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    SILVER CIRCLES REVIEWS Sept11


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    CD314Willie.jpg

    WILLIE
    “LOCO” ALEXANDER

    Fisheye Records

    The World
    Famous Non-Stop Seagull Opera Meets the Fishtones at the Strand

    16 tracks

    To say that Willie
    Alexander is music legend is an understatement. His explorations
    in sound have touched generations, dating all the way back to the latter
    days of the Velvet Underground. Each lineup of musicians has complemented
    his dark, bluesy, garage sound, keeping it fresh with every listen.
    This new release continues the tradition of musical darkness and weirdness.
    The songs are dark and bluesy, bordering on lo-fi, but complex in its
    arrangements and sonic textures. The songs are songs about life
    and living in Gloucester. Somehow Alexander makes this dark and
    interesting, combining backporch blues with trip hop, New Orleans swamp
    rock, psychedelic excursions, experimental noise, Zappa-esque tangents
    into the bizarre, and exploiting the mating calls of seagulls. Any and
    every fan of Willie Alexander’s work will enjoy this latest disc,
    and for those who haven’t yet delved into his massive discography,
    this is a good entry point. While not as aggressive as some of
    the more rocking stuff a few decades prior, there is plenty of rock
    and weird for everyone.
    (Joel Simches)

    THE IN OUT

    Sell You Records

    The Venal Column

    13 tracks

    It can be fun trying
    to describe the indescribable, but sometimes you’ve just gotta step
    outta the ring. So it is
    again with these baffling bastards, who can send
    skulls spinning to unknown worlds on a whim and make it sound as natural
    as breathing. Some say it’s minimalist, but the open spaces allow
    for massive interpretation.
    Forces it, actually. I hit them up for lyrics this
    time, and got stuff about the terminally ill, the 1919 Boston molasses
    flood, a talentless line cook, winks to obscure films, and bands from
    the ’70s, parties gone wrong, blood, brains, with none of it quirky
    or predictable. The groove itself here, which is pretty fucking deep,
    has a decidedly dark tinge, but it’s not heavy in the usual sense,
    which makes it all the heavier. Riffs and execution are insidious and
    airtight. For a trio with the occasional curveball sound effect, they
    infect the mindscape with methods few bands of any ilk would dare attempt.
    One of those things where, when it’s not actually playing, I find
    myself
    thinking about where it’ll take me next time. And
    sure enough, it’s always a different place. I can think of no higher
    praise. (Joe Coughlin)

    Page Contents

    ANDY SANTOSPAGO

    Shiny Bombs

    13 tracks

    This is Andy Santospago’s
    second full-length solo album (he’s also a member of the critically
    acclaimed and cruelly neglected band the Vinyl Skyway). It is a fascinating
    melange. Santospago’s sometimes seemingly twee eclecticism may provoke
    bafflement in some, but I have always thought that an album of songs
    is a better representation of an artist’s vision if it offers up a
    variegated menu of different styles. You hear all sorts of possible
    influences, or at least affinities, in this collection—I almost said
    “confection.” For me, it evokes the sound of the third Velvet Underground
    album yoked to the sensibility of Magnetic Fields; the harmonic textures
    of
    Pet Sounds and Van Dyke Parks, the portentiousness of
    post-
    Crazy Rhythms Feelies, and the lyrical tricksiness of Ray
    Davies. Santospago’s work is notable for its eccentric, architectonic
    originality and his keen sense of how incongruity can serve to offset
    cliche. The opening track evokes the ambiance of that eldritch ’80s
    hit “Life in a Northern Town.” “Parasite” explores somewhat
    well-worn solo Syd Barrett territory. “Text and Drive” features
    exaggerated melodicism somewhat perversely undercut by irregular rhythms.
    Then things start getting real real going for a change. “You and Everything”
    combines a Romantic-era symphonic approach with C&W touches and
    almost-but-not-quite affectless lyrics. “A Happy Farm” and “My
    Delivery” brilliantly evoke the poppy sentiment of an artist like
    Harry Nilsson. “Smithsonian” is like a delirious slowed-down They
    Might Be Giants-style pastiche of American history. His rendition of
    Procol Harem’s “Shines on Brightly” resembles some of the more
    discursive vocal ramblings of the Kinks. Current-events mavens will
    be ticked by the ironic deadpan Philippic “My Catapult (Ode to Bernie).”
    Best of all is “Cornflower Blues,” an extended suite, and a pure
    product of cracked-jug pop Americana. Personally, the more I listen
    to this, the more I see faces forming in the trees, the clouds, and
    even the bedding. (Kidding—I’m just kidding.) We might be looking
    at an album, which in the future becomes a cult favorite. (No kidding.)
    (Francis DiMenno)

    FOUND AUDIO

    Chalk

    10 tracks

    These guys really get off on the whole
    alternative-country crossover thing and do a damn good job with it,
    too. They veer on the softer side of the alt-rock spectrum with their
    laid-back mid-tempo songs full of arpeggiated guitars, chimes, and smooth
    melodic basslines, but with an old-timey dialect. The finger-pickin’,
    banjo pluckin’, pedal-steel twangin’ goodness and, of course, the
    close-knit vocal harmonies between the two fellas has country music
    written all over it. But this ain’t that rootin’-tootin’ tobacco-spittin’
    knock-out-yer-teeth-out sorta country. It’s more like that sentimental
    sobbing-quietly-into-yer-beer sorta country. The lyrics really stand
    out with their surreal narratives and idiosyncratic phrasing. They’re
    like an enigma wrapped in a riddle wrapped in Michael Stipe. And, they’re
    sung with a free-wheelin’ vocal delivery that doesn’t always fall
    into nice-and-neat verses and choruses, but instead spills over into
    the rustic musical terrain. These guys got a real easy-going sound,
    almost to a fault. In large doses, it starts to feel like the soundtrack
    to a coma and I’m left waiting for a change of pace that never comes.
    (Will Barry)

    JIMMY RYAN

    Mandolin

    7 tracks

    To those in the know
    regarding the local music scene, especially folk and acoustic, Jimmy
    Ryan is a well known personality. A professional mandolinist and fine
    songwriter, Jimmy showcases six original tunes and one cover on
    Mandolin.
    The cover tune is none other than “Sympathy for the Devil,” not
    my favorite tune in the world, but it seems to fit itself very well
    into a mando interpretation. This album is primarily singing voice and
    solo mandolin accompaniment… if you like the sound of that orchestration,
    you’d love this. Vocally though, Jimmy sounds (at times) like James
    Taylor with clogged sinuses, but what do I know from heartfelt singing?
    I do know that the sound of his instrument has a melancholy, waif-like
    vibe that’s driven by earnest intensity and technique. The thing I
    mostly like about this disc, it doesn’t get boring. That’s always
    a chance you take when you put yourself out there with an acoustic stringed
    instrument. Nice stuff Jimmy.
    (Mike Loce)

    P.J. O’CONNELL

    Clang!

    Join the
    Crowd

    11 tracks

    With a stunning crowd
    of several, P.J. O’Connell’s latest release is a celebration of
    pure pop for now people. I can almost feel Nick Lowe peering over my
    laptop. Every song glimmers with jangle, the harmonies drip of
    honey, and the piano is so very Nieve-y! There are also slices
    of Hoff, Sweet, Westerberg, and Martin, and of course Wilson blew me
    out. The production on this disc is as clever and sparkly as the
    songs. There are sweet sonic goodies to complement this razor
    sharp slice of pop perfection. I really believe there aren’t
    enough of these albums being made without being cynical or ironic, not
    that being cynical and ironic is such a bad thing. You can listen
    to these tracks again and again and know that everyone on this recording
    gets it and means it. This album has an appropriate pop sneer,
    but at the same time sounds like a fun time with some gifted players
    on both sides of the glass—a party I’d love to attend.
    (Joel Simches)

    PARANOID SOCIAL
    CLUB

    Axis IV

    11 tracks

    Is it punk? Is it indie pop? Heavy
    rock? Worldy ska-licious psychedelic? Some terrific melding of all the
    above… that’s what it is. Blending genres like this could confuse
    the mind, but I like that Paranoid Social Club is different and unexpected,
    and because I happen to love indie pop rock as well as garage and punk
    and heavy rock—well, it all
    works for me! It’s kind of like a carnival of sound. This is really
    like nothing I’ve ever heard before and I can’t say enough times
    how utterly refreshing it is to hear unpredictability yet consistency.
    I realize I’m lavishing compliments here but it’s a bit difficult
    to break down because of its wonderful musical eccentricity. I was going
    to call out my favorite tracks like I often do, but honestly each song
    holds something so groovily interesting, I love them all. Based out
    of Portland, ME, and started by members of Rustic Overtones, Paranoid
    Social Club are four ambitious, creative, highly talented musicians
    who now have a new fan named Debbie Catalano. (Debbie Catalano)

    ANTIQUES

    Jwns

    12 tracks

    I’m not really sure what to make
    of these dudes. Some of their songs sound like ’90s alt rock and some
    of their songs are totally indie. “The Coffin” is probably the best
    song I’ve heard all week. I can’t put my finger on what it reminds
    me of— Smashing Pumpkins maybe? I just wish the vocals were more dominant;
    they are slightly muted in every track. “Etc” is another sweet track,
    but unlike “The Coffin” it isn’t channeling the ’90s—it’s
    more of a mellow indie situation a la Rainer Maria. And then “Smile
    at Me” reminds me of Bright Eyes. Go figure. Despite being all over
    the damn place, I dig Antiques, and I’m just grateful that I can finally
    offer a halfway positive review to T Max for once. Thanks, Antiques!
    (Emily Diggins)

    SOMERVILLE SYMPHONY ORKESTAR

    Somerville Symphony Orkestar

    7 tracks

    Somerville Symphony
    Orkestar is the essence of borcht on the rocks. It’s only after shooting
    back the vodka does the orchestra slur into orkestar, for some feisty
    Kelezmer-esque jazz. Jonathan Cannon unleashes the fiddle on “Clap
    for My Birthday,” a truly festive anthem that hurls the shy birthday
    boy above everyone for some controlled chair-surfing action, otherwise
    known as the Hora.

    Each ballad tells a folktale. The tuba grunts away like a wise prophet
    on “Into the Wood Chipper.” The saxophone blares on “Blagojevich!”
    with a rejoicing melody that sounds off a victory for the motherland.

    Vodka aside, the Somerville
    Symphony Orkestar knows how to party. You might just be lucky enough
    to experience a Penelope the elephant sighting, a plushed-out elephant
    whose fallen off the wagon so many times you might see her make an unannounced
    appearance at a gig— the jacket sleeve does credit Penelope for being
    the token elephant of the gang. SSO’s self-titled debut record takes
    music from the motherland of yesteryear and injects everything from
    Django Reinhardt’s gypsy guitar, to subtle tuba ska musical interludes.
    So try Cossak dancing with SSO in the background, or party hard with
    the tribe. Joel, Jon, Rowen, Max, Regan—and who could leave out Penelope—are
    rebel rousing gypsies that kick out the jams, along with your teeth,
    with no hard feelings because a black eye only means you partied right
    last night. (Justin Korn)

    THE BYNARS

    The Bynars

    12 tracks

    Highly likeable if
    formulaic pure pop, meticulously buffed to a high gloss, brimming with
    life, and all somewhat akin to the Raspberries gone new wave: a pastiche
    of classic melodic pop-rock with knowing post-punk touches. Nearly every
    one of the songs starts from a simplistic but eminently sound musical
    premise and lards it up with multitracking wizardry and nuancical rhythms
    and textures. “Steal My Sunshine” is the most irresistible example
    of this formula, but you can also detect it in the taut A-B-E progression
    of “Can You Hear It.” “Every Little Thing You Love” could have
    originated as one of the lost Lennon tapes for all I can tell, and “Angeline”
    is cut from the same cloth as the McCartney-Costello collaboration “Veronica,”
    albeit with a nagging ostinato and nouveau-Merseybeat middle-eight,
    all topped by a rave-up coda. “Love Explosion” reminds me that the
    first people to crack the formula for a new direction in pop were none
    other than the Cars, though Wreckless Eric and Nick Lowe also deserve
    some of the credit. Some people would profess to enjoy this album only
    in an ironic way, and indeed, there are cheesy synth effects such as
    on “Ba Ba Ba Ba” that make it difficult to take the compositions
    entirely seriously. But the Bynars may have stumbled across a future
    redirection for ’80s rock revivalism—as a lively riff-based platform
    from which to exploit largely forgotten or neglected pop cliches long
    buried beneath a self-serious troupadour mentality of “significance”
    that ultimately did nobody any favors. I haven’t liked a new band
    this much since Hooray for Earth; with luck, the Bynars may ascend to
    the same exalted status. (Francis DiMenno)


    RIFF GALLAGHER & A MURDER OF
    CROW

    Won’t Be Home Soon

    12 tracks

    The first song is a
    little silly ditty, a seemingly deliberate attempt to play a Blues Brothers’
    type of big cheesy production number, but then as the album really begins
    with “The Spring of 49,” Riff Gallagher has grabbed your soul.
    Owing a little nod to Warren Zevon’s style of storytelling, Gallagher
    offers a full plate of hope, misery, and reflection. The musicianship
    is top notch and well-recorded. The arrangement and instrumentation
    seems to change and adapt for every mood. While his guitar playing
    could be described as quintessentially classic blues-rock, Gallagher’s
    vocal approach seems to work best when he’s being more natural and
    less affected. I suppose you could chalk that up to attempting
    different approaches for each song and style. There are some songs
    where it really works. “Billy (Lordan of the Dance)” is a
    barroom cinematic masterpiece. I wish “Things (That I Like to Do)”
    didn’t get buried at the end of the album. Damn, that song is epic!!
    This album tries to be a lot of things, but succeeds (for me anyway)
    on the strength of the fairly straight-ahead songs with minimal embellishments.
    Sometimes it’s good to hear an album that tries a little less hard
    to please. (Joel Simches)

    VELVETEEN PLAYBOYS

    Shakin’
    Not Stirred

    10 tracks

    Contemporary power-pop
    performed by an all-star cast with a wide variety of different music
    genres mixed in. Paul Souza (Beat Surrender) lends his powerful vocals
    that can quickly convey diverse aural images almost instantaneously.
    He can go from sweet sounding to world weary in a flash and his stellar
    vocals, the songs’ punchy arrangements and the razor-sharp artistry
    make this project so unique in today’s market. And so good. Robert
    Holmes (’Til Tuesday/ Ultra Blue) adds his expert guitar presence.
    Bob Gay (New Man) and his ultimate sax and premier bassist/backing vocalist
    Lenny Bradford (Entrain) join forces with drummer Anthony Steele, Mike
    Null on guitar and backing vocals and Ben Zecker on keys to create real
    radio-friendly music. “Virtual Girl” is the hit. “I Want That
    Girl” with its power chords is my second favorite song. Ballads “Over
    and Over,” “Lucky Dog,” and “Darkest Hour” all feature Paul’s
    haunting and expressive voice and Bob’s superlative sax is best heard
    on the jazzy opening of “Last Girl on Earth.” This song is almost
    like a show tune in that it’s so theatrical sounding I imagine it
    could be covered equally by either Freddie Mercury or Rick Berlin. “Burn
    It Down” is techno-flavored and is very clever. A nice and different
    sound: Just the way I like them. (A.J. Wachtel)

    Rope &
    Wine

    10 tracks

    I’ve been sent many CDs that were
    recorded at Galaxy Park Studios, and this is by far the moodiest grower
    of the bunch. There’s something of an elegiac warmth about this album.
    It’s a feeling I get when I hear Neil Young’s so-called “Ditch
    Trilogy,” some Buffalo Tom songs, and other albums/songs not worth
    mentioning because they only make sense to me and they sound nothing
    like this band. It’s just a feeling. Perhaps it’s the tuning of
    the guitars—in some tracks it sounds like the standard E-A-D-G-B-E,
    but roughly a quarter-tone off—a subtle trick that can effectively
    alter a song’s mood. Perhaps it’s the warm distortion of the guitars
    and the folky tinges (occasional banjo, etc.) that alternately appear
    in these tunes, both reminiscent of said Neil Young trilogy. Vocals,
    however, remind me of (yeah, this might be a stretch) a younger but
    mellower J. Robbins. All told, these expertly woven elements form a
    fabric rife with “the feeling.” Try this material out, break it
    in. Could be a comfortable fit for you.
    (Tony Mellor)

    THE FATAL
    FLAW

    Narrow Hours

    10 tracks

    I’ll preface this
    review by stating that I’m a bit biased in favor of the Fatal Flaw.
    T Max sent me their cd to review back in 2008 and I have been a fan
    ever since. I think “Narrow Hours” is a bit grittier than the band’s
    last album, “We Are What We Pretend to Be.” This one has more of
    a rock ’n’ roll vibe, and my only complaint is that some songs take
    this heavier tone a little too far—for example, “Leviticus” is
    a gang vocals, “whoa-oh,” bro-down situation that I just can’t
    really get down with. The album offers the same catchy melodies and
    biting facetiousness that I loved about the last one though, not to
    mention Joel Reader could sing the alphabet and I’d probably like
    it. The album’s title track is probably my favorite out of this set.
    It’s crazy catchy, sort of bittersweet, and I think it embodies the
    band’s style well, Journey references and all.   (Emily Diggins)

    THE GIL CORREIA
    BAND

    Tattoo’s
    & Blues

    7 tracks

    This is the band you
    want to have playing when you are out partying at a blues bar. Growling
    guitar at a loud volume, backed by powerful drums and held together
    by a solid bass that results in both impressing and leveling the listener
    at the same time. Gil plays guitar with a great, nasty tone, Dave Baker
    on drums/percussion and four-stringer Scott Cormier play Chicago blues
    like they are natives of the Prairie State. My favorite songs are the
    opening cut “The Rattlesnake Hop” with its biting guitar, “Taken
    It Back” with guest harpist Gregg Mackenzie blowing nicely, and the
    final composition by Lightning Hopkins “Too Many Drivers” with it’s
    sexual lyrics: “I’m in love with you honey/ I just want to drive
    your automobile.” If you’re into Ronnie Earl, Kid Bangham, and Ricky
    “King” Russell, this CD is for you. If you like jump blues go see
    these cats perform live; this CD is hard to stop playing.
    (A.J. Wachtel)

    SHARKS COME
    CRUISIN

    A Past That
    We Need to Know

    11 tracks

    I feel like I should
    have hangover after listening to Sharks Come Cruisin’s 11-track
    A Past That We Need to Know as it is 41 minutes of ale-fueled drunken
    sailor anthem-type tunes with a definite Irish punk-rock flavor. There
    you go… fun, good-humored, sing-along festival and/or pub rock. The
    vocals are often off-key, and I wouldn’t say this recording is the
    most polished or full-bodied, but hey first off, I’m not an
    American Idol
    judge, and secondly, for this genre and energy, it really doesn’t
    matter. You’ll find yourself wanting to hit the local tavern and wave
    your stein whilst you chant the catchy choruses from nearly all the
    tracks off
    A Past That
    We Need to Know
    . Enjoy, aye?!
    (Debbie Catalano)


    DAVID GREENBERGER
    WITH
    JUPITER CIRCLE

    Never Give Up Study

    13 tracks

    DAVID GREENBERGER AND RALPH
    CARNEY

    OH, PA

    29 tracks

    DAVID GREENBERGER & BANGALORE

    How
    I Became Uncertain

    30 tracks

    DAVID GREENBERGER & MARK GREENBERG

    Tell Me That Before

    18 tracks

    Shakespeare famously
    said, “The web of our life is of a mingled yarn, good and ill together.”
    These four CDs exemplify that philosophy, offering up Greenberger’s
    well-known spoken-word adaptations of monologues by nursing home residents,
    as originally published in his magazine
    Duplex
    Planet
    , all backed by variegated
    musical templates. The spoken-word collaboration with jazz band Jupiter
    Circle is hardly unprecedented in the genre; Mingus recorded the album
    A Modern Jazz Symposium of Music
    and Poetry
    (aka Scenes in the City) in October of ’57. What has advanced since
    that time is the jazz form itself. 50-plus years of exotica, free jazz,
    third stream, and fusion have left their footprints and moved jazz ever
    more firmly into syncretism. I can’t speak highly enough of the broad
    and all-embracing compositional skills of Jupiter Circle—they are
    subtle and brilliant and provide a formidable but never gratuitously
    heavy backdrop for Greenberger. That their music is from chamber arrangements
    rather than improvisations does not diminish its luster. The arrangement
    for percussion, piano, bass, and sax on “Chicken Feed” is ingenious,
    and the tango motif that breaks up the introspective melody of “No
    Funny Business at Roseland” is a treat. Concluding words of wisdom:
    “It’s God’s place and you never feel lonesome.”

    Ralph Carney has long been my hero, ever since his groundbreaking work
    with the ’70s new-wave ensemble Tin Huey. As one might expect from
    Carney, on OH, PA, his collaboration with Greenberger, there
    is a avant-garde presence, with winds, keyboards, and treated sounds
    predominant. There seems to be a strong emphasis on whimsy here, with
    eccentric and often open-ended anecdotes serving as the subject matter—stories
    of consequential inconsequence with significant meanings waiting to
    be uncovered–and Carney provides correspondingly odd and fragmentary
    musical snippets to accompany them. “Third Name” is the tale of
    a girl who was thought to have died, and Carney provides a comically
    portentous organ track. “Dolly Before Dolly” is a fantastical pitch
    for a potential C&W hit; “Rem” is a surreal recipe for a cold
    cure. The breath of life animates every one of these short short stories.

    Greenberger’s collaboration with the Boston-area trio Bangalore, How I Became Uncertain, opens with “Skein a Day,” a funky take
    on
    OH, PA’s “A Happy Soul.” Many of the instrumentals
    are riff-based and jaunty and add a great deal of vivid coloration to
    the often whimsical and sometimes agitated monologues, though occasionally
    these backdrops are so lively that they threaten to overwhelm the spoken-word
    segments. On some tracks, such as “Sandwich,” and “Second Loves,”
    the collaborative effort yields results, which are pricelessly humorous;
    on others, such as “Four in One Year” and “Two Legged Buck,”
    and the title track, the results are in each case uniquely bittersweet
    and evocative.

    Tell Me That Before, the collaboration
    with Mark Greenberg (plus Paul Cebar on selected tracks) is a jazzy
    but also musically eclectic set, perhaps the best of the four from the
    standpoint of the oddball pop music aficionado. These mini-narratives
    are the usual blend of winsome and strange; commonplaces expressed by
    people with unique sensibilities—notable “Realistically” and “Good
    Girl Spend It.” “Thanks to the Good Little Fellow,” “Army Conditions,”
    and, especially, the heart-tugging “Grateful,” are uncommonly moving.
    The final, title track is a 20-minute suite with a repeated ethnic Jewish
    violin motif featuring musical pieces composed by notables such as Terry
    Riley, Lou Reed and Laurie Anderson. It is Greenberger and Greenberg’s
    tour de force, by turns touching, reflective, and strange; a fitting
    finale. (Francis DiMenno)

    THE ROADKILL
    ORCHESTRA

    Live at the
    Emporium:

    Greatest
    Hits Volume 3

    13 tracks

    This album was recorded
    with minimal overdubbing in Dr. Gonzo’s Uncommon Condiments Emporium,
    which is a real place in Worcester. While one can debate on the
    merits of having a house band in a condiment shop, these gentlemen from
    west of Boston, have perfected in a musical concept they call “garage
    lounge.” Musically they straddle the fence between Dr. John
    and Dr. Teeth. The arrangements and the songs are so over the top but
    played with such a fierce sincerity, that one can never tell how serious
    this band really is or how much of it is a put-on. The musicianship
    and arrangement are tight and sophisticated, but the lyrics straddle
    the fence between MIT and Wal-Mart. At times, it sounds like Steely
    Dan covering Captain Beefheart or Tom Waits singing a Bruce Hornsby
    song. The fact that much of this was tracked all at once gives
    this album a live performance feel, but with the separation of a studio
    recording. I can only imagine what a “produced” version of
    this would sound like. (Joel Simches)

    Dancing in
    Ceremony

    10 tracks

    A reinvention of indie pop, former
    Jaguar Club members Will Popadic and Yoi Fujita have been joined by
    Nadia Brittingham. The result is Medals, a self-proclaimed “…fun
    but serious, loud and good” trio. A love for electronica of
    the ’90s and the music of the English alternative rock outfit, Blur,
    has spawned an effort that is equal parts dance and radio-friendly contemporary.
    The opener, “Lonestars,” is a haunting plea to a lover: “Before
    the war comes, will you be mine? When darkness falls, don’t
    leave me behind, oh no…” amid a combination of otherworldly elements,
    each of which successfully convey an eerie feel. Throughout the
    effort, the interplay of male and female vocal inflections is reminiscent
    of Frausdots, while the synthesizers call to mind the Bravery, resulting
    in a creative and cohesive collection of melodic, nighttime pop.
    (Julia R. DeStefano)

    MICK VALENTI

    Europolis Records

    Beatlesque

    12 tracks

    If the Beatles locked
    themselves into their style of writing in 1965, traded in Ringo for
    a cheap drum machine and all of George Martin’s lush orchestral flourishes
    for bad general midi sounds, it would still sound more creative than
    the twelve songs on this record. While Mick Valenti can certainly
    write in that style and does his best cartoon impersonation of a Liverpudlian
    nasal caricature, there was much more to the Beatles than this.
    Claiming that this is “the music the Beatles stopped making,” is
    mildly insulting to anyone who was a fan. The Beatles themselves
    evolved from this era, because they didn’t want to parody themselves
    and they wanted to explore other ways of making music. This album
    not only doesn’t embrace that philosophy, it leads the listener into
    thinking that this album is somehow some kind of loving tribute to the
    Beatles. I suppose Valenti may think so, but that doesn’t make
    this CD any less painful to listen to. File this in the bin at
    the Beatle convention next to the book written by the daughter of the
    mailman who dated Cynthia Lennon’s second cousin after the Beatles
    broke up. I am sure they will both be signing autographs.
    (Joel Simches)

    RICHARD MIRSKY

    Mommy, What’s
    a Mirksy?

    13 tracks

    Allow me to answer
    the question posed by the title of this barroom rock record. A
    Mirsky is someone whose music caused my cat to walk up to the stereo
    speakers, sniff them, wrinkle his nose in disgust and walk away before
    depositing the equivalent of this music in his litter box. I’m
    allowed another hundred words or so, but I don’t really think anything
    else needs to be said. (Kevin
    Finn)


    VARIOUS ARTISTS

    Red Car Records

    Twisted Rico—the
    Scandalous Years

    20 tracks

    I’ve heard of Twisted
    Rico for a long time; damned if I know why it wasn’t till this summer
    that I finally heard a production. Featuring a collection of songs that
    upon first listen sounds like an alternative smorgasbord of different
    bands,
    The Scandalous
    Years
    delivers the sounds of a group coherency that can only
    be obtained by multiple listens. It’s true… sometimes we reviewers
    throw a disc in once, scan through the tracks and belch out a review;
    I’ve been guilty of that. But this album’s music gave me intrigue;
    it gave me pause. It made me listen to it again and again. Wait a minute…isn’t
    Twisted Rico a band? No, it’s a management company! That’s a clever
    thing to do… release a great compilation of bands from around the
    area, and then title and pack it so upon first impression it looks like
    you’re
    the artist! Well, you are if you come up with that idea. The real rock
    stars are… the producers. (Mike Loce)

    THE FUTURE
    EVERYBODY

    It Takes
    Nothing

    4 tracks

    Andy Warhol, leader
    of the pop art movement, was quoted saying,
    In
    the future everybody will be world famous for 15 minutes.
    It is only poetic that the Future Everybody’s
    latest EP,
    It Takes Nothing, just misses the benchmark—15 with 14 minutes
    of phenomenal feel-good pop rock.


    Affected guitar chords ring out on “Amy (Don’t Blame Me),” with
    subtle synthesized chimes cueing Nate Roger’s to belt out from his
    diaphragm. At times, you almost expect to hear Rogers exclaim, “That’s
    me in the corner/ That’s me in the spotlight/ Losing my religion!”
    But, alas, the Future Everybody showcase enough originality to ward
    off all R.E.M comparisons. (Justin Korn)

    SECRET SATELLITES

    Secret Satellites

    6 tracks

    Fans of the much-missed
    Sun Lee Sunbeam can rejoice as Jessica Sun Lee has returned, teaming
    up with Jeff Clarke to form Secret Satellites. The Satellites’ brand
    of pop is a bit of a departure from Lee’s previous band, a little
    more relaxed and with an electro influence. What hasn’t changed, though,
    is that Lee is still a solid songwriter. I often find this type of music
    to be cold, but this is never the case here, largely due to Lee’s
    honeyed vocals. The leadoff track “Siren” is the strongest, and
    its title is certainly fitting. Not all the songs are overly substantial,
    and the slower ones drag in parts, but it’s always good to hear from
    Lee.
    (Kevin Finn)

    THE FAMOUS WINTERS

    Carnival
    Sky EP

    4 tracks

    If the Beatles and Pink Floyd magically
    mated to create a new musical entity, the offspring would be named the
    Famous Winters. It walks boldly along that side of insanity that Floyd
    always brought us through. One second it is calm, tranquil, and safe.
    The next, a torturous black hole of despair the only hope is that small
    glimmer of light that shines brightly in the distance. The music pushes
    us down the path, creating a new world to explore. The songs are mostly
    stripped down to just drums, vocals, and various guitar parts. It is
    so simple, that it becomes incredibly complex. I was pleasantly surprised
    with the journey the Famous Winters took me through.
    (Melvin O)

    THICK SHAKES

    Aurora 7 Records

    Why Buy the
    Cow

    3 tracks

    This band makes pop
    music that attacks, bludgeoning you with a fuzzed out attack and leaving
    you happily concussed. The songs are fast and aggressive, but never
    at the expense of melody, a catchy chorus or a series of “oh oh oh”s.
    “Go Back to New York” will play well around these parts, and so
    would a full-length record. Three songs are not enough!
    (Kevin Finn)

    LENNY SOLOMON

    “Soldier Coming Home”

    1 track

    We, as a people, need
    a slap in the face about war. It’s happening under our nose but you
    wouldn’t know it—there’s always something more important happening
    to distract us from it. Lenny Solomon holds the mirror up for us and
    it’s not pretty. “Soldier Coming Home” deals with the situations
    that some of the unlucky soldiers face—not being able to adjust to
    their post-soldier reality, and their country not being able to give
    them the treatment they need. Lenny delivers this with acoustic guitar,
    harmonica, and voice in the folk vein. It’s serious music about a
    serious problem. “Soldier coming home from the war/ with his body
    and future torn to shreds/ and leaders just refuse to see that their
    policy made his reality tonight.” Good song, important message, keep
    them coming. (T Max)

    THE TIN THISTLE

    We Were Promised
    Better

    5 tracks

    I’ve seen these guys play live several
    times, so I was excited when I was handed their CD. The excitement died
    quickly when I started listening to it. I’m not sure if the title
    was meant as a joke, because I repeated it like a mantra as I sat through
    the longest 20 minutes of my life. Musically it is basic good old-fashioned
    punk rock; it is loud, uncomplicated, and obnoxious. There is a reason
    why punk songs are only a minute long though, because three plus minutes
    of the same three chords grow boring real quick. Bil (singer) sounds
    like what a drunken Bobcat Goldthwait would sound like if he sang bad
    ’80s hair metal, just not as funny. I actually have found this review
    hard to write: it’s not easy typing while rocking back and forth repeating,
    “We were promised better.”
    (Melvin O)

    GADI CAPLAN

    Opposite Views

    7 tracks

    Gadi Caplan performs
    guitar with passion and finesse in this seven-song primarily instrumental
    EP.
    Opposite Views features contemporary jazz tunes—all fluent,
    relaxing, and pleasant. Though most of the tracks are a bit too long
    for my taste, it does work for this genre as you can easily disappear
    into this soothing music. Along with Gadi’s wonderful guitar playing,
    his songs are enhanced with keyboards, bass, drums, alto sax, violin,
    flute, viola, and cello—not in each but nicely scattered throughout,
    all by equally talented musicians. There are even lead vocals on one
    track, “Nocturnal Adventure,” which I quite enjoyed though I believe
    one of his guest musicians, Patrick McConnell, provided the vocals for
    that. Gadi’s background is in rock and he alludes to progressive rock
    and fusion in his material but it feels more like modern adult jazz
    to me… relaxing and lovely. (Debbie Catalano)

    CAROLE STOCKWELL

    Ear Munchies Records

    Pieces Of My Heart

    11 tracks

    It isn’t easy listening
    to easy-listening. Quite the opposite, in fact, as this collection of
    bland adult-contempo tunes proves. The album is exactly what you’d
    expect from a run-of-the-mill female singer/songwriter for whom the
    whole sequence of human history seems to have stopped somewhere around
    1975. A hokey onslaught of folk songs and wimpy blues numbers smeared
    with hillbilly honky-tonk. At times, it’s not entirely unpleasant,
    but it’s still utterly unremarkable. The lyrics sound like they were
    cut and pasted from a pile of old Hallmark cards—not that I expected
    anything less from an album entitled
    Pieces
    of My Heart
    . Did I mention
    the cover-art is a photo of a heart-shaped jigsaw puzzle? I think I’m
    gonna be sick. (Will Barry)

    THE TAKE BACK

    Win Some
    Lose Some

    12 tracks

    This is a pretty rockin’
    collection of songs for those who love Social D, the Misfits, and the
    Dropkick Murphys. The band and songs are pretty tight, featuring
    some solid drumming and thick guitars, the usual Pabst enhanced fist
    pumping vocal approach and some great moments of rock ’n’ roll silliness!
    The great surprise is the vocal harmonies and how the band seems to
    be able to move beyond the cliché of the musical style and just make
    great music without trying to sound as much like their influences.
    Three songs in and the arrangements seem to get a little more interesting.
    Almost like Social D covering an ELP tune. Oh and could we please
    outlaw covering the song “Rumble In Brighton” once and for all?
    This is almost as tiresome as the wah-wah wuckachucka and the hip hop
    shout-out. Those should be outlawed as well, but that’s another
    review for another band!    (Joel Simches)

    PRESENT RHYMES

    Mertz & Sun Productions

    Yep, hip-hop from the land of jam bands…
    these cats are proudly reppin’ the birthplace of Phish: Burlington,
    VT. Scary concept, isn’t it? As you may expect, there’s good news
    and bad news. Let’s start with the good. The beats are a decently
    done, quite serviceable version of that East Coast underground sound
    that seems virtually unchanged in the last fifteen years—so, thankfully,
    none of that recent trendy bullshit. Nothing weak or wimpy, but
    possibly not memorable either… Bad news: the MCs. The voices are hackneyed
    and whiny—not ICP-vomit-inducing, but still pretty annoying. There’s
    nothing particularly compelling about the lyrics, either. Sorry, I can’t
    feel this trust-fund rap. Yeah, I know, it’s not like all hip-hop
    lyrics have to be about “the struggle” or anything like that, but
    I like a good story, vivid imagery and clever wordplay. Not much of
    any of that to be found here. However, I’m sure people who like their
    Deep Disco Moe Banana Biscuit Blackout and their Tribe Called Quest
    will find this a fleetingly good time.    (Tony Mellor)

     

    If you are based in New England,
    send your CD for review to
    T Max/ the
    Noise, PO Box 353, Gloucester, MA 01931.

    If you’re sending a CD in to
    the Noise make sure to use our new address.
    And everyone else should
    update our contact info too. Thanks.


    T Max/ the Noise
    PO Box 353
    Gloucester, MA 01931
    617-331-9637
    tmaxnoise@aol.com


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  • The Fools | The Noise

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    The Fools

    The Fools-webTHE FOOLS by A.J. Wachtel

    There is a lot of history to this band that hails from Ipswich. By 1975, Mike Girard, Rich Bartlett, and Stacey Pedrick formed The Fools, and by 1979, with the release of their Talking Heads parody, “Psycho Chicken,” they became very well known across the country. The group followed with “It’s a Night for Beautiful Girls,” a huge hit that peaked at #67 on the Billboard charts. EMI signed the band and they toured with The Knack and released their first album, Sell Out.  In ’81, their second album, Heavy Mental, was released with their cover of Orbison’s “Running Scared” reaching #50 on the Billboard charts. They joined Van Halen on their Fair Warning tour and drummer Leo Black jumped aboard for the ride. By 1985, The Fools put out World Dance Party, with four of the singles becoming huge hits. The title song, “Life Sucks Then You Die,” “She Makes Me Feel Big,” and a cover of Manfred Mann’s “Doo Wah Diddy” got considerable local and national airplay. Their MTV video for the last tune increased their popularity a hundred fold. In 2010, Mike released Psycho Chicken & Other Foolish Tales, a book that outlined the hilarious history of the band. Current bassist Eric Adamson became a Fool in 2012 and, currently, this gregarious group continues their quest for world domination through their own special brand of tomfoolery and musical monkeyshines.

    Noise: You guys have been together performing since 1975. Most marriages don’t last that long. Why are you still together?

    Mike Girard: I think we’re still together because we allow ourselves to cheat on each other and play with other bands. Rich and I also play with Beatlejuice, and Stacey and Eric also play with The Mockers.

    Rich Bartlett: We tried to break up! We were unsuccessful at that, too!

    Stacey Pedrick: Our longevity? Okay, well I guess you don’t know us very well, I thought it was common knowledge that Mike not only does ALL the dishes, ALL the laundry, and ALL the cooking, but he never ever asks us where all the money went! We’d be… fools… to break up.

    Noise: 35 years ago, “Psycho Chicken” was released and you’ve played that song hundreds of times. Do people still remember it’s a parody of the Talking Heads song, “Psycho Killer,” or has it taken on a separate life of its own?

    Mike: I don’t know what you’re talking about. Who are the Talking Heads and what is Psycho Killer?

    Rich: I know you didn’t ask, but I got the idea for the guitar part from Link Wray (“Run Chicken Run”).

    Noise: “It’s A Night For Beautiful Girls” is a sweet New Wave romance song. Is it a happy tune or a sad one, and what band would you have liked to seen cover it and why?

    Mike: I’ve always thought of it as a happy song, but in a desperate way. It’s the way most of us feel about an approaching weekend; it’s full of promise. I’d have loved to hear 10cc cover it.

    Noise: I know it’s in your book but, you toured with The Knack and Van Halen. Which headliner treated you worse as their opener and in what ways?

    Mike: So many bands treated us so well: The Knack, Rush, The Ramones, J Geils, The Doobie Brothers and more. Eddy Van Halen was always friendly, but the one calling the shots at that time was David Lee Roth, a world class rock singer, but also a world class asshole. For the juicy details, read my book, Psycho Chicken & Other Foolish Tales… available at Amazon.com.

    Noise: Your book Psycho Chicken & Other Foolish Tales is funny in a serious way. What are The Fools serious about in 2014? It’s a great outline of the hysterical history of the band. Will there be a Vol. II? Is there a new CD in the future?

    Mike: Our job is to not take anything too seriously, but we are involved in a few local charities and I guess we’re serious about that. Yes, there is another book in the works, and I’m finally starting it. Me and Rich are also starting work on a new batch of tunes.

    Noise: Are you onstage activists in a sense? Are your sets more “political and making a statement” or more of a “social commentary” in any way, or something completely different?

    Mike: I want people to feel like the circus is coming to town. By the time the night is over, I hope they feel like they’ve seen something with a bit of spectacle to it, like a circus, but minus the big pile of elephant crap in the corner.

    Rich: We do like to address subjects that make some people uncomfortable, but in a humorous way… sort of like an x-rated Disney cartoon.

    Stacey: I think our sets are purely musical and hopefully entertaining. Sure, our un-flinching support of Legal Personhood for Pets is nearly legendary, but we don’t bring such serious matters to the stage. People should think at home.

    Leo Black: I’m onstage to get into the zone with the other guys and experience the fun and the sheer joy of sharing that with people.

    Eric Adamson: I see it more like political and social satire with a humorous twist. Try to have fun and don’t take anything too seriously

    Noise:  Your live shows are very interactive with the audience. You walk into the audience during a song and do your schtick in a light-hearted, comical, and very entertaining way. Have these exchanges and responses generally remained consistent throughout the years? Are there any songs you don’t play anymore because times have changed and they’re not as funny anymore?

    Mike: Most people come to our shows expecting to have fun. That feeling in the audience carries us in the band. When your job description is to have fun, good things happen.

    One song that used to work well for us was called LL Cool Bean. I’d come on as a rapping guy from backwoods Maine, wearing a green hat with flaps and a hunting jacket. But over time, as rap music turned more into hip hop, the song stopped feeling relevant… if it ever was.

    Noise: How much of the group’s purpose and execution changed over the decades, or will seeing a show in 2014 be reminiscent in any way to being present at one in 1984?

    Mike: We’ve always seen performing rock ’n’ roll as kind of a funny thing to begin with. It’s an art form where we scream our most heartfelt feelings to you at an ungodly volume. Our viewpoint about that hasn’t changed, but I think we’re better at delivering the goods.

    Noise: One word to describe Mike Girard?

    Rich: Fearlesstalentedfunnyenter-tainingfriend.

    Stacey: Ubiquitous!

    Leo: Best.

    Eric: DEBAUCHERIST.

    www.thefools-band.com

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    Great article!! Great band!

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  • The Noise : Rock Around Boston. – Me & Joan Collins

    Support Local Music


    by Shady

    Here’s something different: a rock band that is more concerned with the roll than the rock. Out of the ashes of the Collisions, Bo Barringer (guitar and vocals) scrapes together a pop band with soaring melodies and a dual guitar attack that is also less concerned with the attack. Rounding out the line-up is Jen Grygiel (guitar and vocals) and Jason Marchionna (drums). Don’t worry kids, they have a bass player; he or she is just TBA. Me & Joan Collins are that rare breed mixing porn and Brit-pop with classic glam sensibilities and girl-boy vocals. I mention porn because it dominated a bit of the conversation that the boys and girl of Me & Joan Collins and I had at the cozy confines of the Independent in Union Square, Somervillle. The atmosphere lends itself to intimate conversation of porn collections—found or otherwise—and other less sex-inspired discussions. When we met up the band had unfortunately just been eliminated from the opening round of this year’s ’BCN Rumble. Despite this event, they seemed high on the direction and future of the band. They are in the midst of recording a full-length disc with Dave Westner at Woolly Mammoth and plans of touring regionally are in the offing.

    Noise: For some reason I want to talk about hunting.
    Bo: I would like to experience the emotional hell that it would put me thr

  • The Noise : Rock Around Boston. – Mr. Max’s Message

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    VACATION

    The Summer Peace issue is done and after I finish distributing it, I get time off before the September issue. This year I’m actually going to go someplace. A friend is renting an apartment in Paris and I’ve been invited to stay there for a short time. I took French in high school so I’m all set if I need to find a library—ou est la bibliotheque? But I may need to know more than that to get around. Please share any tips that you think might enhance my stay in the city of lights.

    GIGS FOR DREAMERS WANTED

    Before I hop the big pond I’ve got some shows lined up to perform “End War Now” with Shawn Marquis and Michael Bloom (the basic band of Dreamers Wanted).

    On Friday, July 6 at the Baseball Tavern, The Liz Borden Band asked Dreamers Wanted to join them on stage to sing the song that Young, Dylan, and Springsteen have already covered (click on the third song at myspace.com/dreamerswanted). Besides The Liz Borden Band, Muck & the Mires (straight from their European tour) and The Illegals are on the bill.

    Then on Friday, July 13, Brian O’Connell invited Dreamers Wanted to be a part of Assembling Peace V—an alternative, fun and energizing anti-war event/party/mixer/concert (to benefit the Greater Boston Stop the Wars Coalition) at Spontaneous Celebrations (45 Danforth St., Jamaica Plain). The party is hoppin’ with Jimmy Ryan, The Gary Backstrom Band (ex-Jiggle the Handle), The Grass Gyspys, Andrew Alexander, Nicolas Despo and more. Everything gets started at 7:00.

    NOISEBOARD & READERS REPO

    Check out the new layout of the Noise Board. We’ve separated the music forum so you can go there and talk about music without someone interrupting you with his or her sock fetish. It’s a much friendlier place now.

    Don’t forget that you can respond to any of the reviews on our website using Readers Respo. It never seemed fair to me that reviewers get the last word about the CDs and live shows that they write about. This function allows you to respond with your opinion.

    T Max (publisher/editor)
    74 Jamaica St.
    Jamaica Plain, MA 02130

     

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  • Lynne Taylor | The Noise

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    Lynne Taylor

     

    LynneTaylor-webLYNNE TAYLOR 

    by Lois A. McNulty

    With Lynne Taylor, what you see is what you get.  She writes the songs, she sings them, and she accompanies herself on the piano. She is a one-woman act, but there is no acting involved.  It’s all Lynne Taylor, and her music is anything but sweet, often rocking, sometimes waltz-like, and as raw as it gets. She is “pushing conventions and boundaries in the realm of social and personal awareness. Her lyrics range from dark and moody to hopeful and uplifting,” according to her website, Lynne Taylor Music. 

    Taylor makes her living as a teaching assistant in a charter school while playing in three bands and also building her solo career.  She is a multi-instrumentalist—piano, upright bass, bass guitar, and voice.  A staple on the music scene in her adopted hometown of Newburyport, MA, she has been writing songs since 1976, when she was 14, and performing professionally across the northeastern U.S. for 30 years.  Critics have compared her to Tori Amos, Fiona Apple, Ani DiFranco, Gillian Welch, and Sheryl Crow.
         Taylor released a self-produced CD When Lightning Strikes in October, 2013. Previously, there was her solo CD Grace in 1996, Rantic, the self-titled 2001 CD with her band at the time, and Sooner, in 2011, with the band Liz Frame & the Kickers. She is a wife, mother, and grandmother with a large circle of friends. 

    Noise:  To describe your life as busy would be an understatement.  On top of a full personal life, and a demanding  job, what drives you to keep up with the practices, the writing, the performing and touring, not to mention the behind-the-scenes work of promoting your work?

    Lynne: Idealism. Idealism drives me. There’s so much that’s wrong in this world, and it just has to change.  I grew up with the strong notion that music is a powerful tool that could help change the world, raise awareness and make things better, get people honest. I still feel strongly that way today.  So, for me, it’s always about the next new song.  It’s not ego that drives me. Ego is so limited, and it will burn you out. It’s more like strong feelings that drive me to write songs and perform them, share them. I have no goals or expectations, really. I am not what they call goal-oriented.  All this that I’m doing now has just unfolded, without any plan. I have been very lucky to get the chance to work with such exciting musicians throughout my life.  Plus, I’ve always been a bit hyperactive!

    Noise:  How did you come to be a musician?

    Lynne: Oh music is in my blood. It was never something I found or aspired to; music was always a natural part of my life. My parents were folk singers in Cleveland, Ohio in the ’60 and ’70s. They opened for Phil Ochs and others. I grew up on Ian and Sylvia, Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger. My dad is a light-skinned African-American and my mother is white. Her family disowned her when she married my dad, pregnant with me, in the early ’60s. My dad’s career took us to Kent, Ohio where, when I was eight years old, two things happened that affected me deeply: the Kent State anti-Vietnam War shootings, and my parents’ divorce.  I became politicized at an early age because my parents were active in the anti-war and civil rights movements.  I was young, but this consciousness affected me deeply because it changed the people around me, the people important to me. The divorce killed me inside. That’s when I discovered that I could get attention by singing. I had a strong voice and an ear for harmony. I started playing piano—mostly self-taught. When I got older, I played with my family’s bluegrass band, Fishcreek. 

    Noise:  You seem to be good at juggling several diverse pursuits simultaneously. Can you describe the range of bands you’ve played in over your 30-year career? 

    Lynne:  In my teens I was angry, unmanageable, really. I was using drugs and alcohol from the age of 14, did a stint in juvie, bounced around between my mother’s home in Ohio and my father’s home on an Indian reservation in Arizona, and then to living with friends, all before I got out of high school. This led to my deep involvement with punk. Kent, Ohio was a hotbed for punk, the home of Devo and the Dead Boys. I moved East and started playing in a punk band with my brother, a drummer. We called it Klaxxon.  (A klaxxon is a warning siren.) This was my first band of many—alternative keyboard-based,  heavy metal, alternative folk, rock, and a heavy prog-ish band. This led me to Liz Frame & the Kickers, an alternative folk/roots acoustic band, where I’ve been playing  stand-up electric bass for the past five years. In addition to the solo singing/piano-playing gigs, I sometimes perform with The Lynne Taylor Band, which includes a rotating cast of characters including: Ed Passarella or Gerard Kennedy on bass, Scott Solsky, Mark Toolan or David Fischer on guitar, Jason Novak on harmonica, and Charlie Farr on drums.  Recently, for fun, I started a punk band with Charlie Farr and Mark Toolan. We are Halo & the Harlots and I play bass guitar. 

    Noise:  It’s obvious you love all that you’re doing, and embrace each part of your musical career, but what’s the difference, for you, between performing solo and with a band?

    Lynne: One thing I love about playing in a band is the camaraderie. It is just a lot more fun. You have that emotional buffer. I am someone who loves to bounce ideas off people. I love to hear other musicians’ interpretations of my songs.  You become like a little family. That’s why it’s so hard when the bands break up, or someone leaves. I get that same feeling in my gut that I do when a relationship breaks up. I’m devastated. At the same time, I like playing solo because there is no mistaking my message. You can hear every nuance of my voice, every single lyric. 

    Noise:  Your lyrics are strongly, but never stridently, feminist, such as the song “Legacy.”  What informs this advocacy for women? 

    Lynne:  I can answer that in one word (no, two!): Murtis Taylor.  She is the topic of the song “Legacy.” I grew up with powerful women, including my mother, Judy Platz, a teacher and poet, but among those women, my father’s mother, Murtis Taylor, stands out as a remarkable role model for me. “Life was hard, but she loved it anyway,” I wrote in the song. Born in Brunswick, Georgia, in 1913 to children of former slaves on the Oglethorpe Plantation, she was a light-skinned black woman who was taken by her white grandmother to live in Cleveland, where she was expected to try to pass as white. Murtis refused, and always played with the black kids anyway. She had a strong drive to change society. She knew the poet Langston Hughes! She went on to have a distinguished career as a social worker in Cleveland, where there is now a foundation in her name, the Murtis Taylor Human Services System, that provides community mental health, alcohol, and other addiction services. Her example was a strong influence in my own decision to get sober and drug-free at the age of 29, in 1991, after I gave birth to my daughter. 

    Noise: Your songs can be personal but your topics can also be global. What  specific issues do you tend to write and sing about? 

    Lynne:  Well, corporate greed motivated me to write “The Grand Empire.”  Then there’s “Pablo’s Glue,” which came after I watched a documentary  about street children in South America. The hopelessness of their lives haunted me. Then, I had a dream about a little girl who wanted her story told, and I knew I had to write that song. Then there are the ballads straight from my own adventures in love, like “Back by Suppertime,”  “Grant and Lee,” and “The Angel that Flew.”

    Noise: You don’t do covers on your new album; they’re all original songs written by you. How can fans get the lyrics and hear your music?  

    Lynne: I included all the lyrics in the new CD, and you can also listen to and download every song I’ve written and performed (some for free) on my website.  As I said, I hope to make my living with music one of these days, but it’s more important for me now to get it out there into people’s ears. 



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    CDsShepardess331webSHEPHERDESS 
    Tiny Radars
    I’m Saving Myself for Shepherdess
    9 tracks

    Anyone who hasn’t followed Hilken Mancini’s post-Fuzzy work has made a grave mistake.  This second record from Shepherdess finds Mancini on top of her game, leading the band through a set of songs that are in debt as much to riot grrl punk as they are to the power pop that she is known for.  The music has a ferocity to it, but never at the expense of a good hook, and while Mancini lets her guitar hero side show, the songs never meander aimlessly.  The other band members, Emily Arkin (baritone guitar and violin) and Allison Murray (drums) excel as well, proving nimble enough to turn on a dime while also focused enough to keep the proceedings grounded.  The production is excellent throughout, fully capturing the spirit of their live shows, except for the actual live track that closes the album, which sounds dull and far away.   (Kevin Finn)

     

    JAMES MONTGOMERY BAND
    Open E Entertainment
    From Detroit… to the Delta 
    12 tracks

    James swears that “Detroit blues is greasier than Chicago blues” and his latest project is a testament to this fact. First, with an all-star cast of musicians; every song is a gem in its own right. The group consists of  James on superb Sonny Boy Williamson I-inspired harp and very solid vocals. David Hull, the bassist and backing vocalist, also very ably produces this product. Guitarist extraordinaire George McCann on sizzling six-string and Seth Pappas on driving drums are razor-sharp on every cut. When the group suddenly stops in an arrangement, the momentum stalls and it’s the perfect music foil to transfer the listener’s focus back on to front man James alone. This allows him to always have control of the song, it works well, and it’s a great foundation for a great cd. I really dig “Intoxicated” with it’s hook, and Willie Dixon’s Delta inspired “Same Thing.” “Little Johnny” is a great tune with Johnny Winter on Firebird Slide guitar and Aerosmith’s Joey Kramer on drums. Listen at the end of the song when Aerosmith’s guitarist Brad Whitford joins in. Just killer. Joey also pounds on the John Lee Hooker classic “Motor City Is Burning,” for real Detroit bluze. “I Don’t Want To Have a Heart,” co-written with local vet Bruce Marshall, is another good song. I really like “Delta Storm,” with the Uptown Horns. Their presence always takes the sound to a better level. Ask The Stones. Another standout is Bo Diddley’s “Who Do You Love?” sung by rapper DMC. His delivery and just his appearance is way cool and it’s done “Detroit” all the way. “Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is” another “Delta inspired” blues tune, is tightly and powerfully done, showcasing the band’s many talents. The jazzy/soulful version of Ray Charles’ “Hit the Road Jack” is very interesting and Montgomery’s opening harp and vocals are really cool. “River’s Edge,” written by McCann and “Changing of the Guard” composed by Hull, are both enjoyable blues/rock that again allow the stars to strut their stuff. Finally, Cotton comes and shows everyone his own interpretation of Sonny Boy’s style with the Lightning Hopkins classic “Black Cadillac.” This is not just another harp CD.  Great music. Great performances. Great guest-stars. Play this CD loud.         (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    THE WEISSTRONAUTS
    Sool Recordings
    Control Is in Your Command:
    The Best of the Weisstronauts 1999-2012

    27 tracks

    There are twelve songs actually, on the vinyl release—plus a mind-roasting 15 bonus tracks on the CD release. Y’know, judging from the first track, “Get It Together,” this band might strike the uninitiated as purveyors of the type of allegedly “hip” music” listened to the squares in the film version of The Graduate. But these instrumentals actually span the 14-year run of this collective of musicians gathered together to pay homage to exhausted styles past—from heavy duty funk (“Fibonacci”) to bubblegum pop (“Fruity”) to seedy pop psychedelia (the previously unreleased “Handball”). The aptly named “Psychedelic Whiplash” affectionately sends up both Blue Cheer and crazed 1960s LA radio DJ raps (e.g., “The Diamond Mine”). Make no mistake:  this best-of collection is nothing if not eclectic. We also get a Byrdsy-Liverpudlian amalgam of folk-blues-pop (“Hoopin’”) side by side with  twangy Johnny Cash style country (“Hot Dog City”). The sparkling and aptly named “Perky” appears here in a brighter 2011 remix. As for the CD bonus tracks, the standouts include “Tommy the Smelter” and its interpolated “Gimme Shelter” riff; the spectacularly jaunty “Last Train to Shartlesville”; the sheer verve of the previously unreleased cover of “Hot Smoke and Sassafras,” and the glad-making “Thrifty 2,” sounding like a picture perfect portrait of 1966, alongside of the cover of “Pleasant Valley Sunday,” with its nitrous oxide punch at the finale. All in all, it has been a fun ride, kids. Let’s keep up the good work.         (Francis DiMenno)

     

    ORB MELLON
    Reltone
    Love & Violence
    10 tracks

    Former Dirt Merchants founder Mike Malone emerges with his latest release under the moniker Orb Mellon.  This collection of tunes features solo home project recordings from two different periods of time and digs deep into the whiskey drenched delta blues/juke joint wave. The varying qualities of these recordings make this album sound instantly and simultaneously like a recently unearthed blues fossil and a modern edgy classic. Love & Violence has a healthy blend of soulful, intimate, fragile, and bombastic, as good albums should, without trying to sound all “faddy,” as if vintage were something you could simply buy at Guitar Center with a discount coupon.  All the songs on this sound honest and from the heart, with the charm coming from differing degrees of sonic fidelity. Sometimes the only way to achieve that is with a home recording. This is a record worth having in the collection.          (Joel Simches)

     

    AMERICAN THREAD
    Killing Days 
    11 tracks

    Recorded at Proofbox Studios with multi-instrumentalist/producer Steve Mayone, the lads from American Thread have got a great, well-rounded sound. Like a cross between the Pogues, Billy Bragg and Steve Earle, they waste no time to blast out some high octane Americana infused with healthy portions of country blues and barroom rock. Guitarist/singer Brendan Ahern and drummer Geoff Downing pair nicely, and fill out their sound with Michael Taggert on lead guitar and Gary Taggart on bass. American Thread is the kind of band I can easily picture playing at Bull McCabes or Toad, strumming their working class anthems over acoustic guitars and tall glasses of Irish whiskey. Like the best folk songs, each tune tells a story. “Fisherman’s Lullaby” is one of my favorites, depicting the tough times of today’s fisherman.  “Parade” is another fun folk song; it has a ring of Bruce Springsteen doing a Bob Dylan cover.  The organ on “Lost and Found” is a nice touch and allows that song to stand out a bit more instrumentally. “39 Days” somehow reminds me of an acoustic Bob Mould tune.  If this is the kind of stuff you dig, check out American Thread.      (Kier Byrnes)

     

    BIRD MANCINI
    Second Story Records
    Bird Mancini Lounge  
    12 tracks

    This music is a mix of the usual eclectic roots rock sound of Bird Mancini and the Bossa Nova. Both Ruby and Billy Carl sing great.  Ruby wrote the opening, “If You Wanna Get To Know Me,” and Billy wrote all the rest.  Their Bossa Nova songs that could have been covered by Brasil 66 or Astrud Gilberto include: “You Don’t Know What I’m Saying,” the instrumental “What Gets Me This Way,” with the great groove, “Midway Green Café,” “Jet Setting In Morocco,” “Patagonia,” and the closing cut, “Running To You (Coda).” Less danceable but just as lounge-ish are “The Listener,” “Somedays,” and “Pond Life,” a song co-written by Mr. Curt  that could be on an Adventure Set set list. Instruments included on this CD that I am unfamiliar with their specific sounds are: axatse, china cymbal, and a rain stick. This is rock solid, enjoyable, and certainly not just elevator music. Pour yourself a martini and listen.                 (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    GROOVE LOUNGE 
    TVP Records
    Volume 1  
    14 tracks

    I love the modern electro-soul sound.  There are many categories for this type of funky jazzy hip hoppy compilation, but “electro-soul” really resonates for me.  It sounds 21st century, looking at it from the 22nd century.  The artists in question on this hipolific mix are really at the mercy of New Hampshire Seacoast producer Scott “Sir Buck” Ruffner—and are performing as THE sound of TVP Records.  Hailing from the (and inhaling the) Portsmouth vibe and sea air, Sir Buck and his compassionate cohorts have welded together a nasty and smooth mix of flash and brash, spunk and funk, mix, licks, and some chicks.  Before I venture further into questionable beat poetry rhyme schemes, let me say that this CD is a great party soundtrack to keep rolling… though I haven’t been to a great party in many moons.  Tasty bits of guitar work, positive-energy lyrics and seamless integration in the many artists’ sounds in the tracks lead my ear to a pleasing sense of completion and flow throughout the work.      (Mike Loce)

     

    MOE POPE & RAINS
    Let the Right Ones In
    19 tracks

    When they reminisce about good Hip Hop this album will be amongst the ranks.

    Out of the gate there is a sense of euphoric nostalgic transcendence.  As soon as the beats drop, it is apparent that this LP blends many different types of styles and influences from rock, ADM, and ’90s trip hop.

    Moe and his cast of characters are droppin’ more knowledge than glitter on the Bean with very conscious and reflective lyrics.  His mixed cast include several Boston musical luminaries such as Dua Boakye from BAD Rabbits, Reks, and Julia Easterlin.   The first track, “Gothham feat. Easterlin,” is beautious out the gate. “Annie Mulz” is a super sonic gritty party anthem. Track 10, “Pressure,” is grimy and raw.  Just about every joint on this album seduces you on the low like a not so silent assassin with all its heavenly and heavy beats. This album truly has mass appeal, which I feel will be appreciated by hip hop heads.      (Lara Jardullo)

     

    JIMMY RYAN
    Ruido Guide Records
    Readville 
    8 tracks

    The mandolin pickin’ is good—nothing truly virtuosic—the songs are okay—nothing top out of sight brilliant—the singing is of variable quality—some of the melodies are sprightly—notably “Gone Yer Gone,” the Dylanesque “Rocket to the Soul,” and, notably, “Just Like You,” where Mr. Ryan’s voice is heard to best effect. I love anthemic mountain music—from Bill Monroe to the Anglin Brothers to Jim Eanes. I love it with a passion bordering on the fanatic. These songs don’t move me in any of the same ways. At best, they only tickle my fancy and whet my appetite for some of the real thing, which, in and of itself, is no mean feat.     (Francis DiMenno)

     

    HOWLING BOIL
    Maiden America
    11 tracks

    This is an outstanding album from an outstanding band. It’s all the more impressive that this is their debut release and not the work of a band 10 years in and five albums deep. Stylistically, they are as ambiguous as they are adventurous, touching on country, blues, and prog-influenced groove-heavy jams, with the occasional dash of avant-garde jazz licks and metal riffing. Broadly defined, I’d call ‘em art-rock. Their upbeat and whimsical style with its chunky fuzzed-out guitar leads, bouncing basslines, and lighthearted organ/synth is really compelling. They’re like Blur, without the British accents. They’ve got a knack for writing catchy tunes full of quirky modulations, sudden style shifts, and outstanding musicianship—especially with the layers of interwoven lead guitar lines and the dense harmonies of the backing vocals, yet, their unorthodox approach and technical badassery are never overpowering enough to alienate even the most casual of listeners.       (Will Barry)

     

    Z*L  
    Midriff Records
    Z*L
    10 tracks

    The self-titled opening salvo from Z*L is a musical flavor I don’t taste too often, a blend of surf/psych rock tinged with some heavy reverb and a few cool effects. We’re definitely off to a good start, and I get the feeling that this trio has a lot more in store. Mournful ballads like “Mermaid Knife” contrast sharply with the fuzzy, shred-filled “Steev Millar,” and “A Town Called Romeo” gives the full-frontal assault to the ears that you hear more than once in this album, and the intensity makes me wonder what a live show with Z*L is like.

    The vocals of Isabel Reilly (bass) and Ian Adams (guitar) are mournful and heavy, but it’s the kind of darkness that just wants to impart a story, rather than drag the listener down into a depression they never wanted. Ian’s a familiar face as a solo artist, and has transitioned to this band seamlessly. The bass and guitar steal the show,with shredding solos that flood the air. The drum work of Jack “Knife” Guilderson is effective and on point, and maintains a strong presence with his bandmates. All in all, an impressive debut for a band that’s worth keeping your eyes on.                             (Max Bowen)

     

    T MAX 
    Dove Records
    Thinkin’ Up a Dream 
    8 tracks

    Re: Opening number “Clickity Clack.” Whew. Who knew the world was at long last ready for a Mungo Jerry revival? Though, actually, it sounds more like “Mirror of Love” by the Kinks, croaked in a dyspeptic Bob Dylan caw, or maybe a slowed down trippy version of the Wilson/McGuinness collaboration “Ding Dang.” Next, we get more of the swoony guitar mode—in fact the treated guitar sound on this recording is the unique selling proposition—on “Fade Away, Fading In.” We then get a slab of Jonathan Richman style eerie-but-touching goofiness on “My Friends’ Pets.” And “Thinkin’ Up a Dream” is hokum jazz revival ala “That Cat is High” and such. “(Let’s Go Down to) Dogtown” recalls the novelty stylings of a certain unnamed local Irish-heritage rock band, and the chantey “Dundabeck” continues in a similar vein (though, for the record, the rogue sausage-maker’s name was actually Donderbeck.) “Train Sleep” is twangy skiffle hokum, a mildly amusing novelty number. The most compelling song here is the shortest: “Fading In”: a dazed and fitting coda to the proceedings. This release is shot full of songs in a genre—call it groovy Americana—which was and is a rich vein tapped by the Holy Modal Rounders, Dylan, Phil Ochs, Dave van Ronk, Beefheart, et al., long before its putative revival in the 1990s. I long ago predicted the whole Americana craze—a hillbilly aesthetic which was the inevitable counter-response to the black-leather-jacket garage hoodlum. But we forget that at one time the hobo was also at the cutting edge of hipsterdom. Even Richard M. Nixon referenced the far-away lonesome train whistle in the night during his maudlin acceptance speech to the 1968 Republican National Convention. So now I’m going on record to predict a movement called the Hobo Revival. Will this be the opening salvo? Only time will tell.      (Francis DiMenno)

     

    THE DRUNK NUNS
    The Winchester LP
    12 tracks

    These songs are mostly fast screamers with attitude, sorta like Slayer meets the Butthole Surfers meets the Ramones. Industrial rock, punk and metal are the main influences here and songs like “What Now,” “Reckless,” “The Boys,” my favorite “Tell Me,” “Juvenile,” and “We Don’t Know” assault your eardrums from start to finish. All the songs are written by growling vocalist Joe Barron and guitarist Andrew Dedousis, who sets his amp at vol. 11 from beginning to end. Drummer Andy Mac and bassist Frank Ashe ably keep all the mayhem together and even a slower, quieter stomp like “Winchester” is just as menacing. This is manic music sure to help make you hard of hearing. Fast and furious and not for the fainthearted, I like it like this.  (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    MAX GARCIA CONOVER
    Clip Records
    Burrow
    11 tracks

    Max Garcia Conover’s first full-length album is aptly named. One song in, and I want to disconnect the phone and let the music be the only thing on my mind. His fingerpick style is quick, sure, and delivers a great folk sound that sucks the stress out of your soul and replaces it with a relaxed tranquility. The album opens with “Teem,” a chill instrumental piece that showcases Conover’s skill with the strings, and damn does he have skills. Whether a slow strum or a fast, surgical tone, he’s on point each time. His vocals are light, but no less effective in connecting with the audience, like a casual conversation that lasts for hours. Based out of Maine and recognized as Best New Act by the Portland Music Awards last year, Conover shows us that the title wasn’t won for nothing. His music takes you into the forests and fields of his home state, or to a quiet café for an acoustic show. Either way, where this music goes, you want to follow.      (Max Bowen)

     

    JULIET & THE LONESOME ROMEOS
    No Regrets
    10 tracks

    Americana music that gets foot-tappin’ at times, Juliet is raunchy in “Narcissus,” my favorite song, and wails a weeper in the ballad “Song For You.” She goes Nashville in the country/ soul “Learn to Love Again” and the country pop/ rock “Last Kiss.” I love “Unkindest Cut,” sorta like Pure Prairie League meets Lucinda Williams. I can also hear the Neil Young influence in “Wishing Well” and Emmylou Harris in “Failed Highway.” Produced by Ducky Carlisle and Michael Dinallo, I would imagine they perform on this project also. Most of the songs are written or co-written by Juliet and the music jumps out of the speakers. For both your dancing and listening pleasure check out the jangling guitars and versatile vocals the next chance you get.    (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    THE SKELETON BEATS
    Shake Your Bones
    10 tracks

    The Skeleton Beats prove that you don’t have to be very original to be a good band as long as you possess a true rock and roll spirit as well as a keen knowledge of where your strengths lie.  The band plays the kind of music that used to find a home at the Abbey.   The songs are fast, loud, and in debt to the holy trinity of punk, garage and rockabilly.  Most importantly, these guys and gal bring the fun, an element that seems all too lacking from a lot of the music that lands in my inbox these days.   Being able to write ear candy like “Bad for You” doesn’t hurt either.   That number hasn’t left my brain for days, and I’m clearly a better person for it. Thanks, Skeleton Beats!     (Kevin Finn)

     

    I AM NEXT
    Cemento Records
    How to Tell the Phonies From the Phakes
    10 tracks

    This is a pretty slick piece of power pop. While the songs are bright and zippy with some brilliant harmonies, their sound harkens back to ’70s and ’80s proto-indie-pop bands like the the Raspberries, the Buzzcocks, and the Knack, with bits of Peter Case and Marshall Crenshaw, and the attitude of the Smithereens, and the Replacements, except without all the cheesy gated reverb on the drums.  The production is tight and punchy, but the songs initially are kind of hit and miss.  The first four songs are desperately in search of good hook to tie together all the little bits.  Perry Leenhout’ s voice, while really good, seems to lack the swagger that some of these songs need and there isn’t much emotional dynamic, until the album hits its stride with “Hallucination Mania” and “Radio Wave Goodbye.” The broader psychedelic approach to those tracks seems to suit his laid-back melodic tones. While there are so many great ideas, they tend to outstay their welcome, often within the same song. I am sure this band kicks it pretty well live. I would like to see that.                      (Joel Simches)

     

    BEES DELUXE
    Livevil 
    8 tracks

    This is powerful old-school guitar driven music with heavy Hendrix/ Clapton/ B.B. influences. It is nothing new but always enjoyable and rocking. This “limited edition collection of unauthorized live recordings” is just the music you’d expect from a transplanted Brit who landed in Boston. A mix of originals and covers, Conrad Warre admirably wields his axe while Brad Smith on keys and Patrick Sanders on drums accompany him through cool tunes like “Look-Ka Py Py,” “Ain’t Nobody’s Business,””Funky Miracle,” and “Watermelon Man.” Solid vocals surrounded by a tight band, and check out the tones he gets out of his guitar; this cat can play.     (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    CAIXA
    Caixa
    10 tracks

    Right off the bat, Caixa’s sound collages conjure something Kubrick might have used in 2001: A Space Odyssey with their eerie, drone-heavy tone. The music is chock-full of amorphous textures, electronic outer-spaciness, and lush cymbal splashing that slow-simmer to a seething boil with track 4, “P.I.G.,” a bawdy funk piece tinged with acid-jazz and thick with gritty guitar and keyboard-mashing cluster-chords. It is definitely a stand-out tune. The album overall has a touch of the Far East with its trance-inducing beats, psyched-out effects-drenched guitar lines, long synthesizer oms, and gamelan-like vibraphone pitter-patter. Ominous and hypnotic, Caixa’s drone-heavy sonic explorations bring me to a goddamn theta state. Nirvana, here I come.                  (Will Barry)

     

    CRYOSTASIUM & THOR MAILLET
    Twinnings
    8 tracks

    The first track on this album is entitled “The Fun Is Done,” which, in case the sound of babies screaming wasn’t enough, pretty much lets you know what you’re in for. These tracks aren’t really songs as much as they are soundscapes that would fit in well in a horror movie or a dark video game like BioShock. In fact, I found myself wondering what the intended purpose of this music was. It’s intelligently put together and effectively spooky, but it doesn’t seem like something you would just sit down and listen to on its own. It also, I learned, isn’t something you want to listen to right before you go to bed, as you will most likely have very creepy dreams about being murdered on the beach at night.  (Kevin Finn)

     

    CHOOSE TO FIND
    Auxetic Records
    Songs Without Words  
    10 tracks

    I would say that this is music for big venues.  Theaters.  Arenas.  Concert halls with reverb.  The idea of a group with this sound playing at a small dive is just an ass-chapper.

    This is instrumental rock music.  Grand.  Big. Lush at times.  Anthemic.  Thematic.  Wide.

    The “introduction and farewell” is quite a piece of music… a romp in seven from the Yanni trick book to a phase-in of Alan Parsons Project with Vince Guaraldi bashing on piano.  The primary songwriter is piano man Todd Marston, who no doubt has had a fun time honing his crew. I hope it’s lucrative.  I still hear that old Frank Zappa quote about the futility of performing instrumental music, and the importance of having a voice plopped onto it.  Here, the music IS the voice.  Rock on guys.  Hope to see and hear you live some day, and in a bigger arena than a small dive.    (Mike Loce)

     

    HAYLEY JANE & THE PRIMATES 
    Color Me
    7 tracks

    On their first proper EP, Color Me, Hayley Jane & the Primates concoct a crazy mix of gothic Americana, folk, jazz, and rock. It’s incredibly difficult to put a finger on how to categorize the results. I suppose the key is that the mix is freaking fantastic.

    From the dark, murder-ballad stomp of “Saving Kind,” to the playful swing of “Worrisome Thing,” and on through the near-country twang of “Everybody Runs,” there’s never a moment that Hayley and her band don’t bounce from one genre to another.

    The Primates are adept at keeping up with the characters that Hayley embodies at each turn. One moment they could be playing in a dusty saloon, the next in a college-town bar. All the while, Hayley moves her vocals deftly from Erin McKeown to Kim Deal to Ani DiFranco.   (George Dow)

     

    PETER BALDRACHI 
    Prodigal Son Records
    Tomorrow Never Knows  
    11 tracks

    Fluty-voiced pop with a new-wave edge; some groovy fun for fans of Benny Mardones, perhaps; all well and good. The songs are tuneful and catchy pop trifles and the lyrics are, unfortunately, the usual lightweight clichés. It would have been a delightful companion-piece to the likes of the Outlets back in 1985; nowadays it comes across as a head-scratching anachronism, and, ultimately, in its utter lack of originality, I’m sorry to say, this collection verges upon the profoundly annoying—like being slapped repeatedly in the face by a washrag soaked in warm milk.   (Francis DiMenno)

     

    GRACIE CURRAN & THE HIGH FALUTIN’ BAND  
    Proof of Love
    9 tracks

    Gracie is one of the best blues divas on the local scene today and this CD allows her to strut her stuff behind her fine band. The result, mixed and mastered by blues harp legend Rosy Rosenblatt (D.K.’s Full House) is a great example of why our local blues scene is one of the best around. Listen to: “Can’t Getta,” “Take You With Me,” “Even With The Rain,” and “Been All Over” (with Rosy’s great harp) to hear her country-blues sound at it’s best. The sweet and sad twang of “Take You With Me” should be heard on country radio stations everywhere. It’s always cool when blues royalty makes a cameo. Keyboardist extraordinaire Bruce Bears, from Duke Robillard’s band,  joins in here too. I also really like when the horns are employed in her music; their brassy additions always are short and sweet and greatly add to the total package. Whether torching an Americana ballad or pouring her heart out in a romp, the nice guitar work of Tom Carroll, the good bass of Geoff Murfitt, and solid pounding of Derek Bergman on drums mix well with Gracie’s great vocals for a real treat. Check it out.   (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    LIOTTA ST. JOHN
    Driving Records Music Group
    Good Day For A Beggar
    10 tracks

    Good God, this is painful.  Is it so much to ask to tune one’s guitar before recording something people are going to actually hear? Obviously this guy has a great, soulful voice and the potential to record something that could move mountains and make angels weep, but there is a profound difference between DIY and just bad quality decisions.  I get it.  It sounds like the band wants to “capture the moment” and what happens happens—warts and all, but ignoring this fairly simple courtesy of being in tune and putting a little thought in making your album that you work hard to write and record look and sound like something that people other than your immediate friends and family would want to listen to and spend money seeing live, just seems disrespectful to any potential new listener.  It is truly brilliant stuff otherwise.    (Joel Simches)

     

    T. JOHN CADRIN
    Nothing Is Hidden
    5 tracks

    Nothing Is Hidden, a quirky indie-pop romp with elements of Big Star, Jellyfish, and Boston’s Bleu, features changing time signatures and musical twists à la Be-Bop Deluxe and They Might Be Giants. Verses, choruses, and bridges not only sound like they were plucked from different songs, but from different musical genres.

    Fantastic production showcases strong, at times Jeff Buckley-esque vocals, evocative and intelligent lyrics, haunting harmonies, and almost subliminal incidental keys, guitars, and  percussion.  Nothing Is Hidden is an example of no-holds lyrical and instrumental barred risk-taking.   (Marc Friedman)

     

    THE BRIDGEBUILDERS
    Love In Vain
    3 tracks

    Released late last summer, the Bridgebuilders offer this snippet of their world.  They are a band determined to shake up what people think about conceptually when hearing the tag “singer/songwriter” bandied about like an hooker at a crack party, or something. Sure there are good, solid songs, but they are arranged and performed with instruments and sensibilities of indie bands who aren’t afraid of making folk a lot less pretty and tidy around the edges.  While there is acoustic guitar and jazzy-groove drums, there is also distortion, tape echo, ripping solo sections, and string/fiddle arrangements with a nasty disposition.  In fact, the contrast between smooth and prickly could not be starker and that is the band’s biggest musical strength. It is nice and somewhat rare to hear “folk” music played with such genuine ferocity. It’s good to know people like that are out there!                      (Joel Simches)

     

    MEI OHARA
    Antimatter EP
    6 tracks

    Ohara’s driving industrial beats with their booming low-end and the darkly prismatic array of synth sounds make for an eerie dystopian backdrop that is both chilling and seductive. Her high-soaring silvery soprano, though, is what carries the tunes, cutting through the densely-packed steam-powered productions with its cathedral-sized echo, haunting vibrato, and sky-high range. The cherry on top of this EP, however, is the high-pitched wail of her violin that’s so wet with psychedelic effects, it must be tripping hard on brown acid. She may be classically trained, but her space-age fiddle warbling is so far from classical it’s not even in the same galaxy, let alone ballpark. More Hendrix than Haydn. Man, I could listen to this for hours. Probably will, too.       (Will Barry)

     

    PETTY MORALS
    The Cotton Candy Demo
    3 tracks

    Given my love of Tijuana Sweetheart and Cult 45, I had pretty high hopes for Petty Morals, but unlike a good chunk of life, The Cotton Candy Demo is anything but full of disappointments.  Poppier than either of the previously mentioned bands, Petty Morals wants to send you to the dance floor, but they do it with the punk edge of Le Tigre and Spinnerette.  Taiphoon’s voice provides just the right mix of honey, soul and danger; LoWreck’s drums make things swing, and the guitar and synth of Chrissy V and Naz T Naz make things bounce.  All three songs are solid, but the closing “Radio Action” is the standout, sounding like a dangerous version of the Go-Go’s.  Hopefully, there’s a full-length in the near future.               (Kevin Finn)

     

    JERRY VELONA 
    Karunabird Records
    Dream Girl 
    5 tracks

    Both takes of the title track, the second with vocals, are swoony and delirious smooth jazz, appealing if you’re an aficionado; tolerable even if you’re not. The New Orleans-styled “Wishful Intuition” (both takes, large and small band) is less successful, though the small band version is more intimate. The cover of “If You Stub Your Toe on the Moon” is pleasant enough—it’s a catchy song—but seems more a low-key exercise in nostalgia than a dynamic interpretation.      (Francis DiMenno)

     

    MARS
    Red Planet Records
    Everything You Want and Need     
    6 tracks

    Mars sounds like what would happen if a group of your dad’s suburbanite businessmen friends collectively had a midlife crisis and decided to try to revisit the rock ’n’ roll past of their youth.  Nowhere is this more apparent than on “Mrs. Stinson,” which has the band coming across as a neutered New York Dolls and on “Looking for You” with lines about youth that come off sounding quite silly. These guys do at least have some chops, and when they find their sweet spot in the mellower numbers, you find yourself wishing they went in that direction more often, as they do seem to have the rare ability to distinguish being tasteful from being boring.            (Kevin Finn)

     

    RACHEL TAYLOR
    Heartbreak Is For Everyone 
    4 tracks

    This CD produced by Peter Hayes from the group Black Rebel Motorcycle Club really showcases Rachel’s beautiful and passionate vocals. The title and opening cut is a nice Americana ballad that gets a bit funky. “Satisfy” is a country-flavored pop/rock tune and “Broken” is softer and slower, and brings iconic singers like Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn to mind. I really dig her sultry, haunting sound and her soaring melodies. Just great. A bit of alt folk/ ’50s country & western, and unplugged pop, the ending cut, “You Might Be Surprised,” is killer. Rachel, Peter, and band mates Jesse and Dan Russell really shine on this and make me want to hear more music from this talented artist. Acoustic and very well done.                           (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    THE RADICALS  
    Suburban Daydream
    6 tracks

    If you took Operation Ivy and stripped out the ska you would still be left with one mighty fine puck rock band. Proof of this fact can be found in the Radicals.

    Their third release, Suburban Daydream, rolls through all of the touchstone effects canonized some 25 years ago on Operation Ivy’s debut, Hectic EP. Sloppy, back-and-forth dual vocals—check! Blue collar gang-choruses—check! Popping bass noodling—check! Quick-paced punk with a hardcore edge—check!

    Some might worry that with so many similarities the results would be a derivative rehash of punk’s glory days. If three twenty-something blokes from north of Boston can so perfectly meld all that made late-’80s So-Cal punk so vital, I say bring it on!        (George Dow)

     

    TONY JONES & THE CRETIN 3
    Midnight Mass 
    5 tracks

    The first (and title) track is your standard hillbilly-schlock-metalcore ala the Cramps and, as such, is not half bad. “Christine” is reminiscent of “Bodies” by the Sex Pistols; “Cindy Was a Terrorist” evokes the Pistols and the Ramones; only the crazed and utterly original “Bobby’s Shed” displays an incoherently creepy grandeur.       (Francis DiMenno)

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  • LIVE REVIEWS | The Noise

    June 2012

     

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    LIVE REVIEWS

    THEA HOPKINS
    Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA        5/3/12

    A fine gig tonight at a great packed venue for long-time folk talent Thea Hopkins. She’s opening for the legendary Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, he of the more talk/less music mentality (that’s what octogenarians are apt to do—whoa!).  Immediately Thea and her tremendous sidekick, Andy Hollinger (guitar/ mandolin), set the audience upright with a short collection of great folk-rockin’ material. Her voice is crisp and clear with gorgeous sustained tones vested with both blues and country inflections. She graces us with an uptempo version of Linda and Teddy Thompson’s tune, “Do Your Best for Rock ’n’ Roll,” that gets the crowd boppin’, but it’s her original material that is the focal point. “Down By the Water,” “Hold On,” “Rows and Rows of Stars,” and “Lilac Sky,” the title tune from her upcoming new album, are standouts. Thea also proudly tells us that she has just won an American Songwriter contest and will be receiving a new Gibson guitar. Bravo and fait accompli.         (Harry C. Tuniese)

     

    TIM GEARAN
    CD Release Party,
    Atwood’s Tavern, Cambridge, MA 5/10/12

    Atwood’s is quickly becoming the hub of the Americana and roots scene in the Greater Boston area.  Tonight people have traveled near and far to see Boston’s own iconic singer/songwriter and his band.  The room is packed to the gills with fans friends and celebrities like Will Dailey, Christian McNeil, Steve Morse, Jesse Dee, Ed Valauskas, and Andrea Gillis from the local scene all paying tribute to the man. It’s all Tim Gearan tonight. And he deserves it. The man is a workhorse. He plays four to five nights a week in town and tonight is working on his second set of his second show today. His voice reminds me of a soulful Bob Dylan meeting a bluesy Randy Newman. The crowd in front of the stage is thick as Jello. There is more talent on stage tonight than some clubs see in a year.       (Kier Byrnes)

     

    ANDREA GILLIS BAND,
    THE BANDIT KINGS

    The Dog Bar, Gloucester, MA   4/20/12

    The double shot female vocals of the Bandit Kings commence soon after I find a seat near the stage. The band mixes up a good selection of covers (the Pretenders seem to be their favorite) and their own catchy songs.  “Find,” “Motorcycle,” “Shirt Off My Back,” and “Epic Hello” have all stuck in my head since the first time I heard them. Ann Marie has a great physical presence; her moves force you to watch her. Renee on keyboard adds the perfect vocal support—and sometimes it’s not clear who’s supporting who, as both these women have great pipes—and unison between the two is one the band’s signature sounds. Dan King is playing the rounded sound of a Washburn semi-hollow body tonight (instead of the Fender Telecaster I usually see him with)—he knows the right moments to pour on the heavy vibrato. Dennis Mongale is steady on the drums and adds to the songwriting with “Breath.” Joe Cardoza on bass knows when to lay back and when pump up the low end. They complete the set with the gals fevered up and letting loose with “Jerker.”

    Andrea Gillis’s super-talented band from Boston is up next and the folks of Gloucester don’t hold back their appreciation by dancing through the whole set. The band includes Charles Hanson (lead guitar), Melissa Gibbs (rhythm guitar), Bruce Coporal (drums) and Mark Panaski (bass). The family tree that those members branch from is impressive. They start with “Bring It on Home to Me” with bluesy guitar solos and Andrea getting all soulful at the end… then they’re right into a bebopper called “Tough Love.” The gals from Bandit Kings get on stage and add their background harmonies. Then there’s that big round bass riff driving “We Could Make Each Other Happy.” They go from country twang to ’60s soul, from straight rock ’n’ roll to Donna Summer’s “Hot Stuff” disco AND the old gospel tune “Hold On (Keep Your Hand on the Wheel),” and it all makes perfect sense with Andrea’s raspy vocals holding the common denominator. These musicians build a set the way a volcano cooks up before it explodes. The lava leaves the room full of sweat.                       (T Max)

     

    THE GROWNUP NOISE,
    BOW THAYER & THE PERFECT TRAINWRECK,
    GARVY J, MOTHERBOAR

    T.T. the Bear’s, Cambridge, MA   4/20/12
    Rock ’n’ Roll Rumble Finals

    I walk up Brookline Street to see a long line of people waiting to get into T.T.’s, which is testament to how many people are drawn to the annual Rock ’n’ Roll Rumble (or, North by Northeast, as I’ve been calling it over the past couple of weeks as I struggle to explain to my coworkers why I’ve been so tired without using the term “nine-night party”). Luckily I’m on the list and I jump the line to get inside the club, which is by far the most packed I’ve ever seen it.

    Motherboar has just started playing so I squeeze into the crowd, which I instantly regret as I fall victim to the beer showers which are apparently Motherboar’s signature move. The entire set is brutal, relentless, and testosterone-ridden. I have a feeling there are going to be a lot of headbanging-induced post-metal-show sore necks tomorrow. My favorite song of the set is “Camel Puncher,” which is precisely the ratio of straight-up metal to melody that makes me want to break things (not recommended).

    Motherboar is the front-runner of my Rumble trifecta (along with Garvy J and Parlour Bells), and by the end of their set, I’m pretty convinced they’re going to win, based on how thoroughly melted everyone’s faces appear to be. On my way to get a drink post-face-melt, I run into pretty much everyone who ever posted on the Noiseboard, as well as an ex-boyfriend or three. The Rumble really does bring everyone together, and that’s what I love about springtime at T.T.’s. It’s like a damn rock ’n’ roll reunion up in here.

    Garvy J starts playing, and their dreamy atmospheric pop-rock grooviness juxtaposed with the sheer brutality of Motherboar throws me for a loop at first. I must admit I am also slightly disoriented by all of the leather, but once I adjust to the drastic mood shift, I like what I’m hearing. It isn’t long before I find myself swaying along in a dreamlike state of arena rock bliss. These guys have a following, for sure—I see lots of people dancing up front who know every word.

    Next up is Bow Thayer & the Perfect Trainwreck, who play bluegrassy country rock, complete with banjos! The set is actually my least favorite of the evening, even though the musicianship is top notch (that drummer!) and the crowd seems really into what they’re hearing. The songs just seem to blur together, although that could also be the PBRs. It feels like just a few minutes have gone by when the Grownup Noise takes the stage in the Rumble’s traditional guest spot. They have a cellist! And that voice! They are so smooth and sweetly mellow! It’s definitely a shame that they had to drop out of the prelims.

    Shortly after, it is announced that Bow Thayer has taken the 2012 Rumble, and out of the corner of my eye I see champagne spraying everywhere while I’m tweeting the news. Accolades to Anngelle for organizing such an amazing scenebuilding event that exposed us all to so many bands we normally wouldn’t have seen—the Rumble is the only time you’ll see such varied types of music represented back to back. As I wait in line at the Hi-Fi afterwards with half the people that were just at T.T.’s, I find myself thinking that I can’t wait ’til it’s Rumble season again. Cheers, Boston. That was rad.         (Emily Diggins)

     

    GYPSY CARAVAN
    Belfast Free Range Festival, Belfast, ME 4/28/12

    We arrive at the whimsically named, Belfast Free Range Festival, in time to hear the first scheduled act, Gypsy Caravan. The little fishing village is milling with folks of all ages as we hurry to the Aarhus Art Gallery, one of eight venues where thirty-five bands will perform in a staggered schedule today.

    Gypsy Caravan is from mid-coast Maine. They perform manouche-style gypsy jazz, and also play in the tradition of modern jazz guitarists Robin Nolan, Frank Vignola, John Jorgenson and Bireli Lagrene. They are seasoned musicians—Dave Clarke is the lead guitarist, and composer of many of their tunes. His dad, Dan Clarke, plays rhythm guitar and Ezra Rugg is on the standup bass. Wayne Delano plays at least two different saxophones. The venue is filled to capacity with a small crowd standing at the back of the gallery. Many seem to be genuine jazz aficionados as there are numerous bursts of wild applause for the intricate, improvisational sax solos and all round unified musicality of the group. I was expecting more of a Django Reinhardt type set but they seem to reach into more of a modal sound that tend toward the abstract. They are excellent musicians, though, and in fine form, playing high tone music without smoke or alcohol in the surroundings, jumping right in with intensity and feeling before lunch!      (Kimmy Sophia Brown)

     

    ENGINE JUDY,
    HIRAM BULL,
    MICHAEL BLOOM,
    DAN McGINN

    Private Party, Revere, MA  5/5/12

    Initially assembled late in 2010, Engine Judy came together as a full-fledged band some three months ago. The band already has a slew of songs, of which, on this evening, we are treated to six. The full band is Tim Sprague on guitar, vocals and trumpet; Judith Ann Sprague on vocals; Phillipe Doucet on guitar, Maureen Relling-Booth on bass and vocals, and David Zimmerman on drums. The concert takes place on a dead-end street in a big backyard with a maypole newly wrapped in multicolored ribbons rising out of the tidy lawn from nearly dead center. The warm-up number, “Keep Away,” is a standard blues shuffle. (I mention to Michael Bloom that it would do nicely for a Viagra ad. Then I admit that this was a very cheap shot indeed.) The second number, “Cadillac,” reveals a semi-psychedelic undertow in the interaction between rhythm guitar and bass, with (infernal cliche) hot guitar licks interspersed along the top. It concludes with an incantatory, mildly doomy Doors-like vibe. (Michael Bloom observes that it would be even more amusing if it were sung in Swedish and called “Volvo.”)  “The Gathering” is a jazz-inflected, bass-heavy lament with muted trumpet solos. Next is “Long Ride,” an incantatory rock number with harmony vocals and tribal percussion. The sound in the outdoor venue is murky and diffused as the sun is not long from setting and the super moon is about to rise in the serially gathering fog—conditions which add an appropriate, almost suffocating sense of something ominous to come. The highlight of the evening is “I’m in Love With You,” which I peg as psychedelic garage punk from the opening bars. True to form, the song features circular bass riffs with fuzz guitar overlay, but with highly enunciated vocals rather than the incoherent babble one might expect from frantic Tejano-style psychedelia. Tim calls their final number a “fake jazz tune,” but the actual title is “Rocks They Crumble.” As the song begins, a red-haired woman with fingernails painted green begins to smile and nod. The tune features a trumpet riff on top of a springy guitar rhythm and torchy vocals. Overall, what Engine Judy lacks in heedless stripling energy they more than make up for with subtlety and feel.

    Hiram Bull, not seen on a stage of any kind for nearly ten years, shambles up and performs, a capella, in his wavering hillbilly tenor, a simple song: “We’re Just Like Everybody Else.” Before the feeble and scattered applause dies down, he then introduces Michael Bloom, who follows up with a lovely ballad sung over a regrettably

    under-miked acoustic guitar rhythm. A real surprise is the performance of an impromptu pickup band lead by Dan McGinn, aka Black Dog Brother, who performs two guitar numbers with an undefinably choppy rhythm sung with manic brio and admirably underscored by galumphing percussion.

    Earlier, some people had been petting their dog, a strangely complacent pit-bull and black lab mix “with a touch of greyhound.” I asked why the dog was so calm. “She’s a rock ’n’ roll dog,” was the reply. (A very handy dog to have around.) (Francis DiMenno)

     

    THE REACTIVE,
    THE BEACHCOMBOVERS,
    UNRULY

    Club Bohemia/Cantab Lounge, Cambridge, MA   5/5/12

    Too much! It’s like a hit-jukebox tonight at the Cantab. It’s also local legendary videographer Artie Freedman’s birthday. There’s dancin’ (whoa!), pop hits galore, fashionable people, and even exotic bellydancers! And it washes over me like a bountiful shot of tequila on a wonderful Cinco de Mayo evening. Aye-yi-yi-yi!

    We arrive as Unruly, a three-piece female power trio, finish up with Zeppelin and Hendrix tunes.

    Next up is Tommy White’s group, the Beachcombovers, a fun-filled tribute to surf music and instrumental beat combos (a la Dick Dale, Link Wray and the Surfaris). With their natty attire and well-chosen covers, they bring big smiles to the entire crowd, especially when three exotic dancers make an appearance. Both sultry and swirly, they weave through the room waving scarves and balancing swords on their torsos. Good fun stuff.

    Lastly, the debut of the Reactive, featuring ex-members of the Varmints (vocals/guitar Fred Victor and drummer Dan McCarthy) and long-ago Rumble champs, Pastiche (Ron Marinick on keys), and charming pop-rock stylist, Julie Sweeney (guitar/vocals). Very fine presentation and quite loud and strong—our ears are still hummin’. Great crowd response (real dancin’—whoa!!) and Mickey Bliss is even singin’ into his PA mic at the soundboard on some tunes! A good looking band with wonderful balance—front man charisma, cute side gal, and solid rhythm grunts groovin’ non-stop equals irresistible! Excellent selection of great tunes by the Stones, Rascals, Kinks (the masters!), with a few cool originals thrown in for good measure! A group to keep your eyes and ears and pulse reactin’—shake some action, indeed!             (Harry C. Tuniese)

     

    DUKE LEVINE BAND 
    Atwood’s Tavern, Cambridge, MA 3/20/12

    A bunch of friends and I hold a running club Tuesday nights at Atwood’s. We meet each Tuesday around 7:15 and set off for a run, returning to Atwood’s afterwards for cold beers and some tasty grub.  Tonight we get a special treat. Duke Levine, one of (if not the) best guitarists in Boston has set up camp on stage and we have front row seats to an amazing display of guitar virtuosity.  Unlike when Duke plays sideman to Jimmy Ryan, Dennis Brennan or the J. Geils Band where Duke rips into a lighting fast mind blowing solo, Duke’s solo stuff is more reserved. It’s still amazingly technical, but it’s a lot more smooth and mellow. There are a lot of ballads (a few too many some would say) but the crowd that is fortunate enough to see someone this talented in such an informal setting, doesn’t complain. Boston rock icon Peter Wolf jumps up on stage and does a few songs to close out the night and to top off what’s an amazing set.         (Kier Byrnes)

     

    THE SKINNY MILLIONAIRES,
    THE McGUNKS,
    THE OLD EDISON

    Providence Social Club, Providence, RI  5/8/12

    Every year I pick a show to go to on my birthday, this year I chose this one. Supersuckers headline, and I figured since I’ve seen most of these acts it should be a slam dunk. The club never really fills up tonight, but it is very barren as the Old Edison takes the stage. This is the first time I’ve seen them fully mic’d. To be honest, I prefer them unmic’d buried in the crowd, with everybody singing along. That isn’t happening, the music is still great, but I don’t feel the same connection that I’ve grown accustomed to when seeing them in Boston.

    The McGunks are fresh off their Motif’s Punk Act of the Year win and they’re looking to prove why they’re money. The club is now a little fuller, the stage has a few more faces but still it’s kind of a sad draw. We get the “all business” McGunks tonight. I prefer the drunken falling down shit show, but I’ll take what I’m given. Bob McGunk barely stops to talk between the songs. This banter is my favorite part of their shows usually. He does ask for everyone to tip the bartender so she could buy pants that fit. Overall, the McGunks set is a win, and they’re pretty money in my book.

    I’m excited that part of the Denver Boot is playing with the Skinny Millionaires tonight. The excitement ends as the music starts.  I’m not impressed at all. Yes, the energy is amazing. The singer is all over the stage—jumping off the drums, jumping in the air, swinging his guitar around—but all the energy in the world doesn’t make up for the blatant Violent Femmes rip off. The nasal vocals grind on my last nerve very quickly. I really can’t tell you what he is singing about, because where I’m standing the crowd noise is drowning him out. I don’t smoke but opt to go and catch some of the second hand just to escape for a bit. This by far wasn’t my best birthday show, but they can’t all be winners.              (Melvin O)

     

    BILL STAINES & BOB FRANKE
    Me & Thee, Marblehead, MA  5/4/12

    My favorite host at the Me & Thee coffeehouse, Phillip Murphy, gets the show rolling with his snappy fire exit information executed in a humorous rap style which includes a costume and personality change—he becomes his evil twin brother who wears a Yankees baseball cap. After the intro, Bill Staines and Bob Franke take the stage looking like two old gunslingers—with six-strings instead of six-shooters. Bill sports a cowboy hat, trimmed white beard and brown Beatle boots while Bob Franke wears a loose fitting brown suit. These guys comfortably start swapping songs back and forth with no set list. Comfortable is a key word here.

    The songs are true old-school folk songs that fit right in with the best traditional folk songs available. And the coffeehouse is filled with long-time fans who readily join in on the choruses. Even Bill’s rendition of Pearl Jam’s “If I Come to Need an Angel” gets equipped with a folk melody to make it suitable to sing at his daughter’s wedding.

    The between-song banter is wonderful with these two. When Bob twists around to switch to his 12-string he groans, and Bill says it’s the same sound he makes when he puts on his socks. Bill threatens his out-of-tune guitar with, “Remember the wood stove,” then follows up with, “It smartens it up all the time.” When Bill raises his capo one fret right before the start of a song, Bob quips, “A good friend warns you.” Later Bill preceeds one of his songs with, “Flying is the second best feeling—landing is the first.”

    Of the standout songs, I’ve noted Bob’s “Not Today”—an a cappella tune about an alcoholic staying away from a drink. Then there’s Bill’s theme song for keeping kids off drugs (“Tomorrow”). And the smugly humorous song about Bob’s dog Snowy, “Good Dog,” is my favorite. The night continues the series of well-written songs and high quality performances that I’ve come to expect out of all the shows at Me & Thee.    (T Max)

     

    DOLLAR GENERAL
    Club Passim, Cambridge, MA        5/4/12

    Michael Chorney, an arranger-producer-guitarist from Lincoln, Vermont, was also the musical director/accompanist for Anais Mitchell’s Hadestown album & tour, creating a sympathetic backdrop of Americana/jazz/folk/pop/blues/minstrel music that broadened the  arrangements and presentation. At several performances, his musical ensemble often opened the show with his mild-mannered and uniquely involved material. He has now taken the next step and formed his own folk-jazz quartet to showcase this splendid mellifluous vision.

    The only caveat tonight is there is no available album for a CD release party—just a petite sampler EP. Michael explains he’s been so fussy with final mixes that the project just couldn’t be rushed to accommodate the gig. But folks, from the material presented, this will be a masterful collection from some extraordinarily talented performers. His group, Dollar General, featuring Asa Brosius on pedal steel and Dobro, Rob Morse on acoustic bass, and Gaza Carr on drums, is so effectively tuned into his music, it takes my breath away. I hear traces of John Martyn, Tim Buckley, Peter Blegvad, Fred Frith, and Michael Hedges. With Mr. Chorney’s laid-back vocal fluency and dextrous use of both acoustic and prepared guitar (he’s developed a system of manipulating the strings with metal strips that can alter the tone from that of an African kora to Javanese Gamelan), this is special and great stuff, indeed! Check ’em out whenever they make a return visit to Boston—positively recommended!   (Harry C. Tuniese)

     

    METEORA
    Belfast Free Range Festival, Belfast, ME  4/28/12

    We stay in the Aarhus Gallery because one of my favorite Maine folk trios, Meteora, is up next. The gallery is packed to the door. They welcome us warmly. As an aside, Will Brown and Kat Logan both contributed to the 2009 Grammy nominated folk album, Singing Through the Hard Times—A Tribute to Utah Phillips. Jim Loney is from an R&B and delta blues background and has an elegant tenor voice. He did me in with a solo of “O Come Emmanuel” at a Christmas concert back in December.

    Meteora’s three-part harmony gives me goosebumps. Will cradles his teardrop shaped 12-string guitar like a baby and his voice is rich and sweet. If I had to classify Kat’s voice it would be in the Judy Collins camp. She has a tonal quality that brings to mind cool water from a pristine forest. We hear an array of musical flavors from blues and bluegrass, Celtic and English folksongs, a few originals and even a couple of Latino tunes. Folk singer Ann Dodson is present and joins them on stage for a few songs. I would happily drive two hours to hear them again. Their set is over too soon. The audience is blissed out. Me too.            (Kimmy Sophia Brown)

     

    HOOKERCLOPS,
    LITTLE WAR TWINS,
    FAUX OX,
    GOODNIGHT MOON

    Church, Boston, MA   5/2/12

    I’m late. Traffic’s brutal. Kenmore Square is packed with rowdy Sox fans heading to Fenway. I deftly maneuver my way through the crowd as the cry of ticket-scalpers rings out in the cool night air. I finally make it to Church with just enough time to catch the tail-end of Goodnight Moon’s set. A buncha young’uns, these guys—black X’s sharpied on each of their wrists. Their music smacks of pop-punk—sentimental and bubblegummy, with a dash of distorted grit and oomph. Not too shabby.

    After them comes power-trio Faux Ox. There’s no bassist—just two guitars and a drummer, but their sound isn’t lacking in low-end bombast. Not in the least. Their tunes, for the most part, radiate drone-heavy drop-D riffing through cranked amps. The lead-guitarist shoegazes his way through exotic Eastern-tinged melodies drenched in a variety of spacy effects. The drummer blasts tom-heavy battle-drum rhythms while the singer chomps on his guitar and sings in a twisted Cramps-like staccato style. Think “Kashmir” meets White Stripes. Dark and dreary, this post-punk outfit is right up my alley.

    Third on the bill are Little War Twins, who provide a nice change of pace, substituting thunderous volume with subtlety, positivity, and intricacy. Their manic pixie dream girl vocalist, in her summer-dress and pink bandana, strums gently on her acoustic guitar and sings flower-power songs with her smoky voice. To her right, a lead-guitarist lookin’ like Duane Allman reborn, finger-picks delicately at his Strat, emitting a mind-boggling array of tonal colors—from eerie UFO sounds to whammy-barred chimes to sparkling glissandi. To her left, a stunning violinist warbles like a songbird on her violin, ebbing and flowing between climactic peaks of fierce fiddle-sawing and startling pizzicato breakdowns. The drummer’s less-is-more style and outside-the-box approach—using the stands themselves for percussion, scraping drumsticks across the cymbal-edges to make a theramin-like squeal, etc.—gives the lushly-layered songs just what they need.

    Rowdy rock ’n’ rollers HookerClops close out the night. A tough slot, closing on a Wednesday night, but these guys do it with such unrestrained intensity and boundless aplomb that you’d think it was a Friday night at the Rat. Their music is juiced-up on distorted guitar machismo, punk-rock swagger, and cheap beer. The lead-singer (lookin’ a like a punk-rock Colonel Sanders with his white suit) strums a cherry-red Bo Diddley guitar, while the bassist (with his philosopher’s beard) cavorts across the stage and the mustachioed lead-guitarist wrenches twangy leads from his hollow-body. Propelling it all is the wild drummer’s boisterous backbeats and frenetic fills. They plow through a barrage of brief but driving tunes full of delightfully absurdist lyrics and rallying-cry choruses.  (Will Barry)


    ATLANTIC THRILLS,
    THE ROACHES,
    GANGBANG GORDON

    PA’s Lounge, Somerville, MA   4/29/12

    Gangbang Gordon is easily one of the most bizarre rock acts I have come across in the past few years.  GG is a one man band: vocals, guitar, drum machine. Tonight, his appearance is as equally striking as his outsider, noisy-garage driven music.  He hops on stage wearing a poorly supported, blonde hair wig and an old, beat up Corona hat.  GG’s set is roughly ten minutes long and consists of him jumping into the small crowd with little to no preservation for himself or the attendees; at one point he even knocks me on the head with his guitar.  Towards the end of the performance, the audience stares blankly, unsure whether it is the end or if there is more to come.  GG assures us, “NO ENCORE!”  Of course, it is good to note that this is in fact his debut performance, so for that I will say, congratulations, young man!

    The next band, the Roaches, continue the garage rock tradition that Gangbang Gordon begins.  This time, however, it is from the total opposite side of the spectrum.  Being Berklee College of Music students, the Roaches are excellent musicians and deliver a knock out set.  Like GG, they are highly energetic, but they play much faster and with extreme precision. I note an undeniable Oblivians influence.  Like Oblivians, they take the blues and pump it up with fierce, loud punk rock. They have a tight sound, the guitars are thick, the drums are pounded with incredible force, and the vocals are shouted.  The Roaches hit me like a tornado and their half hour set never runs its course.  I have been meaning to see them for over a year now, so this is a real treat.  I recommend the band to anyone in interested in perhaps more sophisticated garage rock.

    The headliners tonight are the Atlantic Thrills, a local favorite of mine hailing from Providence, Rhode Island.  When you see the Thrills it is always a party! They conclude our evening of fun filled garage rock. The group is not as musically inclined as the Roaches, but much more experienced than Gangbang Gordon,  so it is the perfect middle ground: loose rock ’n’ roll meets admirable musical chops. The band is always excited to play and the crowd eats it up.  When I look around I notice that there is only a handful of people in attendance, but honestly it makes no difference.  The crowd, for the most part, is either wildly dancing or moshing, or both. It turns into one of the most enjoyable rock experiences of my life.  Their finale is an unexpected and amazing cover of the  ’60s, Peruvian garage band, Los Saicos’s “Demolicion,” which sends me into a frenzy.    (Chris DeCarlo)

     

    WE OWN LAND,
    WHITE DYNOMITE

    Majestic Liner Yacht, Newport, RI and Atlantic Ocean 5/12/12

    I’ve been on a few booze cruises on the ferry in New Bedford in my life, but the cover bands were always an afterthought. On this yacht, or ferry, or spaceship, or whatever I’m on, I’m finally going to hear something good. Allow me to correct myself. With White Dynomite, I’m going to see something great. With the bassist of Roadsaw, you know these guys are not messing around, white suits or not. Heavy rock, not metal tinged with classic and southern rock influences like Black Oak Arkansas, Dust, Kyuss, Monster Magnet, and Glucifer. The boat was rocking and people were getting hammered, some of them in the bands, so I was a bit concerned for the safety of the passengers, but I think we all made it back safe. It was different, for me at least, to see some great bands on a big as boat cruising under the stars and the Newport Bridge. I caught a little of White Dynomite at the Pour Farm Tavern in New Beige a couple of weeks ago, but this is the first whole set I’ve seen. Damn, Gina, these guys are great.

    We Own Land is a little less Cactus and a lot more Motorhead. These Newport natives do not fit the image many have of their town as they tried to take down the ship to the bottom of the sea. With energetic drumming, a dynamic frontman and relentless solos, We Own Land are bringing back punk influenced hard rock to Newport, and its about time. This three hour cruise was over way too soon, but at least I am with the movie star and Mary Ann. I guess that makes me the Professor.        (Eric Baylies)

     

    We get a lot of calls and emails from bands requesting coverage of their shows. Please be advised that we do not assigned live reviews. 

     

     

     

     

     

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  • CD Reviews | The Noise

    September 2012

     

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    CD Reviews

    THE MICHAEL J. EPSTEIN MEMORIAL LIBRARY
    Faith In Free

    3 tracks

    It’s fitting that this EP is one song broken into three movements because its wide breadth and artistic imagery evoke classical music as much as pop.  In less capable or more austere hands, this could be a disaster, but Epstein and crew pull it off without a hitch.  The first movement, featuring an array of instruments and voices, has a spooky, haunting vibe, and its use of repetition puts the listener in a pleasantly hypnotic state.  The second movement is a gypsy waltz that recalls DeVotchKa or Firewater, and its shifting tempos amplify its tensions.  The third movement, which lyrically recalls the first, goes down the smoothest, with the lyric “I’m not afraid of the dark” bringing the song’s soothing nature to the forefront.  There’s a lot packed into this piece, requiring the listener to spend some time with it to fully discover its charms.  It’s time well worth spending.        (Kevin Finn)

     

    RICK BERLIN w/ THE NICKEL & DIME BAND
    Whitehaus Family Records
    Always on Insane 

    14 tracks

    Not all the melodies here are certified knockouts bound to set you to rocking back on your heels, but a jolly manifesto like the cover of “(I’m a) Slut” is an ingenious opening salvo, and a tuneful number like “Hilary (Galway Girl)” shows to gratifying effect lead vocalist/writer Rick Berlin’s patented sense of high style. The Nickel & Dime Band is a talented crew who contribute a hyper-competent garage rock template, as well as a user-friendly vibe replete with a soulful but restrained horn section. Throughout Berlin’s latest batch of introspective song scenarios, you can hear resonances of the Rolling Stones, the Who, and the Buzzcocks. More pleasing still are the vocal nuances Berlin brings to many of these tunes, notably the delightfully wacky “Karaoke.” “7 Foot Woman” is a similarly amusing novelty; “I Love You in the Rain” is a quieter ’70s-era jazz pop confection driven by piano and saxophone and a bravura vocal performance,  and “As Long As it Takes” is a nuanced love song with a delicate bone-china melody. “Summer Roof” has touches of ska and Northern soul and is perhaps the most appealing song on the collection.  Unfortunately, there are more than a few misfires. The genre-clowning “Kitchy” seems more self-indulgent than whimsical and strikes me as a poor man’s Springsteen circa “Candy’s Room”–a song which seems epic to some, but comes a cross as merely schmaltzy to the less susceptible. I have a similar problem with songs like “Salut” and, especially, “I’m Jes’  Sayin’,” which features somewhat ludicrous vocals over a low-key arrangement. “Party Comin’ Up the Stairs” is an overlong and somewhat muddled mess—Gary “U.S.” Bonds it’s not. The Berlin oldie, “Beer Belly,” seems like a misguided attempt at musical slapstick ala Lou Reed’s “Disco Mystic.”   And, as an ostensibly inspirational song,  the album closer, “All in This Together” comes across as less than subtle, verging on strident. Some artists latch onto a style and hone it until it can no longer be improved, and eventually reach a point of diminishing returns and commence to spinning their wheels, Other, arguably superior artists, continue to attempt stylistic progressions and constant innovations. Throughout his long and storied career, Berlin has shown both these qualities; his best compositions here fall squarely in the latter camp.  (Francis DiMenno)

     

    SANS NOMENCLATURE      
    Tea & Kittens

    4 tracks

    Sans Nomenclature’s 4-track, Tea & Kittens, sounds a bit like an early Mistfits record, if Glenn Danzig had been traded out for Government Issue’s John Stabb. The band disguises their peppy tempos and classic influences beneath a veneer of crunchy distortion in much the same way the aforementioned Misfits did. What’s unfortunate is that Sans Nomenclature suffers from the same muddy production that plagued the Misfits, rendering this EP good for little more than getting a taste of a band that may have a very bright future. I, for one, hope that their next release enables them to showcase the quality music that they are capable of.    (George Dow)

     

    THE BENEDICTIONS
    American Wasteland

    10 tracks

    From a repetitive opening three-chord rock track that sounds like a bunch of your pals chanting drunkenly over and over, to the second three-chord track that sounds like a bunch of your pals chanting drunkenly over and over…there’s a bit of charisma, kitsch, and panache here.  For a band comparison, I would have to say I hear a 2012 Rolling Stones, though not getting to the chorus.  It’s the sound of safety, something none of us really need in this vile world of 2012.  In music we want danger, not security.  We want risk, not safety; we want entropy, not stability.  I can see the fun in blasting out a bunch of rock and stroll songs, perhaps if anything else for party’s sake, but it doesn’t move the soul.  Then again, my soul is under question and akin to many of the Boston harbor tunnels in terms of construction and leakage.  So take it with a grain of salt, rock on, and more power to you.     (Mike Loce)

     

    THE LIGHTS OUT
    On Fire

    8 tracks

    With their latest release, the Lights Out continue to do what they do best. And what, you may ask, does this band do best? They play their ’roid-raging brand of rock and they play it loud. It’s the type of rock that’s souped-up on muscular basslines, steady backbeats, and chunky blues-rock guitar riffs. It’s driven by charismatic vocals that range from guttural growls to fierce falsettos and bolstered with richly-layered spot-on vocal harmonies. Though this album lives on a steady diet of red meat, non-light beer, and unfiltered cigarettes, it’s not mindless or shallow jock-rock by any means. It’s got depth and soul to match it’s gusto. “One Way To Die,” in particular, stands out. With it’s pulpy hard-boiled lyrics, minor-key twinges of Americana, epic build-ups and breakdowns, this tune sounds like it could be the title track of some long-lost Bond flick. While these guys may cut their teeth in the local club circuit, their style is clearly meant for the arena. Keep it comin’, boys. (Will Barry)

     

    NELSON BRAGG
    We Get What We Want          

    11 tracks

    “Dedicated to Brian Wilson… Thanks for the road trip,” singer, songwriter, percussionist, and all-around artist, Nelson Bragg, writes in the liner notes of We Get What We Want.  An individual best described as a melodic power-pop aficionado who has succeeded in crafting a dazzling sophomore record, Bragg has been a key fixture in Brian Wilson’s Band since 2003 and is now one of the musicians backing the Beach Boys.  It is particularly admirable to see Bragg take elements of his influences and inspirations, molding them to create something unique and pleasing to listeners of all generations.  For instance, the album’s opener, “You Could Believe,” keeps listeners on their toes as it shifts from a cappella harmonies evoking the treasured, multi-layered harmonies of the Beach Boys to a full-on sound reminiscent of the Byrds and the Beatles.  The ethereal “Steel Derrick 1979” is also worth noting, with its utilization of an acoustic guitar, beautiful guest vocals supplied by Evie Sands, and the trumpet work of Probyn Gregory, one of Bragg’s bandmates from Brian Wilson’s Band.  The record closes with “Everything I Want To Be,” a warm and welcoming tune that is, essentially, a celebration of friendship.  It evokes summer nights spent around a campfire with compatriots, sharing anecdotes through spoken word and song.  Bragg’s vocal is especially intimate here, its accessibility blending nicely with the track’s theme.  We Get What We Want appears to be Bragg’s psychedelic love letter to the ’60s, so inspired is he by this timeless era.  (Julia R. DeStefano)

     

    BEN TAYLOR
    Sun Pedal Recordings
    Listening

    11 tracks

    This is a solid CD packed with great songs that touch on folk, pop, reggae and Americana and are all sung by Ben’s supremely soulful voice. Singer/songwriter Taylor sounds most like his father, James, withhis wit, skill as a songwriter, and by his expressive vocal delivery. But the music mix from song to song encompasses solo acoustic melodies to multi-layered vocal tracks which include backing vocalist sister Sally, and with fresh beats. This is where the main differences lie; the songs are up-to-date and current and have an urgency and intimacy that separate them from being classic rock or anything else. The songs I really enjoy are “Oh Brother,” “Dirty,” and “You Could Be Mine”; there is a lot to like on this project. “Giulia” and “Worlds Are Made Of Paper” are uptempo/folk/pop tunes that showcase Taylor’s talents tremendously, too. I also dig the funky folk of “Vespa’s Song,” the reggae influences of “America,” and the haunting Americana closing ballad, “Next Time Around.” His father’s folk is most evident in the opener, “Listening,” “Not Alone,” and “Burning Bridges.” Listen long and listen good: this is a great CD that makes me hungry for more.     (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    THE PANDEMICS
    Lonely Like the Sun

    11 tracks

    For those who want their rock without any modifiers like indie, punk, classic, etc., I give to you the Pandemics, who play what just might be the most straightforward rock you’re likely to hear these days. But please don’t mistake straightforward for boring or thoughtless.  This is intelligent, well-played and well-recorded music.  The songs have a lot of punch to them, but not at the expense of hooks, and the musicians are given enough room to show their skills without being given enough room to show off.  Most importantly, it got my wife humming along, and she probably has higher standards than anyone reading this right now.  If there is a drawback, it’s that the tempo stays mostly the same throughout, which can lead to occasional bouts of monotony, but is this really the type of band that you want toning things down and doing a ballad? I didn’t think so. (Kevin Finn)

     

    THE STRANGE AVENUES
    Bacchanalia

    6 tracks

    Part chain-smokin’ guitar-slingin’ hard-rock, part busted-knuckle punk, part raunchy gutbucket blues—Christ, I’ve never heard an identity crisis sound this damn good. They’ve got a dark brackish guitar-heavy sound that’s dragged along kicking and screaming by the driving drumbeats and skulking basslines. The two vocalists duke it out song to song, one with his husky smoke-dried baritone, the other with his glass-eating punk-rock shriek. Hell, even the guitars have five-o’clock shadow. The tracks are, for the most part, high-energy hook-laden song-explosions fulla Fender-bending guitar solos and smeared with punk-rock sneer, but it’s those WTF moments I get listening to tracks like “Queen of Hearts,” a slow-burning drop-D blues that’s darker than a Mississippi Delta barroom at midnight—it’s those moments that really get me. I’m not sure if I should give these guys a round of applause or a chest-bump.       (Will Barry)

     

    PETER BALDRACHI
    Prodigal Son Records
    Tomorrow Never Knows 

    11 tracks

    Okay, where has Peter Baldrachi been hiding that I haven’t heard of him? I’m sure he hasn’t been hiding, I just missed him somewhere in this sphere of Boston music but I’m glad to have found him now! Due to circumstances unfortunately beyond my control, I got quite behind in my CD reviews and since this was submitted, I believe he has released another, but this still very much deserves a review. Tomorrow Never Knows features a refreshing blast of commercial pop rock tunes; Peter’s music is upbeat with a perfect blend of a Brit-pop / American alt rock feel with decided dashes of twang. I absolutely adore it. Accessible, catchy, and happy—we all need music with a goodtime spirit and Peter’s got it—not to mention that the production is outstanding. It’s a very rare and special thing to love every track of a CD but I can honestly say with Tomorrow Never Knows that I did. Can’t wait to hear the next!      (Debbie Catalano)

     

    GOLDEN BLOOM/
    THE MICHAEL J. EPSTEIN MEMORIAL LIBRARY

    Swap Meet

    4 tracks

    Epstein et al. perform two by Golden Bloom, and vice versa. Fun ensues, and both ensembles are covered with glory. Golden Bloom’s rendition of the heroic and anthemic “Amylee” is brilliantly understated and polishes that gem-like song to a high gleam, while their rendition of the sardonic “Civil Engineering” is creditably lighthearted and upbeat.  Better still, TMJEML’s version of “Theme from an Adventure at Sea” is comically atmospheric in an ineffably appealing fashion reminiscent of the best of post-punk era keyboard synth. Best of all, their version of Golden Horde’s “You Go On (and On)” is an unexpectedly  touching melodic lament. Both bands acquit themselves spectacularly here. A stellar release.                     (Francis DiMenno)

     

    MARK CUTLER  
    75orLess Records
    Sweet Pain

    13 tracks

    I can see this dude playing at some little roadside bar, and I can see myself hanging around for his set, especially if he plays “Heart of Stone,” which just won’t get out of my head (and I’m okay with that). This is folky, rootsy rock ’n’ roll with a very lived-in feel, and while the songs could benefit from more variation in tempo, there’s enough song-to-song variation in mood and structure to keep the listener engaged.  The record’s biggest strength is Cutler’s charismatic voice, which falls somewhere between Petty and Dylan; it might not technically be the strongest, but it’s quite adept at conveying emotion.  This is a solid effort.         (Kevin Finn)

     

    BILLY SHAKE
    Crashing Down

    11 tracks

    It’s interesting how Billy Shake blends Americana rock with garage and hard rock elements. In tracks like “Down The Road,” heavy guitar riffs complement the jangly rhythms. It’s a standard roots vibe flavored with a hard edge. Lead vocalist George Simpson’s vocals fit the genre—they’re a bit flat but the Bob Dylan/Mark Knopfler-ish vocal style is spiced with shades of David Bowie, creating an original voice for George and the band. Am I over the moon with Crashing Down? Not exactly and I can’t pinpoint why—it’s done well and the musicianship is top-notch—especially the guitar-playing! Not sure whom I should credit the outstanding guitaring to as both Chris Bernard and Ken Sparrow are listed as guitarists on the CD (on their site Dan DelSignore is listed as a guitarist) but I’d say that’s the standout of this entire CD. Also a big plus for the band is the fact that Brian Maes co-wrote a couple of the tracks—nice to have his touch on those. Overall it’s a very good job.                    (Debbie Catalano)

     

    NEW PILOT
    Looser

    8 tracks

    This versatile collection features a blues-based shuffle  boogie, (“Little Bird”), a rock song with touches of reggae (“Stuttering”), and some well-wrought Americana (“The Waiting Is Over”).  “When I Go to See You” is a memorably heartfelt ballad, and the raga-rock of “A Queen’s Gambit Declined” is commendably ambitious. All of these songs have an appealing, laid-back ambiance; all are competently arranged and meticulously executed, and yet there seems little that is original or remarkable in the band’s approach, and so the overall result is one of pleasantly executed craftsmanship—no small thing, but not yet the stuff of which legends are made.      (Francis DiMenno)

     

    FRAN REAGAN
    Heard, Not Seen

    10 tracks

    This CD clocks in at about 57 minutes, which is at least an hour longer than it needs to be.  While listening to it, my cat actually jumped on the CD player and turned it off.  When I turned it back on, he then tried to change it to the radio.  Smart dude.  To be fair, Reagan has a very lovely baritone, both warm and friendly, but the problem is the material.  The music is often extremely overdramatic despite its mellow vibe, and the lyrics often aim for a sense of inspiration that is beyond Reagan’s grasp.  At times, the music feels like it should be playing over the closing credits of a Disney movie.  Other times, it feels like it should be playing over the boring parts of fantasy movies where the characters are hanging out discussing love instead of killing orcs and shit.  That said, I’m probably not the target audience here.  All listening to this CD made me want to do is turn on Seinfeld re-runs and listen to punk rock records, so that I could reconnect with my sarcastic, bleak self.   (Kevin Finn)

     

    BLISS
    Seconds in a Minute               

    12 tracks

    Never have there been statements truer or more applicable to a band than the old adages, “Find your bliss” and “Follow your bliss.”  Three Durham, New Hampshire-based women, Kristan Bishop, Cathy O’Brien, and Karen Larson, are doing just that through a combination of originals and covers using acoustic guitars, a violin, a keyboard, and beautiful soul-stirring harmonies.  The result is a blend of the folk, rock, and pop genres in the realm of Emily Grogan and Linda Viens’ Angeline.  However, while the innovative qualities embodied within Angeline serve to captivate and hold listeners’ attention, the Bliss ladies become repetitive.  For instance, the disc opens with “Shine On,” which would be a lovely tune except for the fact that it sounds similar to several other tracks, namely, “Seconds in a Minute,” “Better Days,” and “Love, Love.”  Despite this, the girls’ cover of Green Day’s “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)” is worth noting with its harmonies that are both gorgeous and haunting, and clean guitar work.  Overall, Seconds in a Minute comes across as one long song as opposed to a twelve-track album.  Variation in instrumentation and in vocal dynamics would result in something that leaves more of an impression on listeners.        (Julia R. DeStefano)

     

    A BIT MUCH
    Labor Day 2011
    2 tracks

    I like the band’s name and their sense of humor (i.e., “a bit Much is rock ’n’ roll’s mid-life crisis”). I’m not sure, however, whether their ’80s vibe is intentional—in particular the guitar riffs. The classic rock thing they have going on jumbles up amongst a non-descript vibe. In other words, they’re a bit all over the place but I get the feeling they relish in this. The first tune is eight-and-a-half minutes—too long for my taste. Track two is another eight-minute song and a schizophrenic mash of sounds. But I think I hear some strings mixed in—a nice touch amongst the chaos. If anything, they possess self-awareness and a spirit of enjoyment.       (Debbie Catalano)

     

    THE FEW
    Live at WMFO                           

    3 tracks

    Up until recently I had never heard of this rock band the Few, which is weird because I usually know my rock around Boston.  This live set at WMFO studios begins with the thunderous rocking track “Got to Try.”  It is a solid start and reminds me of the Stooges.  Perhaps not as gritty or as vile, but it certainly has a similar style and attitude.  You can tell from this first track that the Few are ready to rock.  It is a bit too crisp and clean for my tastes, but I think most will find it pleasing to their ears.  It is definitely a song one can bang their head to.  “Got to Try” is filled with sing-along harmonies, steady drum beats, and brief guitar solos.  The next track, “Nowhere to Run,” keeps up the same ode to classic rock sound as its predecessor.  This song, however, is a bit slower, but nonetheless maintains the same energy. The final song, “Push,” is perhaps the band’s catchiest on this release.  With this track we hear Jaime MacKenzie on lead vocals; you can tell her singing truly reflects the attitude and lyrics she is delivering  in the song.  She’s got some powerful pipes and I hear a little bit of Robert Plant in her voice.  Overall, this brand of rock  is not exactly what I am looking for in music as it is a bit too conventional for my standards, but at the same time the band clearly has some strong songs under their belt and with this in studio performance they prove to be the rocking force they claim to be.             (Chris DeCarlo)

     

    AYLA BROWN
    Ambient Entertainment
    Ayla Brown

    9 tracks

    The first thing I notice is the stunning vocals: this young lady sure can sing. Check out “Beat By A Girl” and you’ll see what I mean. The second thing I notice is that Ayla can go from straight-ahead Americana to Americana with a hard rock edge quite smoothly, which isn’t necessarily easy. And I can hear the folk influences too. Listen to the closer, “Can’t Make Up My Mind,” with its nice piano opening and it almost sounds like a Carole King melody. I really dig “Goodbye for Good” and “Don’t Mess This Up” for their country rock ’n’ roll feel and I love Brown’s steely vocal delivery in “Playin’ With Fire,” where she sings, “Don’t mess with me!” I also like the pedal steel present in many of the songs that give the whole thing a real Nashville sound. She writes most of the music, and her tight band never gets in the way of her vocal delivery either; which definitely adds to the overall audial appeal. This is good stuff so check it out now.    (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    THE NEW LOWS                
    Rock and Roll Limbo

    13 tracks

    A little bit punk. A little bit bar-band. A little bit honky-tonk. Sound confusing? Well, it is. And that’s not all either. The New Lows mix in classic ’80s and indie rock influences to boot.

    Rock and Roll Limbo is a good record but very difficult to pin down, bouncing from one genre to another, each track utterly disregarding the previous. The genre-jumping is manageable, mostly because the New Lows play each with skill. The exception comes about halfway through, with “I’m Only Sayin,” an embarrassing attempt at white-boy rap. My personal favorite is the straightforward guitar rock of “Lost In The Maze”

    Aside from the hip-hop misstep, the New Lows deliver an entertaining debut.             (George Dow)

     

    PLUMERAI
    Your Guilty Prize                      

    9 tracks

    It is difficult to pinpoint the exact feelings experienced when listening to Plumerai’s fourth studio release, something best described as a melancholic, supernatural trip blending folk, rock, punk, and industrial genres.  Frontwoman Elizabeth Ezell is the embodiment of intriguing sultriness; her heartbreaking breathy voice comparable to the likes of PJ Harvey and Carina Round, and is capable of leaving a lasting impression upon listeners.  The result is a sophisticated emotional record full of depth and indicative of the band’s collective growth.  Take the foreboding tone of the opener, “Strike,” and compare it with its polar opposite,  “Spinning Landscape,” a song that appears to effortlessly float through the air and utilizes elements that make it dizzying to the ear, exactly as its title would suggest.  “Empty Graves” also takes on this kind of ethereal quality and is reminiscent of the Cure’s vast catalogue.  Overall, the effort is bold in its production, taking risks so as to keep listeners guessing, which makes the work commendable in its own right.  However, I cannot shake the feeling that I have heard something very similar to this before.  Think the sweeping and pop-oriented dreamlike state that Mazzy Star’s work manages to evoke.  If you put both bands side by side, Plumerai tends to assume the role of little sister and suddenly, their work no longer appears so innovative.  But it is enjoyable, nevertheless.      (Julia R. DeStefano)

     

    PACO
    You Are My Life

    16 tracks plus 1 music video

    Paco (Frank Stewart) is a throwback to old-school big band vocalists. He sites his musical heroes as Josh Groban, Andrea Bocelli, Michael Crawford, and Ronan Tynan, but he also mentions Paul Anka, Neil Sadaka, and Barry Manilow for artists that I’m more familiar with. This musical project is based on love of family and friends and Paco’s heart leads the way. The show rolls out with the old standard, “You’re Nobody Till Somebody Loves You” that starts like a piano bar performance and ends with the whole orchestra joining in with Paco’s exuberant vocal crescendo—complete with the trumpets squealing. He picks great classics (“Georgia On My Mind,” “How Can You Mend A Broken Heart,” “All of Me”) and becomes the lovable manly ringleader. It appears like Paco would like to make his fans an extension of his family. He’s got the love vibe is leading the way.  ( T Max)

     

    SHARKS COME CRUISIN
    Hardtack EP

    4 tracks

    These are a couple of age-old songs of the high seas that are given the punk-rock treatment. The time-worn waterlogged melodies are retrofitted with cranked-up electric guitars, a drum kit, screamed gang vocals, and, of course, the lead singer’s gravelly voice. It makes me timbers shiver, or whatever. There’s a nice array of traditional instrumentation mixed in, including banjo and fiddle, which help to preserve the traditional nature of these chanteys. All in all, it’s a good balance between old-world and new-world. The punk aspects give these tunes a shot in the arm without overpowering their humbler roots. Of course, for this band, there’s no escaping comparisons to the Dropkick Murphys, but let’s face it, this is a comparison they’ve certainly earned.           (Will Barry)

     

    DIDN’T PLANET
    We’re Goin’ Nowhere

    14 tracks

    On the first track I thought they were doing a tribute to the Fat Albert theme song… how many people know about Fat Albert these days?  Hmm, maybe a lot, maybe we’re all just older and don’t talk about it as much.  Maybe that was the idea, keying in on a tune that we over-35 folk would say, “Hey man, it’s our chance to be retro and nostalgic and pretend we loved the good old days!”  Frank Zappa was right; nostalgia is consuming itself in ever-shrinking cycles, faster and faster. I liked the mood. The second tune was a good Green Day-on-beta-blocker composition, with tight production, snappy chord hooks, and vocal assuredness.  The thing that separates this album from any other fare of the same genre is a sense of definite humor in the segue and sequence of songs: vocal bits of randomness such as answering machine messages, unedited studio chatter and vocal commentary about the topics at hand hold the story together—the story of being in a band.             (Mike Loce)

     

    TED HU
    The Path to War

    12 tracks

    These heartfelt keyboard–based art songs are often filled with attempts at epic grandeur. But “The Engineer”  hovers uncomfortably close to Queen-style excess, and purists might furthermore argue that certain of the vocal stylings are overly dramatic, as on “Man” and “Anchored.” Such genuine passion can often verge into the realm of the overwrought.  However, more restrained and intricately structured numbers such as “Orange Revolution” showcase Hu’s keyboard artistry to better effect, and there are some stunningly lovely and artistic instrumental passages here, as on “American Perfume” and the tuneful “American Lullaby.”        (Francis DiMenno)

     

    DAVID ARVEDON & THE PSYCHOPATHS
    Oink Records
    Lieutenant Salt’s Solitary Brains Organization Orchestra

    12 tracks

    I guess if you’re into Weird Al Yankovic’s hokey musical parodies, this album might be up your alley. But chances are, it still isn’t. Chances are you’ll find this watered-down parody of the classic-rock style with it’s poorly-sung lyrics, ham-fisted Beatles references, and grade-school humor just as unbearable as I do. I could go on, but I’d rather beat a dead horse. Literally.    (Will Barry)

     

    ONSLO               
    Understanding, Inc.
    A Taste of Purple

    7 tracks

    For their sixth CD, Onslo drop a 10-minute, bite-sized bomb of post-hardcore, prog-rock goodness while channeling equal parts King Crimson and Mars Volta. Most of the seven tracks clock in at two minutes or less, an amazing feat given the denseness of their songs.

    Onslo sticks to the formula that they’ve established over their previous EPs by jamming multi-part suites, time changes and instrumentals, and other bursts of genius into some of the shortest songs ever. The denseness factor is incredible.

    At little more than ten minutes total runtime the one drawback is that A Taste of Purple is only enough to give listeners a taste of Onslo.

    Download available on bandcamp.   (George Dow)

     

    VARIOUS ARTISTS
    Kinder Angst

    14 tracks

    Finally! A “kids” rock album that parents can really dig!

    Though it has been blessed by an appearance by the (god)mother of punk, Debbie “Blondie” Harry, much of this raucous rock collection sounds more like Avril Lavigne and her once-removed generation of disgruntled descendants. From the aggressive, alphabetic tour of the neighborhood near the legendary CBGB  (“Alphabet City”), to a creepy Screamin’ Jay Hawkins-y take on hide-and-seek (“Peek-A-Boo”), to an alternative aggro-imagination that poses Cinderella as the vindictive victor (“Let’s Play Pretend”), this album takes childhood’s most precious gems and chips away at them. Though some songs may work well as group rave-ups, Momma Harry’s ska-tinged suggestion to “Do It Yourself” offers a welcome respite from the frenetic pace and push of the rest of the album. Though faster, the upwardly-moving hoe-down, “Jump Jump,” is a country-fried bouncer that may require a helmet but is fun anyway, as is the Japanimated pop-popper-babbler “Bubble.” Other clever offerings include the goth-y glower of “Sourpuss” and the gloomy emo-ter “Today.” Far more knowing than many of its nu-hip childen’s fare (including those by co-creator Rachelle Garniez’s Boston-based buddy, Dan Zanes), Kinder Angst (birthed by Friggs fronter Palmyra Delran) encourages listeners to look at the source of their issues, as in the revealing (and somewhat finger-pointing)  “A.D.D.” When the trouble reaches a peak, a young Sid Vicious gets a “Big Time Out.” In the end, however, the album leaves listeners with a friendly reminder to “Be Kind to Your Parents.” After all, it notes, you might be them someday (perish the thought!).  (Matthew Robinson)

     

    THIS SCARLET MOURNING
    Spinning

    8 tracks

    This is an orgy of effects-swollen guitars, oscillating, flanging, phasing, you name it, coupled with an almost telepathic mind-meld between the melodic string-popping mantras of the bass and the thunderous rhythms of the drums. On top of this carries the  vibrato-heavy female vocalist, Rachel Drucker, with her ominous lyrical meanderings. There’s a touch of metal to the guitars and a post-grunge approach with the anthemic walls of distorted guitar djenting coming in on the choruses, but there’s absolutely no mistaking their obvious shoegaze style—each track a nebulous sculpture of guitar sounds, trance-inducing rhythms, and goth-tinged vocals that is given some semblance of form from the unsubtle, explosive refrains. This band will tug at your psyche, that’s for sure. And then, when those choruses hit, they’ll blow your mind. (Will Barry)

     

    OLD NEW ENGLAND WEATHER
    Knew Myths

    9 tracks

    Never judge a CD by its piece-mealed cover or even its description—something I was reminded of with Old New England Weather’s submission. I understand that, at the time it was submitted, they were in the process of putting together the actual CD, so this package included all the pieces and, in their materials, an invented genre of their music (love that!) “vanilla prog” and “headphones folk.” I’m not a prog-rock lover so I wasn’t sure what to expect and unfortunately got stuck on the word “prog” before listening, but I dug it—much more than I expected to; and I personally think headphones folk was the closer of the two made-up genres. This CD has an old-time folksy vibe that seamlessly melts into modern folk. It’s a bit drifty at times… kind of like lazily floating out on a river raft, while other times it diverts a bit into psychedelia. Nice use of the whistling banjo saw, trumpet, and trombone. Old New England Weather feels more like old-time New Orleans and a West Coast hippy state had a summer storm, but hey New England weather is unpredictable, isn’t it?    (Debbie Catalano)

     

    If you are a New England-based artist and would like the Noise to review your CD, send hard copies to T Max/ the Noise, PO Box 353, Gloucester, MA 01931, or send your links to tmax@thenoise-boston.com.

     

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