, he may not have been first choice of the purists, who could go off and follow Fish solo, but he made the position his own and gave the band a second lease of life , in a slightly different direction.

Disc one give us the original album, in a new stereo remix by Michael Hunter.
Disc 2/3 is the entire album "live" as recorded at 2022's fan weekender at Leicester; including tracks Gaza & The Leavers.
Disc 4, again from Marillion is the secret weapon: a 5.1 mix of the album, B-sides and bonus tracks (including demos), a ‘Bootleg Mix’ of the 1990 concerts in Montreal, an 85-minute making-of-the-album documentary called Seasons Change, the full From Stoke Row To Ipanema documentary, the Rock Steady live performance and the promotional videos for ‘Hooks In You’, ‘Easter’, and ‘The Uninvited Guest’. Phew!

In all, a great package for what has grown into a great album.

Easter - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFQLAnAcrDc
Uninvited Guest - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWfTwEdSzwg
Hooks In You - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvmv_4zPEQg

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Jethro Tull - RökFlöte (2023)

So, the 23rd album, and the quickest turn-around in albums since 1980 for Tull... And, unlike Zealot gene, this one deserves to be under the Tull banner. I don't think it reaches their highwater mark, but it's far from being the worst they've done; maybe somewhere between Stormwatch and Catfish Rising...  Maybe even a little higher, but Anderson's vocals are showing wear and the guitar work, though good just isn't as crisp without Martin Barre.

Love the Norse theme that runs through the album, like a Viking Songs from The Wood - time to change the band's name to "Ragnar- Tull" maybe?

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Si Cranstoun - Get Lively (2009)
                      Poems Unlocked (2020)

Couple more CDs from my night with Si; the first Get Lively and older of the album is a Live album doers exactly what it says on the cover.; Si in his natural element, on stage and belting out originals and a range of covers, from Louis Armstrong to Creedence Clearwater Revival. Not only is he in top form, but the band; Stuart Pennaman [bass]; Mike Watts [drums]' Chris Corcoran [guitar]' Dan Faulkner [sax] & Ed Benstead [trumpet] are really hot too. The album does start with 2 in-studio covers, Jackie Wilson's Reet Petite and Nappy Brown's Little By Little; both of which have become Live staples.

Poems Unlocked is Si's "lockdown album"; a collection of songs & poems, minimally recorded by Si with just harp and acoustic guitars, at home on a two-track quarter-inch tape recorder. This was then mastered by Axel Praefcke at Lightning Recorders, Berlin; the enhanced clarity really underscores the intimacy of the songs. This shows a more Folksie side to Si and if I dare say, some old-school Claypso roots

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Lindisfarne - Radio Times (Live at the BBC 1971 - 1990)  2023

An eight disc box-set, featuring over 8hrs of Live recordings of Newcastle's folk-rockers Lindisfarne - what a treat. Charting their rise & fall rise again and sliding into "national treasure" status for a band rightly revered in their home town as much as Dire Straits, The Animals, Sting et cetera, and who's song, the title track of their 2nd album, is as much a Geordie anthem as The Blaydon Races

So, this anthology kicks off as the band's debut album Nicely Out of Tune starts gaining momentum, with songs such as We Can Swing Together, and the growing classic, Winter Song gaining the attention of DKs such as Brian Matthew, Mike raven and of course, John Peel. As 1971 progresses, material from the 2nd album, Fog On The Tyne starts to be aired; January Song, Meet Me On The Corner; (of which several renditions are played in the set); the haunting Lady Eleanor, Train In G major and the albums title track which had every schoolkid sniggering over a certain couplet...

By the time their 3rd album, Dingly Dell came out, the strain was showing within the band and the album wasn't as well recieved. By the end of 1973, the band split and It was agreed that he and Jackson would keep the group name while Cowe, Clements and Laidlaw left to form their own outfit Jack the Lad; while Tommy Duffy (bass guitar), Kenny Craddock (keyboards), Charlie Harcourt (guitar) and Paul Nichols (drums) were brought in to back Alan Hull and Ray Jackson. The new line-up lacked the appeal of the original and with Hull also pursuing a solo career, the band's next two albums Roll on Ruby and Happy Daze and the subsequent singles failed to chart and they disbanded in 1975.

That could very well have been the end of the story, but in 1976, the original line-up reformed for a one-off show at Newcastle's renown City Hall; the  reunion was so acclaimed that the band repeated it a year later and decided to get back together on a permanent basis in early 1978, Jack the Lad having disbanded after none of their singles or albums on two different labels made the charts. They continued to perform at Newcastle City Hall every Christmas for many years performing a total of 132 shows at the venue overall. This prompted a new album deal, and their first new album Back and Forth saw them once again riding high in the album charts and single success with Run For Home.

Five more albums were released during the 1980s, and while sales weren't as high as the 1970s peak, they were well received;
The News (1979); Sleepless Nights (1982); Dance Your Life Away (1986); C'Mon Everybody (1987); Amigos (1989). However, it was probably more their legendry Christmas Shows for which the band were mainly noted for; often they ran a 10 might runs over the Christmas and New Year holidays; consistently sold out "parties"; I know, I didn't miss one that decade.... Two discs of this set were recorded at these shows in 1984 & 1986.

In 1990, Ray Jackson left the band and Marty Craggs (who joined a few years earlier on sax, took over his lead vocals, adding piano accordion and tin whistle, as the band gradually rediscovered its acoustic roots. Clements started to play slide guitar and mandolin, his former role as bassist being filled by Steve Cunningham and, later, Ian Thomson.

That's the period covered by this collection, and you can hear the shifts and changes in this great band. They did continue for several years after, though a blow was dealt by the early death of songwriter Alan Hull in 1995. They continued until 2004 when they split again, various members did tour their own way for several year, until the threatened closure of Newcastle's City hall prompted another reunion gig, though not of the original band, and the shows still continue, and while a calendar highlight, they are but an echo.

This set though, is a great reminder of their halcyon days; and I'm saying that, not just because I got it signed by Rod Clements and Ray Laidlaw but because they were part of my musical growing up...

Winter Song (1984 City Hall) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PsHvFOAGJ8k

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

The Teskey Brothers - Live At The Forum (2019)

With their new album, The Winding Road not being available until mid-June, this was my pick off the merch stand on Friday night. A collection of songs from their 2 studio albums, along with a cover of John Lennon's Jealous Guy. naturally, being a home-town gig (Melbourne AUS), there's a great buzz and vibe coming off the audience and from the band. A worthy addition to the collection.

Hold Me - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86DAAATkTUA
So Caught Up - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Tz-bAt7X20
San Francisco - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVZmPYu5EJk

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Hawkwind - The Future Never Waits (2023)

So, excluding the Flicknife albums and the Weird Tapes, I think this must be getting on for the collective's 35th or so album. I call the band that, as folk seem to drift in and out at will, though they are still guided by the original galaxy Guardian, Dave Brock, when he's not feeding the horses.

Not saying it's their best album, though they are doing what they do best, swinging between Space Rock and Ambient anarchy; both of which if they didn't invent, they certainly pioneered. that's the main let down, it can't decide it's identity: if there's one past member who could have pulled this together, it would have been Robert Calvert R.I.P.

They probably also invented sustainable, ethically sourced vegan gluten, though I'm pushed to name any song containing those words in any combination, (but I claim copyright before anyone pinches the line...)

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...

Re: What song are you listening to right now?

Henrik Freischlader Band - Missing Pieces (2020)
Henrik Freischlader - Recorded By Martin Meinschaffer II  (2022)

After a recent triumph of a show at Hartlepool, I managed to get a signed copy of the most recent album, so had to send off to Cable Car Records for the earlier of the two albums, and have to say, they turned the order round in quick time...

As you can see, I've listed these separately as one is "Band" and the other is Henrik "solo". And just to make it clear, the Meinschafer II is the second album Henrik has recorded with the producer, after a gap of 12 years.

As expected then, even though there's little gap between the albums, there's a huge one in terms of style. Missing Pieces is very much a band album with Armin Alic on bass, Roman Babik on keys, Marco Zugner on sax & Moritz Meinschafer on drums and with Henrik handling the production. The feel of this 70 minute monster of an album is more funk and jazz than straight Blues, with what I'd say was a Hank Marvin styled opener - Opening; but it iis very classy throughout.
Another Missing Piece - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCybL8hOGh8
Opening - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHaYC9KcLjY

If you think a 70 minute album is huge, then Recorded II trumps that, the 12 tracks stretch the CD format to it's 74 minute limit (or if you're a vinyl fan, then it's a perfect double album). This is very much more a straight Blues album, dripping with Gary Moore, Peter Green & Roy Buchanan influences and I'm going to stick my neck and say it'll grow into a classic of the genre. Yes, it has it's flaws; eschewing the band format, this time round Henrik handles the majority of the backing instruments, as well as the lead, with the exception of Hammond and Fender Rhodes, which are in the hands of Moritz Fuhrhop. The interplay between the 2 is stunning. Henrik is credited with the production but the mixing & mastering is handled by Meinschafer and the results are superb. You get the feeling on the majority of the tracks that Henrik and Moritz got into a groove and the tape was left to run, rather than cut the creativity short; the final track, Hands of Jesus runs 13 minutes, and you probably won't hear a better outro solo this year.
The Question - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=stZ3GYDFbDE

When life gives you lemons; don't make lemonade.
Give back the lemons.  Why were the lemons free?  What's wrong with the lemons?
Do Not trust the lemons...