Author Archive
DARRELL SCOTT
DARRELL SCOTT
Long Ride Home
darrellscott.com
For decades Darrell Scott’s father, recently deceased, played roadhouse bars, singing country hits while squirreling away his own material. That explains Darrell’s fondness for classic country and fascination with the musician’s lifestyle, both of which are celebrated on this disc—a literally down-home collection he cut in his house with a team of Nashville aces. Scott is a respected Music City...
THE MARSHMALLOW GHOSTS
THE MARSHMALLOW GHOSTS
The Marshmallow Ghosts
myspace.com/themarshmallowghosts
On their third straight Halloween-inspired release, the Marshmallow Ghosts move beyond singles and stretch their spookadelic aesthetic across an entire album. The band includes members of Dreamend, Hospital Ships and Black Moth Super Rainbow—bizarro pop acts from the aptly named Graveface label—but the men and women behind the instruments might as well be swirly-eyed...
GLOSSARY
GLOSSARY
Long Live All of Us
glossary.us
After a month holed up in a rural Tennessee house, this veteran quintet emerged with an album’s worth of revelatory self-help
rock ’n’ roll. Singer Joey Kneiser comes on like a Springsteenian Southern preacher man, piling positive exhortations and affirmations (”Crawl with me out of the dark,” “You don’t have to know what got you here to be happy you’re alive”) atop Stones-via-Skynyrd guitar...
ALERT NEW LONDON
ALERT NEW LONDON
Youth
facebook.com/alertnewlondon
Alert old London—as in the British capital—and tell the city’s nostalgic 25-year-olds that there’s an American band reviving the sound of their teen years. On their debut, Alert New London harks back to the chiming, heroic turn-of-the-millennium U.K. rock of Travis, Doves and early Coldplay. Another reason 20-something Brits (and Americans) might dig this? The Ohio quintet packs Youth with...
KID SAVANT
KID SAVANT
Drop It on the Stereo
kidsavant.net
Four years after forming in Indianapolis, this electro-rock quartet has finally released its debut EP. The long delay might explain “4 Years,” in which frontman Ryan Weisberger seems intent on putting the past behind him. “Let’s let loose and forget,” he sings, but the band—now based in Brooklyn—sounds neither loose nor forgetful. All pointy guitars and walls of synth, “4 Years” recalls...
BRETT NETSON
BRETT NETSON
Simple Work for the Dead
thisisthenewblack.com
Acoustic guitars anchor Brett Netson’s solo debut, but it’s his electric tones—coarse, buzzing and intended to agitate—that give this album its post-apocalyptic feel. The Built to Spill guitarist and longtime Caustic Resin leader plays through amps that sound as if they’re powered by iffy generators, and indeed given this disc’s major themes—greed, war, environmental and economic...
SORRY EVER AFTER
SORRY EVER AFTER
Meet Us When the Lights Go Low
sorryeverafter.com
Nostalgia for the ’90s was all the rage this year, and while much of it centered on Pearl Jam and Nirvana, there was more to the alt-rock era than oversensitive dudes in flannel. The Clinton years also gave us Magnapop, Letters to Cleo and the Muffs—female-fronted pop-punk bands whose spirits live on in the music of SorryEverAfter. Formed in August 2011 in San Francisco, this...
TALE WAGON
TALE WAGON
Tale Wagon
kanedaily.20fr.com
Don’t be fooled by the word “Wagon”—this New York trio is no outlet for bearded alt-folk softies singing sad songs and pretending to live in prairie days. Bandleader Kane Daily grew up on ’70s glam and bluesy rock, and the Big Apple nightclub lifer makes with plenty of Keith Richards riffs and red-hot slide playing. His chops are impressive, but he plays with welcome economy on the strutting standouts...
ADRIAN YOUNGE PRESENTS VENICE DAWN
ADRIAN YOUNGE PRESENTS VENICE DAWN
Something About April
waxpoetics.com/tag/adrian-younge
Before he earned plaudits for scoring the 2008 neo-blaxploitation flick Black Dynamite, Adrian Younge released Venice Dawn, conceptualized as a soundtrack for a film that didn’t exist. Something About April is the sequel—and again the producer and multi-instrumentalist reveals a crate-digger sensibility, using electric pianos, organs, fuzz-tone guitars,...
WUSSY
WUSSY
Strawberry
wussy.org
The way it’s described throughout Strawberry, if love were a piece of produce you’d give it a squeeze, frown and think better of the purchase. That’s the metaphor suggested by the title, but on the rest of their fourth full-length these Cincinnati alt-rock stalwarts come up with cleverer ways of expressing romantic disappointment. Singer and guitarist Chuck Cleaver (formerly of Ass Ponys) digs space metaphors, and...
DAN BLAKE
DAN BLAKE
The Aquarian Suite
danielblake.net
Dan Blake doesn’t need chords to hold his music together. Working with trumpet, bass and drums, the Brooklyn saxophonist and composer dabbles in formalism—you can whistle “The Whistler”—and digs deep into formlessness. Marvel as he and trumpeter Jason Palmer take turns racing into the rhythmic churn.
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JASON REEVES
JASON REEVES
The Lovesick
myspace.com/jasonreeves
Having crunched the numbers, Jason Reeves knows the odds of finding true love and happiness are pretty slim—roughly “Infinity to One.” But that doesn’t stop him from singing the sunniest pop songs this side of Gavin DeGraw. Leave math to the mathematicians, and love to the lovers.
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DREW WILLIAMS
DREW WILLIAMS
Engineerium
listn.to/drewwilliams
Like a toned-down Tom Waits or T Bone Burnett, this wily Georgian does Americana with murky textures and a willingness to get weird. There are songs about hobos and migrants, and on the feral blues sketch “Wigwam” he pitches his tent as far from the suburbs as possible.
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BURAKA SOM SISTEMA
BURAKA SOM SISTEMA
Komba
buraka.tv
A byproduct of our shrinking world, this Portuguese dance collective comes with fierce Angolan beats and synths that blare like sirens and blip like cheap digital watches. The disc’s anthem, “(We Stay) Up All Night,” is thrilling, if redundant—with this stuff blasting, who could sleep?
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THE ICARUS LINE
THE ICARUS LINE
Wildlife
theicarusline.org
Born and brined in L.A. sleaze, these garage-punk miscreants draw strength from defeat and depravity. (Sample titles: “We Sick,” “Sin Man Sick Blues,” “Like a Scab.”) Catch them at their thorniest, though, and they’re all shriek, fuzz and thrust: Iggy and the Stooges for the Sunset Strip.
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JAMES McCARTNEY
JAMES McCARTNEY
The Complete EP Collection
[Engine Company]
There’s something funny about packaging two EPs and calling it the “complete” collection, though it’s accurate in James McCartney’s case. The English singer and songwriter has released two digital EPs, and this compilation is the first time they’re available in physical form. McCartney plays with a jittery seat-of-his-pants sensibility that sets him apart from his famous father,...
MIKE VIOLA
MIKE VIOLA
Electro de Perfecto
[RED]
Fifteen years have passed since Mike Viola lent his voice to the That Thing You Do! soundtrack, and he still sounds like the boy next door who dreams of being best buds with Paul McCartney. His writing, though, has gotten dark enough to prevent him from busting the adorability scale. Using phrases like “midlife crisis” to describe Electro de Perfecto would be unfair, if only because some of the subject matter...
PEGI YOUNG & THE SURVIVORS
PEGI YOUNG & THE SURVIVORS
Bracing for Impact
[Vapor Records]
Pegi Young’s late-blooming musical career continues to evolve apace, as her third solo release features a rootsier, bluesier sound than earlier efforts. “Flatline Mama” is a lively tune done up in a ’50s rock ’n’ roll vein, while the gritty, bluesy edge on tunes like “Med Line” and “Gonna Walk Away” recalls Bonnie Raitt. Young convincingly serves up the soul on “Trouble...
THE MONKEES
THE MONKEES
Instant Replay
[Rhino Handmade]
In February 1986 MTV ran a marathon of episodes from the Monkees’ 1960s television show, instantly igniting a wave of new interest in an act known during its heyday as a fabricated cash-in on the appeal of the Beatles. But if MTV started the second wave of Monkeemania, the folks at reissue label Rhino made sure it stuck. The next several years saw a series of loving re-releases of the Monkees’ original...
ADELE
ADELE
Live at the Royal Albert Hall
[Columbia]
After issuing two mega-selling albums before the tender age of 21, Adele Adkins has had fans raving about her as the second coming of Dusty Springfield. And she makes a pretty good case for that opinion on this full-length concert DVD recorded at London’s most venerable venue. Adele displays expert pitch and control, and a rare ability to wring visceral emotion out of a simple lyric like “I won’t...
MARK YARM
MARK YARM
Everybody Loves Our Town: An Oral History of Grunge
[Crown Archetype]
Never have the people responsible for starting a musical movement been so quick to tear down their own myth. From the moment the sound known as “grunge” emerged from the Pacific Northwest, the sobriquet was universally rejected by the artists to whom it was applied. From well before the moment major record labels began making their way up to Seattle, smelling money...
WILLIE NILE
WILLIE NILE
The Innocent Ones
willienile.com
If there were a version of the Traveling Wilburys for unfairly overlooked singer-songwriters, Willie Nile could be its very own Tom Petty. A rock ’n’ roll lifer who’s earned endorsements from Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Lucinda Williams and just about every other guitar slinger with an opinion worth trusting, Nile has managed a mere seven studio albums since debuting in 1980. Luckily three...
HIMALAYAN BEAR
HIMALAYAN BEAR
Hard Times
myspace.com/himalayanbear
The first riff Ryan Beattie rustles up on this seven-song collection—his third album under the name Himalayan Bear—recalls nothing so much as “Floating,” a Julee Cruise tune featured on the classic David Lynch television series Twin Peaks. It’s an apt reference, as Beattie blends his bleak alt-country with the shimmering dread of Lynch’s film soundtracks, dredging up the icky underside...
CAMILLE BLOOM AND THE RECOVERY
CAMILLE BLOOM AND THE RECOVERY
Never Out of Time
camillebloom.com
When she’s in somber acoustic mode, singing and strumming over cellist Jessika Kitzman’s slow-bowed moans, Camille Bloom earns a place among such quirk-folk queens as Suzanne Vega, Ani DiFranco and the Indigo Girls. But there’s more to this Seattle-area songwriter than unplugged self-reflection. On “Running Out of Time” and “Tonight,” guitarist Danny Godinez cuts in with...
SUGAR RAY AND THE BLUETONES
SUGAR RAY AND THE BLUETONES
Evening
sugarrayandthebluetones.com
Blues enthusiast John Mayer sometimes pokes fun at himself for being from Connecticut, a place few associate with the genre. Despite its lack of hardscrabble romance, the Constitution State has produced some fine bluesmen. Case in point: Sugar Ray Norcia, a soulful vocalist and powerhouse harmonica blower who years ago “came down with the blues,” as he sings here. Norcia likes his...
SUMMER CAMP
SUMMER CAMP
Welcome to Condale
myspace.com/summercampmusic
British newcomers Elizabeth Sankey and Jeremy Warmsley have a thing for American coming-of-age movies. The duo’s debut is a concept record set in fictional Condale, Calif.—the type of sunny L.A. suburb featured in countless beach flicks and teen romps—and as explained in the handmade scrapbook-style magazine that accompanies the album, the songs center on two sets of characters, one...
DJ CAM
DJ CAM
Seven
inflamable.com
DJ Cam revisits the icy, jazzy, sexy cool of ’90s trip-hop, one of the sounds that have defined his long career, on his seventh album. The Frenchman teams with Massive Attack collaborator Nicolette Suwoton on “Love”—an electro-lounge tune complete with vintage organ tones and a martini-shaker rhythm—and newcomer Inlove on “1988,” further showcasing his music’s sensual side. He gets less from his collaboration...
PAUL BURCH
PAUL BURCH
Words of Love: Songs of Buddy Holly
paulburch.com
Buddy Holly would have turned 75 in September. While a pair of star-studded tribute albums (Rave On and Listen to Me) got most of the press, Nashville singer-songwriter Paul Burch has released a fine disc of his own saluting the late icon. Burch reaffirms the timelessness of Holly’s songs without radically altering the source material, adding and subtracting just enough to make these ’50s...
ROB GARCIA 4
ROB GARCIA 4
The Drop and the Ocean
robgarcia.com
This disc’s title refers to the Sufi belief that man should submit to things larger than himself. It’s a concept that has always been applicable to jazz, and it hasn’t been lost on drummer Rob Garcia, leader of this Brooklyn foursome. Although Garcia sometimes cannonballs in, asserting his virtuosity with splashes of intense, restless playing, he’s plenty good at going with the flow. On the...
ALYSSA CARLSON
ALYSSA CARLSON
This Side of Innocence
myspace.com/alyssacarlsonmusic
Nashville-based singer and songwriter Alyssa Carlson takes her cues from heroes like John Mellencamp, Mary Chapin Carpenter and fellow native Minnesotan Bob Dylan—her acoustic-dominated settings gently frame poetic and carefully observed lyrics about far-off dreams and close-up heartaches. Producer Neilson Hubbard (known for his work with tunesmiths like Glen Phillips and Kim...
KORALLREVEN
KORALLREVEN
An Album by Korallreven
korallreven.se
The sound of two Swedes on holiday, if only in their minds, Korallreven has its beginnings in a trip that founder Marcus Joons took to Samoa several years ago. Inspired by the weather, scenery and local Catholic choirs, he partnered with Daniel Tjader—keyboardist for the stellar dream-pop outfit the Radio Dept.—to recreate the tropical vibes. The duo retains the melodic aspects of Tjader’s main...
JUNIUS
JUNIUS
Reports From the Threshold of Death
juniusmusic.com
Proving that metal dudes have feelings—and maybe even listen to Joy Division and the Smiths—Junius offsets violent guitars with epic synths and the sepulchral croon of frontman Joseph Martinez. While “Betray the Grave,” “Dance on Blood,” and “A Reflection on Fire” may read like Slayer song titles, they’re anything but typical metal tunes. This Boston group pouts as...
HINDI ZAHRA
HINDI ZAHRA
Handmade
hindi-zahra.com
Barely in her 30s, Hindi Zahra writes with worldliness beyond her years but indicative of her background. Her life story is all there in her music: a sophisticated jazz-folk hybrid that marries the exoticism of her native Morocco and the metropolitan cool of Paris, where she moved as a teenager to live with her father. Purring like a Middle Eastern Billie Holiday, Zahra dresses down suitors less schooled in the...
SAVOY BROWN
SAVOY BROWN
Voodoo Moon
savoybrown.com
How long can one man live with the blues? It’s been 45 years for Kim Simmonds, leader of this British institution, and on these nine new originals, the guitarist and sometime singer brings the requisite hot licks and bad-mojo lyrics. Something about this stuff must do the body good.
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CORREATOWN
CORREATOWN
Pleiades
okcorreatown.com
Correatown mastermind Angela Correa was made for Los Angeles. She’s shown showbiz savvy, having landed songs in films and on television. More importantly, the Yuba City, Calif., native has mastered the hazy ’60s pop, Laurel Canyon folk and cool-kid indie that have long been the soundtrack of her adopted hometown.
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EMILY O’HALLORAN
EMILY O’HALLORAN
Morphine and Cupcakes
emilyohalloran.com
A pretty young blonde with the voice of a wizened roadhouse belter, O’Halloran figures “Nashville is where it’s at,” as she sings two songs in. The Aussie newcomer promptly lands in a Hollywood noir version of the Music City, where she savors the feeling of being done wrong.
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AMY WINEHOUSE
AMY WINEHOUSE
Lioness: Hidden Treasures
[Island]
We know the drill here, right? After endless posthumous releases from Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, Kurt Cobain, 2Pac and countless others, the pattern is set: A singer-songwriter in his or her 20s dies, and somehow a few spare tracks can always be found in the vaults to justify one more new piece of product. Lioness is with us less than six months after British songbird Amy Winehouse’s premature...
VocalizeU Release Party
VocalizeU Release Party
Hosted by: Natasha Bedingfield
Presented by Dave Stroud & Michele Rundgren
Photography by Jeff Fasano
Natasha Bedingfield and Jessie Collins
Ben Folds
Bren and Rebop Rundgren
Bren
Chloe Leighton and guests
Crystal Knighton and Aisha Francis
Daniel Bedingfield and Natasha Bedingfield
Daniel Bedingfield, Natasha Bedingfield and Jessie Collins
Daniel Bedingfield
Dave Stroud and Ben Folds
David Matalon, Sonnet Simmons, Dani...
THE ROOTS
THE ROOTS
Undun
[Def Jam]
The latest from hip-hop’s hippest band is a concept album that tells the fictional—although all too believable—story of Redford Stephens, a low-level street hustler who makes all the wrong choices on his way to an early end. That’s not giving anything away: The Roots tell this story in reverse, rewinding Stephens’ life through songs carefully constructed to avoid glorifying his brief and unfortunate time in the...
KATE BUSH
KATE BUSH
50 Words for Snow
[Fish People/Anti]
This is Bush’s first recording of all new music since the double-disc Aerial in 2005, although earlier in 2011 she released Director’s Cut, which included slightly reworked versions of some previously released songs. Not so much a holiday album as a soft, meditative and lush rumination on winter,
50 Words for Snow will remind listeners of a time when musical artists were more intent on creating unified...
THE BLACK KEYS
THE BLACK KEYS
El Camino
[Nonesuch Records]
Prior to its release, Black Keys drummer Patrick Carney proclaimed El Camino the first “all rock ’n’ roll album” of the duo’s decade-long career. Point taken, but the Keys have hardly forsaken the retro-soul vibe that’s underpinned previous discs. Kicking off with the raging, surf-guitar-driven “Lonely Boy” (think the Cramps with a touch of Memphis R&B), Carney and guitarist Dan Auerbach...
DRAKE
DRAKE
Take Care
[Young Money]
Every movie about fame has a scene in which the rising star ducks out of the party and stares through the penthouse window, weighing what they’ve gained against what they’ve given up. Stretch that moment into an entire album and you get Take Care, the sophomore effort from Canadian hip-hop phenom Drake. With his confessional lyrics and sing-rap-chat vocal style, Drake follows in the footsteps of Kanye West. While...
DAVID NAIL
DAVID NAIL
The Sound of a Million Dreams
[Universal Nashville]
With his third album, 32-year-old David Nail proves that he is a cut above contemporaries whose songs often rely on a slapdash collection of tired, countrier-than-thou stereotypes. Nail shows a knack for songcraft, most notably on “Catherine,” a tune written for his wife. But his supple, soulful tenor elevates the album’s outside material, too, as he tackles everything from frenetic...
RICH ROBINSON
RICH ROBINSON
Through a Crooked Sun
[Circle Sound/Thirty Tigers]
This second solo album from Black Crowes guitarist Rich Robinson finds him drawing from the usual sources—the Stones and Faces, in particular—but more dominant are some old-school rock influences that rarely surface in the Crowes’ music. The strummy “I Don’t Hear the Sound of You” evokes the breezy shimmer of the Hollies, but mostly Robinson works in darker colors. “Follow...
GORILLAZ
GORILLAZ
The Singles Collection 2001–2011
[Virgin]
Straight out of the cage, Gorillaz promised to be more than merely a high-concept art project. The “cartoon” rock band formed by Blur frontman Damon Albarn and animator Jamie Hewlett broke through in 2001 with “Clint Eastwood,” a heavy helping of spaghetti-western dub and meaty old-school hip-hop. Albarn sang with quintessentially British melancholy, but he couldn’t help but dream of the...
NILS LOFGREN
NILS LOFGREN
Old School
[Vision Music]
Among his fine work in Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, stewardship of Grin and work alongside Neil Young on classics like Tonight’s the Night, Nils Lofgren once simultaneously enjoyed a prolific solo career. But as his day job as an E Streeter has taken up increasingly more of his time, devotees have been left hoping he’d step out more on his own—and Old School should satisfy those Lofgren loyalists....
MEDESKI, SCOFIELD, MARTIN & WOOD
MEDESKI, SCOFIELD, MARTIN & WOOD
Live: In Case the World Changes Its Mind
[Indirecto]
Medeski, Martin & Wood, who’ve been redefining the jazz keyboard trio for a remarkable two decades now, first collaborated with guitar dynamo John Scofield in 1997 on the latter’s A Go Go album. Even then the match was ideal: Scofield’s probing, groove-infused licks and MMW’s future-funk worship made one another whole. Nearly a decade later, MSMW...
THE DECEMBERISTS
THE DECEMBERISTS
Long Live the King
[Capitol]
Even as they fail to hold together in one piece quite like this year’s full-length The King Is Dead, most of the songs on this six-track EP strike a fine balance between frontman Colin Meloy’s literary depth and some easily accessible tunes. The real keeper here is “Foregone,” on which Meloy’s love poetry is driven forward by a homey steel-guitar lick. Also on the simpler side are the Prince-ly...
R.E.M.
R.E.M.
Part Lies Part Heart Part Truth Part Garbage 1982-2011
[Warner Bros.]
With R.E.M.’s demise last fall the timing is perfect for this double-disc, chronologically arranged retrospective that makes a valiant, if lopsided, attempt to put the group’s three-decade run into perspective. Part Lies Part Heart Part Truth Part Garbage is the first R.E.M. compendium that surveys the full breadth of that career, from the mumbly, jangly early innovations...
KELLY CLARKSON
KELLY CLARKSON
Stronger
[RCA]
Unlike most American Idol alumni, Kelly Clarkson has always set herself apart by generally placing artistry over histrionics. The pattern continues on her latest pop-rock collection, on which she wisely lends her impressive pipes to address purely emotional matters of the heart. On the opening “Mr. Know It All” she reminds us why she’s the queen of the kiss-off with a gritty delivery reminiscent of Melissa Etheridge...


