Tag Archives: Rock

Mason Jennings: Blood of Man

MasonJennings_BloodOfManMason Jennings goes electric and dark

As a singer-songwriter with an acoustic guitar and wordy songs of social and political observation, Mason Jennings could nominally be called a folkie. But much of his inspiration came from mid-80s punk rock and his work with drums and bass (sometimes his own, sometimes additional players) has been infused with rock ‘n’ roll energy. His eponymous debut, with Jennings overdubbing guitar, bass and drums into a loose, homebrewed production, ranged from folk songs with narrow melodies (think Lou Reed, Jonathan Richman and Ben Vaughn) to thrashing acoustic punk rock. Jennings’ early songs were terrifically conversational, sung variously to a third party or directly at the listener, and his lyrics were personal and often philosophical.

Hooking up with a bassist and drummer, his music gained some bottom end and tightened up, but retained the unfinished edges of his initial homemade productions. More importantly, his lyrical view turned outward to political and social observation, and his musical styles expanded to include the reggae rhythm of “United States Global Empire,” middle-eastern melodies, and jazz sax riffs. Over the next couple of albums he returned to his earlier ragged style of guitar, bass and drums on Use Your Voice, a thicker, more highly produced sound on his major label debut Boneclouds, and again to simpler sounds for In the Ever, his first album for Jack Johnson’s Brushfire label.

Throughout all the musical transitions, Jennings calling card has been his lyrics, and even as he plugs in his guitar for this latest release, the focus remains on words. He plays his electric with the same sort of propulsive chord strums as his acoustic, and the simple leads often match the narrow melodies of his vocals. What’s changed is the lyrical tone, which is substantially darker than on his earlier releases. Jennings writes of isolation, loss, loneliness and despair, unmet expectations, murderous retribution, war and death. You might wonder if Jennings’ dog died on the way to the studio. The album’s one moment of unobstructed lightness is the idyllic childhood memories of “Sunlight,” which sounds like one of Pink Floyd’s Meddle-era pastoral numbers.

There are a few musical adventures, including the opening “City of Ghosts,” which fits nicely into the post-punk vein of Television and the Neats. The heavy bass and distorted vocal of “Ain’t No Friend of Mind” suggests the blues of numerous two-man-bands descended from the White Stripes, and the closing “Blood of Man” runs the album’s gamut from rumbling low-strummed electric to sharply picked acoustic to a rocking climax. Eight albums into a decade-long career, these are fruitful new musical and lyrical directions for Jennings. The undercurrent of his folk style remains, as it has on all his records, but there are storm clouds directly overhead and the rain will both cleanse you and leave your skin raw. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

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Mike Doughty: In and Out of Control

MikeDoughty_SadManHappyManEx-Soul Coughing lead dovetails his group and solo work

Mike Doughty’s had a solo career that’s long enough to nearly obscure his years as lead singer of Soul Coughing. His latest reels back in the guitar, bass, drums and keyboard layers of last year’s Golden Delicious, and though his acoustic guitar is the dominant instrument here, he doesn’t retreat fully to the sound of his solo debut Skittish. His syncopated strumming and vocals hold down the center with the usual level of energy, and there are low string drones that add weight, drums to further propel the beat, and some twangy trills, skittish violin notes and sonic washes that make this more than rock reduced to folk. Doughty not only returns to guitar-and-voice centered productions, but also the beat-rap poetry style he favored earlier in his career.

Doughty’s lyrics include lost and reconsidered love, introspective questioning and optimistic possibilities, and stretch out to carefully constructed rhymes and elliptical couplets. The latter flow smoothly, but leave their deeper meanings for listeners to decide; it’s enough to make one long for an annotated lyric sheet. College DJs should track down the Hombres’ “Let it All Hang Out” for a good segue with Doughty’s “Pleasure on Credit” (though you’ll need to watch out for the s-word 32-seconds in). Twelve originals and a cover of Daniel Johnston’s “Caspar the Friendly Ghost” will please fans of Doughty’s early solo work, and fans of his earlier work with Soul Coughing will happily welcome his lyrical and sing-rap style. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

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Will Hoge: The Wreckage

WillHoge_TheWreckageSoulful, rustic rock ‘n’ roll with blue country edges

Will Hoge is a soulful, rustic rock ‘n’ roller whose career has mostly stayed under the mainstream radar. Yet he’s not only turned out a consistent string of fine records over the past decade, but toured tirelessly in their support. His initial two albums with Atlantic didn’t build a short enough on-ramp to stardom to keep the label’s interest, but a few indie releases caught the ear of Rykodisc, for whom he’s now releasing his second full-length. Hoge’s music takes in the rootsy guitar rock of Mellencamp and Petty (the latter of whose singing style makes a big impression on “Long Gone,” itself co-authored with ace songwriter Jim Lauderdale), but also the strained angst of Daughtry, the wavery worry of Gin Blossoms, the throbbing blood-vessel edginess of Joe Cocker, and the soulfulness of Paul Carrack-era Squeeze. There are blues and country edgings as well, as befits a musician who hails from the South and has repeatedly toured the roadhouses of America.

Recorded partly before and partly after a serious motor scooter accident, the album is only indirectly colored by Hoge’s trauma and recovery. His themes continue to center around well-worn tropes of love, its struggles, pains and powers, and though he’s mostly adding shading to that which has been written before, his voice carries the sort of emotion that explains why these topics persist and repeat in popular music. Even the album’s title song is about the aftermath of a relationship rather than the physical collision that interrupted the recording of the album. Similarly misdirecting is the title “Even if it Breaks Your Heart” which strays from interpersonal tug-of-wars to take a heartfelt look of how music hooked Hoge into a lifelong calling. Rather than spending his recovery writing big picture songs, Hoge rededicated himself to the daily intimacies that add themselves up without a songwriter having to connect all the dots. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

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Rufus Wainwright: Milwaukee at Last!!!

RufusWainwright_MilwaukeeAtLastRufus Wainwright makes himself at home on stage

Rufus Wainwright’s performances have often been larger than a recording studio could fully capture. His cabaret-styled vocals and opera-sized emotion are more naturally at home on stage, and captured live they resound not only with unbridled emotion but with the interplay of a performer and his audience. His tour of the classic American songbook on 2007’s Rufus Does Judy at Carnegie Hall is now eclipsed as a live document by this tour through eight original compositions and covers of Noël Coward’s “If I Love Were All” (borrowed from the Garland set list), and the early twentieth-century Irish love song “Macushla.” Wainwright draws his own material almost entirely from 2007’s Release the Stars, closing the album with 2004’s “Gay Messiah.” His measured, emotional vocals hold down center stage, supported by rock band arrangements that would sound at home in a stage theater’s pit. He soars up and dips down with glissandos, reels listeners in with intimately quiet sections, and drives his lyrics home with dramatically held notes. The dynamic range speaks to both his talent as a live performer, and the raptness with which his audience is willing to pay attention. The result offers a great deal more delicacy, nuance and power than the average live album, and it provides a startling accurate portrayal of Wainwright’s magic. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

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Chuck Mead: Journeyman’s Wager

ChuckMead_JourneymansWagerBR549 lead’s first solo album

Chuck Mead’s first solo album doesn’t stray far from the country, rock and blues he’d mixed and matches successfully as guitarist, vocalist and songwriter with BR549. With the band having run through a number of record labels and transitioned through key personnel changes, they now seem to be on hiatus, leaving Mead time to record and tour his first solo album. His originals sound as if they could have been worked up by BR549, though a looser rhythm section and the addition of horns adds new flavor. Ten originals and a cover of George Harrison’s Beatles-era “Old Brown Shoe” should tide BR549 fans over, but may also signal the launch of a full-time solo career. Either way, Mead’s roadhouse rockers, back-porch blues, and country-rock offer a fine balance of humor and sincerity as he crafts dance floor burners, thoughtful ballads, and novelty titles. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

Chuck Mead’s MySpace Page

The Avett Brothers: I And Love And You

AvettBrothers_IAndLoveAndYouRick Rubin captures country-rock brothers in their zone

The North Carolina-bred Avett Brothers, Scott and Seth, initially developed their rustic country-folk as a sideline to the rock band, Nemo. With the addition of bassist Bob Crawford, they embarked on a career as a trio with 2001’s Country Was. Subsequent albums and EPs have alternated between studio and live releases, with the albums gaining complexity and the EPs (particularly The Gleam II) providing a place for more sparsely arranged works. By 2007, with the release of Emotionalism, the trio had expanded greatly on their acoustic-folk roots, adding guests who laid drums, cello and electric guitars into the mix, and stretching themselves out to pop, rock, and blues.

What’s remained constant across all of the Avett’s records is the starkness and lack of artifice in their vocal performances. Working solo and in tandem they sing with the full-throated conviction of students pouring their hearts into a variety school performance. They strain to hit high notes and recede to delicate moments of lilt with absolutely no hint of self-consciousness. They emote in a speak-singing style that’s almost conversational. The vocal conviction fits particular well with the Avett’s new recordings as they transition from indie darlings to Rick Rubin-produced major label act.

The endorsement of Rubin and his American Recordings label hasn’t gone to the Avetts’ heads. Instead they’ve taken opportunity to question themselves, to parlay the slap on the back into an album full of songs about transition itself. They draw upon themes of physical relocation, emotional realignment, coupling and uncoupling, growing up and growing old. As Seth Avett writes in the tiny-typed liner notes, this is an album of dualities, “both a milestone and an arrival.” It’s an album filled with questions, and in its certitude of uncertainty, a big helping of self awareness. Its moods range through exhilaration, doubt, melancholy and depression; it’s both contemplative and expressive, underwritten by a dynamic musical palate of folk, pop, twang and even Violent Femmes-styled folk-punk.

Fans that worried the big city producer would recast the small-town singers as something they aren’t can rest easy. Rick Rubin has always staked his job as a producer as one of anticipating recording rather than hands-on knob twirling in the control room. His pre-production regimen focuses artists on preparing their material and themselves, leaving them free from decision making in the studio. The resulting performances are true to the music and its emotion rather than the studio and its artificial environment. Rubin captures musical acts in the zone, as he’s done here. The changes from their earlier albums are audible but unimposing – less banjo, more subtle use of strings and organ, and inventive touches of harmonium and tuba. It’s not the rustic acoustic sounds of their beginnings, but neither was Emotionalism.

Rather than pushing the Avett’s ten steps forward, Rubin has edged them into refining and consolidating their greatness to date. Their vocals are a shade more crisp and up-front, their songs a notch freer to explore wordiness, odd lyrical meters and chorus-less structures, and their musicality is opened to lush acoustic strumming, impassioned vocal wails, raggedy pop-punk and string-lined productions. As is Rubin’s way, however, none of this obscures the basic premise of the band’s music, as the brothers’ voices remain undressed, lyrically and sonically revealed to the world. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

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Elliott Brood: Mountain Meadows

ElliottBrood_MountainMeadowsUpbeat folk- and country-tinged rock tells a very dark tale

The pastoral title of Elliott Brood’s second album (originally release in Canada in 2008) is a head-fake, as is the upbeat tone of the folk- and country-tinged rock. The songwriting themes were inspired from the dark story of an 1857 massacre in which 120 men, women and children were slaughtered as they emigrated across Utah towards California. Songwriters Mark Sasso and Casey Laforet ponder not the deaths, but the lives of those who witnessed and survived the massacre, and rather gruesomely, the children who were adopted by the very Mormons who’d led the assault. Like their countrymen, The Sadies, Elliott Brood’s music is impossible to pin down to a single genre. In volume they’re a rock band, but in tone they augment their wall-of-sound guitars with nineteenth century elements of banjo and ukulele, and martial rhythms.

The trio creates music that’s often sparse, but still attacks with its dynamics. Hard-strummed acoustics, crashing cymbals and drum accents punctuate Mark Sasso’s impassioned, accusing vocals. Even when the music breaks down to ukulele and scavenged percussion, the background vocal exclamations continue to taunt. Sasso’s high, raspy voice will remind you of both Perry Farrell and Shannon Hoon, as he gives voice to travelers unsure they’ll survive the travails of the journey, angsty emigrants led uneasily away from their wagons, murderers haunted by misdeeds, and faint memories of the children left behind. Rather than a literal retelling of the massacre, the album is written as impressionistic fiction grown from the historical premise. This is a musically satisfying album, though you may wish the lyrics more transparently imagined the story from which their inspiration was drawn. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

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James McMurtry: Live in Europe

JamesMcMurtry_LiveInEuropeOpinionated Americana rocks the EU

James McMurtry’s never been shy with his opinions on politics and society, and playing his songs for a European audience one has to wonder whether his metaphors translate to a more universal sentiment or simply provide a peephole into an American’s view of his own country. This 8-song live CD features five titles from 2008’s Just Us Kids on which McMurtry cataloged political diseases and social isolation. Two of that album’s most scathing pieces, “God Bless America” and “Cheney’s Toy” are left out here, which is a shame considering the CD fills only half its space at 42 minutes. The accompanying DVD, taped in Amsterdam,  duplicates two titles from the CD, but adds four more including the early “Too Long in the Wasteland” and a cover of Jon Dee Graham’s “Laredo,” on which Graham himself guests. A lengthy live version of “Choctaw Bingo” gives both McMurtry and legendary keyboard player Ian McLagan a chance to show their instrumental wares. The sound is sharp, and though the songs are played largely as recorded on their studio albums, the band adds a punchy rock dynamic. The rhythm section is potent, the guitar twangy, and McLagan’s organ and piano are especially satisfying. McMurtry sings in a limited range, but this gives his live vocals an effective element of speech making. Delivered in a tight-fitting two-panel cardboard slipcase this is more a memento of the tour than a new chapter in McMurtry’s career (as was his previous live album, Aught-Three), but it’s a solid representation of the current state of his art. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Bayou Tortue
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On Tour: The Morning Benders

As they finish up their upcoming sophomore album Big Echo, the Morning Benders are trying out some of their new songs on a few selected West Coast dates, including a New Years show at San Francisco’s Bottom of the Hill.

MP3 | Your Dark Side

October 14, 8pm || Vogue Theatre || Vancouver, BC #
October 15, 8pm || Crystal Ballroom || Portland, OR #
October 16, 8pm || Moore Theatre || Seattle, WA #
December 4 || The Loft @ UCSD || San Diego, CA %
December 5 || Troubadour || Los Angeles, CA %
December 6 || Muddy Waters || Santa Barbara, CA %
December 31 || Bottom of the Hill || San Francisco, CA^

# with Grizzly Bear
% with Girls
^ with Miniature Tiger

Chris Chu will also be jetting off to New York City to play a free solo acoustic show at The Living Room on October 22nd, as part of the 2009 CMJ festival.

Lou Barlow: Goodnight Unknown

LouBarlow_GoodnightUnknownAnxious lullabies from Sebadoh/Folk Implosion founder

Lou Barlow’s output is something to behold. Across albums with Dinosaur Jr., Sebadoh and Folk Implosion, as well as a string of side- and solo-projects (some released as Sentridoh, some released under his own name), Barlow’s explored a lot of territory. Much like 2005’s Emoh, Barlow’s latest album splits its time between acoustic-centered folk songs, layered pop-rock, and crafted studio production. The album opens with the hard-charging “Sharing” and the electric bash of “Goodnight Unknown,” but Barlow’s voice also takes turns in dreamy sing-song, penetrating directness and confessional angst.

His folk-pop influences are heard on the terrific “The One I Call,” melding the sweetness of Donovan with the questioning of Cat Stevens. The morning drowsiness of “Take Advantage” is juxtaposed with the looping percussion of “The Right” and staccato rhythm of “Gravitate.” Barlow’s lyrics are often poetically abstract, but the booklet’s background images suggest themes of temptation, greed, confusion, discovery, ambivalence, self-loathing, patience and seeking. There is both venal opportunism and contented love here, but if you’re looking for finely drawn character portraits or story songs, look elsewhere.

In a making-of video that accompanies the album’s release, Barlow mentions that his new album reminds him of the Folk Implosion’s One Part Lullaby, an album recorded upon Barlow’s relocation to Los Angeles, a city whose “concept” nagged him. The anxiety and ambivalence induced by his new environment remains in ‘Faith in Your Heartbeat,” as well as in the wide-swinging dynamic range of the album. With musical assistance from drummer Dale Crover (Melvins), guitarist Imaad Wasif (Yeah Yeah Yeahs), Barlow creates acoustic ballads, driving rock tunes and thumping studio productions that will sing your anxieties to sleep. [©2009 hyperbolium dot com]

MP3 | Gravitate
The Making of Goodnight Unknown
Lou Barlow’s Home Page