Category: Pop (Page 149 of 216)

Road Warriors 34

Road Warriors 34

In honor of his (gasp) 60th birthday, Sammy Hagar will hold his annual birthday celebration at his Cabo Wabo Cantina in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico beginning this weekend. Collective Soul is one of the bands performing every other day, and the party will last for two straight weeks. Tickets are first come, first serve.

Nelson Mandela is once again planning an AIDS awareness show, the fifth one of its kind. The event will be held on World AIDS Day, December 1, in Johannesburg, South Africa, and more than 30 artists are expected to perform. Those artists will be announced soon.

John Mayer’s Mayercraft will set sail soon in the Caribbean. The three-day cruise will feature performances by Mayer and also by a few other artists he has picked himself, including Colbie Caillat, Brandi Carlilie and Brett Dennen. For more information, please visit www.mayercraft.vh1.com

Polo Grounds Music/J Records’ newest hip-hop sensation, Hurricane Chris, has been chosen to perform his single, “A Bay Bay,” at the 2nd Annual BET Hip-Hop Awards. Hurricane Chris has received four nominations including Rookie Artist of the Year, and the show will air on BET on October 17.

Beyonce will make her first ever appearance in China on November 5 at the Grand Stage in Shanghai.

Pop star Ricky Martin is kicking off his Black and White tour, and will also receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on October 16. Martin kicked off the tour this past week, and remaining dates Continue reading »

DMed’s Video of the Week: Dave Gahan, “Kingdom”

I’m sure I was not the only one underwhelmed by Paper Monsters, Dave Gahan’s 2003 solo debut, but as a lifelong Depeche Mode apologist, I will always give them and their assorted side projects a chance. And I’m glad for that, because there is a strong Songs of Faith and Devotion vibe to Gahan’s new single, “Kingdom.” I could not help but think of the Christmas lights synched up to Transiberian Orchestra during the middle part of the video, but maybe that’s just me.

Notes from the Orphanage, Part VIII

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.

Road Warriors 33

Road Warriors 33

Lollapalooza 2008 is far from announcing who its artists will be, but the event is already scheduled for August 1-3, so you can start making any early arrangements. For more information, please visit www.lollapalooza.com.

Eclectic singer/songwriter Luke Temple is back with a new album, Snowbeast, and has a busy touring schedule to support it. Critics are calling Snowbeast the Brooklyn based artist’s best work to date. To see what the fuss is all about, you can catch Mr. Temple at these shows:

09/26 New York, NY Lit Lounge
10/01 Buffalo, NY Mohawk Place*
10/02 Boston, MA Middle East (downstairs)*
10/04 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom*
10/05 Philadelphia, PA First Unitarian Church*
10/06 Washington, DC Rock N Roll Hotel*
10/07 Carrboro, NC Cat’s Cradle*
10/25 Madison, WI High Noon Saloon**
10/26 St. Paul, MN Turf Club**
10/27 Chicago, IL Schuba’s**
10/28 Lafayette, IN Lafayette Brewing Company**
10/30 Cleveland, OH Beachland Ballroom & Tavern**
11/01 Lexington, KY The Dame
11/02 Newport, KY Southgate House**
11/03 Nashville, TN Americana Music Conference**
11/04 Charleston, WV Mountain Stage Radio**
11/05 Pittsburgh, PA Club Café**
11/07 Northampton, MA Iron Horse**
11/08 New York, NY Joe’s Pub**
11/09 Philadelphia, PA Tin Angel**
11/10 Annapolis, MD Ram’s Head**
11/13 Atlanta, GA The Earl**
11/15 Boston, MA Boston University
* w/ The Good Life
** w/ Chuck Prophet

Los Angeles based five-piece band and Dallas based symphonic pop group The Polyphonic Spree will head out on a co-headlining tour beginning October 14 and running through November 17.
The Spree is touring in support of their latest, The Fragile Army, and Rooney in support of their Calling The World. Here are the confirmed Continue reading »

Ruby Tuesday: Freiheit, “Tears Are A Girl’s Best Friend”

Back in 1989, when Cameron Crowe rounded up John Cusack, Ione Skye, and John Mahoney and produced one of the greatest teen romances of all time (duh, of course we’re talking about “Say Anything…”), he also found time to compose a rather memorable soundtrack as well. The film’s money shot, of course, belonged to Peter Gabriel’s “In Your Eyes,” but songs from The Red Hot Chili Peppers and The Replacements were used to great effect as well. Hiding way, way at the end of the soundtrack album, however, was a song that I fell in love with about as hard and fast as anything I’d heard in awhile: “Keeping the Dream Alive,” by Freiheit…or, as they’re more commonly known in their native Germany, Münchener Freiheit.

I didn’t know the first thing about Freiheit when I discovered “Keeping the Dream Alive,” but, damn, that song was such a gorgeous, sweeping ballad of ELO-sized proportions that I immediately knew that I’d have to seek out more of their material. As it happens, there wasn’t anything else to seek out…well, not in the U.S., anyway. Not long after, however, the band’s debut American release, Fantasy, found its way onto shelves and, almost immediately thereafter, into my collection. To this day, I’m still surprised that it never scored much in the way of success; it’s a highly enjoyable pop album that owes as much to Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus as it does Jeff Lynne. The only real explanation I’ve ever come up with is that it’s a bit heavier on synths and electronic drum beats than the kids were listening to at the time, but it still features heavily in my regular playlist even in 2007.

Unfortunately, Fantasy remains out of print in the U.S., and since that was the only Stateside release of the band’s career, Freiheit’s profile remains woefully low on our shores. Even the usually helpful All Music Guide gives them short shrift, with the bio in their entry simply reading, “This German band (orig. Munchener Freiheit) played power-pop music from 1982 to 1988.” That’s it. Talk about your inglorious retrospectives!

If you’re curious about the band, there are several import best-of collections available via Amazon, but you should be prepared to find them almost completely free of English-sung material. If you don’t speak German as fluently as the members of Freiheit, however, here’s a song from Fantasy that you might appreciate a bit more:

Freiheit – Tears Are A Girl’s Best Friend

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