Monthly Archives: March 2009

On Tour: Henry’s Funeral Shoe

In support of their debut release Everything’s For Sale, Henry’s Funeral Shoe takes to the road in their native Wales.

MP3 | Henry’s Funeral Shoe

April 4 Cardiff Mavis (Clay Statues) Birthday
April 10 Cardiff Promised Land
April 12 Live Tracks in Session BBC Radio – Adam Walton Show
April 18 Aberdare Cwmaman Institud
April 30 Cardiff Barfly
May 2 Porthmadog Gwyl Porthmadog Festival
May 3 Swansea Uplands Tavern
May 23 Abergafenny Welsh Perry and Cider Festival
May 24 Abergafenny Welsh Perry and Cider Festival
June 27 Newport T.J’s

Henry’s Funeral Shoe: Everything’s For Sale

henrysfuneralshoe_everythingsforsaleHeavy two-man guitar-and-drums blues-rock

The minimalist blues formula brought back to popular prominence by the White Stripes, has been equally effective for guitar-and-drums duos like the Black Keys, Two Gallants and Soledad Brothers, and bass-free groups like Black Diamond Heavies and Radio Moscow. The Welsh duo Henry’s Funeral Shoe, featuring Aled Clifford on electric guitar and vocals and his younger brother Brennig on drums, debut with heavy blues-rock originals that drift briefly into psychedelic jamming. Aled’s twanging low strings and Brennig’s heavy kick drum and tom-toms fill up the rhythmic and tonal space made by the lack of a bass player. There are shades of Peter Green in the guitar playing, and the sparse vocals have the rough-and-ready force of guttural blues shouters such as the proto-rock ‘n’ roller Big Joe Turner, the edgy electric bluesmen Johnny Winter, early metal howlers like Paranoid-era Ozzy Osbourne, and growling alley dwellers like Tom Waits. The elder Clifford writes lyrics populated with phrases rather than stories or characters, matching the duo’s instrumental style by adding verbal catch-lines to the riff-heavy music. These tunes are sure to be even more arresting when assaulting sweaty bodies on a darkened, beer-soaked dance floor. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Henry’s Funeral Shoe
Henry’s Funeral Shoe’s MySpace Page

Dolly Parton: 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs

dollyparton_9to5Country and pop from Hollywood Dolly

In celebration of 9 to 5: The Musical‘s Broadway debut, RCA/Legacy has reissued Parton’s 1980 album with a trio of bonus tracks. Building on the 1977 pop breakthrough, “Here You Come Again,” 9 to 5 (as a film, album and single) cemented Parton’s draw beyond her core country audience. She’d released Dolly, Dolly, Dolly earlier in the year, and its orchestrated AOL covers freed her to indulge more country sounds here. The 9 to 5 album topped the country chart and the title single topped the country, pop and AC charts. The album’s second single, a light-pop cover of the First Edition’s “But You Know I Love You” (originally sung by future duet partner Kenny Rogers) also topped the country chart, and a disco cover of “The House of the Rising Sun” made the top twenty.

The hit singles provide a fare representation of the album’s variety. Parton’s originals include the hopeful, country gospel “Hush-A-Bye Hard Times,” the unapologetic portrait “Working Girl,” and the homespun values of “Poor Folks Town.” The covers are more diverse, including a delicate reading of Woody Guthrie’s “Deportee” and a solemn take on Merle Travis’ “Dark as a Dungeon.” Less successful is the pedestrian Nashville backing given to Mel Tillis’ “Detroit City” and Mike Post’s badly aging arrangement of “Sing for the Common Man.” Yet even when backed by hackneyed keyboards, liquid guitars and by-the-numbers strings, Parton’s voice still shines.

The struggles and successes of working people provide the album a theme, but the album never musters the artistic force of Coat of Many Colors, My Tennessee Mountain Home or Jolene. Parton’s in excellent voice throughout, but her bid for broader commercial success leaves several tracks uncomfortably laden with pop clichés. Legacy’s 2009 reissue adds a previously unreleased session cover of Sly and the Family Stone’s “Everyday People,” a beat-heavy 2008 house remix of “9 to 5,” and a lead vocal-free remix of “9 to 5” that puts you in Dolly’s rhinestone-studded high-heeled shoes. Bonuses aside, it’s the album’s originals and selected covers that make this an essential entry in Parton’s catalog. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

OST: Gonks Go Beat / I’ve Gotta Horse

ost_gonkshorseGems sparkle on obscure mid-60s UK film soundtracks

Gonks Go Beat and I’ve Gotta Horse were low budget British musical films released in 1965, with soundtrack albums even more obscure than the celluloid from which they sprang. A DVD of Gonks Go Beat turned up in 2007, and the film’s soundtrack now appears on this two-fer CD. For better or worse, an official DVD of the companion I’ve Gotta Horse is still to be produced. Both films were intended as cheapy cash-ins, with Gonks the more successful in corralling artists such as Lulu, Graham Bond and the Nashville Teens to provide some mid-60s relevancy.

I’ve Gotta Horse, on the other hand, was a vehicle for pop star Billy Fury, and the purpose-written songs are in league with Elvis’ lesser film works (“Do the Clam,” anyone?). As the liner notes explain, this was the “alternative to change in 1965.” In addition to thematic songs expressing Fury’s love of animals, there are string-laden ballads, offensively inoffensive harmonies from The Bachelors, and stagey show tunes “Do the Old Soft Shoe,” “Dressed Up For a Man” and “Problems.” This may be fun for the whole family, perhaps even passable filler at a variety show, but it’s hardly the sound of ’65. The album’s one rock ‘n’ roll tune is the Gamblers’ garage-blues “I Cried All Night,” which sounds remarkably out of place amidst the rest of the soundtrack.

In contrast, Gonks Go Beat splits its time between rock and ballads, much as the film’s story line pits the inhabitants of Beat Land against those of Ballad Isle, with a Romeo and Juliet subplot that weaves in elements of The Wizard of Oz and It’s a Wonderful Life. The soft pop of Ballad Isle is mostly forgettable, but even the softies manage the excellent country-tinged folk of Elaine and Derek’s “Broken Pieces.” Better are the soundtrack’s opening salvo of Lulu’s go-go “Choc Ice” and Graham Bond’s blues-drenched “Harmonica.” The Titan Studio Orchestra offers up a galloping guitar-and-sax instrumental, and a quartet of skinsmen compete in the epic “Drum Battle.” Lulu returns for the soulful “The Only One” and the Nashville Teens show they had more than “Tobacco Road” with the rave up “Poor Boy.”

The film’s ballads play better on film (where the colorful sets and pretty faces provide distraction), but the pop, rock and blues cuts from Gonks are simply terrific on CD. Kieron Tyler’s liner notes provide a short history of British pop cinema, suggesting these films were sadly within the tradition and that A Hard Days Night was the artistic aberration. Gonks Go Beat is not as unwatchable as reviews suggest, and the opportunity to see Lulu, Graham Bond and The Nashville Teens (and their vintage instruments and amplifiers) is worth a rental. This soundtrack two-fer (mono for Gonks, stereo for Horse) is a must-buy for the handful of superb tunes from Gonks and the charmingly banal tunes by Billy Fury. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

RPM Records’ Home Page

On Tour: Blind Pilot

Portland duo Blind Pilot heads out on the road as a 6-piece band with the addition of bass, banjo/dulcimer, vibraphone and keyboard/trumpet players. They’re supporting the CD release 3 Rounds and a Sound, headlining in March and April and opening for the Decemberists May through July (the irony!).

MP3 | The Story I Heard

March 24 Nashville, TN The Mercy Lounge
March 26 Greensboro, NC Studio B
March 27 Arlington, VA IOTA
March 28 Philadelphia, PA Theater of Living Arts
March 30 Cambridge, MA Middle East
March 31 New York, NY Mercury Lounge
April 1 Pittsburgh, PA Club Cafe
April 2 Cleveland, OH Beachland Ballroom
April 4 Minneapolis, MN 400 Bar
April 6 Norman, OK Opolis
April 7 Austin, TX Mohawk
April 9 Tucson, AZ Plush
April 10 San Diego, CA Casbah
April 11 Los Angeles, CA Spaceland
April 13 San Francisco, CA Cafe Du Nord
May 24 Missoula, MT Wilma Theater*
May 26 Denver, CO Fillmore Auditorium*
May 27 Kansas City, KS Uptown Theater*
May 29 Milwaukee, WI Riverside Theater*
May 31 St Louis, MO Pageant*
June 1 Columbus, OH Lifestyle Communities Pavillion*
June 3 Atlanta, GA Tabernacle*
June 4 Raleigh, NC Memorial Auditorium*
June 5 Richmond, VA The National*
July 18 Troutdale, OR Edgefield Amphitheater*
July 19 Troutdale, OR Edgefield Amphitheater*

* With the Decemberists

Press Release
Blind Pilot’s Blog
Blind Pilot’s MySpace Page

Willie Nelson: Naked Willie

willienelson_nakedwillieWillie’s Nashville-era work stripped to the studs

Nelson’s longtime harmonica player Mickey Raphael “unproduced” these seventeen tracks from the original RCA multitrack masters, drawing material from 1967’s The Party’s Over and Other Great Willie Nelson Songs, 1969’s My Own Peculiar Way, 1970’s Laying My Burdens Down, 1971’s Willie Nelson & Family, and a few rarities, including the 1968 single “Bring Me Sunshine,” and the archive tracks “Jimmy’s Road” from 1968 and “If You Could See What’s Going Through My Mind” from 1970. The new mixes are stripped of strings and backing vocals, leaving Nelson’s voice up front of rudimentary arrangements of guitar, bass, piano and drums, and occasional flourishes of vibraphone, steel and organ.

Unfortunately, the notion that these de-sweetened versions get to the roots of the songwriter’s original vision is only half true, as Nelson and Raphael could only work with what was on the tapes, which includes unswinging Nashville-styled performances from studio A-listers. The basic tracks were purposely arranged as scaffolding upon which decoration was to be layered, distracting decoration perhaps, but decoration that was part of the original architecture. What’s left sounds unfinished, rather than the original root of something that was embellished. Even without the orchestration and backing chorus, Nelson’s vocals remain at odds with the backing players, confined by Nashville’s straight time, and unable to launch his idiosyncratic stylings.

This would be less evident had Nelson not bucked Nashville’s constrictions and satisfied his muse across dozens of celebrated albums for Atlantic and Columbia. These de-produced versions are neither the intricately assembled, finished products of Nelson’s producers, nor the fleshed out visions of a singer-songwriter chafing against Nashville’s conventions. The Nashville studio players only hint at the emotional work that would back Nelson’s breakthrough efforts. Fans will enjoy hearing Nelson’s voice out front of these terrific songs, but there isn’t true gold lurking beneath the orchestrations and backing vocalists, only a clearer picture of just how desperately Nelson needed to break free of Nashville’s way of doing things. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Skeeter Davis: The Essential Skeeter Davis

skeeterdavis_essentialSolid single-disc overview of Davis’ country and pop hits

Skeeter Davis was one of Nashville’s early female crossover stars, producing twangy country sides, Brill Building pop productions, and several hits that straddled both worlds. Her recording career opened on the country charts as half of The Davis Sisters with the sad duet “I Forgot More Than You’ll Ever Know.” Though sung in forlorn harmony with a strong pedal steel, the 1953 country chart topper also found its way into the pop Top-20. Sadly, Davis’ partner (though not actually her sister), Betty Jack Davis, was killed in a car crash, leaving Skeeter Davis to partner with Betty Jack’s sister for a couple more years.

When the reformulated Davis Sisters failed to click, Skeeter Davis moved on as a solo, signing with RCA and coming under the care of guitarist/producer Chet Atkins. Atkins’ doubling of her voice on country hits “Set Him Free,” “Am I That Easy to Forget,” “My Last Date (With You)” and “Where I Ought to Be” suggested the harmonies of the Davis Sisters, with Skeeter stepping out solo on selected verses. Davis returned to the pop charts as a solo artist with 1960’s “(I Can’t Help You) I’m Falling Too,” this time employing a countrypolitan sound shorn of steel and fiddle. Her original lyrical version of Floyd Cramer’s “Last Date” (retitled “My Last Date (With You)”) continued the dual country/pop success, and in 1963 she scored her biggest crossover hit with “The End of the World.”

The violin chart and heartbroken lyric of “The End of the World” suggested superb pop productions on the horizon. She reached the pop Top 10 with Goffin & King’s “I Can’t Stay Mad at You,” featuring Neil Sedaka-styled “shoobee doobee” backing vocals, a full Brill Buildling production, and a chipper girl-group lead. She also picked up “Let Me Get Close to You” from the Goffin & King catalog, doubling her vocal with pop harmonies that suggest Carole King’s early sides. Davis sang Brenda Lee styled ballads, pop confections, and continued to mint hits throughout the 1960s, including the lovely pizzicato “What Does It Take (To Keep a Man Like You Satisfied)” in 1967, and a ’50s styled cover of Dolly Parton’s “Fuel to the Flame.” This collection closes with Davis’ last two major hits, 1970’s Loretta Lynn flavored “I’m a Lover (Not a Fighter),” and 1971’s autobiographical “Bus Fare to Kentucky.”

Davis had too many hits to collect on a single disc, but the Essential set does an excellent job of balancing important tracks from both the country and pop sides of her career. Several lower charting country hits, including her Grammy® nominated cover of the Original Caste’s (and later Coven’s) “One Tin Soldier,” are omitted due to space constraints. Still, this is the most comprehensive single-disc collection issued so far, and makes a perfect starting point for enjoying Davis’ twenty year career as a hit maker. Those looking for a deeper helping of her country sides should check out the Country Legends collection, those craving more from the pop side should find the Pop Hits Collection (Vol. 1, Vol. 2). [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Chip Taylor and Carrie Rodriguez: Red Dog Tracks

chiptaylor_reddogtracksTwangy, relaxed, confessional country duets

Hit songwriter Chip Taylor’s performing career is having quite a second act. Or third, or maybe fourth. After his initial foray as a singles artist netted little success in the early ‘60s, Taylor penned a string of hit titles for others (including “I Can’t Let Go,” “Wild Thing,” “Country Girl, City Man,” and “Angel of the Morning”). In the 1970s he embarked on a moderately successful second pass at recording with a string of solo works. His songwriting continued to make more headway than his performing, and at decade’s end, he retired from the music business (apparently to become a professional gambler). He resurfaced in 1996 with Hit Man, an album of newly recorded versions of songs others had made hits, and the following year returned as a contemporary songwriter with The Living Room Tapes.

What was clear from his new songs, which continued across a trio of albums on his own Train Wreck label, was that Taylor had returned to performing and writing with more rustic country intentions than with which he’d left at the end of the 1970s. The roots movement had opened up space for country-oriented singer-songwriters to lay down their wares without the interferance of anything Nashville, and that space could just as well benefit old masters as young guns. What sent Taylor’s performing career to the next level, however, was his meeting of fiddler Carrie Rodriguez. Taking her on tour as an instrumentalist and backing singer, he gradually drew her out as a duet singing partner for 2002’s Let’s Leave This Town.

This 2005 release is their third, and the chemistry that was immediate on the debut has greatly deepened. The growing confidence in their vocal interplay allows them to sing more leisurely and provides more breathing space for their music. Acoustic bassist Jim Whitney keys the band’s relaxed pace, and Bill Frisell’s guitar winds all around the vocals. Rodriguez’s fiddle is heard more as accompaniment than solo, the focus staying with the vocals and occasional instrumental flourishes. Taylor wrote most of the songs, co-writing one with Rodriguez, pulling two from Hank Williams (“My Bucket’s Got a Hole in It” and “I Can’t Help It If I’m Still in Love With You”) and one from the public domain (“Elzick’s Farewell”).

Taylor’s songs retain the folkiness of his earlier days, particularly as rendered with relaxed tempos and quiet instrumental passages that provide reflective moments between verses. The contrast of his rougher vocal tone to Rodriguez’s plaintive style works especially well as they converse in melody, employing long drawn notes and an intimate, confessional tone. The ease with which they sing together demonstrates the pairing that began as a serendipitous meeting at SXSW has blossomed into a complete partnership. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Chip Taylor’s MySpace Page
Carrie Rodriguez’s MySpace Page
Train Wreck Records

Jackie DeShannon: Don’t Turn Your Back on Me / This is Jackie DeShannon

jackiedeshannon_dontturnthisisHit songwriter’s first two UK albums as a performer

Though Kentucky-born Jackie DeShannon had two major chart hits, a chart-topping 1965 version of Bacharach and David’s “What the World Needs Now is Love” and the 1969 original “Put a Little Love in Your Heart,” her work as a songwriter has commercially overshadowed her performing. The author of “Dum Dum,” “When You Walk in the Room,” “Come and Stay,” “Breakaway,” and “Bette Davis Eyes” has been represented on the charts for four decades, turning up on countless artist’s albums and greatest hits collections, but her own catalog of performances has had a difficult time gaining CD reissue.

A number of single-disc anthologies, including the Definitive Collection, Ultimate Jackie DeShannon, Come and Get Me and High Coinage have offered good overviews, but only in the past few years have her original albums found their way into the digital domain. This two-fer from BGO combines DeShannon’s first pair of British LPs, opening with the sensational rock sounds of 1964’s Don’t Turn Your Back On Me, and continuing with the more centrist orchestrations of 1965’s This is Jackie DeShannon. The jump from the debut’s pop, rock and folk-rock works to the industry productions of the sophomore release is stark, to say the least, and though the former is the more satisfying spin, the latter holds several charming works.

Don’t Turn Your Back On Me relies on Brill Building styled arrangements (courtesy of Phil Spector’s main man, Jack Nitzsche), with light violins adorning tracks powered by full-kit drumming, deep tympani, driving 12-string guitars and vocals that are both R&B rough and girl-group sweet. DeShannon’s original take of Nitzsche and Sonny Bono’s “Needles and Pins” is sung downbeat, making the vocal more tearfully bitter than the Searchers’ spitefully anxious hit cover. The mood recovers by song’s end, however, with DeShannon singing sassily across the beat and flinging away her pain.

Additional tunes from Jack Nitzsche (the girl-group “Should I Cry”) and Randy Newman (the stagey ballad “She Don’t Understand Him Like I Do,” the Lesley Gore styled “Hold Your Head High,” and the girl-group “Did He Call Today, Mama”), are complemented by DeShannon’s original version of her own “When You Walk in the Room.” The latter, taken again at a slower tempo than the Searchers’ hit cover, has an edgier vocal and wields the lyrical beat like a hammer. DeShannon’s voice turns to a Brenda Lee styled growl on “The Prince,” the 1950s R&B tune “It’s Love Baby (24 Hours a Day)” provides a fine 1960s rave-up, and her cover of “Oh Boy” charts the transition from Buddy Holly’s reign to the Beatles then-current dominance.

The two-fer arrangement of this CD finds the last track of Don’t Turn Your Back On Me, a rousing cover of Allen Toussaint’s “Over You” segueing into the muted brass introduction of “What the World Needs Now is Love,” which opens This is Jackie DeShannon. It’s a segue that was really meant to be heard with a year’s gap in between. With the rock drums and guitars stripped away and the arrangements turned to sweeping orchestrations, DeShannon still shines on covers of Gershwin’s “Summertime” and Bacharach and David’s “A Lifetime of Loneliness,” but mostly without the electricity of her earlier sides. The originals “Am I Making It Hard on You,” “Hellos and Goodbyes” and “I Remember the Boy” sound as if they were recorded during the sessions of the previous album.

“What the World Needs Now is Love” fit DeShannon like a glove, but the attempts to replicate its orchestrated formula weren’t as successful. In contrast, the album cuts on Don’t Turn Your Back On Me are enjoyable, if not hit single quality, as are the rock performances grafted on to This is Jackie DeShannon. This is a fine two-fer, though more for the debut than the follow-up, though even the latter has a number of cuts that will find space in your regular rotation. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Jackie DeShannon’s Home Page
Jackie DeShannon Appreciation Society

Jackie DeShannon: What the World Needs Now Is… Jackie DeShannon- The Definitive Collection

jackiedeshannon_definitiveFamous songwriter, underappreciated performer

American songwriter Jackie DeShannon had two monumental top-10 hits as a performer, her own “Put a Little Love in Your Heart” and an indelible cover of Burt Bacharach and Hal David’s “What the World Needs Now.” But even with major chart success, she’s been more commercially successful writing songs others brought to fame, including The Searchers’ “When You Walk in the Room,” Marianne Faithfull’s “Come and Stay With Me,” and Tracey Ullman’s “Breakaway.” Many of he compositions are perennial cover bait, returning to the charts in new versions by artists ranging from Dolly Parton to Al Green to Tom Petty to Pam Tillis.

As her own albums and hits collections show, however, her immense talent as a songwriter was matched by her work as a singer. Her original versions of “When You Walk in the Room” and “Breakaway” aren’t merely songwriter demos – they’re templates of the angst and joy that would mark every subsequent version. Her early version of “Needles and Pins,” written by Sonny Bono and Jack Nitzsche, has all the hooks that made the Searchers’ subsequent cover a hit, and her original take of “Till You Say You’ll Be Mine” showed a young Olivia Newton John just how the song should sound (the Searchers’ string-lined cover pales in comparison to both the ladies’ versions).

This 28-track collection spans 1958 to 1980, but focuses most heavily on DeShannon’s output for Liberty between 1959 and 1970. Both of her hit singles are here, along with singles the flopped and originals of songs that became hits for others. DeShannon proves herself to be much more than a songwriter trying to cut their own tunes, she’s a talented vocalist equally comfortable with chirpy rockabilly, pop, soul, girl group harmony, and especially chiming folk-rock. DeShannon’s later ballads (those recorded after the success of “What the World Needs Now is Love”) often suffered from mundane orchestrations, but this collection keeps such tracks to a minimum.

This 1994 set was nominally replaced in the EMI catalog by the cover-laden and less satisfying Ultimate Jackie DeShannon. Better is Raven’s Come and Get Me and its recent companion, High Coinage. Of the four, What the World Needs Now still provides the most balanced portrait of DeShannon’s key years and the best starting point into DeShannon’s catalog. All four collections feature tracks not on the other three, so you might pick up more than one, or use any of the four as a map to the recent original album reissues. Finally, the Ace volume Break-A-Way: The Songs of Jackie DeShannon provides a good helping of others’ covers of her writing. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Jackie DeShannon’s Home Page
Jackie DeShannon Appreciation Society