Rolling Country 2006 Thread

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Yeah, I really like the single, "Satisfied." More demure than Miranda, with a sweet voice that reminds me of Kasey Chambers, but she doesn't play the little girl card too hard. She's, what, 19? I hope the single gets a push, as country radio hasn't been happening for me of late. Every song I like seems to be from last year or the year before.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 18:13 (eighteen years ago) link

That ever-slowass "major" label country release schedule, movin' even slower than Uncle Joe at the Junction nowadays. Is it any wonder this thread has gotten so CDBaybeee

don, Thursday, 30 March 2006 01:14 (eighteen years ago) link

& more & more, that's where the quality well as quantity is (and may stay, though some still hope for what's left of the majors, no doubt)

don, Thursday, 30 March 2006 01:18 (eighteen years ago) link

im out east for the week, and i know chucks from new york, but its damn hard to find country here, and maybe its my circle, but i qouted pop country twice this week, and people were shockingly suprised..

how much of this shit is geographic

anthony, Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:01 (eighteen years ago) link

JOSH ARE YOU GOING TO THAT MIRANDA LAMBERT SHOW AND DID YOU GO TO THE LAST ONE AND HOW WAS IT IF YOU DID?

j blount (papa la bas), Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:05 (eighteen years ago) link

When I was last in NYC, I was hanging about with a long-time local who I consider to be a world-class record shopper. I said "I wouldn't mind going to a shop with a good selection of country". He looked puzzled for a minute, and suggested Tower. (If there are such places and he just didn't know about them, I'd be delighted to hear where they are before my next trip there, in June).

The upside of this is that I get to see Lee Ann Womack on Staten Island, in a theatre with a capacity of a couple of thousand. I imagine this venue to be smaller than she would regularly play in towns more receptive to country music.

Tim (Tim), Thursday, 30 March 2006 10:07 (eighteen years ago) link

>chucks from new york,<

No, no, no, I'm *IN* New York. I am not now and have never been and will never be "from" here, no way. And New York's illiteracy about country has indeed given me the opportunity to see excellent Miranda Lambert, Shelly Fairchild, Lee Ann Womack, Montgomery Gentry, and Big & Rich shows in rather small venues. (I even saw Toby Keith do some industry-only sitdown-and-strum thing maybe five years ago, before I knew who he was! Though I mainly went for the free food, I think.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 30 March 2006 12:32 (eighteen years ago) link

RIP Cindy Walker. She was 87 years old. Willie's tribute to her this year is good and timely. "You Don't Know Me" is a desert island song, in more ways than one.

Quite right. We've been talking a bit more about her on this thread.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 30 March 2006 14:59 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm thinking about going, James, haven't seen her before though, didn't even know she'd been through town before in fact.

Josh Love (screamapillar), Thursday, 30 March 2006 15:13 (eighteen years ago) link

speaking of country/new york, anybody else going to the CasHank hootenanny tonight at buttermilk? ;)

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Thursday, 30 March 2006 15:33 (eighteen years ago) link

Man Katie, back in my lower Park Slope (aka South Slope aka South Park aka Greenwood Heights aka EHODE as in East of the Home Depot days), Buttermilk was basically my neighborhood bar, just around the corner from where I lived. By home is Queens now, sigh. Someday I'll go back...

xhuxk, Thursday, 30 March 2006 15:59 (eighteen years ago) link

i really like their tuesday vinyl nights -- my bf lives down the street so whenever i'm in his hood we either go there or bar 4 (which has a good open mic night). you should make tonight your proud return. :)

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Thursday, 30 March 2006 16:05 (eighteen years ago) link

Rodeo Bar still happenin?

don, Thursday, 30 March 2006 19:34 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah, I was at actually at Rodeo Bar a few weeks ago and saw (by accident; basically I'd just been in the neighborhood and wandered in) another secret non-Little Willies Norah Jones side project whose name and sound I don't remember much about though if somebody jogged my memory I probably would. They covered lots of old standards by Hank Williams and "people like that" (not all country though), surprise surprise. Norah was one of the backup singers, and had a baseball cap on in a way that people in the audience had no idea it was her.

Anyway.

http://cdbaby.com/cd/tiffanyjoallen2

"Youngest to hit #1 on the Nashville Western Chart!", the cover says. Which is to say she hasn't even been a teenager very long. First song on her album. "Dear Carl," sounds great and wise and detailed and intense, and would have made more sense sung by somebody at least three times Tiffany Jo's age, but she pulls it off. (Unfortunately I listened to it a couple hours ago and can't remember per se' what exactly the details *are,* just that they're there.) Covers of "Blue Moon of Kentucky," "Louisiana Saturday Night" (hey maybe we should talk about Mel McDaniel, he was cool!), "Walkin After Midnight", and "Jambalaya" are well-chosen and done fine; "Living the Life of a Celebrity" seems not bad either. Seems a bit of a gyp that Tiffany Jo doesn't actually *yodel* til the eighth song, "Cowboy Sweetheart," and I'm happy when she finally does, but that's not to say I necessarily wish she yodeled more. "Hero In the Dark" is a sappy ballad that I could totally live without, about how everybody wants to change the world but the ones who do are ones who do it behind the scenes or whatever. Tiffany Jo's got vocal range many would die for I assume, and actually has a rich lower register, though sometimes when she drops down there I get the idea she's saying "Listen, I'm going to go into my rich and bluesy beyond my years lower register now, so watch out and prepare to be impressed." My intern Max just said she sounds like Leann Rimes; and he may well be right -- I've actually never paid attention to Leann's teen era stuff as much as her later dance stuff. (I've always assumed Leann got more interesting later; am I wrong?)

xhuxk, Friday, 31 March 2006 16:58 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah, when her Daddy was pulling the strings, more of a novelty act: "Look, Granpa, a little girl who sings like Patsy! And just so you won't get the wrong idea, you ol devil, now she's doing 'God Bless America!'" (But he may've also been the one who authorized some good dance mixes.)

don, Friday, 31 March 2006 17:42 (eighteen years ago) link

oops, this is the actual tiffany jo CD I have, not the other one:

http://cdbaby.com/cd/tiffanyjoallen1

xhuxk, Friday, 31 March 2006 17:49 (eighteen years ago) link

What I left out is that Tiffany Jo (in her celebrity song, I believe, and other places) seems to have more of a rockabilly bent than Leann and most other Nashvillians tend to. Which I appreciate. (Is that what makes her music "western," or just the yodeling and oldie covers?)

xhuxk, Saturday, 1 April 2006 19:42 (eighteen years ago) link

Now listening to the new Candi Staton album, *His Hands,* which both Don and Edd talked about a couple months back. A sound record, not a song record, near as I can tell - what do you want, it's on Astralwerks, right? Also as much a gospel record as a country or soul record, to my ears; as as gospel records go, not unplayable I guess. Decent ebb and flow, not much if anything to get excited about. "You Don't Have Very Far To Go," "How Do I Get Over You," and "Running Out of Love" make their presence felt more than most of the tracks, I guess, but I doubt I'll play this again unless somebody convinces me otherwise.

xhuxk, Sunday, 2 April 2006 13:56 (eighteen years ago) link

huh...so it turns out that who the sensibility that parts of tiffany jo's album (especially the sensibility of the opener "dear carl," where early-adolescent tiffany gets tired of washing her "husband"'s underwear and finds he's got a grey hair so she says "i'm young and pretty and i'm moving to the city" then signs the letter "your ex-wife" then her much older-sounding blues-talking husband comes in and watches the sky turn black and hears thunder crack then sees God who's white as a ghost and tells him he better buy a Maytag and learn to cook and take his young wife to a beauty salon or he's gonna leave her; but also to a somewhat lesser extent the rockabilly sensibility of "living the life of a celebrity" and "i love my guitar" and some of the covers especially "blue moon of kentucky" going from slow to fast) reminds me of is WHITE STRIPES. Interesting -- maybe even intentional?

xhuxk, Monday, 3 April 2006 13:11 (eighteen years ago) link

I like folky busker Tim Easton's new one, Ammunition: it's a very modest record, a word record for sure, music mostly there in his more-alert J.J. Cale-ish or maybe younger Priney voice (if Prine had survived throat cancer at 25), but the messages aren't boring. My favorite, " J.P.M.F.Y.F.", translates as Jesus Protect Me From Your Followers.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Monday, 3 April 2006 21:45 (eighteen years ago) link

Listening to the new Toby Keith (barely a week after I finally got his previous one), and holy shit it is sounding great. He split with DreamWorks, got Lari White (who put out her completely slept-on more-soul-than-country-and-it -said-so *Green Eyed Soul* on an indie label last year) (how many female producers are there in Nasvhille or anywhere else for that matter, especially producing macho men like Toby??), and she's filled it up with Dixieland horns and put *Dusty in Memphis*-style orchestrations here and there and she's emphasizing the laid-back *ease* Toby's always been capable of in his singing, and what you get is his most soul-music album ever, as far as far as I can tell. That laid-backedness might mean that some of the songs will detonate less on immediate impact the way his hits always have in the past, but they *sound* so good that they'll have no problem seeping in before long -- Toby's just a way more assured singer than Lari (or probably any other would-be Dusty this decade I could name), so this won't wind up just perty background music. "Note to Self" on now; sounds great. "Get Drunk and Be Somebody" is *less* laid-back, but almost in an old minstrel jazz kind of way; I can't place who it's reminding me of but I will -- one thing I *will* say though is that the way he says "BE somebody" makes me think he''s listened to Ol' Dirty Bastard at least once or twice. Damn, I'm going to be playing this a lot this summer. Could wind up being his best album, period, but I don't want to go out on limb. Right now, I'd say his best since *Unleashed* at least. (Though okay, I just noticed "Ain't No Right Way," partially written by Dean Dillon, which says ethics are black and white and seems to be anti-choice and anti-"people saying our kids aren't allowed to pray in school", what horseshit. So maybe I won''t wind up liking that one. Or maybe I will. With Toby you never know.) (And okay, "Brand New Bow" now, this is country jazz like Merle... what is that, a kazoo? Hoosier Hotshot revival in full force!) (Last song, about sex with an overweight girl, might also be iffy, but again, iffy in a country-jazzy way. Not sure if it's good-hearted yet.) (Last three songs are more of his "bus songs," I just noticed.)

Cool stuff happening at the bottom of the Billboard country songs chart this week:
#58) Hot Apple Pie, "Easy Does It," their Lionel Richie imitation
#59) Ronnie Milsap, "Local Girls," not a Graham Parker cover apparently but Billboard says "tropical flavored" and his first chart spot in six years. I haven't heard it, but I'm guessing I might like this. I should really investigate Ronnie someday -- he's another one of those soul-music-as-country guys. Always loved his "Any Day Now".
#60) Carrie Underwood, "Before He Cheats", her punk rock revenge song!
#61) Cledus T. Judd parody of Three-6 Maffia's current hit, on how soul food is an excellent fiber source: "Ever Since I Could Remember I Been Poopin' my Collards." Okay, I just made that one up. Sorry.

I wonder how much those Hot Apple Pie and Carrie songs are getting radio-played. More promising titles: "The Seashores of Old Mexico" George Strait #21, "If You're Going Through Hell (Before the Devil Even Knows)" Rodney Atkins #32, "Chicken Fried" the Lost Trailers #52. Anybody heard any of these? And who are the Lost Trailers, anyway?


xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 12:15 (eighteen years ago) link

http://cdbaby.com/cd/kidmans

OK, I want FRANK to listen to this one and figure it out. Are you out there, Frank? Three harmonizing Christian sisters who seem to want to look like the Dixie Chicks, all majoring in music at the University of Arizona, none of whom EVER seem to smile in any of their pictures. The first SEVEN (out of ten) songs on their album, including their uncharacteristically (at least comparatively) upbeat cover of "Ticket to Ride", all seem to be breakup songs. The first few, especially, strike me as very very dark, not to mention souped up with tons of Jim Steinman doing Bonnie Tyler melodrama. Opener "You're All I See" is the most over-the-top bombastic of all, but the close triple harmonies in it (is this a classical-training thing? a puritan Protestant church choir thing?) come off to me almost like some *Saturday Night Live* EZ-listening skit making fun of middle-aged ladies and their square square music, and its words are about going insane and feeling like you're locked in a cage in the heat of the desert, and after a stab at Spanish guitars, at the end the harmonies climb toward an almost operatic climax. Second song, right off the bat, concerns a disabled person and a suicide, so even darker, and though angels save the day they don't make the song any more cheerful. Next few songs are almost as dour, though "Marble Rain" seems to have a little bit of Stylistics or something in its melody, and the mood picks up a little for "Ticket to Ride" then the quite poppy "Between the Lines," which are still breakup songs nonetheless as far as I can tell, so by then you're wondering if they all broke up with the same guy (Jesus, maybe??); either way, they've got issues and they seem to want us to know it. Finally track 8 "Arizona Sunsets" is about finding an escape from climbing the ladder of success to the glass ceiling (they actually say "ceiling"), and the album closest with its funkiest track, a cover of Stevie Wonder's "I Just Called to Say I Love You" which, like the Beatles cover, is forgettable but not bad. Their cdbaby page seems to suggest they self-identify as country (where else would they find an audience these days?), but I honestly don't hear much country here. And I honestly don't LIKE it much, but I'm still kind of in awe -- especially of that first song, which strikes me as fairly ridiculous, but also fully audacious in a way that I may not quite be getting.

xhuck, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 17:15 (eighteen years ago) link

Oops, Arizona State Universiry not "U of A" (does anybody call it that?)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 17:17 (eighteen years ago) link

and ok, on their actual website, they do smile sometimes. but the photos where they really look sad or pissed-off definitely get priority.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 18:14 (eighteen years ago) link

the four new songs on tim mcgraw's *greatest hits vol. 2* seem okay, but not great. the ryan adams cover, "when the stars go blue," is probably my favorite of the bunch; it's really pretty, and i'm guessing tim (who i bet sings it better than ryan does, but i don't remember ever hearing ryan's version so who knows?) likes the song for same reason he liked "tiny dancer," whatever that is. "my little girl" hits my heart a little since i'm the dad of a daughter big deal, but it's another one of those dorky songs that will piss frank off since it rests on the assumption that tim's daughter will definitely want to grow up to get married, and to a (gag) "man's man" no less. "i've got friends that do" is do-gooder "i'm not a junkie or in prison or poor or jesus but i can sort of empathize with them a little so i won't judge them" sap, slightly soft-rocked, who cares. "beautiful people" (as in here is the church and here is the steeple open the doors etc etc etc) is neglible (though better than the marilyn manson version.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 19:35 (eighteen years ago) link

>You're All I See"... words are about going insane and feeling like you're locked in a cage in the heat of the desert<

..'cause you're haunted by the memory of the dude you just broke up with, and no matter what you do you can't shake the obsession (i meant to say.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 20:36 (eighteen years ago) link

the most over-the-top bombastic of all, but the close triple harmonies in it (is this a classical-training thing? a puritan Protestant church choir thing?)

Sounds to me like an Auto-Tune thing. It's kinda hard to tell though over the net, but the harmonies have that flattened out quality. That's not necessarily a bad thing, I guess, but I'm not sure it's so good either. I like the version of "Ticket to Ride" though.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 21:15 (eighteen years ago) link

I think it's interesting how the country audience has moved from being primarily poor, rural, whites, to largely urban grups.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 22:00 (eighteen years ago) link

[MOD NOTE -- the below is not an actual quote from sara evans, but a tasteless parody.] "We know your husbands are dead, but here's a song to help you widows
remember the good times, when they would get home from work and you would make dirty love with them till it was time for 'em to get up and go to work again. You
did all do that, right?" -- Sara Evans dedicating "Coalmine" to an audience in West Virginia

Her intentions are admirable, but the sign outside her mind reads Vacancy.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 23:15 (eighteen years ago) link

Oops, that was my bad. Sara didn't say that. It was a parody, and my mind is vacant enough tonight that I didn't get the satire. Anybody know how to get in touch with a mod to have them delete that post?

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Tuesday, 4 April 2006 23:30 (eighteen years ago) link

>There is a female country singer named "Bomshel" (as in bombshell, apparently) who has a debut album coming out on Curb this year<

..and her single "country music love song" just entered the country chart at #59. (i got 2 billboards in the mail in the 2 days! hot apple pie as lionel now up to 54, carrie underwear i mean underwood keying cars up to 57, milsap down to 60). but i want to hear bomshel!)

xhuxk, Wednesday, 5 April 2006 00:48 (eighteen years ago) link

i havent heard coalmine yet, i need to hear more chart, go thru the chart again.

god is nashville star boring

anthony easton (anthony), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 04:57 (eighteen years ago) link

So not that anybody cares, but the context for my faux pas above is the following press release, which is genuine:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 4, 2006

SARA EVANS AND WRITERS OF NEW SINGLE “COALMINE” BAND TOGETHER WITH RECORD
LABEL AND PUBLISHERS TO AID WEST VIRGINIA FAMILIES

April 4, 2006 -- Multi-platinum country superstar Sara Evans has joined
forces with her record label, RCA Records; writers Ron Harbin, Richie McDonald and
Roxie Dean; and publishers Harbinism.com Music, Sony/ATV Music Publishing and
Zomba Music Publishing to donate a portion of the proceeds from with her new
single “Coalmine” to a life needs/education fund for the families of the Sego
mine disaster in West Virginia.

Evans, currently on tour with label mate Brad Paisley, recently performed in
Morgantown, WV where they invited the families of the Sego mine disaster to
attend a special reception followed by the concert. Having spent time with
these families, Evans was moved by their strength and decided that she wanted to
find a way to contribute.

"It is truly a blessing that because of this song, so many different people
are able to come together to contribute to these families who have been through
so much," said Sara Evans.

The songwriters of “Coalmine,” Ron Harbin, Richie McDonald and Roxie Dean,
were also watching and reading about the Sego disaster and began to look for a
way to help out. Upon hearing that “Coalmine” would be the next single from
Evans’ album Real Fine Place, they contacted Evans’ management and record
label stating that they would like to donate a portion of the proceeds from this
record to the West Virginia families. RCA Records, Harbinism.com Music,
Sony/ATV Music Publishing and Zomba Music Publishing, a division of BMG Music
Publishing, were immediately on board to contribute as well.

“Ron, Roxie and I were saddened as we watched the news in West Virginia
unfold,” commented Richie McDonald. “When our song was chosen as the next single
for Sara Evans, we immediately knew that this was our chance to help make a
difference for these families who have been through so much.”

Working with West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin’s office, a foundation was
identified that will help the families with everyday needs as well as lend
assistance with their children’s education. Anyone who would like to make a
personal contribution can do so by purchasing a commercial digital download of
“Coalmine” available at iTunes, Walmart Digital Downloads, Napster, Real/Rhapsody,
MusicMatch, Microsoft, SonyConnect and Y! Music. A portion of the proceeds
from all digital downloads will contribute to the fund.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 15:06 (eighteen years ago) link

tim mcgraw sounds like a robot singing "stars go blue" -- no surprise considering the amount of reverb and effects applied to his vocals. adams' voice was very pretty-boy on the original. i think julianna raye sang harmonies on it, it was delicious.

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 16:05 (eighteen years ago) link

is there a weird disney pinochio ref in the first lines of that song? and i really like it, i just dont know why

anthony, Wednesday, 5 April 2006 17:01 (eighteen years ago) link

I need to get the new Toby album. In the mean time, I'll keep listening to this new James Hunter record on Rounder. I don't think I've ever heard this guy before, though I guess he's been around since the '80s. British neo-Sun r&b guy, voice like Charlie Rich, some flash-it-back-and-hold-it guitar slinging, rockabilly and ska and Hoodoo Man Blues rhythms, and a lot of really good songs, all originals I think.

Roy Kasten (Roy Kasten), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 18:35 (eighteen years ago) link

james hunter puts on a good show.

anthony, are you refering to the wooden shoes bit?

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 18:51 (eighteen years ago) link

from rolling metal:

http://cdbaby.com/cd/lucasmccain

Lucas McCain, *New Horizon,* yet another excellent cdbaby Southern rock/country-metal album (from Georgia this time) nobody's gonna care about but me and George, though others should. 2006 copyright, too! Anyway, a brief rundown: "New Horizon" (Skynyrdesque gimme-three-steps boogie woogie, they totally know how to dance), "Long Hot Summer Night" (Mellencamp/Adams '80s-style words, riff somewhere between "Run to You" and "Money for Nothing" but heavier + more boogiefied), Home On their Minds" (lament honoring the troops, hoping for peace in a strange land with death all around them), "Gimme Some of That" (funky rock namedropping Bocephus and Skynyrd and saying no-sell-out and we miss that old time rock and roll it's the music that saves our soul), "One Bad Love (Don't Make It Bad)" (divorce lament suggesting, no kidding, John Conlee leading the Marshall Tucker Band), "Does Anybody Care" (gutbust lament where the vocal verges into Eddie Vedder territory though that's just 'cause, as I believe Frank Kogan observed in *Radio On* many years ago, Vedder sang like David Clayton-Thomas; beautiful twin-guitar ending), "Concrete Cowboy" (Charlie Daniels doing "Legend of Wooley Swamp"-style rapneck), "Working on Tomorrow" (riff recalling Eddie Money's "I Think I'm in Love" only heavier.) And there's a couple other songs too (and many other lovely guitar parts).

I also love that they've opened for both Mother's Finest and the Kentucky Headhunters, that's very cool.

xhuxk, Wednesday, 5 April 2006 19:42 (eighteen years ago) link

speaking of bocephus, he is now on the country singles chart at #44, with a song called "that's how we do it in dixie" in which he is allegedly (i haven't heard it) joined by gretchen wilson, van zant, and big & rich, the latter pair of whom scored with a big hit single last year protesting physical assaults of the womenfolk. hmmmm:

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0404061_hank_williams_1.html

xhuxk, Wednesday, 5 April 2006 21:40 (eighteen years ago) link

Interesting Kelefa review in the *Times* this morning of the new Toby Keith album. He likes it, but as frustratingly seems increasingly to be the case with the Kelefa, he seems to be reviewing the lyric sheet much more than the music. A shame, since the music on this one is what makes it great, I think; I wonder of Kelefa has noticed how *different* for Toby it sounds. He does catch some things I didn't, though -- for instance, that the thing with a big bow tied around it in Toby's new birthday song might be part of Toby's body...Anyway, as I said before, that's supposed to be one of Toby's "bus songs"; i.e., they're songs that his band sings on the bus, not meant for the radio. Just for fun, or whatever. Which obviously is something Toby uses as a trap door -- if you're not amused by, say, the song about sexing up the fat girl, you're just taking it too seriously. He doesn't put these on every album -- I'd have to go back and check, but I recall that he definitely did it on *Shock 'n' Y'all,*, with the "Ahab the Arab"-style song from the point of view of the Middle Eastern guy fleeing the Taliban and the one about smoking dope with Willie. Toby pretends these aren't part of the "real" album, though of course they really ARE (just like all so-called CD "bonus tracks" these days). So he can get away with stuff he otherwise couldn't, novelties and stuff. Not surprisingly, they're frequently among his more lively tracks.

Australian Angel City fan Leanne Kingwell's "More" (not nearly one of her most rocking songs, but still) is allegedly getting played on terrestrial country stations in Stillwater, OK (KGFY) and Sheridan, WY (KYTI), not to mention Internet stations LexCountry out of Lexington KY and USA Radio Country out of Eagle, ID. I mentioned her cdbaby album, which I love, on the metal and teen-pop threads, but oddly did not think to mention it here. So I'm gonna cut and paste in a sec.

xhuxk, Thursday, 6 April 2006 12:02 (eighteen years ago) link

here goes:

so, stop the presses, this album from australia is what avril and kelly (and uh, maybe even ashlee and skye and hope) *should* sound like. which is to say, like the first-album divinyls except less arty and more consistently catchy and funny and sexy, often (in "you stink" and the great and hilarious and furious cheated-on-revenge single "holding your gun" for instance) doing a fast mott the hoople (or angel city?) boogie-woogie hard rock under thick guitar buzz. the *gun* EP threw me at first because it opens with leanne kingwell (that's her name, remember it) doing two power ballads (one of them apparently a cover, since it's credited to john watts and the lyrics aren't in the lyric booklet of the album) with prim and proper aussie pronunciation like for instance pronouncing "france" "frontz", but in the course of the album (now called *show ya what,* which seems to be mostly a reissue of the 2005 album that's up on cdbaby, with "holding your gun" replacing "back to me" and the track order shuffled) the ballads make way more sense, partially by being less plentiful...and okay, i also just noticed that the track "be with you" is credited to brewster/brewster/neeson, which means i was RIGHT about the angel city comparison. "blind" is credited to one james stewart; the rest are kingwell herself. "drop your pants" starts out like "hey little girl" by the syndicate of sound (which the divinyls covered), then gets tougher and thicker, like the sonics, but the effect isn't '60s garage rock nostalgia at all, probably because leann's vocals (basically, she sings a lot like christina amphlett at her most rocking) are the most powerful element in the mix. and also maybe as a tribute to christina, in "my hero" she touches herself. with her vibrator. which is better than you. predicton (probably premature, but who cares, what else is new with me): *show ya what* could wind up being one of the best albums of 2006; "holding your gun" might be one of the best singles.

http://cdbaby.com/cd/kingwell

http://cdbaby.com/cd/kingwell2

-- xhuxk (xedd...), March 28th, 2006.

okay, didn't notice these; she's even cooler than i thought:

>"I saw The Angels gig at the Palace in 2000 and it absolutely knocked me out. I was one of a dozen girls in a room of about 1500 guys who just went off and knew the words to every song. That gig got me thinking about how to create some kick arse rock n' roll that girls would dig as much as guys."<

>A four track EP featuring a cover of Fischer Z's 1980 smash "So Long" plus 2 originals.<

and yeah (as reviews on those pages say) i definitely hear the easybeats and suzi quatro in there, too.

-- xhuxkx (xedd...), March 28th, 2006.

xhuxk, Thursday, 6 April 2006 12:06 (eighteen years ago) link

Or uh (listening to Toby again), maybe the reason Kelefa didn't talk about the music being such a departure is because the music is NOT as much of a departure as I suggest above? I dunno. Now all the parts that *aren't* more soul or jazz than Toby's been before are jumping out at me (and, to be honest, it's not like even the jazziness, where it exists, is entirely new; he did that on *Shock n Y'all* some too, as I recall.) Still loving a lot of it, though "Ain't No Right Way" is offending me as much for the soggy-dish-rag-ness of its sound as the soggy-dish-rag-ness of its politics now. "Runnin' Block," the song about the chubby girl, is actually about playing the wing man for a buddy, still not sure what I think of it overall beyond its moral assholitude, but I actually really like the sound of its chorus, which reminds of something from the '70s and which always confuses me into thinking it's about football (which maybe it is, sort of). Something in its jazzy storytelling also somehow brings to mind Tom T Hall, and I think there are other moments on here when I think of Hall too. (He could be as jazzy as Merle, actually--and in a Dixieland minstrel way. Also as good natured as any songwriter ever; no wonder Jimmy Carter was his pal. Though his sense of ethics clearly put Toby's to shame.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 6 April 2006 14:37 (eighteen years ago) link

> He doesn't put these on every album -- I'd have to go back and check<

On the cover the new CD the last three songs are called "Bus Songs Session #2," so yeah, I guess this is the only time he's done it besides *Shock N Y'all.* And I meant to steal Frank's "escape hatch" metaphor in regards to these, not his "trap door" metaphor. Though I guess it's more honest than coming up with an entirely different alter ego, like David Allan Coe and Clarence Reid have done. (Not that Toby has ever done anything approaching the outrageousness of those guys' sideline stuff.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 6 April 2006 15:20 (eighteen years ago) link

the wooden shoes, and isnt their a song on the pinnocho soundtrack that features blue stars?

anthony easton (anthony), Thursday, 6 April 2006 18:25 (eighteen years ago) link

did anyone hear the tim mcgraw special yesterday?

an unrelated amusing anecdote
hes also working w. bochephus, and lives in the old hank/audery home--which apparently is civil war old, so hank jr and tim mcgraw try to figure out which bullet holes are "civl war or hank/audrey war'

anthony easton (anthony), Thursday, 6 April 2006 18:27 (eighteen years ago) link

if i remember correctly, there's a blue fairy pinnochio's tale, but no blue stars.

don -- cute lil ashley monroe came into the office yesterday. has the sharp nuance of dolly. she's 19 and i really wanted to hate her but could not.

katie, a princess (katie, a princess), Thursday, 6 April 2006 18:58 (eighteen years ago) link

#61) Cledus T. Judd parody of Three-6 Maffia's current hit, on how soul food is an excellent fiber source: "Ever Since I Could Remember I Been Poopin' my Collards." Okay, I just made that one up. Sorry.

WHY OH WHY CAN'T THIS BE TRUE.

random thoughts/questions:

Saw Sara Evans on the CMT countdown show talking about meeting with the miners' wives and it was pretty vacant. Why is she such a terrible judge of her own music lately? I want "Bible Song" and "New Hometown" as singles.

I just listened to the new Shooter Jennings for the first time and thought it sounded pretty terrible. Do I need to give it another chance or can I safely file it away?

I weep at my inability to keep up with this thread.

(And M@tt -- you know I was country when country wasn't cool!)

chris herrington (chris herrington), Thursday, 6 April 2006 20:17 (eighteen years ago) link

I, too, would like more info on the Shooter Jennings album please. I haven't heard any of it. (Xhuxk, what says you?)

Je4nn3 ƒur¥ (Je4nne Fury), Thursday, 6 April 2006 20:23 (eighteen years ago) link

"Electric Rodeo," first song on the Shooter Jennings, bluesy rock about travelin' on the road. "All I know is the guitar and the bottle." Disappointing actually, not because there's anything inherently wrong with it but because there's absolutely no surprise in it. As it goes on the song seems to kick harder for me, though maybe that's owing to my absorbing its kick.

Je4nn3, I wish you'd visit the teenpop thread more often.

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Thursday, 6 April 2006 20:35 (eighteen years ago) link

Okay Frank! I will. (I like the new Aly & AJ song kind of a lot.)

Je4nn3 ƒur¥ (Je4nne Fury), Thursday, 6 April 2006 20:41 (eighteen years ago) link


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