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    CDsWEB354MichaelJRoyMICHEAL J. ROY

    Eclectricity

    14 tracks

    Michael J. Roy is the long time guitar star and handsome fashionista of Boston and NYC bands Fox Pass and Tom Dickie & the Desires. The players here are Stephen Gilligan on bass and Lenny Shea, Jr. on drums of Stompers fame. Line up wise this is essentially Fox Pass sans Jon Macey. Roy is and has always been a sensitive, painterly guitar player who added color and emotion to the songs of the Desires and Fox Pass, as he does here on Electricity. His warm, soulful voice can cause even this reprobate’s heart to melt. It was always Roy who was chosen to sing the smoother, more melodic songs of Fox Pass. If it were the ’60s, I could envision Roy in a blue eyed soul outfit like The Rascals.  “Stop the Rain” kicks my ass. As does the Byrdsian jangle of “In A Well.” There’s not a dud here. Roy’s voice is heart-wrenching. He doesn’t pluck the heartstrings – he shreds them! Congrats to a fine artist and human being.     (Nancy Neon)

    Club Bohemia D-BannerShell

    REVEREND FREAKCHILD

    Treated and Released Records

    Hillbilly Zen-Punk Blues

    10 tracks

    Swampy, with appropriately muddy production; the first song, “All I Got Is Now,” comes lackadaisically oozing out at us with laconic, homely wisdom: “If you can find a way/ To want what you get/ Hmm, I’ll tell you Buddy,/ That’s the best thing yet.” The Instrumental piece “Angel$ of Mercy” is a soothing, introspective piece for resonator guitar, with harmonica by the super-talented Hugh Pool. The brain-melting cover of Rev. Gary Davis’ “It’s Gonna Be Alright” is reverential, but not slavishly so–not to mention kind of trippy. “Lullaby” is another crystal-clear instrumental with meditative undertones. The delicate picking and atmosphere of calm is entrancing. The guitar line on “Moonlight Messages” is like something out of John Fahey, albeit with vocals, percussion, and flute (ably played by John Ragusa). “She Wants My Name” reverts back to gutbucket blues – the low-down dirty kind which wouldn’t be out of place in any whiskey-soaked roadhouse in the U.S.A. “Soul Transforming Realization” has an anthemic guitar line which explodes into percussion and dirty blues, then resumes its psychedelicized ascent. We hear some more spectacularly grimy blues on the raging “Tears of Fire.” Finishing off a fine collection is a growly version of a song made popular by Mississippi Fred McDowell and R.L. Burnside, “Wish I Was in Heaven Sitting Down” – a song which lesser mortals wouldn’t even attempt. Overall, this is one of the best modern blues albums I’ve heard in years. Recommended.  (Francis DiMenno)

    BONNIE GORDON

    Lowbudget Records

    This Modern World

    10 tracks

    When Bonnie Gordon released her debut album almost six years ago, she was a fresh-faced, lovelorn tunesmith of much potential. She got some excellent reviews, did a few gigs, and then disappeared. Not a promising career move. My suspicion is that heartache rules her destiny and the proof is here on her new album. With her fragile voice, wound-up verbal delicacy, and gentle piano playing, she paints song after song with vibrant images of failed, missed, and past romance. Obviously, she’s still looking for her dreamboat. There is something compelling and utterly personal, unsentimental, and somehow affectionate in the details she engages. In the title tune, she admits “I may be old fashioned/ A casualty of a kind/ But I’ll go round the world/ For a modern love to find.” Displaying a sadness tempered by optimism and a despair rescued by innocence and experience, she is a modern adult caught in a major paradox called the dating game. Two of my favorie songs are the bluesy, jazz shuffle, “Lips of Fire,” wherein she succumbs to the passionate advances of a “dime store paperback” though she prefers her “literature hard bound,” and “Long Ride,” a deep organ driven confessional overview of her tired life with “her meter expired without any spare change/ feeling so human and terribly exposed – my thoughts deranged.” Without forcing comparisons, she mostly reminds me of Marianne Faithful and Rikki Lee Jones, two classic song stylists with wistful voices and an array of anecdotes, all weary and wise. And lastly, I must acknowledge Chillgroove, the ambient, world-music backing band she uses to convey this fine material. Adroitly attuned to her sentimentality, every texture and nuance they produce – dripping with atmosphere – works masterfully. If they ever return to live performance, this would be an ideal pairing to make modern audiences swoon. This is a gorgeous, stunning album produced by Tim Casey, and hopefully a preview of more to come. Highly recommended.   (Harry C. Tuniese)

    MELVERN TAYLOR & HIS FABULOUS MELTONES

    The Old New Stuff

    14 tracks

    This kicks off as classic Americana: nouveau-vaudeville music hall division, in the vein of Harper’s Bizarre, The Kinks, and Mungo Jerry (!). “Penny Arcade” – as well as many of the other songs –benefits from an irrepressible joyousness, here replete with horns, which is impossible for the fan of eclectic music to resist. Melvern Taylor has the kind of relaxed tenor which suits the material. Other best of shows include “Jet Black Chevy Corvette,” which has a somewhat cheesy old-time country and western tone which is nostalgically delightful. Brilliant, after its retro fashion. “Mill Town Moon” is a slowed-down waltz more suitable to the tastes and sentiments of the early 20th century than the present day, but its straight-faced earnestness renders it innocent of the charge of mere travesty. “Tellin Lies” is so sprightly it might almost be featured on The Lawrence Welk Show, reeking as it does of a ’20s mentality and ’40s western swing bonhomie. One almost expects to hear an electric steel solo by Bob Dunn. “Nothin Left to Do But Cry” could almost be a lost recording by Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys. It also happens to be a pretty good tune under the layers of superadded hokum. “The Girl Next Door to the Girl Next Door” is an anomalous Motown-like bit of early ’60s pop fluff and is awfully impressive, even if it is replete with the now-familiar c&w styled guitar. “Melly’s Waltz” caps the proceedings – thoughtful, even heartwarming, with an entrancing melody. The wonderful thing about this album is how it manages to integrate disparate instrumental styles belonging to music hall, bluegrass and c&w with the Great American Songbook of early 20th century popular and Broadway tunes – while seldom betraying much of a modern sensibility at all. This collection is an amusing exercise in musical camouflage which will please fans of artists such as early-era Randy Newman and Harry Nillsson. Recommended. (Francis DiMenno)

    BELLA’S BARTOK

    Don’t Be Yourself

    4 tracks

    The number of songs on this release may be minimal but all the cuts possess a big and very unique sound and approach. The four tunes, “Frankenstein’s Monster,” “The Bag End  March,” “Garden Song,” and my favorite, “Wanderin’” all sound like they come from the music of an avant off-Broadway play. An accordion, mandolin, and acoustic guitar mix with a trumpet, trombone and a very tight bass and drums to provide the perfect backing for the changing tempos, alternating instrument focus and the eye-popping, finger wagging vocals. It’s as if a kaleidoscope had a soundtrack. The music itself has many influences from punk arrogance, polka oom-pa-pa, to Broadway musicals. Cool and very interesting music from a suburban band. Check it out.   (A.J. Wachtel)

    DOWNTOWN BOYS   

    Don Giovanni Records

    Full Communism         

    12 tracks

    Providence Rhode Island’s Downtown Boys are often lumped in with political punk rock bands. That’s all fine and good, and well documented elsewhere. I only have a moment of your time and I want to focus on what I love about Downtown Boys. They write catchy yet angry punk noise songs and execute them to near perfection, mostly in English, but with some sung in Spanish. Not many punk bands use horns, and fewer make them work. Downtown Boys, who are also great live, obviously put a lot of thought and hard work into this short but amazing album. The CD has 10 originals and two covers. “Poder Elegir” is from a leftist leaning Chilean hardcore band Los Prisoneros, and the other is from Bruce Springsteen. Springsteen has written many political anthems and socio-economic essays within the framework of a pop song, so its interesting that they cover the pretty much straight forward “Dancing In The Dark.”  Maybe singer Victoria Ruiz and crew want to show that sometimes even Downtown Boys want to have fun. (Eric Baylies)

    HIXX

    Branded  

    12 tracks

    The music on these songs basically fall into two different categories: Southern rock punk, sorta like Blackfoot or Skynyrd on amphetamines, and country metal, sorta like Kiss meets Elvis meets Johnny Cash. Richard Mirsky (Zipper), Ray Crandall and Chris Costello wrote all the tunes and I know Bob Daley (Chloe) is now the hard hitting drummer, but the credits don’t reveal a thing to me about who does what to create this loud and contentious release. Everyone has a pseudonym with the last name Hixx, and in the photos, everyone is wearing sunglasses.  My favorite cuts are, the head banger “Petting Zoo,” the country punk ballad “Trailer” and the oversize 10-gallon hat country punk pop anthem “We Want America Back.” I also dig the growling and creepy low opening vocals to “AxMurder Country,” the loud sonic thrashing of “Redneck Motherfuckers,” and the aggressive “Drink! Fuck! Fight!”  Sometimes dark and scary. Always guitar driven. And built like a wall of sound. Best for inspiration when you want to kill for catharsis. Make sure you’re not near anything breakable. I love it !    (A.J. Wachtel)

    VIVA GINA

    Live At WFMO   

    4 tracks

    This is a fun CD. I’m sure the ladies in Viva Gina work real hard to be this awesome. Tracks titled “Crotch Punch,” “Your New Girl Is A Slut,” and “Like A Unicorn” make me think these women are not as angry as they seem on first listen. The album is a must for anyone who likes Hole or The Muffs, but are looking for something way better. The songs were recorded live on WMFO’s On The Town With Mikey Dee on July 17, 2013. They sounds good but I can’t wait to hear a proper studio recording. Still, the live energy of the band explodes through the speakers and dares you to see them live. (Eric Baylies)

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    Duke Robillard

    DUKE ROBILLARD 

    ON THE ROAD AGAIN

    DukeRobillard-web   by A.J. Wachtel

    After dinner, you are tuned into WBZ Channel 4 watching Jeopardy as Alex intones to the final jeopardy contestants: “What do Bob Dylan, Tom Waits, John Hammond, the late Jimmy Witherspoon, Dr. John, Maria Muldaur, and Roomful of Blues all have in common?” You find yourself screaming “Duke Robillard! Duke Robillard! Duke Robillard!” to the TV screen and you curse the stupidity of the blank-eyed threesome. You even know Duke won Blues Music Awards (formerly W.C. Handy Awards) for best blues guitarist four out of five years starting in 2000. Check out what this guitarist, bandleader, songwriter, singer, producer and session musician has to say.

    Noise: You have a lot going on right now. You just released Independently Blue with another local legend, Monster Mike Welch, right?

    Duke Robillard: Yes, my new album has been out about six weeks and has just hit #2 on the Living Blues Radio chart. I had been talking with Monster Mike about doing something together for a few years. I really admire his playing a lot and we are similar but different in many aspects, and I knew that we would make a good team. Adding Mike to my current line-up was a good move because besides bringing great blues energy and solos, he was great at finding really good parts on the spot. Not to mention his two songs, which are great showcases for both of us. I am really happy with this album and the results we got on the spot with no preparation. I tend to have some ideas and let them grow into songs in the studio. Some tunes were finished but other just sketches when we went in.

    Noise: How did your giving guitar lessons online on Sonic Junction come about?

    Duke: I met Mike Caren, the owner of Sonic Junction several years ago now. He had started an online guitar lessons company and had heard my Blues-A-Rama track on a plane en route to Europe and was impressed. He contacted me and we did a few videos and it eventually turned into what it is now. It’s a very popular thing now and we have several hundred students in 22 countries and six continents! And it’s growing fast. To check it out Google Sonic Junction. go to www.sonic-junction.com.

    Noise: What is the story on your new record label Blue Duchess?

    Duke: Blue Duchess is a label I started with Blues Radio International host Jesse Finkelstein. It is a label for my jazz recordings and other artists. We now have CDs by tenor sax giant Scott Hamilton, jazz vocalist Mickey  Freeman, and the Duke Robillard Jazz Trio. We also have a blues and roots sister label called Shining Stone. We have David Maxwell’s Blues in Other Colors on our label, Sunny Crownover’s Right Here, Right Now and we just released Paul Gabriel’s What’s the ChanceCD. We have a Brazilian blues-rock artist named Nuno Mindelis also whose album we mix next week and that will be released this summer. I am also finishing up production on a great blues-jazz-R&B singer named Robin Banks from Canada. That could possibly end up on Shining Stone also. So we have our hands full you see!

    Noise: Weren’t you just mentioned in Scott Yanow’s new book Great Jazz Guitarists?

    Duke: Yes, I have a profile in Scott Yanow’s new book Great Jazz Guitarists; and I’m honored to be included.

    Noise: You also joined Bob Dylan’s band and are currently on tour with him. How much improv are you allowed in his band or do you have to play note for note what the audience expects on his classic catalog?

    Duke: Yes, I have joined Bob’s band and his touring schedule also allows for me to have quite a bit of time to tour with the Duke Robillard Band. I am enjoying working with Bob Dylan tremendously. It is a very special band and Bob’s concept of bringing the volume down and making it a lighter, cleaner sound has really opened it up for more improvisation. The interplay between everyone is really great and it’s fun playing with Bob and watching him re-interpret his songs.

    Noise: Stu Kimball (from Boston’s Face to Face) is the other guitarist in Dylan’s band. What’s it like playing with another guitarist and did you know Stu from both of your days on the Boston circuit?

    Duke: Before joining Bob’s band I heard Stu on record but had never met him. He is great to work with and is a very in-depth guitarist with great knowledge of chord voicings, and he really knows Bob’s repertoire. I am enjoying working with him and all the guys in the band. I didn’t know how well I would fit in until we started touring. It does seem to be a great combination of players and I’m loving it.

    Noise: B.B. King has called you “one of the great players.” What is your relationship with B.B. and what would you call him?

    Duke: I met B.B. King in the early ’70s when I opened for him with Roomful of Blues. We have had the chance to play together several times over the years and it’s always a honor. B.B. is a true gentleman and master. We all have learned from him.

    Noise: You founded Roomful of Blues in Rhode Island in 1967. Would it be harder or easier to form a large jump blues band locally today?

    Duke: It would be easy to form a great jump blues band today in New England. There are so many great players here. But the big problem is the economics. Not enough club work to sustain it. Not to mention that clubs’ pay for most blues musicians hasn’t elevated with the times. In many cases it was better in the ’80s, and I’m talking about for established artists that have been recording for decades!

    Noise: You stayed with Roomful for 12 years and then played with rockabilly king Robert Gordon. Jon Paris has said that Robert’s voice WAS rock ’n’ roll. What are your recollections of gigging with him?

    Duke: I played with Robert Gordon for a short time after leaving Roomful. Robert offered me the lead guitar chair, which enabled me to start my solo career as I was working with him. Yes, Robert does have an amazing voice. I did several shows with Danny Gatton while playing with Robert, which was amazing

    Noise: In 1990 you replaced Jimmy Vaughn in the Fabulous Thunderbirds. Care to share a cool story about your time there?

    Duke: I worked in the Thunderbirds for about two and a half years with Kid Bangham and I trading off lead guitar chores. It was a fun gig and we got to make a great record (Walk That Walk, Talk That Talk) while I was there. It wasn’t a hit but I feel it was one of the best Fab T-Birds records they made. I am a friend of Jimmy’s so when he was leaving he said call Duke. At that time the rhythm section were Rhode Islanders who both played with me in Roomful at different times, so when I joined, three of the members of the big Texas band were from little ol’ Rhode Island!

    Noise: What is your advice to young artists trying to get their music heard in these hard times?

    Duke: It’s hard for me to give general advice about the music business. I came up in a completely different environment than today’s young musicians. I didn’t have any of the tools available today and it was all hard work, dedication, word of mouth, and grass roots advertising. So I won’t start preaching about “the old days.” I’ll save that for my book.

    www.dukerobillard.com

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    THE CHANDLER TRAVIS THREE-O
    This Is What Bears Look Like Underwater 

    14 tracks

    On opening track “Little Things,” which sets the tone for much of what is to follow, it seems like Fred Boak, John Clark, Berke McKelvey, and Chandler Travis don’t so much rock out as commit acts of vaguely rock-like instrumental pop which are not quite like anything you’ve ever heard before, unless you happen to be inordinately fond of spacy ’70s jazz pianists, obscure late ’60s prog-rock, and even more obscure ’50s instrumental exotica—and maybe not even then. The closest comparison would involve a mellow, yawning Bizarro World version of the instrumental tracks on Pet Sounds. The introspectively whimsical and goofy exotica of “Camel, Passing Through The Eye of a Needle” is another prime example of this tendency, as are the instrumental tracks “Zoe” and “Stuck.” “January” (by Chandler Travis and David Greenberger) seems more like Harry Nilsson circa The Point, or maybe Robyn Hitchcock in the whimsical mode of “I Got a Message for You.” “Born to Disappear” is also reminiscent of a heartfelt Hitchcock number like “Globe of Frogs” or even Rod Stewart’s “Handbags and Gladrags.” “Take Me With You” (by Travis and Greenberger) is a spare, minimalistic love song; a mode which, by now, is a Travis Chandler specialty; ditto the inimitably sardonic “The Person You Deserve.” The goofy scatting vocal jazz of “One Step Forward” varies the pace, as do the NRBQ and Beatles covers. But it’s not all inimitably delicious Chandler Travis style weirdness: I point to the Best of Show: “Make the Small Things Pretty,” also by Travis and Greenberger. Here is a song which is very much in the laid-back but jangly pop mode of past Chandler Travis masterpieces (and I don’t use the word ironically). It’s a pop song with the damndest sense of dynamics I’ve ever heard, flowing along at an easygoing pace—so easygoing!—and with lush melodic breaks which slow the pace even further, yet somehow it works brilliantly, mostly due to the irresistibly chiming hook in the main guitar line. It’s a song every bit as risky and rewarding as a Brian Wilson confection like “The Little Girl I Once Knew.” Nearly as great is the inimitably loping, gorgeously melodic and impeccably constructed toe-tapper “Paper Roses.” The astonishing thing about this record is that the pace is mostly slowed way down, yet the melodic values are so strong that on the best numbers you can hardly bring yourself to stop tapping your feet all the same.           (Francis DiMenno)

     

    DADFIGHT
    Polk Records
    Paternity Test

    6 tracks

    This EP starts off strong with the fast-paced ultra-melodic fuzz-boxed anthem “Shantytowns and Hoovervilles” and keeps up the momentum throughout the next five tracks. Their songs are driven by a rollicking rhythm section of spot-on drumming and tuneful plucked basslines roiling beneath loud and lively melodies cloaked in a grunged-out guitar tone that’s tough as coffin nails. The singer can’t sing and knows it. Does that stop him from belting out each tune with unrestrained punk-rock fervor? Hell no. He embraces it. His high-toned off-key whine, while disastrously out-of-place and utterly unforgivable anywhere else, is perfectly suited for the confines of a rowdy punk band likes this—or American Idol tryouts, but these guys have too much integrity for that. They play hard and fast. What they may lack in studio perfection and spit-polished production values, they more than make up for in attitude, ADHD-addled energy, and a lo-fi garage-rock spirit.    (Will Barry)

     

    TOM HAUCK
    Insistent                                      

    3 tracks

    It is fitting that Tom Hauck has decided to call his new EP Insistent.  A synonym of the adjective “persistent,” the word is a perfect characterization of Hauck and everything his pop-rock-punk music stands for.  The former guitarist for New England bands the Atlantics and Ball & Pivot, Hauck presents listeners with three fierce, rocking tunes.  It is a sound all his own but one that is unmistakably influenced by the Rolling Stones, Elvis Costello, and Velvet Underground, to name a few.  Even the opener, “Flash,” has a B-52’s “Love Shack” flair, and Hauck’s vocal timbre sounds noticeably similar to that of Fred Schneider’s.  The one drawback is that the EP is entirely too short for a man of such great stature as Hauck.  Hopefully, we won’t have to wait too much longer for a new full-length, but until then, this definitely satisfies.           (Julia R. DeStefano)

     

    RULE
    Rule

    6 tracks

    The last few years have seen a resurgence in both the popularity of and the respect given to heavy metal. No longer is it something laughed at or admired only from an ironic distance.  Whether or not you view this as a good thing will certainly color your take on these indie rockers turned metalheads.  Rule definitely finds its inspiration from the more worthy bands of the genre.  Think Iron Maiden, Dio and Kill’em All era Metallica, not Steelheart and Wild Boyz.  The musicians are all impressive, particularly the increasingly versatile John Brookhouse on guitar, and lead singer Mike Soltoff deftly hits all the requisite high notes.  Listening to this album sent my two cats into an epic wrestling match that would put any of the classic Randy “Macho Man” Savage—Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat matches to shame.  That has to count for something.    (Kevin Finn)

     

    THE LIZ BORDEN BAND
    Don’t Stand In My Sunshine 

    12 tracks

    Liz always entertains with her great hooks and metal/punk music and her latest release continues in the same fashion. Song after song the equation stays similar: she creates a good guitar hook and writes a melody around it. Her vocals preach, teach, tease, and scold and add a sense of urgency that is vital to all songs of meaning in the CBGB world. The opener, “Bang Bang,” is the hit with its great guitar riff and memorable bridge. Another radio-friendly cut is her version of John Denver’s “Leaving On A Jet Plane.” The gender switch in delivery makes Lizzie’s love song take on a whole new meaning and the quicker tempo makes it completely different from the original. “Sweet Pain” and “Moonlight & Whiskey” really rock and both feature the typical cool guitar riff with added volume 11 power chords. Even the ballad “Mystery” with Marnie Hall guesting on violin is a sweet rendition and is pure punk in its attitude alone. More good stuff from Liz Borden; check it out.             (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    ROGER MILLER
    “Big Steam” (video)
    An interesting, somewhat bluesy declamation. Miller himself points to the A-side as “a deliberate sonic referencing of Pink Floyd’s Piper at the Gates of Dawn.” But it also reminds me, in an odd way, of the song “Warm Moving Bodies” by the ’70s San Francisco band the Units, who, though largely keyboard based, also specialized in a type of brutalist form of punk/post punk which was jarring in its tectonically shifting blocks of sound. The spiky guitar runs are a welcome highlight. Personnel: Miller (Mission of Burma) on vocals, guitar, and bass, and Larry Dersch (the Binary System) on drums, with superadded French horn by Brian Arnold. As for the video, it intercuts negative polarity effects added to live performance footage with intercuts from Buster Keaton’s The General as well as other train-oriented footage; no great shakes, but a workmanlike setting for the song.   (Francis DiMenno)


    MUY CANSADO

    Muy Cansado

    9 tracks

    This trio couldn’t be more opposite than what their band name translates to (Muy Cansado is “very tired” in Spanish for those unfamiliar). On the contrary Muy Cansado’s music is bright, alert, rousing—so much so that listening now makes me want to jump up and dance around with a big smile on my face! I’m impressed with their dynamics and catchy indie pop flare. This super trio is Chris Mulvey, Lisa Libera, and Jon Ulman—a combination of musicians who create a beautifully layered sound that you would expect with a larger ensemble. For example, one of their tunes reminded me a bit of Arcade Fire—a seven-piece group as opposed to this three-piece. But it’s not about the quantity of performers but rather the songwriting and these songs are all stellar; plus Chris and Lisa’s harmonies are simply magical. I was going to call out the songs that I loved, but in all honesty I loved every track—and a special thank you to the band for their song “Let It Go,” which I happened to hear EXACTLY when I needed to. See—they’re magical. Muy Cansado you’ve got yourself another new fan!       (Debbie Catalano)

     

    PETER BUFANO’S CIRKESTRA
    Cirkestra Music
    The Hairless Woman             

    10 tracks

    You might not expect much musical diversity from an album’s worth of circus music, but there is a great deal of historically interesting Americana embedded in these delightful instrumentals. “Klezmer’s Charivari” is weirdly antic with an undertone of eerie sadness. The galumphing tempos of “Chair Balance” are delightfully humorous, like watching a rhino trying to eat a cupcake. “Little Holy Circus” is delicately revenant; thoughtful tuba and clarinet arrangements mark “Consuela’s Box Car Blues” as more Dixieland than blues. Equally delightful are the stately, gently melodic “Lilia the Human Cannonball,” the whimsical “The Un-Funny Clown,” and “A Pie in the Face,” oddly reminiscent of the TV theme “Mr. Terrific.” The pick tracks are the lively, circumambulatory “German Wheel,” and the gently nostalgic Tin Pan Alley reverie feel of the title and concluding track.    (Francis DiMenno)

     

    MEAN CREEK  
    Youth Companion  
    10 tracks

    This is a great indie/college rock disc. This disc left me reminiscing of the days when Talking Heads, REM, and U2 were still fresh, raw, and new. The biggest compliment I can give is I never once looked to see how much longer I had until the album was done. The songs flowed beautifully, the album is well balanced, and the singer had just enough angst without being melodramatic. This was my first taste of Mean Creek, but I really wouldn’t be surprised if in 20 years another reviewer is reminded of this great disc while listening to something new. I highly recommend this.   (Melvin O)

     

    THE HIDEOUT
    Now Tom. Now!!

    10  tracks

    Celebrating their first full-length release, the Hideout has refined the concept of post-punk pop to something resembling an art form. Not content to merely bash and bop away, the Hideout writes songs with darker subject matter, punctuated with a slightly more sophisticated chord structures and more adventurous arrangements than your typical punk-pop band weaned on a generic dose of your everyday Green Day, Social Distortion, and Dropkick Murphys wannabes. This music still has pomp and attitude, snarl and bite, but isn’t afraid to read a book, or drink some shelf whiskey.  This is post-punk with more than three chords, and definitely more than one idea.   (Joel Simches)

     

    THE BRIGHTON BEAT
    The Brighton Beat LP              

    6 tracks

    Interesting jazz fusion with elements of Latin music and Afropop. The orchestration throughout is agreeably eclectic without often being overtly showy; the improvisational passages tend to lead somewhere rather than merely meander; say what you will, but, overall, these guys have good taste. The production on this nearly hour-long outing is somewhat restrained; it seems to only intimate the dynamism of the live experience. To a certain extent the music may sound somewhat studied and designed to appeal to genre connoisseurs, but it is also listenable and seems like it might be accessible to non-jazz devotees. The opening track, “Pinball,” features daring interpolated snippets of free jazz, fusion, and what have you. Most notably, I hear snippets of late-period John Coltrane, certainly not the most accessible jazz, but perhaps more tolerable when offered up in sample-sized snippets within the context of a rhythmic framework with hooky leitmotifs and an occasional dollop of psychedelic keyboard.  A track such as “Changing Elevators” seems somewhat flashy and yet is whipsaw sharp, with a bevy of pleasing electric guitar solos to leaven the somewhat strenuous virtuosities of the horn section. “Giraffe” is vaguely reminiscent of “I’m Not In Love” by 10cc, but wanders through a soundscape more funk-laden than avant-jazzy, with some almost gospel-tinged keyboards emerging midway through. “The Paradox” is a picture perfect take on late 60s/early 70s jazz-rock fusion with a decidedly hard edge in its guitar/bass interplay—almost like “Layla”-era Clapton or the Allman Brothers. Only two tracks fall short: the perky, percolating motifs of “Capture the Flag” do not, alas, always rise above the status of jazzy background music. And thankfully, the band reserves their hardcore experimentation for the final track, “Indian Summer,” a woozy, psychedelicized ’80s-era Miles Davis-like mood piece. But overall, this is a solid and gratifying outing.                      (Francis DiMenno)

     

    DARLENE BAILEY
    Wrenches and Rags 

    12 tracks

    Darlene Bailey has crafted a homespun and heartfelt CD based on her observations about life. The subject matter covers a variety of topics from a tune about an old bureau passed down through generations of her family, to broken relationships, to giving birth late in life, lobstermen, ancestors and love songs. Darlene nails the country genre with a tribute to “her Nascar stud—Ricky Rudd.” I think she has a country hit with that one. Darlene’s voice has an accessible, warm presence, she picks a crisp guitar and the arrangements are folksy and friendly.

    The title song, “Wrenches and Rags,” is the story of Darlene’s parents—hard working folks who ran a service station and raised a family with wholesome ethics. For all you country music lovers especially, this is a nice mellow album to pop in the CD player while making dinner or driving. Ms. Bailey sounds as if she has been playing music all her life with loved ones, friends and neighbors. I can imagine her performing at local festivals and family events. Her lyrics rhyme and the melodies are pleasant but this isn’t a confessional album spilling all the dirt about life’s dramas. It’s a sweet compilation of gratitude and appreciation for the little things in life. With all the complaining and rage in this world it’s nice to find a musician who is celebrating simple pleasures. This CD is a little time capsule of love.       (Kimmy Sophia Brown)

     

    RUBY ROSE FOX
    Ruby Rose Fox

    5 tracks

    I love this! I love that Ruby Rose Fox describes the genre on Facebook as “old-fashioned” and I love that it has, what I would call a theatrical modern heyday sound. But that description of mine is inspired by the overall stylings. Ruby’s voice has so much character that she creates a piece of art in each song. Now I have five songs only in which to get the feel for Ruby Rose Fox but those five songs are enough to take a trip into a little magical time-traveling world—from cabaret to garage to soul. Ruby Rose Fox’s supporting band is terrific and this EP recording is full and super warm. Overall, I’d say it’s marvelous!        (Debbie Catalano)

     

    SESSION AMERICANA
    Love & Dirt

    10 tracks

    The latest effort by these stalwarts starts off with “Down to You,” a languorously sweet-natured MOR declamation followed by a wanna-be wistful duet, “Love Changes Everything,” which gratifyingly transmogrifies into a stomping hoedown. “Barbed Wire” is a catchy early ’70s country-rock pastiche ala Jackson Browne. The appealing “Making Hay” is a familiarly minimalistic bluesy romp not unlike Treat Her Right. The closing track, “So Far From Your Door,” is a soulful and entertaining bit of melodic patter. “Easier” is the standout oddity, an evincing lament, with instrumentation which is a cross between drum & bass and exotica, it points to a versatility and willingness to experiment. But ultimately? The production and mixing are impeccable, the musicianship is of a very high professional standard indeed, as you might expect from stellar local performers like Jim Ryan and Jim Fitting, but many of the compositions just don’t seem to measure up. The songs are well crafted, but seem more like down-to-earth finger exercises than fully realized works of art. It all seems somehow second-hand. Not so much derivative as simply pallid. I’m simply not hearing much that is truly earth-shaking or even memorable.      (Francis DiMenno)

     

    VIRUS  CYCLE
    Bluntface Records  
    Zombichrist

    8 tracks

    Virus Cycle’s third release is another brilliant dark masterpiece which skillfully combines all the best (and silliest) aspects of goth, metal, industrial, and low budget horror movies, to create the ultimate soundtrack to eat human flesh and brains by. Throw in a little dose of religious cynicism and a twisted sense of humor and this album becomes the perfect expression for the Theatre of the Demented.  Having been a fan of releases on this label, I am impressed by the production and quality of this.  Listen on headphones in a sensory deprivation tank on mushrooms at your own risk and whatever you do, don’t look at yourself in the mirror.  It won’t be pretty. Everyday really is Halloween.               (Joel Simches)

     

    ED ROMANOFF
    Ed Romanoff

    11 tracks

    Achingly beautiful. I’m moved by Ed Romanoff’s musical storytelling and whether the stories he tells are deeply personal or observations on moments in life, they are told with such utter sincerity and truth of the heart. Rich, warm vocals with an emotionally textured feel, Ed shares his songs in a vein best described as low-key Americana—singer/songwriter with a folksy twangy root vibe. I rather prefer to say he’s a poet—a la Leonard Cohen. The self-titled CD opens with one of those aforementioned personal songs (and I encourage you to read more about the inspirations on his site or CD cover) “St. Vincent de Paul”—one of my favorites but honestly I was entranced by every song in this recording including the one cover, “I Fall To Pieces”—a rendition of which I felt every broken piece that Ed so genuinely relays. I’m compelled to name some of the contributors to this wonderful CD: producer Crit Harmon and background vocalists Mary Gauthier, Josh Ritter, Josh Kaufman, Tift Merritt, and Meg Hutchinson. Truly sublime.   (Debbie Catalano)

     

    ENGINE JUDY
    Live @ WMFO

    3 tracks

    The first track, “Pickin’ Bones,”is a nice, low-key bluesy effort with mysterioso vocals by Judith Arc; the second “Keep Away,” is a primitive blues more in the incantatory vein of Norman Greenbaum’s “Spirit in the Sky,” while the post-apocalyptic third track “Long Ride,” is the standout, with its exotica-tinged guitar.    (Francis DiMenno)

     

    THE DIFFERENCE ENGINE
    Endless Forms Most Beautiful

    10 tracks

    Thanks to Bandcamp, I was able to hear this CD in its entirety as the CD itself had some issues—or perhaps my player did. Nonetheless, it’s always good to offer that alternative access to music. On to the music: the Difference Engine fuse a sometimes-’80s feel with present-day electronic music. Notice I did not say “electronica”—is there a difference? I don’t know but electronica didn’t feel right. What it comes down to the Difference Engine captivated me with their original sound. I really dig the dreamy grooves and how the band meld that quality with some pulsing rhythms. I appreciate that the Difference Engine stays consistent with their style throughout but avoids sounding like one super long song—which can happen with this genre. There are several tracks I really like on this CD, some with the ’80s vibe like “The Still” and “In Medias Res” and others with more of that independent vibe like “Happy Together” and “In the Dim Lights of 3A” (probably the one with the most radio potential). Good job.                    (Debbie Catalano)

     

    COREY AMARAL BAND
    Flatbubba Records
    Go!  

    11 tracks

    Amaral and company play the type of music you can take home to Mom or play over the loudspeakers at Whole Foods.  It’s pleasant, affable, tuneful, and completely bland. Amaral takes every groove-oriented, black-identified genre of music and whitens the living crap out of it.  He’s a 21st century Pat Boone.  There’s neutered jazz, neutered funk, neutered R&B, and even a little neutered hip hop (in the form of a laughably out-of-nowhere cameo from a rapper).  At its best, the band comes off as a sexless Maroon 5, and, to be fair, there is clearly a market for that. What saves this record from being absolutely terrible is that the musicianship is tight, and Amaral has a warm, expressive voice that drips with earnestness.  He sells the music well; I just wish he’d be willing to get a little dirt under his nails.      (Kevin Finn)

     

    BISCUITS AND GRAVY
    Hello Weekend 

    10 tracks

    This debut LP from Biscuits and Gravy starts out with a smooth, mellow R&B groove about the joy of making it to the end of the dreaded nine-to-five. It’s the perfect tune to wake up to on Saturday morning and start the two days we always look forward to, with some kicking rap lyrics to add a little spice to the mix. “Blind” serves up a full band ensemble with a powerful horn section that dares you not to dance.

    I’ve heard this band ranges in size from the core seven members to around 15, and it sounds like they’ve brought the whole shooting match to this album. The vocals of David Huddleston are energetic, at home with a smooth jazz tune or a pulsating big band beat, and other members of the band, Sam R-P (guitar), Mark Steinert, AKA Ghost, (keys), Evan Coniglio (bass), Mark Ward (drums), Paul Jefferson (alto sax) and Eric Tait (trumpet) craft a beautiful symphony of sound that energizes the soul.

    This album’s been three years in the making and it’s been well worth the wait. Contained within these 10 tracks are a boatload of desire, drive, and a love for the music. This is not a CD to relax to: if you can last three songs without being struck by the urge to get up and move around the room, you’re a better person than I.    (Max Bowen)

     

    THE SHAPES
    The Shapes

    11 tracks

    I don’t know much about the Shapes other than it’s a project by Jeff Reynolds and that the CD cover seems to be its own bio with a simple “modern traditional fusion.” But it is a self-described demo of instrumental music that I would say accurately falls into that description above. Keeping that in mind, the Shapes’ CD consists of 11 very pleasant keyboard-led tunes that in Jeff’s own words “are not intended for public consumption or for an album.” I enjoy the majority of the songs and appreciated how they each convey a mood. My ears perk in particular with the more distinct jazz numbers like “Fly High” and the reggae-tinged “Vice Versa.” Along with those tracks, “Work It” convey a nice cheerfulness while “No Sale” is lovely. This collection is a nice showcase for Jeff’s keyboard talents. Easygoing, easy-listening music. Thanks for sharing, Jeff.     (Debbie Catalano)

     

    FREEZEPOP
    Doppelganger                           

    9 tracks

    If you’re a fan at all of the electronic realm or even Harmonix video game titles (AmplitudeKaraoke Revolution, the Guitar Hero series, and the Rock Band series), then you have no doubt heard of the band Freezepop—a saccharine concoction of music its members appropriately describe as “sweet and cold and fruity and plastic-y.”  Although the band has several releases under its belt, has enjoyed critical acclaim, and was even a semifinalist in the 2001 WBCN Rock ’n’ Roll Rumble, this reviewer cannot help acknowledging the mundanity of the Doppelganger EP.  It is without a doubt that Freezepop has creative ideas, as is seen throughout “Doppelganger,” the opening track and only original song on the record; however, the release is, on the whole, lengthy and repetitive.  Even when the tracks are remixed by a variety of different artists, there is a definite lack in exploration of textures, resulting in the EP being tedious.  With this being said, Freezepop would have been better off if they had written and developed an entirely new record as opposed to rehashing older songs through mixes.         (Julia R. DeStefano)

     

    WE OWN LAND
    The Plan
    tracks

    This is one of those albums that I would play at a party in the background, or if I were driving around looking for trouble. The second song, “Nobody Better,” sounds like a sped up “Hot for Teacher,” which I really didn’t mind hearing. These guys rock out, and this is a fun album. It doesn’t deliver much substance, but sometimes just kicking back and having fun is far better than being brought down with a dose of reality.         (Melvin O)

     

    ENDNATION
    The Absence of Everything

    12 tracks

    With song titles like “Machete” and “49 Maggots,” there is not a lot of sunshine and lollipops to be found on this record. Endnation plays a brand of pummeling post-hardcore influenced hard rock, clearly influenced by Fugazi and Jawbox, but more willing to explore quiet spaces than either of those bands.  At its best, this record provides a guttural and welcome blast of catharsis, and it’s an excellent showcase for the dexterous power of drummer Matt Graber.  Too often, though, the dramatics are overbearing, particularly with regard to Anthony Conley’s pained (and sometimes painful) wailing.  That and the lack of discernible melodies make the album feel a lot longer than its thirty minute running time.              (Kevin Finn)

     

    ADAM & EVE                                                                     
    “(You Don’t Know) Much About Me”
    1 track

    This is the first taste of Adam & Eve, a new project featuring Boston luminaries Lenny Shea, Linda Viens, Jon Macey, Lynn Shipley, and Rich Lamphear.  The result is rich textural slice of Americana, with lush vocal harmonies, thoughtful lyrics, and the easy pace of a leisurely walk through the park on an autumnal afternoon with that special someone.  While it’s hard to judge a band project solely on one single song, the caliber of this combination of Boston rock royalty almost guarantees that Adam & Eve have some brilliant songwriting in their future.              (Joel Simches)

     

    ALEC K REDFEARN & THE EYESORES
    Sister Death
    12 tracks

    This album is very psychedelic with a Middle Eastern flair to it. The whole album feels like one long story, each song is a chapter pushing us further along. You can listen to each track separately, but I found that it lost the intensity that way. This is one of those albums that needs time to be absorbed fully. If you’re a fan of the commercialized Top 40 music played on most radio stations, this album probably isn’t for you.  It is aimed at that type of music fan that likes to absorb the music, and enjoy the experince. I’m sure musicians will admire the technical side of Sister Death.                          (Melvin O)

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    Comments

    I’d just like to thank the Noise and Debbie Catalano for reviewing my album. Debbie gave it a positive review,which is cool, but, even if it had been a negative one and sucked, I still would’ve been happy such an awesome freakin’ magazine like the Noise and it’s peeps was there to review it!
    Thanks,
    JR

    Pingback: the noise : The Difference Engine

     

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  • The Noise Archives: Ad Frank

    The Man Who Fell to Earth
    by Lexi

    No one’s figured out a cure for the common cold. Teams of philosophers are still struggling with the chicken-or-the-egg problem. And it took generations of mathematic genius almost 400 years to solve Fermat’s Last Theorem. The world we live in is filled with complex, multi-layered puzzles.

    One unseasonably balmy night in springtime, at the Druid in Inman Square, this writer attempted to figure out Ad Frank.

    Call him an enigma, call him mysterious, but the Melrose-born singer/songwriter is at heart just a sensitive man who feels things deeply and takes nothing for granted. Though kind of shy, even sometimes tongue-tied, Ad has an endearing way of wearing his heart on his sleeve both in real life and in his work. At any Ad Frank show, be it his frequent solo acoustic performances at TT the Bear’s “Other Side of the Bear” series or his full-band rock onslaughts, you’ll find new fans that found him last week as well as diehards from his early ’90s Miles Dethmuffen/Permafrost days. He’s genuinely surprised when his solo shows pack the room, and finds it extremely funny when he’s compared to Barry White, Tom Waits, and Leonard Cohen.

    Ad’s tuneful songwriting is part beat poetry, part offbeat pop, and as likely to ooze somber despair as wry self-deprecation. With titles like “Last Night Mark Eitzel Saved My Life” and “I Have Seen The Moment of My Greatness Flicker,” it’s clear that Ad’s songs are a backdrop to his own quest for understanding his world, his muse, and himself. To our great benefit, we get to come along for the ride.

    These days Ad Frank plays either solo (though any of his endless bevy of talented friends will always join him for a song or two) or backed by Jake Zavracky (guitar), Shane Phillips (drums) and Eric Donahue (bass), a trio perhaps better known as glam rock gods Quick Fix.

    Ladies and gentlemen, Ad Frank.

    The Muse

    Noise: Do you want to talk about inspiration? You seem to write from a place of heartache. Does disappointment drive you?

    Ad: I think of it more as a release. And not just for me. The music I’ve always really loved, I’ve loved because it made me feel less alone. Hopefully that’s what I have to offer the world as well. You go to weddings to help celebrate people who’ve found the perfect person and there’s a ceremony, and music, and music is part of the ceremony to help celebrate their happiness. But I just feel like there needs to be a ceremony for the rest of us, where it didn’t quite work out the way we planned.

    Noise: What’s your favorite song off the new CD, Mr. Fancypants?

    Ad: “U-hauls and Ryders.” It covers a lot of ground. Off the record, I like it because it was a way to make sense out of something that happened. Put it into a three minute song and keep telling it to myself.

    Noise: Why is that off the record? You’re intriguing with what creative impulses you want to keep close, and what you feel okay about sharing.

    Ad: Okay but…the unspoken contract is that no one is allowed to assume that it’s auto-biography. For one thing, it instantly makes it infinitely less interesting. There’s a review of Mr. Fancypants in this online ’zine in England where the guy kept referring to the record as a log of my failed marriage. (laughter) So I was like, okay, he’s just assumed something that’s completely untrue about me. On the other hand, it’s irrelevant to the album whether I was married or not.

    Noise: Are you working on another album?

    Ad: Yeah, I have what I think is going to be the next record pretty much planned. We do three of the songs now live. But it’s probably about half new and half stuff that Permafrost never got to.

    The Man

    Noise: Do you know that there’s an Ad Frank discussion on The Noise message board at least once every few weeks?

    Ad: No, what are they saying?

    Noise: It’s all about your sexual prowess and general desirability.

    Ad: Is it a “is he or isn’t he” discussion?

    Noise: No, I don’t even think people care about that. Boys like you, girls like you. It’s irrelevant.

    Ad: Good. (laughter)

    Noise: What’s funny? Turning on a whole roomful of men and women? You work it, come on, admit it.

    Ad: Well, yeah but…I don’t think anybody’s turned on. This is a fairly obnoxious compliment I’m giving myself, but I’m such a blatant Queen rip-off that I think I’m just a nod to that kind of thing. I mean Freddie Mercury, he was like my first rock star, my first hero, and HE was ridiculous too.

    Noise: I see what you mean, but I’m not sure I’d have gone there, for you. Freddie Mercury. Hmm…

    Ad: Who else would you compare me to.

    Noise: Leonard Cohen?

    Ad: He’s a sexy man. Who else?

    Noise: I don’t know, I’d have to think about… hey wait, don’t ask ME questions, this is my interview.

    Ad: Okay.

    Noise: So, DO you get a lot of “is he or isn’t he”?

    Ad: It really blew up…Aaron Tap [Stop Pop and Roll] says it’s because of the Mr. Fancypants album cover. Though you’d think the other one would have caused more questions.

    Noise: The first one? The one known as My Boyfriend is Gay?

    Ad: (laughter) Yeah. Some people say it’s overtones in the lyrics, but I think they’re working too hard.

    Noise: You like to maintain the mystery.

    Ad: Um… I think like you said, it’s irrelevant. At the record release party, I had Paula Kelly introduce us? She had made her own Mr. Fancypants shirt and on the back it said “Is He Or Isn’t He?” My mom was at the show, but she didn’t really ask me about that. (laughter)

    Noise: Clever. I like that. But this is starting to sound like a discussion with Gene Dante.

    Ad: He should talk.

    Noise: Do you carry around a lot of anger? What pisses you off?

    Ad: How much tape have you got? (laughter) Where do I start. Um…it pisses me off that there aren’t any mid-level labels left that will work toward big time selling. The last one I can think of is Matador. Where about forty thousand units is a pretty good sales figure.

    Noise: What makes you happy?

    Ad: I’m always happy when somebody thinks the songs are funny. I think “Last Night Mark Eitzel Saved My Life” is hysterical. I think “Bay of Fundy” is very funny.

    The Act

    Noise: You’ve been doing this awhile; do you still get nervous onstage? When you perform you put so much of yourself out there, you don’t hold back.

    Ad: In my solo shows I’ve been trying to work some piano in, and I get deathly nervous. The only way I’m going to conquer that is to keep doing it. It’s fun being nervous. It’s just been so long. It’s like I’m eighteen again.

    Noise: In Permafrost and even in the early post-Permafrost Ad Frank bands, you played guitar and sang. In the present lineup that you’re calling Ad Frank and the Fast Easy Women, you leave the guitar playing to Jake Zavracky.

    Ad: One of the things I said when Permafrost broke up was that I would only ever do one or the other again, play guitar or sing. Not both. It’s a lot easier. In Permafrost I used to make so many mistakes.

    Noise: Without the guitar, you’re so dynamic. You’re writhing around on the floor and playing to every corner of the room. Where does that come from?

    Ad: This isn’t going to answer your question, but three nights before our first show, I went out to see Butterfield 8 and I studied Leah Callahan. I was really amazed by her and how she could just command an audience by standing there and staring them down. I kind of built on that. That’s the fallback just to make sure I can do it even if I can’t move an inch, even if I’m tied up in front of the microphone. Once you’re at that level, you can pretty much do whatever the hell you want.

    Noise: Do you ever feel ridiculous up there?

    Ad: Constantly. But the audience paid eight dollars. You have to give them something.

    Noise: Since it’s Quick Fix that’s backing you, you don’t get to have them available all the time. Is that a problem?

    Ad: It actually works out well for me. I’m pretty much happy to play once every two or three months and not play out of town and not work it too hard. I don’t think I could find a bunch of people willing to do that if they weren’t already in a band they were putting everything into. I also don’t think I could find a band that would be willing to take it down as much as they do, if they didn’t have their own band to turn it up to eleven. They can do all kinds of things. Consider where they came from, with Jake having been in Boy Wonder and Eric playing in the Mothers. Quick Fix is one of my favorite live bands.

    Noise: It’s a fun dynamic. At a T.T.’s show the guys dressed up in sports jerseys and you said, “Usually when I’m surrounded by three guys dressed like this it means I’m about to get my ass kicked.”

    Ad: Yeah, that’s fairly typical. I have to train myself to not say things like “wouldn’t it be completely ridiculous if…” because they’ll do it. (laughter) The second to last show at the Lizard Lounge residency last month, we did an arena rock singalong for “The Ticket Was Non-Refundable.” It was like, “Alright the people between that post and that post!” That’s an example when I said to the guys, oh my God wouldn’t it be stupid if we did a three-part singalong at the end? The residencies are great for stuff like that. And the Lizard Lounge in particular, it’s so small and homey. It’s like playing in your friend’s old basement.

    Noise: Do you remember what I asked you as I was leaving the last night of your Lizard Lounge residency?

    Ad: Uh oh. No.

    Noise: I asked “what makes you so good,” and then I said to save your answer for this interview. So I am now asking that question.

    Ad: Jeez. I guess I should answer from the presumption that it’s true, rather than argue whether the question itself is fallacy. It’s… um… God, it’s just so fun.

    www.adfrank.com

  • The Noise 10/03: Live Reviews

    VALHALLA KITTENS, ANTI-LOVE PROJECT
    Great Scott 8/28/03

    It’s The Plan, the now-Thursday-soon-Saturday series in which Great Scott morphs from frightening BU pickup spot to bizarrely clean and pleasant rock club! I arrive in time for about four songs from Anti-Love Project. And a fine project it is. The overwhelming feel I get here is Sonic Youth when Kim sings. This is good. Two guitarists throw out a wild-ride mixture of fast melodic riffiness and avant-noise skronk, while the glittery lead singer shrieks and growls. The rhythm section is tight. The whole thing is punky and rich and fun.

    Valhalla Kittens now have enough songs that I can be disappointed to not hear the one I wanted, which is an important step forward. I still get plenty of their thoroughly unique brand of girl-group math rock. And this time the audience is actually standing up, which enables us to join in when taught the dance steps. They are notably precise tonight, and these are complicated songs. The kittens could be heard more, and the bass, as usual, sort of blows everyone else away; this band seems to have ongoing trouble with balance. (It’s the heels.)

    Perhaps the only factor marring my enjoyment of the evening is the creepy fan guy dancing in the front. On the one hand, you’re glad he’s obviously having a good time. On the other hand, he really is really creepy, and if he’s having such a good time he should focus on his own enjoyment of the music, and let other people do likewise. In particular, he needs to leave the women alone. If I were club personnel, I might have spoken to him the second or third time a woman backed away in fairly obvious alarm. (Steve Gisselbrecht)

    THE SECRET CHANNEL, THE INFORMATION
    T.T. the Bear’s 8/22/03

    T.T.’s is nice and dark tonight, the way a NIGHTclub should be (there’s no annoying, bright light shining in your face, as at The Middle East upstairs.) And The Information’s dark take on early ’80s punk and new wave fits in nicely. This band has a good energy on stage although with six people in the band, I’d expect as much. Their first song, “The New Deal” reminds me a little too much of an Interpol song. The songs following are good but I think they need more hooks. “Queer” has a catchy synth octave hook. The singer has shaggy hair and jerky movements, and his vocals inhabit that familiar grey area between lonely and pissed off. I like it when the bleepy synth lines contrast with the heavy, Verbena type bar chords of the guitars. Some memorable, echoey, keyboard lines carry the last, best song and hint at what this band could be, given a few more dynamics.

    The Secret Channel, a four piece, are more straight ahead and hard hitting with good melodies and tightly crafted songs. “I Know I Was Wrong” features a fluid yet biting guitar solo with bass and drums running wild and an earnest, angry vocal. It’s always nice to hear some concise, old fashioned lead playing on a vintage Rickenbacker. But this intense music demands better lyrics. “I will never fall in love again”? “I hate your attitude/you are so fucking rude”? Do better, please. And the bass player might take a little less Ritalin next time, his spastic dance moves are distracting. Still, I’m impressed by their energy. (Laura Markley)

    WE’RE ALL GONNA DIE, ICHABOD, ELDEMUR KRIMM, PARANOID
    O’Brien’s 9/12/03

    Everything I like about hard rock music is summed up in Paranoid. In the tradition of COC, Black Label Society and southern metal in general, Paranoid write songs that mimic these greats without ripping them off. The drummer’s thrashy style does a lot to prevent the plagiarism, his quick, crisp style belonging more to modern metal. But the vocalist/ lead guitarist in this power trio is laying down an old school, crunchy, heavy metal soundwave. The bassist is laying down some mean Geezer Butler style fills. The whole band digs in and gallops along through splashy puddles of staggered distortion in a unified evocation of Sabbathy simplicity. Then they’re sounding like Soundgarden’s lost album. They rock so hard that they’ve got the old timers in the crowd yelling “Who the fuck are you?!!!” with a desperate need to know in their voices. I predict that people won’t need to ask in the future.

    The Gibson-fueled quartet of Eldemur Krimm continue the trend of ’70s hard rock influence in this night at O’Brien’s. No, I have no idea where they came up with that name, but the retro vibration runs even deeper here. Very guitar-driven, with all the instruments supporting a fat, thick sound as deep as the sin of man. I keep being reminded of obscure ’70s hard rock outfits, but can’t decide which one. They’re an informed synthesis of the past three decades of rock, with compositions that stomp, explode and cruise along. The tall, long-haired, lead singer/guitarist is talking some bizarre, humorous shit in between songs, which gives evidence of where the rich character of their music comes from. They’re a band whose music has an aura of mythos to it as if their catalog is a canon that the crowd is being initiated in. The room responds favorably throughout.

    At first I think Ichabod is a band dominated by a great bass player. His cool, watery bass sound stands out throughout their set. Combined with a lead vocalist with an interesting, almost off-key singing style and a drummer who’s a rattling, bass thud of adrenal discharge, Ichabod sounds pretty good. They’re another band dipping into the well of obscure ’70s hard rock sounds, at times alien, sometimes scary, at others just strange. The singer erupts now and again, gravelly rage blaring from his throat. They maintain a level of meanness for their set, and that power seems to come from their bassist, who the whole band seems to orbit around (I later find out that the guitarist was having technical difficulties the whole time). By the end, the lead singer is screeching like one of Tolkein’s Ringwraiths. They leave the stage just as they were getting warmed up.

    We’re All Gonna Die take the stage to much cheering. OB’s is now filled up with people getting in to see this hard rock power trio. In an evening of bands carrying on the traditions of hard rock, these guys are the kings. They unleash their savage guitar sound/rock and roll vocals, hectic, precise drumming and rock solid bass line, and OB’s is suddenly the epicenter of a sweet audio discharge. There’s so much of what I would consider outstanding musical influences woven into We’re All Gonna Die’s sound. The crunchiness of pre-Napster Metallica, the vocal intensity of The Cult, the attitude and heaviness of Sabbath, the cocksure slickness of Zeppelin, the three piece firepower of Cream. This stream of incessant, driving music washes over the crowd like manna from rock and roll heaven. The downbeat gets so thick and sludgy you can smoke it. It ends all too soon. (Joe Hacking)

    THE CHARMS, TRIPLE THICK
    The Abbey Lounge 9/5/03

    The Abbey has a spiffy new sign over the stage! It looks positively out of place amidst the heavy, grey air and sticky floors, but it’s nonetheless lovely. Playing under the sign when we arrive are Triple Thick. I can’t actually speak too well of their set—they are distinguished by really noticeably stupid lyrics, and they’re also pretty sloppy, to the point where they have to go over chord progressions before several songs, and they start one song off so obviously playing in different keys that they give up halfway through. Practice, practice. However, I want to like them because of the way they buck the gender-role trend: if a band has one woman and three guys, she’s usually not the lead guitarist. And she rocks, too; easily the best thing in the band. So practice hard, guys, and write some better words.

    Finally, The Charms show us how it’s done. This is what we’re here for, and the space in front of the stage is jam-packed. New drummer Meeker is EXCELLENT, and already gives the impression that he could play these songs in his sleep. Now, to be fair, the lyrics here aren’t really any smarter or more interesting than Triple Thick’s, but when a band is this tight, with great melodies and great harmonies, perfect stage presence, and the best damned guitar solos you’re likely to hear, I’m perfectly happy to sing along with “yeah yeah, baby, yeah.” The Farfisa has an elemental rightness in the context of these songs. We get a Zeppelin cover for an encore, and I’ll take Ellie Vee over Robert Plant any day. (Steve Gisselbrecht)

    THE REAL KIDS, CAGED HEAT
    The Abbey Lounge 8/12/03

    Jill Kurtz is easily one of my fave female singers in Boston, right up there with Jen Rassler. She’s so gutsy and it’s hard to believe that big voice is coming out of such a skinny little body. Her voice can rise from a whisper to a scream to underline her conviction, she can croon with bluesy longing as well as croak out her disgust. On “I’m Gonna Get to You,” her tightly wound vocal trades off with the bass line. Allen Devine plays his usual incisive lead guitar and sings some backing vocals along with the bass player (who has his own great punk band called The Collisions). “Losing You” is a country rock number with tandem vocals but I wish I could hear Jill’s guitar better. “Animal” ends it with scorching harmonica from Jill. This is a crowd favorite, a bluesy song that builds to a chaotic finish.

    The Real Kids take the stage and play yet another inspired set, with “Bad to Worse,” “You Gotta Lose That Girl,” and “Not the One” being highlights for me. Just what is a “Taxi Boy,” I’d like to know? I might need a lyric sheet on this. I also love the melancholy feel of “Somewhere West of Nowhere” that turns around on the bridge to a more upbeat sound. It seems to reflect life’s ups and downs. That simple guitar intro creates such suspense and then the kick drum starts thudding, the guitars get louder and it just explodes. I love the longing and honesty of John Felice’s lyrics that are kept tough and raw by the together musicianship of Billy Cole, Chris Barnard and Jimmy Birmingham. They care about getting the feelings across and that’s what the fans get off on. (Laura Markley)

    LOVELESS, FRANCINE, SEÑOR HAPPY
    T.T. the Bear’s 9/6/03

    Tonight is a woefully underattended Q Division NEMO showcase at TT’s. I don’t understand why Loveless, with their excellent, rocking, catchy songs, expertly played, aren’t huge stars, although the fact that I like them is usually a bad sign for a band’s marketability.

    First up are Señor Happy. While I’ve never seen them before, I’ve seen three quarters of them in other things: the drummer is also in Loveless, the bassist is in Godboxer, and Jay plays guitar and sings in Godboxer and The So and Sos. (When I ask him after the set how many bands he’s in, he laughs, but is unable or unwilling to name an exact number.) The lead singer is kind of weak—his voice is not bad, but he’s tentative, and his pitch isn’t always great—but the songs are good, and all the instruments are fine. The drummer is particularly good, and sings able backup, and I like Jay’s guitar leads. They prove to be my second-favorite band of the night.

    I saw the lead singer and drummer/backup singer of Francine recently on The Other Side of the Bear. As I suspected then, there’s a lot more going on in these songs, and Clayton Scoble is a perfectly able guitarist when he’s only trying to play one guitar part. And as they did then, the two voices complement each other nicely on these lovely and interesting melodies. However, they have The Mid-Tempo Rocker Problem; these songs worked really well as quiet acoustic numbers when we were all sitting down, but as rock songs they get boring in the aggregate.

    At last Loveless go on, a little late, for a slightly abbreviated set. It’s basically the same Loveless set they always play (their songs are great, but they should write more of them) with a really remarkably good mix. The vocal mix is especially great, and I can hear every note that Dave and Jen sing, a rare pleasure. All four of them are really on tonight, individually and collectively. The guitar timbres are even more feedback-drenched and wild than usual, while the vocals are tightly controlled and beautiful. During the set Dave announces that he has one copy of the long-awaited album, and as Tom and I are demonstrably their biggest fans in Boston, if not anywhere, he gives it to us, and our joy is complete. (Steve Gisselbrecht)

    SCREAMING FOR EMILY

    The Chicken Bone (Framingham, MA) 8/28/03

    I always hear such good things about this place. It’s supposed to be a hot new spot for talented local acts. Obviously, Screaming for Emily is not one of them. Disappointed would be an understatement. Maybe if my friends told me this place sucked, I wouldn’t expect much from the entertainment. I swear I saw these guys at a local “Battle of the Bands” in 1988. They were probably the next big thing in spandex and hairspray. It’s funny how the flash masks the fact that these guys have no talent. What I am seeing tonight onstage is a sad attempt at originality by a band without any. Their songs are boring at best when played in the same chord, as if they own the rights to it. Trying to salvage some recognition from the audience, they end with a pathetic acoustic cover of “Brown Eyed Girl.” Still no applause. I am chalking this up to a bad night for the club. I will visit here again soon, for this place has potential. Screaming for Emily does not. (Sue O.)

    THEY’RE GONNA GET YOU, NEW YOUTH
    Skybar 8/27/03

    The New Youth… yeah, they’re young but I don’t hear anything new. They sound like radio ready punk funk to me, with a white rapper dude in baggy pants, some slick guitar and bass playing and rhythms that sound like reggae here, hip hop there. Sometimes the singer drops the mic and plays conga while the guitar player does some Santana type solos with wah pedal. They’re fluid and obviously good musicians but this is not my thing, what can I say. One song has lyrics that sound like “hell no, we won’t go/ Babylon sister.”

    They’re Gonna Get You are a new surf band with Rachel “Ms. Organa” (formerly of Psychodaisies) on keyboard, Danny “Mr. Zen” on guitar, Dynamite Andy Excuse on bass, and Devito on drums. They play a fun, slapdash set of Dan’s originals plus a few covers of classic surf tunes like “Magnum 44” (“Pipeline” to those less in the know… and no, I didn’t know that, they told me!). Dan is a wildly energetic player with butt shaking dance moves that threaten to distract you from his scorching surf stylings. He changes guitars a few times (I wince when he throws down the beautiful lyre shaped one) and they come unplugged twice. I like the creatively titled songs like “Marsh Mel O Slut” and “Siddharta Was a Fag.” Rachel plays some roller rink sounding organ plus some cool glissandos while Andy announces each new song in a deep, horror movie host voice. Once “they” “get me,” I’m wondering what’ll they do to me. (Laura Markley)

    BANE OF EXISTENCE, ASCENDANCY, KEVORKIAN’S ANGELS, TERATISM
    Boston’s Dead, O’Brien’s 9/4/03

    Teratism is barrage death metal with demon-lord-of-zombie-army vocals. The drummer’s like a battalion of stormtroopers all firing at once with full mortar support. Twin guitars like twin 30 caliber cannons raining death from the wings of strafing fighters. Teratism is explosive, magmic, convulsive, and all this with no bass player (they’re still looking). We’re witnessing world class metal here, full of mad stampedes for the edge of the abyss. The guitarists pull off frantic dual leads, rolling staccatos, whirring groans, ethereal drones and stone grooves, eluding the specter of death metal clichés and concentrating on the underlying groove. Like Phantom Limb, these guys refuse to let a missing bass player stop them, but time does just as they sound like they’re getting warmed up.

    There are few bands in Boston that can overwhelm the senses so righteously as Kevorkian’s Angels. Their ability to play beyond the range of non-musician perception makes them a tough cookie to crack, but when you finally comprehend what they’re up to, you understand that this is trance metal, so concentrated and intense that it may one day have a martial art designation. The fact that the crowd is responding more actively to their slower stuff still leads me to believe that the average audience finds them hard to decode, but they’re like Frank Zappa, the more you listen, the more their music opens up to you. As usual, this performance is being driven by the almost mythological speed of their drummer and the equally amazing ability of the band to keep it tight. The discipline required to perform like this is grounds for canonization into the heavy metal sainthood.

    I reviewed Ascendancy a few months ago when they had the ballsy chick bass player, but this time out they’ve got some dude who apparently has learned their catalog in some ridiculously short amount of time. He’s pulling it off, but the band understandably sounds different, with a lot more guttural low end. The rest of the sound is splashing cymbals, rotary guitar drones, spastic kick drum, gargling demon burbling musical froth. The kachunka rhythms and anvil hammer snare make it sound like this band represents the thrown pushrod in the engine of western civilization. The guitarists suddenly stroll out of O’Brien’s and walk along the front of the building, playing metal at the intersection of Cambridge and Harvard via their radio transmitters. The effect within O’Brien’s is that of a disembodied band. The effect without is a lot of confused motorists. They return to the stage and finish up to massive applause.

    You can tell Bane Of Existence is psyched about their upcoming gig opening for Overkill. Like a cruel thought manifested, Bane brings to the room the sound of oblivion, a sonic wall of crunchy, wargasmic guitar and bass that pushes up a mountain of metal energy. Behind the guitarist and bassist is one of the most dynamic and stoic drummers in the city. He melds well with the rock/metal opulence of his other gig, Noosebomb, but it’s obvious that Bane is where he puts his energy. It’s the fact that the rest of Bane utilize him to such full potential that makes them worthy of adulation. His bandmates take his hellacious hammerings and build a solid wall of human will as the set progresses, thickening it with every minute. The singer’s out front, working to produce the vocal expression of their sound. Bane finishes another Boston’s Dead off nicely at O’Brien’s. (Joe Hacking)

    FRITTER, STARR FAITHFULL, EILEEN ROSE
    The Paradise 9/11/03

    I wonder if I’ll ever say, write, or type “September 11” without this feeling again.

    Everyone at the show tonight, of course, has to acknowledge this most un-festive of occasions, but we’re here to rock, and rock we will. This is part of The Rising Tide series, presented by Anngelle Wood of WFNX. Eileen Rose and her band are playing when I arrive—a bit of a shame, as I have apparently missed amusia entirely. Eileen and her band are okay, but her songs are a bit country-folky for my tastes, and I find I really dislike her voice. There’s something nasal and flat about it, flat not in pitch but in timbre. But the songs themselves are pretty, the band are skilled, and when they leave the stage and Ms. Rose plays the last song solo-acoustic, I think it works a little better in this setting.

    Starr Faithfull has got the music in her. And it’s tryin’ to get out! It’s tryin’ to get out! Her voice is a fabulous screaming, growling thing, and her guitar playing is serious virtuosa stuff. There are also a bassist and a drummer, and in fact both play creatively and well and sing good backup, but I find myself forgetting that they’re on stage. She’s that captivating. The songs themselves are really kind of simple and straightforward, and I think that they wouldn’t particularly grab me if there weren’t this force of nature singing them and playing kick-ass solos. But there is!

    Finally, Fritter play to a dwindling crowd, as it’s a school night and the T is closing. Their streak is unbroken: I’ve still never seen these songs played by the same lineup twice. Elizabeth Steen’s voice is pleasingly gruff tonight, kind of soft and furry. Peter Moore is singing harmony, and I love the way their voices blend. They seem a little under-rehearsed at one or two points, studying cheat-sheets in mid-song, and Elizabeth complains of technical difficulties, but musicians this good can wing it in style, and the small crowd is appreciative. (Steve Gisselbrecht)

    WELK, GLADYS THE MULE, AWAKENING STICK
    O’Brien’s 9/13/03

    Co-fronted by the bass player and the guitarist, a long-haired testament to searing solos, Awakening Stick plays a set of driving, in-your-face rockers. I find this power trio’s songs just long enough and the guitar solos—a rarity these days—just short enough. You could say that they’re ’70s influenced but that’s not entirely accurate. This band seems to draw from a number of influences, processes all that information, then spits out a crunchy-but-melodic guitar-based sound that’s entirely their own. I notice that the audience, indifferent at first, gradually becomes capitivated. By the end of the set they’re nodding to one another doing the white man dance. One guy even holds up a lighter.

    Gladys the Mule doesn’t capitalize on the energy of the opener and regrettably puts the brakes on the night with their singer-songwriter/ jam band sound. I want to like this four-piece; after all, they are well-rehearsed, technically proficient, and seem earnest in their quest for appreciation (besides, I admit to being drawn to affectionate animal names). But they remain in mid-tempo jam band mode for most of the set which becomes increasingly tedious. Similarly, their stoicism as well as their rumpled appearance gives the impression that they rolled out of bed and onto the stage without the benefit of a cup of coffee. Maybe caffeine kicks in for the last song, though—an energetic rocker during which the guys actually become animated. I only wish they had spiced up the set before the end.

    Headlining is Welk. I’ll spare them the implications of the name, but let’s just say that they bear no resemblance to that “wunnerful, wunnerful” show my grandparents used to watch on Saturday nights when I was a kid. They’re a three-piece electronica-guitar-art sound fusion band with a rabid following. Their keyboard-based soundscapes—you can’t really call them “songs”—meld into each other throughout the set and culminate in a frenzied apocalyptic crescendo which elicits enthusiastic whoops and yelps from their fans, one of whom is inspired to attempt, however badly, some Russian-style squat kicks around the bar. Welk’s set is devoid of vocals with the lone exception of an alarming piece that involves much incongruous and off-key yelling amidst the keyboard acrobatics a full thirty-five minutes into their otherwise droning and meandering exploration of their keyboards’ tricks. Welk is like high modernist art—the kind we’re not supposed to admit we don’t get. (Robin Umbley)

    HELICOPTER HELICOPTER, THE COLLISIONS

    T.T. the Bear’s 9/13/03

    I arrive at T.T.’s just as The Collisions are about to go on. They take the stage and launch immediately into a fairly faithful cover of “Pablo Picasso Was Never Called An Asshole.” At this point, I’m inclined to like them. Nor am I disappointed, as their whole set is good, silly fun. The songs themselves are slight and simple things, but they sing good harmonies and they all play their instruments well. I’m particularly fond of the drummer; I love a man who knows how to use his floor tom.

    Headlining, and the reason I’m here, are Helicopter Helicopter. This band have the complete package: really great songs, (assuming you like their brand of beautiful melodic power-pop, which I do) two excellent lead singers, both of whom seem perfectly happy to sing backup as appropriate, and both of whom are ALSO excellent lead guitarists who seem perfectly happy to play rhythm as appropriate, a fine bassist, and another great drummer. This is the first time I’ve seen them with Dave Foy on drums, and I am suitably impressed. They play a nice long set, more or less evenly divided between songs from the new album and the (to my taste) even better previous album, with a couple of their older and maybe a little punkier numbers thrown in. A big chunk of the crowd left after Dressy Bessy were done, but those of us who remain are loud and enthusiastic, and the band seem happy to be home. (Steve Gisselbrecht)

    THE PHEROMONES
    T.T. the Bear’s 8/31/03

    Labor day weekend and I’m going nowhere. T.T.’s seems like a good idea, why not? They have beer, seeing as I just ran outta PBR.

    New to town, but not rock, The Pheromones hold your attention with an early Mellencamp sorta sound (and if you say you don’t like early Mellencamp, you’re a bloody liar). Apparently the band had just pulled themselves together; the bass player is new. The drummer just flew in from Seattle, where the band began, about a week before. But you’d never know. They are tight. They flow effortlessly through a set of straight ahead rock ‘n’ roll, including a kick ass cover of The Clash’s “Train in Vain.” Their sound has the feeling of what you’d want on your CD player if you were throwing a party. This trio is the kind of band that stops conversations. They reek of rock. (Bebe Gunn)

    BUXTON, PAUL SCHNEIDER
    The Kendall Cafe 8/19/03

    My only disappointment in this evening’s show is having arrived at the Kendall Café too late to catch more of the Paul Schneider set. When walking in the trio is on stage jamming through their final song, the small café filled with funky and beautiful sound that I note to check out again. Happy with the memory of what I just heard and the many posters of progressive rock and folk-y singers covering the walls, I am suddenly both excited and uncertain about seeing an acoustic show by the very un-acoustic Buxton, who will next take the stage.

    I have found myself seeing a lot of this band over the past few months, attending almost every Buxton show since January—both for local support and for my own musical cravings. So by now I have come to know their songs as well as the ones daily commuters hear on the car radio driving home. During each set I look forward to particular favorites, notice new, standout tunes, and occasionally find myself singing along when the pop-rock melody gets too addictive. This might explain why I am finding their acoustic show at the cute, quaint Kendall Café to be so refreshing! For a band with guitar driven rock that aims at giving the loudest performance possible, planning an acoustic show seems like a tough, maybe even impossible, gig—but worthy of the challenge. The boys of Buxton are true musicians and lead singer Scott Chase writes songs that are likable in any context. Breaking things down and emphasizing lyrics turn these rock stars into poets and call attention to musical arrangements that I had yet to notice. Even though I will always look forward to the next rockin’ Buxton show, I’ll remember this particularly for its proof that Buxton’s songs don’t sound so good just because they’re loud and powerful, but because they’re written well and being played with skill and care. (Vanessa Earl)

    HO-AG, CAN’T, BIG BEAR
    Choppin Block 8/31/03

    I’ve been dying to see Big Bear for weeks. They take they stage first—two guitars, bass, drums, and this singer that looks like my friend’s eight-year-old niece. The guitars start to thrum, people start elbowing up front, and this tiny girl opens her little mouth and just SCREAMS like nothing I’ve heard before. The sound is so rich and huge and balanced—they’re laying out everything I love about The Melvins and this chick is actually banging a tambourine against her hip as she thrashes around with her pixie haircut and her unholy howling and holy shit, I want to drop everything and follow this band wherever they go. They play five songs, each better than the last, and by the end of their set I’m drooling, ready to buy anything and everything they have and the tiny girl says, “We have a mailing list.” Sadness sets in. Big Bear, I love you. I really do. Make me a fucking tape already.

    Can’t—nee Jessica Rylan, one woman noise band—is setting up in the back. She only brought this ten watt speaker and the modulated synth that she built. The sound starts low and slow like she likes it—she’s really an old lady at heart—and I wish her speaker was louder because the club is pretty crowded, no one is paying any attention and she deserves all the attention in the room. The tension builds and people start milling around her. She dances and she’s electric. She hums and squawks and twitches and strangles her voice in her throat and through a CB mic. She moves a knob a fraction of an inch and a beautiful rumbling sound emits from the speaker. She’s mastered the art of explosives at the lowest range possible. I don’t know why she calls herself Can’t, because she can do whatever she wants and it will still sound incredible.

    Ho-Ag just came back from a two week tour and you can hear it; their songs are instinctual to them. Their songs are closely knit and multi-faceted, like four minute suites, and are so catchy that you walk away singing them although they are like a complex equation. Matt Parish, their singer and lead guitarist, slings his forearm over the mic like he’s your next door neighbor just having a chat over the fence and he’s not actually singing these sharp, surrealist melodies. Patrick is supposed to be their rhythm guitarist, I guess, but he plays effects so they sound like a compromise between keyboards and guitar; they occupy a space that no other sound will fit. Top that off with the rumbling bass of Dave Dines and the drumming finesse of John Rue and you’re never disappointed. Ever. (Donna Parker)

    AD FRANK, CLAYTON SCOBLE
    T.T. the Bear’s 8/25/03

    “The Other Side of the Bear” is T.T.’s Monday night acoustic series: small, quiet, and soothing. Clayton Scoble is playing guitar and singing as I arrive, with someone (I missed the introduction.) helping out on light drums and backing vocals. They do a mixture of originals and covers, and the songs are good Monday-night songs, mellow and relaxing. I’m not crazy about the guitar; either some of these songs have a tonal structure that’s weirder than I can follow, or it’s just out of tune, and on some songs it seems kind of labored, but the highlight here is the singing. Whether singing in octaves, as they do on one song, or in lovely harmonies on most of them, the gruff baritone and lightweight tenor add up to way more than the sum of the parts.

    Ad Frank headlines solo. He is an incredibly gifted songwriter, turning out one gorgeous, bittersweet pop epic after another. Ad’s voice is pretty rough tonight, but his piano playing is just beautiful, spare and delicate and intensely musical. He doesn’t actually play keyboards with his band, The Fast Easy Women, so it’s a treat to hear this set. The covers that he chooses fit really well with his songs, and we get one great new tune that elicits heartfelt murmurs of approval from the audience—the “Other Side of the Bear” equivalent of a standing ovation. In mid-set he switches to guitar for a few songs, then back to piano for the big finish. He threatens to end with a fairly faithful cover of “What I Did For Love,” but fortunately follows that with an upbeat rocker of a Fast Easy Women tune that sounds great in this stripped-down setting. (Steve Gisselbrecht)

    SHATTERED EXISTENCE, PARANOID
    The Skybar 9/7/03

    I saw Paranoid at a VFW all ages show down in Kingston, MA in June with a bunch of other great bands I’d love to see in Boston. Paranoid are the only ones who’ve made it so far. Since June, this power trio have gotten much more savage, tight and edgy. These three younguns’ are channeling an updated old school southern metal sound adeptly here at O’Brien’s this evening. The guitarist/ vocalist invokes Zakk Wylde in all his warbling harmonic glory and Pepper Keenan in all his iron-shod chunkiness. The drummer seems twice as powerful and focused this time, and the bassist has a good old time of grounding this heavy, clever sound through a thick, dense-as-lead accompaniment with the drums or guitar, depending on the moment. The sound they’re laying down is fresh, heavy and full of quicksilver slickness. I hope to see more of Paranoid in Boston.

    The Pantera influence in Shattered Existence is obvious, except that I like the lead singer’s voice better than Phil Anselmo’s. More straightforward and old school than a lot of the area’s other metal units, SE nevertheless maintain a level of intensity and deftness that sets them apart in the field of their peers. Tonight, a good part of this intensity comes from their drummer’s symphonic style, the cymbal and double kick work sometimes sounding like a wall of falling boulders. The groove he lays down gets picked up and amplified by bassist and guitarist, and then Shattered Existence are GROOVIN’! They explode from the stage as if all the agents from every major label were in the audience, judging them. Their compositions discharge from the modest Skybar stage like coolant through a nuclear reactor, the hooks where they should be, the frantic runs placed where they work. Pretty heavy, dude. (Joe Hacking)

    TANYA DONELLY, KRISTIN HERSH, JULIANA HATFIELD, THE STONE COYOTES,
    BLAKE HAZARD, THE SO AND SO’S, ELIZABETH STEEN, JAMES O’BRIEN
    Rockingham, VT 8/15/03-8/17/03

    Rock in Rockingham is a three-day indie rock party in Vermont, mounted by the crew of Fort Apache studios in their new country home and centered around Kristin Hersh and Tanya Donelly. The party begins Friday night with New Faces Night at Rick’s Bar & Grill. The first New England band is James O’Brien and the Church of the Kitchen Sink. I am a bit frustrated by this band. The best thing about them are their lyrics, which are amazingly cool and bizarre and evocative. The vocal melodies are also quite good. The principal frustration comes from his singing: if he just had a crappy voice, that would be one thing. Instead, he apparently has access to a really good voice, which we hear maybe 30% of the time, but most of the time he seems to clamp down his throat and choke the music out through his nose, giving it a strangled, nasal, constipated tone. It’s a real shame, and the boy needs to practice really hard until he sings well all the time, reliably. Then he’ll be pretty great. The Church of the Kitchen Sink, alas, have no promise of greatness. They’re all absolutely fine, and resoundingly mediocre. Not one of them ever does anything interesting.

    I’m a big Elizabeth Steen fan and I’m really looking forward to her set. The first song she plays is unfamiliar to me, a big treat, and the rest are from Mockery, her album with her band Fritter. Tanya and Dean sit in on a few songs, Tanya singing backup on “Milktoast” and “Scapegrace Sister.” (This is the fourth time I’ve heard some of these songs performed, with a completely different lineup each time!) They sound fantastic, and Elizabeth seems to be getting more comfortable in the front woman role. She entertains the crowd with a reading from “The Existential Poetry of Donald Rumsfeld,” which is really funny until it occurs to me that this man really does control the US armed forces. Scary stuff, kids.

    Next up, The So and So’s, from beautiful Boston, MA. I’ve never seen them before, and I’m really impressed. They are an awesome rock band. The songs are pretty good, and lead singer Meghan Toohey has a terrific voice and great attitude. I have heard of her as a folk singer, but here she’s a rocker. The other guitarist and the bassist both sing good harmonies well. The drummer is totally solid, if a little boring. The coolest thing about them is the two guitarists, who switch off lead and rhythm duties and occasionally share the lead in an excellent, really interesting way, so that the lead comprises the lines both of them are playing fused together.

    The next day I head over to the big tent in a parking lot which is the venue for Saturday’s show. First on the bill today is Blake Hazard, joined by John Dragonetti and his laptop. John plays bass on one song, and guitar on the rest; the laptop provides drum machine sounds, of which I am no fan. Blake plays guitar and sings, and it’s like it always is when I see her. Her demeanor is so ludicrously sunny and happy that I want desperately to like her, but her songs are pretty and bland and, ultimately, boring. I honestly do not remember a single thing about a single song that she played.

    The Stone Coyotes are my discovery of the weekend. They’re a three-piece out of western MA, and a family affair: singer/songwriter/guitarist Barbara Keith, her husband Doug Tibbles on drums, and his son John Tibbles on bass. Barbara is a fabulous, wailing rock chick—the killer song “First Lady of Rock” is on the album Born To Howl, which pretty much tells you what you need to know. Doug gets a full, complicated rhythm out of just two drums, hi-hat, and one cymbal! And John steps up near the end with a fiercely complex slap part on one song. I attempt to nucleate a standing ovation, with moderate success.

    Juliana Hatfield is daunted to follow them, but the crowd loves her. I honestly don’t know why; to me, she’s Blake Hazard without the pleasant disposition. I’ve just never liked her songwriting, and her guitar playing is pretty pedestrian. But it’s solid, and she does have a lovely voice, and she gets probably the loudest response of the day so far.

    Finally, it’s the beginning of the Main Event. Kristin Hersh takes the stage to thunderous applause and plays a set that has me in tears. She starts out with songs from Sunny Border Blue, her 2001 solo album, and an old Muses song or two, before pulling out the big guns. I had accepted that I would never hear “The Letter” played live, since she’s said many times (including today) that she hates the song. But she plays it for us, and it is devastating. As I am regaining my composure, Andrew Bird joins her with his “punky fiddle” for five songs, including Throwing Muses’ “Hook In Her Head,” which is the greatest piece of music anyone has ever written. Oddly, they play nothing from her most recent album, which Andrew plays on, but there’s another show tomorrow.

    No encore, because Tanya Donelly is the headliner tonight. She starts out alone and acoustic (after some unnerving mic issues) on “The Bees,” a fan favorite. She is soon joined by Dean Fisher on guitar and drums, the legendary Rich Gilbert on guitar, pedal steel, and mandolin, and Elizabeth Steen on gorgeous high harmonies, with occasional keyboard and eggs. With four musicians on stage, the sound is still very solo-acoustic (especially since Tanya’s attempts to play electric guitar nearly get her electrocuted by a mis-grounded microphone!). She plays a mixture of her solo stuff and Belly tunes, including radically countrified acoustic versions of mega-hits “Feed the Tree” and “Slow Dog.” “Keeping You” is sung to her young daughter, playing in the center aisle. For an encore, she calls Heather Rose up to the stage to sing harmony on “Silverfish,” and when a second encore is demanded we get a funny and fabulous solo acoustic version of “Red,” a big rocker from Belly’s last album. They practically have to herd us out of the tent to make us leave.

    Sunday’s venue is the Rockingham Meeting House, a 200-year-old church, for acoustic sets from Tanya and Kristin. I believe these may be the most uncomfortable seats I’ve ever sat on. We are nevertheless mesmerized and immobile for both sets. Tanya, Elizabeth and Dean play the just-finished (like, three days ago) new album in its entirety. The songs are soft and spare, with lots of Elizabeth’s gorgeous piano. Highlights for me, on first listen, are “Devils Everywhere” and “Butterfly Thing,” the latter built cleverly around the idea that, if our actions can have huge unforeseen consequences, I’ll just stay in my room. She finishes with a few older songs.

    Last, Kristin sets up with Andrew Bird and we finally get to hear some songs from The Grotto. They’re beautiful and haunting—having a Throwing Muses album come out the same day really freed these songs to be quiet and meditative. After Andrew leaves she plays mostly older solo songs, and then Tanya comes back and they duet on “Two Step,” the Throwing Muses breakup song. If there’s a dry eye in the house, I certainly can’t see it. (Steve Gisselbrecht)

    We get lots of calls from bands asking for coverage of their live shows. Please be advised that shows are never assigned for review. Noise writers cover what they choose to attend. It’s logistically impossible to honor or acknowledge these requests. The Noise has always had its ears closest to the ground in greater Boston. If you’re doing something even remotely exceptional, we’ll be the first to tell the world. If you’re horrible, same thing.

  • SILVER CIRCLE REVIEWS: September 2007 | T Max’s Music Site

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    SILVER CIRCLE REVIEWS: September 2007

    THE ATLANTICS
    Something Hot Communications
    Live
    13-song CD
    Nostalgia is what gets in the way. I don’t care that the band recorded this on March 25, 1979 on the eve of the national tour that was to make their reputation, nor need I mention that ABC Records dropped the ball forthwith. But The Atlantics were most likely never destined to be anything like The Cars, churning out their patented brand of deracinated New Wave kitsch; The Atlantics, bless their souls, were nothing if not full of rough edges and full-throated piss and vinegar, as evidenced on this middling-to-good-sounding sampler of their live repertoire. Of the songs that stand out as underrated classics, the Stones-y “Straight From My Heart,” shows attitude and bite and is a textbook case on how to write a canonical no-frills rock song, and the must-hear cover of Mark Bolan’s “Jeepster” shows just how good a live band they really were. As for the rest, if you’re in the nostalgia market, you won’t be disappointed; the favorites are well-represented here: from the garage-deluxe rant of “Teenage Flu,” the riff-tastic “I Can’t Help It,” and the catchy pure pop of “When You’re Young,” to the histrionic “One Last Night,” and the incorruptibly anthemic “Big City Rock.” (Francis DiMenno)

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    TWINEMEN
    Hi-N-Dry
    Twinetime
    8-song CD
    Can we pass a resolution making Twinemen the house band at the Lizard Lounge? The music, heavy on the low notes and with plenty of jazz and blues overtones, just seems like a perfect fit for a dark, mellow basement room, and Laurie Sargent’s vocals would fill the place with enough smoke for you to forget that there’s smoking ban in effect. There are some real standout songs on here, particularly the sultry, almost dirty “Come Clean,” and the playing, especially Dana Colley on the sax, is top notch throughout, which is what you would expect from a band that formed out of Morphine’s ashes. It is particularly impressive how the band knows exactly when to let things breathe and allow the spaces between the notes do the talking. There are a few problems, though. The songs don’t have quite as much variation as one would hope, and the opening melody of “Calamity J.” reminds me way too much of Phil Collins’ “That’s All.” Those are hardly fatal flaws, though, as this is a solid piece of work. (Kevin Finn)

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    THE BIG DISAPPOINTMENTS
    Hot Cave Records
    The Big Disappointments
    15-song CD
    Screw any attempts at rock-crit hipness here—this is just fucking excellent. The hard part, however, is painting an accurate picture of the music, which reminds me of many bands, but not enough to actually name one. It’s a pretty stripped down sound that manages to be lush when it needs to be, it travels effortlessly from the haunted, medicated country of “Deathbed Country” to the desperate straight-ahead drive of “Like to Know” to the swampy “Crop Diamond Everglade,” but all while sounding like one band with one coherent musical vision. Eric Boomhower’s vocals are all miked in that sort of “distant radio station” style, which works perfectly without seeming like a gimmick, and the rest of the band demonstrates a focus on the requisites of the song, egos well in hand. Produced by the band and Thalia Zedek, mixed by Paul Kolderie and mastered by Nick Zampiello, this comes with some serious pedigree, and the whole thing shines like a piece of gold found on a lonesome fog-bound trail somewhere in the West. Damn near perfect. (Tim Emswiler)

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    27
    Release Records
    Holding On for Better Days
    10-song CD
    They should be holding out for better songs. (Scratch that—Beliel made me say it.) No, seriously, I like to kid 27, but I ask you, what’s not to like? Sawed-off meat-eating brutes and sardonic High Priests of Now Who Treat Everything Like A Big Fat Joke may scoff, but who, other than soulless, barking mad vulgarians, can argue with the results evidenced on these ten kaleidoscopic tracks: mind-manifesting production values, shimmery textures, endorphin-flooded soundscapes, demurely mood-setting vocals, misty-eyed ballads, and melancholic vistas, all those melancholic vistas? Can’t you see? Can’t you see what they’re trying to do? They’re using their music like a painter uses a canvas. No kidding: these are actually impressionistic soundscapes. They don’t exclude the uninitiated in quite the same way as say, the drip-tastic canvasses of Jackson Pollack; nobody is going to go home and say my three-year old coulda done that. But if you’re looking for riff-ariffic tunes with a 2-4 beat about fucking whores and puking in the gutter, then Brosephus, you are definitely in the wrong damn neighborhood. (Francis DiMenno)

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    THE 2×4’s
    Process Bessemer
    Compilation
    15-song CD
    Zipperheads rejoice! It’s time to fire up the Bridgeport lathe and do the Nakkamichi boogie. Before Germany assaulted the world with industrial techno, Boston had its own brand of, um, “industrial techno,” in a more literal sense, with the 2×4’s. Led by John Hovorka, the 2×4’s played a stripped down, mechanical interpretation of classic rock ’n’ roll with lyrics based on, well, factories and machine shops in the industrialized world. Peoplewho have worked in machine shops (like me) will understand the stories and situations depicted in these tunes. Songs like “Mechanistic Girl,” “Fight Fire with Fire,” and “Iron Line” conjure up tales of blue-collared past. The immortal “Bridgeport Lathe” has practicle advice: “foxy secretaries make a point of passing through… but you might get your arm torn off, if you look too long from your Blanchard Grind-All.” All the songs are great, and a lot of fun to listen to. The infectious melodies make this a great party disc. It’s been a long time coming, and this CD compilation of all the 2×4’s various singles and LPs is a must own for any audiophile, or local music junkie. It was also remixed and remastered! It just doesn’t get any better than this. (John Hess)

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    JIMMY RYAN & HAYRIDE
    Hi-N-Dry
    Fun With Music
    10-song CD
    It seems like there are bands that can play live shows well and bands that write and record great albums. Jimmy Ryan and Hayride is one of those bands that does it all. Jimmy Ryan on mandolin and Duke Levine on guitar are probably two of the most talented musicians you’ll find anywhere. These two gents are literally superheroes of the roots rock scene in Boston by playing music like gods among mere mortals. Together they are a force as unstoppable as Superman and Batman. As a result Fun with Music is chock full of well-crafted tales that delve into blistering solos and showcase the band’s virtuosic chops and Jimmy’s soft crooning voice. There are some nice surprises on there too, like Sarah Borges singing along with Jimmy in “No More Songs About Whiskey” and a light-speed version of “Salt Creek.” Like a fine bourbon, songs like “Firescape,” “Blossom,” and “It Takes One to Know One,” leave you with a happy, warm feeling your belly. This album is the kind that grows on you more and more with each listen. If you only go out and get one local music disc this year, do yourself a favor, make it this one. (Kier Byrnes)

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    THE GOBSHITES
    Another Round
    13-song CD
    On their third album The Gobshites plow their familiar turf—Irished-up cover songs by the likes of Stiff Little Fingers, The Damned, The Replacements, The Ramones, assorted locals (Darkbuster et al.), plus “Friggin’ in the Riggin’,” an ancient, profane chantey that was, of course, famously covered by the Sex Pistols. The Irishing-up is most admirably done; banjo, fiddle, pennywhistles, impeccable arrangements, and so forth. All the songs are about wild boys and their wild and boozing ways. In a way, this sort of single-mindedness places the band squarely in the folk camp, whether they care to be there or not; they are the modern-day bardic equivalent of Miss Joan Baez warbling about “Pretty Boy Floyd,” though they don’t sing anywhere as nice. But they sure as hell seem to know what they’re talking about, in the same way that some superannuated blues centenarian with one tooth in his redeye-chugging skull knows exactly what it’s like to chop weevily cotton in the man-killing sun. So although The Gobshites may run the gamut from A (alcohol) to B (beer), they still get the top grade for authentic Irish all-out orneryness. (Francis DiMenno)

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    CARRY THE ZERO
    Hey! Hey! Hey!
    7-song CD
    It takes balls to call your album Hey! Hey! Hey!–people are going to expect you to throw it down and get the dance floor all beery and maybe bloody. But the title track (entitled “Title Track”) will put your mind at ease and your body in motion, as the band comes out swinging like The Turbines, and with the same kind of vintage sound but better guitars. Things slow down a bit after that, but they don’t lose intensity, and then the wah-wah-soaked chop chords of “Rev ‘Em Up” bring you back to the fist-pumping. Now, it also takes balls to cover “Midnight Confessions.” Full credit for the fact that this cover works so well goes to singer Matt Erhartic, who belts out these songs with the soul of Sam Cooke, a range wider than yours, and enough pissed-off-ness to make it sound like these tracks were done with a cop standing in the doorway yelling “Okay, boys, time to wrap it up, the neighbors have had enough.” But you haven’t. Excellent. (Tim Emswiler)

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    DESTROY BABYLON
    Music ADD
    Separation
    7-song CD
    From listening to this record, along with Destroy Babylon’s previous work, I feel that somewhere inside of this band is a very good album waiting to come out, but there’s still some work to do. Musically, their mix of reggae and punk works quite well, and while that’s an easy pairing of which to be skeptical, there’s no authenticity issue here either. In fact, the arranging and the playing have gotten a lot better, particularly with the horns. The big problem, though, is that while this left-wing band has its heart in the right place, the lyrics too often come across as generic sloganeering instead of illustrative storytelling. The band knows what it wants to say; it just hasn’t figured out an effective way to say it. In addition, the album’s momentum comes to a screeching halt with the last track, an unnecessary and self-indulgent 10-minute piece consisting of only trombone and some effects. Criticism aside, Destroy Babylon is worth keeping an eye on. (Kevin Finn)

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    THE UNSEEN
    Hellcat Records
    Internal Salvation
    13-song CD
    On their fifth album, these local punk stalwarts may serve up a largely standard-issue brand of anarcho-sermonizing, with the generic punk tumbrels all situated neatly awry, ready to roll the unpenitent war pigs to their well-deserved damnation. But what surprises me here is how high-quality the underlying tunes are, and how most of them would stand up to extended scrutiny even if they were rendered in the much-derided unplugged format. That may never happen: the band is too damn hot. They have energy to burn and are therefore, q.e.d., the antithesis of hipster cool, which depends upon a façade of not caring at all about anything. Furthermore, the hipster lives in constant paranoiac fear that someone, somewhere, might take innocent pleasure in his output strictly for its own sake, rather than for its intrinsic value as a trophy to brag about. No; unless I badly misjudge them, I think The Unseen are about as unhip as they come. Sure, they throw in a fillup here and there that reminds you that they’re perhaps still overly fond of heavy-metal histrionics, but otherwise they seem to care deeply about the music, not the power games. Praise be. (Francis DiMenno)

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    TWO VIEW REVIEW

    P.J. O’CONNELL
    Clang!
    Careful
    14-song CD
    Greetings, Zortar here reviewing Americana music which means as much as linoleum to me, being an alien and not of the immigrant variety (like Mrs. Slimedog). This is roots music but has no direct correlation with hair. It’s well played, well sung and very well produced. I think of Nick Lowe, The Beatles, Tom Petty when I listen to this and also, if there’s squirrels in Iceland. But you might not have the same thoughts as I do, You know, this stuff is slick but in a good way, but it doesn’t connect with my cold alien soul. And it would make me feel guilty to toss childish remarks their way, So, I deem this CD good, I crown it with my glorious scepter even if it ultimately doesn’t do much for me. (Slimedog)

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    P.J. O’CONNELL
    Clang!
    Careful
    14-song CD
    Just what does P.J. have to do to break through the wall of indifference that surrounds roots rock not recorded in, say, Nashville or Memphis? Record with NRBQ? Well, he already did that. And yet, following his second solo release, the sporadically brilliant 2004 LP “Happy Go Lucky,” O’Connell still garnered scanty recognition, even for songs as intrinsically incandescent as “I Can’t Stop Thinkin’ About You,” “Old Moss Back,” and “Happiness Is Havin’.” So, on this follow-up, Mr. O’Connell seems a maybe just a wee bit disgruntled, and small wonder. This third outing has songs every bit as brilliant, but it also has a consistency that was lacking on “Dream Life,” his first solo recording. The opening track, “Can’t Get it Right,” sets the tone: O’Connell magnificently grumbles like the Sultans of Swing on a bummer trip. “Walked Away” is an evincing, world-weary tune that belongs on everyman’s play list, the title track is an insinuating nugget that truly resonates with our times, and “Eventide” is a transcendent ballad the likes of which the Eagles would have given their eyeteeth to have written. So for God’s sake get wise to yourself and go and visit, pjoconnell.com. (Francis DiMenno)

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    DARK MARTINI & THE DIRTY OLIVES
    Rapeeesh Records
    Go On Get Out
    7-song CD
    Dark Martini & the Dirty Olives sound pretty cool, and I’ll be damned if I can’t hear an overall band sound reminiscent of the early part of the decade within which Bill Clinton was president. It’s kind of a funky grunge, and for a power trio, this band really makes a full sound—not a whole lot of interesting changes harmonically, though. Mostly a blues-based sensibility mixed with rock drives these songs, which may or may not be your cup of tea. The guitar sound is a classic tone—sort of compressed distortion with not too much sustain, just what you need. The tunes are all foot-tappable and catchy, and these guys have worked the sound into a tight cherry bomb of aural presence. I always liked trios—they have more space but more to work for and to prove. If they’re good, they work harder at it. Dark Martini & the Dirty Olives is a good mix. (Mike Loce)

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    DANIEL BON & THE FUTURE GHOSTS
    Walking Backwards Thru the City
    11-song CD
    After having fronted both Pennyred and Averi, it’s easy for a lead singer to want to stretch out and do his own thing. Daniel Bon’s solo debut shows a great deal of musical scope and depth beyond the bands with which he was involved.
    The songs are engaging and interesting, but like a lot of post-band solo efforts, tries to be all things and all styles at once. This, unfortunately, makes for a very uneven and disjointed record. Bon’s band is very tight and his sense of melody and harmony is impeccably produced. There are songs that rock, songs that soar, and songs that make you think. If you think of this album as a compilation instead of one man’s spiritual journey (I mean—seriously how many albums are about the songwriter’s “spiritual journey?”), you’re in for one hell of a pop ride! (Joel Simches)

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    ECLECTIC COLLECTIVE
    The Flux
    7-song CD
    Extra, extra, read all about it! Technically gifted musicians and heavy-handed producer combine for a syrupy and bland album! The truth is, when you combine “funk, jazz, hip-hop and metal” you get none of the above. Instead a hybrid sound is born. Every song employs the same elements and achieves the same results. No one would mistake this for any of the above genres, If this album had existed 30 years ago, before we were able to hear any genre of music with the click of a mouse, The EC might have had something groundbreaking. But, we’ve heard everything. We’ve been to Dre Day and back. We’ve floated through Kind of Blue. We’ve seen The Mothership Land. We’ve been to Ozzfest. And we love all that shit. Think about it. How many people say they listen to “everything”? A lot. But how many people want “everything” in one song, or one album. I can only think of one. My cousin Charlie in Ithaca. You know what though, he’s going to grow out of that. (Kevin McDevitt)

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    TIM BLANE
    SBKB Publishing
    Clockwork
    12-song CD
    Radio music lets you know it’s radio music. I have to say that first off. It’s just me being me. Tim Blaine is totally polished. What are the criteria for program directors to play songs in this day and age? That’s rhetorical. It’s really good sounding stuff, and it must be exciting to be Tim. That’s not snarky, as I was once accused of being. Tim, is it exciting being you? Right on man. I’m happy for you. This material is the result of NEMO performances, dedication to the cause of developing the music, acknowledgement of your own sound, and also an astute observation of what sounds good to who, and why. How the hell can you fault this music? You can’t. I tried and found that most negative aspects of my opinion were really based on my own incompetence at listening. Nice job on this album, it’s a slice of 2007 as real and true as anything. (Mike Loce)

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    BRANDON HEISLER
    Do Me In
    9-song CD
    Slimedog’s cat, here. Yeah, I know, why does a cat get to review? Especially one that’s used up his nine lives, good news, humans—there’s an afterlife! Bad news—it’s only for animals, seems we are the ones who got souls! Are you really surprised? Look around you. Well, if you read some of Slimedog’s review you would be grateful you’re getting me, you know what I’m sayin’? I’m the best buddy he ever had—you best believe it. This CD is pure Bob Dylan, you know, that old guy who’s trying to coast on his son’s coattails, that guy in The Wallflowers. Except this guy sings okay, not like a depressed frog being squeezed in a George Forman grill. Did I tell you I love meat? Yum-mmm. So I know Slimedog, Zortar, hell, most of you hate this harmonica playing, guitar strummin’, folk singing shtick—which is what Brandon’s laying down here. But for its genre, it’s well done, sounds sincere, is pleasant, and I would say if you like or are willing to give folk folks a chance you should most indubitably check this out. I like fish, too (not the band—yuck). (Slimedog)

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    PRETTYGOOD
    The Singles: 1970-1985
    11-song CD
    Tim Cawley, the guitarist and main man behind Prettygood, named his band oh so aptly. His eleven songs of 4/4-ey goodness and recognizable chord progressions give the feeling of having heard the songs a million times before. In this way, the listener can feel very connected with the music upon the first listen, or possibly just sleepy. The songs’ spunky break-downs, splattered here and there, are almost reminiscent of classic rock as in “Satisfied, However,” although the feel of the music in general is more melodic, fun, rock. The contrast is satisfying… however. This multi-era effect reminds me of bands like Jerimiah Freed and Switchfoot. He throws other stylistic traits in there as well, slathering “Johnny Sang Poorly” with a thick coat of ’80s pop that suggests Modern English-type riffs. In general, refer back to the band name. (Appogiatura Dee)

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    CHARO SOFIA
    Montreal
    6-song CD
    Charo Sofia’s deep, sultry voice could easily garner her quick comparisons to Tracy Chapman, but past the surface, there is also the vocal lilt of Jeff Buckley, the phrasing of Joan Armatrading, and the emotional turmoil of Elliot Smith. It isn’t every day that such a straight-ahead, simple recording could have as much emotional impact as this EP. With simply her voice and guitar, Sofia’s knack for melody and ear for a catchy phrase can somehow propel a simple arrangement to something uplifting and meaningful. There are few Boston songwriters that can do that, and Charo Sofia has just jumped to the top of that very small list. (Joel Simches)

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    PAT SCANLON
    Where is the Rage?
    2-song CD
    Andover resident Pat Scanlon might not be known well in local rock circles, but that doesn’t mean much when you read about his past. Pat is a Vietnam Vet who sings out against the Iraq war. He attracted national attention when folk legend Pete Seeger offered support. His songs focus on poignant lyrics back by banjo with simple folk arrangements. “I’ve Got A Feelin’ I’ve Been Here Before” points out the similarities between what we’ve done in Vietnam and Iraq. Pat has a friendly hi-pitched voice, so his lyrics never get buried—a major problem that plagues a lot of local acts. I hope Pat can set an example by showing the need to hear the vocals, but even more than that—have something to say. (T Max)

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    EVER UNDER
    The Mystery EP
    3-song CD
    They might masquerade as a lo-fi garage rock band with bad haircuts, but in reality Ever Under is a tight three piece rocking outfit, whose influences range from the Replacements to White Stripes to Green Day to the Who.. Or at least as far as these ears are concerned. Even Under pounds out their pop goodness, with great hooks, tight harmonies and hard riffs. Their songs are infectiously irresistible and their energy is irrepressible. I hope to hear great things about this band in the time to come. Make more music soon! (Joel Simches)

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    WONDERFUL SPELLS
    The Prophecy of Smarmulous Rex
    5-song CD
    They call themselves “psychedelic pop-rock,” but to be truthful, I only hear “psychedelic” in one song, and I don’t hear “rock” anywhere. Now, that one psych track, “Vermilion,” isn’t my kind of fuzzed-out groove psych, but more of a Syd Barrett/Brit-psych kind of think that is sorta cute and sorta quirky and rather too twee for me. But it’s still the cream of this small crop. Otherwise, it’s just plain pop, and truth be told, I haven’t thought to myself, “Damn, I think I’m going to sit my ass down and listen to some good, pure pop” since… well, since I listened to Squeeze, I guess. So, that’s really the rub for this one—if you, yourself, have ever had a hankering for some simple, hummable pop, these guys might just be right up your alley. I, however, am going to go to my grave cursing them for the song “Black Cat,” which, while I really don’t like it one little bit, will probably stay stuck in my head until the day of my demise. (Tim Emswiler)

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    BURNT FUR
    Vitriol
    3-song CD
    Owing greatly to the synth pop of the eighties, Burnt Fur (another unfortunate band name) takes a lot of great beats, hooks, and melodies from the salad days of New Order and Depeche Mode and infuses them with a modern rock ethic. The worst part of the song “Vitriol” is the occasional moment where it sounds like the band doesn’t really know what to do and there are more than a few empty spaces that lack creative ideas of any kind. The other two songs on this single are covers of New Order and Human League respectively. While these versions add nothing to my love or appreciation of the originals, they certainly have all the focus and energy the title track lacks. (Joel Simches)

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    STATE YOUR MIND
    State Your Mind
    4-song CD
    If I had a nickel for every band I have heard this summer that wanted to fill the jam band void left by Jerry Garcia’s passing and Phish’s untimely demise, I could buy a whole bunch of soap and wash these stinking hippies once and for all. I am being sarcastic about that. Actually, I love hippies. I love the expression of groove, the sensuality of their expression of freedom, and of course, the drugs. Unfortunately State Your Mind do nothing to further their goovalicious cause by making music that has no real musical purpose. Lengthy instrumental jams with lots of bongos and a sexy girl going “whoah-oooh heyy ayy ayy” doesn’t make up for the fact there are no songs here. (Joel Simches)

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    THE NO IT ALLS
    The No It Alls
    4-song CD

    The No It Alls are a new band out of Rhode Island (two points there, I heap like-um those guys to the east) who eschew the traditional guitar and drum sound and rely totally on vibraphones and mandolins. Just kidding, really they play hardcore influenced punk that recalls the old L.A. or Washington D.C. bands but also sound up to date with current punk influences, also. This is fast, passionate music with lyrics that are thoughtful and have meaning. My favorite track is “Brazil” that has an urgent, buzz saw verse that explodes into a neat unison chorus and contains an actual (gasp) guitar solo that works really well (really). And the ending part of “2 A.M.“ is pretty nifty, too. It’ll be interesting to see what these No It Alls show us all what they can do in the future. (Slimedog)

    Comment on Silver Circle Reviews

    PARKBENCH
    So It Goes
    4-song CD
    Definitely a homegrown effort, Jeff Clarke was holed up in his bedroom annoying the neighbors recording this demo. The ideas on this demo remind me of some of Matthew Sweet’s solo efforts. Unfortunately the vocal is pretty pitchy and unlistenable at times, and the drums were all done on a cheesy drum machine. Some double tracking on the vocals would have helped a great deal. The guitars are pretty rocking, there’s some great tambourine playing, and the songs have some potential. I would be curious to hear this with a full band and some live energy. (Joel Simches)

    Comment on Silver Circle Reviews

    NADIA
    Nadia
    3-song CD
    Nadia has a heart wrenching, soulful voice. These three songs totally remind me of Sade, full of emotion, passion and pain. Her harmonies dance on the ear like water on a vine leaf. What makes this CD unlistenable is the horribly cheesy production of these three songs. This could be a really lush, soulful R&B recording, but it is so obvious the backing track sounds like Karaoke Night at the Oriental Jade. The mix is horribly uneven and ruins the potential for greatness these songs could have. It’s a shame, because her voice is beautiful and the studio production completely destroys the very ambience it tries to create. (Joel Simches)

    Comment on Silver Circle Reviews

    GRIFFON
    Griffon
    6-song CD
    Heck, I like 311, Alien Ant Farm, Avenged Sevenfold, Blindside, Chevelle, Dark New Day, The Deftones, Dredg, Drinkfist, Finch, Glassjaw, Incubus, Killswitch Engage, King’s X, Letdown, Muse, Sevendust, Story of the Year, Thrice, Tool, Tunnel Drill and Uriah Heep (no, just kidding) just as much as the next fellow, if not more, and I’ve got no beef regarding Framingham bands per se, but as melodic noise-rock cum alt-rock goes, this is palpably mediocre, and the lyrics are histrionic and pretentious and though I wish them all the luck in the world and though I hope that in the very near future they figure out how not to wear their influences so heartfully on their sleeves, most of all, I hope that some day they read this review of their fledgling first effort and laugh and say, “Boy, did we ever prove that pompous and pretentious loser wrong!” I mean it. I really do. (Francis DiMenno)

    Comment on Silver Circle Reviews

    CHARLIE
    Charlie
    5-song CD
    If there were ever a poster band for click tracks and pitch correction in the studio, Charlie would be on the short list. There are some interesting ideas here, but the band comes up short on execution. The guitar playing is inventive, but the vocals are painfully out of tune and the drummer has no real concept of tempo or phrasing. The recording of all of these songs is so uneven, it’s hard to really hear the blend of the band. It sounds like one of the guitarists just decided to plug in and play really loud to a rough mix of something they were fucking around with in the rehearsal space. They do get brownie points for the Back to the Future reference in the middle of the third song. I am sure the lawyers over at Universal will be knocking down your door any day now. (Joel Simches)

    Comment on Silver Circle Reviews

    FUGITIVE KIND
    Give In EP
    4-song CD
    If this band truly believes that they are somehow channeling the energy of contemporary favorites like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, the White Stripes, and the Arctic Monkeys, they must have been listening to them on Quaaludes. This sterile, flaccid batch of songs sounds like Ani Difranco on a bad hair day. The only rock element present here is the distortion on the guitars. The rest of this is a vaguely funkified, by-the-numbers, songwriter record. Granted, Lydia Esrig can certainly sing, but there is a controlled feeling of restraint throughout the EP, as if she is afraid of letting go and actually experiencing some of the emotions she wants to be singing about. The overall result is stunningly underwhelming. (Joel Simches)

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  • The Noise 03/04: CD Reviews

    CD Reviews

    Photo by Chris Kline   

    THE MODEL SONS
    Lies / $ Records
    The Story of My Love

    5 songs

    So few songs, so much rockin’. Every song on here is entirely worth listening to, and I had it stuck in my CD player for a solid week, which is unusual for a CD I’m given to review. I don’t really know what other bands to equate their sound with, but they definitely rock it up good. They eschew the traditional solo work of most guitar driven bands, and instead concentrate on dueling, layered guitar riffs; almost invoking The Strokes, but in much harder setting. And not only do they execute time changes skillfully, they do it tastefully. I can’t think of how many bands try to play in 5/17 or something just to prove they can, when they ought to be thinking about if they should. The drum lines are steady and driving, but at the same time clever and unusual. I particularly like the way they drop in on “Steady Hands.” The guitars lead you to believe they’re going one way with the verse, but then the drums come in and slow it down and take it somewhere else entirely. These are some good ole Boston boys, playing some good ole Boston rock, so get out there, buy the EP, see the show and support them. They definitely deserve it. (Erich Hagan)

    THE ELECTRAS
    The Electras
    13 songs

    In 1962, a bunch of blue-blood preppies from St. Paul’s Academy in Concord, NH, were encouraged by their fans to cut a record for posterity. They set up in the school’s band room, borrowed a friend’s Ampex reel-to-reel tape deck and one microphone, and blasted out 13 primitive ’60s rockers. Inspired by The Invictas from Phillips Academy in Andover, they also chose a band name that paid homage to one of Buick’s sporty cars. Despite their ambition to meet girls, the musicians soon found out that all the action was taking place on the dance floor. However, they had their camaraderie and music that helped get them through the grueling academic experience.
    Drawing inspiration from the Ventures and Link Wray, this mostly instrumental septet played school-sanctioned tea dances and other society events, rocking out with rollicking renditions of “Shanghaid,” “Summertime Blues,” “Torquay,” and “Yellow Jacket.”
    For years this record was a desirable artifact for diehard collectors of Sixties rock and the remaining copies of the 500 vanity pressing dissipated into the netherworld of obscurity. That is, until this writer exposed the fact that their bassist (described on the back jacket as “the producer of a pulsating rhythm that lends tremendous force to all the numbers”) was none other than presidential candidate JOHN KERRY!
    Ever since the Washington Post broke the story last February, major media coverage has appeared in Rolling Stone, People Magazine, Newsweek, the Boston Globe and Herald, Inside Edition, and Deborah Norville Tonight. This remarkable human-interest story can only help humanize Kerry’s stiff image and both a reissue and reunion seem imminent. Recently a fairly worn copy was auctioned on eBay for the staggering amount of $2551.
    Objectively this rough diamond (or diamond in the rough) is an extremely cool document of a bygone era and one that Kerry should be extremely proud of. There is no question who will get my vote in November! (Erik Lindgren)

    VARIOUS ARTISTS
    Man With a Gun
    The Pill

    Tomorrow Never Happened

    15 songs

    This record was intensely hyped, and rightfully so. Including songs from The Cignal, Emergency Music, The Information, The Bon Savants, Mittens, The Good North, Aerial Love Feed, December Sound, and Baby Strange, it really backs up all the buzz that it generated. So, chances are, you’ve already heard it by now, but just in case, here are some of the highlights, and this is totally subjective, of course… The Cignal kicks it off into high gear with “Missteps,” a furious dance anthem fueled by Stephen Morris-ish drums and a rainbow of guitar and keyboard, aggressively topped off by a fine growling vocal. Both songs by Emergency Music feature beautiful harmonies and songs crafted so tightly that you have to recognize why they are an indie staple in town. The Information’s “So Clear” is also aggressive and fun. The mix of warm guitar fuzziness and ice cold keyboards is really hard to ignore. The Bon Savants cleanse the palate with Thom’s smooth, low voice, and the bass in “Why This Could Never Work Between Us,” which is funkier and smoother than a lot of the other tracks on the disc. The Good North’s “Not Feeling It,” and Baby Strange’s “Don’t Care,” also stand out as fast, fun, and rocking. The December Sound closes it all out with a good bit of bombast on “Signal Flow.” Chances are, you’ve heard these songs by now. If not, go get music from the Pill.
    You HAVE to SWEAT it! (Ryan Lee)

    LARS VEGAS

    Skycap Records
    Meatland

    15 songs

    Why me? This is the second month in a row I’ve gotten a record that opens with a guy singin’ about how he likes baloney. Didn’t this band used to be cool? I think I know what happened. They saw too many reviews praising their “quirkiness” and figured that was the thing to exploit. Now they’re all about the zany, except no one told ’em that adding horns doesn’t equal an actual sense of humor. This is sub-faux-jazz as intended for frat boys. The vocals are that lifeless/ “ironic” bit where the guy’s trying to sound all fuzzy and confused, probably because some cheeseball dame told him it was cute. As thoroughly annoying as all this is, though, they DID accomplish something historic. In all the years I’ve been with this godforsaken rag, this is the first record I’ve ever ripped outta the player because of the lyrics alone. Yep, they’re really that awful. “I’m a pickle now what are you/ And all my friends are pickles too/ Now some people say/ That coconuts and pickles/ They don’t mix/ Well if you think that is true/ Lars Vegas has got news for you.” Then they get really deep with stuff like “Hair In The Tub Water” and “I’m Your Dentist.” They might wanna consider that even the greatest music in the WORLD can be rendered unbearable by this kinda grade-school horseshit. (Joe Coughlin)

    WHEAT
    Columbia
    Per Second, Per Second, Per Second…Every Second

    14 songs

    On Wheat’s third LP the intriguing arrangements and subtle production effects don’t fully disguise the conventional nature of these mostly unabashed pop songs, but so what? Okay, so maybe, music-trend-wise, the Morrissey-like tentative-and-uncertain-and-diffident shtick is growing old, but these guys pull it off with panache. Strangely enough, on tracks like “Breathe” or “Closer to Mercury,” the compositional ethos is the Paul McCartney/ Ray Davies school of tasty guitar-licks-yoked-to-melodic-quirks-are- just-as-good-as actual-songs. Or check out “Go Get the Cops” or “Hey So Long” for the Yo La Tengo school of “See-sawing rhythm equals excitement.” Or “These Are Things” for the U2 school of reverb-plus-anthemic- vocal-pronunciatos-equals-significance. This is a gimmick-ripe band with a trick bag chock-jam full of aggressively good hooks (see “Life Still Applies”). If I were a teenaged girl I’d squeal that they’re Just So Cute! Testosterone and senescence preclude that asseveration, so I’ll just say that listening to this CD makes me feel good, real good. Maybe I’m being manipulated, but a song like “Can’t Wash It Off” is a rare and wonderful thing, like watching fireworks in slow motion. And they are… kinda… cute. (Tee hee.) (Francis DiMenno)

    THE JACK McCOYS

    In Gray Light

    8 songs

    It took me three tries to get into In Gray Light, the final recording from Boston’s Jack McCoys. That’s not their fault; it was mine. You have to be in a very special place to appreciate what this band did; you need to be centered, and focused, and fully open to the experience. This is not a record you can play in the background while you’re ironing or opening the mail. You need to give yourself to it 100%, or it won’t come together for you. The casual listener will hear a squall of competing guitars, erratic drumbeats, and whispered vocals. But let the music come to you, and you’ll be enveloped in a symphony of sound and rhythm, an experience that’s at once idyllic and pastoral. What a shame that the Jack McCoys decided to disband when they’ve finally figured out how to record Matt Savage’s uniquely soft vocals. I once said that Matt sounds like he’s inhaling when he’s singing. And in a band with as many amplified instruments as the Jack McCoys (or even in his and guitarist Dan Madri’s much-beloved earlier project, Godboy,) it was all too easy for that voice to be gobbled up and buried by the big dirty-ass rhythm guitar sound that hogs the mid-range of most indie-rock recordings. On In Gray Light, Savage’s voice finally conquers and tames the din around him, like Tinkerbell shining brightly through the inky darkness of Neverland’s night. If you give this music a chance, you’ll be enchanted by it, subsumed by it, and transported to a very special place, where’s Matt’s lyrics flow like the poetry they are and the band’s seemingly random tumult of sound comes together in transcendental melodies. Good-bye, Jack McCoys; it was good to know ye. thejackmccoys.com (Jim Testa)

    PETER C JOHNSON

    Hi-N-Dry
    Soul Sherpa

    11 songs

    Boozy, woozy singer/songwriter Peter Johnson is a 35 year vet of the “biz” who, it sez here, once opened up for the Velvet Underground, which means his hipster street-cred trumps yours and mine by about a thousand, so let us forgive him for the maddeningly pretentious title of this ‘un. The songs on Soul Sherpa are drawling country-blues, reminiscent of Kris Kristofferson and Mark Lanegan, delivered in an authentic cigarette rasp, and accented with sweetly chiming guitars and exotic, chikka-chikka percussion. The overall effect is like walking into some cocktail jazz lounge in a jungle outpost somewhere, and being greeted by a leathery Yank in a cream colored suit at the end of the bar, who chain-smokes and prattles on in jivey slang about nothin’ in particular (“You’re reading like junk mail, baby/ I’m not buying you”). But he sounds cool, like Lou Reed or somebody, and he’s the only one that knows how to get outta this here hellhole, so ya listen anyway. You know, a real “Kling Klang King of the Rim Ram Room” type. It’s pretty swanky stuff, this Soul Sherpa business, and I betcha it’s perfect for checking in to rehab, or at least pacing around outside the liquor store, waiting for it to open. (Sleazegrinder)

    HEADBAND
    The New Buzzards
    8 songs

    I love it when bands give you more reasons to enjoy a record than just the music. For instance, the cover (a photo of a TV on the floor, with a heavy metal band on the screen, an amplifier and a knocked-over Bud behind it). Or the back cover (a photo of inside a factory chicken farm). Or the booklet, which is half blank and contains only the lyric, “Born on a mountain/ Raised in a cave/ Partyin’ and rockin’ are all I crave.” Or the ostensible press sheet (irregular scrap paper that might be from the garbage, handwritten in tiny letters with a huge magic marker, so that it’s all bled together illegibly, and the band’s name snipped from a Xerox and scotch taped to the mess, like someone couldn’t just write that as well. Or the inlay card (an uncredited painting of a dead bird. At least I think it’s dead). Or the label on the disc, with a minimum of what might be otherwise useful info, except the words are typed over each other in multiple layers. And I think, “Anything this completely fuckin’ BAKED has GOTTA have some good stuff on it.” And it does. It sounds… well, a lot like it looks. Like a small group of friends, all blown out and half-dickin’ around… occasionally silly and clumsy as fuck, but at least you’re sure it’s not about the money. Kinda like rock-in-spite-of-itself. In other words, all the right people will hate it. (Joe Coughlin)

    WESTFORD TEEN ARTS COUNCIL
    Rising Stars Compilation 2003

    17 songs

    I admit, I was in an inordinately generous mood when I snabbed this baby. It’s put out by a volunteer organization which promotes and encourages arts in the teenage community of Westford, Massachusetts, and is obviously at first glance an enormous labor of love on the parts of all involved. And yeah, I once raved about the Randolph High School Band in these pages, and meant it, but I wonder if I have even less business reviewing this than I do most things, since (a) the teens in question aspire to sound like established mainstream acts, understandably of course, (b) someone’s sure to show this to ’em, and (c) people kind of expect me to be an asshole at this point. But as much as I dislike the bands these kids emulate, they do an infinitely better job with their chosen genres than the actual bands in question. I never thought I could sit here and listen to (let alone enjoy) emo-type stuff, Tori Amos and Fiona Apple knockoffs, white-boy hip-hop, new-agey string work, Dashboard Indigo Confessional Girls, or Filter and Violent Femmes takes. There’s even something that sounds like Penguin Café Orchestra. These kids got it goin’ on in ways they may not even be aware of. Frankly, I’m stunned. Hopeful, even. Magnificent jobs all around, and every town in the world should have a program like this. More, please. (Joe Coughlin)

    THE PSYCHOPATHS

    Deceased Aardvark
    Have a Nice Day
    9 songs

    Betraying their name completely, The Psychopaths are not remotely loony or dangerous. Whatever happened to the days when bands named themselves after something they actually were, like, uh, Quitter, or Nasty Savage? Anyway, these faux psychos are a buncha 40-something softbellies, and they play right-of-the-dial, pre-“Alt-Nation” ’80s jizz—think a hoary cross ‘tween Platinum Blonde and Talking Heads. Presumably, this is all just a bit o’ fun for the fellas, as the songs tackle less than serious issues like eating chunks of linoleum and… well, I can’t fathom what “Hot Diggity Dog Diggity Cat Diggity Mouse” could possibly be about, but safe to say, it’s probably fucking stupid. About the only thing I can tell you about The Psychopaths that may be of interest to superhipster Noise readers is that occasionally they sound like Waltham, but you tell me, ladies—would you still like Waltham if they looked like your hippie uncles? (Sleazegrinder)

    MALVERN

    Death Benefits Records
    The Grand Bender

    12 songs

    It may be unfair to hold Malvern’s newest full-length next to REM’s early IRS recordings, but that’s the first comparison that came to mind when this indie quartet first played through the speakers on my stereo. The Grand Bender may not be Fables of the Reconstruction, but I’ve experienced very few other bands that have been able to stay so seamlessly true their own unique sound throughout a sixty-five minute recording while moving easily back and forth from swoon to rock ‘n’ roll. Malvern juxtaposes dreamy ballads like “Winston” and the dynamic “Vaguest of Pleas” with hard rocking pop anthems like “The Sound of Halifax” and “Thingnaes.” While no one will argue that front-man Allan Lewis is the next Michael Stipe (or that drummer/ backup singer Dan Ricci sounds anything like Mike Mills) Malvern, like REM, uses backup vocals effectively to create a melodic atmosphere for the music to exist in. Most of all, the independent spirit of Malvern’s music is what sets them apart from the majority of what is out there today. Malvern takes a lot of chances with this album, but those chances were worth the risk. This is one of the best local albums I’ve heard this year. (Jeff May)

    A WILHEM SCREAM

    Nitro
    Mute Print

    11 songs

    The problem with life in the Zeroes is that everyone just falls into line ALL THE TIME. I mean, dig this: A Wilhem Scream (formerly the equally atrocious sounding Smackin’ Isiah) are a buncha go-getter young dudes from New Bedford. They play scream-o, and they have “Scream” in their name. They sound just like AFI, and they’re on Nitro, AFI’s old label. Bill Stevenson, “legendary” drummer in The Descendants and All, produced this, and his bands were pretty much the ones that started this whole non-offensive college-boy sugar-punk thing in the first place. They cite “ironic” ’80s metal influences, just like those clowns in Sum 41, and sure enough, they don’t sound anything like Iron Maiden, either. Basically, everything that this band does has already been done, like, 12 minutes ago, and none of it was all that interesting, or clever, the first time. Still, in the clinical sense, Mute Print is a good record. Certainly, these cats are accomplished musicians, and all the songs sound like mock-affected commercials, which probably isn’t all that easy to do. It’s just insufferably corporate and no fun whatsoever to listen to. Maybe I missed a memo or two along the way, but didn’t kids used to LIKE fun? (Sleazegrinder)

    DANNY CARNEY

    Cattle Tragedies

    10 songs

    It’s good to see punk crossing over more and more with country. Country is as a whole is like where metal was in the late ’80s and early ’90s, all too watered down and more about image than heart. With the loss of Johnny Cash, its good to see a new generation of rockers waiting in line to fill the ranks and tell the whole music industry, if not the rest of the world to back the fuck off. Danny Carney takes some of these roots influences and packs ’em into a shotgun and he’s not just ready to fire, he’s pointing the barrel right at your face. The edginess of punk rock is prominent throughout the whole album, even in the softer acoustic numbers. During the harder, heavier numbers like “Pete Rose,” I was left scratching my head wondering if I was actually listening to some Fugazi B-sides. Whoever recorded this album did a good job at capturing the energy of the whole thing. My only suggestion I’d propose is to sharpen the songwriting a bit; a few more hooks like the one in the chorus of “Lady Grey” and “Crying Shame” would be nice. (Kier Byrnes)

    MAGICK

    Senses Productions
    All is Fair in Love & War

    7 songs

    Magick a sometimes augmented duo, bar no holds nor pull no punches in their release All is Fair in Love & War. This seven cut release opens with the techno-laced “Politics of Love,” meanders to clipped rap contrasted with epic guitar work in “Pyrosis,” and winds up with a ballad in “Forgive.”

    Although sometimes a bit too epic and grandiose to get inside of, this record, despite the shudder-inducing over-use of the Cher-bot (think: “do you believe in life after love”) vocal sound has some nice moments. The guitar playing is very good throughout with tasty hooks and thoughtfully played. Some of the grooves feel just right, too. This reviewer found “Dormancy” to have that summer-pop-tune-foot-tapping something that a lot of bands wish they could get.

    I would like to see this band live as I am personally not a fan of the drum machine beats on the record but can easily imagine the tunes rocking a little more with a heavy hitting drummer and, according to their website, they have just that.

    These guys present some very good ideas that hopefully will get distilled and exploited more on future efforts. (J Russell)

    NECRONOMITRON

    Load Records
    Necronomitron

    12 songs

    It’s only fitting that a band with a name that directly references the title of H.P. Lovecraft’s mythical tome, the sinister Necronomicon, should release an album on a label out of Providence. Unfortunately, the only thing “evil” about this album is the lack of production values. The press sheet accompanying the CD states: “Two guitars and drums.” Um, okay… and no bass? So it would seem, and with a drum mix so lifeless that the kick is reduced to a dull fwap-ing sound, there’s nothing to anchor any sort of groove. Perhaps the band realizes the futility of such a thing however, as the guitar parts seemingly consist of hundreds of short riffs and solos haphazardly assembled with little concern for the tempo variation from one to the next. Ritalin be damned! With vocals that reach neither the upper-octave wails nor the guttural rumblings typical of the genre, this release goes a long way in proving that there’s more to making a good death metal album than just playing fast. These criticisms aside, something tells me Necro-nomicon is probably a great live band, which may be what drew Load to them in the first place. (Josh Witkowski)

    ELENA

    Waiting On You

    12 songs

    Sifting through the box of CDs that seems to often consist of bands poised in a Creed ambush, I flipped to one that immediately caught my attention. A cover consisting simply of her face with brown eyes gazing contentedly, my curiosity struck and drove me to write up a few words for her.

    Elena lends her vocals to a diverse musical direction, from somber ballads to aggressive rock. For a solo vocalist to not simply stick with love songs and cheesy R&B; tracks is a change, and I think it works here. The song “Electric” especially stands out with Elena being the lyrical aggressor while the backup band propels her along. “Perfect,” on the other hand, has her choosing the quietly confessional route. As well as with the rest of the songs on the disc, Elena shows her varied genre tastes through her voice.

    Like any artist, it’s up to the listener to decide whether or not they enjoy the voice coming out of the speakers, but I think Elena’s musical range make this album worth listening to. (Evan Mauser)

    DOMINGO

    The Sunday Sessions

    13 songs

    Domingo is a band that likes to keep you guessing as to where they’re going in each song: quick at first, then a slow interlude, then a medium overture and then suddenly back up to speed. Because songs in general usually are predictable in their path, it’s refreshing to hear their changes of pace.

    The first song on the album, “Piper’s Song,” sets a fine table. I really like the musicianship with its stuttering guitar riffs and tense keyboard background. The variance in tempo in “Silver” also keeps things interesting, as well does the very comfortable sound of “Papercut.” The piano in “Pebbles” also makes for a nice touch, though combined with the pleading vocals it seemed like they were trying to catch a John Mayer wave. Regardless, the instruments throughout the disc are what make it successful.

    I even liked the joke tracks at the end, (“Do you … believe in DEEAATH?”) which, after all that pleading stuff, makes for a humorous sendout for the album. Indeed, I look forward to what they put out next. (Evan Mauser)

    IIJ

    Metalstar Garocktica

    12 songs

    IIJ is short for “Is It Jazz,” and if I am correct in my assumption that this is a question for me, my answer is roundly no. This is more like occasionally acoustic, quasi-pop space rock. This is one of those bands that value their “image” as much as their music, which is not necessarily a bad thing. Think Queen’s over the top delivery minus glam and the great songwriting, with a dash of Tenacious D’s vocal stylings and pseudo-arrogance. The have cute little names for each member of the band, and descriptions of each player’s duties like “Chief Architect, Guitar-a-Tron© Division.” That’s not to say these guys aren’t talented; they are all very good at their respective instruments. Most of the songs start out with a lot of promise, but they spiral out of control when the band forgets that most audiences don’t care if they’re using every single knob on that classic synth; they just want to hear a good song. While the orchestration and arrangement is quite interesting overall, especially on tracks like “Planet M” which is a creepy gothic organ composition over a plodding industrial drumbeat, the tracks lack the accessibility necessary to make a commercially successful album. If you’re down for something different and are able to sift through the filler, this could be a pretty good album for you. Otherwise, try to catch them live and show up before they get all “experimental.” (Erich Hagan)

    KTD

    Hydrant Records
    Territory

    8 songs

    Okay, so I totally grabbed this for the throwback appeal. Visions of headbands and mirrored shades everywhere, bony asses atop spindly legs, vacuum-sealed in painted-on jeans and stuffed into soft, shiny cowboy boots, supple torsos dripping jewelry from every appendage. Not to mention the girls. Halter-topped, Farrah Fawcett-maned floozies on rollerskates outside The Tank in Revere, begging to climb in back o’ my gold-flake Camaro, with the unicorn painted on the hood, for a hit off the ol’ Gasmask Skull Bong. Shit, the press sheet alone sounds like Mickey Spillane in eyeliner and a spandex corset. “A six-string shotgun affair of moxie and melody. This is a band you can kick your feet up and have a beer to.” Hey, I kick my feet up and have beers to infomercials for exercise machines. You wanna sell me drinking music? Play me some country. Don’t get me wrong, I DO still like this kinda stuff and think they’re sincere. And they can dress like Motorhead and sound like Warrant all they want, but the songs lack that certain true-badboy something that propels a band to the hockey rinks. (And hey, any acronym-named act worth their studded belts TELLS you what the initials stand for. Not these guys. What’s up with that?) Like the press sheet says, “We marked our spot.” There ya go. (Joe Coughlin)

    STU WALKER

    Odd Halo Recordings
    Stu Walker

    12 songs

    I hate to agree with that fat old baldhead Billy Joel but sometimes the angry young man really IS boring as hell. But not this time. Ethyl Bourbon’s multi-tracked voice on “Theft Arson Vice Murder and Death” sounds like the Andrews Sisters backed by the superstitious natives who worshipped King Kong (1933 version). On “Always Draw Your Own Last Breath,” Stu Walker’s voice crackles over the telegraphic mutant delta blues boogie like smoke over dry ice. This is the most brilliant local debut since… I dunno—Veronica Black Morpheus Nipple? Okay, so the first two tracks are the best, and the rest of it is mostly experimentation of varying degrees of ingenuity and interest. But you could say the same thing about certain Prince or P-Funk albums. (Francis DiMenno)

    LOCK AND KEY

    Irresponsible Records
    No Fate

    7 songs

    Well, popular radio has done it again. Another music group, (“rooted in punk and hardcore” as the promo sheet says) has gone the typical way of rock bands trying to make it big using brutal force. Unfortunately, they just end up falling into the muddy pool of other punk-metal bands featuring adrenalized guitars and drawn out yelling.

    It’s not that Lock and Key don’t have a pulse, for that’s not it at all. Hey, if they were breaking new ground with this stuff it would cause quite a stir. The youth would attempt to imitate the lead singer’s hollow voice by blowing out their vocal chords at their parents and then recording the result to a tape deck. They’d also start playing their guitars and drums as loud and fast as they could without regard for pause and reflection. It’d be a blitzing massacre across the nation, and yet… it’s just not. As much as Lock and Key try to separate themselves with a drummer named Trash, it’s the same old schtick that countless other hard rock bands have trudged through these recent years. Hohum. (Evan Mauser)

    FLASHCUBES

    Air Mail Recordings
    Live in Japan

    15 songs

    On the surface, this album looks like it was an idea created by four dads wanting to get out of the house. In May of 2002 these guys probably told their wives they were off to the grocery store and, instead, boarded the first flight to Tokyo. There they blasted off fifteen upbeat power pop songs that strongly appealed to our Japanese friends.

    I admit, at first listen I wasn’t all that enthused with the songs. It sounded much like the Fountains of Wayne style I’ve heard a lot on the radio recently. Then after a few more spins I remembered that hey, these Flashcubes guys have been around since the 70s and they’re still having a great time rocking. Along with their singles “Christi Girl” and “Wait Til Next Week,” the Flashcubes muster up some armchair quarterback energy for the rollicking “She’s Leaving” and the pounding “Got No Mind.” Even the ending medley combining the Ramones with Nick Lowe shows that these guys aren’t slowing down anytime soon.

    This is a fun disc to listen to if you need your mood picked up. Just don’t ask any of these guys to pick something up from the corner store. (Evan Mauser)

    CHEECH

    Dank Records
    A Day Late & A Dollar Short

    19 songs

    Take this how you will, but it seems to me that some of the songs on Cheech’s A Day Late & A Dollar Short , namely “Billion Dollar War” and “Quest for Herb,” could easily be retooled to fit on the seminal GWAR album, Scumdogs of the Universe. And I love GWAR!

    Of course Cheech are nothing like GWAR, at least in that they don’t dress up in giant latex costumes, play satirical heavy metal, and spew fake blood on the audience. They do however, play balls-out hardcore, drawing heavily on their forbearers for inspiration, with an inclination for themes both anti-establishment and pro-party in nature. There’s no shortage of humor here, fortunately, which helps negate some of the harder-than-yo’-momma attitude they (and too many other hardcore bands) rely a bit too heavily on. Songs like “Intro (Beer Prayer),” with its West coast hip-hop backing, and the acid-casualty freak-out skit following “Those We’ve Loved and Lost” help remind us that it’s not all about fronting your image for the scene and debating the ills of society. (Josh Witkowski)

    NAMED BY STRANGERS

    Gone

    13 songs

    File this under “Reasons Not to Move To Canada.” The vocalist of this Burlington, Vermont combo sounds like an icky hybrid of Bob Seger and Harry Chapin, and overall, repetitive song structures and man-o’-constant-sorrow lyrics make for pretty dreary soundscapes which occasionally burble into Garcia-tinged jam band mode. Even when this combo sounds sweet and lively, as on “Feelin’ Fine,” the tune is dragged down by the vocalist, who sings in his finest Voice of the Ancient Mariner. They ought to print a picture of an albatross on the cover. Okay, on the one hand, I went to see the Clash at the Orpheum in 1980, was once maced by the police, and I still think there’s something fishy about Jethro Tull. On the other hand, I’ve seen the Grateful Dead over 20 times, most recently in 1988, and I also own a juicer, a tea press and a breadmaker; plus, I voted Nader in 1996 and 2000 and will likely do so again. But as a listening experience, Gone is just too much of nothing. Named by Strangers? I almost wish they would be abducted by strangers. Then I would, at long last, no longer be Annoyed By Hippies. (Francis DiMenno)

    THE MERCURY SEED

    TMS Records
    Dust

    10 songs

    Dust is the second independent release from The Mercury Seed, and it will fit nicely into the indie / alt-rock section of any record store. It’s not a bad album. It actually has a little bit of a classic rock lean to it, like the Rolling Stones or Tom Petty, which is nice. But overall it’s just so standard, so mundane. I just can’t understand how people can start a band with no aspiration further than sounding like all the bands that have done this same sound before. It’s the same chord progressions, the same lock-jaw, Scott Stapp-esque voice, the same everything; band after band, album after album, and song after song. What ever happened to taking a band that you like and being inspired by that, but still doing something different and new? It’s like the only reason they wrote these songs was so that they would have something other than the usual covers to play; there is no heart or feeling behind the songwriting itself. And when there is no love for the songs for their own sake, that really comes through, especially on an album, because you can’t see how the band performs live. So I wouldn’t pick up this album, unless you’re at one of their shows and just feel like supporting them a little bit because they’re such nice guys. (Erich Hagan)

    COLDREAD

    Coldread

    7 songs

    Coldread are of the portentous shit ‘n’ death school of microphone-membrane-shredding shouters and ranters. I can feel this gloomfest sucking the serotonin right out of my brain with every nearly interminable passing nanosecond. So the question here is, “Why record this type of music in 2004?” Assuming Coldread come from small-town America, here are some possible answers: (1) You just can’t get good animal tranquilizers anymore. (2) The law is cracking down on people who throw stuff from interstate overpasses onto passing cars. (3) Setting fire to Winos has lost its novelty value. (4) Can’t visit Dad at Walpole; he blinded a Trusty and has been moved to a supermax in Colorado. (5) Jacklighting rats down by the town dump is no fun because ever since animal control set out the baited traps they’ve all moved into Home Depot, the deserted train station and the abandoned Catholic church. Overall, these marathon, synthesizer-driven, percussion-rife psychotic reactions make OMD’s “Stanislow” sound like a Mike Myers laughathon and “Violence” makes Dark Side of the Moon come off like a cheery vaudeville turn between a slyly insouciant tramp, a stuffy society matron, and a harrumphing, morbidly obese, stogie-chuffing plutocrat. (Francis DiMenno)

    ENEMIES OF ENORMITY
    Apply Within EP

    8 songs

    Imagine what it might sound like if you placed the pop-accessible percussion sounds of NIN, Boards of Canada’s “Aquarius,” the demo song from a Roland synthesizer, and a 55-gallon drum of water in a blender, mixed it on “bastardize” until smooth, and strained out any lumps of originality. Bake it on 450° until “the time of the enemies is finally here” and distribute in a fancy Digipak wrapper. The results? Enemies of Enormity’s Apply Within EP.

    Now, I live for electronic music; be it Japanese noise, old-school industrial, or current IDM and click-hop musicians; but as a rabid consumer of these styles I have repeatedly come across the likes of this duo. Sure, the propagation of computer technology has lead to the emergence of several noteworthy musicians, but it has also dramatically increased the signal-to-noise ratio for consumers. Apply Within EP falls on the latter side of the equation, as the combination of a tragic vocal mix, preset synth sounds, and generic electronica compositions belie the notion that Enemies of Enormity were once under-appreciated because they were ahead of their time. Sorry gents, but the time of the enemies may never arrive. (Josh Witkowski)

    STEVE MAYONE

    Umver Records
    Bedroom Rockstar

    12 songs

    At first listen, this was one of those “great for what it is, but not my thing” jobs. Exceedingly tasteful/ sensitive, low-key, acoustic-based, cliché-friendly, sunny, breezy, sometimes bittersweet, guilty-pleasure fluffernutters, without a hostile note or discouragin’ word to be found. It should be noted, though (maybe), that my frequent dismissal of such product comes from (a) the sheer glut of it out there, and (b) my intense denial of the aging process itself and the maturity expected along with it. I too often rebel against anything which doesn’t somehow refer to my whole “gloriously misspent youth” thing, and basically resent anyone my actual age who seems the least bit comfortable or sane. But I’m learning. The truth is, this thing sounds great from tip to tail. This guy writes real songs, and employs real musicians and production values (imagine that?), and it’s PLEASANT, for Christ’s sake, and it feels GOOD not writhing around on the floor pretending to relate to some tortured, drug-dizzy Ar-Teest or puke-encrusted punk for a change. This only helps re-beef the notion that I wouldn’t, in fact, be twenty-something again for all the rim-jobs in Thailand. So as a way to hang onto the attitude, I simply enjoy the challenge of dishin’ up rave reviews that no sensible musician would ever brag about. Try it, it’s fun! (Joe Coughlin)

    ASECT

    Asect

    11 songs

    Okay, after listening to this disc a few times I finally figured out who these guys really are. Boston band my butt, they’re just a relocated Warrant! They’ve cut their hair, applied pore-crippling ageless cream, and directed their music away from the sex-laden arena rock to a more downtown dive bar groove.

    But seriously, I wouldn’t doubt it. The first track, “Little Didja Know,” starts the album very well with a catchy chorus and exchanges between soft and loud guitars. But after that positive note they hit you with an emotional a cappella track. You think, “What the HECK was that?! Uh oh…” Although “Left of Alright” caught my attention for its vocal work, most of the rest of the disc fades into the background like a bar band on a weekday. All in all, Asect provides solid rock, but it’s nothing to lift your shirt to. (Evan Mauser)

    LYN PAUL JUNCTION
    Bullzeye
    Evil Eye Music
    11 songs

    Oh my. Oh, fucking my. Imagine the worst of crappy eighties metal bands redefining the word cliché in the vein of the whole roots rock thing. My initial reaction is that I hope that this band is sort of like a bad joke. I can sort of picture Spinal Tap’s David St. Hubbins closing his eyes in some sort of cheesy flashback video montage. However, after checking out their website, lpjrocks.com, I discover they are quite serious. It turns out that they were actually once a finalist in the WBCN Rumble. Man, I can’t imagine what they were like in their heyday but the stuff on here is pretty tacky, like really bad lawn furniture or neon green fanny packs. Maybe it was a really thin year on talent? The lyrics this sings make Cinderella, Quiet Riot, and The Scorpions look like Bob Dylan. I have been able to stomach most of the Adam Sandler romantic comedies, but many a song on this album, such as the hard rock/swing combo “Gotta Be the One,” and the power ballad “Daydreaming” for instance, made me gag up my lunch. Even worse that is the skin crawling cover of Johnny Cash’s “Boy Named Sue” renamed “Boy Named Lyn.” This CD is coming out of my player and never, never, never going back in. (Kier Byrnes)

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    CD334web-LizFrameLIZ FRAME & THE KICKERS
    Sooner                                                                                           
    10 tracks

    This 2011 outing is, most of all, earnest, filled with spare, simplistic message songs that are performed with  an admirable sense of self-possession and integrity.  “Bullseye on My Back” is a moody track which in some ways epitomizes their approach—easy to understand story line, introspective vocals, and simple but effective melodicism.  The low-key approach is actually quite appealing; “Don’t Play With Guns” is creditably tough and rugged in a Dire Straits mode, while “Girl of Little Faith” features wonderful harmony vocals, which put the band near the top of the heap of the Americana sweepstakes. Highly recommended.            (Francis DiMenno)

     

    THREE DAY THRESHOLD
    While the Baby Sleeps          
    4 tracks

    Three Day Threshold may get pigeonholed as a country band, but it’s more fitting to compare them to the psychobilly of Reverend Horton Heat or the gothic Americana of Murder by Death.

    This 4-song EP is a perfect introduction to a sub-genre all its own. “Baby’s Got to Go” has a Johnny-Cash-on-steroids tempo that gallops like a horse. “Dark Eyes” surprises with its Eastern European-sounding fiddling—a punked-up polka instrumental, a la Gogol Bordello. The fiddle/guitar interplay on “Give It A Name” blends so you can’t tell where one ends and the other begins. The EP closes with the Tom Waits-worthy swing ballad, “When the Money’s All Gone.”   (George Dow)


    ROB POTYLO

    Drone Alone 
    11 tracks

    If you like goofball protest songs crudely sung over a slightly out-of-tune guitar with lyrics that may have some deeper meaning hidden beneath their awkward, comedic exterior, then this, my friends, is the album for you. You can download it for free, but you might wanna consider throwing the guy a couple bucks to invest in a tuner and some more pot.   (Will Barry)


    BUTTERSCOTT
    Snowman on the Moon        
    4 tracks

    This is aggressive and ironic techno-punk with great sexual innuendos in every lyric—the type of music that first makes you grin when you hear the insinuation. Then you can’t believe Jonathan Scott wrote a song around it, and finally you really dig the beat and the message. I like these songs. The first, “Bubblegum Man,” with the lyrics: “I am Bubblegum man; chew on my bubblegum if you can,” is very minimal with the artist melodically rapping to a drum machine. Short and sweet, this would be a great set opener live. The second song, “Hobbyhorse,” has a nursery rhyme feel to it, adding to the irony: “Daytime, night time/ baby it’s the right time.” It’s techno-pop at it’s best. Next is “Groggy Froggy” with metal-ish guitars and a punk feel mixed with ’60s Brill Building pop that makes it unique and good. Last is “Wheelchair Woman” pure punk lyrics, loud, aggressive guitars, and just a few chords. Funstuff!               (A.J. Wachtel)


    SUNNI BADORE
    Family Life
    5 tracks

    Pianist/vocalist Sunni Badore lures us into Family Life admitting she wants us to love her in “Jones,” a playful bouncy barroom romp. Her inviting alto voice lets you know, “I wanna be the one you’re making tracks for” with the fiddle rolling lines, keeping it fun. She’s serious in “Sons & Daughters,” caring about what we, as a generation, are leaving for the folks that come after us. “Euphoria” rocks as Sunni harmonizing with herself while electric and classical guitars battle. The title track, and highlight of the EP (along with “Jones”), is a humorous kickback swinger sung from a front porch swing with Grandma sharing all the dirty little secrets about the relatives. Sunni gets serious again to close the short disc with “Precious One.” Sunni Badore has created a collection that is easy to re-listen to. The contrast of humor and seriousness works well, but the lighter, more uplifting, subjects win-out. These tunes fit well alongside Janis Joplin’s “Me & Bobby McGee.” Now how can we not adore Sunni Badore and Family Life?   (T Max)


    JO HENLEY
    The Fall Comes Early 
    11 tracks

    With this fourth full-length album under their belts, the rhythm and poise with which the members of Jo Henley (Andy Campolieto, Ben Lee, Tony Markellis  and Mike Dingley) write and perform is exquisite. Touches of Robbie Robertson and the Band and all who followed in their footsteps echo throughout this collection.  The range is beautiful. The lyrics and melodies have a very familiar feel throughout, as if we have dear friends in all these songs—a rare gift indeed.  

    “Big City” is an instrumental surprise, soft and edgy but haunting and soothing at the same time.  What movie soundtrack can we all place this in?  In this selection, as well as the album’s namesake, “The Fall Comes Early,” I hear romance in Ireland.  It takes me back to one of my favorite movies, Bill Forsyth’s Local Hero featuring Mark Knopfler’s fabulous soundtrack.

    A neat Luther Perkins riff is perfect for delivering “I’m Gonna Find It” with some fine picking by the band’s stellar lead guitarist, Ben Lee.  

    Right from the start, “I Used to Be Young” is simple and uncluttered but sticks in your head, in a good way.

    The traditional “Amazing Grace” is the last track, the sweet tea served after this delicious musical spread.

    These guys should be on the AMA (Americana Music Association) charts, right up there with Guy Clark, Dawes, and Steve Earle.    (Jim Marchese)


    HOOKERCLOPS
    Dumb 
    7 tracks

    It turns out this is more of a requiem than a review as the mighty punk-rock behemoth that was HookerClops has since, I’m sorry to say, disbanded. But, you can rest assured, their new 7-inch Dumb doesn’t go quietly into that good night. No, it rages in a frantic, ferocious free-for-all of grizzly guitars, leather-lunged vocals, ball-busting basslines, and heavy-artillery drumming. For me, though, it’s the curve-ball tune “Notice” that is the unquestionable high-water mark on this all-too-brief release: a heavy, slow-burn of a tune that seethes with guitar fuzz, bittersweet melody, and deeply personal lyrics—the lyrics of a man who has taken something ugly, some lump of bitterness and anger from his past and turned it into something beautiful, like growing daisies out of dogshit. You can really feel the catharsis in this tune. The rest of the record doesn’t disappoint with its meth-head tempos, ’70s-rock riffs, anthemic choruses, trademark sense of humor, and raunchy guitar solos. This is HookerClops doing what they do best and doing it loud as hell. Ah well, looks like this is last call, boys. Here’s to you. Cheers.    (Will Barry)

     

     

    GRETA BRO
    Love’s Song
    8 tracks

    Greta Bro’s 8-song CD, Love’s Song (all lyrics and most of the music written by Bro, some in collaboration with a circle of friends), is at once haunting, sultry, sexy, and swaying with pleasing rhythms throughout (produced and engineered expertly by John Hicks).

    Rife with cool and interesting instrumentation, solo riffs surprise and delight me—check out the melodica, ukulele, flute, and percussion of all sorts, including a tabla; there’s trumpet, cello, really smooth sax, and maybe, just to tickle your imagination, birdsong!  
    Bro’s songs stand out, each quite different from the one before; they call me over to her party. I’ve listened to them over and over since lifting the CD from my sister’s shelf without permission. I pour a glass of wine, close my eyes, and move myself into another place, into Greta Bro’s world. I let my head tilt from side to side. It’s a very smooth ride; I love it.

    So, where’s it been hiding—or maybe I’m the only one who hadn’t heard it?     (Iowa’s Frances-Ann)


    MICHAEL THOMAS DOYLE
    Storm Colors 
    3 tracks

    The three-song EP from Michael Thomas Doyle brings an indie rock style that resonates with power and dedication, a sign that if he sticks to it, good things are likely in store.

    A student at Berklee School of Music, Doyle’s music has a solid rock sound with some pop elements here and there, creating an upbeat and energetic flow. The vocals are clean and carry through the music with ease, and the guitar skills are impressive—particularly in “Liquid Courage,” which features some killer riffs. The first track, “Storm Colors,” is a solid opener, incorporating some strong visuals of nature with raw emotion. “Baby on Sunset” dials it down a decibel or two, and closes out the album with another great exhibition of Michael’s skill on the strings.  

    This versatile sound brings to mind an image of Michael at an open mic, giving a small group of friends and family a quieter acoustic version, or performing with a full band at a much larger venue, getting heads to nod and feet to tap throughout the set. Michael makes the most out of this EP, and it’s definitely worth picking up.                              (Max Bowen)


    RENEE & JOE
    Dreamsteering      
    14 tracks

    Parts of this song collection are reminiscent of early XTC, and with a simple but not overly simplistic instrumental palette. “Molly,” in particular as an absolutely beautiful song, and the album is speckled with similar gems: “For My Love” is a whimsically romantic romp; “Tell Me a Good Lie” has a lovely, memorable melodic line.       (Francis DiMenno)

     

    SCOTT TARULLI
    Anytime, Anywhere  
    11 tracks 

    It is fitting to assume that, for Scott Tarulli, the guitar is not merely a musical instrument but an extension of oneself.  A session musician, writer, and Berklee professor, his new record, Anytime, Anywhere, not only exemplifies instrumental compositions; it serves to push the boundaries of our comprehension.  While Tarulli has undoubtedly developed a signature technique over the course of years spent honing his craft, his gift lies in his inimitable ability to transport listeners to otherworldly dimensions. Particularly noteworthy are the shifts that encompass “Shade Dance,” the Jane’s Addiction/Dave Navarro-esque riffs of “Caffeine and Wine,” and the romanticism of “Aurora.”  Not since Allen Devine and David Byrne have instrumentals “taken” this reviewer anywhere.  Tarulli is in league with the two in that his compositions can be felt deep within one’s core and therefore, experienced.  Atmospheric and “ear-pleasing” to the utmost extent, compositions such as these are best suited for inclusion within the world of television and film.         (Julia R. DeStefano)


    LISA MANNING
    The Zoo 
    19 tracks

    Lisa Manning calls herself the singing poet. She tackles personal and social subjects in her unique classical folk style. “The Zoo” starts things off with a statement about how a planet can be healthy as long as mankind is locked up in zoos. “Modern Child”—about a violent looney with a gun—has gotten Lisa banned from some open mics. Why an artist can’t sing about life’s realities without being penalized is beyond me. “That Carefree Child” follows the life of a boy going though his parents’ breakup, and sounds like it could be gender flipped auto-biographical song. “Turn Your Engines Off” is a complaint about people leaving their cars running while doing their nature gawking. Sounding maybe too personal, on the recording she dedicated “The Last Waltz” to her best listener, Joyce.  With 19 songs, I’d expect more variation in tempos, sounds, and style. Lisa has locked herself in a very small stylized space—I believe there is a lot of room for decoration and expansion. But if she chooses to be a total minimalist, does my opinion matter?   (T Max)

     

    GIANTIST
    Changing Front 
    11 tracks

    With this, their first full-length, Giantist continue to hone their dark-toned atmospheric rock sound to great effect. It’s a slow, brooding sound, thick with watery guitars, a churning rhythm section, and soaring saxophone that builds to eruptions of fuzz, fury, and the feral chromatic-fantastic squealing of the guitarist exorcizing demons from his guitar. Amidst the high decibels and stomp-box grit lie the somber skeletons of folk songs: acoustic strummings, the male vocalist’s hushed, bone-dry chant, and the female’s oil-slick lilt, each carrying the poetic gravitas of the lyrics. At first cattle-prodded with the surge of electricity, in the eye of this album’s storm, the folksiness is offered up in all its naked austerity, finally returning with a fuzzed-out vengeance in the finale. Yes, they’ve really upped the ante from their prior release with a deeper sense of gestalt and keener ear for composition, treating the album not just as a collection of songs but as a cohesive whole, a concept, one with a seamless flow from song to song. Simply put, sans all the geek-speak and fan-boy adoration, I think Changing Front is Giantist at their giant-est.     (Will Barry)

     

    THE FLYING SEEDS
    Street Songs & Meadow Music Volume 1      
    11 tracks

    This is thought provoking music with a Latin influenced sound. Many of the songs on this release are really mellow pop songs with nice melodies and a different sound. Their sound is present in the very good flamenco guitar work of Lenin Sabino, one half of the Flying Seeds. In songs like “Reflexiones,” “All Night All Day,” “Warm Night Under Autumn Skies,” and “Vision To Share,” the tunes begin with his South American guitar finger picking ,which sets the mood for the duration. He also adds flute and charango to the mix. The songs themselves are mostly lyrics about nature and love and are provided by talented writer Emily Sabino, the other half of the mix. Some of her words are like poems set to music. She has a great voice and I really dig when she sings harmony to herself. “Join Out Of Time,” a nice uptempo pop song or “Miracle,” which showcases the best of the band: nice vocals, great flute, and a memorable melody, are maybe the two most radio-friendly cuts on this release.  The CD itself has a great psychedelic and colorful design. Check their music out when you can; I dig it.                    (A.J. Wachtel)


    IAN JAMES 

    Blue FX Records
    Human Casualty
    14 tracks

    This sounds like the type of music that vampires listened to back when they were badasses, not broody pretty boys.  At the very least, Ian James doesn’t make music that should be listened to during the daytime.  A veteran of punk bands like Chanticlear, James has moved a few years forward on the musical timeline, making music that recalls ’80s British post-punk.  Both the sound of his voice and the dark feel of the music recall a slightly peppier Joy Division.  For the most part, there’s an urgency and tension to the music that keep things fresh.  There are a few missteps, though.  The pseudo-rap on “Getting in My Way” makes Geddy Lee’s rapping on “Roll the Bones” sound like Chuck D.  Overall, it’s a solid choice for your friends with rainy outlooks.                (Kevin Finn)


    SHANNA UNDERWOOD
    Fieldnotes from a Caravan
    9 tracks

    This is a 2010 Americana outing in which the excellent, low key instrospective song, “There was a Town” segues into material which, unfortunately doesn’t bear the same heft or sheer forcefulness. The singing is stellar, but too many of the songs consist in the main of poignant and melancholy laments, which are mostly forgettable. Songs of this type—rootsy ballads replete with harmonica and slow guitar—are a fine thing for them as likes ‘em, but I can’t help getting the strong impression that this is mood music for folks who are inclined to wallow in misery. Still, there’s no denying a song like the grandly presented and genuinely touching “Small City Walls” is a worthy and classic addition to the genre.      (Francis DiMenno)


    GIN MILL JANE
    ’Til You Come Back Home
    6 tracks

    From the opening vocals, low, mournful but full of life, then ratcheted up to 11 with an intense mix of roots, rock, and soul, ‘Til You Come Back Home delivers in an unforgettable way. 

    Based out of Providence, RI, Gin Mill Jane does its local scene proud with a solid contribution to a genre that is quickly expanding in New England. The six tracks sound just like the name implies—a hard as nails personality who stands on their own and tells their story for all to hear. “A Little More” is a solid opener, but there’s a lot more to come, with a percussion and piano-infused cover of “(Ain’t That) Good News” by Sam Cooke.  

    I was blown away by the vocals of Heather Randell on the first track, and the instruments sealed the deal. This album showcases an incredible range, with Heather also on harmonica, along with Brian Knoth (acoustic and electric guitar), Frank Haines (upright and electric bass), and Eric Hastings (drums and percussion). But that’s not all—Brooks Milgate (keyboards and piano), Jared Sims (saxophone), and Brian Thomas (trombone) make a solid contribution of their own, and it comes through loud and clear. Though the album packs in instruments of all kinds, it doesn’t feel overloaded. Each one has a part, and they make room for the others, and the final product shows a band that’s experienced, dedicated, and determined.         (Max Bowen)

     

    CHRISTA RENEE BAND
    Roots Dance Culture EP 
    4 tracks 

    This feel-good album brings soulful jazz and reggae style music with gospel chants and pop-lyrics. Guest Jonah Erikson plays lead guitar on the first track, “Culture of Violence,” a jazzy song with offbeat drums and a rocksteady feel.  “Lovesick” brings romance and lost love, a lyric heavy song with piano and softer percussion. This track comes unexpectedly to an album with such an upbeat title but shows that these musicians are talented enough to expand into other genres. This EP is heavily reggae-influenced with a touch of ska-style rhythm and blues. Christa Renee sings, “Can we ever be happy/ can we ever just be okay/ just for today?” in the song “Just For Today,” a track that begins with syncopated keyboard, and ends with a swing-style tempo. The EP brings all types of dance and funk, and returns to Jamaican reggae in the final track, “Mr. Leaver.” Christa Renee Band gives jazz and dance music a new voice, while accentuating an array of rhythms. It’s refreshing to hear a female-fronted band with such international influences in this genre. Roots Dance Culture is bound to make a wild summer soundtrack.        (Ashley Magown)


    Z CO.
    Z Company                            
    10 tracks

    This is some interesting music from Peter Zicko (Girl on Top) and John Fannon (New England) that was released during the summer. Sometimes the acoustic side stands out and sometimes the metal influences take center stage–—almost like T. Rex meets Metallica at times. “My World,” the radio friendly “Superhuman,” “I Wont Let You Go,” “Bridge To You,” and the opener and closer; “Feels Like Dreaming” and “Man” really showcase this acoustic/electric dichotomy present in every song. Sometimes Peter’s vocals are haunting; sometimes they are wispy. But they are always good and appropriate. This is acoustic folk/rock with a heavy metal edge and loud guitars. Check it out.                                        (A.J. Wachtel)


    THE INEBRIATIONS
    “Austin, Texas”
    1 track

    What we got here is a rowdy country-rock tune, loaded with chicken-pickin’ geetar, solid drumming, and the steady thud of the jug-band bassline. It is clearly driven hard by the singer’s raspy yelp that sounds like it has been left to sweat a couple days in some backwoods country smokehouse. Though the music’s doused in old-timey Americana, it’s been polished to a high studio-shine and lacks in the boot grit and tobacco spit of true-blue country music. Still, I’d be a son of a bitch if bartenders didn’t see an increase in whiskey sales and fist-fights every time this tune hit the jukebox at the local watering hole. (Will Barry)


    KALEN
    Fallen From the Sky
    6 tracks

    Kalen Lister is a young lady from Exeter, NH, who wrote and produced this CD. She also sang and played piano and percussion. The mood shifts from somber works of staggering heartbreak and pain to more upbeat trip-hop cabaret jazz. This sassy urban gypsy will be chopping heads and blowing minds on the cutting edge of female- fronted music for decades. Kalen is associated with an underground musical movement, yet I can see her timeless, passionate odes to life and love being huge on soundtracks and regular radio, if radio as we know it does not cease to exist soon. The CD booklet is a work of art in itself, with eight paintings rendering Kalen’s debut album a must have on every level. This is music for airports, funerals, and parties.       (Eric Baylies)


    FROGGY & THE FRIENDSHIP
    Proud Dad Records
    Stegosaurus 
    11 tracks

    Much like how you should never read the comments following a story on the Internet, you shouldn’t look at the pictures with the liner notes, and you shouldn’t listen to the lyrics of this album.  Avoid those two things, and you’ve got a much better shot at enjoying this.  The band mixes the big, theatrical feel of the Polyphonic Spree or I Am from Barcelona (without the inflated headcount) with a hippie vibe.  They come across as the type of band that you would expect the Burlington, Vermont, High School drama club to come up with.  This is a crew with an unusually high level of ambition, and the songs are generally quite catchy and are crying out to be sung along with.  Too often, though, they get weighed down in a goofiness that might seem okay for a song or two but gets a bit grating over the course of an entire album.           (Kevin Finn)

     

    SPOSE
    The Peter Sparker Mixtape
    13 tracks

    I’m not got gonna lie, when I heard the words “hip-hop” and “Maine” in the same breath, I rolled my eyes, half-thinking it’d be a bunch of rapping about moose, trees, and smoking pot by the pound because, well, that’s what it means to be from Maine, right? Wrong. Well, maybe except for that last part. But seriously, shame on me for doubting this guy. Spose’s Mixtape is rife with wit, tongue-twisting word-play, and a wry sense of humor. Most of all, it’s got substance. Not only does the music distance itself from the empty bravado of gangsta-rap—where talent and intelligence too often take a backseat to how many times you’ve been shot or locked up. Spose isn’t afraid to poke fun at gangsta-rap’s shortcomings either. “It’s not a novelty or comedy,” he raps about his music in the opening track, “because I’m into honesty and modesty and never did a robbery.” But, don’t take his modesty for docility. That razor-shark wit, cunning, and rapid-fire rhyming of his can still kick ass and take names, as he displays in the album’s second half. For me, though, it’s his unpretentious approach and fresh perspective that really make this a stand-out album.             (Will Barry)


    BLACK AND GREY
    Littleguy Records
    After All This Time 
    4 tracks

    “I Can’t Make You Happy” is a truly unsettling, bare-boned, acoustic romantic lament, full of original imagery and performed here in an emotionally wrenching fashion. Nearly as good is the full-bore folk rocker “In the Sand.” Although the vocals are droning, they are heard to good effect amid the semaphoric guitar work.  This slab of minimalistic despair may well be the stuff of cult worship in years to come.                     (Francis DiMenno)  


    JOHN DECARLO & COMPANY
    Live @ T.T.’s Demo Tape        
    5 tracks

    When John’s group plays uptempo, I call it ska and when they slow it down a notch, I call it reggae. This is good music in both cases—rock steady covers and originals recorded live at T.T.’s March 1. The band, including bassist Mark Ferrante and saxman John Ferry, both from Bim Skala Bim, is killer. John also plays guitar and sings with local Marley tribute band, Duppy Conquerors. I really dig the Delroy Wilson cover of “Better Must Come” and “Guns of Brixton” by the Clash (!). Josh Cohen on sax and vocals, Mike Hartford on keys and Matt Sullivan on percussion and vocals have the vibe down just right and DeCarlo’s song, “Pull It Together,” is also red hot. Spark up a spliff and enjoy the music. Good stuff.         (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    TWO VIEW REVIEW

    REBUILDER
    Rebuilder EP 
    6 tracks

    From what I gather from their self-titled EP, Rebuilder is all over the indie rock spectrum, with a sound that ranges from punk to pop punk to emo. “Keep Me Awake” is by far my favorite track of the set with its catchy bubblegum pop punk riffs. This particular track reminds me of pop punk mainstays Motion City Soundtrack—the singer, in particular, reminds me of Justin Pierre. The opening track on the EP, “Everything That I Hate,” immediately evokes the Promise Ring. I think I can hear threads of second wave emo influence throughout the entire EP. On the other end of the spectrum, “Exhaustion” is reminiscent of old school punk with its gang vocals and grungy, faster-paced tempo. The last track, “Headrush,” which is stylistically in the same vein as “Exhaustion,” is nothing exceptional, but solid and catchy nonetheless—which, as it happens, also sums up my feelings on the EP as a whole.      (Emily Diggins)


    REBUILDER
    Rebuilder EP
    6 tracks

    Despite earning an “A” for effort, it is the bands lack of originality that ultimately sinks this freshman outing. To the point of being a detriment, the band enthusiastically revels in its influences. While there are some great moments in this DIY effort (including tasty and surprising organ and electric piano runs), the project ultimately leaves listeners trying to remind them of which Green Day or Sublime or Minor Threat song they were listening to. In the end, all is not lost, since I eagerly anticipate hearing what Rebuilder comes up with when they have matured and found their identity. (Marc Friedman)


    DAVE GERARD
    Savoy Productions
    The Zoomy Trail              
    10 tracks

    The musicianship on this 2009 outing is impeccable; the songs, though, mostly plough familiar genre paths—for instance, the bluesy slow build followed by a mysterioso guitar solo (“Dreamland”), or the somewhat threadbare blues pronunciato “30 Robins,” or the pretty but ultimately inconsequential ballad “Faith.” Gerard’s vocal prowess compares favorably with Tom Waits and his legion of acolytes.  Only the material seems somewhat lacking. Fans of Stonesy Blues and Leon Russell-style low-key soul shouting (“Change”) will enjoy this album immeasurably. Those who see the style as a relic of a bygone era may very well decide to take a pass.       (Francis DiMenno)


    SPIN-OFF!
    Late Night Curry 
    5 tracks

    It is fitting to assign Late Night Curry with the term “comfortable,” as it is not a particularly groundbreaking effort but still remains pleasing, nonetheless.  Where Spin-Off! lacks in originality, it makes up for in “enjoyability”—providing listeners with a healthy dose of infectious, ’80s-infused arrangements and sing-a-long choruses.  This is not to say, however, that the band cannot come across as strange from time-to-time—“Sigourney Weaver” being the prime example alongside “Weird Girls” and “Screaming Creatures.”  Where one could come up with a hook of: “She had a face like Sigourney Weaver but not in a bad way… She had the legs of a golden retriever but not in a bad way” this reviewer will never comprehend.  There is no doubt that Spin-Off! has made this persona work to their advantage.  It has only served to solidify their status as a band with a tongue-in-cheek sense of humor—something perfectly acceptable in this reviewer’s book.  (Julia R. DeStefano)


    CHANCE LANGTON                           
    Old Green Records
    I’m Better Than Them
    5 tracks

    This man is a national treasure. His latest CD includes a short set recorded live at the Capitol Center for the Arts in Concord, NH, and it catches this very talented artist right in his prime playing acoustic guitar and making point after satirical point; and the crowd just going nuts. And it’s easy to tell why: whether talking about a one-legged waitress he encountered at I-Hop, joking about an Asian Liquor Store named “Tai-wan On,” or getting the audience to sing-along with him as he plays his masterful acoustic guitar acompanyment; and sings The Three Stooges’ “Alphabet Song” with the packed, hysterical, house; he is a very funny man. I can’t quote the many funny comments Chance made or I’d ruin your future enjoyment, but he is biting, observant, intelligent and experienced enough to have the crowd in the palm of his hands. Langton has toured with Rodney Dangerfield, Joan Rivers and Styxx: his singing voice can be heard in Adam Sandler’s animated film “Eight Crazy Night” and he has appeared physically in “House Party 2” and “Complex World.” This CD also includes four separate songs; “The Laugh Factory,” “One Of The Elves,” “I Want The Money” (where he is backed by Weird Al Yankovic’s band), and “I’m Better Than Them”; all with good acoustic guitar finger picking and playing. Some of these songs sound like they have pop and celtic influences. Sorta like if the Pogues did the Beatles’ “Michelle.” Now I just want to go see him live and onstage in person.           (A.J. Wachtel)


    JESSICA PROUTY BAND
    Set Me Free
    8 tracks

    The best thing about this record is Prouty’s arresting voice.  Its mix of power and clarity makes her band sound like a heavier version of Heart, if Heart had provided the soundtrack to a less nuanced Game of Thrones.  These songs make me want to simultaneously fight a dragon while pining for a handsome prince.   It’s a bit of a throwback record in that it’s arena rock, and unashamedly so.  This is both a good thing and a bad thing.  It’s good in that the songs generally make you want to pump your fist and shout along.  It’s bad in that the band at times leans toward the melodramatic, occasionally recalling Evanescence.  Of course, if I had a voice like Prouty’s I probably wouldn’t waste my time with subtlety, either.          (Kevin Finn) 


    MEL GREEN     
    MLG Limited
    I’m Taking My Time  
    13 tracks

    Idiosyncratic songs with interesting instrumentation.  “There’s a Light on the Hill” is an ill-considered outing which is sung in a key unsuitable to Mr. Green’s range, and “God’s Domain” is so evanescent and fey that it makes Bread come across as pimpin’ Mack Daddies. “Old Flowers Die” and “All This Time” are best of show, and put me in mind of the neglected eccentric songwriter Biff Rose. But much of the rest of this 2010 outing seems rote and plodding, as though the singer wished to record an aural diary of his feelings but chose to pay little regard as to who might wish to listen to it.    (Francis DiMenno)


    If you are a New England-based act with a CD you’d like reviewed, send it to T Max, PO Box 353, Gloucester MA, 01931.  We’d like to love every CD that comes in, but the reviewers are instructed to let their true opinion be heard.  Digital releases are also reviewed—send free downloads to tmax@thenoise-boston.com.

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    CD Reviews

    Heathermaloney+Darlingside-web

    HEATHER MALONEY + DARLINGSIDE
    Signature Sound
    Woodstock

    5 tracks

    Oh, this collection is just good beyond words. “You Forget” is lush strings, sincere vocalizations, and full of the longing sadness that can be young love. “Roadside Lily” is full of lovely images—a girl depicts herself as delicate and pointless, and is left behind until the coming of the roadside raven. All five are unique, gorgeously executed tunes. Their cover of Joni Mitchell’s “Woodstock” invited well-deserved praise from Graham Nash (and the New York Times!) in their press release.  The string arrangement, the harmonies, and Heather’s spot-on lead singing breathes new life into the song for this generation.           (Kimmy Sophia Brown)

     

    GUNS OF BRIGHTON
    A Selfish Call to Arms 
    8 tracks

    Guns of Brighton might be the band to take on the mantle of Boston’s hometown, punk rock heroes—a tradition started by the Mighty Mighty Bosstones in the ’80s and continued by the Dropkick Murphys through the ’90s, and into this millennium. G.o.B plays the working-class punk originated by The Clash and reimagined by the likes of Rancid and Green Day with workman-like skill and a sprinkle of modernity.

    For a short, eight-song album, A Selfish Call to Arms flows amazingly well. The “Call to Arms” intro and reprise that bookend the record is a nice touch that ties the whole thing together. The rat-a-tat snare drumming that introduces the closing track, “Umbrella of Hypocrisy,” helps to wind things down on a mournful military note.

    G.o.B. take on ska-core as well. “Rude Boy Warning,” pops a Madness-esque rhythm but takes a marked ’50s turn—sounding suspiciously like something from Grease. Maybe an alternate take on “Greased Lightning?”

    The cynic in me might sneer at the transparent bid for the hearts of Boston’s punk community that is “Heroes of the Past.” Tugging at union pride and name dropping the Kennedy family might make me gag if it weren’t also so damn endearing. When I was a kid, iron workers and Bruins fans were more likely to kick the shit out of the punkers than join them in the mosh pit. Nearly 30 years after punk broke in Boston, I guess it’s nice to see the day that punk rock can be the soundtrack for the city.

    Move over Dropkick Murphys—here come the Guns of Brighton!    (George Dow)

     

    DOCTOR X
    Lowbudget Records
    Ambient Hours – Addendum 1
    11 tracks

    There is the caveat right there in the liner notes: “At its worst, ambient music can be annoying or, I daresay, even stupid. But, at its best, it can relieve stress and bring the listener to a slightly higher plane…”, which means ambient music does not come to you, you must go to it. It’s a way of absorbing everything and nothing beneath an umbrella of atmosphere—something to nod your head to and place it inside. When Mr. Brian Eno, the godfather, applied the term to his musical activities, he switched the emphasis away from making music to focusing instead on the art of listening. This was the other green world.

    This collection follows up Doctor X’s three-CD set from 2009, a true masterpiece of creativity and vibrant soundscapes, again featuring his newest software keyboard, Spectrasonics Omnisphere. With this technology in hand, an ability to create something fresh, enticing, evocative and unpredictable is quite easy. This is why he continues to float in this sea of sound. Not to take away from the good Doctor’s personal efforts, a casual listener might hear traces of Eno, Biosphere, Trent Reznor, The Residents, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Fennsez, David Toop, or Alva Noto—all champions of the genre. Every track on this album is a pure sonic collage of the highest order—I played it three times in a row and never succumbed to the void. Space is the place!     (Harry C. Tuniese)

     

    GARY HOEY
    Deja Blues   
    10 tracks

    This is a classic, guitar-focused, testosterone-driven CD with three of the best local guitarists dueling away on it as icing on the cake. Gary struts his stuff like Stevie Ray on “Boss You Around” and I really dig his nasty, stinging guitar tone. “Boot Hill Blues” has James Montgomery doing a cameo and giving a lesson on bar-room blues. In “Almost Over You,” one of my two favorite cuts here, another Hendrix inspired local icon, Jon Butcher, duels it out with Hoey; and it is GREAT. On my other favorite cut, “She’s Walking,” axeman extraordinaire Johnny A goes head to head with Gary in this steady rolling R&B tune: and again the result is incredible. Check out the slide guitar part that Frank Hannon brings to the table during “Got To Believe”; more Rory Gallagher than Johnny Winter and just as tasty. There are two covers on this CD; “Going Down” which is positively electric, and “Born Under A Bad Sign” the Booker T written classic, with Hoey’s screaming guitar and effects driving the song. Gary Hoey’s creative dexterity is to be admired. THIS CAT SCREAMS! I really dig his music and you will too.  (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    THINNER
    Horrorhead Records
    Elevator to Mars
    8 tracks

    From their first release, Thinner has always been about more than simply meat-and-potatoes power pop. The opening and title track is about as trim and fat-free a nouveaux-psychedelic manifesto as we’re likely to hear nearly five decades after that genre first flourished. “Black Forest Walking” is some more matter-of-fact quotidien metallic ominousness—a vital, spongiform declamation. I hear a bit of Bowie and a bit of Marc Bolan, but such name-checking only gives us a vague idea of their overall sound, which also combines the dark hookiness of Big Dipper, as on “Black Lacquer Girl,” with the ornate proto-punk ethos of The New York Dolls or post-punk stylings of The Stranglers. Thinner rolls their merry way through the Pixies-like “Rebound,” the ironically anthemic “Slackers and Laggers,” and the darkly joyous, unlikely love song “Postado.” Even a lesser song like “Save Me” has a lovely vocal hook in the refrain and a dynamic middle-eight. “Mr. Aviator” is a refreshingly wild Hollies-like romp with a great, maddeningly hooky chorus. This is a classic collection from a band at the height of their prowess.       (Francis DiMenno)

     

    FOUR LEGGED FAITHFUL
    Devoured in the Dark
    11 tracks

    What’s interesting about Four Legged Faithful is that while they don’t claim to be a bluegrass band, their primary instruments of banjo and mandolin certainly inject big aural doses of that old-timey Americana sound. But there’s no point in arguing pigeonholes; none other than giant Louis Armstrong reminded us that there’s only two kinds of music: good and bad.

    Hailing from Haverhill, MA, the Four Legged Faithful produce good music. Very good, in fact. The CD cover points out that the band spent nine months recording the album. Most of the cuts on Devoured… feature instrumental dynamics that swing between laconic half-time minor-keyed passages and speedy fast-picked breakdowns. On top of this, the foursome layers in crystalline two, three, and four part harmonies that would do Crosby, Stills, and Nash proud.

    And if you were looking for just a bit more quirk, the band has no drummer. All hands take their turns on tambourine, snare box, or other percussive device. But this listener didn’t miss hearing any true drums; with masterful, crisp playing across the board, that’s all the Faithful need to keep the beat clean and sharp.    (Tim O’Brien)

     

    JAMIE KENT
    Embers & Ashes
    5 tracks

    This 27 year old, Northampton, Mass. artist plays Americana/folk music with Bruce Springsteen and Tom Petty influences; and similar predispositions from Ray Lamontagne and Amos Lee as well. The opening cut, “Broke, Not Broken,” is the hit, with it’s poppy radio-friendly sound. Jamie on vocals and acoustic guitar, Joshua Meltzer on bass and backing vocals, Quinn on drums, and Cisco De Luna on lap steel, are tight and uplifting. When Joshua moves to piano and Rhees Williams brings his upright bass in on “Still A Dream,” this finger-picking uptempo folk ballad really showcases Jamie’s great vocals and superb songwriting skills. “Bonfire” has Heather Maloney on nice backing vocals, “Prince of Pain,” is more foot-tapping than yee-hah, and the closing cut, “Changes,” all written by Kent, are enjoyable and easy listening but not too introspective to be silencing. In other words, I can hear this cat playing to large crowds at coffee houses and in small clubs alike. Good stuff.     (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS
    Laughable Records
    Boston Strangler
    6 tracks

    It is risky for a Boston band to name themselves after a beloved sports franchise, but at least they can go to Savers or the Salvation Army and get cheap band merchandise to sell at shows. New England Patriots have been one of the kings of the Boston underground scene for some time now and I think its time they started getting more recognition. This album recalls Joy Division, Six Finger Satellite, Sacharine Trust, Devo, and The Dillinger Escape Plan more than Brady, Wilfork, and Gronkowski, which might actually be a pretty good band name, too. This is a very Boston-y sounding disc. For those of you old enough to remember them, it sounds like the Boston Bruins theme song from 30 years ago with the opening of Channel 56’s Creature Double Feature (by Emerson, Lake, and Palmer) and the intro to Dana Hersey’s The Movie Loft on Channel 38. Forgive me if I sound flippant, but this is Boston Strong.        (Eric Baylies)

     

    CIRCADIAN RHYTHM KINGS
    The Rotary Records
    Three Thirty Four
    7 tracks

    Thirty seconds into track one and it’s already painfully clear that Circadian Rhythm Kings are shaping some of the most exciting, exhilarating, and daunting jazz I’ve ever heard. What stands out most is the dazzling cacophony of wind instruments that weave their way through the record: The dulcet croon of clarinet, the spit-fire fury of trumpet and sax, the airy trills of the flute, and the booming braggadocio of the bari, all resounding en masse. Of course, I don’t want to sell the rhythm section short. It’s the warm fluid smears of upright bass and stream-of-conscious percussion work that allow the compositions to free-flow their way from nebulous piano-filled fogs to Latin-tinged poly-rhythmic grooves and back again with such subliminal ease. Sure, those clarinet lines may sound as smooth as nocturnal emissions and the surreal contour of the compositions may flow like you thought only dreams could, but don’t let their name fool ya—this isn’t the type of jazz that will put you to sleep.      (Will Barry)

     

    PADDY MILLS 
    Ormal Nye Records
    Race to the Bottom
    10 tracks

    The deeply introspective work-protest-history song “Bay View Massacre” establishes Maine folk singer and multiple award-winner Paddy Mills as a chronicler-songwriter in the tradition of Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger. The title track displays a wry side to his hard-luck tales, which is enormously appealing, due in no small part to the level-headed vocals, his pleasant tenor, and his outstanding backing band. In addition to the progressive agenda of some of the lyrics, the musicianship is also redolent of the traditions embodied in the great American folk music songbook. He also has a great sense of humor: If you favor folk novelty acts you’ll greatly enjoy an upbeat number like “Fox in the Barnyard”—you could play it side by side with the likes of Pure Prairie League and James Taylor and no one would blink. The same goes for the jazzy “Another Day Another Sand Dollar.” Paddy Mills also has a knack for a love song, as evidenced on the clever, world-weary, and heartfelt “Settle Up.” Mills is a world-class talent who ought to be more widely known—in a crowded field, he rises to near the top with his hard-won wisdom yoked to a thoroughly simpatico style of presentation. He strikes me as the kind of folk performer people want to sing along to—and possibly even emulate.        (Francis DiMenno)

     

    JOHNNY BARNES & THE THIN BLUES LINE
    The Willie Dixon Tribute
    13 tracks

    Whether you know it or not, Willie Dixon has been a big part of your musical upbringing; either directly or indirectly. If you listened to bands like The Jeff Beck Group, The Rolling Stones, early Led Zep, Muddy, and Howlin’ Wolf; they all covered his songs. And now scene vet Johnny Barnes gets an all-star cast to back him up for his own stellar tribute: including David Maxwell on piano, Sax Gordon on saxophone, James Montgomery on harp, Joe Pet from The Joe Perry Project pounding, and even Jon Butcher playing the sizzling lead on “Hootchie Cootchie Man.” Barnes has a lot of fun recording this music; and it shows.

    The opening recording, “I Am the Blues” starts off with a blazing guitar intro that sets the tone for the rest of the CD. Growling guitar and raspy vocals surrounded by the best internationally known blues piano, harp, and sax artists around. A great formula that results in a great listen. My favorite cuts are the hard edged “I Just Want to Make Love to You” and the romping “I’m Ready.” The bar-room blues feel of “Back Door Man,” “You Shook Me,” and “Let Me Love You, Baby” really knocks me out too. Saving the best for last, “Little Red Rooster” is a great slide version that the master himself would be proud of. Play this CD LOUD.   (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    THE FABULOUS MUSTANGS
    The Fabulous Mustangs      
    6 tracks

    If you like the honey-dripping style of rock-a-billy/country music, played with rockin’ robin  precision, then you’ll enjoy this EP. The cusp of ’50s/’60s music is captured here in every cut. The insistent bass lines, the see-sawing fiddle, the undulating golden tones of the steel guitar, including worthy covers of tunes by the Everly Brothers and Patsy Cline. The cherry on top is “Take Me Back to My Boots and Saddle,” bringing to mind Marty Robbins’ “El Paso.” This band knows their stuff and could definitely help you and your posse dance the night away.      (Kimmy Sophia Brown)

     

    BRIAN CARROLL
    Miscellaneous
    7 tracks

    Folk/Americana artist Brian Carroll’s newest release has a haunting melody to it. It’s a presence that sits down beside you and starts sharing stories.

    I love how the instrumentation varies in intensity from a few quiet plucks of the guitar, bass, and mandolin to a fenzied flurry of sounds. Brian’s got a great natural talent that shifts around, crafted into a form that evolves with the tone of the song.

    Brian’s voice needs a mention here, because as good as he is on the string instruments [for the record, he’s really damn good], his vocals are second to none. They’re mellow, easy-going, and raw, untempered and unrestrained. Kudos goes to Mark Whitaker for his contributions with the banjo on “Grandfather Clock” and “Again and Again.”

    This collection of seven tracks was recorded, mixed, mastered, and produced in just one month at Brian’s home for the RPM Challenge—there are some old songs which were never released and others that are brand new. The challenge included a limit of 10 songs or 35 minutes, and though Brian said he didn’t quite meet the mark, in my book this album is a success.   (Max Bowen)

     

    MARK MANDEVILLE AND RAIANNA RICHARDS
    Nobody’s Favorite Records
    Hard Times & Woes
    10 tracks

    Folk-rock and country-rock fans who gravitate to the like of Gram Parsons and his successors will likely work up a great deal of enthusiasm for these wistful and impeccably performed numbers.   From the title track opener we are promised a romp though the vast fields of pure Americana; nor are we disappointed. Outstanding tunes include the soothing down-home threnody “It Won’t Be Written On My Grave”; the countrified declamatory “Every Time I Step Down”; the lovely harmony vocals on the traditional arrangements of “Farther Along” and “Hard Times”; and the reverential harmonizing of “Last Tree Standing.” Best of show: the deep country piano and string-band arrangement of the inimitably touching “Line in the Sand.” I can imagine this duo, and their outstanding collection of songs, would be quite a treat to experience in a live setting. (Francis DiMenno)

     

    PERRY PERSOFF
    A Place Beyond The Sun
    1 track

    I know Perry Persoff. I play softball with him. I know that he’s a DJ on the radio (WUMB) and does voiceover work. One day he shared with me what he calls an “essay.”  I loved it—it taught me new things about space exploration in a way that I found fun and easy to learn. After listening, I realized this wasn’t very different than a spoken word CD. Perry created it with words, music, and sound effects—and the production is no less amazing than what goes in to a hit song.

    A Place Beyond The Sun starts out with Perry admiring the trim job he did on his mustache. Without his contacts in, he thinks the sink looks perfeectly clean, but after the lenses go in, his reality changes. Apply that perception to the difference we see in space since NASA launched the Hubble Space Telescope in 1990.  It sent back so much new information to review that what was once considered science fiction, started looking like science fact. In 2009 the Kepler space telescope went even further to seek out other planets that could possibly be habitable. It’s reality copying art—if we choose to call Star Trek art. That telescope discovered a planet orbiting a red dwarf star over 20 light years away that could possibly be habitable. Perry’s essay is like an entertaining radio show that used to be popular back before TV. Maybe we can make a full circle and embrace this type of essay as entertainment. I’ve already hopped on to this idea.     (T Max)

     

    PIXELS
    Pepsi Queen                        
    5 tracks

    Wrenching strained arpeggios from the reverb-stung guitar while the primal drums plod along, Pixels deliver a cache of catchy garage rock tunes that demand your attention. Their heroin-chic lyrics are sung with an anxious vocal delivery that jumps back and forth from dead-pan chanting to voice-cracking falsetto, their pop hooks have serrated edges coated with rust. Sonically, this EP is so lo-fi it’s practically no fi, but don’t let the basement-aesthetic of the recording stop you. Embrace it. In fact, let it embrace you. Learn to love it, the same way you would a Jesus & Mary Chain or Pixies record. You’ll be the better for it.    (Will Barry)

    SENIOR DISCOUNT                                                                                This Is Not the End
    12 tracks

    The self-styled space jam “Smile” and the track “Never Saw Forever” are smart, loco, epic punk, but much of this collection brings a mare’s nest of stylings to the mix, such as the slashingly heart-rending ballad “I Don’t Know Why (You Lied),” the rousingly inspirational “Afterlife,” the poignantly melodic “Light On,” the reggae-goof cover version of “Three Little Birds,” as well as the martial mutant power pop of the title track. This is a pleasant assemblage of unassuming, even earnest, songcraft.       (Francis DiMenno)

     

    MERACULA
    Perils of Basement Culture
    5 tracks

    Meracula is the new group led by Andrew Lowrey of the band Fort and one of my all time favorite house venues, the Secret House of Pancakes. Andrew is not straying too far from his rock and ska roots here, but he is perfecting his craft as a songwriter and performer. Some of this is like Bad Religion with horns. Some of the tunes are heavier, others more danceable. The song “My Uncle Tells Me How Good Music Was In 1988” shows they also have a sense of humor. Great job, Meracula. Pancakes for everybody!  (Eric Baylies)

     

    MARI BLACK
    Flight 
    16 tracks

    Although it may be ironic for me to say, Mari Black ISN’T fiddling around, it is completely truthful. Many of the tunes are traditional, but a lot of the cuts are more like sets; where the first part of the melody is a slow Scottish reel that goes into a quicker Irish jig and finally ends with an original jazzy influenced coda. It’s very interesting and you don’t have to wear a kilt to dig the creativity and effort that went into this release. In very simple terms, this music can be generally placed in two categories: ballads and dance tunes; with much of it similar to a soundtrack of a Charlie Chaplin silent film. And I mean this in the best of possible ways: this music from start to finish is very well done. From Mari’s lush fiddle sound accompanied with a large assortment of instruments including a cello, accordion, and “low whistle.” The songs on this all-instrumental CD that best illustrate what I am talking about are: “Exhale” with the swing of a jig combined with part of an original tune, “Hallucinations” a take on Bud Powell’s Bebop tune with some real cool jazz fiddle, “To Paula” a waltz written by Louis Schryer, and the last cut, “A Letter From the Next Room” a slower, quieter original with a nice jazzy piano part and always the sweet full tones of her fiddle. Very good. Very different.               (A.J. Wachtel)

     

    WALTER NOONS    
    Real Records
    Poem Tones
    12 tracks

    Walter Noons put a lot of thought, energy, ambition, and feeling into this eclectic mix of a CD. “(And It’s All) Becoming Real” has a breezy ’80s feeling, reminiscent of Joe Jackson’s “Stepping Out.” The production is nice and smooth, like cruising on a summer day. “Mademoiselle” is a strummy tune with a ‘20s era aura that should be streaming through a gramophone—and like an earworm, it’s hopelessly catchy. “Bored Street” is a homage to Lou Reed, and as a fan, I was trepidacious. Like some Reed songs, it’s mostly two chords. Noons shares his admiration for Reed, but what’s lacking is the hip cynicism of Reed himself. “That’s No Way To Treat A Pussy” rocks! Noons sings his support of Russia’s girl band, Pussy Riot. It’s hard rocking with fist pumping—gotta play it LOUD—good stuff! “What Do You Believe In” is fast paced and hard, invoking The Jim Carroll Band’s “It’s Too Late.” It got me moving, forgetting what I believe in! The angry rant of “There Was Once A Time” could work for me if I were in one hell of a questionable mood—and that could happen! I was caught off guard by a surprise ambush of the country and western, “Ring In The New.”  It’s ood ol’ cry in your beer music through and through, with more than subtle nods to Roy Orbison, among others.

    I’m 50/50 on this. A whirlwind ride, if sounds were sights, I’d have seen much within the realms of Poem Tones. It’s kind of like New England weather, if you don’t like one thing, wait… something different will come along and surprise you.    (R.J. Ouellette)

     

    TEST OF TIME
    Bridge Nine Records
    A Place Beyond
    3 tracks

    Boston straight edge hardcore standard bearers, Test of Time dropped a three song teaser, A Place Beyond, in advance of their upcoming full-length, By Design, scheduled for a July release.

    Their style sits somewhere between Youth of Today and Uniform Choice. In a strange twist on traditional hardcore, Test of Time forgo the verse-chorus-verse song structure for what is mostly a verse-verse-verse approach. Instead of launching their songs with intros and weaving through mosh-ready breakdowns they simply drop each track at a scorching pace—vocals, guitar, bass and drums all screaming at once, cranked to 11. The pummeling pace continues, straight through, for the next 90 seconds or so when the track abruptly ends. After two seconds of silence the next track kicks in and does it all over again two more times.

    It’s an intense formula that works well over the course of three short tracks. It will be interesting to see how it plays out over the course of a full-length album.    (George Dow)

     

    VARIOUS ARTISTS    
    Heavy Rotation Records
    Dorm Sessions 9
    18 tracks

    This assemblage of songs by Berklee students includes several promising contenders in its roster, including the Heart-like theatrics of Fate & the Family Band, who also contribute a jazzy ballad; the synth-heavy high soul psychedelia of Ojinda; the piano-heavy synth-saturated theatrics of Dev3; and the Nick Drake-like lush stylings of Night Lights, whose “Make Me Smile” is a highlight, as is the ’70s prog metal of Analog Heart’s “Backlight.”       (Francis DiMenno)

     

    SOUTHERN RAIL
    Saturday Night – Live in Concert
    18 track DVD

    This delightful DVD isn’t as wonderful as it would be to be sitting in front of this fine band live, but you can get the feeling of what it would be like. They really have it all. The kick-off tune, “Carolina Lightning” immerses us in the ol’ timey joys of well-played bluegrass music. Each member of this band is top-notch; Jim Muller on guitar and vocals, Sharon Horovitch on acoustic bass and vocals, Rich Stillman on banjo and vocals and John Roc on mandolin and vocals. The gentlemanly and lady-like look of this group adds to their appeal.

    The liner notes say they’ve been together for over thirty years. You can feel how tight and professional and well-seasoned they are. Despite the long time together, they put their all into each track. Jim Muller mentioned he’s from Richmond, VA and I thought, no wonder he’s such a fine bluegrass man. (Our four kids were born in Richmond!) Jim mentioned he and Sharon are married, and the warmth shines in their faces. Sharon just couldn’t be cuter, grinning and bobbing up and down behind all the guys. Jim sings of his love in the sweet song, “I Didn’t Ask.”

    Tracks of note are the dizzying, death-defying finger assault of “El Cumbanchero” and the equally lovely instrumental piece, “Crossing the Cumberlands.” John Roc’s mandolin playing is extraordinary, and Rich Stillman’s banjo pickin’ is joyous.

    If you know anyone who loves bluegrass and is bedridden, then buy this DVD for them. The rest of y’all need to watch for where they’re appearing next, show up and have a grand ol’ time.          (Kimmy Sophia Brown)

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    ButterscottWEB

    Page Contents

    BUTTERSCOTT                 

    Ka-Bling!!

    Presents the Slick Overproduced Commercial Pop Thing™    

    36 tracks

    Here follows a Skeleton Key to the Finnegan’s Wake of Rock Albums. Well, not exactly. More like Bizarro Superman comics. But anyway, note the interpolated commercials, just like that ’60s classicThe Who Sell Out (and don’t think for a minute they have never heard that album). Butterscott, in case you don’t know because you’ve been living in a cave on Mars (or even if you haven’t), specializes in the delicious literary device known as travesty:  a “burlesque of a serious work or subject, characterized by grotesque or ludicrous incongruity of style, treatment, or subject matter.” The cover copy promises that two-thirds of the album is not re-treads of earlier songs, and I suppose that’s true. I will admit that it’s nice to see an Elvis-oid version of “Mindless Boogie,” the band’s passive-aggressive tribute to (among other things) the fabled star-making machinery. “Kissing the Velvet Glove” is a classic late-’60s psychedelic rock farrago with the equally classic low-affect sardonic Butterscott vocal touches. “Legoagogo” is a “Fame”-like disco song which bravely tackles the ubiquity of Legos. While pretending to celebrate them. Sadly, no commercial potential here. Sorry boys – we can’t USE you. Better go back to driving a truck. “Wheelchair Woman” is a proto-metal song which addresses the menace of the overbearing cripple. Edgy stuff, man. Ginger Baker would hate it. “Rekkid Grouch” concerns Your Typical Record Store of yore and takes us into fake-Monkees territory. “Pajama Mama” takes on, with electo-funk, the sociological phenomenon of daytime pajama wear. “Solitude for Two” is a Motown send-up with goofy doo-wop elements and a kicking bass line which makes it, like, an even more authentic fake. “Groggy Froggy” is a “Louie Louie”/“Banana Splits Theme” send-up which is actually quite catchy. “Hot Buttered Toast” is a nod to quaint Kinks numbers such as “Have a Cuppa Tea.” Pop music a la The Association gets eviscerated in “Moist” – also see “Crystal Blue Persuasion” by The Shondells. “Slim Kim” pays obvious tribute to sports anthems like Gary Glitter’s “Rock and Roll” – and to Kim Fowley, the LA songwriter, producer and impresario. “Bartleby” is another re-run, reminiscent of kludgy rock a la The Move, which devolves into a psychedelic freakout. “Thank You Captain Obvious” is a lyrically deft send-up of faux-marching bands. “How’s Yer Hair” – another re-run – is an introspective number in the style of Bread, with superadded Beatlesque pomp in the coda. “Kalliope Krouch” is a twisted children’s song – with an important message about drugs! “Wannitbad” is a country rock parody with dirty lyrics. (Sorry Boys, etc.) “Infinity Forever” caps the proceedings with a grandiose pronunciato—a bit like Todd Rundgren, maybe. Plus, there’s a bonus track, “Hey Ho and a Bottle of Brew.” There’s lots of nifty songs here.  You look at their obsessions and realize that they’re also yours and you wonder what you’ve done with your life. And then you laugh. Because they’re funny, and bitter, and so are you now maybe, just a little bit.         (Francis DiMenno)

    CHARLIE KOCH

    Help Me to Believe                  

    10 tracks

    Charlie Koch is an unpretentious performer; the opener “Don’t Go Away” has a nice James Taylor feel to it with simple piano accompaniment by Kent Allyn. When Charlie’s voice jumps high on the end of the chorus “I don’t want to be alone… alone,” you can hear his vulnerability.  “If You Stop Lovin’ Me” is a sweet plea for a heads up if love ceases to exist. And love is all over this disc – nice, calm caring affection from a sensitive man. The more I listen to this album, the more I feel the tenderness in each track.  Seth Connelly’s beautiful lap steel with a little distortion, echo, and tremolo slides through “Shine a Light” adding just what the song calls for.  Cosy Sheridan sings a duet with Charlie on “If I Were a Bird” and I can sense the origin of the love. The tracks are short; only one “Old Brown Shoe,” extends five seconds over three minutes, where Hatrack Gallagher provides harmonica that adds a Sunday country porch atmosphere—even when the showy diminished chords climb. The one (out of place?) break-up song was penned by Charlie and Julie Snow and the sadness in it adds contrast to the theme in the rest of tracks. Then, like a wife in shining armor, Cosy Sheridan returns as if she’s been away too long, to join Charlie in the final song and pulls the devotion back into this collection of love songs. I’m feeling all warm and taken care of after listening to this. Thank you, Charlie, for the experience.                    (T Max)

    JAY STOLLMAN featuring  DEBBIE DAVIES

    Number7Records

    Room For One More            

    14 tracks

    After listening to this release for the first time I realize there are a lot of things to like about this Connecticut blues artist’s killer CD. The vocals are rock solid, really gruff and growling, and sung with great emotion, feeling and passion. But beyond all of that, this man is a great interpreter. Listen to his covers of  Johnny Winter’s elegant “Tired of Tryin’,” where he turns the original into a harp song. Check out Sam Cooke’s Civil Rights epic  “A Change Is Gonna Come”; where he turns the gospel spiritualism of Cooke’s classic into a slow Memphis blues burner. And I just love his take on Chuck Berry’s B-Side rocker “Back To Memphis” with the tight rhythm section and Debbie Davies’ stinging two-string leads. It’s great stuff that really showcases Stollman’s feel and connection to what he sings. From the opening track, “Ride ‘Till I’m Satisfied” by Walter Trout (an uptempo blues tune), to the title and closing cut “Room For One More” (a slower, introspective blues ballad), this music just jumps out of the speakers. Jay on lead vocals, Debbie Davies on lead guitar (along with Andy Abel and Jeremy Goldsmith), Scott Spray from the Johnny Winter Band on bass (along with Johnny Mennonna), Tommy Nagy on drums (along with Gerald Myles),  Matt Zeiner on keys and Kevin Totoian on harp are a powerful and smooth band that does a great job backing up Stollman’s stellar singing. Listen to Debbie’s incredible guitar licks on “I’d Rather Drink Muddy Water,” Luther “Guitar Jr.” Johnson’s “Lonesome In My Bedroom” and “Pucker Up Buttercup”; this woman is remarkable. Hear the nice slide by Abel on Stollman’s “I’m Done” or his and Spray’s “Love Me & Leave Me.” And I like how all of a sudden I’ll hear Zeiner tinkling the ivories at just the perfect place. One thing is for sure: whether covering classics or doing their own originals, these cats sure sound sweet. After listening to this release for the first time, I just want to hear it all over again.    (A.J. Wachtel)

    T MAX

    Fill ‘Er Up                                  

    11 tracks

    I like that T Max sent this my way. It’s like he’s baiting me to give it a classic Sleazegrinder lambasting, like he wants me to burn both of our careers down to the ground in one final cleansing fire of piled-up adjectives. Well, as much as that appeals to my self-destruct trigger, I can’t. The record’s good. Mostly. I can do without the infuriating, nursery rhyme-y “Chop Chop Chop” (Chop those vegetables up!), but otherwise, T (who plays everything himself, incidentally) vacillates pleasantly betwixt slinky, tongue-in-cheek blues, Beatles-esque pop, and champagne-bubble crooning. Vintage, classic, whimsical, slightly pervy. It’s exactly like hanging out with him, really.    (Sleazegrinder)

    TAD OVERBAUGH    

    Peeled Label Records

    Beauty & Barbed Wire             

    9 tracks

    This CD falls into the category of modern country/alternative rock. It’s sunny sounding and mostly upbeat. Even the songs with more dour lyrics don’t sound like a downer. I can see it getting a good amount of airplay and being well received in any venue that favors this sound. While not a fan of this type of country, I really wouldn’t object if it were happily playing in the background. It’s music that respects auditory boundaries, if you will.

    Tad Overbaugh, who wrote many of the songs and co-wrote many with James Hankins, plays acoustic guitar and has a voice that is well suited to this genre. Shawn Byrne backs him on vocals and plays lead guitar, bass, and a nice banjo. I’m a sucker for the lilt of a good steel pedal and Tommy Hannum comes through, peppering much of the CD’s music with his playing. This shines through really well on “North Side of the Grass.” Nick Buda’s drums keep the beat nicely without jumping out at you and Steve Scott and Mike Webb are credited with the sound of a well balanced and unobtrusive Hammond B3.

    Fans of the new type of country music will enjoy this CD very much.

          (R.J. Ouellette)

    PYRAMID

    Pyramid Demos                        

    7 tracks

    Pyramid are three women from Providence who sound like little kids having a fit, but, you know, in a good way. This album chugs along like the little train that could – before it runs your ass over. Get out of the way or turn it up! Points of reference for this rocking not quite rock ’n’ roll are Jandek, Ween, Carl Simmons, and The Happy Flowers. This is the most fun album I’ve heard in a while. With songs about going to sleep and brushing your teeth, you better be careful, or you just might learn something! (Eric Baylies)

    LAY LOW MOON

    One Winter                                 

    5 tracks

    The follow-up to One Summer, this was originally released in February. In February, if you gave me a CD about winter, in the middle of the worst winter on record, I would’ve probably hung myself, so good thing I got this in June. Also, speaking of hanging yourself, opener “All Affirming” is so hilariously bleak it’ll have you gobbling fistfuls of Prozac. I’m a huge fan of severely depressed folk music, so thumbs up. The rest of this five-song EP is a few shades lighter, but it’s all still pretty bummed-out. I dunno who to compare it to, really, except maybe for Jose Feliciano right after his cat died. Pretty good if you like staring out of windows on rainy days and feeling forlorn.   (Sleazegrinder)

    HONKY GABACHO

    Crossing Swords Productions

    We’re Alive                                

    11 tracks

    Strange. Multitracked a capella vocals creating some unusual sonic textures are the opening track’s declaration of independence from conventional sounds. Subsequent tracks utilize more normative techniques: “We Don’t Belong to This Way of Living” is a kind of a quirky yet strangely monumental chantey. “Kinky Wonder” is a perverse love song with HG’s trademark herky-jerky vocals and songcraft not heard since Marc Bolan and maybe not even then. “Beefcake” features eccentric time signatures with a deterministically strummed guitar and half-meandering vocals a la Syd Barrett. “Diane” is a quirky but otherwise surprisingly mostly conventional love song replete with a keening guitar passage; “Got a New Girl” is a subdued near-rap with an insistent guitar line, which breaks unexpectedly into an acoustic “Billy O. O’Day” passage. “Happy Birthday Zalim” is an odd sing-song to a lost child with a mildly ominous edge. “Take It easy, Angelo” is an epistolary song which has a rattling feel amid the angularly chiming guitar and jaunty vocalizing. “Manymuch” is a pulsing bass riff with a vocal recitative; one of the oddest tunes on a singularly odd album. “Massimo in the Underworld” has a Spanish influence with the usual twists and turns in the guitar and the discursive vocals. “When I Hear Your Lonesome Whistle Blowing” is a clever song which brilliantly replicates with a strummed guitar the rhythms of a train. Of all the songs, this one is the most monumentally irresistible. Overall, this is a solid batch of eccentric songs and lively, well-crafted lyrics. Fans of Beefheart, The Incredible String Band, early Pink Floyd and The Soft Boys will find much to like here. Unique. Strange. A solid keeper.                       (Francis DiMenno)

    ARLEN

    Animal                                         

    6 tracks

    There are no slow, easy-listening songs or melodic tracks on this alt/rock EP to mellow you out. This one’s all about pushing things to 11 and enjoying every second. This isn’t a quiet set of music to pass an idle evening. No, this is meant to be listening to while on a road trip with your buddies, running headlong through the city in search of adventure, or just dancing your ass of at home when no one’s watching (your roommates are gone for the night, right?).

    “Tell Me” is my top pick of the pack crafted by this Lowell foursome. It’s extremely personal, and one that’s instantly relatable. Lines like “Quiet is too loud” remind me of many down times in my life.

    The title of this EP, “Animal,” is so fitting. The heavy rock, slamming drums, and killer guitar work brings all the primal urges to the surface, but these are the good ones—the ones that crave adventure and excitement, the ones that should never be repressed. This album lets them all loose, and that’s something we should all try and do more often.           (Max Bowen)

    METHADONE KITTY

    Darkness                                   

    12 tracks

    I gotta say, their name engenders no confidence whatsoever that this is gonna be a good record. And guess what? It’s not. Apparently Methadone Kitty has been around since 2001, which is alarming. That’s 14 years, man. You don’t know how to sing in tune yet? You can go from high school zero to brain surgeon in that amount of time. Nations have been built in 14 years and you guys can’t even bang together a hummable two-minute rock ’n’ roll jam? The noisy post/pre-punk sounds they mine are straight from ’79, which is fine, but nothing ever congeals into an actual song. It’s just riffs and warbling. Jesus Christ, do you think we’re gonna live forever, Methadone Kitty? I could be listening to Steely Dan right now. In summation: fuck this.                  (Sleazegrinder)

    DAVE GERARD

    Five                                             

    10 tracks

    “Magical Day” sets the tone of Five with some jazzy soul, leading me to believe Dave Gerard’s musical lifeline leads back to Van Morrison and Al Green. Dave has been at this for three decades (this being his fifth full-length) and the quality is up there with his guitar playing, the relaxed grooves, and the effective keyboard playing of Bill Payne (Little Feat). Listening to Dave is like getting a good back massage: the groove is just right and it makes you feel good. The chorus of “Happy Home,” with its soothing Hammond B3, gets under your skin immediately, making me wonder if I’ve heard it before. The disc hits its stride with the over six-minute “The Messenger” where the rest of the band (David Bailey on bass, Conor O’Brien on percussion, and Kent Raine on drums) captures a nice groove; the vocal line “Is he the messenger” in the chorus is repeated in a slightly distorted echo. The song has a section where the band comes way down and Dave talks, reminiscent of what Jimi Hendrix did in “If 6 Were 9.” “The Unknown” comes close to sounding country with its mandolin line, but Dave’s voice keeps a certain soul in the mix. Based in New Hampshire, Dave Gerard has seen fame with his other band (Savoy) Truffle and has played as many as 275 shows a year. His experience shows in this CD – an excellent listenen that leads me to believe he’s got a fun live show.                           (T Max)

     …

    AYLA BROWN

    Ambient Entertainment Records

    Let Love In                                

    13 tracks

    This is Ayla’s third country music album and she just keeps getting better and better. Her powerful and expressive vocals do a great job of communicating what she is singing about and Brown wrote or co-wrote all the cuts with Nashville writers on this May release. All the songs are ballads but there’s not a weeper in sight. And although this is a very autobiographical album, Brown focuses on the positive in tunes like the opening title cut “Let Love In” with its great harmonies, “I Wanna Kiss You Too,” “Mr. Right,” and “Plain Ole Me.” Also check out the nice twangy guitar in “I Just Wanna Be Your Baby” and “Can’t Run Away.” “Matches And Gasoline” and “Stupid Me” really showcase the strong passionate side of her singing while “That Morning Never Came,” and her hushed intimate opening express yet another side of her great talent. It’s nicely produced by Gus Berry – a lot of very good songs sung right from the heart. Love it!        (A.J. Wachtel)

    THE UNGRADED

    Not Guilty                                   

    7 tracks

    Oof. More like The Tragically Mediocre. I mean, it’s not bad, but it’s not even good enough to compare it to anybody we’ve both heard of. It’s standard suburban barroom hard rock with a few punk flourishes. I wanna have more to say about this because I know the guys in the band probably worked really hard on it, and I’m sure they’re nice dudes, and press is tough to come by these days, but I mean, what the hell. Gimme something bigger to bite on than this. We live in a world of infinite choices now, and I just can’t see why you’d choose this over something genuinely exciting. Sorry, The Ungraded. I tried. And hey, maybe it’s just me. It’s not, but maybe.       (Sleazegrinder)

    THE LIED TO’S

    The Lied To’s                             

    11 tracks

    The self-titled debut album of the Lied To’s is a collection of country-rock tunes mostly sung in two part harmony. Susan Levine has a voice somewhere between Dolly Parton and Maria Muldaur – it carries an edgy passion with a wailing “want my man” quality. Doug Kwartler has one of those John Mellencamp-ish, longing, honky-tonk voices that make women weak in the knees. Like in the song “Do You Ever Miss The Things You Swore You Never Would?” Together they ain’t just singin’ an playin,’ they’re cryin’ and terrible sorrowful. This is the kind of song that Johnny and June would’ve sung, or George Jones and Tammy Wynette. I can picture them with big hair and everything. “It was not so long ago that you called me by my name and professed undying love for me with an ever-burning flame.” “Ten” is a great country song, their lyrics are poetic – not just on this song but the others too. “Ashes blowing down the highway/ Remnants of a careless cigarette/ I never understood how someone lights a fire/ Throws it out a window and forgets.” They know what they’re doing and they do it well. It’s a great little CD. I suspect they would be great live too.             (Kimmy Sophia Brown)

    FAMILY PLANNING 

    Pretty Purgatory Records

    John Wayne Frankenstein     

    11 tracks

    Family Planning sounds a lot like an “unplugged” version of Primus (“unplugged” in quotes because they play stripped down as opposed to truly acoustic). Like Primus, Family Planning leads with the bass. Even the guitar, which is front and center, is presented in a bass-heavy way. You will find the same noodly string work that Les Claypool has trafficked in for time immemorial. You even get the slightly jarring, but ultimately endearing, nasally vocals that Primus fans have grown to love.

    Setting aside the Primus comparisons, Family Planning is more rooted in jazz and beat poetry than in rock. Jaunty bass and guitar chord progressions meld with spare yet complex, skittering drums, all of which bring to mind Sunday morning coffeehouse jazz brunches. Scatting vocals contemplate halitosis, ringworm, and strawberry tarts, in a stream of consciousness that is sometimes hard to follow but always entertaining.              (George Dow)

    I EAT ROCKS

    Trash Culture                             

    7 tracks

    I Eat Rocks is a trio from Providence who sort of play punk rock, if you consider the Butthole Surfers and Fantomas punk. Fuzzed out bass, distorted vocals and relentless pounding drums propel this album to dizzying heights and rumbling lows. This band is pretty great live, too, so maybe they should put out a video.        (Eric Baylies)

    CHARIOT BRIGADE           

    4 tracks

    Is it really just two guys doing all this?  Damn, they make enough noise for four!  Maybe five if one’s taking it easy, but definitely a four. This collection of four songs offers a good sampling of the music of Chariot Brigade. It’s loud as hell, with the drumming sounding like a thunderstorm of cymbals and snares. The guitar work is solid, particularly on “Out of Service,” and adds to the sometimes chaotic, but all-around impressive style. Give these guys a listen, and then see them live. Just wear earplugs – you’ll thank me later.                           (Max Bowen)

    TED SOLOVICOS      

    Tedhead Prod.

    Mixed Emotions of the 21st Century             

    19 tracks

    Alongside of the Moody Blues-style pop smoothness are mostly unpretentious tunes with strong melodic values reminiscent of Love circa Forever Changes, and solid and dynamic guitar playing, as on the satiric “Kingdom Hall,” and “I Got My Mind on You.” “Pack Rats” is a deviation from the norm: a darker song which could almost pass as a type of funky heavy metal ala Black Sabbath or Steppenwolf, with an irresistible guitar line. “Bring on the Switchitters” caps the album with an intricate guitar line and tough, bluesy vocals. If you like British bands of the ’60s, and you don’t mind mostly simplistic lyrics, you’ll probably find this enjoyable.                    (Francis DiMenno)

    VARIOUS ARTISTS

    Heavy Rotation Records

    Dorm Sessions X                      

    21 tracks

    A roster of Berklee musicians trot out their projects, many showing great promise and more. “Output,” by I/O, is heavy-duty ecstasy rock and ends the album on a monumental note. Check out their debut album “Saudade.” Recommended. Other highlights include “Lemonade,” in which Grey Season contributes some mildly folk and country inflected earnest Rock and Roll. On “Creighton Court,” Kyle Thornton & The Company offer up a heavy metal blues which is ineradicably weighty. “In Search of Souls” by Cocoa Jackson Lane features exotic vocals and a too-brief stormy psychedelic funk passage which devolves into shimmering West African rhythmic pop. Recommended. “Dysphoric” by The Rare Occasions is standard headbanging fare, but “Halfheartedly” has an irresistible momentum as it weaves dynamically back and forth between quiet and declamatory passages. Recommended. “Hands Like Guns” by Cordelia and the Buffalo is a Sinead O’Connor-like lament, but the electronic rock and symphonic touches on “Free” approach surpassing grandeur. Recommended. The Boston-based DJ and producer yeah Dubz contributes a bright and flashy collage of rhythm and sound titled “All the Days” which is alternately stunning and euphoric. Amy & The Engine scores with the catchy “I Got You,” their gladsome folk-inflected love song. Recommended. “Tarde De Abril” by 3 Sudacas is a slow dance number with a South American flair. Fever Charm has an ’80s rock vibe with a 21st century outlook, and their energetic song “Sound of Summer” reminds me of Dexy’s Midnight Runners. Recommended. Oh, Malô contributes “Feed,” a swoony dirge with expressive vocals and swirling textures. All in all, this compilation is an impressive showing.  (Francis DiMenno)

    THE RADIATOR RATTLERS  

    Spiral Records

    The Radiator Rattlers  

    11 tracks

    Upon my initial listen, I wanted to throw my hands up in the air, wave the white flag and surrender.  It’s 2015; haven’t we had enough of bands playing punk music with folkish instrumentation, especially if accompanied by gravelly gang vocals?  Clearly, the answer is yes, but The Radiator Rattlers still won me over.  The songs are energetic and catchy, and the album has surprisingly crisp production values that flatter the band without sacrificing any grit.  The record makes me want to see the band play live, and I have no trouble picturing them winning over a sweaty, boisterous crowd at The Midway Café.  (Kevin Finn)

    TAXICAB COWBOY

    Long Time Comin’      

    13 tracks

    The TaxiCab Cowboy is singer/songwriter Paul Sullivan and he really is a taxicab cowboy – a driver with the streets as his frontier. Inspired by not only life’s experiences and feelings, his songwriting is fueled by the taxicab life: the late nights, the people, the stories, the personal thoughts and reflections. Capturing all of the above through pure country roots rock is the perfect genre for this cowboy. Paul’s talent for genuine, honest songwriting and performing, teams up with a terrific array of supporting musicians who beautifully lend to each musical tale. One such musician is the outstanding guitarist Tony Savarino, who besides playing lead guitar on nearly every track, wonderfully produced the album.  Each of the 13 songs features a different sides of country, rhythm and blues rock. They’re peppered with mandolin, pedal steel guitar, sax, accordion, and keys – consistent in genre, but strongly standing on their own individually. So many impressive musicians help shape and express the feel of each of Taxicab Cowboy Paul’s songs, so pick up this CD or find the songs online to see the full credits. Highlights: “Just A Man,” “Taxicabcowboy” (kinda punk country), “You Turn Me On” (showcases the gorgeous supporting vocals of Ajda Snyder), the smoky “Audrey Rose,” the dirty bluesy “I Remember Love,” and the emotionally raw and beautiful “Brothers Song.” (Debbie Catalano)

    MATTHEW CONNOR

    Farewell Motel 

    11 tracks

    The music on this CD reminds me of Leon Redbone meets Tom Waits. It’s done well – very interesting and dark, somber and almost funereal. And I mean this in a very good way. His sound is very different and for special ears only. He opens with the dirge-like “Midnight Blue” and includes eclectic cuts like the somber “Somewhere Down There,” “Veronique Waiting,” “Limestone And Yew,” the almost Gothic “Money Goes,” “Paper Trail” and “After The Show”; they are all the same salad with just a little different dressing. All the titles are self-composed ballads, but I really dig the matinee idol quirk that Connor employs in his crooning: all of a sudden his voice will rise an octave and this just sounds so sweet. Matthew is originally from Alabama but now resides in Boston. Local artists Thad DeBrock (pedal steel), Karl Doty (upright bass), Beth Holub (violin and viola), Dave Ragland (electric bass), and Kenneth Frank, Julia Haltigan and Pia Romano on vocals contribute to the final mix. Interestingly, Thad plays SINGLE notes and slides them every which way instead of a many note country style pedal steel performance. There isn’t a solo, just sparse notes that add to the mood. I also really like listening to Connor’s funny and unique lyrics in all the music. For best Leon meets Tom, check out “How Is July Almost Over?” and the title track “Farewell Hotel” – my two favorite tunes. Nice voice. Interesting songs. Different style. And another neat illustration of the New England music scene’s great depth and diversity.   (A.J. Wachtel)

    LEXI JAMES

    Stop                                              

    6 tracks

    This 23-year-old New Hampshire resident is also a national spokesperson for PACER-Teens Against Bullying – and she has the voice of an angel. She is a country music singer and songwriter whose style at times reminds me a bit of Taylor Swift, some Carrie Underwood, and a tad Lady Gaga but she has a better voice, more like Whitney Houston, than any and all of them. Just listen to her great phrasing and her powerful and emotional voice. And above all, she’s got passion. Her band, Kyler Creek, goes from the hard country-rocking “Knockin’ on Your Heart” to ballads “Dreamer,” “Stop,” “Standby,” and “Echo” without missing a beat. My favorite cut is one she wrote called “Out of This Mess” – an uptempo country/pop song that really showcases her sweet voice. All of the tunes are radio-friendly and one better catch her now before her career explodes. In May, she played a gig up at Exeter High School in New Hampshire. Next year she’ll be playing arenas. It’s great music from a young New England artist. Check her out.   (A.J. Wachtel)

    THRIFT STORE RANSOM

    Thrift Store Ransom    

    10 tracks

    Listening to this CD has been a great experience. Thrift Store Ransom is an experimental effort by Eric Ott and co-producer Sean Yadisernia. It’s very eclectic and inasmuch as its influences are so widely varied, it defies categorization of genre. I was often unable to pin down the influences that various songs brought to mind while feeling as if it were on the tip of my brain.

    The feel of the CD is warm, smooth and soft, with plenty of heart. The sound changes radically from song to song. This man is possessed of dazzling talent and the diversity of these tunes allow him to showcase that, switching styles with graceful ease.

    In “Cold Blue,” I hear traces of John Lennon mixed with Electric Light Orchestra in just one song! “How Can You Love A Dying Man” evokes The Grateful Dead and  Neil Young, tinted with country/bluegrass. “Middlebrook Road” has a familiar sound which I couldn’t identify. Invitingly warm, it makes me long to reside there. “Mill Song # 2 (The Strike)” is laced with Tom Petty’s influence.

    I don’t want to imply that Eric Ott comes off as a “tribute” artist. He owns what he does, displaying  many influences while being original. Becoming bored while listening to this CD would be difficult. It’s hard to find something unique these days, but this CD qualifies. It was definitely a mixed bag of tricks. I enjoyed most of it and feel it worthy of a recommendation. Give it a listen.   (R.J. Ouellette)

    LINES WEST

    Two of a Perfect Pair    

    10 tracks

    My goodness these vocals, both the lead and gorgeous harmonies are delicious – creamy, silky smooth, sweet tones, truly the strongest points of Lines West. Credited to confounders John Radzin and Brian Larney – both of whom also play guitar, percussion, and piano on this recording. The band is rounded out by Kenny Cash on bass and Scott Logan on drums. Out of the gate, I was impressed by the flawless, incredibly clean recording quality – there is not one critical thing I could say about this production value and full, crystal-clear sound. But all the technical prowess in the world really doesn’t mean anything if the songs aren’t there. Fortunately, Lines West’s songs are right up there in quality – catchy, steady, lovely, indie-vibing pop. So pleasing to the ear and soothing the soul, I could listen to Two of a Perfect Pair repeatedly without tiring of it – that’s a gift, and what any artist would desire. Some songs are stronger than others, like ”Honeybee,” “Foolish,” “A Deeper Shade,” and showcasing their rootsy, Americana/acoustic-y side, “Straw Man” and “Nowhere Feels Like Home.” Just wonderful overall! (Debbie Catalano)

    AUTUMN ABOVE

    Blessed You’re Still

    11 tracks

    If you have a soft spot for drawn out prog-rock that lands somewhere between Cursive and Dream Theater, then Autumn Above is for you.  For the rest of us, getting through this album is a bit of a slog.  Before listening to this band, I wasn’t aware that you could fit 11 hours of music onto one CD.  At least, that’s how long the album feels like.  Some of the songs are so mellow and hazy that they come off as the aural equivalent of melatonin; others are so overwrought and melodramatic that you feel like you’re reading the diary of a sensitive, but not yet articulate, teenager.   (Kevin Finn)

    BUTCHER BOY

    Pretty Purgatory Records

    Rhubarb

    3 tracks

    Butcher Boy’s three-song EP Rhubarb may be short in tracks, but at over 25 minutes in length, there is plenty to wrap your ears around. Each of the seven-minute-plus songs follow a similar path – banjo and dobro shifting from Appalachian folk to droning psychedelia, overlaid with vocals that split the difference between The Violent Femmes’ Gordon Gano and O’Death’s Greg Jamie. I suspect that both bands were influential on Butcher Boy’s sound.

    Each track meanders far and wide without ever finding a destination. But, in the end, that’s the fun of these songs – each playing more on mood than melody. The mood though is a strange one. Never sure whether it’s a funeral dirge or a basement jam.   (George Dow)

    THE ALMIGHTY BUCK

    So Long

    5 tracks

    “Your Favorite Song” is a lazy, loping delight, as casual as a summer day. “Ravin’ Mae Renee” is a vocal duet with Tim Ko and the toughly angelic-voiced Bethany Brooks. Again, there is that casual feel—replete with carnivalesque keyboards by Jen Kearney which makes this song come off as the best song Levon Helm and The Band never recorded. Best of show “Orbit” features tumbling percussion and bright guitars and is appealing in a vaguely wistful way until it drifts into a dynamic middle section, where it approaches classic psychedelia with a folksy vibe, and leaves one wishing for more. “Old San Juan” is a quavery, country-inflected ballad, nothing exceptional, and “A Fireman’s Mustache” is a lonesome plaint. Three great songs out of five is pretty swell. (Francis DiMenno)


    If your act is based in New England and you would like to submit a recording for review, send it to T Max/ The Noise, PO Box 353, Gloucester, MA 01931

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