Archive for the Music Category

Rock It From The Crypt: New Jimi Hendrix Song

Posted in Music with tags , on February 10, 2010 by johnbuckley100

The Jimi Hendrix Estate, far longer in existence than the Jimi Hendrix Experience ever was, would seem to have scraped the bottom of the barrel so hard, it must shine in the dark.  So how to explain that 30 years hence, we have the prospect of a “new” Hendrix album, with the teaser song released today? “Valleys of Neptune” tracks familiar territory — starting out like “Angel,” and then invoking a softer chord progression than “Freedom” — and we’re probably listening to guide vocals.  But Hell, it’s Jimi Hendrix, and we haven’t heard this song before.  Thank you, God, or Mr. Hendrix, or whatever lawyer or studio archivist who found these tapes and made them available.

Now it says these tracks have never been released, though surely we’ve heard some of the songs contained in the album, to be released one month hence.  “Here My Train a Comin’,” “Red House,” and “Lover Man” were all released in studio versions, and we’ve heard “Sunshine of Your Love” live.

If the title track released today is indicative, what we’re going to hear is a good showcase for Hendrix’s final line up — Billy Cox and Mitch Mitchell backing him up.  This thing came out of nowhere, as I far as I knew, we’re damn glad it did.

Oh Thank Heaven, The New Pornographers Have Not Forsaken Us

Posted in Music with tags on January 22, 2010 by johnbuckley100

This just in:

The New Pornographers will have a new album out, entitled Together, on May 4th.  12 Tracks, produced by Phil Palazzolo who produced Challengers.

After a long week, good news…


Savoire Adore At D.C.’s Velvet Lounge 1/22

Posted in Music with tags on January 21, 2010 by johnbuckley100

“Leave the winter behind,” sing Savoire Adore, the latest fun pop duo from Area Code 718, and while we can’t quite do that, we can go see a band that reminds us of Dean and Britta, or even the Asteroids Galaxy Tour.  This doesn’t quite do justice to a really original band that showcases confident craftsmanship and oddly beautiful songs that are just enough off kilter, if you pushed them they’d tip over and land in a different, amusing shape each time.  Songs to sing around an electric campfire.  Fun, pretty ditties with plenty of confectioners sugar atop something much grittier.  Nourishment for a winter’s evening.  At the Velvet Lounge, 915 U Street, Friday night.

The Coolest Postage Stamp Ever

Posted in Music with tags on January 20, 2010 by johnbuckley100

The cover of London Calling is now a stamp, courtesy of the Royal Mail.  And we wonder why the U.S. Postal Service is losing money…

New Songs From “Exile On Main Street”?

Posted in Music with tags , on January 16, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Uncut reveals that the remastered version of  the Rolling Stones masterpiece Exile On Main Street will be released on April 12th.  But if that information sets the heart beating fast, consider this:  It will include three previously unreleased songs.  Now, neither “Following The River,” “Plunder My Soul,” nor “Sophia Loren” show up in Martin Elliott’s The Rolling Stones Complete Recording Sessions,” and we don’t seem to have them on any of the bootlegs stored deep in the secure vaults of Tulip Frenzy World HQ.  So this is a very exciting announcement, and we’ve but 90 days or so until we see if this is right.

Fleshtones Greet Their 5th Decade* By Bursting Into Film

Posted in Music with tags , , on January 3, 2010 by johnbuckley100

SnagFilms brain trust, please take note and acquire these rights for your most excellent nonfiction film site: 2010 will see the release of Pardon Us For Living But The Graveyard Was Full, a documentary about The Flestones, only the greatest… well, we’ll leave it there.  The Fleshtones are just the greatest.  And that there’s now a movie about ’em, in addition to the excellent book on them — Sweat, The Story of The Fleshtones, America’s Garage Band — means the ‘Tones Chronicle is now a full-fledged multimedia juggernaut.   I mean after a book and a film, through what medium may we next capture America’s greatest band?  Sculpture?

Can’t wait to see it, and the really fun trailer just whets the appetite.  Happy 201o.

* No, they haven’t been around for 40 plus years (just a mere 34), but having started in the mid-70s, and with this now 2010, we did the math and…

Ethan Russell’s “Let It Bleed” Is Superb

Posted in Music with tags , , , on December 21, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Santa came a little early, and dropped off the coffee-table book entitled Let It Bleed by Ethan Russell.  Russell is important as a photographer both for the Rolling Stones and Rolling Stone, having  served the Stones as staff photographer on the ’69 tour, and shot album covers for the Beatles (Let It Be), Who (Who’s Next), and Stones (Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out).  All that’s missing from his resume is that Dylan album, you know what I mean?

As a narrative, Let It Bleed is missing the comprehensiveness of Stanley Booth’s Dance With The Devil, which would have been called No One Here Gets Out Alive if it hadn’t already been taken.  Because he’s a photographer (and Grammy-award winning video director) he’s not primarily a writer, and thus Russell’s book relies on the memories of Booth, and Michael Lydon (whose Rock/Folk was a superb early ’70s series of features on the likes of the Stones), as well Jo Bergman, and Ronnie Schneider, and others on what later (in Robert Greenfield’s chronicle of the ’72 tour) would be called STP — the Stones Touring Party.

What’s revelatory about this book is the way it shows the incredibly ad hoc nature of the Stones’ 1969 tour.  Here was possibly the single greatest tour in the history of rock and it was kind of thrown together with Allen Klein’s nephew (Schneider) managing it, with a single Vietnam vet running security, and a total of 16 people in the bubble, including Bill Wyman’s girlfriend Astrid, and the famous Cathy and Mary — groupies pressed into action as drivers of cars provided by the conman John Jaymes who told the Stones he worked for Chrysler,  and Chrysler he worked for the Stones.

The ’72 tour was better musically, as the Stones effloresced with Nicky Hopkins and the Bobby Keys-Jim Price horn section, and of course, by then — post Sticky Fingers, with Exile in the bag — they had all the songs they’d ever need to work with.  But the ’69 tour was more important, because it changed the entire context of rock music, by bringing to the sprawl of  late ’60s expectations an incredibly tight combo as happy to play Chuck Berry songs (in 3:47, not 29 minutes) as their own compositions.  There was no noodling or messin’ around, they just came, conquered, played a seriously great set that kids actually listened to and were out the building before the audience had screwed their heads back on.  Iggy Pop said it was the greatest concert he ever saw, and we’re not going to argue, even though we didn’t pick up the thread for three more years.

As Russell makes clear, the Stones’ ’69 tour was the epochal event that put the capper on the ’60s, and we haven’t even mentioned Altamont, which in the context of his book, really does take on its epic bad trip aura in a shambling, accidental fashion as the Stones just fumbled their way into it.  Political correctness and the bad vibes attendant to the high ticket prices ($7.50 being the highest price – clearly the Stones got over their squeamishness about being capitalists soon thereafter) led to Mick’s declaring they’d do a free concert, with San Francisco the locale, and the rest is a Maysle Brothers documentary.

We know from the incredible Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out 40th Anniversary package — Russell did the photographs, and the liner notes — that the Stones made a grand total of $600,000 for the tour.  Since at least the 1980s, they’ve made more than that for a single show, and even their most loyal defenders will admit the kids got a better value back then.

Russell’s on-stage photos of the band are great, and some of his backstage photos are pretty good — some are amazing —  but it’s a relief, as a photographer, to see the images he took that were blurred, and even when he was focusing accurately, there’s a really soft look to everything — fast film, not great lenses — that was corrected by the time he photographed the ’72 tour.

It’s a great book.  I’m glad he published it.  Not too late to ask Santa for it. Provided you’ve been nice, not naughty.

Why “Together Through Life” Didn’t Make The Cut

Posted in Music with tags , on November 29, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Since Time Out Of Mind more than a decade ago, there hasn’t been a year that Dylan has released an album and not had it make the Tulip Frenzy Top Ten List.  In fact, last year’s Tell Tale Signs was #1, and it comprised mostly alternative cuts of songs that had long since been released.

Together Through Life had some great moments — “Beyond Here Lies Nothin'” and “Forgetful Heart” in particular — but there was something ultimately dispiriting about having Dylan release an album in which several songs were rewritten off the frames stretched by Elmore Leonard or Willie Dixon.  Yes, sure, Modern Times owed and presumably paid royalties to Muddy Waters’ estate.  By this time, though, the act is old, unlike Dylan, the youngest person ever to record more than 50 albums.

We stand second to none in our reverence for the Living Master.  Yet somehow this year we enjoyed Dylan’s interviews with Bill Flanagan more than we enjoyed the actual music he produced.  And the Christmas album?  Please.

We have high hopes for 2010.

Uncut’s Top 10 List Is So Predictable

Posted in Music with tags , on November 28, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Over the past five years, no single publication has turned me on to more good music than the British slick Uncut. Through their good auspices, I discovered Black Mountain, The Black Angels, Blood Meridian, Oedipussy, Kelley Stoltz, the Felice Brothers, and it’s possible that First Communion Afterparty became known in these parts through Uncut‘s writing.

But there is a downside to paying too much attention to the magazine’s recommendations, and it is their sometimes championing bands so dreary and boring it defies belief.  Last year they gave their #1 Album of the Year ranking to Porishead.  Portishead!  And so of course they gave their top slot this year to Animal Collective.

I would rather be mauled by grizzly bears — not Grizzly Bear — and have weasels rip my flesh than have to listen to Animal Collective’s Merriwether Post Pavilion.  In fact, I would probably rank it the Most Boring Album of 2009.

But Uncut declares it the champ-een on the world.  And of course they do.

If you’d like a glimpse at a myriad of Top Ten lists, check out this compendium from Largehearted Boy Top Ten Lists Galore.

Pens Down, Ballots In: Top Ten List Imminent

Posted in Music with tags on November 24, 2009 by johnbuckley100

So maybe The Chesterfield Kings live album is the greatest live ‘un since Get Yer Ya-Yas Out (actually, it does sound pretty great.)  Doesn’t matter.  Pens are down.  Watch for the Official Tulip Frenzy 2009 Top Ten List of the best music out this year to be published imminently.  10-9-8-…