My 2011 Mixtape

Ok, I got lazy and let some others do the talkin on the liner notes for this year’s playlist – ie the interwebz cut and pasted!

DOWNLOAD THE MIXTAPE HERE!

Alabama Shakes – Hold On

A very late in the year find for me but at the top of the list for obvious reasons. Pure soul energy all up in this. Watch this space….

On Record Store Day in April 2011, an unknown quartet called The Shakes — soon they’d discover that name was taken and adopt the reference to their home state — played the backyard stage at The Groove New & Used Vinyl & CDs to a dozen-or-so people, one of them being Seth Riddle, a former Rough Trade staffer.

Says Riddle, “After they started playing I was just kind of pinching myself, because it’s really rare that you see a band that strikes that chord with you and you’ve never heard of ‘em.

“Usually,” he clarifies, “you’ve heard a little buzz about ‘em, and they’ve got their website up, they’ve got some digital files up. This band, they didn’t have anything. Nothing. There was nothing there. I don’t think they had a Facebook page.”

This is what the saga of a breaking band can look like in the age of the constantly plugged-in, accelerated news cycle. In the case of The Alabama Shakes, there really is something beneath the hype that people are viscerally responding to. Aquarium Drunkard called it “a slice of the real” — as opposed to stuff that’s “fake” and “pre-packaged.” NPR music critic Ann Powers noted the pre-packaging inherent in retro soul, but pointed to Howard’s artistic self-determination, describing the 22-year-old singer as “a young woman living in the now, wrapping her arms around a tradition without letting it carry her away.” New York Times music critic Jon Pareles celebrated the contrast between The Shakes and the typical CMJ buzz band — one that’s “built around some cool-headed concept involving noise or irony or ambiguities or primitivism.”

http://www.nashvillescene.com/nashville/unpacking-the-rapid-and-rightful-rise-of-the-alabama-shakes/Content?oid=2691392

Lucero

Beautifully merging memphis country & blues with punk rock. No wonder genre-pioneer Mike Ness sings his protege’s praises…

The 2009 album’s name comes from the address of the Memphis loft in which all four band members lived, practiced and even recorded portions of their 2003 release That Much Further West (the history of the space itself is even more colorful—in the `70s, 1372 Overton Park was a karate dojo where local resident Elvis Presley, among others, took lessons). Over recent years band members have gradually moved out leaving lead singer and guitarist Ben Nichols the sole resident of the space until word finally came down that the building would be sold and demolished. Almost as if marking the end of an era not only for the building but for the band as well, this record turns the page and signals a strong move toward the Memphis soul sound that has long served as an influence for the group. Nichols explains, “When [saxophonist] Jim Spake put that first horn track down, we began thinking of the record as having a certain sound. We heard pieces of Memphis history being played over our songs and it floored us and we just went with it.”

While 1372 Overton Park serves as a love letter to Memphis and its musical heritage, the band has far from abandoned the country/rock/punk influences that they’ve become known for over their previous five records and countless tour dates in front of rabid fans. “I think the fact that we don’t claim a genre is very important to what Lucero is,” according to Nichols. “There are too many rules in punk rock. Too many rules in country music. We’re hard headed and…god damn if we don’t do things the way we want to do them.”

http://www.luceromusic.com/site/bio.php

Alejandro Escovedo

Without a lot of background I could immediately feel the life-experience of living through punk rock in the 70′s in Escovedo’s songs. This album was produced by the great Tony Visconti (Bowie, Morrissey, T-Rex, Sparks). Glam riff-age abounds on the album yet this track slips into more wall of sound territory…

“Musically, Alejandro Escovedo is in his own genre.” David Fricke, Rolling Stone

Alejandro’s whole life has pretty much been documented already and reads like a “How to Make Rock and Roll A Lifelong Profession” primer. Ground Zero punk rock dude with The Nuns (they opened for the Sex Pistols last show, you know), cowpunk progenitor in Rank and File, gutter brawling guitar rawker in True Believers and Buick MacKane and now a songwriter and performer without peer; you know the story.

An Alejandro concert will find him playing for hours and draining himself and his audience with his performance. They can be full on punk sets that make all that SoCal pretty boy punk seem as tepid as it really is, and then he can stop it all on a dime and tear the room’s collective heart out with a sparse, harrowing confessional. In between, there may be lots of moments of him getting his glam rocks off by digging into the Ian Hunter or Bowie songbook. He can show up with just himself and a guitar, his huge chamber rock orchestra, a lean and mean rock and roll combo, or a string quintet. We’ve seen Alejandro dozens of times, and we really never know what to expect, and we never get bored. He can whip out every one of his songs ten different ways, depending on the mood, and they will jump into the rumble seat of your gut every time.

After a near-death bout of Hepatitis C in 2003, Alejandro took some time off from the road. All is, happily, well now and he is putting out more fantastic music and is again sharing it with lucky folks the world over with his regular tour schedule.

http://www.amazon.com/Alejandro-Escovedo/e/B000AP7YBS

Lucinda Williams

Lucinda William’s voice pretty much says it all – gravel and whisky, trouble and love…

The object of cultish adoration for years, singer/songwriter Lucinda Williams was universally hailed as a major talent by both critics and fellow musicians, but it took quite some time for her to parlay that respect into a measure of attention from the general public. Part of the reason was her legendary perfectionism: Williams released records only infrequently, often taking years to hone both the material and the recordings thereof. Plus, her early catalog was issued on smaller labels that agreed to her insistence on creative control but didn’t have the resources or staying power to fully promote her music. Yet her meticulous attention to detail and staunch adherence to her own vision were exactly what helped build her reputation. When Williams was at her best (and she often was), even her simplest songs were rich in literary detail, from her poetic imagery to her flawed, conflicted characters. Her singing voice, whose limitations she readily acknowledged, nonetheless developed into an evocative instrument that seemed entirely appropriate to her material. So if some critics described Williams as “the female Bob Dylan,” they may have been oversimplifying things (Townes Van Zandt might be more apt), but the parallels were certainly too strong to ignore.

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/williams-p5833

Caitlin Rose

It would be a better world with more lady singers like this…

Nashville’s Caitlin Rose first appeared on the radar of music critics this year with the release of her widely praised debut full-length Own Side Now. Rarely does an artist display this level of uninhibited honestly and vulnerability in their writing; the fact that this wisdom is found at the start of Rose’s career promises that she’s not going away anytime soon. Drawing inspiration from female greats like Linda Ronstadt, Patsy Cline and Stevie Nicks, Own Side Now is an exquisite collection, showcasing a maturity in songwriting that few possess at such a young age.

Although steeped in the country tradition, Caitlin’s music is not constrained by that heritage. Her confessional style and wry observations place her very much in the 21st Century, but the heart-wrenching honesty, lyrical prowess and dexterous lyrical delivery found in her music sets Rose apart from her peers.

http://thecaitlinrose.com/bio/

Richard Hawley

I’ve been listening to Hawley for many years but The Country Social Club has renewed his playlist status! Perhaps Sheffield’s loneliest troubadour…he hits the heart strings….

Today, there is no shortage of serious young men in groups, sketching out how they imagine the extremes and depths of emotion might be. Time was, though, that only those who had earned the right to sing of love, loss and striving would share such confidences – real singers, of the calibre of Scott Walker, Roy Orbison, or even Nancy’s old dad, The Chairman himself.

Richard Hawley understands this. The man who could well be Britain’s finest songwriter insists his mind is full only with “confused thoughts and Guinness”. But when he sings, he does so in a voice that’s deep and low, and does not lie. His merciful, wise songs tell of the heart’s truths as seen in the dark, revealed by moonlight. Remember, this is the hopeless romantic who, on returning home from a lengthy tour of America was reduced to tears by the sight of a bottle of sauce – Sheffield delicacy Henderson’s Relish – on his kitchen table.

Coles Corner, Richard’s first album for Mute, was released on 5th September 2005. While his previous long-players, Late Night Final (2001) and Lowedges (2003), scaled remarkable heights of elegance and emotional candour, this collection is surely his best to date. Within, orchestral splendour sits alongside earthy rock and roll in songs that are by turns intimate and soaring.

http://www.mute.biz/richardhawley/Press_Biography.html

Gillian Welch

Welch’s folk songs describe the hard times of forgotten, back-water, American people. Backed ever-faithfully and superbly by David Rawlings. A beautiful bio here…

The Harrow & The Harvest, Gill and Dave’s new record, is both a product of and is unrelated to those years in-between. Best to forget that. What it is, indisputably, is the product of two people who have become so entwined in one another that the songs and the singing and the playing on this record seems to exude from a single voice. This is the sound of two people in a room, playing to one another, with one another. This is the sound of the room in which the two people are playing. This is the sound of two voices, locked in unison, locked in harmony. The sound of two people playing live, with no overdubs, and very few takes. Two people making music together as if they were one soul combined.

Gill and Dave met at Berkeley College of Music; Gillian was studying songwriting, while Dave studied guitar; they met at an audition for a country band. Together, they moved to Nashville, TN where most of their work together has been produced. Since then they have influenced and inspired new generations of country and folk singers, songwriters and players. They have earned the slavish admiration of many of the most lauded and loved voices of the Americana milieu now living – and some who have since deceased (rest their souls). They’ve had their songs recorded by the likes of Willie Nelson, Emmylou Harris, and Solomon Burke. Gill and Dave’s body of work is deeply rooted in the world it has sought to portray in song: the American South.

And the record they’ve made, tonally, is a new Southern sound, with the sort of songs you wouldn’t be surprised to hear issuing from some verdant, wooded hollow in Appalachia; the sort of songs you’d expect to be sung to soothe unquiet babies. Songs you’d expect to hear hollered from an Asheville grange hall, all too late in the evening. Songs with the wry humor of the back porch. “Dave says this record is ‘ten different kinds of sad’, but it’s not without humor. I feel like there’s a maturity in it and a sense of place that only comes with time.” Gillian continues, “We feel at home in the folk tradition, and using its language combined with our own.” “That’s the whole point of the folk tradition,” laughs Dave.

http://www.gillianwelch.com/bio/

Chuck Ragan

Hot water music always hit a chord with me. Ragan’s deviation into folk and country was not a surprise given his southern home base – there’s Springsteen and so much more on this album…

A duality lies at the core of Covering and when Ragan sings about “ten cylinders that fire and a woman at the end of the road” on the driving acoustic song “Wish On The Moon,” it’s dripping with so much authenticity that it’s hard not to imagine yourself behind the wheel alongside Ragan. “Writing has always been a form of therapy for me and something that I feel like I need to do rather than something I’m supposed to do,” Ragan responds when asked where the fire behind this songs originated. “Since I’ve started doing the solo thing in 2005 I’ve been consistently writing and I’m not worried about whether I finish a song, I just want to get this down to unburden my soul.”

http://chuckraganmusic.com/bio/

Deer Tick

Replacements die hards with the goods. By sound and by behavior. Good enough for me!….

To produce this record, the band recruited the team of Adam Landry and Justin Collins, who produced McCauley’s side-project Middle Brother‘s debut album. The results are unlike anything you’ve heard on a Deer Tick album, but Deer Tick achieves something that is a lot more accurate to their live sound. Distorted guitars are aplenty, guitarist Ian O’Neil and drummer Dennis Ryan take lead vocal duties for the first time on record. Man, you can practically smell the sweat and the beer! Shit, you may even hear a guitar or two break somewhere in there! It’s got a little Exile, it’s got a little In Utero, it’s got a little Nilsson Schmilsson, but it’s 100% Deer-Fucking-Tick in their purest, and most carefree form… perhaps that’s because this is the first record they’ve recorded in their home state of Rhode Island… GAH!!! No need to over-think this shit!!! Moving on…

The songs are there. The delivery is in your face. There’s no studio magic. There’s no hiding the fact that Deer Tick is just five regular dudes. This record may rattle your thoughts, and it may make you think differently about Deer Tick, but at least they didn’t make the same album four times in a row, right?

http://www.partisanrecords.com/artists/deer-tick/bio/

Kurt Vile

Hypnotic stuff. For me this has redefined “music that gets stuck in your head”.

Kurt Vile has a way of tying time in knots. You can hear it on his new album Smoke Ring For My Halo from the get-go – the pinwheeling guitars and reaching atmospheres are as strange as they are familiar: a demonstration of how Kurt can put worn methods and sounds through himself and end up with something that isn’t emotionally or sonically obvious. Instead we’re left with a record that contains traces of the past but doesn’t waste precious time in the now being reverent.

Once compared to Leonard Cohen, Tom Petty, Psychic TV, and Animal Collective in the same review (for 2009’s Childish Prodigy), Kurt can bring to mind anything from Suicide to Leo Kottke to My Bloody Valentine, Bob Seger, Nick Drake, and Eastern ragas. Still, he pieces together these disparate elements so seamlessly and unpretentiously that such reference points are rendered pointless by the singularity of his sound. Kurt Vile might belong to a long lineage of classic American songwriters, but he’s the only one who’s alive and in his prime today.

http://www.matadorrecords.com/kurt_vile/biography.html


Harry Nilsson

A long since passed, complete maverick and unique character with unparalelled songwriting skills. His tin pan alley influences echo today. The doco I recently watched “Who Is Harry Nilsson?” was ok but didn’t fully do him justice…

Singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson was named as the Beatles’ favourite American artist when he was still a relative unknown, but despite the acclaim of the world’s most popular band, Nilsson was too idiosyncratic to attain comparable fame. Later, he became John Lennon’s drinking buddy and confidante during Lennon’s split from Yoko Ono, but after rupturing vocal chords during a recording session helmed by Lennon for a new album, Nilsson’s career went on a permanent decline.

http://www.soundunwound.com/music/harry-nilsson/7663?ref=AADP

David Kilgour

A Kiwi that I stumbled upon via Richard Buckner’s site. Played in seminal NZ indie band The Clean in the 80′s. Now hitting his stride with The Heavy Eights as backing band. I’m hearing the Neil Young/Crazy Horse comparison…

David Kilgour’s way with music over the years is the kind of gift of talent that maintains its own pace; without being demonstrative about it, he just seems to release one excellent album after another in group, collaborative, and solo contexts, where one listen is all it takes to remind someone of just how good he is. Such is the case with his latest album backed by the Heavy Eights, Left by Soft, where the opening instrumental title track has not one, but two brilliant solos that seem to float above the energetic, crisp chug of the main arrangement like birds skimming over a lake; if anything, it almost sounds like a song by the Church, not a bad place to be at all. But given the the Heavy Eights’ strengths throughout, it makes more sense to say that Kilgour’s definitely found his own personal Crazy Horse.

http://www.pastemagazine.com/blogs/av/2011/04/album-stream-david-kilgour-and-the-heavy-eights–.html


Tom Waits

Fairly unexplored territory for me until now. Here be a long career path I’m needing to wander…

Thomas Alan “Tom” Waits (born December 7, 1949) is an American singer-songwriter, composer, and actor. Waits has a distinctive voice, described by critic Daniel Durchholz as sounding “like it was soaked in a vat of bourbon, left hanging in the smokehouse for a few months, and then taken outside and run over with a car.” With this trademark growl, his incorporation of pre-rock music styles such as blues, jazz, and vaudeville, and experimental tendencies verging on industrial music, Waits has built up a distinctive musical persona. He has worked as a composer for movies and musical plays and as a supporting actor in films, including Down by Law and Bram Stoker’s Dracula. He was nominated for an Academy Award for his soundtrack work on One from the Heart.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Waits

Cheap Trick

I was pretty damn obsessed for a while this year with Cheap Trick. Their 70′s catalogue is amazing! Forget the Beatle-esque 90′s singles, the riffage from “Heaven Tonight” rulez!

Combining a love for British guitar pop songcraft with crunching power chords and a flair for the absurd, Cheap Trick provided the necessary links between ’60s pop, heavy metal, and punk. Led by guitarist Rick Nielsen, the band’s early albums were filled with highly melodic, well-written songs that drew equally from the crafted pop of the Beatles, the sonic assault of the Who, and the tongue-in-cheek musical eclecticism and humor of the Move. Their sound provided a blueprint for both power pop and arena rock; it also had a surprisingly long-lived effect on both alternative and heavy metal bands of the ’80s and ’90s, who often relied on the same combination of loud riffs and catchy melodies.

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/cheap-trick-p3879/biography

AC/DC

I loudly and proudly introduced my son to AC/DC’s back catalogue on the way to kindergarten many a morning in 2011.

AC/DC’s mammoth power chord roar became one of the most influential hard rock sounds of the ’70s. In its own way, it was a reaction against the pompous art rock and lumbering arena rock of the early ’70s. AC/DC’s rock was minimalist — no matter how huge and bludgeoning their guitar chords were, there was a clear sense of space and restraint. Combined with Bon Scott’s larynx-shredding vocals, the band spawned countless imitators over the next two decades

http://www.allmusic.com/artist/acdc-p3496

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks

Ex (now current again!) Pavement leader Stephen Malkmus. Awkward.Intelligent. Rawk.

Bio written by Malkmus (!!!):

MY goal: to mix the precision of Saab, Stefan Edberg and Bergman with the laid back (yet heavy) beats of deepest Trenchtown. Well, at least on one song (“Vague Space”). The other tunes try to be new and entertaining versions of the type of songs I’ve always admired – mindlessly groove oriented (“Black Book”), cheeky (“Phantasies”), melodically rocking (“Jo Jo’s Jacket”), faux bar bandish (“The Hook”), catchy (“Discretion Grove”), emotional (“Church on White”), warped (“Troubbble”), you get the drift. And anyway these adjectives could easily describe the most annoying band in the world (set myself up for that one!)

AWESOME BONUS FLIM CLIP FEATURING JACK BLACK!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pADR7Hx9xqk

 

Jonny Corndawg

The most awesome, country fried, leather makin’, marathon runnin’, singer-songwriter weirdo I’ve listened to all year!!

Corndawg, whose own songs seem to borderline on earnestness and parody – in the vein of Roy Rogers singing a version of “Happy Trails” and having the meaning of the song have something more to do with pubic hair and tits than wishing dear friends so-long as they mosey on down the road. But somehow, the earnest Corndawg still tends to win out, when we’re to listen to these songs his ideas seem to be drawn from the skies like crazy lightening, strange buzzes that will make you loopy for a second, nailing him with an idea that he then feels compelled to communicate, no matter how off-color or graphic it may be. His mind is revealed in his songs and he makes no bones about it, letting the words just give what they’ve got to give and if some of the giving is “gross” or country and western bathroom humor, then so be it. His songs are flashes of the impulses that strike everyone, but most often they’re suppressed by those people. However, they’re not just that. They are odes to simple lives, to small towns that have a Pizza Hut, teenage pregnancy, a big bad football team that everyone’s proud of, some deep fishing holes and not too much else. They are odes to the boredom that ravages people in those places sometimes. They are odes to twisted thoughts that can be argued to be just as much admissions of the heart and soul – that the heart and soul exist sound and strong – as songs and sentiments that are mistakenly taken to be those of endearing love. He sings, “When a Ford man turns to Chevy an angel gets its wings and the babies they won’t ever cry no more,” and he means it about those babies and those angels – wearing a big, fat CHEVY belt buckle on his belt to prove where his loyalties lie. It’s not a joke, where he comes from and where he’s coming from. It’s this way of creating the blurred lines of folly and feeling that makes the man so charming in his views and in a classic country method that’s always had its fair share of tongues in cheeks with its tears and beers. He’s a freak-folker, by some definitions, and Nashville’s first with cowboy boots and a mad crush on Mountain Dew.

Jackson Browne

Such an incredible songwriter that I had heard a lot about but had not seriously delved into until this year. At his peak in the mid 70′s, Late For The Sky is definitely my fav album of his.

Jackson Browne has written and performed some of the most literate and moving songs in popular music and has defined a genre of songwriting charged with honesty, emotion and personal politics. He’s been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (2004) by friend Bruce Springsteen and the Songwriter’s Hall of Fame (2007).

http://www.jacksonbrowne.com/bio

Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit

Formerly of The Drive-By Truckers. Keeping it real on 3rd album.

Here We Rest: The first motto of Jason Isbell’s home state got changed in the early part of last century to a Latin phrase that translates to “we dare defend our rights”. What starts out as peaceful idyll descends into a defensive posture with the threat of bellicosity just beneath the surface. That’s what tough times will do to a people.

Jason Isbell’s home is northern Alabama, a region that has been hit especially hard in the recent economic downturn. “The mood here has darkened considerably,” says Jason. “There is a real culture around Muscle Shoals, Florence and Sheffield of family, of people taking care of their own. When people lose their ability to do that, their sense of self dissolves. It has a devastating effect on personal relationships, and mine were not immune.”

The characters that populate Here We Rest are wrung out. In “Alabama Pines”, the protagonist has found himself on the outside of the life he once knew. He is living in a small room and in a state of emotional disrepair – estranged from the woman that he loved, as well as friends (“I don’t even need a name anymore/When no one calls it out, it kinda vanishes away”). He is beginning to recognize that his own remoteness and obstinacy has played a large part in his current state of affairs, and longs for “someone to take him home through those Alabama pines.” He’s not quite clear how to get back there himself.

http://www.jasonisbell.com/press/

Howlin Wolf

This man’s voice is like no other. Listen closely and enjoy.

Chester Arthur Burnett has probably had more impact worldwide than the 19th-century American president after whom he was named. With a musical influence that extends from the rockabilly singers of the 1950s and the classic rock stars of the 1960s to the grunge groups of the 1990s and the punk-blues bands of the 21st century, plus a legion of imitators to rival Elvis’s, he was one of the greatest and most influential blues singers ever.

http://www.howlinwolf.com/articles/bio_1.htm

Richard Buckner

Not a bad effort really for a man who during the making of this record was wrongfully named as a murder suspect and had to re-record his album several times due to robbery and home recording machine malfunctions. Buckner’s been recording albums for nearly 20 years.

Since 2006′s Meadow, fans of Richard Buckner have been clamoring for new material and wondering what was keeping their hero from releasing the new songs he would perform on the road. Well, it’s a long story!

First, there was the score to a film that never happened. Then there was a brief brush with the law over a headless corpse in a burned-out car that had all eyes in Buckner’s small hometown in upstate New York turned toward him and his long-suffering truck. Shortly after a move to a safer, less popular corpse dumping ground, the death of his tape machine led to yet another reboot. After Richard called in pedal steel and percussion players and put new mixes on his laptop, his new “safer” place was burglarized. Goodbye, laptop.

Buckner says: “Eventually, the recording machine was resuscitated and some of the material was recovered. Cracks were patched. Parts were redundantly re-invented. Commas were moved. Insinuations were re-insinuated until the last percussive breaths of those final OCD utterances were expelled like the final heaves of bile, wept-out long after the climactic drama had faded to a somber, blurry moment of truth and voila!, the record was done, or, let us be clear, abandoned like the charred shell of a car with a nice stereo.”

http://www.mergerecords.com/artists/buckner

J Mascis

I was bound to pick up on the Dino Jr frontman’s new solo acoustic record. His voice has always lent itself to this style in my opinion and [son], he didn’t dissapoint….

It’s all but inconceivable that J Mascis requires an introduction. In the quarter-century since he founded Dinosaur (Jr.), Mascis has created some of the era’s signature songs, albums and styles. As a skier, golfer, songwriter, skateboarder, record producer, and musician, J has few peers. The laconically-based roar of his guitar, drums and vocals have driven a long string of bands–Deep Wound, Dinosaur Jr., Gobblehoof, Velvet Monkeys, the Fog, Witch, Sweet Apple–and he has guested on innumerable sessions. But Several Shades of Why is J’s first solo studio record, and it is an album of incredible beauty, performed with a delicacy not always associated with his work.

Recorded at Amherst Massachusetts’ Bisquiteen Studios, Several Shades… is nearly all acoustic and was created with the help of a few friends. Notable amongst them are Kurt Vile, Sophie Trudeau (A Silver Mount Zion), Kurt Fedora (long-time collusionist), Kevin Drew (Broken Social Scene), Ben Bridwell (Band of Horses), Pall Jenkins (Black Heart Procession), Matt Valentine (The Golden Road), and Suzanne Thorpe (Wounded Knees). Together in small mutable groupings, they conjure up classic sounds ranging from English-tinged folk to drifty, West Coast-style singer/songwriterism. But every track, every note even, bears that distinct Mascis watermark, both in the shape of the tunes and the glorious rasp of the vocals.

http://jmascis.com/bio/


“If you don’t change your ways my friend, you’ll be singing duets with Tammy again”

When Drive-By Truckers name check someone all song long you know they’re probably well worth investigating. George Jones Talkin’ Cell Phone Blues is a song off their Oddities and Rarities album released in 2009.

There are some classic stories about the legendary country singer George Jones….

Jones’s alcoholism was legendary. For much of his life he woke up and had a screwdriver. He then spent the rest of the day drinking bourbon. One of the best known stories of Jones’ drinking days happened when he was married to his second wife, Shirley Corley:

“Once, when I had been drunk for several days, Shirley decided she would make it physically impossible for me to buy liquor. I lived about eight miles from Beaumont and the nearest liquor store. She knew I wouldn’t walk that far to get booze, so she hid the keys to every car we owned and left. But she forgot about the lawn mower. I can vaguely remember my anger at not being able to find keys to anything that moved and looking longingly out a window at a light that shone over our property. There, gleaming in the glow, was that ten-horsepower rotary engine under a seat. A key glistening in the ignition.
I imagine the top speed for that old mower was five miles per hour. It might have taken an hour and a half or more for me to get to the liquor store, but get there I did.”

In her 1979 autobiography, former wife Tammy Wynette recalled waking at 1 AM to find her husband gone:

“I got into the car and drove to the nearest bar 10 miles away.
When I pulled into the parking lot there sat our rider-mower right by the entrance. He’d driven that mower right down a main highway. He looked up and saw me and said, `Well, fellas, here she is now. My little wife, I told you she’d come after me.”

From Wikipedia

DBT have this great knack for weaving the stories of their musical heroes into their own songs. Carl Perkin’s Cadillac is another fantastic tune told with Cooley’s trademark wit. It’s a story about Sam Phillips promising a Cadillac to the first artist on Sun Records to score a gold record. Featuring….

Justin Townes Earle on Letterman

This is a really great performance from Letterman last week: Justin Townes Earle with ex-DBT slinger Jason Isbell on guitar! The sound was tops.

My 2010 Mixtape

So I thought that I’d put together an mp3 compilation and lay out my thoughts on who/what I’ve most enjoyed listening to in 2010. I ‘ve always found it fun to research and learn about different artists and musical genres to gain new appreciations. It’s a bit of an exercise in writing for me and maybe a reader or two will learn something they didn’t know about these great artists.

Please let me know what you think in the comments section!

The numbers below relate to the song number in my mixtape which you can download here. So in no particular order….

1. There’s a band named Art Brut that have a song with a line something like “I can’t believe I just discovered The Replacements. How have I only just found out about The Replacements?”. Even though that was tongue in cheek, I couldn’t help but feel that was me! New York singer-songwriter Jesse Malin’s quote about The ‘Mats sums it up:

“It’s real. It’s real rock n’ roll. It encompasses everything that rock n’ roll and punk rock should have. Great songs. Great energy. Rebel music. A fuck you. A camaraderie of the people. A great sense of humor. And a unique style. A unique sound. Fearless. Timeless in a way.”

The Replacements were completely shambolic, often drunk and commercially self-sabotaging. They didn’t take the music business seriously at all but put out some fantastic punk rock songs and also some incredibly sensitive songs. They hailed from one of the twin cities of Minneapolis which has since spawned members of The Hold Steady. There’s something about their style and spirit that defines the best American 80’s rock music in a really cool way for me. “Favorite Thing” is just about as good as anything on 1984’s “Let It Be”.


2. My brother turned me onto Big Star about 5 years ago. Alex Chilton was the lead singer and primary songwriter in the 70’s cult band that went on to influence a lot of other artists. Chilton died suddenly in March 2010 from a heart attack. I’ve read a bit about him and he seemed like a very independent spirit. Even with his talents, he voluntarily bucked the whole fame thing, living in a run down shack washing dishes in Memphis whilst artists such as REM, Elliott Smith, Teenage Fanclub and The Replacements lovingly covered his songs. “In The Street” is from 1972, features some sweet cowbell and is possibly my favourite song of theirs.

 

3. I wrapped my head properly around The Boss’s back catalogue in 2010. I grew up hearing “Born In the USA” playing on my Dad’s cassette stereo but if you go back a bit further to his classic “Born To Run” album from 1976, you can see just how talented this guy was at an early age. And as much so, how formidable The E-Street Band is. His follow up to that “Darkness On The Edge Of Town” took me longer to appreciate for some reason but now I can’t put it down. “Born In The USA” kind of moulded an image of this guy for me for a long time and while I love that album, his late 70’s run highlights how impressive Springsteen is as a soul singer. As a songwriter, no one in his generation speaks for working class Americans as well as he does. He has genuinely tapped into the great American songwriting tradition not unlike Johnny Cash. “The Promise” was released in 2010 – a previously unreleased double album that comprised songs recorded during the ‘Darkness sessions in ‘78. It feels like a missing puzzle piece in his legacy and for me is just about the best work he ever did. There’s a bunch of newer bands in this list that are carrying on his tradition today. “Outside Looking In” is a great rolling number from the album.

 

4. The National occupied a very solid month or so residency inside my ear holes when they released “High Violet” in 2010. Matt Beringer’s baritone sinks in deep and does not let go. Interesting mix of musicians with 2 pairs of brothers in the band. Saw them in 2007 play to a pretty small crowd in Brisbane with my sister and they were great. “Afraid Of Everyone” is a typically building tune from “High Violet”.

 

5. Sparklehorse was the name that artist Mark Linkous released his material under. He was collaborating with Dangermouse and David Lynch at the time of his suicide in March 2010.
He self recorded and produced nearly all of his work. His often twisted, surreal lyrical style was put to some beautiful pop melodies. I listened to a lot of Sparklehorse in 2010. “Piano Fire” is a beautiful, static-coated track with PJ Harvey on backup vocals from his 2001 album “It’s A Wonderful Life”.

 

6. Field Music is a band from Sunderland in the north of England which is made up of 2 brothers who play all the instruments. Their self titled album released in 2010 is a really original record. They are influenced a fair bit by Peter Gabriel and his style of production but their songs have great pop hooks and never come across as pretentious. It has the feel of an incredibly well crafted record but the precision never makes the album feel cold, which is a hard mark to hit. “Each Time Is A New Time” is one of a few angular, riffy tunes from the album.

 

7. I hadn’t delved into John Lennon’s solo stuff much in the past but I always remember seeing the old vinyl record of “Mind Games” that my parents had. It was the 30th anniversary of his murder in 2010. To me, he embodied the same wit, exuberance and talent of another of my heroes Joe Strummer. “Jealous Guy” is on the “Imagine” album from 1971 and it’s just such a beautiful, vulnerable apology song. Elliott Smith did a great cover of it too.

 

8. I had heard of Townes Van Zandt for quite some time, knowing that singer/songwriter Justin Townes Earle was named after him. I only got his albums for the first time in December 2010 and they’ve been on heavy rotation since. My brother and I recently watched “Heartworn Highways” a documentary featuring Van Zandt and other musicians associated with the so-called outlaw country movement of the 70’s in the US and then “Be Here To Love Me” a documentary released in 2003 about Van Zandt himself. He was an absolute genius songwriter and performer. He incorporated a lot of folk style to his songs and you can tell he really told the blues from experience. He came from a wealthy, privileged background only to voluntarily throw it away and live the life of a rambling country musician. He died at the age of 52 in 1997 following more than 25 years of serious alcohol and drug addiction just days after a failed recording session orchestrated by Sonic Youth’s Steve Shelly. He had a killer, dry sense of humour which comes out in some of his lyrics and live performances. Amazingly, one of his best songs is literally the first he ever wrote “Waitin’ Around To Die” from his self titled album released in 1970. There’s a really affecting clip of this song from “Heartworn Highways” worth checking out.

 

9. Paul Westerberg was one of my biggest infatuations of 2010. As leader of The Replacements in the 80’s, Westerberg took the group’s early punk and hardcore sound and grew them into a formidable rock band as his songwriting developed to become amongst the best of his generation’s. He went solo at the start of the 90’s but hit his stride in my opinion at the age of 43 when he released 5 amazing mostly-home-recorded albums as a solo artist and also under his alter ego moniker Grandpaboy from 2002 up to 2004. Wonderfully ramshackle but always a fantastic songwriter who makes it look all too easy. He did a great Sun Records-rockabilly influenced album as well. “$100 Groom” is a great tune from “Folker” about a cheap wedding and puking up.

 

10. I enjoyed Grinderman’s 2nd album released in 2010 much more than their first – You can tell that there is more thought put into this one than their blatantly off-the-cuff first effort. It’s essentially a cut down Bad Seeds ensemble but the ambition and style is different. I really like the fact that Nick Cave only recently learnt to play guitar and doesn’t give a fuck about how basic his technique is. It’s rudimentary, but it fits the raw sound of the band and their songs so well. There’s nothing quite like an artist turning around and putting out great punk music (I consider it that anyway ;) at 52 years of age. The brutal, buzz-saw sounds of “Evil” makes it an awesome specimen off the album.

 

11. Dinosaur Jr. have released 2 albums since the original three members reformed in 2007. It’s pretty much a miracle that they reformed at all because there was a 15 year long feud between J Mascis and Lou Barlow after Barlow was kicked out of the band in ‘89. Apparently, Barlow eventually got over being stroppy and realised that Dinosaur Jr was important to him and they reformed with Murph on drums. I remember listening to a bit of Dinosaur in the early 90’s but I really don’t rate any of that era stuff. Their best work is as the original members – albums “You’re Living All Over Me” from ’87 and “Bug” from ’89 and now their most recent two: 2007’s “Beyond” and 2009’s “Farm”. Even more amazing is that their new albums are as good if not better than their early albums. I’ve gone back and listened to their mid 80’s output and it’s really raw production-wise but full of great, inventive tunes. Mascis plays ear-bleedingly loud and he now actually looks like the wizard that he is as a guitarist. There’s always a great sense of melody in Mascis’ songs and his laconic drawl is often of subdued contrast to the music. Barlow contributes a couple of great tunes to each of their two most recent albums as well. The shredding solo in “Been There All The Time” from their album “Beyond” brings me pure joy.

 

12. The Hold Steady hail from Brooklyn New York but the lead singer Craig Finn grew up in Minneapolis in the middle of The Replacements heyday and it’s no surprise that he lists them as his favourite band of all time. The band is also influenced by a lot of classic punk rock like The Clash. They play bar-room rock n roll like it should be played. Unpretentious, smart and fucking loud. Finn is my favourite lyricist writing at the moment. He has managed to weave running themes, places and seedy characters throughout their last 4 albums without getting boring. Guitarist and fellow songwriter Tad Kuebler is a natural, classic rock n roll shredder. Their keyboardist Franz Nicolay moved on in 2009 to join Against Me which unfortunately left The Hold Steady with measurably less mustachioed awesomeness. “Steve Nix” is a riff-tastic thumper from 2005’s “Separation Sunday”.

 

13. Drive By Truckers live and breath the deep south. They come from Muscle Shoals in Alabama which has a really famous recording studio where shit loads of really great records have been cut. The lead singer of this band’s Dad was a bass player and producer who worked with the likes of Percy Sledge, Willie Nelson, James Brown & Aretha Franklin. DBT have primarily had 3 songwriters and singers and they all bring something different to the table. They’re very much a DIY, self made band and they tour and record relentlessly. There are a lot of different musical influences in the mix and Patterson Hood often focuses on storytelling. While still being pretty raucous, DBT form their rock n roll with a certain musical and lyrical intelligence that you usually don’t get from rock bands in redneck country. They backed and co-wrote with 60’s soul singer Bettye Lavette a couple of years ago on her comeback album which showed them to be incredibly versatile as a soul band. “Marry Me” is a great Cooley strut from 2003’s “Decoration Day” that sounds like it’s come straight out of Keef’s bag.

 


14. The Stones are another band that I have come to understand and appreciate so much more in 2010. My brother pointed me in the direction of their great run of albums from about ‘69 to ‘74 with “Let It Bleed”, “Sticky Fingers”, “Exile On Main St”. and “Goats Head Soup”. They moved on from their early-mid 60’s boy band image and really tuned into American blues and country music demonstrating a deep understanding and sincere love of it. They embodied the swagger and attitude of the American outlaw image but injected the genre with rock like no one before them. “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking” from 1971’s “Sticky Fingers” features fantastic Keef riffage.

 

15. Jay Reatard was an artist from Memphis who played garage rock in the vein of The Stooges but with a good deal of pop sensibility. He lived pretty fast apparently. I had been listening to him for a while and had started following his ramblings on Twitter when he died suddenly of an accidental drug overdose in January 2010. Very talented guy and a tragic loss. “Wounded” is from his final album: 2009’s “Watch Me Fall”.

 

16. I think that you have to understand the incredible Englishness about The Kinks to truly appreciate them. A lot like their peers The Who and disciples such as Paul Weller. Ray Davis’ lyrics are focused a lot around working class themes and he has such a larikin sense of humour that he could be mistaken for an Aussie. His grin and the gap in his teeth only add to it! While the more pastoral work from their 60’s albums is great, my favourite record of theirs is still “Lola Versus The Powerman”, the album that has the famous “Lola” on it. It’s pretty much the worst album cover ever but don’t let that put you off. A lot of their songs like this one have that folky 60’s jangle mixed up with tight rock ‘n roll and a rebellious attitude that influenced the best punk rock bands yet to be born. Album opener “The Contenders” rocks.

 

17. Warren Zevon was a really late-in-the-year excursion for me. I had known about him for a long time and obviously knew Werewolves Of London. I remember reading about his death in 2005 and how missed he was by many artists. I’ve since found out he was a good friend of Letterman, appearing on his show many times and even having a stint as residence house band leader while Paul Schaeffer was elsewhere. Letterman had him on the show one last time when he knew he was soon to die from mesothelioma. A great quote he gave about dying was “Enjoy every sandwich”. In his music, I hear all sorts of similarities between Zevon and artists such as David Byrne & Springsteen. I’ve really enjoyed his typically sardonic bar-room rocker titled “Poor Pitiful Me” from 1976.

 

18. I understand that most people either love or hate Neil Young. I’m definitely a member of the former category. I saw him a few years back when he was here in Brisbane, supported by My Morning Jacket and he was incredible. The guy rocked out, especially for looking a bit worse for wear in terms of years of bodily abuse let alone having recovered from a brain aneurysm a few years back! He’s a masterful songwriter and I love how he has an ability to write sensitive folk tunes on one hand then unleash this ragged blaring rock in other songs. “Southern Man” is an anti racism statement from his 1970 album “After The Gold Rush”. Apparently, Lynard Skynard’s “Sweet Home Alabama” was written as a response to this song.

 


19. Al Green is the most amazing soul singer and he had so many hits that it’s hard to pick just one tune that I love. I’ve kept returning to his albums all year in 2010. “Here I Am” was a hit from his 1973 album “Call Me” and features some awesome squeals by The Reverend……and he does believe that there is going to be an explosion.

 

20. Percy Sledge is a soul singer probably best known for his version of “When A Man Loves A Woman”. I’ve only got a best-of album of his but there’s not a weak track on it. If you get soul music from around this era, there’s no need to explain why it’s so stirring to listen to. “Rainbow Road” from 1972 is my favourite tune of his. One of the most awesome bits of trivia I know is that Percy Sledge played at Stevie Van Zandt’s wedding (E Street band guitarist and Sopranos actor) and Little Richard presided over the ceremony!

21. The Gaslight Anthem are known as Springsteen disciples but can now also claim to be proteges as well. There are clips on Youtube both of Springsteen joining them onstage and also singer Brian Fallon joining to sing with The Boss and The E-Street band at another gig as well. Their latest album is really good – earnest, straightforward rock proudly hailing from New Jersey. “Bring It On” is a soulful exhibit from “American Slang”.

 

22. Magnolia Electric Company (formerly Songs: Ohia) are from Chicago and led by songwriter and singer Jason Molina. Molina follows in the footsteps of Bob Dylan and Nick Cave, treating songwriting quite seriously as his life’s purpose. It’s lucky for us that’s he’s very good at it! He’s also incredibly prolific, having written, recorded and released hundreds of songs within the space of less than 10 years. There’s a lot of heartbreak in his songs in the tradition of classic country music and  some of the music goes that way stylistically as well, but he personally draws from a wide array of influences including Black Sabbath. “Farewell Transmission” is the opener from their last album as Songs: Ohia (self titled).

 

23. The Besnard Lakes are from Canada and I got into their first album a few years back titled “The Besnard Lakes Are The Dark Horse” and they released their latest album in 2010 titled “The Besnard Lakes Are The Roaring Night”. They are a husband and wife songwriting team on guitar and bass with other collaborators fleshing out the band. Their music is often cinematic with long, powerful grooves building to righteous, glam-influenced guitar breaks. It’s got a kind of heavy, dark 60’s psychadelic mood, but by contrast, lead singer Jace Lasek often layers a heap of vocals to get Beach Boys-like harmonies. Most songs are slow and brooding but never become boring. After repeat listens their albums have been impossible to get out of my head. “Chicago Train” is a climactic, reverb-washed gem from their latest record.

 



24.
Vic Chesnutt was a musician from Athens, Georgia. Chesnutt broke his back in a car accident when he was 18 putting him permanently in a wheelchair having limited use of his hands so it’s amazing he could play guitar at all. Michael Stipe from REM was credited with helping him out of homelessness and producing his first album in the early 90′s. He had worked with Guy Picciotto from Fugazi and members of Godspeed You! Black Emperor on his last 2 albums. His final album “At The Cut” was incredible and the scrawlling feedback and orchestral backing of the Godspeed musicians suited his songs well.  He sadly took his own life from an overdose of prescription painkillers on Xmas day 2009 after a long, painful battle with his conditions and a huge debt shamefully owing to the gross incompetence of the US healthcare system. “Chinaberry Tree” from his final album is incredibly powerful and affecting.