Monday, October 20, 2025

Boz Scaggs Detour 2025

Boz Scaggs has been here before, and the results are always excellent in a very mellow, laid-back jazz way. But Beautiful 2003 and Speak Low 2008 were both fine late night jazz entrees, and this one is at least the equal of those outings.

Accompanied by a jazz piano trio, Scaggs sings everything with sensitivity and nuance normally reserved for the finest jazz vocalists. If you heard the two mentioned above, you already know that he can deliver jazz vocals as fine as everything else he does in soul, blues, and rock.

Song selection is a lovely dip into the great American songbook and features some songs that not everyone has recorded, at least not recently. There are familiar tunes (The Meaning of the Blues, The Very Thought of You, Angel Eyes) and there are less familiar ones (Detour Ahead, Once I Loved, Too Late Now) that set this collection apart from and above the usual jazz standards collection and makes it sound more interesting than dragging out only the oft-covered songs. In addition to the jazz there are two lovely surprises. Allen Toussaint's It's Raining opens the record, and the rendition is stellar in a quiet way. Scaggs' own I'll Be Long Gone from 1969 is included in an interesting arrangement that is lovely. 

Two things make this record special. One is Scaggs' voice, and the phrasing he has so clearly developed for jazz. The other is pianist Seth Asarnow, whose playing and arranging are sensitive and deft. 

Since 1969 Boz Scaggs has made nineteen records, and there isn't anything close to a disappointment in the catalog. Make that twenty.

Monday, October 13, 2025

Martha Velez Escape From Babylon 1976

Martha Velez acted on the stage in the sixties, and in movies and TV throughout the eighties and nineties. Her voice is big and brassy, and must have been effective from the stage.

Velez's first recordings were with the folk group Gaslight Singers in 1963-64. Her debut solo record, the bluesy Fiends and Angels in 1969, which featured a cast of famous musicians, failed to be her big break. It's a good record, and well worth a listen. She recorded three other stylistically eclectic records in the seventies that went mostly neglected. 

In 1976 Martha Velez went to Jamaica to record a reggae record with Bob Marley producing and The Wailers providing instrumental and backup vocal support. It sounds nothing like anything Velez did before or after. It is also the only record Bob Marley produced for another artist.

Money Man opens the record and the Velez/Wailers combo sounds good on a Velez original that might not be the best fit for a reggae version, but it mostly works. There You Are follows, and it is an excellent take on a Marley original. Wild Bird, another Velez-written tune is an odd folk melody for reggae, but it works and benefits greatly from the I-Threes and a fine Velez vocal. The side closes with Disco Night, featuring less than stellar lyrics, but a strong performance and swell horns from the Zap Pow Horns.

Side two kicks things up a notch. Marley's Bend Down Low is a good fit for Velez, and again the stellar Wailers and I-Threes produce a song worthy of any good reggae mix tape. Happiness repeats the formula again for a hit. Another Velez tune, Come On In, is a blast. It sounds like a Marley written song, and is strong vocal from Velez. The record ends with a cover of Marley and Peter Tosh's Get Up, Stand Up. Velez does a fine job, even if it can't improve on Marley's version, or the definitive version from Tosh's Equal Rights

The record is just 31 minutes long, and then it's over. Side two is perfect.

Monday, October 6, 2025

Album Art

The stereo rack sits in the corner of the living room. Above it in the corner are two framed album covers. In this picture, it's Kim Richie's Rise and The Honeydogs' Love and Cannibalism. They worked together because the colors are similar and they are both collage designs. The selections change frequently. Usually there's a theme.

Like highways. That's the back cover of Jimmy Buffet's A1A and Tower of Power's Back to Oakland
Or Blue. Kenny Burrell's Midnight Blue and Joni Mitchell's Blue.
Or love. Stacy Kent's In Love Again and Nat King Cole's Love Is the Thing.
Or paintings with animals. Dylan's painting from the cover of The Band's Music From Big Pink and Calexico with Iron and Wine's In The Reins
Here's Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon with Billy Cobham's Spectrum
These two work nicely with the color of the wall. Donovan's Barabajagal and Ten Years After's Cricklewood Green. They are both from the same time period, and they are great records.
OK, breasts. I don't think these stayed up all that log. The Rondstadt is my favorite of her records, and the Marilyn Monroe is better than you'd think. It includes her famous Happy Birthday, Mr. President as well as songs she sang in movies, such as Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend. The cover is the gatefold picture she did for Playboy magazine. I'm guessing it sold well.

And then there's the Christmas season. I don't own all that many holiday records, but I have these two combos that I rotate year-to-year.
John Fahey's Christmas Guitar is a very lovely record. The Bolshoi Theater Orchestra's Nutcracker is a classic recording, and good, but there are better versions of the material. Perfect cover though.
Diana Krall's Christmas Songs and Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings' It's A Holiday Soul Party. Both are fun holiday covers, and also happen to be fabulous music.

And there we have it. There's a bunch of combos I didn't remember when I was taking the pictures, so maybe I'll return to this later, or I'll do it when I'm discussing two different records. If I leave anything up too long, the director of home decor keeps me updating fairly regularly.

Saturday, September 27, 2025

Maria Muldaur One Hour Mama: The Blues of Victoria Spivey 2025

Maria Muldaur had a big hit in 1974 with Midnight at the Oasis. The eponymous debut it came from featured blues, country, folk, and pop stylings. She made several others with similarly varied styles, but none of them met with the success of the debut, and nothing charted after 1978. Well, unless you count the US Blues chart, where she's placed 10 records in the top 15 since 1996. One of them, Heart of Mine: Maria Muldaur Sings Love Songs of Bob Dylan was #1 in 2006. Since her debut she's made some 37 mostly blues records.

Victoria Spivey was a blues singer, songwriter, and actor. She made a series of singles in the 20s and 30s, and sang in musical theatre throughout the 40s. She returned to blues in the sixties, both as a recording artist and also as a record company owner.  

On One Hour Mama, Muldaur puts on her best sultry voice to cover a dozen of Spivey's excellent compositions. Musical backing is provided by wonderful New Orleans styled jazz bands, and the arrangements capture the rhythmic swing the style is famous for. There's plenty of great playing. Taj Mahal and Elvin Bishop make cameo appearances. 

If you've kept up with Maria Muldaur, you know she never stopped making solid records. If not, now would be an excellent time to catch up. 

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Ricky Byrd NYC Made 2025

 
Ricky Byrd has been around the block a few times. Lead guitar, backup vocals, and songwriting with Joan Jett's Blackhearts for more than ten years. He's in the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame. Touring and/or recording guitarist with Roger Daltry and Ian Hunter, and at least 25 other artists you're familiar with. He's made four previous solo records. So, a journeyman with a deep resume and plenty of talent. He can sing. 

It's a message record. The message is rock hard and have fun.

Songs are consistently strong. He wrote all of the songs, one a co-write with Southside Johnny Lyons. (Ya Get) 1 Life kicks things off with a reminder to get the most out of it. Glamdemic Blues is a tribute of sorts to Queen and glam rockers. Rhapsody in Blues (One For Jeff) is a fine instrumental in Jeff Beck fashion. Sweet Byrd of Youte and Transistor Radio Childhood dig a nostalgic groove. Alien asks what Bowie's Starman might think of our messy planet. Rock ‘n’ Roll’s Demise (Has Been Greatly Exaggerated) is what it sounds like. Then Along Comes You, Anna Lee, and Best of Times are sweet (rocking) love songs. Nothing deep, and nothing trite.

Music is terrific. Arrangements are varied and dynamic. He's got an A-list team of musicians helping him out. The recording is very good. Lots of hot guitar, hooks for the choruses, gang backup vocals, Uptown Horns on a couple. Bass, drums and keys are all killer, staffed as they are by fellow professional ace musicians. Byrd's vocals are out front, and you can hear what he has to say.

Bryd lists his inspirations as Raspberries, Stones, Yardbirds, The Who and Sam Cooke. This record sounds like that in a blender. There's a lot of sub-genres of Rock 'n' Roll these days. This one is the original, straight up. I know, it's only rock 'n' roll, but I like it.

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Have A Nice Decade: The '70s Pop Culture Box 1998

Here's another in my mission to discuss my collection of box sets. This is another Rhino product, and it is excellent, so long as you want to hear this stuff again. The set consists of seven jam-packed CDs, with 160 songs arranged chronologically from January 1970 with Edison Lighthouse's Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes) to April 1979 and McFadden and Whitehead's Ain't No Stopping Us Now.

The set features songs immediately recognizable from '70s commercial radio. That means there are songs in multiple genres, including Rock, Soul, Funk, Disco, Singer-Songwriter, and Pop, including quite a few cringe-worthy tunes. The only thing missing is Country music, with the exception of a few crossover hits. These are not deep cuts- everything here was a radio hit, at least top twenty on one of several possible charts. Many selections represent one-hit-wonders like Starland Vocal Band, The 5 Stairsteps, Gallery, Paper Lace, Five Man Electrical Band, and Jigsaw. The chronological presentation makes for a nice exploration of how music evolved (not much really) during the '70s. 

The set comes with a very good 89-page book that includes a couple of good essays, one of which, The Tackiest Decade in the History of Civilization, makes a strong case for it's premise. The book also includes a short blurb about each song, and plenty of pictures of artists and pop trivia. It is a fine package as these things go.

Rock: American Woman (The Guess Who), Rock And Roll Part 2 (Gary Glitter), Radar Love (Golden Earring). Soul: Have You Seen Her (Chi-Lites), Sir Duke (Stevie Wonder), Let's Stay Together (Al Green). Funk: The Payback Part 1 (James Brown), Theme From Shaft (Isaac Hayes), Tear The Roof Off The Sucker (Parliment). Disco: We Are Family (Sister Sledge), I'm Gonna Love You Just A Little More Baby (Barry White), Disco Inferno (The Trammps). Singer-Songwriter: Fire and Rain (James Taylor), Sometimes When We Touch (Dan Hill), Wild World (Cat Stevens). Pop: You're So Vain (Carly Simon), Chick-A-Boom (Daddy Dewdrop), The Morning After (Maureen McGovern). 

If you're interested in just how eclectic the tracks are, it is probably easier to just take a look at the track listing at Discogs. The crazy thing was that you could easily hear any of these songs back-to-back on the same radio station in the '70s, before stations started specializing in only one genre. It's probably not one you'll sit and listen to repeatedly, but it's a great source for several '70s playlists, and a fine example of reissue programming.

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Dwight Yoakam Dwight Sings Buck 2007

And why not? Buck Owens is and has always been the primary influence on Dwight Yoakam. It's hard to imaging anyone else doing a better job of covering Buck Owens' songs, although Vince Gill and Paul Franklin did a great job on Bakersfield 2013 in tribute to both Buck Owens and Merle Haggard. In fact, if you like this, that would be a great one to pick up next.

Yoakam generally does these great songs true to the original arrangements. Even some of the pedal steel guitar leads are lifted directly off the original Buckeroos recordings. And why not? Buck's originals are some of the best country music of the sixties and seventies, especially when Nashville was adding strings and "fancy" arrangements to many country hits of the day. In fact, it is in rebellion against that slick Nashville sound that Owens and Haggard staked their claim to a more basic, more direct sound, which came to be known as the Bakersfield sound.

So what is different between this and listening to Owens' originals? Well, the recording is fuller and more modern, with more bass, than the somewhat thinner sound on Buck's originals. And Yoakam has a different voice than Owens, less reedy, a little deeper, and with even more twang and that hiccup thing Yoakam does. But that's about it. The band here is exactly the way the Buckeroos were staffed. Yoakam's acoustic rhythm, Josh Grange on pedal steel, Kevin Smith on bass, Mitch Marine on drums, and the excellent Eddie Perez on lead guitar and harmony vocals (filling the big shoes of Don Rich from the Buckeroos). Bobbye Hall plays some additional percussion. 

Every song is a winner. Buck wrote most of them himself, and the rest are carefully chosen songs that fit right into Buck's style, like Act Naturally and Close Up The Honky Tonks.

Buck Owens' fans with large collections might not need this, unless they also happen to like Yoakam. And why not? Dwight Yoakam fans should own this so they can understand what inspired his work. Plus, as Yoakam records go, this one has nothing but good songs on it, not unlike This Time. A+, five stars.