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2005 August | Americana Roots

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Tom Savage Trio- The County Line Kingston, Ontario's Tom Savage fourth studio album called The County Line recently founds its way to my ears.  Even though it is a 2008 release it deserves your attention if you haven't heard it. ...

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Marley's Ghost - Ghost Town Ever ask yourself what has happened to real music as you search your radio dial….looking for anything that sounds appealing? The music is still out there, you just need to look in the right places. Some...

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Jeremy Porter - Party of One After listening to “Party of One,” Jeremy Porter’s debut solo CD, it’s easy to see what makes Americana music a deeper listen than pure Pop. Both genres share the synthesis of multiple source genres,...

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Drunk On Crutches - People.Places.Things. Have you ever decided to listen to new CD, not knowing what to expect? Sure you have. And when the first song starts, you are not only surprised, but ready to hear what’s next? Well, that’s what happened...

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The Council of Smokers and Drinkers- Grizzled Nashville, Austin, Memphis......Anchorage??  Last year we wrote about Alaska band The Whipsaws on our site.  I'm happy to report that we have another tasty musical export from the Cold North.  Ladies...

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David Allan Coe Re-Release of Penitentiary Blues

Category : Music, Reviews

According to the booklet provided in the advance materials from his new

record company, from age 16 to 21 he was in the National Training

School for Boys, the Lewisburg Penitentiary, the Chillicothe

Reformatory, the Lima State Hospital, and the Ohio State pen.  At

age 23 he went back to the Ohio State Penitentiary, then apparently was

free for a year, then went to the Marion Correctional Institution until

he was 27.

Clearly, he had issues.

Speaking of issues, Shout! Factory/Hacktone Records is re-issuing Coe’s “Penitentiary Blues” album, out of print for decades.

The guitar work is often harsh, the chords are few and bluesy, and the

singing is unrestrained (when he’s mellow his voice reminds me—believe

it or not—of Chuck Berry’s; when he laughs he echoes, at times,

Screamin’ Jay Hawkins). 

Perhaps not surprisingly, in recent years he’s worked with the now

defunct thrash metal legends from Texas, Pantera (a member of the

group, Dimebag Darrell, was recently shot to death on stage).  And

though Coe is country, his lyrics fit metal:

Now they’re taking blood tests

From my heroin vein

According to the press materials, Coe was serving his eighth

consecutive stretch in the joint when he wrote some or all of these

tunes.  Not good for a career as an insurance salesman, but

“street cred” for a writer/performer.  And that’s what the

promotional stuff is focusing on.

But it is a good CD?

Yes, if you like your Americana simple, nasty, bluesy and to the

point.  Note for our younger readers: This CD clocks in less than

thirty minutes.  That’s how it was back then.

Congrats to Shout ! Factory/HackTone Records on this release. 

It’s not in the same league as a Beatles rarities, but hot damn it’s

fun!

3 ½ bottle caps.

Ryan Shupe and The Rubberband

Category : Music, Reviews

I received the sample of the soon to be released Ryan Shupe and The Rubberband album “Dream Big” and I became disappointed. Not disappointed from the music being bad, but disappointed from it only being a sampler (only six songs). THIS CD ROCKS! The first track on this sampler started off with “Even Superman” and once you get picked up it won’t let you down. These guys have a great sound together. Once you get into “New Emotion” you hear a bit of the banjo skills these guys have, but really they are only setting you up for “Banjo Boy” which has some good banjo rips. “Dream Big” is a great song that helps move you on in day to day struggles. Maybe this is why this song had become the bands new anthem. My personal favorite of all the songs on this sampler is “Simplify.” When I heard this I was on my way home from work thinking of all the crap I had to do the following day when this track came up and helped me forget about it all. The name of the track should explain it all. “Banjo Boy” is a great little jam with A LOT of banjo in it. Craig Miner really struts his stuff at the end of this track. It’s great! These guys are great together and bottles up to Ryan Shupe writing these songs. Right now I am giving these guys a four bottle cap rating and hoping when the full album is released, I can check it out and that they are just as great. OK, being that we have recieved the full album, I’m giving my take on on it:They didn’t let me down on this one, it’s great! With the full album, I was able to listen to "Rain Falls Down" which has a reggae sound with a banjo, yes a banjo, they work wonders with that thing (not to piss off any banjo players by me calling it a "thing"). Let me tell you why I enjoy Ryan Shupe and the Rubberbands new album, I couldn’t put my thumb on it until after I read a statment by Shupe, "I realized that our songs are a celebration of life." This complete album is a positive outlook on life. It’s different then a lot of the other crap other music genres are coming out with. Just check out some of the song titles: Even Superman, Dream Big, Simplify, and Never Give Up. Sounds pretty damn positive to me. Be sure to check out their groovy website at http://www.Shupe.Net{mosimage}

Al Kooper – Review of “Black Coffee”

Category : Music, Reviews

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The disc opens with the rock and soul of “My Hands Are Tied.” Other

highlights include “Keep it To Yourself” and “Get Ready.” At 14 tracks,

it’s an ambitious record, but then again, this is Kooper’s first solo

recording in 30 years, so he had to make up for lost time. And, make up

for lost time he does. Backed by a first-rate brass section known as

the Funky Faculty, the musical mensch Kooper conducts this band of

musical brothers on a smooth and soulful ride. Black Coffee is aptly

titled since these 14 tunes are best listened to while sipping your

morning cup of Joe on Saturday morning while reading the paper.

Kooper’s soulful and soft delivery provides a great background for

casual conversation and it’s easy listening music. Just to keep the

listener awake though, there are songs where he turns up the decibel

level and lets the Funky Faculty jam it out — most notably the groovy

instrumental “Green Onions (Live)” that showcases Kooper’s manic

keyboard playing. The most ambitious of these tracks is the funk blues

of the other live track “Comin’ Back in a Cadillac,” which clocks in at

just under 10 minutes.

Overall, Black Coffee shows that like a good caffeine kick, the 61-year-old Kooper shows no signs of slowing down.

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To purchase this CD or learn more about Al Kooper, visit his website @ http://www.alkooper.com

-David McPherson

Chuck Prophet – “Age of Miracles” Review

Category : Music, Reviews

Review of Chuck Prophet’s “Age of Miracles”by Steve HugEmcee, Narrows Center for the Arts, Fall River, MALennon meets Beck meets Richman meets whatever. That’s how I think about Chuck Prophet’s "Age of Miracles" CD, released on New West Records.It’s a funny, serious, goofy, catchy recording that–if the world were a just place–would make this San Franciscan a big star.The sound on some tracks is reminiscent of John Lennon’s "Walls & Bridges" album, particularly the title track. On other tracks he’s got eclectic rhythms one might link to Beck. And throughout, Prophet sings with the lazy, nasal sound of Jonathan Richman, except Chuck actually is a singer.That said, "Age of Miracles" takes these classic influences and comes out fresh as Febreze. In fact, when I stuck the CD into my car’s player for the first time, I couldn’t believe how cool the record sounded. (Even my 19-year-old-daughter agrees, and she rarely concurs).I’m not one to pay much attention to lyrics, but this album has some memorable ones.From "Automatic Blues"–I feel like a pair of sneakers in a washing machine I’m bouncing off the walls trapped in the heat.From "Age of Miracles"–Don’t go now, there’s more to see All lost time will be retrieved I know it’s true, it’s on TV In the age of miracles.Chuck plays guitar, organ, lap steel and other instruments. He wrote or co-wrote all the songs, often with the help of some Nashville heavies.  For example, country soul producer/writer Dan Penn co-wrote "Heavy Duty" on the album. Penn is famed for his "Dark End of the Street," covered by Gram Parsons and many others, and for his production of the Box Tops’ records in the 1960s. More recently, Penn produced one of the finer Americana albums of 2005, Greg Trooper’s "Make It Through This World."Songstress Kim "Bette Davis’ Eyes" Carnes wrote "Just To See You Smile" with Chuck. Kim is known for her duets with Kenny Rogers, and is a celebrated songwriter for pop and country performers. (In case you didn’t understand the reference, "Bette Davis’ Eyes" was Carnes’ smash single that dominated pop radio a million years ago.)Another country Kim–Kim Richey–also co-writes a track, "You Got Me Where You Want Me." Ms. Richey is a well-respected, fairly mainstream country songwriter and performer. (Her website is under construction, but just Google her name if you want to learn more.)Chuck Prophet comes to the Narrows Center for the Arts  in Fall River, Massachusetts, on Monday, August 15, and going to the show just to buy this CD is worth the effort. It’s that good!  Chuck plays New York City a couple nights later and is slated to appear on World Caf� Live on Thursday August 18 out of Philadelphia.For those familiar with the work of John Doe–who also has recently put out a fantastic CD–you’ll like Chuck Prophet. He’s got Doe’s rocking feel, although Chuck’s more lighthearted.I give “Age of Miracles” 4 bottle caps, and urge everyone to get to know the music of Chuck Prophet.{mosimage}

Jim and Jennie and the Pinetops

Category : Music, Reviews

Jim and Jennie Play “Song Grass”by Stephen HugYou’ve heard of bluegrass. Maybe even the term for progessive bluegrass, "newgrass."How about "song grass"?That’s what I think Jim and Jennie and the Pinetops are doing in their first release for Bloodshot Records, "Rivers Roll On By."It’s the song, not just the manic banjo pickin’ or fiddle fiddlin’. And eight out of the 13 are ORIGINALS. Not stuff written by somebody planted in an unmarked grave in some old hilltown.No disrespect intended, of course. After all, this is "roots" music. And they do perform some traditional songs, and a couple written by the late bluegrass legend Don Reno.If you’re an old-timey country song person, one who likes simple, unadorned music, you’ll probably like "Rivers Roll On By." And if you’re a bluegrass aficianodo, you’ll probably like the CD as well, because there is some apickin’ and agrinnin’ too.Jim Krewson and Jennie Benford come from a past not particulary inundated with bluegrass—in fact Jim was a hardcore punker (though instead of screams or grunts he now sings with a “high and lonesome” sound).  And reflecting the punk ethic, they don’t mess around with songs that go on forever.Despite having thirteen tracks, the CD clocks in under forty minutes, which is rare these days. Maybe Jim and Jennie are starting a healthy new trend: self-editing. Unless you’re Lennon and McCartney–and they wrote and recorded mostly short tunes–chances are you can leave some of your precious musical ideas on the "cutting room floor" so to speak, or for another album. Just because a CD can contain a lot more stuff than vinyl doesn’t mean you’ve got the material to fill it up. Leave the listener hungry for more!The originals are simple, likeable and grow on you with each listen. My favorite track is Jennie’s "Stars Fall," which has her singing in a fragile voice as pure as a mountain stream before it’s used for beer. Her "Mt. St. Helens" is also memorable.Jim and Jennie and the Pinetops perform at the Narrows in Fall River, Massachusetts this Friday, August 5th. Tickets are still available.  They play the Newport Folk Festival—happening down the road from Fall River—the next day, but it will cost you a lot more! Three bottlecaps for Rivers Roll On By. Good stuff, but nothing that will knock you out of your saddle.  I’m looking forward to seeing them Friday night in Fall River!Jim and Jennie and the Pinetops WebsiteVisit Bloodshot Records’ Website

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