Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Make Me Dance, I Want To Surrender

Just a few days short of the biggest holiday of the year here at The Cuddle, and we find ourselves tremendously busy.  It's tough to juggle everything that needs to be done with what we want to do.  This tends to fall into both categories... The Ideological Cuddle Top 10 Albums of 2010 starts with this gem, released on October 12, 2010...

ALBUM #10 - Belle and Sebastian - Write About Love
We here at The Cuddle are big on the entire Belle and Sebastian catalogue (Mrs. Cuddle, not so much), and Write About Love fits beautifully among the band's best.  The word for this record is consistency.  May of B&S's records have had legendary tracks, but exist on albums that are weak as a whole.  I think that this release ranks right up there with 2003's Dear Catastrophe Waitress and 1996's If You're Feeling Sinister.  The album is chock-full of the sound of swinging 60s era London, and twee-indie beauty which B&S has become so famous for.  Album opener "I Didn't See It Coming" floats along on Sarah Martin's beautiful, whispery vocal (truth be told, very reminiscent of original B&S female chanteuse Isobel Campbell - too busy making records with Mark Lanegan to be back in the fold with her old band) and propelled by a jangly guitar line and insistent tambourine.  It's telling that the textural layering of the song is such that that Stuart Murdoch is only heard in the background until the 3 minute mark and, there's so much going on, he isn't missed.  "Calculating Bimbo" is classic Murdoch - on the surface, a "put down" song along the lines of Dylan or Costello, but in reality, a song that chronicles a couple keeping score of their shortcomings.  Murdoch manages to express some of the complex emotions present in long-term relationships over a deceptively simple and meandering tune.
Much has been written about the album's two "duets" - "Little Lou, Ugly Jack, Prophet John" featuring Norah Jones, and "Write About Love" featuring Carey Mulligan (the excruciatingly cute lead actress in last year's wonderful An Education).  Some have criticised Murdoch's choice of both of these duet partners, but the band manages to pull each one off.  Jones seems an unlikely, yet refreshingly smart foil to Murdoch, as her jazzy delivery offsets Murdoch's laconic 60s pop crooning.  Mulligan is somewhat of an interesting choice for a singing partner, as she's an actress, but she sings her part beautifully.  In "Write About Love", she is the disgruntled employee to Murdoch's demanding boss, and the roles seem to fit.
We hope that Belle and Sebastian have many, many more albums ahead of them.  Unlike, say, The Hold Steady, they don't feel the need to reinvent themselves album after album.  They do what they do better than anyone else (although fellow Glaswegians Camera Obscura are pretty damn close) and they seem to know it.  Some extra tweaks here and there are fine, but with Belle and Sebastian, it's comforting to know that each album will transport the listener back in time to when sweet pop melodies were the norm, not the exception.
Here are a couple of "promotional videos" that the band released in the wake of the album's release - they're patterned after an idea that the band had to create a "Belle and Sebastian Talk Show" and the design is very much like the sets of The Mike Douglas Show of the 1970s.  Enjoy...

"I Didn't See It Coming"


"I Want The World To Stop"


Until next time, when we reveal our 9th favorite record of 2010, seek out some Belle and Sebastian, and listen...

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Sometimes Lonely Isn't Sad

It's near year end here at The Cuddle and a time to reflect on all of the bountiful pleasures that 2010 has  brought us.  It's a time to be thankful for all that we have and look forward to all that is yet to come.  Today, we kick off the Ideological Cuddle Top Ten Albums of 2010 countdown with the two albums that didn't quite crack the top 10 (but were very noteworthy none-the-less), the top re-issue(s) of the year, the biggest disappointment of the year, our favorite concerts of the year, and some notable bands that may not have released a new album this year, but rose to the top of our play lists time and time again.
Without further ado...

The Biggest Disappointment of 2010 - The Hold Steady's Heaven Is Whenever

Now, by no means do I think that this is a bad album, per se.  It's just such a colossal disappointment.  Coming off of 2008's triumphant and epic Stay Positive, the Hold Steady were on quite a roll.  They had risen to the forefront of indie rock, had websites, print journalists, and fans drooling over their trademark mix of boozy bar rock and literate lyrics.  Then they felt it necessary to go in a "different direction".
(A quick aside... Is it ever really necessary for a band who does what they do well to "reinvent themselves"?  It's such an overrated, bullshit move, and it's usually pushed by the media - "such and such is in such a rut, they need to reinvent themselves" - B-U-L-L-S-H-I-T.  Bands who are good at one thing should stick with that one thing.  There are only so many Elvis Costellos and David Bowies who can create new sounds with each subsequent album and dip their toes in different genres without sounding completely idiotic.  The Hold Steady should have heeded this.  Ok, now I'm done... back to your regularly scheduled blog post...)
So that different direction is Heaven Is Whenever.  There are a  few gems on this record ("Hurricane J", "The Sweet Part of The City", and "We Can Get Together"), but there are plenty of clunkers ("Soft In The Center"?  "Barely Breathing"? - P.S., don't write songs that remind people of Duncan Sheik - "Rock Problems"?  Yeah, there are problems here).  I hate to say it, but this band REALLY misses Franz Nicolay.  Maybe the magic will return with their next record.  We here at The Cuddle can only hope so, since we love this band and all of its previous albums.

Bands That We Came To Love In 2010 (But Should Have Loved Before) :
Pavement
This is a no-brainer.  No band was on our iPod, computer, CD player, turntable more this year than Pavement.  It's fitting that Pavement made a triumphant return to playing live this year as well (I didn't have the pleasure of seeing them in person, but nyctaper's recordings of their shows made me feel like I was there).  I know that I didn't want to jump on the bandwagon because I thought that there was no way a band could live up to all of the indie hipster hype.  I know now that they do.  They really, really do.  I was wrong and I wholeheartedly admit it.  It all started with the career retrospective Quarantine The Past in March.  By the start of December, I owned every one of their full length albums in some shape or form.  Theirs is a catalogue that I cherish and listen to almost every day.

Teenage Fanclub
OK, I had heard of this band in the past, but had never made an effort to seek out their music until hearing about their 2010 release, Shadows.  It was all down the rabbit hole from there.  Their sound is right in my wheelhouse - jangly guitar pop, catchy as hell, sugary sweet harmonies.  You'll be hearing more about them in the days to come.

The Top 3 Concerts of 2010 :
3. My Morning Jacket - CMAC, Canandiagua, NY - August 28, 2010 - Our second time seeing My Morning Jacket was kind of a birthday performance celebration for us, as Mrs. Cuddle and I had celebrated my 33rd bday the day prior.  The New Pornographers opened the show in fantastic fashion (even in the absence of Neko Case) and Jim James and crew absolutely tore the roof off.  There is no band working today who can match the playing chops of My Morning Jacket and this show proved it.

2. The Black Crowes - Tower Theater, Philadelphia, PA - October 29, 2010 - Mrs. Cuddle and I based an entire weekend in Philadelphia around this concert in celebration of our anniversary.  With this tour being billed as their farewell, there was no way that we were going to miss one of our favorite bands for what could be the last time.  They did not disappoint.  Starting with an acoustic set and closing with a marathon electric set, for 3 hours the Crowes reminded the faithful why they're so beloved.  Their encore seemed hand-picked for Mrs. Cuddle and I - our all-time favorite Crowes song, "Feathers", followed by Mrs. Cuddle's recent favorite, "I Ain't Hiding".  All of the Crowes' shows are available for download (for a nominal fee) from the Crowes' live music site.  I highly recommend this show.  Here's a taste:
The Black Crowes - Tower Theater, Philadelphia, PA - 10/29/10 - "Hotel Illness" (Acoustic)

1. Robyn Hitchcock - The Drake Hotel, Toronto, Ontario, Canada - June 12, 2010 - I already waxed poetic about this show (and showed off the BFF's nifty camera work) on this previous post.  I still can't wrap my brain around the fact that I was able to see one of my favorite artists in such an intimate, acoustic setting.  Hitchcock was perfect from the first notes of "Cynthia Mask" to the final strains of a gorgeous cover of The Grateful Dead's "Candyman".  I can't really say much more than what I've said already.  It was just plain perfect.

The Best Re-Issues of 2010 - The Soft Boys' Can of Bees and Underwater Moonlight
I like to think of The Soft Boys' first two records as "Proto-Hitchcock".  While they contain the essential elements that would make Robyn Hitchcock such a singular and original songwriter, their sound was much more hard-edged and driving.  These records tend to rawk more than Hitchcock records.  Yep Roc's reissues came with download codes giving the buyer a plethora of outtakes, demos, and live versions, making each of the albums great values for the money.  Can of Bees is the lesser known of the two, but is by no means inferior.  It takes true balls (or insanity) to start a debut record with the lyrical couplet "I feel like asking a tree for an autograph/I feel like making love to a photograph", but The Soft Boys do it.  Standouts like "Leppo and The Jooves", "Sandra's Having Her Brain Out", and "The Pigworker" stand with Hitchcock's finest compositions (and are bat-shit crazy, to boot).  Underwater Moonlight gets more of the publicity as a touchstone in the indie rock canon and a favorite of many of indie/college rock's favorite progenitors (such as Peter Buck from R.E.M.).  "I Wanna Destroy You" is a stone-cold classic (and has been covered by the likes of Uncle Tupelo and The Goo Goo Dolls), "Queen of Eyes" is my favorite Soft Boys song (and has continued to persist in Hitchcock's sets to this day), and "Underwater Moonlight" might be the catchiest (and ONLY) song about couples suicide ever written.  Check out a taste of Hitchcock's madness:
The Soft Boys - "The Pigworker" - Can of Bees
The Soft Boys - "Queen of Eyes" - Underwater Moonlight

The Best Albums of 2010 - Honorable Mention :
She & Him - Volume Two - More gorgeousness from M. Ward and Zooey Deschanel, following 2008's Volume One.  Ward and Deschanel managed to pen a timeless single - "Thieves" - which made me recall Papa Cuddle's Roy Orbison records, and was easily one of the 5 best songs I heard all year.  Let's be honest, Zooey could just sing the phonebook and I would rave about it.  There's no such thing as too much Zooey.
Grinderman - Grinderman 2 - As with my comment regarding Ms. Deschanel, there's no such thing as too much Nick Cave (although, sometimes he needs to be taken in small doses).  Grinderman's second record is just as over the top as their first (although it contains nothing as ballsy as "No Pussy Blues").  Grinderman tends to be Nick Cave's id - dirty, debaucherous, lecherous, filthy, funny.  "Heathen Child", "Worm Tamer" (yes, this song is about his woman's prowess with, um... well, you know... and yes, it includes the classic lines, "my baby calls me the Loch Ness Monster/Two great big humps and I'm gone").  It's well worth checking out.

We'll return with the "official" start of our Top 10 countdown in the next few days.  Until then, remember all the great things about the past year, and listen.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Gliding Past Hedges and Clocks, Off To Infinity

It's an unfortunate natural progression.  Our time comes, our number is up, and we move on.  No one quite knows to where or to what, but it's not here - leaving a gap in the lives of those we've touched, loved, and cared for.  We sometimes get shocked into this reality, and sometimes it's exactly the perspective that we needed.  It's miserable when we find out that someone we care about is gone and it's really difficult to find any consolation in the moment, but time and reflection allow us to think about what it truly means to live.  It never is easy when that lesson is taught to you by the death of a child.  They don't deserve it.  It's not fair.  It's cruel.  But it's life.  How can a parent watch their child pass on?  What can you say to them in their grieving?  How can you ever reassure them that this horrible emptiness will pass?  The fear, the sadness, the thought that you'll never see that child's bright, shining, innocent face again.  But he's out there, somewhere, rising above all of this, leaving his pain and suffering behind.  It was short, but it was sweet, my friend.  I couldn't be more proud to have known you for that sliver of time.  You're at peace, but we won't be - not yet.  We will, though.  We'll remember the health and the smiles.  We'll know that you're with us... to Infinity and Beyond.

http://www.drewsheart.com/
http://andrewpatricksheart.blogspot.com/
Robyn Hitchcock - "You and Oblivion"
Elliott Smith - "Happiness"
Eels - "The Stars Shine in the Sky Tonight"
The Band - "I Shall Be Released"

Hug those that you love.  Tell them how much they mean to you.  Learn.  Love.  Listen.
Thanks for reading.

Monday, October 25, 2010

The Dew On The Cobwebs Shines Like Gold


My love for everything Robyn Hitchcock is well known.  Autumn is the perfect time to take in his brand of off-kilter psych-folk-rock.  Last week saw the re-release of his classic Soft Boys records Underwater Moonlight and Can of Bees on Yep Rock (purchase them HERE and get 30 BONUS TRACKS) and it's easy to see, from a cursory listen to Underwater Moonlight, where the roots of Hitchcock's muse lies.  His skewed genius is in full effect with classics such as "Queen of Eyes", "I Wanna Destroy You", and "I Got the Hots". 
The tunes below are from The Soft Boy's reunion tour of 2001 :

"Kingdom of Love"
"Queen of Eyes"
"I Wanna Destroy You"

And some bonus Hitchcock - performing two of my favorite tunes (each kind of summing up my recent melancholic mood).  Despite Hitchcock's success with The Soft Boys, The Egyptians, and The Venus 3, he is best heard solo (his guitar skills are underrated and stellar) - here's a taste:

"My Wife and My Dead Wife"
"Autumn Is Your Last Chance"

Until next time, remember that "Autumn Is Your Last Chance" (because it very well might be), and listen...

Sunday, October 24, 2010

The Walls Are Closing In Again, Oh Well


Good Evening, my pretties.  Sunday night.  Stoner Rock.  Close to Halloween.  Must be Queens of the Stone Age.  But stoner rock is such a cop-out.  What Josh Homme has been able to do with the Queens is indulge his base desires (in comparison, Them Crooked Vultures allows him to indulge his Led Zeppelin hero worship and re-write the blues) and meld rock, blues, punk, and multiple types of metal.  Homme has a true knack for writing catchy, heavy melodies and is smart enough to surround himself with some really talented musicians.  Who else but Josh Homme could get Dave Grohl to take a hiatus from being the Foo Fighter's front man and go back behind the drum kit for the first time since Nirvana?  Listen to Grohl's drumming in "Song for the Dead" or "Avon" - the only word that can describe his sound is FURIOUS.  His propulsive sound pushes the rest of the band forward at such a clip that the entire thing threatens to bust at the seams.  When Homme wrote songs that required a sort of "lived-in" voice, he went out and snagged the most grizzled of rock veterans - Mark Lanegan.
Here's a taste of the Queens - with Dave Grohl in full effect behind the kit, and Nick Oliveri holding down the low end on bass - Live at the Glastonbury Festival in 2002 playing "Regular John" :




And here are some further QOTSA tunes for your listening pleasure, live in the 2002-2005 era with Grohl on drums:
"Monsters in the Parasol"
"Song for the Dead"
"I Think I Lost My Headache"
"Avon"
"No One Knows"
"Tension Head"
"Regular John"
"The Lost Art of Keeping A Secret"
"You Think I Ain't Worth A Dollar, But I Feel Like a Millionaire"

Until next time, prepare for All Hallow's Eve with some Queens of the Stone Age... and listen...

Saturday, October 23, 2010

I'm Alive After 1,000 Years


It sounds like hyperbole, but the title is apropos.  It seems like 1,000 years ago that Sleater-Kinney broke up.  It's had to believe that it's been 5 years since The Woods blew the doors off of everything else that was hanging around the fringes of indie rock and 4 years since Sleater-Kinney called it quits.  Thankfully, fans have a new reason to rejoice and celebrate.  Roaring out of the Pacific Northwest - a three-headed hurricane with breasts - was the troika of Janet Weiss (she wasn't the original drummer, but she was the important one), Carrie Brownstein, and Corin Tucker.  They were perfectly suited for one another  - Tucker's lyrical genius over the top of Brownstein's squealing/thundering guitar and Weiss' heavy back beat.  They couldn't just be pigeon-holed as a great grrrl group - they were a great group period.
S-K's early albums comprise blasts of pure punk ("A Real Man" from their self-titled debut, "I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone" and "Call the Doctor" from Call The Doctor come to mind) with screeching noise ("Heart Attack").  While their first album has a few clunkers and is kind of uneven, their second and third albums may be their best.  Call the Doctor and Dig Me Out are both soaked with punk rock energy delivered from a distinctly feminine perspective (although not so feminine that it alienates male listeners).  Dig Me Out is truly where S-K hit their stride - loaded with classics, the record is a taut, tense package.  "Words and Guitar", "Little Babies", "Dig Me Out", and "Dance Song 97" are my favorites.
After garnering significant attention with those releases, the band could have rested on their laurels and put out a carbon-copy of Dig Me Out.  Instead, they chose to go their own direction, open up their sound, turn down the anger slightly, and release The Hot Rock.  This album tears fans down the middle.  Songs like "The Size of Our Love", "The Hot Rock", and "Burn, Don't Freeze" are cerebral, heart-felt, and somber.  This record proved the band's range - not only could they rock out, they could ease back and give a message as well.
For my money, the final three records in the S-K catalogue are the band's finest.  All Hands on The Bad One contains great song after great song - "All Hands On the Bad One", "Ironclad" (how many bands can you name that can write balls-to-the-wall rock and roll allegory songs likening arguments between hard-headed lovers to the battle between the Monitor and Merrimack?  None besides S-K?  Thought so.), "Youth Decay", "#1 Must Have", and my personal favorite, "Milkshake & Honey" - sexy, dirty, longing goodness.  You won't find a better pure rock record from the 2000s.
After the events of 9/11, the ladies in Sleater-Kinney felt it necessary to look inward toward what was really important.  By this time, Corin Tucker had a daughter, and living in a world where our safety was suddenly thrown into question colored the songs that comprise One Beat.  "Far Away" is downright harrowing and the feeling of claustrophobia and xenophobia is palpable.  It may be the finest post-9/11 song out there.  Check out the first stanza:
"7:30am, nurse the baby on the couch
    Telephone rings: Turn on the TV, watch the world exploding fast, don't leave the house"
and later - "Don't breathe the air today" and, finally, questioning the meaning of it all - "why can't I get along with you?" - while questioning the powers that be -
"And the President hides, while working men rush in and give their lives/I look to the sky and ask it not to rain on my family tonight"
The band's swan song, The Woods, allowed the grrrls to go out on top.  A bruising, full-force gale of a record, it includes one of the finest songs of the past 15 years, "Jumpers", a song that perfectly shows off each of the member's strengths - Janet Weiss is a powerhouse of drumming fury - pounding the skins with precision.  Carrie Brownstein's guitar lines are sharp and cutting - alternating between the bouncy bop of the body of the song to the ferocity of her solos on the breakdowns.  Finally, there's Corin's howl.  There is no finer vocal instrument in indie rock history - somewhere between the screech of Chris Cornell and the blues yelp of Janis Joplin, Tucker's voice slashes everything in its path.  We shouldn't discount the power and the harrowing nature of the song itself - a solemn taken on suicide, there might not be a more heartbreaking line in rock history than "4 seconds was the longest wait".  Here are the ladies in action, playing this song, on The Henry Rollins Show:



The Woods also contains the epic, 11 minute "Let's Call It Love" - a sprawling, lumbering, beast of a song, and one that would make Jimmy Page and Robert Plant green with envy.
When S-K announced their indefinite hiatus in 2006, the indie music community was shocked, but hopeful that the ladies would take a break, then reform quickly.  Alas, to this day, Brownstein, Weiss, and Tucker have not come together in any way, shape, or form.  What fans of the band do have now is a new record from Corin Tucker under the moniker of The Corin Tucker Band.  1,000 Years is NOT a Sleater-Kinney record (although fans of the band will not be able to help but feel a little nostalgic at bits and pieces of the album).  It is a thoughtful, mature, and well-crafted group of 11 songs that reflect where Corin Tucker is mentally and emotionally today.  Gone is the anger, present is the longing of missing one's spouse ("Half A World Away"), the dangers of estrangement after years ("Riley"), and thoughts on the recession ("Thrift Store Coats").  Listen to "Doubt" - it's the most S-K-ish of any of the songs - you get some of Tucker's yelp with a little S-K fire in the guitar solo.  "Half A World Away" sounds like One Beat's "Combat Rock", but slowly burns without an explosive payoff.  It's nice to have any transmissions from any of the ladies in Sleater-Kinney.  1,000 Years should tide us over until Brownstein and Weiss release the debut album from their new project, White Flag, sometime in 2011 on Merge Records.
In the meantime, we'll always have the fiery performances that Sleater-Kinney was so famous for.  Check out some live goodness from the grrrls:
Sleater-Kinney Live in Vancouver, BC, 2006:
"You're No Rock and Roll Fun"
"O2"
"Oh!"
"Get Up"

Sleater-Kinney Live on KBOO Radio, Portland, OR - "Drinking From Puddles" Show:
"Light-Rail Coyote"
"Funeral Song"
"The Remainder"
"Far Away"
"Call the Doctor"
"Youth Decay"

Until next time, check out Corin Tucker's new record, 1,000 Years out on Kill Rock Stars now, remember the finest straight-ahead rock band of the last 15 years, Sleater-Kinney, and don't forget to listen...

Sunday, October 3, 2010

I'm Down Here For Your Soul

As we move closer and closer to Halloween, one's thoughts tend to wander off into the macabre.  Nick Cave and his many projects tend to be the perfect soundtrack for this time of year. 
Cave deals in the things that rattle around in the back of men's minds, out of sight of the rest of the world - deviant sex, gruesome murder, the evils of religion, lust, greed, and even hate.  Early in his career, he had a tendency to alternate aggressive, evil albums with quieter, more introspective ones.  His sound is clearly informed by Leonard Cohen (some have said that, without a Leonard Cohen, there wouldn't be a Nick Cave - he might still be making loud, abrasive post-punk with The Birthday Party).  Cohen's influence is all over Cave's The Boatman's Call, No More Shall We Part, and parts of The Lyre of Orpheus - quiet, introspective affairs that show off Cave's trademark baritone and emotive songwriting.  No song of this ilk is more beautiful than "Love Letter" from 2001's No More Shall We Part.  Here's a beautiful live version on The Late Show with David Letterman with the McGarrigle Sisters singing back-up (the visual quality isn't great, but the performance more than makes up for it) :



Cave is not afraid to delve into pure rock and roll either - not that his version of rock and roll is anywhere near "pure".  The cast of characters that have comprised his Bad Seeds over the years are a who's who of avant-garde talent - legendary guitarist Blixa Bargeld and violinist Warren Ellis among them.  They add dissonant flashes to Cave's compositions and add a flair missing from 99% of the music out there today.  Bargeld has since left the band, but Ellis' signature can be found all over recent masterpieces Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus and Dig!!! Lazarus, Dig!!!.  He's also an integral part of the Grinderman project (who I've waxed poetic about in the past). 
To truly appreciate the Bad Seeds' genius, they must be experienced live.  If you can't find them in your town (they're not currently touring as Grinderman is), check out The Abattoir Blues Live tour document - overflowing with 2 live CDs and 2 live DVDs of Bad Seeds madness.  For more, I've dug out some live bootleg tunes from the vaults for your enjoyment. 

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Live from Copenhagen, Denmark on November 19, 2004:
"God Is In The House" - Another beautiful, quiet, introspective tune from No More Shall We Part.  It's a song that pokes fun at religion, prejudice, and the denial that many of us live in.
"Easy Money" - More introspection, this one from The Lyre of Orpheus.  I've thought about the meaning of this song a lot over the years - I've come to the conclusion that the subject of the song has chosen to do some unsavory (and likely unclean) things in order to allow his family to survive, but I'm always up for further interpretation.
"Babe, You Turn Me On" - This one's deviant.  Also from The Lyre of Orpheus, "Babe You Turn Me On" seems gentle and loving on the surface, but upon closer inspection, the singer's "babe" is being hunted like prey, and the singer is NOT being invited to seduce the object of his desire.
"Red Right Hand" - The quintessential Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds song (mostly because it's the most recognized), I've always felt that the main character in this song would make a terrific Halloween costume (while Mrs. Cuddle claims that no one would know who I was - she's likely right).  It has always been the chimes that make this song stand out from a sonic perspective, and the image of a Something Wicked This Way Comes-type protagonist, willing to give anyone anything (for a price), that make the lyrics stand out.

Live in Germany on May 21, 2008:
"The Lyre of Orpheus" - A terrific song that turns the Greek myth on its head, this version is most notable for the crowd singing along with Cave, creating an eerie choir.
"Moonland" - One of my favorite tracks from Dig!!! Lazarus, Dig!!!.  I could imagine this song in lounge version, being sung in Vegas by Sinatra.  Zombie Sinatra, but whatever.
"Deanna" - Legendary in the Cave canon, "Deanna" is from 1988's Tender Prey.  It's raucous, pleading, and sexy.  That it is still filling setlists 20 years after it's initial release is a testament to it's staying power.
"Into My Arms" - More tenderness, this time from The Boatman's Call.

Bonus Live Bad Seeds from various sources - each song is from Murder Ballads :
"Henry Lee (with PJ Harvey)" - I love this traditional song, manipulated to Cave's sensibilities.   One of two duets on Murder Ballads (the other is just as beautiful - "Where the Wild Roses Grow"  with Kylie Minogue), the voices of Cave and Harvey meld beautifully (as did, presumably, their bodies, as they were a couple for a while).  The macabre pairing of Harvey and Cave was almost too perfect, and their relationship didn't last all that long.  We still have this song to remember it.
"Stagger Lee" - Not for the faint of heart, this version of the traditional Stagger Lee is peppered with more f-bombs than almost every other song that I know of.  Beyond the colorful verbiage is the violence - Cave doesn't spare any gruesome detail of the fateful night in The Bucket of Blood bar.

Until next time, enjoy the various moods of Nick Cave (check out his albums as well - Mute Records is in the process of re-releasing everything in the catalogue), and listen (but maybe not too closely if you're faint of heart)...

Friday, October 1, 2010

I've Been Crowned The King of It and It Is All We Have

Evening, y'all.  Quite the tough week here at the Cuddle, as it was not the easiest past 24-48 hours in sick kids land.  Another week of call in the books... and we move deeper into our favorite season, Autumn.  nyctaper is quickly becoming our favorite blogger of all time, not just for the sheer admiration that we have for his craft, but, now, for his taping of EACH of Pavement's shows at Central Park Summer Stage in NYC this past week.  He has each of the shows up for free download (in MP3 version on the site, in FLAC form if you email him).  I encourage each of you to head on over to his site and listen to each of the shows.  They're breath-taking in their variety and sheer duration (each show runs about 2 hours and 30 minutes).  The quality is fantastic as well (considering the venue and lack of a ceiling).  You'll find a preview of some of those shows below.

Can't say that there's a whole lot more on my mind right now.  Just kind of feeling burned out.  Need to recharge.  Peep some Pavement here: 
MP3s REMOVED DUE TO COMPLAINT.
Pavement Live at Central Park Summer Stage:
September 21, 2010 :
"Perfume V"
"Frontwards"
"Silence Kit"
"Grounded"

September 22, 2010:
"Starlings On The Slipstream"

September 23, 2010:
"In The Mouth A Desert"

September 24, 2010:
"Rattled By The Rush"

Until next time... kiss the ones you love and remind them how much they mean to you... and listen...

Monday, September 20, 2010

I Put A Spycam In A Sorority


While we're cleaning out the cobwebs and talking about favorite things, let's hit another few points.

As Ideological favorite, stereogum points out, it's Pavement week in New York City (they'll hit Jimmy Fallon's show this Thursday/early Friday).  They'll be playing 4 shows in Central Park to the collected throng of hipsters (yeah, I'm jealous) over the next 4 days.  Blogger Big Ass Lens captured some excellent bootleg footage of the last four songs of last night's encore at The Williamsburg Waterfront - "Starlings in the Slipstream" (an Ideological favorite), "Gold Soundz" (ditto), "Kennel District", and "Range Life" (total classic) - check out the Vimeo video below:

Pavement - Starlings Of The Slipstream / Gold Soundz / Kennel District / Range Life from Big Ass Lens on Vimeo.

Yesterday's post of some live My Morning Jacket and Superchunk tunes inspired me to post some tracks from two of our other favorite folks whose albums will be jockeying for position in our Best of 2010 list.  Josh Ritter's So Runs The World Away didn't make a whole lot of noise when it came out (our vinyl copy was procured at Record Store Day a few weeks before the regular release date), but has been quite the "grower".  Ritter's prose is nearly unmatched among current singer/songwriters.  "The Curse" and "Folk Bloodbath" are the standout tracks on SRTWA and live versions from the 9:30 Club in Washington, DC back in May are below.
We've waxed poetic on the awesomeness of Spoon's Transference, which came out in January.  Archive.org, on their Live Music Archive, has a few excellent Spoon shows up for public consumption.  The two tracks below, "Got Nuffin" and "Written in Reverse", are taken from Spoon's set opening for the Arcade Fire at Radio City Music Hall last month (and were taped by another of our favorites, nyctaper).  Enjoy.

Josh Ritter - Live at the 9:30 Club - Washington, DC - May 8, 2010:
"Folk Bloodbath"
"The Curse"

Spoon - Live at Radio City Music Hall - New York City, NY - August 4, 2010:
"Written In Reverse"
"Got Nuffin"

Until next time... spend some time with the music of Josh Ritter, Pavement, and/or Spoon... and listen...

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Here's A Song About Nothing And Everything at Once

It's been quite a while, dear readers, but we here at The Cuddle are pleased to be back on the blogging track.  Since we last had a chance to chat (and since we received our most recent threatening e-mail about removing MP3 files) there has been a lot going on in our musical landscape.  We've seen some great shows and heard some great new things that have gotten our fires stoked.  It's a time for change, as we're speeding toward the greatest time of year in sweet, little B-lo - Fall.  Just over 24 hours from now, our calendars will mark September 21st, the start of the Autumn season, and with it, Mrs. Cuddle's favorite holiday, Halloween.  We've got a lot planned between now and then, but in the meantime, on to an update:
On a beautiful late summer evening (August 28th to be exact), Mrs. Cuddle and I ventured to the Canandaigua Music and Arts Center (CMAC from now on) to see two of our favorite bands (to be fair, two of MY favorite bands, ONE of hers) - The New Pornographers opening for My Morning Jacket.  Despite being sans the rapturous Neko Case (felt more than a little slighted there), the Pornos sounded great.  Carl Newman was in fine voice as usual, the band was tight, and Kathryn Calder was downright impressive - not only singing her parts, but covering Neko's as well.  It was a little disappointing that the venue was less than 1/10th full to see one of indie rock's foremost groups, though. 
After a short intermission, the now packed CMAC was greeted by the nattily dressed quintet and its dual guitar onslaught of Jim James and Carl Brommel as they tore into "The Way That He Sings".  For the next two hours, those in attendance were held in rapt attention by what must be the finest live band playing today.  Besides the great setlist and amazing musicianship of the band, what stands out is how much fun they seemed to be having.  Jim James played a variety of guitars (among them, his signature flying-V) and danced all over the stage.  Besides playing most of our personal favorites ("Dondante" and "Wordless Chorus" were sublime), the band played new tune "Circuital" - a live version from an earlier show on 8/17/10 appears below.  This show will rank right up there with the best of our concert-going lives and made us long for their next show in our surrounding area.  A final word on the CMAC - the venue was absolutely perfect.  Great concessions, well-arranged, perfectly clean, great sound, easy parking, helpful staff.  We'll definitely make every effort to go back soon.

Just 5 days later, Buffalo's finest rock venue, The Town Ballroom, played host to another one of rock's most incendiary live acts - The Black Keys.  The room was packed to the rafters as Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney took the stage and burned through some old favorites (kicking things off, as usual, with "thickfreakness").  They were later joined by a bass player and organist to flesh out the sound of some tunes from this year's masterpiece, Brothers ("Ten Cent Pistol" was a definite highlight).  No one in the crowd left disappointed by The Keys' aural onslaught, despite the huge build-up that the show received in our local media (one would think that a band couldn't live up to the hype... The Black Keys certainly did).

This past Tuesday (September 14th to be exact) was quite the new release day, with 3 albums that will vie for places near the top of The Ideological Cuddle's Best of 2010 list.  First, the always enchanting Leonard Cohen blessed his fans with another postcard from the road of his almost two year 2008-2009 tour, adding to the spectacular Live in London which was released last year.  Songs From the Road is a CD/DVD combo (also available in 2 LP form - $35 was a little rich for my blood despite my obvious proclivity for all things wax) with 12 songs taken from various venues on the tour.  The CD and DVD contain the same material, but no matter.  Take it from a Cohen obsessive - the CD is great, but the DVD is essential.  Just watching a 74 year old musical genius weave his web of intrigue is worth the price of admission.  Each performance is pitch-perfect (Cohen's chilling intonation and impressive guitar playing on "Avalanche" is a highlight), but the version of "Hallelujah" from the 2009 Coachella Fest is TRANSCENDENTAL - try not to get chills as Cohen holds 100,000 kids in rapt attention and gets them to sing along.
Nick Cave's Grinderman project returned this past week with Grinderman 2, another album full of sex and sleaze with a psych-blues bent.  More sonically dense and lyrically evil than its predecessor, Grinderman 2 burns out of the gate with "Mickey Mouse and the Goodbye Man", a wicked tune about two brothers clearly up to no good (OK, that's an understatement - felonious would be a better description).  When the band cranks the volume, thrashing ensues.  Where the first Grinderman record was clearly a mid-life crisis record about hunting tail ("No Pussy Blues" anyone?), this record presents the morose along with the deviant.  The protagonist in "When My Baby Comes" is longingly singing from his hospital bed, waiting for his beloved to show up (hint - she ain't coming), while "Palaces of Montezuma" professes the singer's deep love for his woman with all of the things (corporeal and ethereal) that he'll give to her.  All in all, another feather in Cave's crowded cap of masterworks.  While we're on the topic of Nick Cave, if you like the works of Irvine Welsh (author of Trainspotting and Filth, among others) and Chuck Palahniuk (Fight Club), by all means check out Cave's second novel, The Death of Bunny Munro.  This book is not for those looking for a clean, good time, but for those seeking a little bit of seediness with their literature.  I picked it up while on vacation and couldn't put it down.  I kind of wish I had known about the audio book version, as it's 7 discs worth of Cave reading his prose.  Perfect for the Halloween season.
The final new release from last week that has our ears ringing and our hearts leaping out of their collective chests is the thundering return to form by Merge records superheroes Superchunk.  Majesty Shredding can't be called a return to form, nor can it be called a new direction for the band.  What it can be called is a modern masterpiece of indie power-pop.  Coming through the speakers like a New Pornographers LP turned up to 45 speed, Mac McCaughan and company spin through 11 tracks without a dud in the bunch.  First single "Digging for Something" starts the proceedings off right and the band refuses to slow down throughout 42 minutes of perfection.  Most affecting might be "Fractures in Plaster" or "Everything at Once" - as each muses on getting older, and hanging on to what matters.  I must admit being a little late to the Superchunk party (only falling in love within the past 5 years and becoming full-on obsessed while in Boston earlier this year), but consider me a full convert.  It's hard to believe that there are millions out there unaware of this band's prowess and power.  This record is clearly one of the 3 best that 2010 will see and just might supplant The National's High Violet or The Black Keys' aforementioned Brothers at the top of this year's list.

Here's a live taste of some of the best that My Morning Jacket and Superchunk have to offer:

My Morning Jacket:
Live in Japan - February 6, 2009 - "Dondante"
Live in Chicago, IL - Charter One Pavilion - August 17, 2010 - "Circuital"

Superchunk:
Live at Duke University - September 26, 1997 - "Shallow End"
Live in Washington, DC - 9:30 Club - September 17, 2010 - "Throwing Things"
Live in Washington, DC - 9:30 Club - September 17, 2010 - "Fractures in Plaster"
Live in Washington, DC - 9:30 Club - September 17, 2010 - "Everything at Once"

Until next time, please head out to see a band that you love live in concert and check out the new Superchunk LP - it'll make your day... just listen...

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

The Curse of Sophistication


A good Wednesday evening to the collected masses.  Today is a special day in Ideological Cuddle land, as it marks the 56th birthday of one of the 2 or 3 greatest songwriters alive today - Declan Patrick MacManus, aka Elvis Costello.  He is right at the top of my favorite artists list, next to the likes of Tom Waits and Bob Dylan.  The thing that sets Elvis apart from those visionaries is his constant ability to try, and succeed at, new styles.  He's the ultimate musical chameleon, going from literate punk, to R&B revivalist (Get Happy! is clearly the music snob's choice for best Costello album - I agree completely), to country music jester, to straight rock and roller, to torch song savior, to Nawlins preacher, to alt-country crooner, and everywhere in-between.  His discography is the blueprint for hyper literate, catchy songwriting.  Josh Ritter, Joe Pernice, Ted Leo, Billy Bragg, Ray LaMontagne, Nick Lowe, even his contemporary in the British punk scene, the legendary Joe Strummer - they all have written in the style that he perfected.  Each of his albums have their own charms, but I'd select This Year's Model, Armed Forces, Get Happy!, Imperial Bedroom, and King of America as the 5 best (in no particular order).
For the vinyl obsessed (ooh ooh! me! me!), his original picture sleeve singles on the Stiff Records label are highly collectible and quite affordable.  The parade of collectible picture sleeve singles continued upon his switch to Radar Records in the UK with "Radio, Radio" and "(I Don't Wanna Go To) Chelsea" being favorites.  The ultimate 45 from the early E.C. collection, might be his 1979 red vinyl Valentine's Day single of "My Funny Valentine" - knock-off copies exist, so buyer beware.
I could go on for hours about dear old Mr. McManus, but the best way to celebrate his birthday is to listen to some of his music.  Below, you'll find live versions of many of my favorite Costello tunes (yes, I know that "I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself is a Burt Bacharach song).  All are of beautiful quality and most are acoustic versions (many with just Elvis and Steve Nieve, The Attractions' virtuoso piano player).  Enjoy:
UPDATE - LINKS REMOVED
"Temptation" (Live at Massey Hall, Toronto, Ontario, 1996)
"Little Triggers" (Live on the Elvis Costello/Steve Nieve Tour, 1996)
"(I Don't Wanna Go To) Chelsea" (Live on the Elvis Costello/Steve Nieve Tour, 1996)
"I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself" (Live on the Elvis Costello/Steve Nieve Tour, 1996)
"The Other End of The Telescope" (Live on the Elvis Costello/Steve Nieve Tour, 1996)
"Riot Act" (Live on BBC Sound Stage with The Attractions)
"45" (Live on The Tonight Show, 1999)

And last, but certainly not least, his best known song with some beautiful transitions to some Motown classics (including "The Tracks of My Tears" and "No More Tear-Stained Makeup") :
"Alison -> Tears Medley" (Live on the Elvis Costello/Steve Nieve Tour, 1996)

Until next time, celebrate the musical gifts of Mr. Declan Patrick MacManus, and listen...

Monday, August 23, 2010

Another Song, Another Mile

A good Sunday evening to everyone out there.  It was quite the eventful weekend here in Ideological Cuddle land, as it was packed wall-to-wall with concerts, sporting events, dinners, even reunions with old friends (glad to have you back, Big Sexy).  Tonight's post is the next in the Cuddle's series of Top 5s and involves some great music and one of our favorite movies.

The Ideological Cuddle Top Five:
     Songs That Should Have Been In Almost Famous
                   (But Would Have Been Anachronistic If They Were)

1. The Black Crowes - "Wiser Time" (Live on VH1 Unplugged, 2008) - This one is easy.  The best "travelling band, being on the road" song of the past 20 years, the Crowes write what they know.  It's easy to see a little bit of the Crowes in the fictitious Stillwater from the movie (especially since Jason Lee seems to channel his inner Chris Robinson throughout the film - in look and demeanor).  I could easily see this tune replacing "Tiny Dancer" in the scene on the bus after Russell takes a bit too much acid at a party in Kansas.  Might not have the sing along power of Elton John's smash hit, but would hammer home the stresses of being in a band, travelling across the country with your best friends who so easily can become enemies.  The acoustic version above highlights the guitar breakdown in the center of the song - the perfect section for the scene mentioned.

2. My Morning Jacket - "Golden" - Another travelling song, this one's not so specific to the band, but still highlights the loneliness of the road.  Jim James' haunting voice propels the song on beautiful acoustic guitar/slide guitar lines.  I can picture Russell, again on the bus, strumming this song to himself as the rest of the band listens in.

3. Wilco - "Monday" - I can picture Jeff Tweedy and the rag-tag group of musicians who have made up Wilco over the years starring in an Almost Famous-type film.  In effect, they've already documented their quasi-demise and subsequent rise in their excellent documentary, I Am Trying To Break Your Heart.  Any music fan, especially those who love Wilco owe it to themselves to check it out.  This song, off of Being There, is a rollicking throwback of a song, documenting life on the run.

4. Blitzen Trapper - "Stolen Shoes and A Rifle" - Total 1970s country-rock throwback.  There's no other way to describe this standout track from Blitzen Trapper's breakthrough Furr record.  Play it for the uninitiated and they'll swear it was written and released sometime in the early 70s.  Maybe not the perfect song for Stillwater to play in the movie, but something that its lead singer, Jeff Bebe would be found listening to.  Lazy vibe, vintage sounds.

5. Drive-By Truckers - "Outfit" (Live and acoustic at Cooley's House, 12/29/03) - OK, this one is almost too perfect.  A definite masterpiece in the Trucker's canon, Jason Isbell's song of fatherly warning is cautionary, yet encouraging.  A father sings to his rock front-man son, telling him not to fuck up the gifts that he's been given.  "Do you want to grow up to paint houses like me?  A trailer in your yard 'till you're 23?  Do you want to feel old after 42 years?  Keep droppin' the hammer and grindin' the gears."  Daddy sets it out nice and plain, while encouraging his son - "Don't sing with a fake British accent, a Southern man tells better jokes" and "Have fun and steer clear of the needle".  One could imagine Russell or Jeff's father singing this to them on the phone after calling home during a bender.

If any of you out there haven't seen Almost Famous, do yourself a favor and go out and grab a copy now.  It's likely the greatest love note to rock and roll that the silver screen has/will ever seen.  Grab a copy, look, and listen.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Nobody's Listening, My Friend

Good Evening.  Tonight, we are happy to introduce a new and (hopefully) recurring feature at The Ideological Cuddle.  I had the idea recently to throw some quick hit posts out there, highlighting Top 5 lists (everyone likes lists, right???).  There are tons of ideas bouncing around in my head (and further suggestions are always welcome... leave a comment).  Here's the first :

The Ideological Cuddle Top Five:  Unexpected Covers

1. The Afghan Whigs - "Miss World" - This might be my favorite cover of all time.  Greg Dulli manages to boil the punk roots of the Hole original down into a dirge - comprised of slow marching piano, pleading trumpet, sax, and trombone only.  Courtney Love's lyrics of self-loathing are taken from declaration of independence into funeral rite.  Originally released on the "Somethin' Hot" single, it is well worth seeking out.

2. Elvis Costello - "Beautiful" - Recorded for and initially heard over the end credits to an episode of the TV show House, Costello's take on the Christina Aguilera hit is surprising for its unadorned beauty.  It can be found on the soundtrack to the same show.

3. My Morning Jacket - "Tyrone" (Live on KVRX Radio, October, 2000) - This one shouldn't come as much of a surprise to those of you familiar with MMJ's sound.  Fans know that the band can stretch out into funk territory with the best of them.  Their reworking of Erykah Badu's classic is very faithful, funky, and fully-realized.  Jim James' gentle falsetto sits front and center.  The band has been known to pull this one out of their bag of tricks from time to time live in concert.  Keep an eye out for it (and click above for the real thing).

4. Gillian Welch and David Rawlings - "Black Star" (Live at Bonnaroo, 2007) - I hope everyone out there has heard the Radiohead original of this song, as it's a beautiful, guitar-driven ode to relationships on the brink of disaster, and one of the band's true underrated gems.  Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, alt-country troubadours to be sure, strip away the noisy layers of guitar and feedback, leaving the beautiful, acoustically strummed melody unadorned.  Their voices intermingle beautifully, leading to a stunning performance.  Not to be missed.

5. Ted Leo - "Since U Been Gone > Maps" (Live in Studio) - OK, not only does this track include two covers, but it shows Ted Leo's range (or possibly his insanity... maybe both).  Not many indie rock superheroes would dare cover something as mainstream as a Kelly Clarkson song, but Leo pulls it off with aplomb, showing the song to be a stunningly catchy tune.  His ability to go seamlessly into the Yeah Yeah Yeahs lone hit, "Maps", shows not only his range, but the scary similarities between the tunes.

BONUS COVER!!!  Ted Leo - "Spirit of Radio" (Rush cover Live In Studio) - The awesomeness of this track just speaks for itself - Ted Leo + Rush = Indie Fan Boy Wet Dream (and shit can Ted play guitar).

Until next time, drop your thoughts on future Top 5 lists below, or just feel free to share some of your favorite Unexpected Covers... and don't forget to listen...

Saturday, August 14, 2010

I Got A Head Full of Sermons and A Mouth Full of Spiders

Greetings, dear readers.  Today, a glimpse into one of the world's hardest working and least appreciated bands.  For 20 years now (with a couple of hiatuses mixed in), The Black Crowes have been criss-crossing the globe bringing their own brand of dirty rock and roll to the converted masses.  Functioning like a modern-day biblical fable, the rambling, shambling crew that has comprised the Crowes lineup over the years has always been helmed by the brothers Robinson - Chris and Rich.  They fight, they make up, they write, they fight again... and so it's gone for twenty plus years.
To many, the Black Crowes will always be that band that covered Otis Redding, got famous, opened for a bunch of big rock stars, got thrown off more than one tour, wrote "She Talks To Angels", put out a couple more albums, copped the Stones' 70s sound, and disappeared into anonymity.  This couldn't be further from the truth.  Although many mainstream music fans would like to assume that the Crowes disappeared, they clearly have not.  They boast a fan base as committed to their live experience as the most fervent deadheads.
The Black Crowes came screaming out of Georgia in the late 80s boasting a sound that was quite passe at the time (rock 'n roll throwbacks to the previous decade) and made it their own calling card.  Those of us lucky enough to see them live in concert on multiple occasions were never disappointed - they always brought their best, night after night.  As a bonus, they're a taper-friendly band and recordings of shows circulate widely (lately, the band has taken to recording and releasing all of their shows themselves, a la Pearl Jam).
The back-to-back punches of Southern Harmony and Musical Companion and Amorica in the first half of the 90s might be the finest that the decade has to offer in the rock field.  The songs have aged tremendously well and sound like they could have come from any of the past 4 decades.  "Wiser Time" wins the award for "Song Most Likely to Have Been Included in The Soundtrack for Almost Famous Had It Been Written in the 1970s".  Substance driven?  Sure.  But if it leads to art this good?  What the hell...
The Buffalo area has been lucky enough to host some of the band's most transcendental moments - their Spring 1995 Amorica Tour show at Shea's in downtown Buffalo, the band willing a thunderstorm through Darien Center at their July, 1997 Further Festival headlining slot (their version of the legendary B-side "Feathers" followed by the Exile On Main Street classic "Torn & Frayed" that night is not to be missed), the band's triumphant reunion tour as it burned through the Kool Haus in Toronto in 2005, the packed house at The Town Ballroom in 2008 as the Crowes preached the gospel, and the emergence of "I Ain't Hiding" - what can only be called disco-Crowes - at the Harbor concert series last summer.
The stage has been set for a final "farewell" this fall - "Say Goodbye To The Bad Guys" with The Black Crowes is being billed as the bands last hurrah.  The faithful has heard this one before, and the boys always seem to make it back.  This time, it feels like it could be the real thing - none of the members are getting any younger, Chris Robinson has his hands in production (he produced Gary Louris' excellent solo record, Vagabonds, among others) and guests on many records, and Luther Dickinson seems primed to head back to The North Mississippi All-Stars with his brother.  Whatever happens, we, the faithful, have years of recorded concerts to pour over and reminisce with... Here's just a taste...and each is taken from a bootleg source...

The Black Crowes - Live In Concert (sorry... don't remember where each of these are from...)
"Remedy"
"Wiser Time" - The Town Ballroom, Buffalo, NY 2008
"Dreams" (Allman Brothers cover)
"High Head Blues"
"Midnight From the Inside Out"
"Movin' On Down The Line" - The Town Ballroom, Buffalo, NY 2008
"Wounded Bird" - The Town Ballroom, Buffalo, NY 2008
"Black Moon Creeping"

Until next time, raise a glass to the hardest working band in Rock 'N Roll, The Black Crowes, and listen...

Sunday, August 1, 2010

I Can't Define Love When It's Not Love

Well readers, this little blog (which I thought that no one actually read) received some complaints over the past week regarding some of our posts.  We seem to have been nicked for posting some mp3 files from bands who don't appreciate that kind of thing.  In response, I'm trying to find a way to still provide those of you who faithfully read the posts in my corner of the universe with some music that I love.  My current storehouse of files doesn't have the capability to share streaming versions of the songs, so I'll be working on that soon.

In the meantime, I'd still like to share some music that I've had kicking around for a while.
The Talking Heads are the first band that I can remember worshipping.  I was well-known among family circles for doing a spot-on impression of David Byrne in the "Once In A Lifetime" video.  I have been known to break out that dance when the occasion is right and I have enough liquid courage surging through my veins.  The band's music mutated over the years - starting with the blueprint for classic NYC post-punk, morphing into MTV-friendly pop, and finally exploring world rhythms.  Their entire canon is excellent and their music doc Stop Making Sense is commonly regarded as the finest of the genre.
Here's a taste of 1979 Talking Heads, recorded live in Los Angeles:

"Stay Hungry"
"Love > Building on Fire"
"Psycho Killer"
"Life During Wartime"
"Take Me To The River"

Until next time, be careful what you listen to and where you find it (a hard lesson for those of us here, I guess), and listen to some Talking Heads...

Thursday, July 29, 2010

So Drunk In the August Sun and You're The Kind of Girl I Like



'Sup peoples. Another scorching, sticky hot day here in B-lo. No rain as promised. What does the area need? How about a breeze? The next in the series...

IDEOLOGICAL CUDDLE BREEZY SUMMER MIX 2010
1. Joe Strummer & The Mescaleros - "Mondo Bongo" - What could be better than one of music history's most enduring voices backed by gentle acoustic guitars, fiddle, and percussion in a bossa nova vibe. I truly feel that The Mescaleros albums that Strummer made didn't get nearly enough attention. The records celebrate a global sound, blending Caribbean sounds, Aboriginal rhythms, Indian ragas, and street music, all baked together with the crust of Strummer's punk roots. Each of the albums is recommended, but, for the summer vibe, Global A Go-Go is the way to go.
2. Carlos Santana & John McLaughlin - "Naima" - OK, I'm sure many of you out there had no idea that this album existed. Here's the back story - Santana and McLaughlin, two of history's greatest guitarists, and devotees of Sri Chinmoy and his teachings decide to make an album together called Love Devotion Surrender. They decide to lean more toward McLaughlin's jazz roots, but celebrate Santana's furious rock sound as well. The songs are a combination of Coltrane covers ("A Love Supreme" must not be missed; the above song we'll discuss more in a bit), devotional songs, and originals. Upon its initial release, the album pleased critics, but alienated Santana's fans, being too "jazzy" for many. Further inspection over the years has revealed the album to be a genius amalgam of Santana's love of Miles Davis fusion while adding his own touches. While most of the album is loud and electric, "Naima" is quiet, sedate, and an acoustic guitar duet. It is positively beautiful.
3. Gary Louris - "Angelyne (Live, Solo, Acoustic)" - The original version of this song appeared on The Jayhawk's near-perfect 2003 album Rainy Day Music. Louris and his buddies in the oft-imitated, never-duplicated Alt-Country kings came strolling out of the Minneapolis region in the late 80s and put out a string of beautiful albums that touch on country rock, Byrdsian folk, and straight country, presented with Louris and Mark Olson's beautiful harmonies. This track, taken from a solo acoustic performance earlier this year, is a beautiful performance of a true classic. It includes a gorgeous harmonica part and the entire show is worth hunting down from Cuddle favorite, nyctaper.
4. Imperial Teen - "Ivanka" - A perfect example of indie power pop and another great band from the Merge stable, Imperial Teen struck gold with this track from 2002's On. It is the album's lead track and starts with a classic "1, 2, 3, go..." count-up. This is the soundtrack to heading to the beach, head full of ideas of what's to come. Compelling stuff.
5. Robyn Hitchcock - "I'm Only You (live at the Drake Hotel, Toronto, 6/12/10)" - As outlined in a previous post, I was lucky enough to be present at this show, an intimate affair, during which, Hitchcock presented his considerable songwriting and guitar playing talents. The original version of the above track can be found on Fegmania!, one of Hitchock's excellent 80s albums with The Egyptians. "I'm Only You" showcases Hitchcock's guitar skills and is a perfect example of his sometimes bizarre but always affecting lyrics. Just let the ascending/descending guitar line burrow into your brain and let it live there for a while...
6. Neko Case - "In California" - There are so many choices from Neko Case's catalogue that would be appropriate for this mix, but this song seemed to grab me, not just for its gentle pace and powerful vocal, but feeling of reminiscence that it creates. Sometimes summer isn't just fun and games. Sometimes it's tears and loss. What better way to celebrate that element of summer than swimming around in Neko's voice for 3 minutes?
7. The Magnetic Fields - "Come Back From San Francisco" - A short little ditty from The Magnetic Fields' classic 3 disc monster, 69 Love Songs, "Come Back From San Francisco" is a song of longing - the kind of song that Stephin Merritt was born to write. The song is sung by Claudia Gonson, The Fields's drummer, who is able to bring a special touch to the song.

8. The Faces - "Glad & Sorry" - Easily one of the best songs in The Faces catalogue, "Glad & Sorry" is a Ronnie Lane composition, not one of Ron Wood or Rod Stewart's efforts. The gentle piano line is what snags the listener and the lyrics express regret and thanks. The song is breezy and quiet, pushing Stewart to the background, and Lane to the fore. It's been covered many times, most notably by Billy Bragg, Golden Smog, and The Black Crowes.
9. Josh Ritter - "Lark" - One of contemporary music's greatest songwriters and most talented lyricists, Ritter returned to the fold this year with So Runs the World Away, a typically strong set of tunes. "Lark" wouldn't have sounded out of place on a Paul Simon record (such as Rhythm of the Saints or Graceland). "The Curse" might be the album's best track, but it doesn't fit this mix's goal very well (waltzes + mummies NOT breezy summer).

10. She & Him - "Thieves" - Those who know me, know of my love for all things Deschanel (except her marriage to that dweeb, Ben Gibbard). Her collaborations with M. Ward - 2008's Volume One and this year's Volume Two - are studies in throwback 60s AM radio pop, with Deschanel's beautiful, summery voice front and center. Ward's gentle guitar playing and careful arrangements suit her voice perfectly. "Thieves", the clear stand-out on Volume Two, wouldn't have sounded out of place on a Roy Orbison Sun side from the 50s. The song rolls along on a shuffling, classic pop guitar line, augmented by gentle strings and Zooey's beautiful voice. Ward's backing vocals are barely there, but wonderfully furtive. Perfect for swaying along with your favorite girl, watching the sun set.

11. Pavement - "Gold Soundz" - The prototypical breezy Californian indie band with their prototypical breezy summer song. It needs no further introduction, as it's as perfect as indie rock gets.
12. Tallest Man On Earth - "Graceland" - For those who haven't experienced Kristian Matsson's voice, by all means, click on the above link. You'll find two things. First, his voice hits you like a brick - something akin to Dylan circa Nashville Skyline while inhaling helium, his achy croak is an experience unto itself. Two, his stripped down version of the Paul Simon classic opens the listener up to lyrics that may not have grabbed your attention on the original. The mix puts his voice right in your ear, and primes the listener for a close inspection of Simon's prose - here's a news flash, the subject material isn't as sunny as you'd think.

13. The New Pornographers - "Silver Jenny Dollar" - A Dan Bejar-penned song from The Porno's latest piece of power pop perfection, this year's Together, "Silver Jenny Dollar" is the story of a female rocker who is the singer's unattainable love interest (well, I think that's what it's about... can we ever be sure with a Dan Bejar song?). The outstanding feature of this gem is the insistent "Whoa whoa whoa whoa-wa-wa-wa"s that punctuate the chorus behind Bejar's lead vocal. You really can't go wrong with any New Pornographers records - quintessential summer music.
14. Richard Hawley - "Remorse Code" - Ah, Ideological favorite Richard Hawley. Our love for all things Hawley was professed in THIS post from September, 2009. At that time, Truelove's Gutter was released to rave reviews. One of the centerpieces of that album, "Remorse Code", was re-released as the lead single on the False Lights From the Land EP (on 10" vinyl) which was available from Amazon.co.uk as recently as last week (when I picked up my copy), but seems to be sold out now. Secondary market will have to be the way the rest of you pick it up, and it's well worth seeking out. The EP is a collection of songs that revolve around the theme of the sea, with "Remorse Code" spelling out the addiction of the singer's friend in an allegory of being lost in a shipwreck. Heavy subject material, but the 9+ minute epic rolls along on a gentle acoustic guitar line punctuated by Hawley's trademark Gretsch solos. As with all of his best tracks, Hawley's barritone carries the day.
15. George Harrison - "Any Road" - Our favorite Beatle, George Harrison was taken from us much too soon. His post-Beatles output is deeper, more soulful, and more joyful than any of his colleagues. Last year's greatest hits compilation, Let It Roll: Songs By George Harrison compiles a generous collection of his best. "Any Road", from Harrison's swan song, 2002's Brainwashed, is a perfect amalgam of what summer is all about - "Any road can take you there"...
16. Camera Obscura - "French Navy" - I know that their subject matter seems unfit for a breezy summer mix (with album titles like My Maudlin Career and Underachievers Please Try Harder and enough songs about lost love to fill any depressive's play list), but Scotland's Camera Obscura, much like their countrymen Teenage Fanclub, are a summer band. "French Navy" is purely addictive summer bliss.
17. Fleet Foxes - "Drops In The River (Live on Daytrotter)" - Fleet Foxes are an easy choice for this mix, as all of their songs evoke a Summer/Fall natural vibe. Their acoustic sound is the perfect soundtrack for sitting on a porch in the hot sun with friends and a cold beverage. "Drops in the River" starts with beautiful harmonies, but explodes with sound after its opening salvo. This Daytrotter session was recorded prior to the band's ascent to indie folk darlings.
18. Wilco - "The Thanks I Get" - A legendary "bonus track" from Sky Blue Sky (and famous for its inclusion in a Volkswagen commercial), "The Thanks I Get" is a swaying, rollicking tune, and typical for Jeff Tweedy's propulsive songwriting. Many Wilco tunes could fit on this mix, but this one feels just right.
19. Blitzen Trapper - "Lady On The Water" - A song that can only be compared to the best of 1970s Laurel Canyon/Neil Young/AM Radio soft rock (and that's a good thing!). A Blitzen Trapper record is always guaranteed to surprise with every track - psych-rock on one, gentle finger-picked country-rock the next.
20. Big Star - "Thirteen" - We have to end this mix with a total classic. Alex Chilton's ode to teenage love is chill-inducing every time I listen to it. It's a perfect way to end a date... or a breezy summer mix.

Until next time, spend some time with friends out in the summer sun, cool off with this breezy mix... and listen.

UPDATE - LINKS REMOVED DUE TO COMPLAINTS... sorry, you'll have to seek these songs out for yourself... trust me, it's worth the work...

Sunday, July 25, 2010

For Someone Half As Smart, You'd Be a Work of Art

Good Evening, dear friends and faithful readers.  Tonight, I reflect upon one of my favorite artists and just how much he has in common with my city.  The panoramic view of the gorgeous-looking skyline above is none other than down-on-its-luck Buffalo, taken by yours truly from the deck of the Miss Buffalo cruise ship as it ferried myself and 70 other friends up and down the shores of Lake Erie this past Friday.  Gazing out on my city made me realize, again, how beautiful it can be, yet made me sorrowful for all of the architectural beauty that our city has lost - by neglect or plain ignorance.  A similar neglect and ignorance plagues the memory of Elliott Smith.
On a gloomy October evening, nearly seven years ago, I was hard at work at a busy shift in the emergency room of the Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo when word began to trickle down of "another depressed junkie musician suicide".  My co-workers that evening derided and mocked this "sad-sack" musician who had apparently stabbed himself with a knife, close to the heart.  Only after some of the initial hub-bub had settled down did I find out that the identity of that musician who died by his own hand that night was Elliott Smith.  It was very difficult for me to finish my shift, as Smith's music had kept such a special place in my consciousness.  I knew he was fragile - his depression and drug abuse were somewhat legendary - but his music constantly seemed like a cry for help; a narrative to a deeply scarred man's life.  He was also deeply shy - one look at his live performance of his Oscar-nominated "Miss Misery" on the Academy Awards ceremony in 1998 drives this point home strongly - and was famous for shyly and rarely interacting with his audiences at live shows.  It might have been that shyness or that fragility that led him not to seek further help in the dark days leading up to his suicide.  He has left a recorded legacy that seems to parallel that of another deeply flawed and internally wounded singer/songwriter - legendary British folk troubadour, Nick Drake.
Although our city isn't dead, Buffalo has been on life support for decades, now.  Like Smith, our city has wonderful potential, yet it somehow gets flitted away year after year - each capable of great beauty, yet always seeming sad and downtrodden to those who consider it/him.  Fortunately, our city has hope (just as Elliott did prior to plunging that dirty knife deep into his chest) - there are signs that the "brain drain" that so famously takes our doctors, lawyers, and professionals tutored at the University at Buffalo away from us is slowing.  Our housing market hasn't taken the plunge as so many cities' markets across the country have, and our downtown area, slowly but surely, makes a little more of a comeback every year.
As years have passed, it seems as though the memory of Elliott Smith has faded slightly, as has the memory of Buffalo's storied past.  His songs are as powerful as any in the last 20 years - for their message of loss, addiction, hope, and struggle.  The photographer Autumn de Wilde released a beautiful posthumous photograph book entitled Elliott Smith in 2007.  Some photos from the book are available for viewing at de Wilde's website - HERE.  The book is an intimate photographic look into an artist who constantly tried to avoid intimacy.  I encourage each of you to check it out (a copy proudly lives in the Ideological Cuddle's archives). 
It would truly be a shame for those of us who care so deeply about music to allow his legend to disappear.  Although each of his albums are wonderful, the most affecting songs Elliott Smith ever committed to tape tend to be those that are stark and spare - just his wounded voice and a guitar.  Below, you'll find a collection of solo acoustic songs that Elliott recorded in February of 1999 live in studio for broadcast.  It contains two of Smith's most heartfelt and affecting songs - "Baby Britain" and "Waltz #2 (XO)", each found in studio form on his breakthrough record, XO.  I truthfully had no idea I owned this music, but I'm proud to share it with all of you out there.  The songs are bleak on the surface, but give them a chance - Smith's light will shine through (and one day, so will Buffalo's).

Elliott Smith - Live at Glen Sound Studios, Seattle, WA - February, 22, 1999 :
"Happiness" (please excuse the annoying radio host at the outset of the track)
"Son of Sam"
"Baby Britain"
"Everything Reminds Me Of Her"
"Rose Parade"
"Waltz #2 (XO)"

Until next time, remember the good things about The City of Good Neighbors, find some Elliott Smith, and listen...

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

If I Make It Through Today, I Know Tomorrow Not To Leave My Feelings Out On Display


Greetings Ideological Readers... Today's post has a somber, yet celebratory tone.  We here at the Cuddle found out that the Ideological Sister-In-Law was admitted to a local hospital for ongoing evaluation of of GI issues.  Our thoughts and best wishes are, of course, with her for a speedy recovery.  At the same time, we celebrated the 15th anniversary of the life-saving transplant that sustains me today.
Thinking about the anniversary of my transplant always reminds me of when I was diagnosed with renal disease in February of 1993.  At that time, as referenced in previous posts, Evan Dando's honey-drenched voice carried me through the roughest 2 weeks of my life.  During that time, laid up in a bed at the Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo, I listened to The Lemonheads' It's A Shame About Ray seemingly one hundred times.  To this day, I can hear each of the tracks of that record top to bottom when I close my eyes.  Each of Dando's lyrics is gospel to me.  In retrospect, it's interesting that a musician with such a checkered history of drug use and ill health, should bring such hope to an infirmed 15 year old.
As time has passed, some have discounted The Lemonheads' standing in the pantheon of 90s indie pop, but I haven't, nor will I ever.  It's A Shame About Ray will always remind me of a time and place that I had no control over, nor did I understand.  Each of the album's 13 tracks (yes, I had the later pressing of the cassette that had "Mrs. Robinson" tacked on to sell more records) were and are pitch perfect.  Their brand of sunny rock was perfect then, as it's perfect now.  Their music fits well with today's events and with the recent Summer Mix themes of the Cuddle posts.  Below are just a few of the gorgeous tunes on the record, presented in live form from a show recorded at The Lemonhead's heyday in 1994.  I hope you enjoy them, and wish nothing but good health to all of you loyal readers out there...

The Lemonheads - Recorded Live in Concert - 3/20/1994 At Kiamesha Lake, NY
"Confetti"
"It's A Shame About Ray"
"Rockin' Stroll"
"Rudderless"

Until next time, give thanks to good health, family, and friends, get well Katie, and listen...

Friday, July 9, 2010

Here Is A Sunrise, Ain't That Enough?

Good early morning, y'all. Sometimes late evening coffee can have effects other than insomnia, namely, the spark of inspiration for a blog post. Deviating just slightly from the theme set out by the last post, we here at The Cuddle would like to bend your ear about a band that is bending our ears lately, and will continue to all summer long.
The band that we've decided will provide the soundtrack to the summer of 2010 is none other than those long-forgotten progenitors of indie power pop, mantle-carriers of tuneful, timelessly crafted melodies, forefathers of the Glaswegian twee movement, Teenage Fanclub. Their sound is perfect for lounging in the sun, throwing back a few cold ones, chilling with friends, and taking in the slow pace that summer offers.
Morphing from just another fuzzed-out grungy rock band into a power-pop juggernaut in the early 90s, the Fannies faced stiff competition in 1991 when they released their undisputed masterpiece, Bandwagonesque. The record showcased the band's clear strength, namely, three very strong songwriters, well-versed in the lineage of power pop from the Beatles, to the Kinks, to Badfinger, to Big Star. The equal strength of each of the writers in the band make Norman Blake, Gerard Love, and Raymond McGinley as formidable a trio of writers as any band in recent music history has been blessed with. As grunge was coming to the forefront, it seemed easy to dismiss what this four-piece was doing as mere fluff. A closer inspection of that record reveals timeless melodies that hold up amazingly well to this day, almost 20 years later. Rock critics have said that those who haven't heard Bandwagonesque's opening track, "The Concept" are lucky, in that those who worship the song would like to go back and experience it for the first time again. The song is a perfectly addicting 6 minute mini-epic that rolls at a languid pace as Norman Blake recounts (what else) a story about a girl who, inevitably, is gone. At the 3:10 mark, it seems as though the song has ended, but a short drum fill ushers in an initially inexplicable coda that finishes the song's 6:06 length. Wordless harmonizing, bowed electric guitars, a gently lilting baseline, and gentle strumming swell and fall through something that resembles ironic wankery, but comes off as essential, much like "Layla"'s epic coda. The guitar solo at 4:30 even echoes "November Rain" by Guns N Roses. For those who haven't experienced the song, please keep reading, as it waits for you at the end of this post. The rest of Bandwagonesque is just as beautiful, with "Alcoholiday" and "What You Do To Me" providing two other very memorable moments.
While many argue that Teenage Fanclub never was able to hit the heights that they reached with Bandwagonesque, the rest of their catalogue is remarkably consistent. 1993's Thirteen was hailed by many as an utter failure, but the benefit of time and reassessment, shows otherwise. This album merely showed a band willing to look backward to their original sound (more harsh, layered guitars and faster songs a la A Catholic Education, the band's first album) while pushing forward and setting the groundwork for the rest of their catalogue by showcasing sunny harmonies. "Radio" and "Norman 3" are the album's stand-outs.
Grand Prix followed in 1995 and picked up where Bandwagonesque left off, offering a more consistent slower pace, insistent melodies, and power pop bliss through songs such as "Sparky's Dream", "Mellow Doubt", and "Don't Look Back".
1997s Songs From Northern Britain is the album where the Fannies clearly let their Alex Chilton worship fly. The album is a top to bottom stunner, but is not quite as immediate a classic as Bandwagonesque. This album was criticized for being "too mellow" and having too much of a "Laurel Canyon sound", but listening through the record multiple times reveals it to be a love letter to their Scottish homeland and life in general. "Ain't That Enough" is as sweet a song as you'll find in the band's catalogue.
The 2000s brought three new albums from the band - Howdy!, Words of Wisdom and Hope, and Man-Made - each furthering the band's honey-drenched harmonies and debt to Big Star and the Beatles, but none as good as their previous efforts. Five years would pass between the release of Man-Made and the next Teenage Fanclub record. In that time, many forgot about the band, as more recent bands who claim the Fannies as a touchstone and source of inspiration (Belle & Sebastian, Nada Surf, Travis, and the New Pornographers) rose to prominence.
With the dawn of 2010 came the promise of a new release by the band. US distributor Merge Records did a fantastic job of giving the album some press and exposure stateside, and when Shadows was released last month, the world seemed primed for a Teenage Fanclub comeback. They wouldn't be disappointed. Showcasing a more mature sound, stemming from years of experience, the album is their strongest since Bandwagonesque. As with each great Teenage Fanclub record, Shadows is loaded with songs that get stuck in your brain and roll around all day. Just try not to hum along with "Baby Lee", "Into The City", and "Sometimes I Don't Need To Believe In Anything". The album will clearly be a contender for year-end "Best Of 2010" lists, and seems to have a timeless quality to it. The band doesn't rush any of the songs, but everyone should really rush out to hear it.

Without further ado, a Teenage Fanclub primer. You know there's only one song that could kick off this list...

"The Concept" from Bandwagonesque
"Alcoholiday" from Bandwagonesque
"Star Sign" recorded live at The Paradiso, 11.20.95 - original version on Bandwagonesque
"What You Do To Me" recorded live at The Paradiso, 11.20.95 - original version on Bandwagonesque
"Radio" recorded live at The Paradiso, 11.20.95 - original version on Thirteen
"Sparky's Dream" recorded live at The Paradiso, 11.20.95 - original version on Grand Prix
"Ain't That Enough" from Songs From Northern Britain
"Baby Lee" from Shadows

Until our next Summer Mix Tape, sit back, relax, and listen to the gorgeous harmonies and addicting melodies of Teenage Fanclub...