Author Archive
RYAN ADAMS
RYAN ADAMS
Ashes & Fire
[Pax-Am/Capitol]
Ryan Adams recently took a two-year break from releasing new music, an eternity for a prolific singer and songwriter who put out 10 albums in the preceding eight years. Apparently refreshed, Adams returns with 11 songs that are among the best he’s written. That’s saying something given the sheer volume of Adams’ catalog, but he’s rarely equaled the poignant feeling of these tunes. His vivid lyrics...
PATRICK STUMP
PATRICK STUMP
Soul Punk
[Island]
If ever you needed proof that Fall Out Boy was primarily a vehicle for bass player Pete Wentz, one listen to the solo debut from lead singer Patrick Stump should convince you. Largely eschewing FOB’s driving power-pop, Stump lets his funk flag fly right away on the opening “Explode,” its propulsive electro-pop resembling some of his outside work with Cobra Starship or the Roots. Likewise, “This City” shows...
REID PALEY AND BLACK FRANCIS
REID PALEY AND BLACK FRANCIS
Paley & Francis
[Sonic Unyon Records]
“I’ll bring down my foot on your daisy chain/I’ll have a drink from your jugular vein…” Given Black Francis’ reputation as a dark character, those lyrical musings from opening entry “Curse” would seem to affirm his ability to shock the heck out of his listeners. Joining forces with frequent collaborator Reid Paley, the former Frank Black (born Charles Thompson)...
DARYL HALL
DARYL HALL
Laughing Down Crying
[Verve Forecast]
When Daryl Hall tackles a solo project, it’s always interesting to hear how far he’ll stray from the sounds that made him and partner John Oates staples of pop radio. Hall’s fifth solo disc hews pretty closely to those styles. With production help from Greg Bieck (Jennifer Lopez, Destiny’s Child) and guitarist Paul Pesco, Laughing is an update, not a departure, despite the loping Americana beat...
ANDREA BALESTRA
ANDREA BALESTRA
Fine Arts Avenue
myspace.com/andreabalestra
Talent and training will get you far, as this Berklee-educated guitarist can attest, but it takes taste and restraint to make an instrumental album as simultaneously eclectic and enjoyable as Fine Arts Avenue. From funky wah-wah workouts to simmering jazz explorations, Balestra demonstrates the upside of virtuosity.
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SLEEP OVER
SLEEP OVER
Forever
sleepoverforever.com
Existing in some nebulous nether region between New Wave and New Age, the music of Austin synth sorceress Stefanie Franciotti is at turns soothing and frightening. It’s as though Enya has gone Goth and recreated from memory the score from a horror flick she saw as a child.
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RINGO STARR
RINGO STARR
Rock’s most famous drummer remembers the Beatles and looks ahead to a Starr-filled future.
THE FRAY
Earning scars, telling stories and letting themselves get a little bit louder in the process.
KEITH JARRETT
Jazz’s premier improvisational pianist reveals the joy and anxiety of playing without a net.
SEAN GARRETT
The producer behind some of today’s biggest R&B radio hits takes you into the studio.
ANI DiFRANCO
How...
FIRST MARTIN AMBASSADOR OF 2012! – Rivers Cuomo of Weezer
FIRST MARTIN AMBASSADOR OF 2012! – Rivers Cuomo of Weezer
Happy New Year! Get to know the amazing Rivers Cuomo of the multi-platinum selling band WEEZER!
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MARTIN STRINGS AMBASSADOR: LOUDON WAINWRIGHT III
MARTIN STRINGS AMBASSADOR: LOUDON WAINWRIGHT III
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NEW MARTIN STRING AMBASSADOR: JACK SAVORETTI
NEW MARTIN STRING AMBASSADOR: JACK SAVORETTI
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A Word From Chris: Responsible Guitar Building
A Word From Chris: Responsible Guitar Building
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COMMON
COMMON
Catching up with the rapper, actor, author, poet and unlikely magnet for controversy.
LOU REED
How one of rock’s fiercest iconoclasts found common ground with the mighty Metallica.
PETER GABRIEL
Finding fresh new blood in familiar favorites with the help of a symphony orchestra.
RAY MANZAREK
The legendary Doors’ keyboardist extraordinaire isn’t finished lighting new fires just yet.
JAM & LEWIS
Behind the board with one of the greatest...
Americana Music Festival 2011 – 1 of 5
Americana Music Festival 2011 – 1 of 5
Nashville, TN
Amanda Shires
The Black Lillies
Carrie Rodriguez
Carrie Rodriguez & Will Kimbrough
Catherine Britt
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Americana Music Festival 2011 – 2 of 5
Americana Music Festival 2011 – 2 of 5
Nashville, TN
Deadman
Elephant Revival
Henry Wagons
Jimmie Dale Gilmore
John Oates
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Americana Music Festival 2011 – 3 of 5
Americana Music Festival 2011 – 3 of 5
Nashville, TN
Luther Dickinson
Luther Dickinson
Marshall Chapman
Michael Martin Murphey
Mountain Heart
New Country Rehab
Patrick Sweany
Patrick Sweany
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Americana Music Festival 2011 – 4 of 5
Americana Music Festival 2011 – 4 of 5
Nashville, TN
Romantica
Richie Owens
Sam Llanas
Sam Llanas
Tara Nevins
Tim Easton
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Americana Music Festival 2011 – 5 of 5
Americana Music Festival 2011 – 5 of 5
Nashville, TN
Tommy Womack
Will Kimbrough
Will Hoge
Will Hoge
Will Hoge
Tommy Womack & Will Kimbrough
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Joe Henry by Jeff Fasano
Joe Henry by Jeff Fasano
For M Music & Musicians Magazine – September/October 2011
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VAN HUNT
VAN HUNT
Tracking down the sound in his head, even if it leads him to the world of punk rock
“There has always been a sound in my head that existed long before I made records,” says Van Hunt. It’s a sound the Atlanta native has been chasing throughout his life, even as he became a star with two major-label R&B releases in 2004 and 2006. When his record label permanently shelved a more adventurous third album, he became even more determined...
RACHAEL YAMAGATA
RACHAEL YAMAGATA
How she found independence, a new sense of purpose and a banana-colored tent
When Rachael Yamagata elected to record her latest album, Chesapeake, at producer John Alagia’s home on the Chesapeake Bay in Easton, Md., she knew there wouldn’t be room enough for all the players and contributors. So she went to a camping equipment store where she discovered what she calls the “Diva Tent.” “I found this big, banana-colored, yellow...
CHRIS ISAAK
CHRIS ISAAK
When one of rock’s coolest crooners sings Sun Records classics, it’s a good, good thing
Chris Isaak can’t stop laughing. He’s at home in San Francisco, watching with rapt attention as his manager’s playful Maltese runs, dives and slides across the floor. “It’s hilarious!” Isaak exclaims. “You can tell he’s having fun.” He’s not the only one. On the new Beyond the Sun, Isaak himself clearly has a blast crooning...
MICHELLE BRANCH
MICHELLE BRANCH
Country turned to pop when Nashville frustration gave way to London inspiration
Michelle Branch is hanging up her cowboy hat for now. Even after she stormed the country charts in 2006 as half of hit duo the Wreckers, Branch’s own planned solo country effort was met with years of record-label delays. The frustration motivated Branch to return to her roots with West Coast Time, her first pop record in eight years. “It was kind of...
ROBERT EARL KEEN
ROBERT EARL KEEN
This Texas veteran isn’t trying to be clever, but don’t go thinking he’s cymbal-minded
Robert Earl Keen has always been a clever songwriter—perhaps, he recently decided, a little too clever for his own good. “I was always trying to think outside the box,” says the Texas stalwart, whose new Ready for Confetti is his 12th studio effort in 27 years. “For this album, I didn’t concern myself with that. If it was a straightforward...
ANTHRAX
ANTHRAX
Heavy-metal survivors put turmoil behind them for a return to furious fighting form
Thrash-metal giant Anthrax has survived a number of challenges, from lineup changes and record-label headaches to the public-relations nightmare caused by a 2001 series of deadly terrorist attacks using the bacteria for which the band was first named 30 years ago. But the last few years have been especially uncertain, as Anthrax’s lead-singer position became...
JOHN HIATT
JOHN HIATT
Have a little faith in him—this prolific elder statesman is still cranking it up
John Hiatt just can’t understand the way some acts make albums. “You get a group like U2, who rent a place in Berlin for 10 grand a week,” he says. “You can’t write songs somewhere else? You’re gonna get the flavor of Berlin? What is that?” By contrast, the veteran singer-songwriter chose to record his new Dirty Jeans and Mudslide Hymns at Ben...
EVANESCENCE
EVANESCENCE
Amy Lee wanted to go it alone—but needed her band to bring the pain
After forming in Arkansas in the mid-1990s, the members of Evanescence watched in amazement as their 2003 debut full-length album, Fallen, sold 17 million copies worldwide on the strength of hits like “Bring Me to Life” and “My Immortal.” Three years later the follow-up, The Open Door, racked up another 5 million. After such a whirlwind ride, bandleader Amy...
VINCE GILL
VINCE GILL
A country guitar slinger takes his craft all the way back home
By Chris Neal
When Vince Gill was putting the final touches on the newly built studio in his Nashville-area home, he had an unlikely burst of inspiration. He needed something to cut down on the amount of sunlight streaming through the tall windows of the room, and he knew just what material had the color and texture he wanted: the tweed from the front of a vintage Fender amplifier....
TORI AMOS
TORI AMOS
Turning ancient sounds into a modern soundtrack for “cataclysmic change”
Although Tori Amos studied at Johns Hopkins University’s elite Peabody Conservatory of Music in Maryland for five years as a child, classical music had long since been a thing of the past for the singer, songwriter and pianist who rose to fame in the 1990s with alt-rock hits like “Cornflake Girl,” “God” and “Silent All These Years.” That is, until...
MASTODON
MASTODON
Their toughest task yet: reinventing heavy metal on deadline
Longtime fans may be surprised by some new twists on heavy-metal giant Mastodon’s latest, The Hunter. There’s the absence of the group’s usual concept-album narrative, and the presence of producer Mike Elizondo—who has worked with artists ranging from Dr. Dre to Carrie Underwood, but has very little hard rock on his résumé. Then again, fans might also be surprised to...
JOE HENRY
JOE HENRY
Being himself helps this artist-turned-producer help others do the same
By Michael Gallant
“When I listen to music, all I want to know is what works and why it works,” says Joe Henry. “I don’t care about genre distinctions. I’m happy to do anything that’s of quality.” Apt words from a prolific producer who has helped craft distinctive albums for artists as diverse as Elvis Costello, Aimee Mann, Mavis Staples, Brad Mehldau,...
MUTEMATH
Roy Mitchell-Cardenas, Darren King, Paul Meany
MUTEMATH
Slimming down, stepping up and throwing new paint at the canvas
Beset by strife both internal and external, New Orleans-based alt-rock band Mutemath nearly broke up while recording its 2009 album Armistice. So for its latest, Odd Soul, a few changes were due. Guitarist Greg Hill quit the band, leaving a trio of vocalist Paul Meany, drummer Darren King and bass player Roy Mitchell-Cardenas,...
LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM
LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM
Fleetwood Mac’s visionary guitarist reaps the solo seeds he’s sown
By Russell Hall
The story of Fleetwood Mac’s 1977 album Rumours is well-worn: Fueled by the angst of the various romantic collisions among the members—singer and guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, singer Stevie Nicks, singer and keyboardist Christine McVie, bass player John McVie and drummer Mick Fleetwood—the album became one of the best-selling in rock history....
ALICE COOPER
ALICE COOPER
America’s favorite shock rocker dreams up an all-new nightmare
It’s Alice Cooper’s party, and he’ll invite whomever he likes. “Anytime someone tells me I shouldn’t have a particular artist on an album, I take that as a challenge,” declares Alice Cooper. “I think, ‘I’ll take that person and create a situation where you see a different side of them.’” That attitude led the legendary shock-rocker to recruit such...
NICK LOWE
NICK LOWE
A rocker finds new magic by embracing change
“I’m 61 years old now / Lord, I never thought I’d see 30,” Nick Lowe sings on his new release, The Old Magic. The subject of aging, and how to do it gracefully, is one that Lowe has given much thought over the last two decades. The British rock icon’s solution has been to reinvent himself as a bard steeped in a timeless-sounding blend of classic country and jazz standards. We caught...
THOMAS DOLBY
THOMAS DOLBY
From ’80s hitmaker to modern-day tech innovator, science has been good to him
Contrary to the title of his biggest radio hit, London native Thomas Dolby has never been blinded by science. In fact, the preoccupation with technology hinted at in synthesizer-happy 1980s classics like “She Blinded Me With Science,” “Hyperactive!” and “One of Our Submarines” has allowed him to flourish well into the new millennium. After his...
JANE’S ADDICTION
JANE’S ADDICTION
The Great Escape Artist
[Capitol]
Two decades have passed since the first time pioneering alt-rock band Jane’s Addiction broke up, imploding from within via a variety of personality conflicts. Since 1997 the group has reunited in fits and starts with a series of bass players filling in for reluctant original member Eric Avery, including Flea, Martyn LeNoble, Duff McKagan and Chris Chaney. Avery finally rejoined the band in 2008,...
FEIST
FEIST
Metals
[Cherrytree/Interscope]
What’s Leslie Feist been up to since her 2007 album The Reminder? Breaking up, from the sound of things on her latest. These songs play like letters from a broken heart, delivered in the Canadian singer’s typically understated style. Her drowsy voice—which works so well on the lovely offhand pop numbers for which she’s become known (“Mushaboom,” “1234”)—requires only a slight adjustment to sound...
SUPERHEAVY
SUPERHEAVY
SuperHeavy
[Universal Republic]
Mick Jagger, Joss Stone, Dave Stewart, Damian Marley and A.R. Rahman are billing themselves collectively as SuperHeavy, but the all-star quintet’s debut doesn’t quite earn them the label of supergroup. That criticism isn’t a knock on any of the album’s individual tracks. The first half could be the foundation for a perfectly fine, guest-heavy Marley record, and the last half would be adequate filler...
CLAP YOUR HANDS SAY YEAH
CLAP YOUR HANDS SAY YEAH
Hysterical
[Red General]
For a band whose very name implies hyperactivity, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah have been surprisingly inactive for the last few years. Following a self-released 2005 debut that became an indie-rock sensation, the band released a hurried sophomore LP in 2007 before entering a self-imposed hibernation. That break led to the usual flurry of forgettable side projects, but now it’s back to business. Frontman...
WILCO
WILCO
The Whole Love
[dBpm/ANTI]
Although its first seven minutes and last 12 minutes help to make The Whole Love Wilco’s boldest record since 2001’s landmark Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, those opening and closing marathons are also familiar reminders of leader Jeff Tweedy’s wide emotional range. Amid the gloom of the opening “Art of Almost,” Tweedy is the dark-clothed loner with his head down. Yet he’s the same man who, on the closing “One...
THE BEACH BOYS
THE BEACH BOYS
The SMiLE Sessions
[Capitol]
In a scene from the classic movie Citizen Kane, the character of Mr. Bernstein (played by Everett Sloane) rhapsodizes about a comely stranger he briefly spied from a distance some 45 years earlier. “I only saw her for one second,” he says. “She didn’t see me at all, but I’ll bet a month hasn’t gone by since that I haven’t thought of that girl.” There is no beauty quite so radiant as that...
BJÖRK
BJÖRK
Biophilia
[Nonesuch]
Björk’s eighth solo release is not so much an album as the foundation of an ambitious multimedia project. Partly recorded on an iPad and released (in addition to traditional outlets) through 10 interactive apps, Biophilia boasts a lyrical thread drawing from biologist Edward O. Wilson’s ideas about the connections that humans subconsciously seek with the life that surrounds them. By fusing African-derived rhythms,...
GEORGE BENSON
GEORGE BENSON
Guitar Man
[Concord Jazz]
As the title of Guitar Man makes clear, George Benson has rediscovered his axe. Benson began his career as a hotshot jazz guitarist in the ’60s—then in the mid-’70s, he discovered he could sing. Switching gears, he became a pioneer of smooth jazz and has rarely looked back since. Guitar Man offers irrefutable proof that Benson can still play, although all too often he eschews the more nuanced, exploratory...
MATTHEW SWEET
MATTHEW SWEET
Modern Art
[Missing Piece]
After a nearly 30-year career and the critical acclaim reaped by much-loved albums like Girlfriend, Altered Beast and 100% Fun, Matthew Sweet has earned his place among power-pop’s elite. His up-and-down fortunes have been dictated all too often by never-ending shifts in record-label affiliations, but each new album still brings an endlessly renewed sense of possibility. True to Sweet’s retro sensibilities,...
THE JAYHAWKS
THE JAYHAWKS
Mockingbird Time
[Rounder]
The big news for fans of this quintessential alt-country band is that Mockingbird Time is the first new studio release since 1995 to feature the Jayhawks’ original co-frontmen, Gary Louris and Mark Olson. Reunions can be iffy, but the Jayhawks have marshaled their strengths and assembled a recording truly worthy of their stellar reputation. The omnipresent close harmonies, smart songcraft, instantly memorable...
RIGHT ON DYNAMITE
RIGHT ON DYNAMITE
In Vino Veritas
myspace.com/rightondynamite
Three songs into their debut album, these New Yorkers ask, “What Would Ringo Do?” If the ex-Beatle were 22 today, he might join a band like Right on Dynamite. The trio makes classic power-pop with a mussed indie edge, building big hooks from Daniel Murphy’s chunky guitars and excited mumbling.
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JONNY CORNDAWG
JONNY CORNDAWG
Down on the Bikini Line
corndawg.com
The artwork and song titles (“When a Ford Man Turns to Chevy,” etc.) scream comedy record, but Corndawg is no hipster Jeff Foxworthy. His playing is too good, and his love of classic country—in all its heartbreaking, plainspoken, at times ridiculous glory—burns hotter than a backyard tire fire.
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