Archive for “Double Exposure”

The # 7 Album On The Tulip Frenzy 2013 Top Ten List ™ Is Kelley Stoltz’s “Double Exposure”

Posted in Music with tags , , , on December 8, 2013 by johnbuckley100

He’s been higher in previous years, but Double Exposure — while not as fine as Circular Sounds — is nonetheless a great album, and a terrific intro to one of America’s finest artists.

Here’s what we said earlier this fall when, at long last, we were able to lay our virtual mitts on these tracks:

“On the long-awaited Double Harmony, which is his tenth record, but more important than that, a record which upon early listens seems at least the equal of his magnificent 2008 release, Circular Sounds, he still has the capacity to surprise.  The title track is in a long line of exquisite Kelley Stoltz rockers; it could have easily been on 2010′s To Dreamers.  But it’s perhaps the only song on the album that doesn’t seem like a departure; throughout, Kelley reveals himself to be more ambitiously setting a bigger sail for a farther port. Go listen to “Still Feel,”   which would seem to contain all of Kelley’s 10-album’s worth of accumulated charm in a single, six-minute goblet.  Aficionados will grok to the considerably better sound quality than has heretofore been served up.  Yes, even when Kelley Stoltz records have have been lower-fi than Tom Thumb they have always been Semper Fi with sonic gorgeousness.  But this sounds as if, though he may be recording at home, someone’s rewired the place.  He is clearly — true anecdote — no longer propping up the mike in his top drawer and leaning over to sing into it; someone — Jack White? — has at least bought him a mike stand.”

 

Kelley Stoltz’s “Double Exposure” Has Been Released Into The Wild

Posted in Music with tags , , , , , on September 24, 2013 by johnbuckley100

Kelley Stoltz is so much more than the sum of his influences.  But honestly, even if all he were was the sum of his influences,  having such a sophisticated take on the songwriting of Ray Davies and Brian Wilson and Lennon/McCartney would make him A-OK in our book.

It’s when you consider the following that we actually start to wig out: he sings self-harmonies better than Steve Miller, he plays guitar like Dean Wareham’s long lost bro, and he does all this all by himself, not in a garage, but in what we imagine to be an antique-strewn atelier, a place of rare craftsmanship, like the last man on earth who can properly bind the books in which the secrets of rock’n’roll are kept, to be shared only with adepts.  (Perhaps this is the moment to thank Jack White for the generosity and good taste that led him to release Kelley Stoltz on his Third Man label.)

And now on the long-awaited Double Exposure, which is his tenth record, but more important than that, a record which upon early listens seems at least the equal of his magnificent 2008 release, Circular Sounds, he still has the capacity to surprise.  The title track is in a long line of exquisite Kelley Stoltz rockers; it could have easily been on 2010’s To Dreamers.  But it’s perhaps the only song on the album that doesn’t seem like a departure; throughout, Kelley reveals himself to be more ambitiously setting a bigger sail for a farther port.

Showing the influence — yeah, another influence — of his San Francisco chum, John Dyer, whose Thee Oh Sees are worlds apart from, and yet completely aligned with, Stoltz’s sensibilities — a band made for sweating on stage, for levitating roofs, even as they have a melodic streak wide as the Bay Bridge — on the nine-minute long “Inside My Head,” Stoltz builds a coiling, motorik riff until it gets released with precisely the ambient sounds of Fripp & Eno’s Evening Star.   Interestingly, that’s exactly what Thee Oh Sees did early this year on Floating Coffin‘s “Strawberries 1 + 2.”  We’re guessing they had an Evening Star listening party.  Or better yet, they didn’t have to.

Much has been made of the garage atmosphere in which so much of the great music that’s come out of the Bay Area lo these these past five years is steeped.  And while Stoltz has far more in common with Ty Segall and Thee Oh Sees than might be recognized by someone who isn’t a participant in that milieu, his channeling of the Kinks and the Beatles and Pet Sounds-era Brian Wilson does set him apart from the simplistic deshabille implied by “garage rock.”  Yet when you think of what that great pop craftsman Tim Presley is trying to accomplish with White Fence, what Tim Cohen is doing with Magic Trick (moreso than what he does with his other band, The Fresh and Onlys), Stoltz is revealed as both drinking from the same stream and replenishing it.

Want to see what all the fuss is about?  Want the ticket in?  Go listen to “Still Feel” from Double Exposure, which would seem to contain all of Kelley’s 10-album’s worth of accumulated charm in a single, six-minute goblet.  Aficionados will grok to the considerably better sound quality than has heretofore been served up.  Yes, even when Kelley Stoltz records have have been lower-fi than Tom Thumb they have always been Semper Fi with sonic gorgeousness.  But this sounds as if, though he may be recording at home, someone’s rewired the place.  He is clearly — true anecdote — no longer propping up the mike in his top drawer and leaning over to sing into it; someone — Jack White? — has at least bought him a mike stand.

If there were a Venn Diagram, and on the left side were all of the world’s elect who already know how great Kelley Stoltz albums are, and on the right side were all of Tulip Frenzy’s legions’o’fans, in the middle, clearly, would be the coolest cats in the land.  Our abiding wish would be to move more of you on the right side leftward into the red hot middle.  (We wouldn’t mind if some the folks on the left moved to right, too.)  We consider it our civic duty to introduce more people to Kelley Stoltz’s music.  Only time will tell if Double Exposure proves to be as great as Circular Sounds or Below The Branches.  So far, just a few hours of non-stop playing in, we love it.  We can’t imagine you’ll ever regret taking the plunge.

@johnbuckley100

On The Eve Of The Release Of Kelley Stoltz’ “Double Exposure,” We Listened To “Antique Glow”

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , on September 24, 2013 by johnbuckley100

We’re bad at math, so we were a little shocked when we read today that Double Exposure is Kelley’s 10th album.  All we know is that today, when in night-before-Christmas anticipation we started playing 2003’s Antique Glow, we thought of this image below, taken Saturday while walking through the H Street Festival.  Kelley Stoltz albums are a little like this.  If you’ve ever heard him, you’ll know just what we mean.  And if you haven’t, well tomorrow may be your lucky day.  Leica Monochrom, 35mm Summicron v. IV (The King of Bokeh).

Antique Glow

Just 11 Days Until The New Kelley Stoltz Album, “Double Exposure,” Is Released

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on September 13, 2013 by johnbuckley100

We know that you are counting the hours until the release of…. okay, so we could fill in any number of blanks here — the new Pynchon novel, the release in October of the second and final First Communion Afterparty album, the next iPad.  But of course we are talking about the new Kelley Stoltz album, Double Exposure!

We still have… counts on fingers… 11 days until that fateful hour arrives.  But if you just can’t wait for another taste, then simply click your little finger on this helpful link.

Oh yeah, this is going to be good.

Woo Hoo! Kelley Stoltz’s “Double Exposure” September Release Date Set

Posted in Music with tags , , , , on August 14, 2013 by johnbuckley100

We thank you, Pitchfork, for giving us this listen to “Kim Chee Taco Man”, the first track we’ve heard from Kelley’s new ‘un, Double Exposure.  (And a strong track it is!  Ed.)

We thank you, Jack White, for having the taste and moxie to put out Kelley’s new album on Third Man Records.

We thank you, Yaweh in all Your many Manifestations for delivering Kelley Stoltz to us, and for the announcement that Double Exposure will be released to the world on September 24th.  That’s…. (does some arithmetic… 24 + 17 days left in August…) only 41 days away!  Woo hoo!

And why are we so excited about this album coming out, aside from the fact that Kelley has more than one time been listed in Tulip Frenzy’s Top 10 Lists ™?  Well, here’s what no less an authority than Thee Oh Sees John Dwyer has to say about Double Exposure: “A piece of gold in your ear, A lovely thought in your mind, A breeze in the sun, This record is perfect…” 

A Little Tired Of Waiting For The New Kelley Stoltz Album, We Started Listening To His “Crockodials”

Posted in Music with tags , , on August 2, 2013 by johnbuckley100

We have been waiting, by our standards patiently, for the new Kelley Stoltz album, Double Exposure.  Promised for the spring of 2013, long since mixed and mastered, we keep going to iTunes, and to Kelley’s website, hoping for news of its release, only to be disappointed.  Imagine a Rolls Royce, or a pair of John Lobb boots, in which a single craftsman has produced it all — every part hammered home by the same hands that made the part — and yeah, you get a sense of how carefully produced each of Kelley’s albums that emerge from his San Francisco atelier actually is.  But if that makes him sound precious, consider the following.

While waiting for the new ‘un, we went back to where it all began, at least for us, and that’s Kelley’s 2002 release of Crockodials, in which he recorded, all by his’self, each of the songs on Echo and The Bunnymen’s 1980 debut, Crocodiles.  It is brilliant rock’n’roll, that rare homage that, even as each song is lovingly recreated, comes out fresh, new, a revelation.  If you think that Camper Van Beethoven’s version of Fleetwood Mac’s Tusk was a curiously obsessive one-joke album; if, like those of us at Tulip Frenzy, you were disappointed that the great Capsula went into the studio with Ivan Julian to remake David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, rather than a new album, that’s not, we assure you, what Stoltz did on Crockodials.  In a way, he test drove his whole schtick by artfully remaking that great Echo and the Bunnymen album.  And it worked.

If you go to the original today, it still holds up.  Echo and the Bunnymen, in 1980, produced an album as alive today as it was then.  The rare British band that knelt at the altar of both Television and Talking Heads, the album jangles with guitar pop and not the synthesizers just then beginning to rule the post-punk British charts.  By reducing the album even further, Stoltz coaxes new life out of it, all the while creating the sound that he would so brilliantly perfect on albums like Circular Sounds and Below The Branches.

So Kelley, we are waiting, eagerly awaiting Double Exposure. But we are grateful to have been able to dive into Crockodials, rediscovering your early work, and our love for Echo and the Bunnymen, even as we had to put our hands over our mouth lest our airplane seat mates think this guy with the headphones on was stark raving mad.

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