Showing posts with label Top 10 Best of 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Top 10 Best of 2011. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

George Thorogood & The Destroyers ~ 2120 South Michigan Avenue


It has been over 30 years since Thorogood's second album forced its way anachronistically onto late 1970s radios. His latest isn't the blast of take-no-prisoners ground-staking "Move It On Over" (and its predecessor) was. This one hangs around 2120 South Michigan Ave, once home of Chess Records in Chicago. But it's a worthy set for the dedicated electric bluesman to unleash on fans and casual followers alike. His takes on blues standards are solid, reviving and re-masculating already meaty tracks such as "High Heel Sneakers" and "Spoonful".  For an album that's a tribute from start to finish, that lifts riffs unapologetically, that borrows freely from his heroes' inventions, small changes refreshen these songs in surprising ways. For instance, "Bo Diddley" arrives with a high-toned bongo popping in cahoots with the rhythm of the tom-tom, and growly reverb specifically assigned to some instruments adds a familiar but distinctive otherworldly atmosphere.
In fact 2120 South Michigan Ave is so well-engineered it earns a phrase among those reserved for my highest praises: It doesn't draw attention to itself. If young ears now are anything like mine were, they take for granted that music is superbly well recorded (and that "lo-fi" is used for effect). A kind of muddiness was a constant characteristic of old Blues records; even revivals of the 70s and 80s sometimes chose to include some unseparated muddled sounds to evoke previous eras, even though by then it was easy enough to avoid. On 2120 South Michigan Avenue, every instrument is crystal clear, each is placed authoritatively in audio space, volumes are carefully balanced. This kind of attention to detail, the kind that is routinely taken for granted by young and old alike (— the kind that too often is not applied or abandoned on too many current albums where "experiment" is a euphemism for "inexperienced amateur" —) makes a huge difference in the enjoyment of sounds that depend on hundreds of unwritten variations and variables per song to express oneself, to provide heat and energy and passion.
2120 South Michigan Avenue is produced by Grammy winner Tom Hambridge, and features guests Buddy Guy and Charlie Musselwhite. 
Thorogood frames the album with two OK originals, title track "2120 South Michigan Avenue" and "Going Back" (listen for the guitar squeal that pans across the stereo channels). Unfortunately they're just as needlessly nostalgic as they sound. And with "Going Back"'s line "Back when the Blues was king", his well-intentioned, authentic passion tips into inauthentic historical revisionism. But that's the only false note on a sizzling hot summer album.

B+

You can listen to George Thorogood & the Destroyers' 2120 South Michigan Avenue here until the end of this week.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Martin Swinger In Concert in New Jersey in August!
And More About Martin!

Martin Swinger In Concert in New Jersey in August!

Especially excited to announce the August 15th performance at GAAMC!


Friday, August 12, 7 PM
Front Porch House Concert
Martin Swinger solo show! Admission $15
308 Meadowbrook Rd. Robbinsville, NJ 08691
Contact Maggie Marshall 609-443-0577

Sunday, August 14, 5 PM
Carmel Retreat Center
Martin Swinger solo show! Admission $15
DINNER AND SHOW: $30!
1071 Ramapo Valley Rd, Mahwah, NJ 07430
Call 201-327-7090 to make reservations.

Monday, August 15, 7:30 PM
Morristown Unitarian Fellowship
Martin Swinger solo show for GAAMC ~Gay Activist Alliance in Morris County! Donation $6!
21 Normandy Heights Rd, Morristown, NJ 07960
contact Info@GAAMC.org or call 973-285-1595.

More about Martin Swinger

"Some songs are great to dance to, and some feel good to cry to, and others are fun to sing along to.
But sometimes you discover songs that simply invite you to stop and listen.

Martin Swinger sings Songs Worth Listening To."

M O O N has risen and shines just for you!      
Watch and listen to the MOON CD Video Teaser Video

Order M O O N ($15 check) direct at:
Martin Swinger, 52 Green St., Augusta, ME 04330
OR at MartinSwinger.com

Adult Contemporary Singer/Songwriter
 

www.MartinSwinger.com
Songwriting in schools or multi-generational settings and family entertainment:

www.SwingerSongwriter.com
Improvisational singing and workshops

www.Improvox.com

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Martin Swinger ~ M O O N ~ Swinger's songs are among the strongest released in 2011

Martin Swinger ~ M O O N

  It's Gay Pride Month here in New Jersey. Across the country and around much of the world, Pride is celebrated with partying, parades and festivals. But what else is available to us Queers — us Proud Gay Men & Lesbians, Bisexuals, Transgendered and Intersexed — to celebrate? How about our culture! How about creativity! How about breaking out of the box of "gay music" to discover great music by great Gay/BGILT-Q musicians?
  Yeah. How about that?

  Martin Swinger, much to his own surprise, was the first to record a full-fledged album of music directed at an audience of Bears — and we hairy, often bearded, likely as not (how shall I put it?) meaty men have as a group, I'm afraid I must report, barely noticed. That CD, BearNAKED, arrived in 2000, often with a furry frame hand-glued to the edges of the case by Swinger and his husbear themselves.
  M O O N  arrives after years (since 2004) without a new CD from Swinger, partly due to that undeserved lack of notice. A true labor of love, the results transcend the limitations of producing a CD independently. I haven't room here to praise every wonderful song, but will expand on this review over the coming weeks at my new blog.
  "Little Plastic Part" starts as an amusing observational song: "I was cleaning, vacuuming the room…/ The motor faltered… I'd broken… some Little Plastic Part/ …that makes the whole thing work/ …It's never gonna start/ cause there is no replacement for that Little Plastic Part." Then comes a twist and — well, that would be telling. I wouldn't ruin it for you.
  "From Your Gravity" is as beautiful a song as you're bound to hear this year. And its video can be seen at my new Bill Realman Radio blog. According to Swinger himself, "Gravity [was] inspired on Route One driving from Houlton Maine to Presque Isle, following the large scale model of the solar system. And [by] a difficult phone call. My sweetie and I worked it out and are still together celebrating 25 years!"
  But "Gravity", in my not so humble opinion, is not even one of the three best songs on the album. That honor goes to the three songs that conclude M O O N — "Wooden Boy", "Betty Boop & Buddha" and "Music In The Rafters". Together those are the three strongest songs at the home stretch of any album I've heard in years.
  Swinger's website MartinSwinger.com features the story behind the song "Wooden Boy" (and much more). What inspired it is important, of course, but I'll allow you to discover that, too, for yourself. Because although most of us, we — you and I — are not ourselves likely to have suffered under the same condition as "Wooden Boy"'s inspiration, I can attest to knowing his same feelings as a child. Thinking back to at least as young as 8 years old, I felt a deep connection with Disney's Pinocchio, even becoming him for Halloween. Then in high school, nearly a decade before I took on the name Realman, among the ways I saw my life were two long poems I wrote titled "Real Life Stories" and "Real Life Dreams". I have seen my experience, my sense of hiding inside for some reason, some need, reflected in the people around me, in their quiet shyness, in their angry lashing out. It's tough enough for most people to express their loneliness and depression. Why it is practically taboo to admit deep disconnection from the world, I don't know. It's the universality of "Wooden Boy" that matters most, more than its origins. And I've not heard its like before.
  Martin Swinger is just as deft at having fun and being joyful as he is at expressing anything else. "Betty Boop & Buddha" has been delighting audiences in concert for years now. Friends, upon hearing it has arrived on CD at last, have confessed how eagerly they've awaited it, and how much they want M O O N  for it if nothing else. " One simply cannot help going from zero to happy when "Betty Boop & Buddha" plays. It's an inspired pairing, a romance for the ages, and you'll be tapping your extremities, wiggling your wiggleables, and committing every "Bop-bop-a-loo-bop" and "Boo-Boop-i-Do" to memory, as with each verse Nirvana comes closer to fruition.
  As if that one-two punch of the poignant and the joyful weren't enough, finally "Music In The Rafters" brings the album to its gentle, rousing conclusion. When I hear "Rafters" — and I can barely stop playing it — I am reminded of the finest performers in the American Folk tradition, of the Pete Seegers and Holly Nears, and of the finest songs, of the "Rainbow Race"s and "We Are A Gentle Angry People"s. Launched from the sight and sound of a bird's nest being built, from modest "…songs of hunger being answered / as little wings learn how to fly / and make music", a sweet wise plain philosophy takes flight in song.
  "Rafters" is filled with small inspired moments, little touches like the just-subtle-enough cymbal to illustrate "shimmering", the doubled flutters of strumming guitars not tethered to each others' strum, the pull of a sense of community with the addition of mandolin and handclaps for the final rounds of the chorus, the complex but understated lead vocal, the duet vocal by Kathy Slack and the vocal harmonies, enhanced, I'm told in the credits, by "ImproVox + Referendum = Hot Buttah!" It could all have turned out too precious, but feels found afresh. One can only imagine the depth of preparation it took to enable such spontaneity in the performances.
  If ever there was a song that epitomizes what I mean when I say "Music is the Highest Common Denominator," "Music In The Rafters" is it. "Rafters" is like a gift you didn't know you wanted but love dearly from the moment you've received it.
  I've been praising the hell out of M O O N  and especially "Rafters" and, until now, I've silenced the voice of restraint. I know the disappointment of raised hopes dashed. But I can't be dishonest about "Music In The Rafters": The recording itself is a great example of how to open up a great song with great arrangements, production and recording. (And kudos to all those credited in the liner notes whose names I can't fit here.) But scratch that, focus just on the melody and lyrics, and "Music In The Rafters" deserves to take a place of honor among the great songs of our lives.
  Unlike all the manipulative demands of contemporary Pop musicians to herd fans into acting "impulsively" ("Put Your Hands In The Air!" "Say 'Hey'!" "Dance!"), Swinger wants to reach you one-by-one, and one-on-one. Maybe once, twice a year, an album greets my ears with songs that often cause me to tear up in witness to their beauty. It's an intimacy I can't tell you of; it's up to you to put yourself in a place where your heart is open to be touched, to let the music touch you. I wouldn't casually encourage you to embrace such artistic intimacy. Embrace the M O O N, and let the M O O N  touch you. And, as requested in big, bold letters at the end of the lyric booklet, Please Sing!

©2011 Bill Stella. Dancing To Architecture™, HowToFindTheBestMusic™, Bill Realman Radio™, Highest Common Denominator™ by Bill Stella.    All ©, ® & ™ items included in the column for review purposes are ©, ® & ™ their respective owners.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

First Exposure: Martin Swinger ~ M O O N



According to Swinger himself, "Gravity [was] inspired [by] driving on Route One from Houlton, Maine to Presque Isle, following the large scale model of the solar system. And a difficult phone call... My sweetie and I worked it out and are still together celebrating 25 years!"


It's as beautiful a song as you're bound to hear this year.


I'll have plenty more to say about  M  O  O  N  in the days ahead, but for now enjoy "Gravity" with the knowledge that, in my not so humble opinion, it's not even one of the three best songs on the album. That honor goes to the three songs that conclude  M  O  O  N  -- "Wooden Boy", "Betty Boop & Buddha" and "Music In The Rafters". Together those are the three strongest songs at the home stretch of any album I've heard in more than a few years.


Martin Swinger's website features the story behind the song "Wooden Boy" and much more. MartinSwinger.com 



 
©2011 Bill Stella.  Dancing To Architecture, HowToFindTheBestMusic, Bill Realman Radio, Highest Common Denominator by Bill Stella.   All ©, ® & ™ items included in the column for review purposes are ©, ® & ™ their respective owners.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Architecture In Helsinki ~ Contact High



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxjcszKEcHE

Architecture In Helsinki: Their perpetual subtle and explicit moments when what-went-before is not the same as what's-happening-now lend a delectable taste of invention to most of their recordings.
"Contact High" continues their tradition of inventiveness, but with an air of sophistication that is inspired.
Previously, AIH were tribal wildlings, barely honing magically coincidental moments of order out of a chaos that seemed derived from whatever was hanging around and useful. Then, as I understand it, band leader Cameron Bird moved to Brooklyn, and here now they have this unique, savvy, contemporary dance-floor compatible sound that floors me as I want to find a piece of rug to cut.
What, I wonder, happened in Brooklyn?

Soapbox time: If anyone still believes (the reason for this Soapbox will become clear shortly) that Gay folks love Disco, Club music and Broadway (and to a slightly lesser extent the European Classical traditions) because of some innate genetic predisposition or cultural imperative -- GET OVER IT. Gay folks generally still find themselves attracted to those styles because the momentum continues almost as strong as ever, following decades when those were the musical styles most open to Gay folks either being Out or being most able to push their digits out of the closets. Rock and Roll, by comparison, has had its Glam Rock, and The Kinks' "Lola" and the androgynous aspects of The Beatles and The 'Stones, plus a few threads of gentler music and artsier types that wove around, but even today few people acknowledge Gay and Bisexual people behind every kind of mainstream rock from Little Richard to the Four Seasons to Judas Priest to Pink. Whether the credited front-of-the-stage, album cover artist or someone essential behind the scenes, Gay people are everywhere as creators of Rock and Roll -- But we're more often pushed into a closet there or self-repressed and recriminated there throughout its history than we are within Club music or Broadway. And that extends to Now.
Which (and here we go) leads to the incessant, continuous, ongoing guessing game of dealing with musicians whose art and image causes one to wonder "So are they Gay?"
As much as anyone, I wish this was a nearly-boring question, on the par of "So are they married?" I don't ask out of prurient interest. (Though I'll admit I'm only human, and musicians who are Gay and who I find are attractive men capture an extra helping of my attention.)
I ask because it should be more common-knowledge information.
(And here we really are getting to the point(s)):
The video for "Contact High" is a treasure trove of gaydar-inducing images.
  • The lead character is androgynous. Short sideburns and some facial hair is not much to go on to establish male gender. But that's all we get.
  • Sure, it's a men's suit. But a woman with a similar appearance and not-large breasts could fit those clothes.
  • The hands have painted fingernails. But by being disembodied, they put extraordinary weight on fingernail polish as a secondary indicator of gender. One could perhaps be being deceived -- playfully, as part of the pleasures of confusion.
  • Confusion itself - the sense that something is not quite right - is part of the video's underpinnings. It's a confusion that heightens desire. It leads to giving in to a kind of mysterious pleasure.
And yes, alright, I'm behaving highly analytical about a fun, beautiful video, one I have no desire to ruin. But, to me, it sometimes would be satisfying to learn whether an artist or musician is merely using Queer images, imagery that (in the language of the academic) is not hetero-normative, or whether a person, especially the musicians, especially the musician with the lead vision for the music, is simply telling us something about their sexuality.
If there was no video, the song "Contact High" comes with a vague bit of business possibly not intended as but conceivably a clue too: the several tiny moments when the falsetto male lead vocal sings "boy / you". Set in a song-style both similar to the spirit of AIH's past but with much more clean, "artistic" appeal, one can determine that the vocal is treated at those words to make the word "boy" both a little clipped to cause it to almost sneak by, and to make it pop.

I have never heard anything stating that anyone in Architecture In Helsinki is Gay or Lesbian or Bisexual or Trans or Queer or what - or Hetero for that matter (though I may vaguely recall I may have read about a band member's wife or girlfriend).

But I have to wonder -- aloud, in this instance -- whether Cameron is writing about a same-sex experience, something more or less new to him, in "Contact High".

Or perhaps it's just an interpretation with which I would like to enjoy it. Anyone with insight (or other comments) are welcome to respond.

Still, finally it remains, well, weird and bizarre are the only words for it, that in the vastness of what is broadly termed Indie Rock -- all the hundreds, no, thousands of bands and musicians percolating at levels that tend to barely dent the pop charts if they appear there at all, all these amazing creative folks, outside of a handful who identify as LesBiGayTr (and usually cultivate part of their fanbases among Queer folks), and another handful of Out Queer musicians who have done the right thing and mentioned the truth about their sexuality (whether they market themselves as such or not) -- there are not vast lines of Out Gay musicians stretching as far as the eye or the iPod can see.

Come Out, Come Out, wherever you are. Please.

Meanwhile:
Architecture In Helsinki are about to go on the United States & Canada leg of their tour. Dates below (the second digit : the ".06." : is the month, June) are taken directly from their website.
                     01.06.11 Henry Fonda Theater • Los Angeles, CA


02.06.11  Great American Music Hall • San Francisco, CA


03.06.11  Slim's • San Francisco, CA


04.06.11  Wonder Ballroom • Portland, OR


05.06.11  Venue • Vancouver, BC




                     06.06.11 Neumo's • Seattle, WA


                     09.06.11 Varsity Theatre • Minneapolis, MN


10.06.11   Lincoln Hall • Chicago, IL


11.06.11  The Mod Club • Toronto, ON
12.06.11  La Tulipe • Montreal, QC


13.06.11  Paradise • Boston, MA


16.06.11  Webster Hall • New York, NY


17.06.11  Black Cat • Washington DC


18.06.11  World Cafe • Philadelphia, PA
Anyone who could score this poor-boy (financially) tickets to their New York or Philadelphia gigs, please contact me! (See up top, at the end of this blog site's header.)

 
 ©2011 Bill Stella.  Dancing To Architecture, HowToFindTheBestMusic, Bill Realman Radio, Highest Common Denominator by Bill Stella.   All ©, ® & ™ items included in the column for review purposes are ©, ® & ™ their respective owners.