Tuesday, June 28, 2011

The End Records 2011 Summer SamplerCantora Sampler

Oh my gosh!! Today (and for the next few days, at least) Amazon's MP3 store is offering two amazing, free samplers...I can't decide which I like better: this one or this one...

I think one reason I'm so excited is because on The End Records sampler there's a new song by Audio Bullys, a group I loved about six years ago and hadn't really heard anything new from since....their song "Only Man" dares you not to dance...and a track on the Cantora Records album, called "Crime Pays" by Bear Hands, is simply majestic and yet oddly cynical at the same time.

So much on both samplers that I just can't stop playing...think about checking them out and have a great evening!!:)

Monday, June 27, 2011

LA Vampires & Zola JesusSinger Zola Jesus once said, "I want to write songs about things that are important...like why we're here, what the future holds and the apocalypse...maybe the apocalypse has already started. If you look around America, there's a lot of sadness and a lot of suffering. Most people turn a blind eye to it. I want people to come to terms with it."

As someone who grew up loving the bounce and wackiness of so many of my favorite 80s songs, I can't help but think today's music is so much sadder. People say today's music is worse than their own generation's, but I don't believe that's necessarily true. Maybe it's just that some of the best musicians writing and performing today are more accurately reflecting what's going on around them.

There's less escape and more truth today...and that can be kind of bleak, but it can also be kind of what we need.
Is It Fair EnoughClassic RockI can't stop playing "Is It Fair Enough" off of Kingdom Come's new album, Rendered Waters. I read about their newest cd in Classic Rock's special AOR issue. I must have missed Kingdom Come when they first arrived on the scene in the late 80s. But I probably wouldn't been ready for them anyway...I was always on the lighter side of music back then.

"Is It Fair Enough" is both mesmerizing and maudlin, heavy on the drums and sad on the guitars. Its beat is so infectious I can't get enough of it...

I would definitely recommend checking out Classic Rock magazine. They aren't just invested in the past, but in current groups as well and their reviews are top-notch (though my wallet sort of resents that fact since I sometimes end up buying their highly rated albums.)

Sunday, June 26, 2011


The sampler from the July issue of Uncut is just wonderful, full of terrific tracks like Little Willie John's seldom heard cover of "Fever" (my favorite version ever!), Barrett Strong's "Money (That's What I Want)," Sam Cooke's "Chain Gang" and Bill Dodgett's "Honky Tonk (Part 2)."  Most of the songs can easily be found on other cds, but all of them gathered together on one disc make this extra awesome...worth the rather hefty cost of the magazine...whether you read it or not! :)

Here are some tidbits from the sampler write-up accompanying it:

-Sam Cooke joined the Soul Stirrers at the age of 15 in 1950...and seven years later would hit it big as a solo artist with "You Send Me."

-Smokey Robinson's "Shop Around" was Motown's first chart-topping, million-dollar selling single.

-Ray Charles would often perform "What'd I Say (Parts 1 & 2)" at the very end of his concerts, saying after it was over: 'That's the end for me. There ain't no encore, no nothin'. I'm finished."
NYLON (1-year auto-renewal) Forget

The problem with cleaning and sorting trash from recycling is when you discover your old magazine collection and end up slumped in a corner reading things you missed the first time around. In the September 2010 issue of Nylon there's a small blurb about an album I had never heard of before called Forget by Twin Shadow.

I like the way Juliet Linderman refers to it: "It's a very rare record that makes you want to simultaneously dance on a rooftop in your underwear and sit in a corner of a dark bar making sexy eyes at strangers, but that's exactly what Twin Shadow's debut Forget inspires."

The man behind Twin Shadow is Dominic Republican-born George Lewis, Jr., who was raised in Florida and now lives in Brooklyn. Grizzly Bear member Chris Taylor, after hearing his amazing voice, signed him to his label, Terrible Records.

And the rest is music history...something incredible to listen (and dance) to while you revel in the wonderful sounds:)