Monthly Archives: July 2009

Paul Evans: The Fabulous Teens… And Beyond

PaulEvans_TheFabulousTeensAndBeyondNovelty hitmaker’s early rock ‘n’ roll secret

Paul Evans is a lesser-known transitional figure from the waning days of rock ‘n’ roll’s first pass. His best remembered (and most anthologized) hit single is the 1959 novelty “(Seven Little Girls) Sitting in the Back Seat,” which was followed by a cover of “Midnite Special” that’s equal parts Johnny Rivers and Pat Boone. His last top-40 hit was the 1960 banjo-driven pop novelty “Happy-Go-Lucky-Me,” a tune that’s turned up in recent years in both film and on television. He worked as a songwriter, writing Bobby Vinton’s chart topping “Roses are Red (My Love),” and returned to the charts with a couple of middling country entries in 1978 (“Hello, This is Joannie (The Telephone Answering Machine Song”) and 1979 (“Disneyland Daddy”).

Ace’s 28-track anthology focuses primarily on his work from 1959 and 1960, adding his two later country hits and his previously unissued original of “Roses Are Red (My Love).” The latter is a surprisingly close template to Vinton’s later hit, though without a few of the finishing touches that converted the song into chart gold. Evans’ original has a twangy guitar in place of the hit’s Floyd Cramer-styled piano, the backing chorus is more pop than Nashville Sound, and though Evans’ vocal is heartbroken, it’s not as dramatically so as Vinton’s. The bulk of Evans’ earlier recordings include easy swinging rockabilly and toned down R&B covers, produced with guitar, bass, drums, piano and sax.

None of the covers measure up to the readily available originals, but unlike the neutered works of Pat Boone, Evans seems to understand what he’s singing, even if he can’t muster the sort of verve these songs deserve. The backing musicians do a good job, though on tracks like “60 Minute Man” the stinging guitar and soulful background singers give way to a lead vocal whose growl is unconvincing. Evans is better off singing songs of lost love, such as the rolling “After the Hurricane,” and excels on his clever novelty tracks, which include the march time “The Brigade of Broken Hearts” and the country lampoon, “Willie’s Sung With Everyone (But Me).”

Evans’ cover versions provide a novel view of how artists scrambled to cope with the musical changes wrought by rock ‘n’ roll, but a rocker Evans was not. Neither his voice nor attitude have the grit or abandon of a rock ‘n’ roll singer and though his covers are well intended, they’re more cute than convincing. His original work, particularly his pop songs and novelties ring truer to his artistic character. Ace’s compilation gives you the chance to hear it all, including his original hit singles from 1959 and 1960, and his later re-emergence on the country chart in the late ‘70s. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

OST: Funny People

OST_FunnyPeopleFinely selected boomer favorites and more

The soundtrack to Judd Apatow’s latest comedy, Funny People, is a terrific collection of favorite boomer artists in both familiar and less familiar contexts. Well-known tracks from Ringo Starr  (the 1973 George Harrison co-write, “Photograph”) and Warren Zevon (his devasating farewell, “Keep Me in Your Heart”) are complemented by thoughtful solo works from Paul McCartney (1997’s “Great Day”) and Robert Plant (2005’s “All the King’s Horses”), alternate takes, demos and live tracks by John Lennon (a demo of “Watching the Wheels”), Neil Diamond (an early take of “We”), James Taylor (a live version of “Carolina in My Mind”) and Wilco (a live version of “Jesus, etc.”).

Jason Schwartzman’s band, Coconut Records, sounds as if they were lifted from the early ‘70s when rock turned into glam and radio pop. Adam Sandler adds a low-key cover of the Beatles’ posthumous, “Real Love,” and a half-sung/half-standup novelty “George Simmons Soon Must Be Gone.” The latter’s mugging interrupts the album’s sincerity, and Maude Apatow’s cover of “Memory” from Cats might be charming once; but only once. Those two tracks aside, this album plays as a cohesive mix-tape rather than a series of marketing opportunities, and will please both those reliving the film’s story and those who simply like the collected artists. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Elvis Presley: From Elvis in Memphis

ElvisPresley_FromElvisInMemphisStellar expansion of 1969 Elvis milestone

Elvis Presley wasn’t just the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll, he was an artist who prospered in spite of an unsympathetic manager, and a star who rose to a second great peak, resurrecting himself from the ashes of a moribund career. His incendiary, game-changing hits of the ‘50s led to the start of a bright film career, but after losing his crown in a repetitive string of artistically lean popcorn movies, it took a string of three key performances to regain the throne. The first, 1967’s How Great Thou Art, was a gospel album anchored in Elvis’ musical roots; the second, an iconic NBC comeback special in 1968, proved he still had the rock ‘n’ roll spark; and the third, this 1969 return to his Memphis home ground, showed he still had something new and potent to offer. There was more, including live and country albums in 1970 and 1971, but the artistic and commercial renaissance of 1967-69, capped by this soul and gospel masterpiece (and its hit single, “In the Ghetto”), is one of the great comebacks in music history.

Even more impressive, the album’s dozen tunes are less than half the Memphis sessions’ output. RCA’s 2-CD Legacy reissue collects 36 tracks from Elvis’ stay at Chip Moman’s American Studio, adding ten tracks from the second platter of From Memphis to Vegas – From Vegas to Memphis (subsequently reissued as Back in Memphis), four single mixes of album tracks, six non-LP singles (including the trio of chart hits “Suspicious Minds,” “Don’t Cry Daddy,” and “Kentucky Rain”), and four bonus tracks. Having recorded in Nashville and Hollywood since his mid-50s departure from Sun, Elvis returned to Memphis to find soul music still heavily influenced by gospel and blues, but also powered by the bass-and-horns funk developed by the Stax, Hi, FAME, American and Muscle Shoals studios.

Buoyed by the success of his televised comeback, Elvis shook off the insipid material he’d been recording, and dug deeply into a set of blues, country, gospel and pop sounds, pushed by Moman and his crack studio band. You can hear Elvis rediscovering himself as he tests his crooning, wandering through a loose arrangement of “I’ll Hold You in My Heart (Till I Can Hold You in My Arms)” that turns Eddy Arnold’s 1940s country twanger into an emotion-soaked gospel. He’s commanding with the testimony of “Power of My Love” and swaggering and blue at the same time on “After Loving You.” He nails a slow-burning gospel-tinged cover of “Long Black Limousine,” lightens to horn-lined Memphis melancholy with “Any Day Now” and closes the album with the stunning “In the Ghetto.” The extras on disc one are finished tracks that include Bobby Darin’s “I’ll Be There,” the Beatles’ “Hey Jude,” and the gospel “Who Am I?”

The ten tracks of the follow-up album open disc two, and though the sessions were well picked-over for the original album, there are several highlights in the second set, including the slow building blues rocker “Stranger in My Own Hometown,” the dramatic farewell of “The Fair’s Moving On” and the gospel soul “Without Love (There is Nothing).” Disc two’s pay-off are the original mono single mixes, six of which don’t appear on either Memphis album, including the hits “Suspicious Minds,” “Don’t Cry Daddy” and “Kentucky Rain,” and the supremely funky “Rubberneckin’.” All of these tracks have been previously released, scattered across LPs and singles, and brought together on collections such as The Memphis Record and Suspicious Minds. But never before has Elvis’ homecoming been drawn as such a vivid portrait.

This brief leave from Col. Parker’s stifling control gave Elvis a chance to go home, both literally and figuratively, and the circumstances in which to wax one of the two or three finest albums of his career. The energy created in Memphis sustained the King through a resurgent live show, but as the bubble closed back around him, these blue-eyed soul sessions turned into the last studio high point of his extraordinary career. Legacy’s 2-CD set is delivered in a tri-fold digipack that reproduces the covers of both From Elvis in Memphis and Back in Memphis, and includes a 24-page booklet stuffed with photos and excellent liner notes by Robert Gordon and Tara McAdams. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Privilege

DVD_PrivilegeDark story of the star-making machine

Privilege, released in 1967 and starring Manfred Mann lead-vocalist Paul Jones, is a compelling look at stardom and media manipulation. Jones plays Steven Shorter, a sullen, withdrawn, brooding and childlike rock star who turns out to be a puppet front man for a business he doesn’t control. His choices of music, message, performance, clothes and endorsements have been usurped by the media machine that created him; he’s a ghost within his own life story. Shorter is lent to whoever will pay for his services, whether it’s an advertisement for apples or a Christian crusade.

The film is structured as a quasi-documentary with a dispassionate narrator and interview clips. There’s also an air of behind-the-scenes authoritarianism that parallels the tone of Patrick McGoohan’s The Prisoner. Shorter is trapped by his totalitarian masters, and his manufactured popularity is used to influence and control the masses via media manipulation. Shorter himself turns out to be just another cog in the mass, as he emotes through a cynical rock take on “Onward Christian Brothers” and finds himself posed as a faith-healing messiah for a Nazi-styled Christian rally. He’s a scripted prophet whose awakening from ambivalence is his final undoing.

Superb art design, staging and photography complement by a tartly cynical script that would play well with other media critiques such as Ace in the Hole and A Face in the Crowd. This edition includes the film’s original trailer and a 1961 short, Lonely Boy, that offers a behind-the-scenes look at the career of Paul Anka. Director Peter Watkins apparently drew from the short’s style, particularly the narrator’s tone and the use of voiceovers, first deploying them in 1965’s The War Game and again here. The DVD offers subtitles, but unfortunately, no commentary track. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Adam Hood: Different Groove

AdamHood_DifferentGrooveCountry, electric blues and adult alternative

Hood’s been making music for the better part of a decade, having released his first album, the solo blues live set 21 to Enter back in 2001. His second full-length (he released a four-song EP in 2004) was produced and arranged by Pete Anderson and originally released in 2007 on Anderson’s Little Dog label. This re-release gives the album a national re-launch, adding three acoustic takes to the ten Hood (and Hood/Anderson) originals. As might be expected with Anderson co-writing and producing, the songs don’t hew to the acoustic blues of Hood’s debut, and as the title suggests, there are several different grooves here. The most notable change is that Hood is now backed by a full band with Anderson picking strings, Michael Murphy on keys and a potent bass and drums rhythm section. Hood sings electric country-blues, singer-songwriter country-folk, and a country-tinged version of the adult alternative mainstream sound of John Mayer. The album’s killer track is the moody country lament “Late Night Diner,” with Bob Bernstein’s pedal steel and Anderson’s laconic electric guitar providing moving accompaniment to Hood’s sorrowful song of broken hearts and broken lives. Accordion and a second-line beat give “Vornado” a toe-tapping Cajun edge and show how moving Hood sounds in rootsier settings. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Listen to Different Groove
Adam Hood’s Home Page
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Pine Leaf Boys: Homage Au Passe

PineLeafBoys_HomageAuPasseA joyous Cajun dance party on CD

This young Lafayette, Louisiana quintet moves to the Lionsgate label for their third album, and packs along all the accordion- and fiddle-based flavors of their earlier releases. Though they play traditional Cajun music, in both covers and original compositions, they play with a joy that feeds off their youthful sense of glee. Where many Cajun records sound like studio-polished versions of an act’s live show, the Pine Leaf Boys bring the swing and the foibles of the stage into the studio. The result is a disc that captures the verve of a band playing for dancers rather than for microphones. Their vocals offer a rawness that holds on to the music’s front porch seed; their rhythms roll and sway as if propelled by bodies swirling at a fais do-do. There are two-steps and waltzes, and the upbeat original “J’Suis Gone Pour Me Saouler” salutes New Orleans’ influence on the birth of rock ‘n’ roll. As much as they revere past legends of Cajun music, the Pine Leaf Boys bring their own round of refreshments to the party. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Pine Leaf Boys’ Home Page
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Book of Love: Four Album Catalog Reissued

Book of Love was a New York City-based synthpop quartet that found a modicum of success on the dance charts. Noble Rot has released the group’s four albums on individual CDs, each augmented with bonus tracks and new liner notes. The discs are delivered inside three-panel cardboard slip-sleeves, without plastic beds for the discs.

BookOfLove_BookOfLoveBook of Love

Originally released in 1986 the quartet’s debut followed in the footsteps of UK acts like Yaz, Spandau Ballet and Depeche Mode. But even with the synthetic keyboards and drum machines, the band had a distinct voice in songwriter and lead singer Susan Ottaviano. Her vocals are deadpanned in front of skittering and throbbing dance beats, creating emotional tension in the contrast between passivity and activity. Those who fondly remember dancing to post-disco synth sounds will enjoy the trip down memory lane; those who grew thirsty for drums and guitars in the New Wave era will find this a nightmare relived. Noble Rot’s reissue includes the album’s original dozen tracks but drops the five remixes added to previous CD editions. A second disc offers eleven alternates that include live versions of “Happy Day” and “Boy,” five wonderfully primitive demos, and the instrumental version of “Modigliani.” It’s a treasure trove for fans, though it’s a shame the remixes weren’t included.

BookOfLove_LullabyLullaby

The quartet’s second album opens with a hyperkinetic reworking of Mike Oldfield’s hit “Tubular Bells,” with a thumping beat that made it a dance floor favorite, and a seamless segue into the AIDS-themed “Pretty Boys and Pretty Girls.” Susan Ottaviano continued to provide most of the lead vocals, though Ted Ottaviano (no relation) steps to the microphone on the throbbing, slow-building grand production of “With a Little Love.” Having spent the two previous years on the road touring in support of their debut, the band didn’t push their sound or compositions forward on this second outing. Those who liked the debut will enjoy this second helping, augmented here with four alternate/extended mixes and the non-LP “Enchantra.” Points off for sloppy reissue art direction that left the front cover rotated 90 degrees to the left.

BookOfLove_CandyCarolCandy Carol

Given three years between their sophomore release and this third effort, Book of Love finally carved out some new ground. Though still making most of their music with keyboards, their beats had less dance floor thump, and their vocals and melodies took on the bright shades of ‘60s sunshine pop and light psychedelia. It’s as if the Paisley Underground had revived girl-group with synthesizers instead of Byrdsian chime and Velvet Underground drone with guitars. Their revised sound is more Dukes of the Stratosphere and twee pop than Erasure. The opening “Turn the World” borrows the bass line riff of Tommy James’ “Draggin’ the Line” and layers it with lush vocal overdubs, and the animated vocals and revving car of “Orange Flip” suggests an update of Gary Usher. Those who found the group’s first two albums too heavy with dance beats may enjoy hearing this pure strain of the band’s sugar-sweet pop. Noble Rot’s reissue adds four remixes to the dozen original tracks.

BookOfLove_LovebubbleLovebubble

By 1993, seven years after Book of Love released their debut album, the music scene had changed, as had the musical directions of the individual group members. The 1980’s infatuation with synthesizers had been steamrolled by the back-to-guitars sounds of grunge, and the group’s club beats had given way to the pop melodies and layered vocals of 1991’s Candy Carol. Their fourth and final album is a fractured set of songs that range from early dance-ready compositions to moodier, downbeat ballads, and the band’s cover of David Bowie’s “Sound and Vision.” Unlike the group’s second album, whose lack of progress can be pinned on touring commitments that sopped up prep time, the lack of energy here is simply the end of a band’s inspirational arc. There are some catchy melodies and memorable lyrical riffs, but it sounds emotionally estranged and hasn’t the effervescence that marked the band’s best work. Noble Rot’s reissue adds four remixes to the dozen original tracks. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Tanya Tucker: My Turn

TanyaTucker_MyTurnGritty, heartfelt country covers tribute to Tucker’s  father

The wear that Tucker’s voice has accumulated over the years, the burnish of life, drugs, drink and age, has only made her sound tougher. There isn’t a waver in her pitch as she relives this dozen country classics. Even rougher, she takes on songs that were originally the emotional province of male singers, showing that while times have changed (women wearing pants!), it still takes an unusually strong woman to stand toe-to-toe with iconic classics waxed by Faron Young, Hank Williams, Buck Owens, Ray Price, Conway Twitty, Charlie Pride, Lefty Frizzell, Wynn Stewart, Don Gibson, Eddy Arnold and Merle Haggard. Tucker takes them on and pours a life’s worth of misery and redemption into each one, minding her father’s admonition to “sing it like soap wouldn’t get it off.”

Producer Pete Anderson, renowned for the inventive textures he brought to Dwight Yoakam’s records, dials it back here to present Tucker in basic country productions of guitar, bass, drums, fiddle and steel, with accordion from Flaco Jimenez on “Anybody Goin’ to San Antone?” and Jo-El Sonnier adding a Cajun twist to “Big Big Love.” The simple arrangements give this a nostalgic sound, but Tucker’s forthrightness and grit follow a modern arc from the hard-won gains of Kitty Wells, Loretta Lynn and even the younger Tucker herself. Without heavily reworking the songs, the sound of Tucker’s voice (paired with a superb duet from Jim Lauderdale on “Love’s Gonna Live Here”) is more than enough to lend each tune her individual signature.

George Jones notes in his introductory notes that “you know immediately when Tanya Tucker is singing,” and this album is absolute proof. She brings her life story as a country singer, troubled tabloid star, lover, mother, and the daughter of a hard-country loving father to this project. This is an album one could only record on the heels of a career steeped in country music and a life lived deep inside the pains and joys drawn by these songs’ lyrics. Cover albums have a long history in country music, including recent releases from Pam Tillis (It’s All Relative), Patty Loveless (Sleepless Nights), and Martina McBride (Timeless), but this one shines especially bright in their company. It’s a great covers album, a great Tanya Tucker album, and most of all a great country music album. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Tanya Tucker’s Home Page
Listen to My Turn

Rick Shea: Shelter Valley Blues

RickShea_ShelterValleyBluesLow-key singer-songwriter country from SoCal veteran

Rick Shea’s been a regular on the Southern California country scene for two decades now, having first sprung forward with the defiant Outside of Nashville and following up with a cut on the third volume of A Town South of Bakersfield compilation. The Bakersfield from which Shea takes inspiration is the singer-songwriter style of Merle Haggard’s, rather than the telecaster sting of Buck Owens. Haggard’s introspective near-folkie tone is strong on this latest release, with spare arrangements highlighting Shea’s guitar playing and leaving his vocals mostly unadorned by harmonies. Ten originals are joined by a cover of “Fisherman’s Blues” that’s more spent than the Waterboys’ original. The singing is understated, with a reserve that variously suggests distraction, introspection, resignation and carefully measured joy. Even when the band plays electric blues on “Nelly Bly,” it’s low and slow. The album picks up briefly to mid-tempo for the Norteño flavored “Sweet Little Pocha” and closes with the island-flavored steel-guitar instrumental “The Haleiwa Shuffle.” This is a low-key album that’s closer to singer-songwriter folk than country, and a pleasing addition to Shea’s catalog. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Shelter Valley Blues
Rick Shea’s Home Page
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Jay and the Americans: The Complete United Artists Singles

JayAndTheAmericans_CompleteSinglesExhaustive collection of ‘60s vocal group’s singles

Jay and the Americans had an unusually long chart run for a pop vocal group, racking up ten top-40 hits, and many lower charting entries, over the course of nine years. Having sprouted from roots in 1950s doo-wop, the group was signed to United Artists by Leiber & Stoller who quickly had them cut a Drifters-styled cover of West Side Story’s “Tonight.” This first outing was a respectable local hit in New York, but it was their second single, “She Cried,” that established them on the national charts, peaking at #5 in 1962. Unusually, just as the group was finding its commercial footing, lead singer John “Jay” Traynor left to get a “real job.” Replaced by David “Jay Black” Blatt, the group continued to ride the charts through the rest of the decade.

The newly fronted group hit again with the Brill Building sound of Mann & Weil’s “Only in America.” Written as a social criticism for the Drifters, and rewritten as a satire when Atlantic balked, the song became an optimistic anthem in the hands of Jay & The Americans. Originally released as the B-side to “Dawning” (which stiffed), the song rose to #5 after radio jocks began flipping the single. It wasn’t the last time the group would have a hit B-side, as 1964’s “Come a Little Bit Closer” and 1965’s Roy Orbison-esque “Cara Mia,” the group’s top charting singles, both started life as flipsides. As musical innovation swirled throughout the 1960s, the group tasted additional styles but never really abandoned their traditional vocal roots. Their last major hit, 1969’s #6 “This Magic Moment,” brought them back full-circle to their Brill Building roots with a cover of the Drifters’ 1960 single.

Throughout the 1960’s Jay and the Americans remained a step out-of-time. They hung on to their doo-wop inspired sound long after the genre had faded from pop’s main stage, stuck with orchestrated, theater-inspired vocals as the British Invasion pushed the guitar up front, and returned to their Brill Building roots just in time for the nostalgia wave of the late ‘60s. For each commercial breakthrough, however, there were several formulaic reiterations or nondescript follow-ups that failed to capitalize on or sustain the group’s chart success. Their early years with Leiber & Stoller gave way to successful years with UA house producer Gerry Granahan, and ended with a stream of less sympathetic producers and songwriters.

After a clutch of four top-20s in 1965 and a #25 cover of Roy Orbison’s “Crying” in 1966, the group hit a drought in 1967 and 1968. The revolving door of producers and songwriters picked up speed, pushing the group outside their comfort zone with a mish-mash of commercially failed attempts to find workable contemporary grooves, including baroque pop and the rock-funk “Shanghai Noodle Factory.” The latter, courtesy of shared producer/songwriter Jimmy Miller, turned up as a cover on Traffic’s Last Exit album! Jay Black released a solo cover of the Johnny Mathis hit “What Will My Mary Say” in 1967, but with his voice so defining the group at that point, the absence of his band mates is hardly noticeable.

It wasn’t until the band’s fortunes ebbed to an all-time low that they shucked off external pressures to find a contemporary sound. They regrouped to self produce the 1969 album Sands of Time, which reworked twelve of their favorite songs from the original doo-wop era. Three singles were spun from the album, with a terrific interpretation of the Drifters’ “This Magic Moment” climbing to #6, and enthusiastic covers of “When You Dance” and “Hushabye” charting lower. The group that had drifted out of doo-wop into the tumult of the 1960s had come back to its roots with a fresh injection of swagger and energy. Sadly, financial and personal hurdles would sink the group within a year, but not before having one last top-20 hit with a soaring 1970 cover of the Ronettes’ “Walking in the Rain.”

Casual listeners may be better off with the superb hits collection, Come a Little Bit Closer: The Best of Jay and the Americans, but the band’s fans will treasure the opportunity to hear all the lower- and non-charting singles along with their B-sides. Lesser-known highlights include the working man’s anthem “Friday,” written by Ellie Greenwich and her early songwriting partner Tony Powers, the horn-lined rocker “Goodbye Boys Goodbye (Ciao Ragazzi Ciao),” the folk-rock “If You Were Mine, Girl” and “Girl,” the baroque pop “(He’s) Raining in My Sunshine,” the uncharacteristically sharp-tongued “You Ain’t As Hip As All That Baby,” the light-psych “Gemini,” and the Phil Spector produced public service release “Things Are Changing.” The latter, with vocal coaching from Brian Wilson and sung to the melody of Wilson’s “Don’t Hurt My Little Sister,” was also waxed by the Blossoms and Supremes.

The group had artistic, if not commercial, success with original material as well, including the emotional ballad “Stop Your Crying,” the country-rock “(I’d Kill) For the Love of a Lady,” the vocal-psych “Learnin’ How to Fly,” and the A-side “Livin’ Above Your Head.” The latter’s original recording stalled on the charts but became a UK hit for the Walker Brothers. Collectors’ Choice’s 3-CD set pulls together sixty-six sides in crisp mono (just the way the AM radio gods intended) and adds a 20-page booklet filled with liner notes by Ed Osborne, release and chart details, and archival photos. It’s not all gold, but there are several tracks that match up to the group’s hits, and a great deal of excellent material that’s only been heard by those who own the original 7” singles. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]