Monday, January 27, 2025

Todd Snider Trouble 1994

Todd Snider is a brilliant and successful songwriter and performer who can pen humorous songs as well as heartbreak and serious social commentary. His snarky satire is almost always spot on. He's been cranking out solid, critically acclaimed records for 30 years. Sometimes there's a band, sometimes it's just him and a guitar.

From his 1994 debut Songs for the Daily Planet, here's Todd with one of my favorite cheatin' songs, with the prefect line "A woman like you walks into a place like this, You can almost hear the promises break".

You're gonna get me into trouble
I knew it right off the bat
You're gonna get me into trouble
If you keep lookin' like that

Well, I may be alone, but there's someone at home
I just know I'm makin' a mistake
A woman like you walks in a place like this
You can almost hear the promises break

You're gonna make me need an alibi
You're gonna make me have to watch my back
You're gonna make me have to tell a bunch of lies
You're gonna make me have to cover my tracks

Well, I told her I wouldn't, I thought I couldn't
Now I'm so ashamed
When I look at you, that's all that I can do
To think about what's-her-name

You're gonna get me into trouble
I knew it right off the bat
You're gonna get me in trouble
If you keep lookin' like that

Don't look like that, baby...no, no, no, no

You're gonna mix my emotions
And you're gonna tangle my net
You're gonna make me do somethin'
That I'm afraid I won't regret

I may be alone, but there's someone at home
I just know I'm makin' a mistake
A woman like you walks in a place like this
You can almost hear the promises break

You're gonna get me in trouble
You're gonna get me into trouble
You know you're gonna get me, you know you're gonna get me,
You know you're gonna get me in trouble, now don't ya?

Lonnie Mack The Wham of That Memphis Man! 1963

Like there could actually be someone who invented blues/rock guitar soloing. Well, if anyone should get credit for such an honor, it's Lonnie Mack. His debut album from 1963 shows off his impressive skills both on guitar and as a fine soul singer. 

Instrumentals Wham!, Memphis, Bounce, Down and Out, Down in the Dumps, and Susie-Q all feature killer, absolutely super hot guitar. And not just a phrase here or there, but extended solos. Hot licks on Baby What's Wrong and Why, coupled with Mack's blue-eyed soul vocals make for some genuinely rocking soul/blues. Where There's A Will, Satisfied, and I'll Keep You Happy all feature his impressive vocals as well as fine saxophone solos. There isn't a weak track.

Guitar really wasn't played this way before Mack did it. Ok, there were the Ventures, Duane Eddy, Dick Dale, and other rock instrumentalists, and plenty of guitar solos by guys like Ike Turner and James Burton, but the blending of blues and rock in more than four-bar, extended solos was unique to Mack. Not only his guitar, but his soulful singing put him in a category with very few white singers.

That's why Jimmy Guterman in his 1992 book The Best Rock 'N' Roll Records of All Time put this record at number 16. Admittedly Guterman's is an unusual and somewhat controversial list, but this record clearly deserves more praise than it typically receives, and it's a pure joy to hear.

The list of accolades on the Lonnie Mack Wikipedia entry is impressive. I like this quote from Duane Allman, "Now, [in 1963], there was a popular song on the radio called 'Memphis'—an instrumental by Lonnie Mack. It was the best guitar-playing I'd ever heard. All the guitar-players were [saying] 'How could anyone ever play that good? That's the new bar. That's how good you have to be now."

Monday, January 20, 2025

Nick Lowe Indoor Safari 2024

Nick Lowe made four excellent "crooning" records between 1998 and 2011. They were fine outings each one, and established a distinguished late career revival. Lowe toured these records mostly solo and those shows were killer, and of course he did a few of his earlier hits as well. In 2013 he made the unusually good holiday record Quality Street: A Seasonal Selection for All the Family. When he toured the record he began his association with Los Straightjackets, and a live album from the tour was released in 2015. There was also a hot live record (download only) Live at the Haw River Ballroom in 2020, again with Los Straightjackets. It is super good. Check it out.

Los Straightjackets have returned Lowe to some of the rockabilly of his early outfit Rockpile, and they can play just about any style. Eddie Angel is a wonderful guitar player and Chris Sprague stands out behind the drum kit. They have brought back the rocking to Lowe's performances. It's not the basher of old, but there's energy that those 1998-2011 records lacked. 

Between 2018-2020, most of the songs on Indoor Safari were released as singles and EPs. There's only two songs here that haven't been previously released in some form, but most have been newly rerecorded for this record. And what a swell record it is. Lowe is still in laid back mode, but with Los Straightjackets things are going to rock, and that they do. Lowe has written a bunch of great songs, as usual, with good melodies and hooky chorusses, and his singing is his not-so-secret weapon. There's only one slow ballad, the lovely Different Kind of Blue, and the rest swings and pops and rocks.

Standouts include Raincoat In The River, an old Ricky Nelson song, and Bert Bacharach and Hal David's Blue On Blue, first recorded by Bobby Vinton in 1963. Lowe's humorous Went To A Party, sad Love Starvation, the bad girl can't be resisted Jet Pack Boomerang, and rockabilly Toyko Bay are highlights. An unusually happy Lay It On Me, the lyrical twist of Don't Be Nice To Me, and especially the play that sad song one more time of Trombone show Lowe working his talented pen, and Los Straightjackets keeping the backbeat coming. There isn't a clunker in the set. Every Eddie Hazel lead guitar break is perfect. 

Lowe has never made any bad records, and since the career standout The Impossible Bird in 1994, he's been on a thirty-year hot streak. 

Monday, January 13, 2025

Kirsty MacColl Titanic Days 1993, Free World 2023

Great news for vinyl lovers. For Record Store Day 2024, Kirsty MacColl's Titanic Days was reissued on (green, not that it matters) vinyl. While she made several great records, this has always been her finest work in my view. This is the record's first appearance on vinyl.

From my From Croydon To Cuba review: Produced by then husband Steve Lillywhite, Titanic Days has it all: bright love song You Know It's You, tales of very bad men (to which MacColl seems drawn, at least in her lyrics) Titanic Days, Can't Stop Killing You, and Bad, and the sentimental melancholy of Soho Square. The airy, dreamy Angel and Tomorrow Never Comes are beautiful. Lillywhite's production and the backing of crack musicians help realize MacColl's most consistent songwriting, and her performances are both cool and riveting.

I also recently discovered that a new double vinyl best of set titled Free World was released in 2023. It is a thoughtful collection that doesn't bring any new surprises, but collects most of the essentials, and it's available on (yellow, not that it matters) vinyl. There are too many compilations of Kirsty's work, and some are not really hits collections, but this one is a good selection of songs, spans her career, and gets most of the important picks right. Of course if you are a big fan of Ms. MacColl's work, you probably have most of these songs, and if you're a casual fan, maybe you've got one of the decent single CD overviews. So I guess this is mostly for those of us that would want to hear these songs on vinyl rather than CD. Most of her work is available on original vinyl releases (and recent vinyl reissues) of the individual albums.

Monday, January 6, 2025

The Electric Flag (An American Music Band) A Long Time Comin' 1968

Michael Bloomfield was an enormously talented blues and rock guitar player. He first came to notice on the first two Paul Butterfield Blues Band albums in1965-66, Bob Dylan's Highway 61 Revisited 1965, and frequent session work. In early 1967, he formed The Electric Flag in San Francisco with an outstanding line-up of musicians. Harvey Brooks on bass and Buddy Miles drums and vocals held down the rhythm, Nick Gravenites on guitar and vocals, Barry Goldberg on keys, and a smoking hot horn section with Marcus Doubleday on trumpet, Peter Strazza on tenor sax, Stemsy Hunter on alto sax, and Herbie Rich on baritone sax. 

Bloomfield and Goldberg saw the group as one which would feature an amalgamation of American music styles of soul, blues, rock and R&B, and on their audacious debut, they achieved that goal. 

The set kicks off with Howlin' Wolf's Killing Floor, with Nick Gravenites' smooth vocal, hot guitar from Bloomfield and killer horn charts. Ron Polte wrote three songs for the record, and Groovin' Is Easy is all smooth soul, hippie vibe, and hot horns. Over-Lovin' You from Bloomfield and Goldberg is an uptempo soul that gets a really fine Buddy Miles vocal and horns, horns, horns. She Should Have Just from Polte's pen again is more terrific R&B that sounds like a future Tower Of Power hit. Side one ends with Wine, sung by Bloomfield (or Herbie Rich?) is fast blues with a very cool jazzy outro.

The second side is almost as good. Buddy Miles rips another tasty vocal on Texas, as Bloomfield solos throughout the entire song. Barry Goldberg wrote Sittin' In Circles, with it's complex arrangement and another melodious Gravenites vocal. You Don't Realize is a great Bloomfield blues ballad that has everything except the guitar solo it practically begs for, and it's still solid. Another Country, again from Polte's pen, starts as a mid-tempo rocker with classic sixties paranoia/escapist lyrics, slides into a too long music concrete collage, followed by a jazzy section featuring piano, and finally returns to the first verse and chorus with up-tempo guitar and horn charts. It's an impressive piece, but at nine minutes it's just a tad too long. The record ends with a 53-second East Rider with Bloomfield teasing us with some nice licks.

Another Country is a good song, and was ahead of the curve with the music concrete section, but it is a thing of it's time, and you might need to be high. The rest of the record is near perfect.

Bloomfield and Goldberg would leave the band before their second record, and Buddy Miles, Herbie Rich and Nick Gravenites tried to produce a follow-up, and almost got there with An American Music Band, also in1968. It's OK, but doesn't have the magic or the songs of A Long Time Comin'. Miles and Gravenites were not the songwriters that Bloomfield, Goldberg and Polte were. Two from that follow-up, Bobby Hebb's Sunny, and Mystery from Miles's pen, both have strong vocals from Miles and were added to the 2003 CD reissue of Long Time Comin' along with two obscurities, one with some hot Bloomfield guitar. 

There were plenty of horns on soul records of the time. But this one in 1968 was before Chicago, Sons of Champlin, and Tower of Power. It isn't just the horns that make this record so special. Great songs, singing, guitar, the blues/rock/soul blend, and an all-star band make this a lost classic of the first order.