Showing posts with label heavy rotation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heavy rotation. Show all posts

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Heavy Rotation - Week Of Feb 25th


In our weekly series, Heavy Rotation, I will write about the five records I have been spinning regularly over the last week. There is not an expiration date. The records included can be from any time period at all. All entries are eligible to appear for multiple weeks. In fact, repetition is likely due to the fact that while I listen to a fair amount of music, it's not as much as I'd like to make time for. Also, as some of you may know, we have a vinyl only policy around our house, so as expected, all entries on the list are being listened to via turntable.

Ladies and germs, presenting installment five of Heavy Rotation . . .


John Cale | Vintage Violence
Columbia Records | 1970

After leaving the Velvet Underground, John Cale wrote, what he referred to in his biography as "some very simple songs" and assembled a group of studio musicians to record Vintage Violence. The results are a wonderfully eclectic melange of styles from 60's pop (Cleo) to Nashville infused rock (Hello There) to smooth 70's rock (Gideon's Bible). While Cale would go on to make more assured records like Paris, 1919, the charming energy on this record is utterly infectious.






The Left Banke | Too
Smash Records | 1968

This second album from baroque popsters, The Left Banke would be their last for nearly twenty years. The 30 minutes of this record simply fly by as the listener is inundated with intricate arrangements and lovely harmonies populating deftly crafted pop songs. It's a wonder that The Left Banke were never a bigger hit, despite their lone charting single, "Dont Walk Away Renee". One interesting bit of trivia is that several songs on Too feature the backing vocals of a young man named Steven Tallrico who later changed his name to Steven Tyler and went on to start a band you may have heard of called Aerosmith.




Camera Obscura | My Maudlin Career
4AD | 2009

This week's theme of compact pop records continues with the fourth offering from the Scottish quintet, Camera Obscura, whose entire oeuvre is a nod to the great song craft, production and power of early and mid-sixties Motown and girl groups. Led by songwriter and frontwoman, Tracyanne Campbell,  Camera Obscura take their unabashed affection for retro-pop and create a new millennium version on that style. There are notes of orchestral pop, bright horn accompaniments and some wryly hilarious lyrics. Simply put, this record is a ton of fun and should be listened to loudly and with the windows open whenever possible.




Aretha Franklin | Aretha Now
Atlantic Records | 1968

Starting off with the iconic "Think" and rolling through a powerhouse half hour, Aretha Now is the sort of record that grabs you by the scruff of the neck in its opening bars and lets go when the needle rests at the end of side two. Aretha's pipes treat us to the best renditions of "I Say A Little Prayer" and "You Send Me" that are available to ears anywhere. There is a rollicking great time to be had with "See Saw" and of course she reminds us as only she can that "The Night Time Is The Right Time". Maybe you've heard "Respect" too often or just recently saw that video for "Pink Cadillac". If so, please just throw this LP on the deck and be reminded why Aretha Franklin is a national treasure.



Grandaddy | The Sophtware Slump
V2 | 2000

Grandaddy mastermind Jason Lytle has some pretty  obvious influences. Jeff Lynne of ELO and Neil Young seem in a way to almost coat the songwriting and production choices on The Sophtware Slump. And yet, Lytle manages to rise above this by writing about an anachronistic universe where man and technology and nature meld together in a dissolved land of confusion and blurred boundaries. This intermingling geography and a melancholy nostalgia create a canvas on which Lytle's influences seem brand new rather than rehashed. It's a bit like listening to a record made by the love child of Mr. Blue Sky, H.D. Thoreau and Steve Jobs.


Saturday, February 11, 2012

Heavy Rotation - Week Of Feb. 11th



In our weekly series, Heavy Rotation, I will write about the five records I have been spinning regularly over the last week. There is not an expiration date. The records included can be from any time period at all. All entries are eligible to appear for multiple weeks. In fact, repetition is likely due to the fact that while I listen to a fair amount of music, it's not as much as I'd like to make time for. Also, as some of you may know, we have a vinyl only policy around our house, so as expected, all entries on the list are being listened to via turntable.

Ladies and germs, presenting installment four of Heavy Rotation . . .


The Decemberists | The King Is Dead
Capitol Records | 2011

For their sixth full length album, The Decemberists were able to meld their penchant for the British Folk Revival they'd been toying with on their previous two efforts with the tight, straightforward songs with which they began their career. The King Is Dead is still filled with the detailed narratives and maudlin characters that songwriter/frontman Colin Meloy has made his stock and trade. And, by embracing a neo-country arrangement and soliciting the assistance of Gillian Welch and Peter Buck, this album is easily the most accessible and memorable of the band's entire canon.

Watch the Decemberists play the entire album live in the video below.




Le Congo Danse | Compilation
Pathe/EMI | circa 1960s

This collection of Congolese bands from the 1960s is one of the more remarkable records in my collection. French record label Pathe compiled this LP in the late 60's for the cosmopolitan Parisian set. The result, more than 40 years later is a ridiculously energetic and unique set of songs that typify their place and time. Google queries have led me to discover just how rare this collection is and how expensive it can run to get a copy for you to add to your collection. Which is too bad, because it's an absolute gem.




Arcade Fire | Neon Bible
Merge Records | 2007

Arcade Fire often seem like the perfect poster children for the indie-pop meets mega pop world. Their epic, yet utterly accessible songs forged with lush instrumentation and bravado are a masterful example of the bridge that exists between the halls of hipsterdom and the mass appeal of popular music. My kids especially enjoy this band and I've been able to use their affection for Arcade Fire to springboard them in to other musical experiences that seem pretty offbeat to most 11 and 13 year olds.




David Bowie | Hunky Dory
RCA | 1971

In Many respects, Hunky Dory seems like the first truly Bowie of David Bowie's records. The first side alone contains the legendary tracks "Changes", "Oh! You Pretty Things" and "Life On Mars". This LP was just released just a year before Bowie invented his Ziggy Stardust alter-ego and a full six years before he began his now famous collaboration with producer Brian Eno. Bowie's charm and power ooze from the vinyl, but never get in the way of the remarkable songs herein. While his first three records contain moments of greatness mixed with very average material, this seems to be the first occasion where he knocked the whole thing out of the park.




R.E.M. | Reckoning
IRS Records | 1984

What else is there to say about this masterpiece of American rock and roll? Reckoning is one of the cornerstone's of my musical upbringing and a record I have never tired of hearing. There are very few records that seem as perfect to me as this one does. This is one of those ten records I would have to take to that mythical desert island where you listen to records all day long.


Friday, January 27, 2012

Heavy Rotation - Week of Jan. 27th


Sorry for the absence last week. The ice of northern Michigan and the frosty chill of peppermint schnapps called your humble writer away. I'll do my best not to let you down again, faithful reader.
In our weekly series, Heavy Rotation, I will write about the five records I have been spinning regularly over the last week. There is not an expiration date. The records included can be from any time period at all. All entries are eligible to appear for multiple weeks. In fact, repetition is likely due to the fact that while I listen to a fair amount of music, it's not as much as I'd like to make time for. Also, as some of you may know, we have a vinyl only policy around our house, so as expected, all entries on the list are being listened to via turntable.
Ladies and germs, presenting week two (or thereabouts) of Heavy Rotation . . .


Cartagena | Compilation
Soundway Records | 2011

Yet another killer world music re-issue from the world combing collector/repackagers over at Soundway. This volume fixates on the Discos Fuentes record label and the singles they released between 1962 and 1972. Mastered from the original recordings, all of which went straight to 45 rpm at their release, Cartagena unleashes a feast of great Colombian dancehall, pop and cumbia. This record is fun, funky, hip shaking and mind-blowing. In short. it's a groovy and catchy ass kicker. Nearly all of the Soundway stuff laid upon my ears sounds great, but this is in the upper echelon.


Cartagena! Curro Fuentes & The Big Band Cumbia and Descarga Sound of Colombia 1962 - 1972 by Soundway

Luna | Penthouse
Beggars Banquet | 1995

Penthouse represents a high water mark for Luna's fine career. Though the band have many other fine records, Penthouse reads like a series of short stories written by an author who envisioned narratives contrived by Flannery O'Connor and Woody Allen all set to a poppier version of the Velvet Underground. There are not many records from the mid-90's that still resonate with me, but Penthouse is a very special record. There is an emotional response every time I hear it - and I never tire of that feeling.




The Byrds | Live At Royal Albert Hall 1971
Sundazed Records | 2011

If someone asked me to make a short list of the most criminally under-appreciated bands ever, the Byrds would slide into second place behind the Kinks without another thought. This 2-LP live set vinyl reissue further solidifies the point. After years of lineup changes and brushes with pop superstardom, the Byrds of 1971 were an undeniably powerhouse four piece consisting of just one original member (Roger McGuinn) and the badassedness guitar player (Clarence White) country rock ever saw. This Sundazed reissue is a beautiful pressing with wicked versions of hits throughout the Byrds' canon. This is not a band to forget about it. Just listen or yourself.


The Jam | Snap!
Polygram Records | 1983

As a general rule, I do not spin a lot of greatest hits collections. Yet there are always exceptions to every rule. In this particular case, The Jam are a really great band with many very good records, but their greatest strength is most often found within their singles. This double LP set is therefore, a clinic in how The Jam made a bevy of singles in the late 70's and early 80s with a punkish energy, a mod-like sense of style and an Elvis Costello-ish knack for melodies and hooks. For the uninitiated to the work of The Jam and Paul Weller, this is the ideal place to dip your toe into the pool.




Brian Eno | Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)
Edition EG | 1974

Brian Eno is perhaps best known as a producer of mammoth records by gigantic bands like U2, Coldplay, Talking Heads and David Bowie. Many others will link him to his ambient instrumental work. Some will even recall his involvement in the early Roxy Music records. But the greatest gift of Eno's career are the four solo pop records he made in the early and mid 1970's. Mixing cooky-yet-catchy melodies with oddly fascinating veiled lyrics, he crafted some really great songs, especially on this record. At times, he comes off like a more educated Bowie or T-Rex with a tad of Graham Greene intrigue tossed in for good measure. It is exceedingly difficult to make a smart pop record with an attitude, an agenda and a penchant for glam. Brian Eno pulled it off in spades on this one.