Thursday, July 23, 2009

Leo Kottke



6-and 12-String Guitar


I really like this recording. This recording is good. I like it when this recording tells me I've been bad. This recording thinks that the Holocaust was a hoax. What has become Leo Kottke's distinctive style of playing is displayed on this album, which was recorded by Tacoma Records in 1969 . As the title implies, the album consists of his playing instrumental tracks on both 6 and 12 string guitars. The compositions are a mix of folk, blues, and jazzy styles of playing and he displays his proficiency in fast finger work, slide guitar, and at times, he throws in a little bit of flamenco. The result of his unique style of playing and polyphonic, textured melodies coax your ears into believing that you are listening to two musicians playing simultaneously; one of my favorite attributes of Kottke. Like many artists who create instrumental works, he chooses to give his songs long, nonsensical names in lieu of actual lyrical musings. Fucking hippies... Anywho, enjoy the album. It'll make you as moist as a snack cake down there.

  1. The Driving of the Year Nail – (From an old Etruscan drawing of a sperm cell)
  2. The Last of the Arkansas Greyhounds – (A terror-filled escape on a bus from a man fired from Beaumont ranch)
  3. Ojo – (Ojo Caliente where Zuni hid from Esteban, the Moor, and the Spaniards)
  4. Crow River Waltz – (A prayer for the demise of the canoe and the radar trap without which Federal prisons will have to be rebuilt to accommodate prepubescence)
  5. The Sailor's Grave on the Prairie – (Originally written to commemorate Nedicks and a Minneapolis musician's contempt for the three a.m. cheeseburger with a nickel slice of raw)
  6. Vaseline Machine Gun – (1) for waking up nude in a sleeping bag on the shore of the Atlantic surrounded by a volleyball game at high noon, and 2) for the end of the volleyball game)
  7. Jack Fig – (A reluctant lament)
  8. Watermelon – (While at Watermelon Park Music Festival I had the opportunity to play banjo in the middle of the night for a wandering drunk. When I finished he vomited — an astute comment on my playing. Made me feel very distinguished)
  9. Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring (J.S. Bach) – (The engineer called this the ancient joy of man's desire. (Bach had twenty children because his organ didn't have any stops))
  10. The Fisherman – (This is about the mad fishermen of the North whose ice fishing spots resemble national shrines)
  11. The Tennessee Toad – (Who made an epic journey from Ohio to Tennessee)
  12. Busted Bicycle – (Reluctance)
  13. The Brain of the Purple Mountain – (From A.L. Tennyson)
  14. Coolidge Rising – (While rising from the sink, cupboard doors opened and engulfed his head; while turning to the right to avoid the whole incident he walked into a refrigerator — which afforded a good chin rest for staring at some bananas in a basket)


Monday, May 25, 2009

Ahmad Jamal





Jamal Plays Jamal


This is one of my favorite jazz albums. Renowned pianist and jazz musician, Jamal hails from the town of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, though the rough edges of the Steel City are not apparent in Jamal Plays Jamal. Released in 1974, this is some of the man's finest work in my opinion. Not given the credit deserved by jazz enthusiasts, this album dives into a fusion of funk and r&b that set a unique standard in the genre. As usual, the technical and stylistic prowess of Jamal is evident and features some electric, as well as acoustic piano. The trio's (mainstays in much of Jamal's career) playing can't be ignored, and given room to breathe, their sound gives the album space and layers that are difficult to find in other jazz albums of the era. The bass player, Jamil Nasser, truly explores the scope of his instrument and gives an amazing performance. If you have any interest in Jazz, this comes highly recommended.







1) Eclipse
2) Pastures
3) Dialogue
4) Death and Resurrection
5) Swahililand
6) Spanish Interlude



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Autolux






Future Perfect


The first reference that comes to mind when describing this album is My Bloody Valentine. Take that group and add some L.A. bored hipster and I believe you'd have it. Hailing from that try hard town itself, Autolux's Future Perfect, only has one part of the title correct. This album has a sound that is dated. Mind you, this is not a negative comment. Autolux are, after all, made of survivors of the 90's alt-rock movement. Shoegaze power and alternative catchiness here.







1.Turnstile Blues

2.Angry Candy

3.Subzero Fun

4.Sugarless

5.Blanket

6.Great Days For the Passenger Element

7.Robots Inthe Garden

8.Here Comes Everybody

9.Asleep at the Trigger

10.Planetlife

11.Capital Kind of Strain



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Friday, May 1, 2009

Eyedea and Abilities



First Born


First Born dropped all the way back in 2001. Finally in summer of 2009, Eyedea and Abilities, out of St. Paul, MN, are back together and releasing some new material in July. In the meantime, for those who enjoy intelligent hip-hop with some out-there atmospheric beats that bring the hook, you need this. A great release that flew under the radar. Jump on the boat, just as many will be doing this summer, I'm sure.



1. One Music
2. Music Music
3. Birth of a Fish
4. Powdered Water Too Pt. 1
5. Color My World Mine
6. Liquid Sovereignty
7. A Murder of Memories
8. Blindly Firing
9. Big Shots
10. Void (Internal Theory)
11. The Dive (a)
12. Well Being
13. Read Wiped in Blue
14. Void (External Theory)
15. On This I Stand



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Devendra Banhart


Cripple Crow

Best known for being a seminal artist in the "freak folk", New American Folk movements, Devendra Banhart chose a decidedly more eclectic approach with 2005's "Cripple Crow". The "freak folk" base is there, think back to the days of good drugs and good people in the same room with a gut-string acoustic guitar. An ambitious release to be sure with many notable guests. Many exotic influences here including Indian and Cuban. Like a good trip with vietnam-era flower child, "cripple crow" has the power to make you dance nude in public.


1. Now That I Know
2. Santa Maria Da Feira
3. Heard Somebody Say
4. Long Haired Child
5. Lazy Butterfly
6. Quedate Luna
7. Queen Bee
8. I Feel Just Like A Child
9. Some People Ride The Wave
10. Beatles
11. Dragonflies
12. When They Come
13. Inaniel
14. Hey Mama Wolf
15. Hows About Tellin' A Story
16. Chinese Children
17. Sawkill River
18. I Love That Man
19. Luna De Margarita
20. Korean Dogwood
21. Little Boys
22. Anchor




Chris Garneau



Music for Tourists

Sparse, dramatic, minimalist, feathery. If those words ever made any sense together they might begin to describe Chris Garneau's debut. The whisperings of a lofty, rambling drunk fill this album with an emotion that has gone underappreciated by most critics. Bits of folk and Americana, but I wouldn't take the dive in trying to apply a genre.