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 Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Siren song
Posted by peter


doppress2.jpgAiry vocal harmonies, dreamy melodies and starry atmospheres — that's what Dirty On Purpose is made of. Oh, and don't forget puppy-dog tails.

For good reason, Dirty On Purpose's Hallelujah Sirens made scads of best-of 2006 lists, and now, the New York City combo is readying the release of a stunning, five-song EP called Like Bees, due out Jan. 15. Inhabiting the night sky you stare at longingly every night from the balcony of your city apartment, Dirty On Purpose (photo at right by Gregory Wilson) meld influences as diverse as My Bloody Valentine, Galaxie 500 and Sonic Youth on this release.

From the silvery strum of the title track, featuring the angelic female lead vocals of Jaymay, to the carefully manicured guitar of "Back To Sleep" and its stormy crescendos, to the racing, gritty cover of Real Life's New Wave hit "Send Me An Angel," Dirty On Purpose is as epic and awe-inspiring as Explosions In The Sky, while also adept at crafting compelling songs and not just wandering in the generous sprawl of its compositions.

"Audience in the Room" is a brand-new track from Dirty On Purpose and it's a winning mix of everything that makes Dirty On Purpose one of the most amazing new bands out there.

"'Audience in the Room' is about the feeling of being onstage, under lights, and you've got a million things running through your mind, and you wish everyone would stop starting at you," says Doug Marvin. "I wrote the song as an instrumental years ago, for a former band, but only recently showed it to this band and wrote words for it. I love how it turned out!"

Of the "Send Me An Angel" cover, band member Joe Jurewicz says, "George [Wilson, also of Dirty On Purpose]  was hellbent on doing a cover of this song, because it was in the movie "RAD" (a BMX '80s movie), which him and his brother watched every for two weeks last summer."

To learn more about Dirty On Purpose, visit www.dirtyonpurpose.com or go to the band's MySpace page at www.myspace.com/dirtyonpurpose




11/27/2007 12:05:59 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Modest Mouse Trap
Posted by peter


974633_356x237.jpgNo longer the acerbic, weird stepchild of indie-rock, Modest Mouse has unexpectedly gained a secure foothold in the treacherous terrain of today's pop music landscape.

Nobody saw that one coming. There was no way Isaac Brock's deep, philosophic lyrics — couched in his own, uniquely cryptic wordplay — was going to resonate with a public that has an insatiable appetite for all things celebrity related. And, certainly, though oddly catchy, Modest Mouse's quirky, off-kilter sound would never catch on with those same people, gleefully being spoon fed the lowest-common-denominator, overly processed pop the record industry could produce.

Even after blowing away critics with the space-rock epic The Moon And Antarctica, there was no way Modest Mouse was ever going to become a household name. And then came "Float On." Brimming with positivity and championing an "everything's going to be all right" aesthetic, "Float On" marched onto the charts with a funky bass stomp, otherworldly guitars and Isaac Brock's insistent bellow.

With the chart success of the band's latest album, We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank, it appears Modest Mouse isn't about to give up its newfound popularity. On Nov. 10, the Issaquah, Washington's favorite sons invaded Madison, Wis., and threw down, giving a radiant performance at the city's Orpheum Theatre.

Running through a set that mostly featured songs from We Were Dead ... and Good News for People Who Love Bad News. Backed by a rampaging double drum kit attack, courtesy of Jeremiah Green and Joe Plummer, and bolstered by the six-string engravings of ex-Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr, Modest Mouse was captivating. There was little in the way of stage banter, with the band simply plowing through song after song with barely harnessed vigor.

The lead single for We Were Dead ..., "Dashboard," grew in scope, becoming more expansive and propulsive in a live setting, with Modest Mouse's post-punk dance identity coming to the fore. And an epic encore left everybody's mouth gaping. What really stood out was how professional Modest Mouse, producing clear sonic portraits that, while still rowdy and wild, had a clarity of vision and impossible-to-ignore grooves.

Opening bands Man Man and Love As Laughter were at complete opposites, with Love putting on a cough-medicine induced slumber and Man Man erupting with impossible energy. Describing Man Man is a futile exercise. Calling their act a "carnival" would come close, with jazzy horns, rollicking piano, percussive mayhem and kazoos creating an eastern European-influenced, klezmer/punk dynamo. Get to know Man Man.

To learn more about Man Man, visit www.wearemanman.com. To get a Modest Mouse fix, go to www.modestmousemusic.com


11/20/2007 12:53:15 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Sound and vision
Posted by peter

Deluxe book and slipcase.jpgWhile out taking publicity photos, photographer Henry Diltz and the members of Crosby, Stills & Nash came across a ramshackle white house in west Hollywood with a little couch outside.

Unremarkable in just about every way, peeling paint and all, that house would end up on one of the most iconic rock album covers of all time.

"Graham (Nash) had seen this little old house, with a couch, and so we drove there and got out," recalls Diltz. "So, we took these pictures, and the next day, we looked at those pictures and thought, 'Jeez, that'd be a nice album cover.' I mean, we hadn't planned on doing an album cover. We were just doing publicity photos."

At this point, the folk-rock trio hadn't even finalized a name.

"Then, literally, the next day or so, they decided finally on the sequence of names — Crosby, Stills and Nash," says Diltz. "Maybe it was going to be Stills, Nash and Crosby, or something, you know? They couldn't decide which sounded best. So, they finally all agreed it would be Crosby, Stills & Nash, and then we looked at the picture and said, 'Well, jeez, that's backwards here.' So, they're not in the right order, and I said, 'Well, that's no problem. Let's just go right back there. It'll take five minutes. We'll retake the same picture."

But, there was a problem.

"We all went and drove back there, and the house was gone," says Diltz. "The house was totally gone, just a vacant lot there. And that was really an eerie feeling. So, they took the album out, with the picture being backwards. Nothing we could do about it, you know?"

Nevertheless, that simple photo of the band sitting on a beat-up old sofa next to a decrepit, and probably condemned, house wound up being almost as beloved as the band itself.

Diltz' eye for candid, spontaneous photography, and his utter lack of pretension — not to mention his beautiful framing technique — has made him one of the world's greatest rock photographers. And now, he's clearing the vaults for a new book titled "California Dreaming: Memories & Visions of LA: 1966-1975" from Genesis Publications.

A must for anybody who dug the L.A. music scene of that era, the book is an amazing museum of nostalgia and gorgeously shot imagery of rock's biggest names, like The Doors, The Monkees, The Eagles, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, Frank Zappa, Steppenwolf, The Turtles, Poco, The Mamas and the Papas, Joni Mitchell, America and a host of others.

As a member of the Modern Folk Quartet, Diltz befriended many of the stars he photographed. This book takes you behind the scenes, often showing the private lives of these stars, with backstage footage of Crosby, Stills & Nash warming up prior to a concert and a cool photo shoot of The Eagles in cowboy garb re-enacting an Old West shootout.

Diltz' work has taken him to many places. He spent an afternoon at Truman Capote's house. For a week, he relaxed on boats in the Virgin Islands with Paul McCartney and wife Linda while they recorded London Town. And then there were photo shoots with the band America.

Henry in Paris Hi-Res.jpgDiltz went to Hawaii with them. He went to Big Sur with them, and also an Indian reservation. But, perhaps the most interesting place was an oasis in the middle of a desert.

"There were a lot of adventures with those guys," says Diltz. "There's the one picture of them holding a mirror with the moon in it that was really cool. We rode horseback for two hours to get to this palm oasis."

A beautiful place, with palm trees, a pond and frogs making a relaxing noise at night, it was where the group set up camp for the night.

"My partner, Gary (Burden), the graphic artist, wanted that mirror with us, so we had a cowboy, a wranger, who was our guide, and he had to carry that thing under one arm all the way out there," says Diltz. "And Gary wanted to put it on the ground, and have (America) lead over and look into it and me to shoot into it as if it were a hole in the ground, or a hole looking up at them.

"So, Dewey Bunnell, the guy who wrote "Horse With No Name," as soon as we got to this little place and it started to get dark, bats came out up on top of this hillside above the campsite. So, he said, 'I'm going up there. I've got to see those bats.' So, he walked up the hill, and the other guys followed him up, and Gary said, 'Wait, take the mirror with you.' I said, 'What the hell for, you know?' But I carried it up there, and then, they're standing there, and suddenly, I see this light flashing in the mirror as they walked. As the mirror wiggled, I could a light bobbing around in there, and it was a big moon coming up and behind me. And they could see the moon coming up above the other hill. I couldn't see it where I was, and so, I just said, 'Hey, stop you guys. Hold the mirror like that.'"

And Diltz shot the scene. He had an image he would never forget.

"And then, we took the picture," says Diltz. "I love that picture. It was like a total accident. That totally seemed like it was all contrived and planned, and it really wasn't. It was an accident all the way."

"California Dreaming: Memories & Visions of LA, 1966-1975" by Henry Diltz is a hand-bound, numbered, limited-edition book. Only 2,000 copies are available worldwide, each signed by the author. For more information, go to www.Genesis-Publications.com.







11/13/2007 1:11:27 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, November 07, 2007
The Arrangement
Posted by peter


NKC 1.jpgNat King Cole was the star, but behind the velvet curtain of Cole's voice, there was Nelson Riddle, whose gift for charts and arrangements steered the singer to heights of popularity only experienced by another Riddle project, Frank Sinatra.

"I think he changed pop singing altogether with the arrangements he did," says Jim Ritz, producer of Collectors' Choice's reissue series of Nat King Cole's entire Capitol Catalog. "It was just his natural talent that he heard something other arrangers just didn't hear. Nelson was a great bridge between artistic and pop and commercial. There's no doubt his arrangements for Nat were beautifully constructed and artistic, but on the other hand, they were very palpable. You hear his arrangement for 'Mona Lisa,' which he ghosted for Les Baxter, or 'Unforgettable,' and the arrangement is as memorable as the vocal or the words, and I think Nelson was as responsible for bringing Nat to the forefront of popular music as he was for bringing Sinatra to the forefront of popular music."

On Nov. 6, Collectors' Choice released a whopping total of 18 Nat King Cole albums as "two-fers," meaning two albums on one disc. Among them was Penthouse Serenade and Welcome to the Club, which were teamed with The Piano Style of Nat King Cole and Tell Me All About Yourself, respectively. Both saw Cole return to his jazz roots and playing the piano, with Penthouse Serenade a moody concoction of sophisticated cocktail jazz and Welcome to the Club a collaboration between Cole and the Count Basie Big Band.

More Nat King Cole reissues are due out in 2008.

In coming up with the pairings, Ritz and company tried to choose records that complemented each other.

"I wanted to make sure they were coherently pleasing to listen to," says Ritz. "In other words, I tried to couple up Nelson Riddle's work with Nat on the 'two-fers' and Billy May's and Gordon Jenkins' ... so that in listening to it, you wouldn't finish the 12th track and all of a sudden you're in another genre, so to speak. We wanted it to be a coherent listening experience."

To learn more about these remarkable releases, go to www.ccmusic.com.




11/7/2007 5:20:30 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, November 06, 2007
Meet the Fab Four
Posted by peter


GM-Fab4DVD-cover.jpgIt's a marriage made in a Yellow Submarine, or something like that. With the years and years of stories we've done on The Beatles, it seemed the perfect time to collect as many as we could and put them all on CD for you to read at your leisure.

To that end, we offer "Meet The Fab Four." On this CD, valued at more than $80, you'll get the complete issues for 16 Beatles-themed issues from the last decade. And there's more.

It's all here, from the in-depth interviews with band members and insiders, including Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Pete Best, Sean Lennon, Yoko Ono and more to detailed discographies and discounts on merchandise from Krause Publications, and it's all easy to search, easy to store and easy to navigate. You'll also get the complete Beatles-related music pricing guide from author, expert and collector Tim Neely's brand-new "6th Edition Goldmine Price Guide to 45 RPM records," plus key collecting reference information, including market trends, tips on grading and selling your records, and a record label guide excerpted from Neely's brand-new "5th Edition Goldmine Record Album Price Guide."

To pre-order the CD, at a cost of $24.95, go to http://www.goldminemag.com/Default.aspx?tabid=2397




11/6/2007 4:32:41 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Thursday, November 01, 2007
Drum circle
Posted by peter


82666310706.jpgContinuing his quest to bring world music to the masses, former Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart brought his Global Drum Project to the Overture Center in Madison, Wis., last week.

Consisting of longtime Hart collaborator Zakir Hussain, the phenomenal Indian tabla player, and Nigerian talking drummer Sikuru Adepoju and conga expert Giovanni Hidalgo, the Global Drum Project is a study in polyrhythmic trance music, pairing a variety of percussion instruments with the electronic washes of Jonah Sharp.

Alternately hypnotic and tribal, with instances of wild, uninhibited soloing — Hidalgo and Hussain, in particular, were mesmerizing to watch, with Hidalgo a whirlwind on congas and the insane skitter of Hussain's tabla  — the quartet swung from powerful, synchronized surges of beats, like the ebullient "Baba," to the jaw-dropping, ambient beauty of "Funky Zena."

The organic nature of the live experience, plus the mind-blowing improvisation of these masters of their instruments, made the Global Drum Project album, which was released Oct. 2 and has been steadily moving up the world music charts, come alive in unexpected and utterly transfixing ways.

This wasn't just a collection of songs. It was a journey through strange musical terrain, from jungles of sound to oceanic and desert soundscapes. If you get a chance to see this act, do go. You won't be disappointed.

For more on the Global Drum Project, visit www.shoutfactory.com.



11/1/2007 12:45:22 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]