Here - Modern Acoustic
Transcription
Here - Modern Acoustic
SINGING PRAISES Sarah, Jenny, Neko, and Sally give our ears reason to smile. Page 6 PLUS: The ‘Fabulous Tour’ hits Dublin. Page 7 WWW.MODERNACOUSTIC.COM Modern Acoustic The music magazine for really cool people MARCH 2006 - Volume 9 “Miles conceived these settings only hours before the recording dates and arrived with sketches which indicated to the group what was to be played. Therefore, you will hear something close to spontaneity in these performances. The group had never played these pieces prior to the recordings and I think without exception the first complete performance of each was a ‘take.’” Bill Evans, from “Kind of Blue” Lost & found An ode to liner notes: A casualty of the digital music age FROM THE EDITOR I like music. OK, by now everybody knows that. But it’s more than the sound of music that I like. I like the process of music. I like hearing about band dynamics, I want to understand the recording process, the push-pull between musician and record label or between musician and stardom. And that is why I have always loved liner notes. Seeing pictures of a band or finding nuggets of information about a certain artist made me feel like I understood those processes more fully, made me feel I knew the band or musician I was listening to even a little bit. d e s Mis That is why the continuing demise of liner notes disturbs me. It’s a strange situation to be in because I love downloading music. It makes so much sense technologically. It is much more convenient than spending time in those crowded big box stores. Financially it makes sense too, because downloading an album is much cheaper than buying a CD at a store. But it is costly in the loss of liner notes. Hopefully a company like TuneBooks, who we introduce in our cover story, will help bridge the gap. We would also like to introduce you – or reintroduce you – to four ? e u s s i an Visit www.modernacoustic.com/issues.htm and download past issues 2 MODERN ACOUSTIC PHOTO BY ADAM KASSIRER women with new albums: Jenny Lewis of Rilo Kiley, Neko Case, Sarah Harmer, and Sally Ellyson and her band Hem. I’m a sucker for beautiful women’s voices, and all four really bring it. I suggest you download all of these albums, and if you care to know more about the artists, visit their websites. You may find out something about them to make you feel like you know them too. Rich Kassirer, editor Modern Acoustic Vols. 1-7 LIVE SHOT PHOTO BY RICH KASSIRER Laura Cortese with Zack Hickman at her CD release party at Passim in Cambridge. MODERN ACOUSTIC 3 Duly noted We’d like to thank liner notes for all the great memories and for teaching us a few things about music A couple days ago, I was listening to Patty Griffin’s “1,000 Kisses” album and my daughter became interested in the lyrics. She began browsing the CD’s booklet. “Did Patty draw the pictures in here, Dad?,” she asked? It reminded me how much I like – and miss – album liner notes. This isn’t the first time I have come to this sad conclusion. When records were replaced by CDs there was an outcry that the reduced size of recordings would destroy the “art” of the album — which it did. There was truly something great about being able to discover a band’s personality by browsing an album while you were listening to the music. Inside, you might find a collage of photos taken while the band was recording the album, the lyrics of each song, who played on the songs, or maybe even some written nugget of information that gave color or insight into the band. It was also where you’d discover trivial details that made you a “real” music fan: Duane Allman played slide guitar on Eric Clapton’s Derek & the Dominos album “Layla & Other Assorted Love Songs” or the fact that Muddy Waters’ 4 MODERN ACOUSTIC “The band thanks Elissa, Madison, the Schwartz’s, Debbie, Denise, Fender, Dr. Altoids, The Geltman’s, anyone who’s given us a place to crash or picked us up on the side of the road... ” From Laurie Geltman’s “No Power Steering” songs were actually written by McKinley Morganfield, which later you learned was Muddy’s real name. Finding those morsels about a musician or band in the small print was the best part, and made you feel like you “knew” them. On Laurie Geltman’s “No Power Steering” album, she thanked a bunch of first-name-only folks, Dr. Altoids, the Geltmans, and “anyone else who’s given us a place to crash or picked us up on the side of the road.” OK, it’s not vital information, but it does give you a sense of her personality. With CDs, you could still find that information, albeit in even smaller print. It was not nearly as intimate to sit down with a 5inch square booklet to check out the band photos, and at times it took a magnifying glass to read lyrics and other information. But at least the information was still available. Now comes downloadable music, and the end of music packaging. As many of you know, I’m a huge fan of downloading music. I do it all the time and love the convenience, the cost savings, and even the online searches for nuggets not available on albums or lesser known bands and musicians. But despite that joy, there still lingers a sadness from losing some of the intrigue I got from spending time with the liner notes. Jazz, I believe, may be hurt the most from this loss. Because jazz musicians tend to play with many different pairings rather than stay with one band. Unlike in rock, it is much harder to keep track of who is playing on what album. Joshua Redman’s “Wish” album features Pat Metheny, Charlie Haden, and Billy Higgins. I know that because the album cover tells me so. The iTunes version of the album does not mention the supporting players. If I had bought Miles Davis’ “Kind of Blue” by download, I may never have known that John Coltrane played on the album. When I borrowed the original album from the library, I remember pouring over F R O M T H E H E Y D AY Michael Marashian, a vintage poster dealer and former co-owner of Festoons and Underground Records in Harvard Square, Cambridge, offers up his favorite liner notes. “I Want Candy,” Strangeloves. This collection of mid-’60s Bo Diddley ripoffs and inspiration for BowWowWow’s cover of the title track has tongue firmly in cheek. Three American songwriter/producer types (Feldman, Goldstein and Gottehrer … sounds like a law firm!), who worked with the McCoys and a lot of others, jumped into the studio and became the Strangeloves. The notes: “All of England was shaking their derrieres to the Afro-English beat of the three sons of Mr. and Mrs. Wilmot Strange of Armstrong, Australia.” There is talk of crossbreeding sheep on their farm and African drumming, etc., stuff for the teenage readers to actually believe. brought a “human” element to the flip-city takes on world history. The Elektra reissue has wonderful notes by Charles Tacot, and gives the master his due. “The Best of Lord Buckley,” Lord Buckley. The Royal Holiness of the Far Out, eons before his time, known to the hip of the ’50s for his linguistic gymnastics, is an inspiration to me. Since most of his original output of 10” records were long out of print, his rebirth in the mid to late ’60s was helped with reissues on World Pacific, Elektra and Straight (thanks, Mr. Z). The notes: All of these have wonderful notes lovingly written by family or friends who knew his highness personally, and who touchingly “Gravest Hits,” The Cramps. This EP from Illegal Records, recorded in ’77 is the world’s first look into this wonderful band. With the liner notes from a Dr. J.H. Sasfy, Professor of Rockology at the American Rock and Roll Institute, who could resist buying this vinyl. The notes: “...The Cramps began to fester in a NYC apartment.” Talk of sci-fi reruns and southern culture falling apart, and crossing Elvis with Vincent Price. ... Priceless!! “They ooze, and you’ll throb.” For anyone who ever the sleeve notes to see who else played on it. That information today is readily available on the Internet, and I’m sure some eager music fans will take the time to research it, but I worry that the average kid listening to the album for the first time would not take the time to find out such details. There is some hope on the horizon though. A company called TuneBooks has begun to produce “digital liner notes” for certain albums sold on iTunes. According to its website (www.tunebooks.com), “TuneBooks combines traditional visual elements — liner notes, cover art and band collateral — with custom-designed interactive art and media to create a new visual experience.” The company produced such materials for the Click Five, the Darkness and Prodigy. While it will never take the place of the visceral experience of sitting alone, headphones on, “The Rolling Stones Now!,” Rolling Stones. The third Stones LP released in ’64 saw Andrew Loog Oldham (Stones manager and publicity agent extraordinaire) doing his best Clockwork Orange take on the notes for this LP, written as if from a fan. The notes: The Stones music is “Berry-chuck and all the Chicago hippies. … Please autograph this leg I send you ’cause, man, that’s the sign of a real fan!’ Great photography by the famous David Bailey as well. saw the band after that, life would never be the same, and you’d realize that Dr. Sasfy was right on all counts. “Buffalo Springfield Again,” Buffalo Springfield, and “Freak Out,” The Mothers of Invention. (tie, because of their similarity) Both LPs, the former from ’67 and the latter from ’66, have individual song info, who played what – somewhat normal on the Springfield LP where the Mothers just ran off the edge of the flat world with their song “descriptions.” With titles such as “Who Are the Brain Police?” and “Wowie Zowie,” the possibilities were endless for the Mothers. The notes: The Springfield album is such a wonderful LP, and to complete the aural and visual togetherness, they have an extensive list of “friends, enemies and people we don’t know from Adam for their influence and inspiration.” And the Mothers: “These people have contributed materially in many ways to make our music what it is. Please do not hold it against them” Also a great quote from a noted LA DJ saying, “I’d like to clean you boys up a bit and mold you. I believe I could make you as big as the Turtles.” TuneBooks: The future of liner notes? With liner notes nearly extinct, there is some hope. A small New York company called TuneBooks hopes not only to bring back album credits and song lyrics, but to, according to TuneBooks co-founder Josh Koppel, “make the listening experience more fun,” offering interactive audio and visual options for iPod users. TuneBooks, in its first year, has produced digital liner notes for the Click Five, The Darkness, and Prodigy, which are available when you purchase the albums on iTunes. The company has recently signed a deal to produce 50 more such “booklets” for Rhino Records artists. Once downloaded from iTunes, the booklet can be opened on your computer desktop and offers photos, lyrics and other pertinent credit material. Koppel believes in the near future his company’s liner notes will include features such as band photo collages, moving pictures, enhanced lyrics and liner notes read in bandmembers’ voices, and other “psychedelic” cool stuff. A prototype of a Talking Heads album included a fun, interactive, dancing David Byrne (inset). Now the big question: Do you think the average listener still cares about liner notes? “Packaging is important,” says Koppel.“I think people really do want that stuff.” scouring the inner depths of an album jacket for clues to your favorite band, I am hopeful that liner notes will not disappear forever. And when the next youngster is turned on to the Beatles’ “When My Guitar Gently Weeps,” they will read somewhere on its liner notes (digital or otherwise) that helping out on guitar was none other than Eric Clapton. MODERN ACOUSTIC 5 GOLDEN VOICES No doubt Sarah Harmer, Jenny Lewis, Sally Ellyson of Hem, and Neko Case can sing. But on their new albums their voices stand out in a way they haven’t in the past Jenny Lewis With the Watson Twins “Rabbit Fur Coat” Sarah Harmer “I’m a Mountain” Sarah Harmer could have been the darling of FM radio had she followed up her last album – 2004’s “All of our Names,’’ which contained the hit song “Almost” – with another pop release. Instead, she decided to take a seat on the back porch and mull over a batch of wonderful, sincere country and bluegrass inflected folk music that almost defies commerical success. Sarah’s voice perfectly fills these songs, which are backed by mandolin and accordion. My favorites include “Oleander,” a sunny afternoon tune, and the Dolly Parton cover “Will He Be Waiting for Me?’’ And “Goin’ Out” is a song written about an AIDs vigil, with backup vocal assistance from her dad. The standout is “Escarpment Blues,’’ which she wrote about her homeland. It is a passionate plea to save the Niagara Escarpment in her native Canada. She sings: “We’ll need to build some new apartments / And I know we’re gonna have to fix the roads/ But if we blow a hole in the escarpment / The wild ones won’t have anywhere to go.’’ 6 MODERN ACOUSTIC I’m not a big fan of Rilo Kiley; they just don’t do it for me. But Jenny Lewis’ solo album is tremendous. Another female artist embracing country roots. The album opens with three-part harmony of “Run Devil Run,’’ which clues you immediately that this is not your usual “side project” for the lead singer of a band. Many of the songs tackle personal subjects such as love, religion. But instead of simply asking questions, Jenny tackles them with grace and power. She begins the resiliant “Rise Up With Fists!!’’ with “What are you changing? /Who do you think you're changing?/ You can't change things, we're all stuck in our ways.” “Charging Sky’’ is filled with delicious slide guitar and backing vocals as Jenny grapples with religion and God. Finally, there’s a fun cover of the Traveling Wilburys’ “Handle With Care,’’ featuring Jenny, M. Ward, Ben Gibbard of Death Cab for Cutie and Conor Oberst. Hem “No Word From Tom” Let’s just get this out of the way: Sally Ellyson could sing the phone book and it would sound great. Normally an album of “outtakes, covers, demos, live recordings and rarities” usually is reserved for bands over the hill, are packed with filler and are not very good. Younger bands usually don’t have enough material to pull it off. But “No Word From Tom’’ is an exception. The covers, including “Rainy Night in Georgia,’’ Fountain of Wayne’s “Radiation Vibe,’’ and R.E.M.’s “South Central Rain” fit nicely into Hem’s quietly exquisite style. Sally’s voice is sumptuous on “Rainy Night” and “Betting on Trains,’’ and the band, which often plays second fiddle to Sally in the press, fills this set to perfection, adding elegant swashes of guitar and piano. Also check out the old-timey live version of “The Tennessee Waltz.’’ One caution: It’s best to take this album in portions, as it tends to be a little sleepy listened to in large chunks. Neko Case “Fox Confessor Brings the Flood” When I first listened to “The Tigers Have Spoken,’’ Neko’s live album and my first exposure to her music, I was not blown away. The critics fawned over it and she has become quite a media darling. This is no way her fault, just fact. With “Fox,” my first reaction was similar. But on successive listens the album is growing on me. Her voice is country without being twangy; her lyrics tell mysterious stories. My favorite track is “Star Witness,” which includes wonderful imagery of what appears to be a car accident without giving away any cogent details: “Trees break the sidewalk/ and the sidewalk skins my knees/ there’s glass in my thermos/ and blood on my jeans...” She often backs her songs in minor-key splendor from electric guitars and keyboards. She even updates a traditional spiritual, “John Saw That Number.” It opens in true gospel form, then with a few drum beats, it becomes a rollicking country number, only to return to its original roots at the end. A nice touch. The ‘Fabulous Tour’ As many know, my brother Sam is a member of Josh Ritter’s band, which recently played a series of shows in Ireland, where the band is immensely popular. It was on this occasion that my parents, my wife Sue, and Sam’s girlfriend Ari, and I journeyed for a weekend concert at the historic Christ Church in Dublin. We dubbed our trip the “Fabulous Tour,” a four-day whirlwind of airplanes, jet lag, a concert, an afterparty, a wonderful dinner, and the chance to meet some really nice people. Sightseeing? No. A few pints of Guinness? Oh yes! Here are some highlights: It was an hour and into Josh’s meet-and–greet with the “punters” at the afterparty at Vicar Street and he was still working the crowd. In his usual wonderful style, Josh was determined to hug, sign autographs and talk to every one of his fans in the very long line of concertgoers. The band’s family members, who had flown in to catch the show at Christ Church earlier that evening, were talking amongst themselves and with fans in one corner of the bar, while Josh was doing his thing. I went to get Sue a pint, but when I returned she was gone… Our trip actually began Thursday night, but we arrived in Dublin Friday morning, jet lagged and sleepy. After a quick rest, we gathered in the hotel lobby where a car was sent to take us to the show. In the lobby, we were joined by Josh’s parents and bass player Zack Hickman’s mom. We hadn’t met them before, but within moments were totally at ease and felt amazingly part of a bigger “Good Man” is a rollicking blast, “Thin Blue Flame” is eerie and awesome amid the historic surroundings, and “Lillian” becomes electric with Zack playing some wailing guitar. Josh plays “Wings” in total darkness. The crowd listens in rapt silence. Spectacular. The show ends with “Leaving,” as Josh does a lap around the audience, and offers a thank you to the band’s moms for making the trip. The house lights come up, and it’s off to the afterparty. family than the one we left Boston with. It was on to the show. Now an hour and a half into the hugging session, and Josh is still going strong. My arm is getting tired from holding Sue’s still-unclaimed beer in one hand. I wonder where she disappeared to. It becomes clear: She had joined the masses in line to get herself a hug… We arrived at Christ Church and marveled at its historic beauty from the outside. But it was the inside — the divine architecture filled with chunky columns, overhanging Gothic arches, and stained glass – that left its mark. Before the show started, the band’s amiable tour manager Paddy McPoland signaled me to join him for a brief tour of the facilities, which included (in order) a chat with show opener Corb Lund and his guitarist Grant, truly good guys; an introduction to the church’s priest, another good guy!; and finally the preshowstopper, a wall “exhibit” honoring a mummified cat and rat that were found in the church’s organ pipe in the 1860s. Closing in on two hours now, and Josh is still knee-deep in fans. Paddy, trying to put an end to the seemingly endless proceedings, spots Sue in line and tells her she doesn’t have to wait and can move to the front of the line. Sue rejects the idea; she’s enjoying her time talking with the fans. “It’s all about getting the hug” it is determined… Finally, the show begins. The lights go down, the mist machine starts pumping. A light show, like we’ve never seen for the band in the US, begins. In a misty shaft of a red glow, Josh opens up solo, singing “Idaho.” An honor to his parents in the audience? The band then joins him as they deliver stellar, often mesmerizing, versions of songs from the new album. Sue returns, a big smile on her face, and shows off her autograph from Josh:“Sue, ooh la la. Love, Josh Ritter.” Upstairs in a private room set aside for our group, we spend the last hour talking to band and crew. I chat with Corb Lund about his homeland Canada, and, of course, hockey. Sue talks with Garrett the lighting guy about the intricacies of putting on a show in a cathedral. I finally get my Josh hug. At 3 a.m., the night is complete. And so is the trip. While we do have one more day in Dublin, we spend much of it sleeping, trying to overcome lack of sleep and jet lag. That night we have dinner with our new “family.” And I get a special birthday treat: a tour poster signed by the band. Dave Hingerty, the quiet drummer, offers the best of all greetings: “Rich, Hope you enjoy the Emerald Isle and all the shenanigans. Dave H.” Fabulous. MODERN ACOUSTIC 7