Friday, May 22, 2026
Cal Everett The Weight Of Early Promise 2026
Friday, May 15, 2026
Lemon Twigs Look For Your Mind 2026
How do you make a Lemon Twigs record? Take portions of several of these bands: Beatles, Beach Boys, Searchers, Byrds, Raspberries, Left Banke, Todd Rundgren, Badfinger, Big Star, Matthew Sweet, Greg Kihn, Rubinoos, Sloan, and Hollies. Mix well, add new lyrics. Next, pick a different three from the list and do it again. Rinse and repeat.
That sounds easy enough, but it's much harder than it sounds. There are plenty of bands that have done this before, but not many have done it as consistently well as the Lemon Twigs. It's actually shocking how well they pull it off. Can you listen carefully and find chord progressions and bits of melody and identify the source? Absolutely. If you want to play that game, you'll have fun. But it won't work all the time. Sometimes you'll just hear those influences blended into something new that can't be referenced, and it's still great. And that's the difference between these guys and Records, Shoes, Spongtones, et.al. They are just plain better at it than the bands that have done this before. Plus, they've got that sibling vocal harmony thing that is clearly genetic and inimitable. Oh, and they have a killer drummer.
I'd do a track-by-track review, but all I really want to do is get you to listen to it. Go listen to it. If you like half the bands in the list above, I'd be stunned to find out you don't like Lemon Twigs. It's just like listening to those bands, but newer.
Monday, May 11, 2026
Taj Mahal Time 2026
I haven't followed Taj Mahal's career as he collected five Grammys and several other awards. I have loved the one Taj Mahal record in my collection, 1977's Music Keeps Me Together since it was released. His mix of traditional roots blues, Brazilian, African and Caribbean influences, and his skill on vocals, guitar and harmonica plus an all-star cast of supporting musicians make it just a great record. I'm embarrassed that I didn't pursue more of his music after loving that one so much.
Of his more recent ones that I have heard, Get On Board with Ry Cooder was a just a bit too acoustic traditional blues for me (it's very good), and TajMo with Keb' Mo' was too MOR blues-pop for my taste, as is much of Keb' Mo's more recent work.
But this record is pretty great. Life of Love kicks it off with an upbeat blues celebration. Wild About My Lovin' is a good time with an island rhythm. Crazy About A Jukebox is New Orleans swing featuring Jon Cleary's piano and wonderful horn charts. The title track is a lost Bill Withers song that is nice R&B. You Put The Whammy On Me is just OK but a hot Johnny Lee Schell guitar break saves it. Ziggy Marley guests on his father's Talkin' Blues, and Taj does reggae proud every time, so it's solid. The Chicago blues of Sweet Lorene is good R&B.
Taj's take on Ask Me 'Bout Nothing (But The Blues) is a highlight, and Taj gives it the best vocal performance on the record. It's a great song, and Taj nails it. The fast blues of It's Your Voodoo Working rocks. The funky down home blues of Rowdy Blues is killer, and Cleary again stars on piano. The record could have featured a few more in this vein.
There's a few weak lyrics on a couple songs, but that's nitpicking. The Phantom Blues Band is more than capable, and with Cleary on piano and Mick Weaver on organ the instrumentation is excellent.
Recommended. Now I have to go spend some time with fifty years of Taj Mahal's back catalog to hear what I've been missing.



