In the hallowed words of none other than esteemed rock scribe Eric Sorensen,
"So
much music, So little time!"
Nevertheless, every year certain way-out-of-the-ordinary releases manage to
stick deep in my ears long after they have made it up to, then out of, my fabled
To Be Listened To Pile. So this time, rather than recount only those greats
you've probably still got stuck on Repeat Play yourself, here's a few that might
not have made it into your home but I do believe warrant a living loving place
there:
Johnny Dowd: Temporary Shelter (Koch)
Half-a-century along this particular life journey (and Johnny still running an
upstate
New York moving company when not transporting his music to the rest of the
world), Temporary Shelter, unlike the man's previous two albums-ful of dark-
stripped Americana, best reflects the through-the-looking-grime shine of the
incredible Johnny Dowd Band (featuring Kim Sherwood-Caso's alt.-Nico vocals
alongside the ever-Beefheartian beating of drummist Brian "yes, that's really
his name too" Wilson). Still, how best to even attempt to describe this wonder?
Well, let's see: had David Lynch redirected Beach Blanket Bingo, then Big
Wave would've been a natural while, on the subject, Golden Rule most
effortlessly out-Hoppers Blue Velvet at every single lewd lover's turn. These
two selections, then Hideaway especially, are truly cinematic in both their
lyrical bend and, need I add, Justin Asher's widescreen keyboard accompaniment.
Elsewhere, Hell Or High Water brilliantly evokes an early Doors (long before
the rotgut took its toll that is), Lost Avenue truly is deserving of, for
example, Ryan Adams' current acclaim -- not to mention promotional budget --
and then, as if this all isn't amply enough already, Death Comes Knocking
sends the whole program out on an, um, Yuletide note. Sort of. So then: if any
of these words above in any way intrigues (rather than intimidates) you, then by
every means visit Johnny Dowd's new album - then go witness The Johnny Dowd Band
on stage - as soon as is humanely possible.
Casper Fandango: How's Your Hand?
(Lookit Meee)
Just like those High Llamas and especially Squires Of The Subterrain, this here
be darkly, intelligently humorous music akin to that which was once pouring out
of Brian Wilson circa autumn '66. The total brainchild of Jason NeSmith (any
relation?), who by the by's also a member in very good standing of several other
ultra-alt. pop combos - including my personal fave raves The Shut-Ups -- How's
Your Hand? certainly isn't for the casual listener, I suppose, but dig deep in
and there are riches to be found on an almost minute-by-minute basis. Country
Girl! begins the journey by sounding anything but, followed by a couple of
extremely ripe XTC-vs.-Lolas romps then a Breetle-like excursion into semi-
serious Utopianism. Boll Weevil Song delicately recasts the more gentle J.
Lennon of White Album infamy, while The Other Veronica honestly could have
found a very good home indeed upon Elvis the C.'s Spike (rhyming dictionary
notwithstanding). But we're not through yet: Way Out There delightfully
recalls the cheerful insanity of Zappa's youngest Mothers Of Invention; then, as
if to complete said trans-Atlantic equation, the very next song is a Viv
Stanshall chestnut! I think you've all gotten the picture, right? As Casper ne
Jason himself would only add, "The mud elephant wading through the sea leaves no
tracks." I only say, be sure to stick around for this thoroughly cornucopious
disc's Bonus Track too.
Kilopop!: Un Petit
Goûter:
The Best Of Kilopop! (Future Fossil)
Once-Waitress Chris Butler has long been many things to a good many people,
including of course Guinness Book Of Record-holding long long song writer. But
now his esteemed Future Fossil label has gone and pulled off the near-
improbable: Assembled and even released one crazed compilation absolutely cram-
packed with only the greatest-ever should'a-been hits by none other than
Kilopop! Whom, you would likely be asking right about now? Why, only the self-
proclaimed "second best pop band of Europe" who, behind the dulcet voices of
Furk and Trynka Zbenk, enjoyed a miraculous run of hits across the far side of
this whole world all those years ago. And they're all really here, finally:
From the giddily-precise CBGB-vintage Blondie-bop of Sure Wish That He Wasn't
Here (# 7 in 1966) straight into the just-made-for-those-Masticators-esque
Kiss R'n'R Goodbye (all the way to # 4 a year later!) to the Gerry and Sylvia
Anderson Supermarionation stomp Sky Men and even the circa-'69 Buddy Holly
posthumous production touch of Norman Petty which swirls throughout Beat Of The
World (captured live in '85 from a MIDEM mensroom, I kid you knot). Then, for
good measure, would you believe a Shaggs (!!) cover that reportedly includes the
Uncle Meaty bleating of Kilopop's iron curtain co-rockers the Plastic People (Of
The Universe)? Even the smattering of demo-licious bonus tracks, such as the
entirely Biff Rose vs. Elizabeth Suggs "Sonny & Cher" version of Red Drinks!
(# 86 in Belgium; higher still in Iceland) ensures you stick with this disc
right to the ever-lovin' end of it. Suffice to say, Kilopop! may well indeed be
the missing musico-sociological link between Joe Meek and Václav Havel, but
whatever or wherever your political slant may lean, thank your deity Chris
Butler is still round to bring it to us lowly Westerners at long long last.
Jack Pedler: Jack Pedler (King Kong)
Notwithstanding his fiery stints drumming behind everything and everyone from
Teenage Head to Ghost Rockets to the (Kanadian) Kasenetz-Katz Super Cirkus even,
Jack Pedler all too infrequently steps up front to grab the nearest Martin D-1
in order that he may anti-folk himself upon the world. This latest digital
onslaught, recorded and released under the auspices of none other than Ray
Materick, settles that particular score (among many others). From his supremely
cynical march across the past four decades of pop(ular) culture (Hippie
Fascists crying "Peace and Love: let's go to the bank!") to one terrifyingly
precise trilogy of booze-ology (D.T. Delinquent, Knock Down Cocktail, Velva
And Soda), Jack brutally, honestly remains a lone voice of insanity in this
ultra-P.C. world of, as he himself croaks, "daisies and buttercups." For all
who may too find themselves forsaking steak for Shake 'n' Bake in their own
personal Fairielands-gone-all-wrong, may I simply suggest turning off the cable
news already? Go ahead, then Trust in Jack.
Popland: Action! (Zip)
In the three long years since their debut long-player Groovy, Kevin Mathews and
Tim Nolan, d.b.a. Popland, have obviously been honing their melodic craft, not
to mention broadening their three-chord horizons quite some. For Action!,
whilst still brimming along the kinda Kinky guitar parade which made their
previous work bash and pop itself silly, reveals a proud maturity within the
duo's songcraft and arranging skills. The result? Several stunning examples of
deep, dreamful balladry which culminate in the circa Walls And Bridges era
Lennon underscoring Fallen Angels and the wholly Rubinoo-worthy Feel The Same
Way. Dumb Thing also mines the latter's classic Beserkley skinny-neck vibe,
though deftly upping the tempo towards the disturb-the-neighbors level, while
Hold On simply begs to be hauled out upon the nearest concert stage before a
room full of sweaty under-agers. Such great big audio dynamite also powers The
Future (a totally, yes, futuristic retro-popper which sends Ed Wood Jr.
careening towards The Dark Side Of The Moon), and one must then surely sit tight
straight through for Action!'s concluding mock-drum duel too, you know. Among
many other things then, this disc proves Pop can grow up. Because, you see,
Popland itself certainly has.
Anthony
Rivers: Butterfly (Anthony Rivers)
Ahhh, yes! Expertly arranged and recorded, seemingly effortlessly performed,
and vocally never less than ultra-lush (the latter hardly surprising,
considering Anthony's father just so happens to be the Tony Rivers of Harmony
Grass and Castaways notoriety), Butterfly is a deceptively unassuming collection
of numbers, each of which never fail to enchant whilst remaining pleasantly
difficult to pin down, comparatively speaking. The title track kinda recalls
some bright afternoon collaboration between the brothers Gibb and Wilson (Odessa
meets Sunflower, to be precise) while, speaking of Bee Gees 'n' Beach Boys,
Like She Does and It's All About You even moreso positively soar atop the
gentle, blissful spirit - and intonations - of the late, extremely great Carl
Wilson. Mammoth praise indeed, need I point out. Anything Could Happen
simply calls out for the Pearlfishers someday someway (David Scott? Meet
Anthony Rivers!) but it's honestly every single three-minutes-twenty of All
She Wants that best demonstrates what simple Power still resides within the
very best of Pop. Why such marvels as this no longer regularly rest atop Top
Ten's the world over remains a deep mystery to me, but no real matter, really.
For Anthony, like so many other plugged-into-it tunesmiths the world over, will
continue to create their special sounds regardless of the heard-today, gone-
later-today flash-avec-trash which surrounds us. Ahhh, yes!
Rick Scott: Making Faces (Jester)
On this demographic, pigeon-holey planet of ours, Rick Scott's simple, smiling
songs might most likely be relegated towards the - uh-oh! -- "Children's Music"
file. But don't let that trick you: Like all such unapologetic masters of mirth
as Daniel Johnston, Devo and of course Jonathan Richman, Vancouver's Rick Scott
is in fact erecting sly, subtle musical playhouses within which to plant
(perhaps even subliminally?) his own absolutely spot-on worldview. Sounding
disarmingly Randy Newmanesque in many places (especially vocally), the dozen
deceptively carefree excursions herein manage to rhyme "futon" with "crouton,"
quote the late, extremely great Roger Miller, and in Purple Elephant expertly
make near minced meat out of the last three or four Paul Simon albums. It's not
much of a stretch to claim so-called Kids Music may very well be (outside of the
latest International Pop Overthrow Festival that is) the last remaining bastion
of quality, contemporary Sixties-sounding music and musicians. And I bet Rick
Scott, for one, would not likely argue this assertion. But he'd do it whilst
speaking in "duck" or performing "cat" solos, wouldn't he? Careful though: We
once thought Rocky & Bullwinkle was just a cartoon too.....
Sex Clark Five: Crimson
Panzer (Records To Russia)
As the ol' sticker-upon-the-shrinkwrap itself sez: "a NEW Collection of anthems
and operas from the band that invented Strum and Drum!" But to be more
specific, the SC5 were one of the first, and remain after all these decades one
of the utmost, exponents of cooly cryptic southern-baked college pop ...the
brand
not to be confused, however, with such pretenders to this throne of drone as,
um, M. Stipe & Co. Nossir, this is the Real Thing here. Equal parts Ramones
plus Sherman and Peabody, with dashes of Merseybeat Meek, Spinal Tap, and
possibly even J. Tull y'know (...Hey! I happen to LIKE Thick As A Brick!), this
project may well be a - gulp - Rock Opera (of sorts), but always more Who Sell
Out than Tommy, lest you fret. Now as it really should, no mere songs unto
themselves stick far out here - though Chimes Of Discipline should immediately
be forever affixed to RogerMcGuinn.com, while Wreck Of The Ella Fitzgerald
must qualify for at least Song Title of the Year. Nope, this is a true, suite
sonic cycle, packing 23 songs into a mere 38 minutes 35 which deserve to be
experienced en masse, as it were. So kindly wipe that smirk out of your ears
and dive fun-first into a world where the inhabitants are not for one second
ever afraid to create their Art with a capital "F." (PS: Order your copy now,
and you may even receive a packet of freeze-dried Astronaut Ice Cream as well!)
Todd Shuster: Happiness (Platypus)
Of course it seems everyone on earth with gigabytes and CDR's to spare are busy
burnin' burnin' burnin' their hearts away these daze. Which makes a home
recorder like Todd, and a disc like Happiness, all the more thoroughly
delightful to discover in the mail. For just like some old friend sitting and
strumming idly across the campfire, Mr. Shuster offers recordings far from
buffed to high sonic sheen but absolutely candy-bright nonetheless in their
deceptive, inviting bare-bonedness. Now, when not spinning forth biting,
bracing bubblepunk a la Cyrkle-meet-Buzzcocks (Lovely/Lonely) or constructing
what may very well be The Great Lost Jane Wiedlin Classic (Life Preserver),
Todd self-duets in a fashion truly not encountered since those wee early Simon &
Garfunkel gems (Tempest In A Teacup especially reflects back to the beloved
Paul and Artie of yore). But it is a little treasure called My You Museum
herein which demonstrates decidedly the very epitome of why, and how, the one-
man, bedside approach to music-making can most often mean so much, while in fact
utilizing so little. To sum straight up then? Understated, unobtrusive magic,
pure and simple.
Lane
Steinberg: Lane Steinberg Collection
1984-2000 (EM)
Leave it to the ultra-discriminating ears of Japan's EM label to finally
compile, in one neat and keenly-sequenced sixty-six minutes, twenty of the
greatest slices of Lane's fine work with The Wind, Wall Of Orchids, Noel
Coward's Ghost and most recently the don't-call-us-lounge duo Tan Sleeve. From
the Flying Badfinger Brothers alt. Americana of Great Blue to the Ray Davies-
does-Tradewinds surfin' turfer Life Must Go On through the delightfully Zappa
/ Bacharachian Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance, Lane duly absorbs then
abstracts all of the hallmarks of his (and your) favorite music of the ages,
then adroitly shoots it on back home with just the right amount of twist, lest
he fall victim to that dreaded Retro-rawkin' tag. The man just has to be a
true mad musical scientist of sound and word, and this disc is the ideal place
wherein to whet one's ears before plunging into the entirely formidable catalog
of true Steinberg wonders.
(C) 2002 - Gary "Pig" Gold