Ode To Joy - The Deadly Snakes or anything by Jackie Shane you can get your hands on!
Ode To Joy - The Deadly Snakes or anything by Jackie Shane you can get your hands on!
iF ANYONE'S READING THIS....i FINALLY FOUND BROWN'S LAST STUDIO CD , WHICH i DON'T THINK WAS EVER RELEASED IN THE STATES . It's very good , more acoustic , but , his voice still reaches for the cosmos , only to return for a lager or two at the pub....
Hey there Fuzzmeister,
The Texreys split...the usual band BS (yawn).
Me and Eddy had a blast playing together, so we started the new band.
Cheers
Wig
Fuzzmeister said:
What happened to the Tex-Reys?
Yeah, once REM "happened", it seemed to start defining "college radio". It seems like quite a few bands (especially in regions of North Carolina and Athens, GA) had to have the jangle pop sound. Of course, REM started ditching their signature sound and started moving more towards a contemporary rock sound, which I just didn't like. For me personally, their first three albums are their best work.
I also like Chris Stamey's style, his music and album producing ventures...
John Battles said:
I'm just here to see how other people define this stuff.....I think , by the mid - 80's , just about every city had one or two.... In Dallas (Not a city.) , there was The Trees , End over End , Three on a Hill , Howling Dervishes , all of whom , I think , had that sound , to some degree , particularly the former. In 1986 , man , every band in America sounded like REM for 15 minutes. But , I think The Droogs and the Chris Wilson - era Flamin' Groovies also had their feet in that pond before the majority of those bands formed.
I'm just here to see how other people define this stuff.....I think , by the mid - 80's , just about every city had one or two.... In Dallas (Not a city.) , there was The Trees , End over End , Three on a Hill , Howling Dervishes , all of whom , I think , had that sound , to some degree , particularly the former. In 1986 , man , every band in America sounded like REM for 15 minutes. But , I think The Droogs and the Chris Wilson - era Flamin' Groovies also had their feet in that pond before the majority of those bands formed.
1-27-12
Download or stream the entire Jan. 27 show right here. Find Zero Hour on Facebook here.
Justify – Left Lane Cruiser
Harlan County – Jim Ford
The Gun Slinger – Jack Reeves
Marshall, Marshall – Gar Bacon
Down in the Mine – Peter Nelson & the Castaways
Justify – BBQ
Zero Hour (live) – The Plimsouls
Maybe Tonight – The Go Wows
How Do You Spell Love – Bobby Patterson
Who’s Gonna Rock Your Baby – Barrence Whitfield & the Savages
Hunting for the Dead – Kill, Baby, Kill
Bored of Love – Steve Adamyk Band
Crime in the City – Adam Widener
Tide – Mikal Cronin
The Head – Guided By Voices
Nobody Spoil My Fun – The Seeds
Bag of Spiders – Slumber Party
Don’t Leave Me – The Conspirators
Local Lunchbox
Make You Love Me – The Sugar Stems
Stop Your Sobbing – Holly & the Nice Lions
Do You Know What I’m Doin’ – Ramma Lamma
Creepy Jackalope Eye – The Supersuckers
Dial Tones – The Hook Up
Take Your Life – Swingin’ Neckbreakers
Are You For Real, Girl – The Mystic Five
Buggin’ Around – The Creeping Ivies
Feelin’ Alive – The Cavestompers
Bull’s Eye – The GTV’s
Alive/Naturalsound tribute
Paul Collins in-studio interview
Don’t Blame Your Troubles on Me – Paul Collins
USA – The Breakaways
Million Miles Away (live) – the Plimsouls
Get Out While You Can – Outrageous Cherry
Up From the Underground – Occult Detective Club
I’ll Be Your Man – The Black Keys
My Babe – T-Model Ford
Suicide Blues – Brimstone Howl
The Stranger – Radio Moscow
Kill City – Iggy Pop & James Williamson
Fool for You – The Turpentine Brothers
Safe Effect – Gardens
Black Box Blues – The Bloody Hollies
Gimme Me Back My Morphine – Henry’s Funeral Shoes
Everything You Took – Lee Bains III & the Glory Fires
You Are the One – Nathaniel Mayer
Happy – The Sights
You’re My Girl - Hacienda
Incidentally, one of my friends is a psychiatrist.
Psychiatric Consultations said:
Remember Me This Way, seeems oh so ironic.
I would go.
Remember Me This Way, seeems oh so ironic.
I would go.
NOooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
I want you I need You
fight it.
Bryan Adams , Wet Wet fucking Wet Wet Wet , same difference ! HA HA HA ! Playing his music does help , I believe.
Mark George Harrison said:
And I meant Wet wet fucking Wet! first chance Ive had to get back on here and correct myself!
Lets hope he does get better JB, im now going th play 'our love will still be there' and 'lost little girl' and hope it helps!
And I meant Wet wet fucking Wet! first chance Ive had to get back on here and correct myself!
Lets hope he does get better JB, im now going th play 'our love will still be there' and 'lost little girl' and hope it helps!
Oh ,I see. I thought it was the other wayaround.
Tony Jonaitis said:
I loved Hot Wacks, and bought every issue of the book (and it was later a magazine). Today its Bootlegzone and Collector's Music.
I'll offer this
Who knew what effect listening to Sun Ra would have on Zlad?
Corinne Odermatt said:
how about that.
Once I'm over VENTIL and Trace Adkins I might remember what I came here for, haha.
A version of this was published in The Santa Fe New Mexican
Jan. 27 2012
Mark Sultan, a Canadian who has made a living, or at least part of a living, as a one-man band — and sometimes as half of two-man bands such as The King Khan & BBQ Show and, with Bloodshot Bill, as The Ding Dongs — has a pretty strong opinion of one-man bands.
He hates them.
Ranting on his blog last year, Sultan wrote:
“I can see how a one-man-band set-up can leave a bad taste in someone’s mouth. ... I hate one-man bands. Seriously. There are only a couple I like, and those few I do like I like because I don’t consider them one-man bands, but rather musicians who manipulate minimal gear and sounds and transform it and themselves into something special and transcend what they present. ... I don’t like the one-man band as gimmick. Or this fucking community of one-man-band team thought. I hate teams. I hate competition. This is all sports mentality. I hate sports, too.”
Now, I love the raw, stripped-down blues-bash basics of a Bob Log III and O Lendario Chucrobillyman. The one-man format works fine for an artist like Scott H. Biram, boiling down blues and honky-tonk to its basic DNA. There are some European one-manners out there, like King Automatic and Urban Junior, who have taken the form to weird dimensions. And I believe that the ascended master Hasil Adkins knew cosmic truths that most of us lesser mortals will never comprehend.
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Whatever |
But on the other hand, I think I know what Sultan is talking about. Like any kind of music, there is definitely some sameness in the sounds produced by the minions of second-rate Bob Logs proliferating at the edges of the garage and roots-rock scenes.
So, it’s fitting that Sultan’s latest work — two new albums released simultaneously late last year — seems to drift further than ever from the typical one-man band sound. On the new albums Whatever I Want and Whenever I Want, he continues to explores his beautiful obsession with doo-wop. Basically, Sultan just does what he’s always done best — melodic (mostly) tunes colored by R & B, rockabilly and primitive rock ’n’ roll.
But the sound, while still a million miles from overproduced, seems fuller than ever. As he’s done on previous albums, Sultan uses guest musicians. On the new records are Sultan’s pals from The Black Lips (with whom Sultan plays in the garage/gospel supergroup The Almighty Defenders) and Dan Kroha of The Gories. And, even more so than past efforts, he’s not above using a few studio tricks to give the tracks a little heft.
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Whenever |
A word about formats here: Whatever I Want and Whenever I Want are available only on vinyl and downloads. However, for CD loyalists, there is a 13-tack compilation called Whatever, Whenever. Unfortunately it doesn’t have some of my favorites, like “Blood on Your Hands” (which sounds like a weird team-up of Danny & The Juniors and The Kingsmen), “Repulse Me, Baby,” which has a little King Khan in it, and “Pancakes,” which you might mistake for Sha Na Na making the greatest IHOP commercial in the history of the world.
Other favorites from the new albums include Whatever’s “Just Like Before,” on which Sultan goes right for the doo-wop jugular. It sounds like a lost cousin of some vintage Drifters hit. The rockabilly influences show on “Satisfied and Lazy” (on Whenever), while “Party Crasher” on Whenever gets psychedelic with a droning organ, some “Paint It Black” guitar riffs, and distorted background vocals that may make you think of Dion & The Belmonts interpreting the Tibetan Book of the Dead.
Whenever closes with an unexpected twist. The epic eight-minute “For Those Who Don’t Exist” starts out with Sultan strumming a guitar with the tremolo way up and whistling a weird little melody that could almost be a slower version of the Pixies’ “La La Love You.” Then, with clanging railroad-crossing bells apparently warning you, the saxes come in, and it’s a free-jazz odyssey.
What sets Sultan above most slop-rock purveyors is his voice. He has always owed far more to Sam Cooke than to Hasil Adkins. While he messes with several styles, his soaring voice is the thread that holds these two albums together.
Also recommended:* Bad Luck Man by Delaney Davidson. This New Zealand native reminds me of some ghostly troubadour wandering the Earth searching for shadows.
As was the case with his previous album, Self-Decapitation, Davidson’s music shows traces of blues and hillbilly sounds, a little Gypsy jazz, faint strains of Dixieland, perhaps a touch of tango, and who knows what else.
Every song on Bad Luck Man has its charms, sometimes fully revealing themselves only on a second or third listen. Among the standouts are “Time Has Gone,” the kind of sad waltz Davidson does so well. Organ and horns rise up during the first instrumental break, giving the song a circus-orchestra texture.
The murder ballad “I Told a Secret” is a faster-paced waltz with a droning slide guitar. “I made a promise I would tear out my darlin’s sweet heart,” he sings in the first verse. And, by golly, he keeps that promise.
Davidson goes straight for the blues on “Windy City,” a raucous blues burner that comes late in the album, with chugging harmonica and a low gutter guitar. This tune pays its respects to Howlin’ Wolf, Bo Diddley, and other monsters of Chicago blues.
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Delaney in Santa Fe |
Though most of the songs are originals, Davidson plays some covers. He takes bluesman Abner Jay’s “I’m So Depressed” and makes it rock.
And there’s “I’ve Got the Devil Inside,” written by Davidson’s Voodoo Rhythm crony and touring partner, The Reverend Beat-Man. (The two played together in Santa Fe twice in recent years.) Davidson is backed only by loud drums you might think are a high-school marching band from the netherworld.
But for all the demonic energy, there are also some redemptive moments, the finest being “I Saw the Light From Heaven,” a backwoods gospel tune on which Davidson is accompanied by a lone banjo.
BLOG BONUS!
Here's Mark Sultan performing The Rolling Stone's "Out of Time" and his own "I'll Be Lovin' You" from the $ album
And here's Delaney Davidson waltzing with the ladies in Tucson, Ariz. the night before he and Beat-Man played Santa Fe in July, 2010. The song is "Time Has Gone," which is on Bad Luck Man.
Your best bet would be to find an engineer/producer who's familiar with your genre and has had (proven) experience with recording bands you can relate to… Studio facilities and equipment hardly matters when working with the right people.
Here's the playlist from Jan 26/2012
I will be back on the air and the web on Saturday January 28 from 1:00-3:00PM EST. You can listen at 89.7 WITR-FM in Rochester, NY or streaming live at http://witr.rit.edu .
a big muff, is a famous oldtimer that will do , but in my opinion too much woolly sounding. and a muff sounds slowly. but you can get some good noise out of em for a nice price.
me myself got the zvex fuzzfactory for about 7 years. still loving it, very loud (volume wise, a lot of fuzzboxes havent got a large output) and all sort of extreme sounds can be created. but you can also go for the wooly 60s fuzz tone using the zvex, its all there. wide range of sounds.
I just checked out the mossrite fuzzclone on youtube, boy , awesome cruel sound!! but impossible to find and expensive.
I would say checkout youtube vids. or go to your local dealer.
I just bought AND LOVE the Modtone mini FUZZER. I'ts sonicly delicious! I've owned many different fuzz boxes over the years. I've searched and searched to find the tone I dug. This is it. This little thing is rock solid and TRUE bypass. It's affordable too - around $50.00. With a 5 year warranty.
Try one and you might stop looking for fuzz pedals, until you can afford that rare $900.00 vintage fuzz that we all dream of. Even then this still might be your favorite.
I don't work for Modtone. I just think all fuzz-freaks should add the Fuzzer to their bag o' tricks - I think you'll be pleased. It ain't just fuzzy... it's down-right HAIRY!
I forgot to mention its Volume 3 of the series that I own. The rest of the cd is actually pretty good but that 1st track is just shit hot!
Chris Henniker said:
I've been hearing about this compilation ans seeing it in Rough Trade, up in Brick Lane.
Hi Class Joes said:I bought a cd recently called Rare mod on Acid Jazz. There's alot of ropey tracks on it but the opening track by the Montana's called 'Open the Door' is a real stormer. Check it out!