Author Archive
MARTIN AMBASSADOR LP TV DEBUT WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25TH
MARTIN AMBASSADOR LP TV DEBUT WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25TH
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Guitar legend Adrian Belew workshop spotlighting Parker Fly Guitars
Guitar legend Adrian Belew workshop spotlighting Parker Fly Guitars
Guitar legend Adrian Belew (right, pictured with Sweetwater's Editorial Director Mitch Gallagher) visited Sweetwater recently for a free concert and workshop spotlighting his two signature model Parker Fly guitars. Belew also gave a concert for, and spent the day discussing music and audio technology with, Sweetwater's Sales Engineers.
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WILSON PHILLIPS
WILSON PHILLIPS
Three members of classic pop royalty dedicate an album to the ones they love
The members of Wilson Phillips first drew worldwide attention for their quintuple-platinum 1990 self-titled debut—and for their status as rock royalty. Sisters Wendy and Carnie Wilson were the daughters of Beach Boy Brian Wilson, while Chynna Phillips’ parents were John and Michelle Phillips of the Mamas & the Papas. The group has always...
SPIRITUALIZED
SPIRITUALIZED
Crossing continents in a quest to find the heart and see the light
Jason “J. Spaceman” Pierce, frontman and guiding light of English rock band Spiritualized, adamantly disagrees with those who think music must follow rules. After all, he’s been swirling rock, R&B, pop and more into richly textured sonic landscapes throughout his career. But there’s one rule in which he believes fiercely: There’s a delicate but real...
JESSIE BAYLIN
JESSIE BAYLIN
Putting a new spark into her career with unexpected help from her grandmother
“Three days before I was to start recording this album, the label cut my budget in half,” says Jessie Baylin. “Then the next day, they cut it another quarter.” The Nashville-based singer-songwriter took the hint. “They listened to the demos and didn’t think I had the songs,” she recalls with a sigh. “They wanted to put me with hit writers,...
M. WARD
M. Ward
The “Him” of She & Him takes a confident step back to center stage
After releasing 2009’s Hold Time, Portland-based singer and songwriter M. Ward largely put his solo career on hold. He toured and made albums with Monsters of Folk—an indie-rock supergroup also featuring My Morning Jacket’s Jim James and Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst and Mike Mogis—and She & Him, the duo Ward founded with actress and singer Zooey Deschanel....
COWBOY JUNKIES
COWBOY JUNKIES
Bringing a nomadic journey to a close, while looking ahead to the next
After more than 25 years together, the members of Cowboy Junkies have but one goal: “Survival,” says guitarist and primary songwriter Michael Timmins with a laugh. Yet their recent activities suggest broader ambition than that. Over the last 18 months the Canadian band has released a quartet of separate but linked albums dubbed The Nomad Series. “We had...
JOAN OSBORNE
JOAN OSBORNE
Bringing it on home to the blues and soul of her early days
From the moment she lit into Sonny Boy Williamson II’s “Help Me” on her triple-platinum 1995 debut, Relish, it was clear that Kentucky-born Joan Osborne had a natural feel for gutbucket blues. She’s explored those roots regularly ever since, but never so directly as on her new album, the all-covers affair Bring It On Home. With the help from her co-producer and...
JASON MRAZ
JASON MRAZ
A talk about the meaning of music, finding the right sound and his favorite four-letter word.
Jason Mraz is in a noisy Los Angeles rehearsal hall, taking a break from doing something that doesn’t come easily to him: telling other people what to do. Mraz first emerged from the Southern California coffeehouse scene just over a decade ago armed only with a guitar, a sweetly melodious tenor voice and a rapidly growing stack of original...
COUNTING CROWS
COUNTING CROWS
Adam Duritz and company make an eclectic set of covers their own
Nearly two decades have passed since Counting Crows exploded onto the scene with their multiplatinum debut August and Everything After and its smash single, “Mr. Jones.” Even as the band has built on that foundation with one critically acclaimed album of originals after another, it has carved out a reputation for interpreting others’ material—from filling in...
LYLE LOVETT
LYLE LOVETT
One of America’s great singer-songwriters marks the end of an era
Twenty-six years into his recording career, Lyle Lovett is still amused by the attempts to categorize his music. “Even now, people who don’t really listen to country music still think of me as country, and people who listen to country don’t,” he says. “It’s an odd place to be.” Odd perhaps, but Lovett can thank his idiosyncratic nature for providing...
DAYNA KURTZ
DAYNA KURTZ
American Standard
daynakurtz.com
American music comes from the church, so it’s fitting that American Standard—a sampling of homegrown sounds spanning hollerin’ blues to the Replacements’ “Here Comes a Regular”—opens with a prayer. “I’ll be a great sage or a fabulous liar,” Dayna Kurtz sings on “Invocation,” pleading with “mama”—maybe her mother, maybe the Virgin Mary—to “let me come home.” Kurtz will...
UNICYCLE LOVES YOU
UNICYCLE LOVES YOU
Failure
unicyclelovesyou.com
Perhaps intended as film criticism, “Wow Wave Cinema,” the second track on the third album from this Chicago slacker-punk trio, also applies to rock ’n’ roll. “It’s nothing new,” frontman Jim Carroll sings. “It’s just called by a different name.” Twenty years ago, the band’s loveably skuzzy tunes would have been tagged “alt-rock.” Today, they’re “neo-” something-or-other,...
BAHAMAS
BAHAMAS
Barchords
bahamasmusic.net
If not for its twin indie-rock guitars—one glistening, the other grinding—the Bahamas standout “Never Again” might pass for a Lenny Kravitz ballad. And that would be just fine—having spent years playing with fellow Canadian singer Feist, Afie Jurvanen is no stranger to mainstream acclaim. But on his second disc under this tropical moniker, he paddles farther out from the pop mainland. Give him an acoustic...
YVA LAS VEGASS
YVA LAS VEGASS
I Was Born in a Place of Sunshine and the Smell of Ripe Mangoes
myspace.com/lasvegass
To say Yva Las Vegass has a unique point of view is putting it mildly, and there’s no room for mildness where she’s concerned. The native Venezuelan moved to Seattle as a teen and roughed it as a street musician, battling homelessness and addiction. After performing at a birthday party for Krist Novoselic, she played with the Nirvana bassist in...
MOONLIGHT BRIDE
MOONLIGHT BRIDE
Twin Lakes
moonlightbridemusic.com
On “Lemonade,” the big gulp of bittersweet, noisy pop that is this EP’s finest track, singer Justin Giles is simultaneously psyched up and disoriented—just like the music that envelops him. “Where did you take me?” he asks. “These kids are drunk and they don’t like guitars.” If he’s at a party where the kids don’t dig six-strings, he’s definitely in the wrong place. On their...
ULRICH SCHNAUSS & MARK PETERS
ULRICH SCHNAUSS & MARK PETERS
Underrated Silence
myspace.com/ulrichschnauss
Working primarily at night—which might explain the drowsy sound, were it not already his trademark—German electro hypnotist Ulrich Schnauss teamed with Mark Peters of the British band Engineers for this album of pure downy atmosphere. Schnauss’ aim, as always, is to re-create with keyboards the arrestingly beautiful guitar assault of Ride, Chapterhouse and My Bloody...
SISTER SPARROW & THE DIRTY BIRDS
SISTER SPARROW & THE DIRTY BIRDS
Pound of Dirt
sistersparrow.com
Like a snazzy dance band that refuses to wear shoes, this nine-piece soul-rock crew does red-hot and brassy ’60s soul with a scraggly blues edge. The scruffiness is down to the sibling duo of Arleigh and Jackson Kincheloe—Catskills natives who use voice and harmonica, respectively, to dredge up all the sorrow, joy and sexiness of the vintage music they love. Arleigh aspires...
RICKOLUS
RICKOLUS
Coyote and Mule
iamrickolus.tumblr.com
“Where is everyone?” Richard Colado sings on “Candy Blood,” just before answering his own question: “I am everyone.” Sure enough, the 31-year-old Floridian is the sole force behind Rickolus; he recorded this album on a four-track recorder, working partially in the shed behind his parents’ house. There’s a handcrafted feel to these songs, and while the crud-pop nugget “Something in...
SICK FRIEND
SICK FRIEND
The Draft Dodger
sickfriend.bandcamp.com
Since the emergence of the White Stripes and the Black Keys, the indie world has been deluged with guitar-and-drum duos. Sick Friend would seem to offer more of the same, but on their debut these thoughtful Canadians drop bittersweet synth lines and straitlaced rhythms. Singer and guitarist Michael O’Brien has a soul-baring falsetto informed by the Dears and Of Montreal, but on the excellent...
NED EVETT
NED EVETT
Treehouse
nedevett.com
The story goes that Ned Evett smashed his Fender Stratocaster one New Year’s Eve and fashioned a fretless guitar from the pieces. His ingenuity and virtuosity are well documented, but there’s more to his story. For his sixth album, the journeyman picker moved to Nashville and recorded with King Crimson’s Adrian Belew. The goal: to write great songs about his recent financial and romantic hardships. By any measure,...
COLIN SCHILLER & THE REACTIONS
COLIN SCHILLER & THE REACTIONS
Endless Holiday
colinschillerandthereactions.com
When groups do cheeseball ’80s revivalism they tend to focus on stiff, robotic New Wave or butt-wiggling hair metal. Credit Colin Schiller for trying something different. Following in the hallowed footsteps of Loverboy, the Romantics, “Glory Days”-era Springsteen and Huey Lewis and the News, Schiller and his Brooklyn crew make music for Friday at 5 p.m., when...
THE CHROME CRANKS
THE CHROME CRANKS
Ain’t No Lies in Blood
myspace.com/chromecranks
The Chrome Cranks spent three days recording this, their first new album in 15 years. That probably includes the time it took to load in, load out and sweep up whatever detritus—beer bottles, cigarette butts, voodoo remnants—they left behind in the studio. As per their reputation, the Cranks play bluesy punk with murderous glee, conjuring up the Dead Boys on “Living/Dead”...
CAPSULA
CAPSULA
In the Land of Silver Souls
capsula.us
Forged under an Argentinean dictatorship and now based in Spain, this magnificently noisy trio traverses time and space, folding the finest rebel guitar sounds—rockabilly, garage, glam and art-school droning—into one shiny package. Imagine the Stooges on Mars with Spanish accents.
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I SEE HAWKS IN L.A.
I SEE HAWKS IN L.A.
New Kind of Lonely
iseehawks.com
On their first acoustic album, these L.A. country-rockers muse on the Grateful Dead and mourn the literal dead. They also celebrate life—a parade of humor and sadness that, with its immigrant strivers, hopeless drug takers and doomed lovers, is especially colorful in their hometown.
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GEORGE SARAH
GEORGE SARAH
Who Sleep the Sleep of Peace
myspace.com/georgesarahmusic
The year is young, so 2012 could see other electro-orchestral tropical dance records—but only Sarah’s is likely to feature members of the Pogues, Bauhaus and Save Ferris. No wonder this guy makes music for the Discovery Channel; his is a world of wonder and possibility.
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TONIGHT ALIVE
TONIGHT ALIVE
What Are You So Scared of?
tonightaliveofficial.com
Bearing the unmistakable stamp of Mark Trombino—the producer whose high-gloss, hyper-precise pop-punk sound has become an industry standard—the debut from this Aussie quintet bristles with adolescent emotion. When singer Jenna McDougall’s feelings get messy, the music stays tidy and on target.
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MARSHALL CATCH
MARSHALL CATCH
Make Noise
marshallcatch.com
It’s hip to reference Pavement and Teenage Fanclub, but back in the ’90s the rock bands people actually listened to sounded more like Marshall Catch. These big-hearted Montana boys do Hootie hooks with Collective Soul punch. You forgot how much you missed this stuff.
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RISA BINDER
RISA BINDER
Paper Heart
risabinder.com
On “You Made It Rain,” the song that opens her debut album, Risa Binder gets caught between cynicism and belief. As her crush leans in for a kiss, the skies open up—and while she wants to live in a world where such things magically happen, she’s suspicious. “It was so perfect, like the world was a movie set,” the Maryland native sings, perhaps revealing a bit of where she’s been. Before moving to...
BAD WEATHER CALIFORNIA
BAD WEATHER CALIFORNIA
Sunkissed
badweathercalifornia.com
Bad Weather California packs several decades’ worth of good vibrations into a compact package. That goes for the sun—the thematic centerpiece of this aptly named album—and for the half-century of sounds these Denver dudes draw from. With its slippery bass and unlikely blend of wah-wah and chicken-scratch guitars, opener “I’ll Reach out My Hand” kicks things off in a funky fog. From...
AMY RAY
AMY RAY
Lung of Love
amy-ray.com
A few songs after “From Haiti,” whose stabbing guitars evoke “London Calling,” Amy Ray makes an even more direct reference to that classic’s creators in the Clash. “There’s a little Joe Strummer in my DNA,” she sings on “Little Revolution,” an organ-driven pop nugget about embracing—and therefore overcoming—pain and suffering. Indeed, the longtime Indigo Girl shares much in common with Strummer—most...
WALTER ROSE
WALTER ROSE
Cast Your Stone
walterrosemusic.com
As a teenager, this native Hawaiian underwent brain surgeries that left him with partial vision in one eye. Later, after he’d found work teaching special-needs kids, he lost a girlfriend to a motorcycle accident. So he’s entitled to sing songs like “Times Are Hard,” a nervous country-noir number about “dusty dreams.” Of course, if entitlement were enough, the world would be filled with country...
JIOSA
JIOSA
On the Edge
dennyjiosa.com
Even acclaimed smooth-jazz musicians must stand at the mirror and dream of rocking out. Here, Grammy-nominated guitarist Denny Jiosa gets his chance by positioning himself at the head of a mighty power trio. While the versatile virtuoso breaks up his shredding with ballads and even a Beatles cover, it’s the blustery, bluesy hard-rock tunes—the ones you could most imagine David Lee Roth high-kicking along to—that...
SUNNY TAYLOR
SUNNY TAYLOR
Sunny Taylor
sunnytaylormusic.com
Just four songs and 20 minutes long, the latest from this Indiana singer-songwriter offers four distinct stories and asks one overarching question: “When do you get to getting over it?” That line comes from “Paper Tiger (Getting Over It),” a song whose narrator really ought to grab a coffee with the protagonist from “Trucker.” That one is about someone who drives all night, pondering regrets...
LUTHEA SALOM
LUTHEA SALOM
Kick in the Head
lutheasalom.com
Somewhere between Canada and Spain (the countries in which she grew up) and New York City (where she now lives), Luthea Salom surely experienced some heartbreak. She loved, lost and learned, putting her in the same boat as 99.9 percent of the world’s population. So Kick in the Head, her third album, is the sound of an exceptional songwriter coming to terms with the unexceptional nature of her own “little...
CORNFLOWER BLUE
CORNFLOWER BLUE
Run Down the Rails
cornflowerbluemusic.com
Just as the “country” in country music need not refer only to America, such instruments as mandolins, fiddles and twangy guitars aren’t just for hat-clad, boot-scooting genre purists. That’s the takeaway from Run Down the Rails, the sophomore effort from this Canadian duo. Theresa McInerney and Trevor May know their Hank, Johnny and Willie, but they come at Americana via ’90s R.E.M....
KOFFIN KATS
KOFFIN KATS
Our Way & the Highway
koffinkatsrock.com
With a few notable exceptions—the grisly murder tale “A Terrible Way” and apocalyptic rager “The Devil Asked” among them—the Koffin Kats spend much of their sixth album singing about boozing and touring. If the songs are autobiographical, the Detroit psychobilly trio hasn’t let its lifestyle become a hindrance. The production is pomade-slick, and the playing is tighter than sopping-wet...
KIRK WHALUM
KIRK WHALUM
Romance Language
kirkwhalum.com
With Romance Language Kirk Whalum and his brother Kevin have created a musical mash note to one of their favorite albums, 1963’s mood-music landmark John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman. Kirk, an acclaimed smooth-jazz saxophonist with nearly two dozen albums to his credit, handles Coltrane’s parts, blowing in his reed as he might his lady’s ear. Kevin, meanwhile, plays lover-man extraordinaire in the...
WHITTON
WHITTON
Rare Bird
whittonmusic.com
Much in the same way Amy Winehouse played on ’60s soul and girl-group sounds, Jaime Whitton draws on ’40s jazz, positioning herself as a kind of Billie Holiday—minus the tragic undertones of either Winehouse or Holiday—for modern pop audiences. Whitton keeps her retro references subtle, using just enough tinkling piano, warbled phrasing and quacking brass to glance backward without risking whiplash. The...
ROBERT DEEBLE
ROBERT DEEBLE
Heart Like Feathers
robertdeeble.com
In the six years since his last album, this Seattle singer-songwriter earned a master’s in psychology. That explains lines like, “I feel the guilt, I feel the shame of an existential rush of temporal things.” Deeble is obviously a keen observer of human behavior, but what’s remarkable about Heart Like Feathers is how conversational and easygoing he sounds. This is true even when he’s at...
THE WEE TRIO
THE WEE TRIO
Ashes to Ashes
theweetrio.com
Finally, David Bowie gets the vibraphone-driven free-jazz tribute he deserves. The Wees turn the classic “The Man Who Sold the World” into funky supermarket music and 2002’s “Sunday” into as somber a meditation as three zany jazz brainiacs are likely to come up with.
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MAC McANALLY
MAC McANALLY
Live in Muscle Shoals
macmcanally.com
Performing live at the University of North Alabama, this enduring country songwriter and Jimmy Buffet sideman shares the stories behind his best tunes. Better yet, he plays them, demonstrating how aw-shucks personality and serious musicianship can make for a swell evening—and an enviable career.
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AUDREY SPILLMAN
AUDREY SPILLMAN
Part of Me
audreyspillmanmusic.com
On the title track, this Nashville newcomer wonders whether the relationship she’s just ended might have been worth saving. It’s heartfelt and complex—and as with the other four country-soul tunes on this EP, she sings it with conviction and elegance.
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EXDETECTIVES
EXDETECTIVES
Take My Forever
exdetectives.com
Faris McReynolds, the young L.A. musician behind ExDetectives, ends this disc by repeating the words “drift forward.” Sure enough, he sounds like a psychedelic ’60s rocker who’s taken a magic carpet ride through time and landed in the alt-rock ’90s—finding nirvana in the age of Nirvana.
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REBECCA SAYRE
REBECCA SAYRE
Play
rebeccasayre.com
Best known for jazzy pop, Sayre takes more of a down-home country turn on this four-song EP. Luckily she retains her signature pep, bouncing between pragmatism (“I’m gonna leave it up to love”) and optimism (“Today, I’m basking in my own light”).
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JACK WHITE
JACK WHITE
Blunderbuss
[Third Man/XL/Columbia]
You knew someone as restlessly prolific as Jack White would get around to it eventually. After six albums with the White Stripes, two each with the Raconteurs and the Dead Weather, collaborations with everyone from Loretta Lynn to Conan O’Brien and innumerable moves as producer and record-label entrepreneur, the pride of Detroit (and more recently of Nashville) has finally released a solo album. White...
SPECTRUM ROAD
SPECTRUM ROAD
Spectrum Road
[Palmetto]
“Supergroup” is a term that was long ago diluted, but every once in a while the stars align and the word regains its meaning. Spectrum Road is incontestably a supergroup: Cream bassist Jack Bruce; Living Colour guitarist Vernon Reid; keyboardist John Medeski of Medeski Martin & Wood; and drummer Cindy Blackman, who has backed husband Carlos Santana, Lenny Kravitz and others. Spectrum Road—and the quartet’s...
THE TING TINGS
THE TING TINGS
Sounds from Nowheresville
[Columbia]
In the first 10 seconds of “Hang It Up,” the leadoff single from their sophomore album, the Ting Tings swipe the opening chord from Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” and an almost equally recognizable beat from Jay-Z. This British electro-pop duo may have 99 problems, but absorbing and expressing their influences ain’t one. Opener “Silence” is a gift to New Wave geeks—a three-minute...
DELTA SPIRIT
DELTA SPIRIT
Delta Spirit
[Rounder]
It’s fitting that Delta Spirit’s third full-length album is self-titled. The band reinvents itself here, channeling the raucous energy and sound of its live performances. Lineup changes—guitarist Sean Walker has been replaced by Will McLaren—and a cross-country relocation from Long Beach, Calif., to Brooklyn has erased the rootsy folk leanings of previous releases, leaving tightly crafted rock in their...
DR. JOHN
DR. JOHN
Locked Down
[Nonesuch Records]
Few could blame Dr. John (aka Mac Rebennack) if he opted to coast on his towering reputation in New Orleans music. But this new album proves he has no such intentions. Spearheaded by the Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach—who produced and co-wrote the material—Locked Down sounds like a 21st century version of the R&B gumbo Dr. John served up at the turn of the ’70s. The opening title track sets the tone....


