Author Archives: hyperbolium

Emory Quinn: See You at the Next Light

Tuneful country-rock with influences of Dylan, Petty and Knight

If you charted the Texas trio Emory Quinn amid the circles of a Venn diagram, you’d find them at an intersection that neatly combines twang, beat and melody. For those who like their country to rock, and their rock to sparkle with catchy melodies, these ten original songs will have you humming along as you imagine yourself moving to the band’s guitar-bass-drums in a Texas dance hall. Clint (Quinn) Bracher sings with enough rootsy emotion to keep country radio at bay, but in a world where the Eagles and Wallflowers once had hit records (and numerous Nashville acts are only a pace or two away from rock), one can hope this sort of musical hybrid could again find a mainstream audience.

Bracher’s an ace wordsmith who employs a mix of detail and allusion, setting concrete moments amid more ephemeral thoughts. The group’s melodies are often misleadingly upbeat, hiding the dark murder and unhinged smile of “Holes Through the Windows” behind Byrds-like jangle and harmony. The banjo closer “Falling Down Again” is among the more chipper songs about detoxing you’re likely to hear, and though Dylan and Petty are obvious touchstones, there’s also the wariness and foreboding of Chris Knight in “Tear Down the Walls.” Bracher explores both sides of a vagabond’s life in a pair of songs; the rootless party times of “Moving On” offer contrast to the enduring loneliness of constant motion in “Finds Danger.”

Emory Quinn is a talented band with impressive original material and the musical chops to bring their vision to fruition. They create fuller arrangements in the studio than the basic sound of their stage performances (such as heard on Live at Gruene Hall), but they never overdo it. Nathan (Emory) Rigney adds finely played touches of guitar, violin, banjo and pedal steel, bassist Case Bell offers up a tasty keyboard solo on “When I Dream,” and touches of strings add atmosphere without overshadowing the group’s basic sound. Here’s hoping the band finds a way to break out of the Texas dance hall and college circuit!  [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

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Jesse Dayton: One for the Dance Halls

Heartfelt Texas dance hall honky-tonk

The Texas-born Jesse Dayton was weaned on classic country, taking particular interest in the sounds of George Jones and Lefty Frizzell, and the firebrand individualism of Waylon, Willie and the boys. He developed a presence in the alt.country world as his 2001 release Hey Nashvegas seemed to both critique and court Music City. The album’s mainstream touches couldn’t hide lyrics more deeply personal than the typical Nashville songwriting appointment could produce, and his underlying fealty to rockabilly, honky-tonk, Cajun and latin sounds was similarly out of step with country radio hits. Though he released an album of soul-tinged country in 2004 and an album of covers in 2006, he dropped off of many country music fans’ radar. But Dayton didn’t stop making music.

In 2005 Dayton released Banjo & Sullivan: The Ultimate Collection 1972-1978 as a fictional aside to Rob Zombie’s Devil’s Rejects, went on to contribute songs to the Halloween 2 soundtrack, recorded a follow-on as Captain Clegg, and released a superb album of hardcore honky-tonk duets, Holdin’ Our Own, with Brennen Leigh. Dayton doubles-down on the honky-tonk roots on this latest album, cranking out the sort of shuffles, two-steps and waltzes that make Texas dance halls such special places to listen, dance, romance and drink away one’s problems. The opener perfectly captures the magical feeling of a Saturday night, spinning away your aches and pains, taking a smoke break in the dirt parking lot, and tipping the band (with cash or a drink) for that special song.

The rhythm section sets the pace, but Warren Hood’s fiddle and Nat Flemming’s pedal steel supercharge the performances. Dayton revs things up with the freewheeling hoe-down “Camden Town,” and though he might be a quart low on love, he hangs on to his optimism with “Pretty Girls Make the World Go ‘Round.” Things aren’t so sunny for the bloodshot morning-after of Nick Lowe’s “Lately I’ve Let Things Slide” or the chilly relations of Billy Donahue’s “Back to Back.” Damon Bramblet’s “Falling Apart” is given a two-step beat that improves upon the Johnny Cash train rhythm of the original, and Bramblett’s anniversary waltz, “The Years,” is sung with an emotional quaver aside Mickey Raphael’s harmonica.

Thursday night gigs at Austin’s Broken Spoke have honed Dayton into the very thing he most admired as a child: a country singer. His voice has deepened and weathered favorably over the years, getting him closer to Dale Watson territory. Brennan Leigh provides the perfect vocal foil, particularly in duet on “Falling Apart.” The album has the arc of a live set, mixing two-steps, ballads and closing with the Western swing of “Texas Bound.” You can easily imagine the dancers taking one more whirl around the floor before heading out to their pickup trucks, the band packing up, and everyone going home feeling satisfied. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | One for the Dance Halls
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Brian McKenzie: Resolution

Country-rock singer-songwriter with a ‘70s vibe

One time metal guitarist (with the group Kilgore/Smudge) Brian McKenzie was drawn to singer/songwriter roots music as a mental escape from tours “packed like damned sardines in a cargo van.” He transitioned from electric guitar to acoustic relocated from Rhode Island to Nashville for a couple years, and honed his songwriting with the city’s pros. Now returned to the Ocean State, he’s cut this 7-song release. Judging by the retro country rock of the first two tracks McKenzie seems to have been listening to some classic B.J. Thomas sides, along with radio hits from one-time stars like Gallery, Lobo and the Stampeders. The productions are modern, but the melodies and harmonies sport a terrific ‘70s vibe. The remaining tracks are solid, hinting at Chris Isaak’s romantic croon and the thoughtful style of Gordon Lightfoot. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

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The Rubinoos: Automatic Toaster

Power-pop, soul and garage-rock from the Rubinoos

Few groups have had as strong a second wind as the Rubinoos. After releasing two beloved albums in the late ‘70s (available together in a box set), the group went on hiatus for over a decade. But since their return to studio for 1998’s Paleophonic, they’ve dropped four albums of new material alongside numerous reissues, odds ‘n’ sods collections and live recordings. This latest album, their first since 2005’s Twist Pop Sin has been released initially in Spain (where the band has been warmly welcomed on tour) and features the longtime core of Jon Rubin (vocals/guitar), Tommy Dunbar (guitar/vocals/keyboard) and Al Chan (bass/vocals). Joining the trio on drums this time out is the album’s producer (and, yes, one time “Cousin Oliver”), Robbie Rist.

Dunbar’s nine original songs (including new versions of “Must Be a Word,” previously waxed by Vox Pop, and “Earth #1,” which appeared on the band’s Biff-Boff-Boing!) are complemented by a pair of covers: a sumptuous guitar-and-harmony take on Johnny Johnson’s soul side “Blame it on the Pony Express,” and a punchy run through Los Bravos’ “Black is Black.” The new tunes celebrate the basics of four-piece rock ‘n’ roll, the early days of the Beatles, and the superiority of our third planet from the Sun. There are garage rock riffs, kid-friendly horror and humor, and the sort of heartaches that make the band’s early records so memorable. The terrific “Same Old Heartbreak,” released several years ago by the song’s co-writer Kyle Vincent as modern pop on Sweet 16, resounds with the romantic urgency of the Rubinoos’ earliest gems.

Jon Rubin’s voice is as sweet as ever, and Tommy Dunbar’s guitar and pen continue to turn out hummable melodies with clever, catchy lyrics. It’s a shame today’s teen singing stars don’t mine the band’s catalog for undiscovered gems of adolescent longing. Dunbar’s songs are more tuneful and true to teenage emotions than Disney’s factory writers typically achieve. The power and crispness of Rist’s drumming is a nice addition to the band’s sound, though a couple of cuts get overpowered. Heading into their fifth decade, the Rubinoos remain a potent rock ‘n’ roll band whose fine harmonies and guitar-bass-and-drums haven’t lost a step. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

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The Marketts: The Batman Theme Played by the Marketts

Instrumental tunes inspired by Batman TV show

The Batman television show of the 1960s inspired a number of musical spinoffs. There was an original TV soundtrack, a Nelson Riddle-orchestrated film soundtrack, and a Neal Hefti album that wedded Batman-related titles with swinging orchestrations. On the pop front, the Ventures released their own album of TV titles (The Ventures Play the Batman Theme), and the Marketts (who’d hit a couple years earlier with the space-surf “Out of Limits”) released this collection of instrumentals with chorus vocals. The Marketts arrangements don’t rival the orchestrations of Hefti and Riddle, nor do they really fit with the group’s earlier sax-and-rhythm hits “Balboa Blue” and “Surfer’s Stomp.” Songwriters Dick Glasser and Al Capps borrowed heavily from the James Bond cannon, and their horn charts more often have the ominous feel of a John Barry arrangement than the pop sizzle of Riddle and Hefti. Highlights include the title track, a soulful original ode to the Penguin, and the organ-and-horn dance tune “The Bat.” At a shade under twenty-nine minutes this remains a nice artifact of the original Batman television era, but not the show’s most exciting musical spin-off. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

Vote for Research Turtles!

The terrific Lake Charles, Louisiana power-pop band, Research Turtles (whose album and EP were reviewed here and here),wrote with news that they’re currently in second place for “Song of the Year” on the UK Radio 6 International. You can listen to their nominated song, “Let’s Get Carried Away,” on their website, and should you feel inclined, you can vote by:

  • Sending an e-mail to votes@radiosix.com.
  • Include “VOTE-RESEARCH TURTLES” in the subject line.
  • Include your name and a passable address in the body.
  • One vote per mailer.

Contest ends December 23rd, so no lollygagging!

Jason Hartley: The Advanced Genius Theory

Intriguing and infuriating theory of unappreciated artistic value

Jason Hartley’s debut book is interesting and infuriating, ridiculous and thought provoking, challenging and dismissible. “The Advanced Genius Theory” began life as an on-going conversation between Hartley and the theory’s co-inventor, Britt Bergman, initiated in a college hangout and developed in the hallways of Spin magazine and on Hartley’s Advanced Theory Blog. The theory’s basic tenant is that genius doesn’t decay; it only advances its manifestations beyond that which the rest of us can understand. In Hartley’s topsy-turvy world, Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music isn’t an incomprehensible attempt to fulfill a contract, it’s a record so advanced that the typical Velvet Underground fan can’t recognize its brilliant anticipation of industrial music. Bob Dylan’s mid-period albums, not to mention difficult-to-comprehend commercial endorsements, aren’t signs of a creative doldrums; they’re the products of a genius at work.

What immediately comes to mind is that, despite their declarations to the contrary, the proponents of the theory are little more than contrarians. The contortions to which the author resorts stand in contrast to the more generally accepted interpretation: inspiration is fleeting, genius decays, and many artists’ later works pale in comparison to their peak moments. The writing teeters frustratingly between humor and argumentation, invoking false analogies, hasty generalizations, straw men, affirmed consequents, and other logical fallacies. The book is filled with unsupported hypotheses, which can be either funny or irritating, depending on your particular opinion. The book works best when the author’s tongue is planted more firmly in cheek, such as for his descriptions of Miles Davis’ film and ad work, and his wrestling match with Sting’s post-Police catalog. The more ridiculous the assertions, the funnier the book gets.

Perhaps the most fun you can have with the theory is applying it self-referentially to the book itself. Hartley, for example, criticizes some writing at VH1’s Best Week Ever blog and dismisses artists like the Replacements, the Clash and Eric Clapton by virtue of his personal taste; one is quickly led to wonder whether these are simply too advanced for the writer to appreciate. In that self reflection the theory reveals its value as a conversational instigator, providing a framework for advancing subjective opinions towards supposedly objective evaluations. ‘You don’t understand because you’re not advanced’ is a funny retort, but not exactly a compelling argument. The qualifications of advancement seem arbitrary, and Hartley’s positions often seem calculated to stir up controversy. Then again, perhaps the entire Theory of Advancement is itself too advanced to be understood from only a single reading of this book.

That said, Hartley does offer up some compelling analysis. He recognizes that the way in which you relate to an artist’s output depends on the age at which you find an artist and the point you enter their creative stream. Those who latch on early, particularly before fame has been bestowed, relate to the artist differently than those whose relationship is the by-product of such fame. Those who discover an artist in their own young years may find their later disaffection a by-product of changing life circumstances rather than a decline in the quality of artistic output. This isn’t in itself surprising, but the different stages of affection and alienation through which Hartley suggests one can travel is an interesting proposition. Hartley also identifies interesting characteristics common to many mature artists, and though much of the book reads as a contrarian’s apologia, the threads of insight will keep the reader continually off balance. Are they serious? Are they joking? The answer seems to be yes, in both cases.

Though Hartley’s nailed down the theory for contemporary pop music, the general form remains as elusive as Einstein’s sought-after unified field theory. Advancement, in its current form, generally excludes musicians born before the 1940s, and its application to non-musicians is an afterthought. The theory’s extrapolation beyond the original pillars (Lou Reed, Sting, Bob Dylan, etc.) is riddled with inconsistency and episodes of theory yielding to fact. Hartley’s Andy Kaufman-esque commitment to character is inscrutable, intriguing and irritating. Readers will find themselves progressing through stages of denial, anger, bargaining and perhaps even acceptance, nagged all the way by kernels of truth that are simmered a bit too lightly in absurdity. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com] 

The Strangeloves: I Want Candy – The Best of the Strangeloves

Veil lifted from terrific mid-60s pop/garage hoaxers

Although the Strangeloves were reputed to be a trio of Australian brothers (Giles, Miles and Niles Strange), they were actually a successful New York songwriting and production team. Bob Feldman, Jerry Goldstein and Richard Gottehrer wrote and produced the Angels’ “My Boyfriend’s Back,” but in the British Invasion’s wake they opted for the mystery of foreign roots. The deception worked, as their debut single “I Want Candy” hit #11, and the rhythmic follow-up “Cara-Lin” cracked the Top 40. Their final chart success, the hard-driving “Night Time,” topped out at #30 and was selected (in its edited single form) by Lenny Kaye for the seminal Nuggets album. The trio played a few live dates, but the bulk of the Strangeloves’ touring was handled by the studio musicians who worked on the records.

Perhaps the most famous track recorded by the Strangeloves was their non-charting version of “Hang on Sloopy.” Written by Bert Russell (for whose Bang label the Strangeloves recorded) and Wes Farrell, the backing track was reused for the McCoy’s hit single. The version here includes the extra verse cut from the McCoys’ single (the uncut McCoys version appears on One Hit Wonders of the ‘60s, Vol. 2). The Strangeloves’ biggest hit, “I Want Candy,” was reborn with the 1982 new wave cover by Bow Wow Wow. The album’s cover songs, including Gary U.S. Bonds’ “New Orleans” and “Quarter to Three,” Johnny Otis’ “Willie and the Hand Jive” and the Rolling Stones’ “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” are all sung in the group’s trademark style, heavy on the vocals and rhythm.

Among the originals, the Brill Building-styled “Rhythm of Love” (touchingly covered by the Pooh Sticks, Rubinoos and others) is the best of the non-hits. The rest tend to light weight and an over-reliance on the Bo Diddley beat, but they’re still performed with a great deal of verve. There’s something about New Yorkers pretending to be Australian sheep farmers faking New Orleans soul that really works. The tracks mix stereo (1-4, 7, 9, 13-14, 18, 20) and mono (5, 6, 8, 11, 12, 15-17, 19), and the bonus tracks (13-20) include several winners. Gottehrer went on to terrific fame as a record producer (notably for Blondie) and co-founder of Sire Records, while Jerry Goldstein became a producer and manager, but none of their later exploits ever again captured the of-the-moment kookiness of the Strangeloves. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

Feldman, Goldstein and Gotterher as The Strangeloves

The Strangeloves’ Touring Band

Various Artists: ’60s Garage Rock Nuggets

A few remakes, and many original obscurities

Sixty garage rock tracks from the ‘60s at a bargain price is not as great a bargain if (a) several of the titles aren’t garage rock tunes, (b) the songs aren’t all rooted in the sixties, and most unforgiveably, (c) some of the tracks are mediocre re-recordings. As with many such collections, they make an honest effort to recreate the original instrumental and vocal arrangements; and it’s possible that original artists are involved, but some of the remakes (such as Blues Image’s “Ride Captain Ride”) simply sound anemic. Remakes never capture the once-in-a-lifetime excitement that made the hit a hit. The combination of people, place and times can’t be repeated decades later. Worst of all, mixing remakes and original hits blurs the historical record, leaving those who didn’t log extensive hour in front of their AM radios to ponder what’s real, and wonder why these tracks were hits in the first place.

The split between remakes and originals here falls roughly between those that were hits, and those that were true garage rock nuggets. The hits are almost all remakes (or in the case of “I’m a Man” and “Baby Please Don’t Go,” live takes), while the obscurities are almost all originals. The track listing doesn’t completely reflect this, as the Shadows of Knight’s “Gloria” isn’t flagged as a remake, but it’s clearly not the original hit single. Conversely, “Wild Thing” is marked, but sounds like the original, and while “Can’t Seem to Make You Mine” may be an original Sky Saxon track, it’s not the familiar Seeds recording. That said, the majority of the tracks here are original garage rock nuggets, complete with surface noise in a few cases. There’s enough original material to make this a good buy, and once you’ve replaced or deleted the eight obvious remakes (and fixed some of the typos – track 58 is by the Grodes), you’ll be left with a solid compilation of Pebbles-styled garage and psychedelic rockers. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

Sorrows: Bad Times Good Times

Rebirth of out-of-print early-80s power-pop

The New York City based Sorrows (not to be confused with the Don Fardon-fronted freakbeat band The Sorrows) was founded by Arthur Alexander (not to be confused with the R&B hit maker who recorded “You Better Move On,” “Soldier of Love” and “Anna”) following the dissolution of the Poppees. Unlike the Poppees die-hard Merseybeat inflections, Sorrows early ‘80s releases for CBS (1980’s Teenage Heartbreak and 1981’s Love Too Late) were more in line with the power pop sounds of 1970s bands such the Motors, Records, Plimsouls and Beat. You can still hear the early Beatles influences in their chiming pop, and the urgency of melodic punk rock (ala The Undertones) also made an impression, but it was the pure pop sounds of the Raspberries, Badfinger and others that really held sway.

The band played CBGB’s, Max’s Kansas City and other key New York clubs, but their albums failed to break nationally, and by mid-decade, they’d broken up. Their official CBS-released albums remain unreissued to this day, which makes this collection so especially welcome. The sixteen tracks include resequenced versions of the twelve titles from their debut album, the non-LP originals “That’s Your Problem” and “Silver Cloud,” and live covers of the Rolling Stones’ “Off the Hook” and Goffin & King’s “Chains.” The liner notes are cagey as to whether these tracks are distinct performances from the album takes, mentioning tapes rescued from a demolition dumpster and advising “this is not a reissue of previously released tracks.”

What is novel is the sound, which is significantly better than the original vinyl. What was once thin on LP has a lot of muscle on this CD. Even with the mono introduction of “She Comes and Goes,” the abrupt cut to stereo at the 1:30 mark makes good on the band’s “ABBA meets the Sex Pistols” tag line. The collection’s non-LP demos are as good as the album tracks, and the live takes, particularly the punked-up arrangement of “Chains” gives a taste of how vital the band sounded on stage. This isn’t a replacement for a reissue of Teenage Heartbreak, but in many ways it’s actually better. Fans now have to hope that tapes of Love Too Late will be rescued from some other demolition dumpster. [©2010 hyperbolium dot com]

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