I love Thelonious Monk. I could explain away all day the reasons why, but the music says it all. Here he is busting out “Lulu’s Back in Town” in a long two-parter. Amazing stuff.
I love Thelonious Monk. I could explain away all day the reasons why, but the music says it all. Here he is busting out “Lulu’s Back in Town” in a long two-parter. Amazing stuff.
Guest contributor: Una Persson
Sometimes, as a reviewer, your eyes are bigger than your stomach ears. Here’s how the process usually works, a veritable peek behind the curtain, if you will:
1. Our esteemed editor emails out lists of recently arrived CDs to be reviewed to the writers-at-large
2. The writers respond back with their requests, claims, pleas and bribes of what they want to review
3. Our esteemed editor lets you know if what you asked for has already been claimed; If you don’t hear anything, you assume you got what you asked for. (Ed. note: this is not entirely accurate, but I appreciate you giving me the benefit of the doubt.)
4. When the copy of the CD arrives, you listen to it (in heavy rotation if it’s good, not more than once or twice if its pure crap), write the review and send it in
5. Once every few weeks, our esteemed editor sends an email with all the CDs that didn’t get claimed, with pleas – sometimes demands! – for someone, anyone to take on some of these so-called “orphans.”
6. Go to Step 2
7. Rinse, repeat
It’s a wonderful system, in fact. The “bidding” has just enough uncertainty to make it interesting, and it’s a fairly democratic way to ensure the same people don’t review the same kind of material week after week, month after month.
The only problem I have is when my orphans pile starts stacking up, and I just can’t muster up the enthusiasm I once had to write “full” reviews of a stack of CDs that, by default, got placed in my personal B-list of new albums. The A-list CDs get my undue attention, of course…and this installment of this irregular column is my mea culpa for these mostly worthy B-listers…
Chet Atkins & Les Paul: Chester & Lester (RCA)
In 1976, these two guitar legends sat down in a studio to record this straightforward country instrumental session, which finds the fretboard icons laying back, stretching out and having an all-around good time as they flex their respective guitar muscles. Les Paul, of course, pioneered the use of both the electric guitar and multi-track recordings. Atkins is a fingerpicking virtuoso. Having ‘em both together on one CD is worth the price of admission alone.
Brown Shoe: Vanity (No Alternative)
My Morning Jacket-lite, with a shoegazer twist.
Charlie Hunter Trio: Mistico (Fantasy)
Guitar-based jazz fusion with plenty of groove- and jam-band elements to keep the kids happy. Fans should eat this up. If you’re not familiar with Charlie Hunter’s 8-string guitar playing eclecticism (though he’s playing “only” a 7-string on this outing), or if you only know him through his collaborations with Norah Jones and Mos Def, among others, I couldn’t think of a better place to get to know him better than on this CD.
Oakley Hall: I’ll Follow You (Merge)
Not quite Americana, not quite ork-pop, Oakley Hall is kind of like a southern-tinged Arcade Fire. I like it.
Super Guitar Trio: Live in Montreux 1989 (Eagle Vision)
Anyone who loves or remembers “Friday Night in San Francisco,” the acoustic guitar fusion album that showcased the awesome talents of Al DiMeola, John McLaughlin and Paco DeLucia, should run right out and buy this DVD. It’s an updating of that classic album from 1980, this time out featuring DiMeola flanked by Larry Coryell and Biréli Lagrene in a blistering showcase of guitar mastery. All three are virtuosos (but, if anyone’s keeping score, this one was all Lagrene’s).
Fjord Rowboat: Saved the Compliments for Morning (Independent)
Nu-gaze.
Terence Blanchard: A Tale of God’s Will (A Requiem for Katrina) (Blue Note)
Seeing as Terence Blanchard is film director Spike Lee’s go-to guy for music (“Mo’ Better Blues,” “Malcom X,” “Inside Man”), it’s no surprise Lee tapped Blanchard for “When the Levee Broke,” the four-hour award-winning HBO documentary that aired in 2006. Blanchard, after all, is a native of New Orleans, and an accomplished trumpeter-composer in his own right. Four of the tracks from the documentary were given new arrangements for this gorgeous, emotionally expansive album, which also features nine new tracks inspired by New Orleans during and after Hurricane Katrina.
Coco: Play Drum + Bass (K Records)
Picture the Black Keys (guitar and drums garage blues). Substitute a bass for the guitar (though the bass manages to sound like anything but on most tunes), and a female vocalist. Oh, and take away half the talent. That’s Coco.
One of New England’s best kept music secrets is Fats Hammond, a group featuring two Hammond B-3 organs bashing out some of the funkiest soul-jazz on the planet.
Before you go thinking for a second that Fats Hammond, in their standing Tuesday night gig at the Dodge Street Grill in Salem, Mass., puts on some sort of high-faluttin’ academic jazz clinic, go listen to their tracks uploaded to The Space: It’s pure soul grease, laden with more fat than the pub’s fish & chips. Dirtier than the floor around the beer stand behind home plate at Fenway Pahhhk.
Sometimes, we’ve been told, the drummer from the Trey Anastasio (Phish) solo band knocks off early–he works behind the bar at Dodge Street–and sits in with the band, and the jams go deep into Wednesday morning.
Fats Hammond ringleader Ken Clark (back to camera) wheels in his 400lb B-3 every Tuesday
and jams with another B-3 playa and the band.
To prep you for our upcoming interview with Tom Jones, here are a few of the man’s performances to get you, shall we say, in the mood.
First, let’s start with a live performance…his last-ever for the late, great “Top of the Pops”…of his 2006 collaboration with Chicane, “Stoned in Love”:
Here are a few videos you may or may not have seen…
…as well as a few covers you might not have heard him perform…
“St. James Infirmary” (with Jools Holland on piano)
Hoobastank’s “The Reason”
The Manhattan Transfer’s “Boy from New York City” (as a duet with Donny Osmond, no less!)
…but, of course, we must close with an all-time classic, which sounds almost as good in 2007 as it did when he recorded it in 1965:
More than 50 bands will play the second annual Osheaga Music and Arts Festival in Montreal on September 8. Among confirmed acts are Smashing Pumpkins, Arctic Monkeys, Amy Winehouse, Interpol, and Damien Rice with more to be announced later.
Crooner Michael Buble released his new album at the start of the month, and will be starting his tour in support of it on July 12. Plans are also in place for Buble to tour Europe in October.
Erasure is joining Cyndi Lauper, Debbie Harry and The Dresden Dolls on the “True Colors” tour next month, but after that will be headlining a tour of their own that starts July 6 in Tampa. Tour dates are as follows:
Fri 7/6 Tampa, FL Carol Morsani Hall @ TBPAC
Sat 7/7 Miami, FL James L. Knight Center
Sun 7/8 Orlando, FL Hard Rock Live!
Fri 7/13 San Juan, Puerto Rico Coliseo Roberto Clemente
Sat 7/14 Altos de Chavon, Dominican Republic The Amph @ Altos de Chavon
Mon 7/16 Mexico City, Mexico Metropolitan Theater
Thu 7/19 Monterrey, Mexico Arena Monterrey
Sat 7/21 Anaheim, CA Grove of Anaheim
Tue 7/24 Seattle, WA Moore Theatre
Fri 7/27 Minneapolis, MN First Avenue
Sat 7/28 Milwaukee, WI Pabst Theater
Sun 7/29 Kansas City, MO Uptown Theater
Tue 7/31 Detroit, MI Music Hall
Wed 8/1 Cleveland, OH House of Blues
Fri 8/3 Brooklyn, NY McCarren Park Pool
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