Tag Archives: music

Before Taylor Swift and Shania Twain, There Were Sara and Maybelle Carter

Mother Jones

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The original Carter Family trio. Courtesty Argot Films

How big a deal was the Carter Family? Well, even if you’re just a casual music fan, you’ve heard (and sung) some of their staples, songs such as “Can the Circle be Unbroken,” “Keep on the Sunny Side,” and “Wabash Cannonball.” And if you sing a snippet from the Carter’s “Will You Miss Me Me When I’m Gone,” your teenagers may well start singing along—they’ll know it from the Pitch Perfect movies, although the “Cups” version actually originated with the obscure British group Lulu and the Lampshades.

But this barely scratches the surface, as we learn in The Winding Stream: The Carters, the Cashes, and the Course of Country Music. Directed by Beth Harrington—whose last doc, Welcome to the Club: The Women of Rockabilly, was nominated for a Grammy—the Carter film explores the hardscrabble origins and enduring legacy of America’s original supergroup.

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Before Taylor Swift and Shania Twain, There Were Sara and Maybelle Carter

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King Curtis’s Robust Saxophone Singles

Mother Jones

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The great saxophonist Curtis Ousley was an essential part of classic recordings by everyone from The Coasters and Buddy Holly to Aretha Franklin and John Lennon, but he also made some cool instrumental records for himself. Ranging from 1958 to 1971, The Complete Atco Singles features plenty of robust-but-tasteful blowing, sometimes on meaty R&B tracks (“Jump Back,” “Memphis Soul Stew”), and sometimes on surprisingly appealing covers of other people’s hits (“Ode to Billie Joe,” “Whole Lotta Love”). Among the intriguing obscurities is the dreamy 1959 single “Heavenly Blues,” a foray into lounge music produced by Leiber and Stoller. If King Curtis’ solo work was an afterthought, it was consistently entertaining regardless.

Courtesy of Real Gone Music

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King Curtis’s Robust Saxophone Singles

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This Composer Wants You To Know Who Syrian Refugees Really Are

Mother Jones

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When Suad Bushnaq thinks of Syria, she thinks of the wonderful years she spent studying at one of the Middle East’s top conservatories, attending performances at the Damascus Opera House, and catching jazz gigs in back-alley cafes.

She thinks of musakhan, shwarma, fresh-squeezed juices; and of her dearest friends and the jokes they told each other.

She thinks of her late mother, born and raised in Syria, and of her mother’s family still living there.

But these days, watching events unfold from the safety of the United States, she is barraged by daily images of violence, airstrikes, and fleeing refugees. And the public apprehension, ever since the Paris terrorist attacks, that has allowed craven politicians (including the governor of her home state) to paint those refugees as a threat. “No one in the West has the image of the Syria that I know,” Bushnaq told me. “The beautiful Syria filled with culture and history and amazing food and people who laugh.”

Syria has changed dramatically in the decade since Bushnaq, one of only a handful of Arab women composers on the planet (Layal Watfeh and Farah Siraj being among the other notables), last set foot there. The ongoing civil war has disrupted and even claimed the lives of many of her friends and relatives. Now she’s fighting the loss of Syrian culture in the only way she knows how: by creating orchestral pieces and scores that combine the Western and Middle Eastern musical traditions.

She has released two albums and collaborated with award-winning Arab filmmakers, as well as the Syrian Expat Philharmonic Orchestra, which performed a movement of her orchestral suite Hakawaty (or Suite for Damascus) to a sold out international audience in Bremen, Germany, this past September.

The 33-year-old composer was born and raised in Amman, Jordan, by a Syrian mother and Palestinian-Bosnian father with a large LP collection. (“My house was full of music,” she says.) She started piano at age four, but hated her lessons, preferring to make up her own songs. “When I was in fifth grade, my mom told me, ‘If you stop taking piano lessons I will break the piano! I am not the type of mom who would allow us to have a piano as a piece of furniture.”

By 16, she decided that composition was more than just a whim. She dreamed of attending McGill University’s Schulich School of Music in Montreal, but her parents said no. It was too far away and too expensive. So Bushnaq moved to Damascus.

There she attended the Higher Institute of Music, where she learned from and performed with some of the region’s premier musicians—many of them women who’ve gone on to international success. But Bushnaq was the only one studying composition. She would also be the only Arab woman ever admitted to McGill’s prestigious composition program, where she landed a full scholarship in 2005. At McGill, she further honed her compositional style—a distillation of the influences of “a classically trained pianist who grew up in the Arab world, who has a bit of Balkan blood, and who likes to listen to jazz.”

Bushnaq, who now lives with her husband in North Carolina, has worked on the scores of several films. One of them is a documentary about a 12-year-old Syrian refugee, by the female Lebanese director Niam Itani. There’s also a psycho-thriller called The Curve, which will premiere at the Dubai International Film Festival in December, by Jordanian-Palestinian director Rifqi Assaf. (The strings on the soundtrack were recorded by Syrian musicians in Damascus.)

Lately, Bushnaq has been looking around for an orchestra to perform her Suite for Damascus in full, following on the success of the Syrian Expat concert. She remains in constant contact with friends and family back in Syria, where, despite all the chaos, the Higher Institute of Music continues to operate, and its musicians continue to perform.

“It’s sad what’s happening now,” Bushnaq told me. “But it makes me happy to know that the music scene is still going. It shows me that despite the war, people are still trying their best to live.”

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This Composer Wants You To Know Who Syrian Refugees Really Are

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This Is the Greatest Correction I’ve Ever Read

Mother Jones

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Adele’s new album is subliiiiiiiiiiime. Read our review.

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This Is the Greatest Correction I’ve Ever Read

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Twilight of The Velvet Underground

Mother Jones

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The Velvet Underground
Loaded: Re-Loaded 45th Anniversary Edition
Rhino

The Complete Matrix Tapes
Polydor/UMe

Loaded was the most conventional of The Velvet Underground’s four studio outings. With gifted multi-instrumentalist John Cale long gone and drummer Maureen Tucker largely absent from the studio, Lou Reed steered the band away from the notorious sonic and emotional extremes of its early work, trying out a more mainstream pop approach, albeit with more wit and a darker undertone than your basic Top 40 song. The album features a few clunkers but also two of his most-lovable compositions in the form of “Sweet Jane” and “Rock & Roll.” After the confrontational brilliance of early songs like “Heroin” and “Sister Ray,” these engaging anthems seem positively carefree.

This six-disc package includes a mono version, a surround-sound mix, a previously released live set from Max’s Kansas City, and a very lo-fi, previously unreleased live performance from Philadelphia. The high point is the disc containing demos and early versions, which offers hints of what Reed would have sounded like as a folk singer in an alternate universe, and shows him getting warmed up for his impending solo career. “Satellite of Love” would be one of the standouts of Transformer, his second post-Velvets effort and biggest commercial success, while “Sad Song” resurfaced on his third long-player, the harrowing masterpiece Berlin.

Prior to the sessions that produced Loaded, the Velvets played a series of shows at the San Francisco club the Matrix in November and December 1969. Four of those sets appear on The Complete Matrix Tapes and portray the quartet as a cohesive and efficient rock’n’roll band, not simply a vehicle for Reed’s solo aspirations. With Doug Yule taking over on bass and psychedelic keyboards, the group ranges from early gems like “I’m Waiting for the Man,” presented in a bluesy 13-minute version, and “Sister Ray,” which unfolds over 37 mesmerizing minutes, to the not-yet-recorded “Sweet Jane” and “Rock & Roll,” heard here in looser, funkier incarnations. Much of the material on this fine four-disc collection has previously been released piecemeal on other archival packages, but The Complete Matrix Tapes is the best way to get a feel for the later Velvet Underground onstage, no longer revolutionary but still compelling.

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Twilight of The Velvet Underground

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Country-Rocker Corb Lund Shows Off His Wit and High-Lonesome Voice

Mother Jones

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Corb Lund
Things That Can’t Be Undone
New West

With his flexible, high-lonesome voice and witty songs, Corb Lund makes records that have real staying power. On Things That Can’t Be Undone, his first studio outing in three years, the Canadian country-rocker and his nimble supporting trio, the Hurtin’ Albertans, dispatch sizzling boogie rave-ups and heart-tugging ballads equally well, uncorking a batch of snappy tunes bigger names would be smart to cover. Among the high points: “Weight of the Gun,” a loping tale of regret in the spirit of vintage Johnny Cash, “Washed-Up Rock Star Factory Blues,” a hilarious unofficial sequel to Johnny Paycheck’s “Take This Job and Shove It,” and the haunting war story “Sadr City.” Then again, there’s not a dull or false note to be found on this remarkable and rewarding album.

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Country-Rocker Corb Lund Shows Off His Wit and High-Lonesome Voice

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We Finally Got Around to Ryan Adams’ "1989." Here Are Our Instant Reactions to Every Track.

Mother Jones

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Editor’s note: Earlier this week, I suggested to our own Ben Dreyfuss that he take a stab at reviewing Ryan Adams’ new adaptation of Taylor Swift’s hit album 1989. Given the chat that Ben and colleague James West published when Swift’s version dropped last October, I figured it was a no-brainer. (I also didn’t necessarily think that I’d be the only one around when it came time to edit it.) Anyway, Ben agreed, and he enlisted Tim McDonnell to tag-team the review, by which I mean chat semi-coherently for what must have been hours.

TRACK 1: “WELCOME TO NEW YORK

Ben Dreyfuss: Here we go.

Tim McDonnell: Seagulls. We’re on an island.

BD: Welcome to New York.

TM: How can you not like this?

BD: It sounds like a theme song to an ’80s sitcom?

TM: I would watch that sitcom. Every episode.

BD: This really does sort of sound like he is stylizing, like, what’s his name from New Jersey? The Boss? Springsteen!

TM: Descending into the Port Authority from New Jersey to fulfill all your dreams.

BD: I bet he was like “Jersey? That’s basically New York. Let’s go with Springsteen.” Chris Christie would love this cover.

TM: Fist-pumping. Watch for this song at future Christie events. So…better than Tay?

BD: No. I mean, look…no.

TM: Or are we just going with the baseline that none of it is better than Tay?

TRACK 2: “BLANK SPACE”

BD: I hate this.

TM: This is definitely the mopey part.

BD: He is such a whiny bitch. I mean, he is SUCH a little crybaby.

TM: I kind of love it. It’s like he’s sitting in your living room playing right to you.

BD: He is the paradigm of a sad little white hipster guitarist.

TM: Okay, but this is actually a pretty sad song. You wouldn’t really know that from the Tay version. There’s so much implied loneliness.

BD: I feel like we’re on a roof after a cast party, and he is trying to find the courage to tell the girl who played opposite him in Skin of Our Teeth that not only is he not gay…he’s actually in love with her.

TM: Tinged with optimism and hope. Also, the reference to old lovers thinking you’re insane.

BD: “If the high was worth the pain.” Babe, it’s always worth the pain.

TM: They’ll tell you I’m insane. BUT I’M NOT OR MAYBE…

BD: “I’M NOT FUCKING INSANE, OKAY? PLEASE BELIEVE ME!”

TM: “I don’t know! Maybe I am! Let’s make out.”

BD: Then you play this sad song in the bathroom and call the therapist in the morning.

TRACK 3: “STYLE”

BD: Yeah, this is different. This is less whiny.

TM: This is very like tech rock—like, I don’t know. Flaming Lips or something.

BD: I like the bass line.

TM: This is what you hear coming from the second-best stage at the music festival, while you’re trying to watch the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

BD: The band that is better than most of them, but still only forgettable.

TM: Not quite good enough for the main stage, but good enough to forget yourself and just dance.

BD: His voice is so weak and sad. I bet Ryan Adams was the dude in college who wrote his feelings into lyrics in a Moleskin.

TRACK 4: “OUT OF THE WOODS”

TM: Okay, now we’re like at the bluegrass festival. Playing at the bandshell in the town square with your mom.

BD: Just an acoustic, a mic, and a few hundred friends in a park in Tennessee. The Town Square Open Mic! And your mom is way too enthusiastic. She’s embarrassing you.

TM: That’s like Ryan Adams’ birthplace probably. He was probably conceived at an open mic.

BD: Can we talk about his voice? It’s so whiny.

TM: It would be better without all the reverb.

BD: Why is it so weak and sad? Maybe he should smoke.

TM: All the indie bands are like obsessed with vocal reverb these days.

BD: I mean, he shouldn’t smoke. Don’t smoke, kids.

TM: No, but he should.

BD: It would make his voice gruffer and sexier.

TM: Smoke more and cut the reverb. Okay, what about the whole concept of this album? What do we think about rewriting whole albums?

BD: The Larger Story. At first I was turned off by the idea.

TM: Especially for an album that just came out.

BD: One song is one thing, but doing a whole album feels like a purposeless re-creation, but I think I was maybe being too conservative. Like, I can see someone doing interesting things with it. Like imagine Fiona Apple redoing a Chili Peppers album. I mean, that sounds terrible.

TM: Is there a threshold of how much different it has to be to make it worthwhile?

BD: There must be a threshold, or else it’s just masturbatory photocopying.

TM: I like how we just completely tuned out the rest of that song. It was putting me to sleep anyway.

BD: Yeah, I hated it. It went on forever.

TRACK 5: “ALL YOU HAD TO DO WAS STAY”

BD: WHO IS THE FAMOUS SINGER HE SOUNDS LIKE? Is it Springsteen?

TM: Kind of. The Springsteen purists would probably not appreciate that comparison. There are other comparisons that are probably better.

BD: Sorry, Springsteen fans. This sounds like it would be perfect at Giants Stadium. Chris Christie is losing himself in a press box. Should we talk about the pronoun changes? Some people had a little cry about it.

TM: Like when boys sing songs that were originally sung by girls.

BD: Their problem was that he changed the pronouns to “she” instead of “he” or whatever. I think it’s a silly criticism. Like it would be really noticeable if he didn’t change them, and that would in and of itself be a statement, which is maybe good or maybe bad. But clearly one he didn’t want to make and that is his right—the right to abstain.

TRACK 6: “SHAKE IT OFF”

BD: Tay’s version is perfect. Perfect pop song.

TM: Carved from a solid block of pop music viral marble.

BD: Birthed from the head of Zeus, the content creator.

TM: This version is more hedged. He doesn’t actually sound like he’s going to shake it off.

BD: He needs to shake it off. But he sounds like actually he is going to die. He is drinking too much and being angry.

TM: He’s repeating the mantra his therapist fed him. “Shake it off.” But he totally doesn’t buy it.

BD: He is going to get in a fistfight outside a bar, get his ass kicked, get in his truck, drive drunk, and kill a bunch of people. SERENITY NOW!

TM: Shake THAT off. Maybe this is what he’s singing immediately after doing that. That’s what it sounds like.

BD: “Sorry, Mr. Adams, you can’t shake off 5-0.”

TM: “Haters gonna hate.”

BD: “I am not a hater. I am a judge. You killed five people.”

TM: Yeah, he is totally unconvinced of his ability to shake it off.

TRACK 7: “I WISH YOU WOULD”

BD: Oh, another acoustic guitar.

TM: The thing with all of these is that he doesn’t really sound like he’s buying the message.

BD: Yeah, that’s a good point.

TM: Tay works because you believe her. She makes you believe her. She is in that car. She is driving straight ahead. That’s why the songs work.

BD: He’s covering her songs in the sense that he’s singing the lyrics, but he’s not playing the part.

TM: You take the same lyrics and put them in Ryan’s mouth and they don’t really add up. I don’t know what he’s standing for.

BD: My main problem with this album is that like it isn’t fun. It sounds like something you would listen to while being overly dramatic about a breakup.

TM: While riding on a train in Europe with like rain streaking down the windows.

BD: YES. He is looking out of the Eurorail, watching Prague go by in an instant, thinking of…

TM: And drinking a whole bottle of wine by himself.

BD: …some girl.

TRACK 8: “BAD BLOOD”

BD: Taylor was writing about Katy Perry. Who do we think Ryan is thinking of while singing this?

TM: Taylor.

BD: AHHAHAHHAHA. I love that.

TM: Wasn’t he married to someone?

BD: Is he the Ryan Adams who created Glee?

TM: Mandy Moore.

BD: She got left behind the aughts with Gossip Girl and James Frey.

TM: “Mandy Moore confirms Ryan Adams split.”

BD: Divorce isn’t very fun.

TM: This album isn’t very fun! I mean, it’s not meant to be fun, I guess.

BD: This album is like something you won’t object to, but it isn’t aiming to win you over. It strives only not to be turned off.

TM: And it’s probably wrong to compare it Tay’s version. It’s its own thing.

BD: But you can’t not compare it. You gotta dance with the one who brung you.

TRACK 9: “WILDEST DREAMS”

BD: So I was at a Taylor Swift-themed SoulCycle last night.

TM: Oh God. Here we go.

BD: And at the end during the stretching they played one of these, and after I walked out, I couldn’t remember what song it was. It just sounded like every other one of his covers.

TM: See, this one kind of works because it’s sort of nostalgic and sad.

BD: Like he’s just reading the words, changing the pronouns, and strumming his dumb acoustic guitar. He sounds like Monsters of Folk. I don’t believe him that it is getting good now. I don’t believe that he knows she’s “so tall.” “SIR, SIR, have you even seen this woman?”

TM: Only from a distance. Restraining order, you know.

BD: Through a telescopic lens. Yeah, I mean, I do feel like this is Songs for the Socially Estranged.

TM: Most of Tay’s songs sound very similar, too, and there’s not a whole lot going on musically, but they’re so fun because she sells the dream.

BD: Tay does the thing where she tries to appeal to every sort of young-adult scenario. Whatever your personal drama in high school is, Taylor has a song for it. This seems all made for the kid who is an emo cutter.

TM: If you strip away the fun, the songs start to fall apart. Tay is good because of Tay.

BD: That’s so true. You can’t strip fun from pop songs, because pop songs are just fantasy nonsense that exist to be fun.

TM: Of course, that would be the message Ryan is trying to telegraph.

TRACK 10: “HOW YOU GET THE GIRL”

BD: His voice is less weak and pathetic here.

TM: But does this sound like he’s getting the girl? No.

BD: No. He sounds upset. He considers this therapy.

TM: This sounds like the girl went home with the jock after prom. After he caught them making out in the bathroom.

BD: Exactly, and now he’s sitting alone on the hood of his car crying in a canyon somewhere, drinking cheap whiskey, playing for whom? He and God and her. Always her. It’s all for her, but then, in reality, he didn’t even love her. He loved the idea of her.

TM: And imagining another life that doesn’t have to be like this.

BD: Thinking that he can’t imagine who he would be had he not had their moments. But what moments did they really have?

TRACK 11: “THIS LOVE”

BD: Ugh. Piano. “My name is Ryan. I can play the piano.”

TM: I think the ones I like more are the more rock and roll ones. There’s a very fine line here between nice music and just falling asleep. I’m already nodding off to this one.

BD: Why did he do this? He must have spent at least some time thinking about this.

TM: Do you think people tried to talk him out of it? “Oh, cool idea…What else are you working on?…Oh, you were serious?”

BD: “Look, Ryan, I like you. I love you. Ryan, I’m your sister. I support you. But this is not a fight you can win.”

TM: “Record it? Like, in a studio?”

BD: “I mean, if you want me to Periscope one song, okay, but…”

TM: “You want the label to pay for this?”

BD: “Have you had a stroke?”

TM: “Look, we know you’re beat up about Mandy.”

BD: “There are other fish in the sea.”

TRACK 12: “I KNOW PLACES”

TM: I like this one. It’s at least different.

BD: The beat is better immediately.

TM: This could be in a Tarantino movie.

BD: Yeah, it’s got style.

TM: Kind of sexy, like we finally left New Jersey and are almost to Mexico City. Sounds like something you could listen to smoking a big joint and driving really fast through the desert in a Jeep.

BD: I do still hate his voice. I know I sound like a broken record, but I hate his voice. “They got the keys, they got the boxes.” Who is he talking about? The landlord? Was he evicted?

TM: If so, he sounds pretty happy about it.

BD: It’s funny that he finally sounds happy in the song about them having to pack up their lives and flee.

TM: That’s what he always wanted anyway. He’s happy to be unhappy.

BD: “They are the hunters, we are the foxes.” Fox hunting isn’t a thing in the US. Are they in Britain?

TM: I wonder if they recorded the whole thing in like one day. First take.

BD: I sort of feel like they may have? “We have 65 minutes. That leaves eight minutes for a smoke break and a three for a piss.”

TRACK 13: “CLEAN”

BD: Okay, so I hate this song even when Taylor sings it. This is my least favorite song on Taylor’s album, so I am open to his being better.

TM: I really think he could have done more on all these to push it to weird new places.

BD: Because he hasn’t!

TM: Yeah, not really.

BD: He’s just played it like any Berklee music student could have.

TM: Apple Music calls this album “intimate” and “disarming.”

BD: “Disarming”? Who the hell is searching for “disarming” on iTunes? They should be on an FBI watchlist for sexual predators.

TM: I actually don’t find it intimate at all.

BD: I don’t know what the hell this is a metaphor for. His heart isn’t in it.

TM: Well, that’s it. Seagulls again. Coney Island?

BD: Okay, I hated that. I hate Ryan Adams.

TM: I mean I wouldn’t necessarily turn it off, but I don’t plan to turn it on again, which is like the opposite of Tay.

BD: Like elevator music, you couldn’t. Okay, I have to run to therapy, but I’ll be back in 30 minutes for final thoughts.

TM: Go have a good cry. At least you can say this is good music to prep for therapy. Therapy pregame with Ryan Adams.

43 minutes later

BD: I am back. I had a very nice therapy.

TM: Did Ryan come up? Could you get the songs out of your head?

BD: He came up in spirit, but I described him as “my friend who is going through some things.”

TM: The only one I can remember now is “Wildest Dreams.” That’s the one that stuck with me.

BD: Which is a good segue into…What was this album all about?

TM: Existential angst ironically channeled through happy pop music

BD: Yes.

TM: Desaturated Taylor Swift. Tay in black and white.

BD: How a constitutionally angsty person can deliver their angst through pop music. “Words mean nothing—it’s all in the the way you say them.”

TM: While Tay is driving to the party, Ryan is hanging his 5 mm B&W portrait of her music on the wall at the art show in the lunchroom on Friday night, alone.

BD: Like a dramatic actor doing a Shakespeare comedy, it’s not going to be funny, but maybe there is some honesty there? Like, some sort of unplugged brutalism? It’s a very sad album. I’m worried about Ryan. I mean, I’m not really worried because, look, people die. But if I knew him better I would be worried. *If I cared.*

TM: So I’m probably not going to listen to that album ever again. It had its moments, but now I just want to listen to the Taylor version. And feel okay about my life again.

BD: I also will never listen. REVIEW: DON’T BUY, but it’s okay in elevators.

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We Finally Got Around to Ryan Adams’ "1989." Here Are Our Instant Reactions to Every Track.

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Anything Goes on Unwound’s Latest Album

Mother Jones

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Unwound
Empire
Numero Group

The fourth and final chapter in record label Numero Group’s fascinating history of the Olympia, Washington, trio Unwound collects the albums Challenge for a Civilized Society (1998) and Leaves Turn Inside You (2001), along with stray tracks from the same period. At this point, Justin Trosper (vocals, guitar), Vern Rumsey (bass), and Sara Lund (drums) are in full anything-goes mode. While some exhilarating songs reflect the band’s familiar hard rock and grunge roots, others take entirely different paths, using mellotron, harmonium, and studio effects in unpredictable pieces that can run ten minutes, notably the freeform electro-psychedelia of “The Light at the End of the Tunnel Is a Train.” Not everything works, but even the experimental misfires feel like an heartfelt attempt to develop new ideas without abandoning the anxiety-inducing tension that made Unwound so compelling in the first place.

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Anything Goes on Unwound’s Latest Album

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Jimi Hendrix’s Last Big Concert Hit Darker Notes

Mother Jones

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Jimi Hendrix Experience
Freedom: Atlanta Pop Festival
Experience Hendrix/Legacy

Jimi Hendrix was at a musical crossroads when he played the Atlanta Pop Festival on July 4, 1970. With bandmates Mitch Mitchell (drums) and Billy Cox (bass) in tow, he turned in a fiery 16-song set that mixed reliable crowd-pleasers such as “Purple Haze” and “Foxey sic Lady” with less-flashy, socially conscious material like “Message to Love” and “Straight Ahead,” which wouldn’t see official release until after his death less than three months later. While Hendrix could easily have phoned it in on the oldies and still thrilled the crowd, he didn’t, preferring to add different, darker textures to his hits; the bluesy staples “Red House” and “Hear My Train a Comin'” found him, as always, using familiar structures to veer off in exciting, unexpected directions. Whether Hendrix was on the verge of entirely abandoning the rock scene for uncharted territory remains unknown, but Freedom: Atlanta Pop Festival suggests big changes were definitely in the offing.

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Jimi Hendrix’s Last Big Concert Hit Darker Notes

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Marshall Crenshaw Plays Superior Guitar Pop

Mother Jones

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Marshall Crenshaw
#392: The EP Collection
Red River Entertainment

A worthy heir to Buddy Holly (who he portrayed in the biopic La Bamba) and John Lennon (who he played in a production of Beatlemania), Michigan-bred, New York-based Marshall Crenshaw has made superior guitar pop for more than three decades. Folks with long memories will recall such early faves as “Someday, Someway” and “Favorite Waste of Time,” also recorded by Bette Midler. Compiling highlights from six recent EPs, #392 showcases Crenshaw’s gift for blending razor-sharp melodies and wistful vocals that have just enough grit to avoid any suggestion of cheap sentiment. This 14-track set also offers some savvy covers, including a lovely, un-ironic take on the Carpenters’ “Close to You” and a crackling, previously unreleased version of the Everly Brothers’ “Man with Money.” If you’re new to Crenshaw’s work, consider yourself lucky: A great back catalog awaits.

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Marshall Crenshaw Plays Superior Guitar Pop

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