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The Used show off their Artwork

The Used, Artwork

For their fourth studio album, The Used–a band known for their tragic melodies, raw vocals and powerful hooks–have teamed up with producer Matt Squire (Taking Back Sunday, Boys Like Girls, Katy Perry, and 3OH!3) to create a cohesive, emotive alternative record with just the right amount of pop flare.  For more than a year singer Bert McCraken, guitarist Quinn Allman, bassist Jeph Howard, and drummer Dan Whitesides have toiled over the creation of what Allman called a, “more sincere” approach to his bands music.  “Lyrically, it completely engulfs you and makes you feel safe but it’s all about feeling alone and empty and knowing there’s always a light,” said Allman.

In the past, that light Allman spoke of hasn’t always shone through The Used’s dark, troubled lyrics and heavy pulsating riffs.  On Artwork however, the band has managed a perfect combination of the grit that put them on the map and the artistic impulses that have pulled them in a more polished direction.  The first single from Artwork, “Blood On My Hands,” is indeed the perfect blend of shiny pop and edgy alternative rock.  All the attitude The Used have become known for is there, and it’s only re-enforced by the giant sing-along chorus that drives the track.  It’s the perfect way to open the record, and The Used pulls it off flawlessly.

Artwork continues with “Empty With You,” a classic-sounding The Used track that finds McCraken looking for a companion who’s just as dysfunctional as he is.  It feels like an extremely natural progression for the band, and the record, and serves as the perfect bridge to the records second single, and strongest track, “Born to Quit.”  As indie-rock anthems go this one is about as big as they come.  The chorus explodes with a fiery, almost bittersweet quality that channels previous singles like as “All That I’ve Got” and “Buried Myself Alive.”  Fans looking for the band’s old-school sound on Artwork should head straight for “Come Undone.”  It’s loud, angry and in your face, and you can feel the passion in his voice when McCraken screams, “I’ll be the end that you deserve!”

Other standout tracks include the groovy, “On the Cross,” a tune that seems to be an obvious attack on religion as McCraken wails, “pray/ if it makes you feel safe/ all i can say/ is we go our own way.”  The energy, passion and pure attitude on “Cross” is what makes this track stand out, while at the same time allowing  it to fit in seamlessly with the rest of the record.  Even next to the somewhat out of place ballad, “Kissing You Goodbye,” or the heavier, metal-infused jam, “The Best of Me,” it’s tracks like “Cross” that have defined The Used as a consistent, driving force in the world of alternative rock.

After nearly a decade making music Bert McCraken and friends have done what most bands struggle to accomplish.  Instead of trying to keep up with today’s trends, The Used has remained true to the spunky, scream-heavy rock that captured audiences back in 2003.  As a result, Artwork is one of their strongest, most consistent albums to date.  It’s the perfect blend of the raw emotion and unbridled intensity of earlier records like Maybe Memories and Shallow Believer, with just enough of the shiny polished edge that dominated Lies for the Liars and In Love and Death.  It’s loud, it’s raucous and it will stick with you, but most of all it’s a true representation of everything The Used stand for, and with that, it truly is Artwork.

Music labels pounce on Ellen

Ellen

Fans of the show, critics, and even Paula Abdual expressed excitement over Ellen DeGeneres’ hiring at “American Idol.” The music industry, however, has chosen the perfect opportunity to stick it to her. Apparently, the “Ellen DeGeneres Show” has been illegally using copyrighted music during her infamous dance intermissions.

Some of the world’s largest recording companies are suing “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” claiming producers violated their copyrights by playing more than 1,000 songs without permission.

Scott Rowe, spokesman for the show’s Telepictures Productions, wrote in an e-mailed statement that the company has been working with the record labels for months to resolve the issue and remains willing to resolve it on “amicable and reasonable terms.”

The suit claims the daytime talk show has used copyrighted music without permission since its inception, including “recordings by virtually every major current artist of popular music.” It claims the show routinely used some of the most popular songs of the day, which the record labels don’t license for daytime television at any price.
Other songs cited in the lawsuit include Michael Jackson’s “Thriller”; The Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations” and Will Smith’s “Gettin’ Jiggy Wit It.”

Are you freaking kidding me? The show’s dance segments aren’t advertising a product — it’s just part of the show. If anything, it’s free promotion. Ellen’s audience provides a large demographic consisting of individuals who probably rarely listen to music she’s playing. The labels should be thankful. It’s one thing to use songs by indie artists or if they’re used in a distasteful manner. But she’s not. The songs, from my understanding, are usually brainless pop numbers. And that’s quite an accomplishment: The show played “recordings by virtually ever major artist of popular music.” Give me a break. I’m sure Will Smith is having a fit.

Nevertheless, this isn’t great news for Ellen directly after signing on with “American Idol.”

Gary Burton, Pat Metheny, Steve Swallow, Antonio Sanchez: Quartet Live

Jazz vibraphonist Gary Burton formed the original Gary Burton Quartet in 1967 with bassist Steve Swallow and a couple of other hip jazz cats (namely, guitarist Larry Coryell and drummer Roy Haynes), predating the sometimes exhilarating but often lugubrious jazz fusion craze by at least a few years. Coryell left the band after a few years, and a number of talented jazz guitar slingers filled the slot, Pat Metheny among them. Recorded live in June of 2007 at Yoshi’s Jazz Club in Oakland, CA, Quartet Live reunites Burton, Swallow and Metheny, and includes drummer Antonio Sanchez, who’s been playing in the Pat Metheny Band for a number of years. The chemistry between these four jazz masters is obvious, as the quartet just clicks on a set that includes such compositions as Duke Ellington’s beautiful ballad (and disc highlight) “Fleurette Africaine,” Chick Corea’s “Sea Journey,” Carla Bley’s “Olhos de Gato” and “Syndrome,” Keith Jarret’s “Coral” and Metheny’s own “Missouri Uncompromised,” “B and G” and “Question and Answer,” the well-known Metheny staple here given an 13-minute treatment that somehow manages to avoid sounding like aimless, ego-driven noodling, like the rest of the album, really. (Concord Jazz, 2009)

Gary Burton fansite MySpace page

Hot Club of Cowtown: Wishful Thinking

The best thing about Wishful Thinking is the lack of ironic, tongue-in-cheek posturing. The Hot Club of Cowtown plays a sincere, honest blend of Western swing and hot Gypsy jazz that’s thankfully parody-free. The weakest thing about ’em is, sadly, the vocals, which are a bit thin for music this passionate. I found myself wishing more than once that they were an all-instrumental band, in fact. Luckily, the palpable sense of exuberance and the command of their instruments is almost enough for Elana James (fiddle, vocals), Whit Smith (guitar, vocals) and Jake Erwin (upright bassist) to get by on. And the vocals aren’t so bad that you’ll find yourself turning Wishful Thinking off, either. It’s obvious this band has the chops and experience to exhilarate an audience, whether live (they’ve appeared on such diverse stages as the Grand Ol’ Opry to the Glastonbury Festival to “Prairie Home Companion” to opening for as well as backing both Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson) or on record (this is their first new album in five years, and the first-ever with drums), which lend such a crackling energy to the proceedings you’ll wonder how they ever did without ’em. (Thirty Tigers, 2009)

Hot Club of Cowtown MySpace page

Chris Knight: Trailer II

A lot of country singers don’t know squat about horses, trailer parks, and rural life – but they can sound like they do, thanks to the songs written for them by guys like Chris Knight. A former coalmine inspector from a speck on the map in Kentucky, Knight is one of those plucked-from-obscurity successes whose story sounds like it was dreamed up in a Beverly Hills bungalow for a crappy movie script, but he’s the real deal – and though he’s never enjoyed a ton of success as a recording artist, he’s written plenty of cuts for more established acts: Montgomery Gentry, John Anderson, Ty Herndon, and Gary Allan are just a few of the performers who have covered his songs. Trailer II, as you might have already gleaned from its title, is a collection of demos taped in a trailer, and a sequel to 2007’s well-received The Trailer Tapes. Recorded over a decade ago, when Knight was still years away from making his major label debut, these performances offer a grippingly intimate snapshot of an artist with little more than a guitar and a dream. Unlike The Trailer Tapes, the songs that make up Trailer II will be familiar to Knight’s fans, but hearing them here, in all their stripped-down majesty, provides a more direct emotional connection to the material. He’s been described as “John Prine and Steve Earle rolled into one,” and despite the hyperbole of the comparison, that’s as apt a way as any to describe what you’ll hear here. Forgive the somewhat dodgy fidelity and bask in the sweltering heat of a bona fide Americana talent. (Drifter’s Church 2009)

Chris Knight MySpace page

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