Posts Tagged ‘Chicago’

The broadcast recordings included on this release showcases Lou Reed’s eighth solo album, Street Hassle , which was issued in February 1978, during the most prolific period of the man’s recording career. Lou Reed had embarked as a solo artist in the early 1970’s, following his departure from the extraordinarily influential Velvet Underground – a group he had led since its inception in late 1965. As Brian Eno so memorably claimed, “The first Velvet Underground album only (originally) sold 10,000 copies, but everyone who bought it formed a band.” Every one of the four Velvet Underground albums recorded during Lou Reed’s tenure with the group is included in ‘Rolling Stone’ magazine’s list of ‘The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time’. As critic Paul Nelson said of Lou in 1975: “Had he accomplished nothing else, his work with the Velvet Underground in the late Sixties would assure him a place in anyone’s rock & roll pantheon; those remarkable songs still serve as an articulate aural nightmare of men and women caught in the beauty and terror of sexual, street and drug paranoia, unwilling or unable to move.” Lou’s own versions of two of the most commercially successful tracks from the fourth VU album, ‘Loaded’ are included here. Rock And Roll is the semi-autobiographical tale of how music saved the life of a young radio-listener, invoking memories of Reed’s earliest musical endeavors as a salaried songwriter for Pickwick Records in New York in the early 1960’s. Sweet Jane, is another hook-laden delight riding a stone-cold classic riff that has been widely covered by a diversity of artists across the years, including Mott The Hoople, Cowboy Junkies, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Metallica. After leaving the Velvets during the recording of ‘Loaded’ in August 1970, Lou moved to RCA Records and issued his first eponymously entitled solo album the following year. Well-crafted and featuring several songs originally written for the Velvet Underground, the album was well-received though not commercially successful. The follow-up, ‘Transformer’ (released in December 1972) and co-produced by David Bowie and Mick Ronson was a different matter entirely. It boasted an insistently memorable hit single in the shape of the marvelously affectionate tribute to the Warhol/Factory era, Walk On The Wild Side, a song that Lou reprises here, together with the glorious ballad Satellite Of Love – surely two of the most widely known and best-loved songs in the entire Lou Reed solo canon. The album was a triumph and really served to establish Lou Reed as a solo artist of considerable stature internationally. Never one to rest on his laurels, Lou quickly followed up with the much darker-hued and heavily orchestrated rock opera ‘Berlin’ and what became his highest-charting album, ‘Sally Can’t Dance’, which reached the Top 10 in the USA (both albums were released in 1974). Also out the same year was Reed’s classic live album, ‘Rock n Roll Animal’ which memorably featured an absolute orgy of hard-rock guitar from Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter. Subsequent records ‘Metal Machine Music’ (a collage of electronic feedback and effects) and the more accessible ‘Coney Island Baby’ (a lengthy reworking of the title tracks is included herein) and ‘Rock And Roll Heart’ were not as well-received, before 1978’s ‘Street Hassle‘ marked a strong return to form. There are live versions of five of the album’s eight tracks here: Gimme Some Good Times, Dirt, Street Hassle, I Wanna Be Black and Leave Me Alone. The studio version of Street Hassle notably included a spoken piece by an uncredited Bruce Springsteen. AllMusic’s Mark Deming described the record as “among the most powerful and compelling albums he released during the 1970s, and too personal and affecting to ignore.”

01 – Gimmie Gimmie Some Good Times
02 – Satellite of Love
03 – Leave Me Alone
04 – Walk on the Wild Side
05 – Coney Island Baby
06 – Dirt
07 – Street Hassle
08 – Sweet Jane
09 – Rock ‘n Roll

A modern day classic in the style of “Solid Air”; finds Ryley Walker roaming through languid folk-jazz with rich instrumentation and deft improvisation.

Ryley Walker’s Primrose Green is the guitarist’s second LP in less than a year, and he’s already gotten way better. Last year’s All Kinds Of You was a good meditative folk record. Primrose Green has that, too, but it also has highlights like “Summer Dress” and “Love Can Be Cruel,” songs that incorporate jazz and psychedelia, unfolding into strange and exhilarating passages. It has roots in the British jazz-folk of the ’70s, but in 2015 it feels like it’s born from some other place entirely, or at least from Walker’s custom cocktail for which the album’s titled: whiskey with morning glory seeds.

Summoning up the spirit of songwriting past masters, Primrose Green takes elements of Van Morrision, Nick Drake, John Martyn and more without ever descending into pastiche – instead it’s a cosmic journey into jazz-inflected summertime rock and roll. The instrumentation positively dances amid brass, organ and fancy fret-work while the dizzying Sweet Satisfaction extends proceedings into a darker, rampaging terrain.

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Ryley Walker ”Sweet Satisfaction”(from Primrose Green)

”I came up with that in the middle of winter in a desolate Chicago last year, it gets really cold there, way below zero, three feet of snow, dangerous to go outside. I think it’s kind of a cover poet drunk song, a desperate song. You have seven or eight drinks and all of a sudden you think you’re this poet and can reach into a woman’s heart with this poem. It comes from that standing point. A drunk leaning against the wall poet. We had to cut that song down, because originally it was like fifteen minutes long. Maybe in the box set in twenty years! I like that version better but the label thought there was no room left on the record. We had to edit out that jam section in the end. It went on forever, not in a bad way, I thought it was pretty cool with the strings and that bit that sounded like Terry Riley.”

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 Ryley Walker released the first video in a series of performances from the 2015 Pickathon festival Woods Stage. The videos showcase some of the most exciting performances from this summer’s festival, held at Pendarvis Farm just outside Portland, Oregon.

On the first day of the festival, Chicago Illinois native Ryley Walker brought his distinct brand of jazz- and psychedelic-rock-inspired folk music to the Woods Stage, a picturesque pavilion nestled in a holler and made out of twisted twigs and trees. Here, Walker performs an extended version of “Summer Dress” from his classic 2015 album, Primrose GreenRyley Walker‘s extended jams are becoming part of his legacy as he continues his extensive touring.

“AND THEN THERE WERE FOUR” deluxe vinyl available from http://www.plastichead.com order link below

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This superb live recording, taken from an FM radio broadcast of The Band playing at the Mandel Hall during their first re-union tour following the group’s split in 1976, subsequent to their Last Waltz concert – was nothing short of a roaring success despite the absence of Robbie Robertson. A great show by The Band recorded live in Chicago at the Mandel Hall.
This was one of the first shows they did after the 1983 reunion
SIDE A
1.Up on Cripple Creek (Live)
2.The Shape I’m In (Live)
3.It Makes No Difference (Live)

SIDE B
4.Milk Cow Boogie (Live)
5.Mystery Train (Live)
6.King Harvest (Has Surely Come) [Live]
7.Java Blues (Live)

SIDE C
8.I Shall Be Released (Live)
9.Rag Mama Rag (Live)
10.Long Black Veil (Live)

SIDE D
11.(I Don’t Want To) Hang up My Rock and Roll Shoes (Live)
12.The Weight (Live)
13.Ophelia (Live)

The brilliant opening track off “Ghost Notes”, Veruca Salt’s first full-length album of new material written and recorded together since 1996, and due out July 10th. Fans who pre-order Ghost Notes at http://verucasalt.com/preorder will receive both this song and “Laughing in the Sugar Bowl” as instant downloads. In 1998, the singers of MTV alt-rock favorites Veruca Salt — Louise Post and Nina Gordon — had a fight so bad, the Chicago quartet broke up after just two albums (including 1994’s all-time classic, American Thighs. Post would use the Veruca Salt’s name with new musicians to release two more albums, but it’s only in the last year or so that the band’s original lineup have reunited and eventually made Ghost Notes. The album is at its best when Gordon and Post use their vocal harmonies to lead kick-down-the-door rock anthems, which are in no shortage here on an LP that comes at a good time given music’s current fascination with attitude-filled grunge that boasts pop hooks.

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The second single from the new Fort Frances EP “No One Needs to Know Our Name.” 

With that line Fort Frances’ new EP reaches its climax, in the middle of the single “Anonymous,” and the band announces-without question-their plans to continue evolving. No One Needs To Know Our Name is a leap forward for the Chicago trio, leaning more toward rock than their folk beginnings. Traces of Spoon and Dawes ooze out of every song while singer David McMillin maintains his pop radio-friendly voice.

The biggest similarity between this new EP and some of their older work is the idiosyncrasies that you find all throughout. There’s some phrasing in the lead track “Days Get Heavy” that you don’t hear very often (reminds me a bit of Fiona Apple’s Extraordinary Machine) that betrays the campfire feel produced by the pretty three-part harmonies.

“Best Of Luck” sounds like it could’ve been a Good News For People Who Love Bad News song that just missed the cut. The music overpowers the lyrics a bit, but I like the line at the end, “Your mind takes pictures of everywhere you’ve been, and everything that’s lost can be found again.”

The record may be called No One Needs To Know Our Name, but I think people will want to know Fort Frances once this EP hits. These are five well-crafted tunes performed by guys who’ve been making hits flying under the radar for years. Take some time to listen to The Atlas and Harbor before everyone knows their name.

“No One Needs To Know Our Name” will be released on May 12th.

Produced and mixed by Sam Kassirer

For a free download and tour dates, visit www.fortfrancesmusic.com.

U2 played the third show of their five-night run at Chicago’s United Center Sunday night, and for the second song of the evening, they dug out “Gloria” from their 1981 LP October. “We’re a band from the north side of Dublin called U2,” Bono told the crowd. “This is the first time we’ve played this song in about 20 years.” (They actually played the tune more than a few times on the 2005 Vertigo tour.)

Prior to the show, the group soundchecked 1983’s “Two Hearts Beat As One,” which they haven’t played since the Lovetown tour in 1989. It didn’t make the show, but Bono did sprinkle a few lines from it into “Beautiful Day.” The Edge worked on the guitar parts for “The Crystal Ballroom” from the expanded edition of Songs of Innocence prior to the show as well.

This was U2’s first show since the landmark Supreme Court decision on Friday that granted marriage equality to all Americans, and Bono celebrated by wearing a rainbow flag during “Pride (In The Name of Love).” The singer also modified the lyrics of “Beautiful Day. “See the world in green and blue,” he sang, via  U2 “A rainbow of colors right in front of you.”

U2’s Songs of Innocence + Experience Tour continues with two more Chicago shows this week, heading over to Toronto and Boston before wrapping up the American leg with an eight-night stand at New York’s Madison Square Garden. The band will then head to Europe for the remainder of the year.

In 2014, a little band called The Thons released their second full-length album, “Thirty Foot Snake”. It was a raw slab of rock and roll that simultaneously recalled both the punk rock coming out of New York in the late 1970s, and also the early 80s response from UK bands such as The Fall and Gang of Four. It was ferocious and intimate at the same time, decidedly punk rock—but the playing indicated that there was something more going on, too.

On “Hot Fun”, the Chicago trio is digging a little deeper and showing the world what was bubbling underneath the surface. And it’s a little bit psychedelic.

The album opens with “Wooo,” a track so soaked in reverb that you can practically hear the springs bouncing. A surf/Dick Dale influence that there was no trace of on the band’s previous records takes front and center. It’s an opener that makes a very clear, very loud statement: the band’s sonic palate has been expanded.

“Lose Control” follows with an arrangement that frames Graham Onak’s half-spoken Mark E. Smith-like vocalizing with some great, angular guitar parts. Onak, a lefty, is an outstanding player with a southpaw’s skewed sensibilities. Here his instrument punctuates his vocal ejaculations with squeals of pain. Or is it pleasure? Maybe both. The surf sound of the first song has been twisted around on itself to resemble something like Television playing with Sonic Youth, under the spell of Syd Barrett.

“Being Me” introduces the record’s first real vocal melody, and it’s a good one. Here Onak belts out (ironically?) that “It still feels good to be me” with a ton of attitude. But, despite the apparent irony, it actually sounds like it does feel good to be him. It’s pure rock n’ roll joy that comes and goes in less than 2:00 as drummer Greg Bry channels Tommy Ramone, pounding out the beat with blistering speed while still somehow managing to groove.

And from there, the album keeps whizzing by: “Looking Out, Looking In” straddles the line between psych and punk more than any other song on the record, with Bry doing his best Keith Moon. “Feeling Alive” finds bass player Frank Thom’s fingers crawling all over the neck of his instrument, pumping out eighth notes and slipping them in to the spaces between the guitar and drums. Off-kilter and grooving all at once.

Comes the time to wrap the whole thing up, The Thons give us their most intimate offering. “He Lives” is reminiscent of Sonic Youth’s more-tender moments on Daydream Nation. It’s a lovely way to end the album, as gentle guitar figures, McCartney-esque bass playing, and a surprisingly touching lyric pull the listener in close to say goodnight.

The entire album flies by in less than 23 minutes: all punk rock energy, colored with a psychedelic flair. And while there are some excellent guitar solos, there is no hint of the blues in them; these songs leave no room for extended psychedelic jams. This record is lean and mean, with incredible playing turned in by all parties. And it’s all crisply recorded, with a haze of reverb blanketing the songs.

Or, to use a different analogy: on their previous albums, the band served up a plate of meat-and-potatoes punk rock. This time, it’s meat and potatoes with gravy—mushroom gravy. “Hot Fun” strays from The Thons previous work in its more polished, longer recording process. “Hot Fun” blends garage, surf and post-punk into a washy, emotionally raw journey inter-cut with spacey feedback that is best listened to seamlessly all the way through.

released 31st January 2015

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One of those bands that I really want to see are Chicago band rock trio Fort Frances, whose superb debut album “The Atlas” released in 2011 still gets plays and is a forever favourite.

Now back with a new EP, Fort Frances entitled “No One Needs to Know Our Name” and its out May 12th, the effort highlights a brand new side of the band, of its members saying “goodbye to twenty-somethings.” Where “The Atlas” showcased a group playing understated but memorable folk music, “No One” is unquestionably a rock effort, complete with more mature offerings that are nonetheless catchy and fun.

Opener “Days Get Heavy” sets the tone by being a foot-stompin’ anthem with an absolutely hair-raising chorus. The expert songwriting and instantly accessible songwriting continues throughout, from the swooning, heartfelt epic “These Are The Mountains Moving,” the horn-led swing of “Anonymous,” the Spoon-like swagger of “Year of Gold or the infectious pop rock of “Best of Luck.” Partially responsible for the bigger sound is producer Sam Kassirer (Lake Street Dive, Josh Ritter), who recorded the album with the band last fall at his Maine farmhouse. It’s an effort teeming with different ideas.

 

 

 

 

Fort Frances

 

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If you’ve been hoping to hear more of Twin Peaks’ ragtag garage pop since devouring last year’s debut, “Wild Onion”, you’re in luck. The Chicago outfit has a freshly pressed orange vinyl — featuring their awesomely idiosyncratic In The Morning (In The Evening) — ready for Record Store Day next weekend. The B-side of that disc, however, features an older, charming Twin Peaks track called “Got Your Money” that saunters along with hooks buried in a stoned, paranoid haze. As the band said, “It is one of the earliest Twin Peaks songs, essentially a lost number from the “Sunken” days. It’s a song loosely born around the movie True Romance, but upon its revival was also inspired by current events in our country.

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