Steve Wilson. On music.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Liminanas - Costa Blanca (Trouble in Mind Records) - courtesy of blurtonline.com

Newly posted at blurtonline.com, my review of Costa Blanca by the Liminanas.

Go here: http://blurtonline.com/review/liminanas-costa-blanca/ ; won't you?

Previously, I reviewed their Crystal Anis album.


In fact, Crystal Anis was my No. 9 album of 2012.
Okay, let me tell you, Costa Blanca is no less of a record. And no, it didn't make my top 10 this year, because I digested it a bit late for inclusion. But top 10, 20, 50 lists are, you know, an imprecise science, more like a dubious art. Some might say bullshit.



What matters is the music, and the joy it brings.

So (en)joy this while you read the review at blurtonline.com



Monday, December 16, 2013

Ezra Furman - Day of the Dog (Bar None Records) - courtesy of Paraphilia Magazine

Hello!

Freshly posted with Paraphilia (a fantastic read all-around) is this ...

http://www.paraphiliamagazine.com/periodical/ezra-furman-day-of-the-dog/.

My review of the latest recording from rocker, singer-songwriter Ezra Furman. 

The album is called Day of the Dog, and it's quite good. Mind, a tolerance for shaggy-dog, occasionally pitch-challenged singers is required, but the material is great and I, for one, dig the singing. Terrific band, too. But hey ... read the review. 

And while you're reading, listen to some music by Mr. Furman and company. 




Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Crossing Boundaries: Those Darlins ... courtesy of Blurt Magazine and blurtonline.com

Blurt has published, both online and on paper, my feature/interview with Those Darlins. You can read it here:

http://blurtonline.com/feature/crossing-boundaries-darlins/

Jessi warmed up to this interviewer as soon as I helped her identify some albums she was making reference to, like Patti Smith's "Wave." That's how this game works. Mostly artists talk to the naive or idiotic. Prove you're neither, they warm up some.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Memento Mori, Lewis Allan Reed, entry no. 2

At last write I recalled my attachment to “I’m Set Free,” a track by Lou Reed on the third Velvet Underground (s/t) album.I failed to mention the guitar solo. It too arrested me, with its beautifully, pitch-warped authority.  

So noted.

Gradually, the whole album sunk in. ‘Murder Mystery’ baffled and amused me. "Pale Blue Eyes" a revelation. "Story of my Life,"  glowed with bittersweet acceptance. Each song an unraveling. “Beginning to See the Light” especially grabbed me … “I met myself in a dream, and I just wanna tell you everything was alright.” The conversational, grace note quality of his phrasing, cramming words while maintaining the tune, struck me. Little did I know then that this would be a set closer for a band I helped conjure a few years hence called Thumbs.
pictured: The Sunshine Company (ha, ha!)

Here, we dive into personal revelation and exposition, perhaps of no interest to someone who just wants to hear about Lou Reed. But it will be in the nature of these posts to move back and forth between worship and wreckage, reverie to reevaluation, the focus shifting from Lou, to me, to the culture in which we both endured. 

By my senior year in high school I was differentiating myself. I was the kind of kid who befriended anyone who was welcoming, smart and/or funny. I didn’t care what tribe you came from, what race you were, nothing of the kind. But in 1969 the ‘respectable’ kids and jocks would ostracize you if you started befriending ‘freaks.’ At first I was just dumbfounded, nonplussed by such bullshit. Then it made me mad. As much as I enjoyed my freak friends I wasn’t interested in signing any contracts. But damned if the straights kids’ intolerance didn’t make my decisions for me. Make me a freak – fuck you, I'll be a freak. But like the Velvets, a band that never fit into the hippie paradigm, and abhorred the West Coast acidsunshinedayglohappyfreakout, I felt like I came from an earlier bohemian world, looking askance at the kids frolicking in the aquarian expectation - loving them, and shaking my head. 

Then there was this girl. It’s a long story, but here’s the short version. After being stymied by shyness and doubt for years, I finally found a girl I wanted to date in my senior year of high school - enough to actually ASK her. I fell in love; I think she loved me too, but I know she wasn’t as consumed as I was. Anyway, she goes away to college while I stay in Lawrence at KU (like I had the money to imagine otherwise). Our love begins in winter, grows through spring and summer, endures for the better part of a long distance fall semester, then she dumps me and breaks my heart.

Who knows, maybe I had it coming. Who was that guy? I look back on him with recognition and incomprehension, affection and bewilderment. Is that how memory lives, works?

I had never been a drinker in high school. A beer or two once in a while. I might have gotten drunk once or twice. We’ll skirt the subject of my emerging drug history, but let’s just say that as the dejected lover I plunged into a brave new world of cheap wine. An immersion it takes a lifetime to assimilate, to make peace with, or eliminate and move on. 

Sometimes I try to remember those days, idle afternoons with friends, hard work in stainless steel kitchens, bit and pieces of something called college, playing in my first band (Eddie Haskell) second floor apartments, bad jug wine, early morning hangover breakfasts, characters on the street, falling asleep on the stairs.

Three records were the soundtrack for my freshman year, second semester, into the summer and well ... since. One had been out for a full year, the early 1970 release of The MC5’s Back in the USA. It was joined by February 1971’s Love it to Death Alice Cooper, and November 1970’s Loaded by the Velvet Underground. And it was Loaded that I played more than any record for the next year or so. 

Compared to White Light White Heat it was pop, fuck  - by comparison to WLWH it was country-rock. A failed attempt at making the Velvet's palatable to radio and wider audience, it was also a beautiful, melancholy capstone to a great band's career. Lou Reed and company had made the Manhattan equivalent of a Beach Boys record with Loaded. “Who Loves the Sun," a pop hit in an alternate universe, with its Randy Newman-like mix of lyrical lamentation and sunny sound kicks the album off. Doug Yule is the singer, as he is on three other of the album's ten tunes. And those performances are part of the beloved fabric of Loaded. Although, guitarist Sterling Morrison contended it would be a better record with Lou's lead vocals throughout. The original sleeve distributes songwriting credits to the band, since corrected - however much Yule contributed, these are unmistakably Lou's writing. 

And the first time I heard “Sweet Jane” I didn’t know it would be the one song that traveled with me everywhere. I have sung it so many times with bands, and heard so many other versions of it that it has attained the elastic status of a standard. But when I go back to the original performance I am struck by the in the pocket ease of the band, the relaxation of the performance.

These albums (with bit of Plastic Ono Band and in April '71, Sticky Fingers), especially Loaded, were part of the after school, between school and work, downtime hanging with friends - soundtrack of eighteen and nineteen. We thought we were clever to figure out the ambiguous mix of doo-wop homage and parody in a line like, ‘as I walk down life’s lonely highways, hand in hand with myself,” from “I Found a Reason.” And “Rock and Roll” suited my emerging sense of self. Faced with the draft, the vagaries of picking a career (“then they expect you to pick a career” – “Working Class Hero,” John Lennon), and living hand to mouth, I was already finding a sustenance, resonance and home in the music that I wasn’t finding anywhere else. And that's why Reverberations borrows from Lou for its credo (i.e. "My life was saved by rock 'n' roll").

Of course all this time I was doubling back to the first album, Velvet Underground and Nico, which by this time sounded both dangerous and familiar, not yet realizing that for me, like hundreds of young musicians, an entire sensibility, a musical template was being established.

But more about that as we move along.


So thank you Lou (Mo, Sterling, Doug ...Adrian, Geoff, Billy).  For spring afternoons. nights of cheap wine discoveries, good friends, bonding over outsider blues. Oh, and of course for helping chart part of my own musical course.  We have many more stories to tell, and shall.

... part II evokes fond memories of Karl, Doug, Jane, Randy, Rick, Rick, Becky, Hector, Mary, Charla, Kevin, Kevin, Stuart, and so many ...

Monday, October 28, 2013

Memento Mori, Lewis Allan Reed, entry no. 1


It was at a high school basketball game of all things.

The day I first laid eyes on the ‘peel slowly and see’ banana cover, designed by Andy Warhol, of the first Velvet Underground album. 

An acquaintance was roaming the balcony of the Lawrence High School gymnasium, pausing occasionally to show his new acquisition to anyone who might be impressed.

This is real time, folks – mid-march, 1967. I was fourteen years of age.

This may sound strange. But I well remember walking the streets of downtown Lawrence with “Are You Experienced” under my arm, recently released, newly purchased, enjoying the commentary of friends and acquaintances who stopped me and asked me about this new artist and phenomenon named Jimi Hendrix. There was no world wide web, only a handful of rock magazines and underground newspapers spreading this subterranean culture to a few of us with our ear to the ground.

This acquaintance later become a friend. Then he was a year or so older. That’s a big deal when you’re fourteen.

He explained the whole drugs, whips, furs, demi-monde exceptional-ism of this new band, a teenage wasteland attempt to provide context.

I filed the information away, curious but anxious.

I heard White Light, White Heat somewhere, some other avant-friend's house. "Sister Ray" freaked me out to tell you the truth. Intrigued, unsettled by what I heard; I was fifteen.

Then I saw the third album, the self-titled record, in the bins of a local record shop. I couldn’t leave the store without it for some reason. That shop is long gone. But that music plays so very often, not just from my computer, stereo and car speakers, but also in the jukebox of my mind.


The first song that sunk in was “I’m Set Free.” The jangle reminded me of the Byrds. The lyrics were a quiet rapture and revelation. The chorus was rousing and dour. And in summation: “I’m set free to find a new illusion.” Words that would raise my spirits and trigger some sadly absurd sense of life’s cycles and shortages … over and over again.

1st in a series of Lewis Allan Reed memories and rhapsodies. 

Friday, September 13, 2013

Richard X. Heyman - X (Turn-Up Records) - courtesy Paraphilia Magazine

Check it out. 

My review of Richard X. Heyman's new album ... X



The link takes you to the marvelous Paraphilia Magazine, where you should hang out and groove even after reading my stuff!

http://www.paraphiliamagazine.com/periodical/richard-x-heyman-x/

No video snips from the new album yet, but enjoy this Heyman classic:




Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Ty Segall - Sleeper (Drag City) / courtesy blurtonline.com


This review of the new Ty Segall release, Sleeper, on Drag City was just posted at blurtonline.com. The link below takes you there (that and the Staple Singers).

http://blurtonline.com/review/ty-segall-sleeper/

Hey, since you're in the neighborhood enjoy "West" from Sleeper.









Thursday, August 29, 2013

Elvis Presley - Elvis at Stax: Deluxe Edition (RCA Legacy Recordings), courtesy blurtonline.com

Please enjoy this new review, ladies and gents:


Just posted at blurtonline.com, my perspective on "the King" and his sessions from 1973 at Stax studios, recently released on RCA Legacy Recordings as a 3-disc set called Elvis at Stax.

Thanks to my editor Fred Mills 'Falletinme Be Mice Elf Agin."

http://blurtonline.com/feature/memphis-found-elvis-at-stax/


From those sessions, Elvis does Chuck ...




Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Eleanor Friedberger - Personal Record (Merge), courtesy of blurtonline.com (Blurt)

Hey. Reverberations Readers ... 

As you know, I write for other periodicals. Yup. Blurt is one such outlet. They just posted my review of the new release from Eleanor Friedberger; perhaps you know her work from the band the Fiery Furnaces. Her sophomore solo release, Personal Record, is a really, really fine album. I think I did a fair job of capturing its quality and spirit. So ... uh, enjoy - 


http://blurtonline.com/review/eleanor-friedberger-personal-record/





Oh, and while you're hanging around "Reverberations" enjoy this video ...






And what the heck explore the blog, too. 

THANKS!

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

"The Church of Jesse Malin" - a 'reprint' from "Back to Rockville" (with appreciation)

Jesse is working on a new record. I'm a fan. I dropped a few bucks into the kitty for his Pledge Music campaign to finance the record. This is the future of prerecorded music for artists with realistic ambitions and sincere aims - like listener supported radio, listener supported artistry. I love that there are still mid-size labels like Merge, Sub Pop, Matador, and In the Red who are motivated by the music, and find some way to survive, even thrive in this new music business model (whatever that is). Truly, I do. But outside of a few viable small to mid-size labels, labels that understand the artist and the audience, the old record business model and the labels that dominated it are a tiresome joke, sliding toward death.

So, if you love an artist, kick in a few bucks. Buy tickets to their shows, fork out for a t-shirt if you can afford it. Buy them a drink if they show an inclination. This is the new world.

There's a link below to a long ass piece I wrote about Jesse Malin inspired by a truly moving live performance, a Madison Square Garden calibre show in a dink ass Lawrence club, to about forty people (maybe). Rock 'n' roll, one sexy ass proposition. And I mean that in the snarkiest and most sincere way possible.

Peace.

http://backtorockville.typepad.com/back_to_rockville/2007/06/an-essay-the-ch.html

Friday, June 14, 2013

Laura Marling - Once I was an Eagle (Ribbon Music), courtesy of blurtonline.com (Blurt)

Hey. Reverberations Readers ... 

As you know, I write for other periodicals. Yup. Blurt is one such outlet. They just posted my review of the new release from Laura Marling, a supremely talented young artist. Her new album is called Once I was an Eagle. It's quite, quite good. And the review? Pretty good, too. Thanks for visiting Reverberations ... the link allows you to visit Blurt's site and see the review.




http://blurtonline.com/review/laura-marling-once-i-was-an-eagle/














Oh, and why not enjoy a nice video from Eagle?







Saturday, May 25, 2013

Iggy and the Stooges - Ready to Die (Fat Possum), courtesy Paraphilia Magazine

It's nice to find a home for one's wayward pieces, writing that defies easy categorization, work that asks the reader for more than the allotted two minutes. Díre McCain and Paraphilia Magazine have afforded me such a sanctuary. I am grateful.

So, a memoir, a reverie, a record ... Iggy and the Stooges - Ready to Die...




The link below sends you to my review at Paraphilia:

http://www.paraphiliamagazine.com/periodical/iggy-and-the-stooges-ready-to-die/

Saturday, March 23, 2013

The Bang Girl Group Revue, as featured in Paraphilia Magazine. Review of "Soul Shangri-La."

I am most fortunate to have crossed paths with Dire McCain and the pioneering crew at Paraphilia magazine. 

Two of my reviews are included in the launch of their new format, which begins with this new issue of Paraphilia. This is the start of what I think should be a long, fruitful association. 

This link delivers you to my just posted review of The Bang Girl Group Revue and their album Soul Shangri-La.



http://www.paraphiliamagazine.com/periodical/the-bang-girl-group-revue-soul-shangri-la/

Friday, March 22, 2013

Big Dipper, as featured in Paraphilia Magazine. Review of "Crashes on the Platinum Planet."

I am most fortunate to have crossed paths with Dire McCain and the pioneering crew at Paraphilia magazine. Two of my reviews are included in the launch of their new format, which begins with this new issue of Paraphilia. This is the start of what I think should be a long, fruitful association.

The link here is to my review of the new release by Big Dipper, Crashes on the Platinum Planet.



http://www.paraphiliamagazine.com/periodical/big-dipper-crashes-on-the-platinum-planet/

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Coming soon... Big Dipper review (Crashes on the Platinum Planet) for Paraphilia magazine.

My review of  Big Dipper's rather wonderful reunion record Crashes on the Platinum Planet will appear in the upcoming edition of Paraphila magazine (http://www.paraphiliamagazine.com/).

In the meantime, check out the video for their homage to their friend (he 'did' Crashes' album art) Robert Pollard.

Enjoy!





















Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Beth Orton - Sugaring Season (Anti-Epitaph)

 
Photo: I have yet to write a review of "Sugaring Season" by Beth Orton, but as a music fan and writer I would be doing it and you a disservice not to give it "Reverberations" highest recommendation.

It has grown on me with every listen. While always a fan of Orton's I've never been struck as true or deep as by this record. 

I could draw parallels to the work of Van Morrison, Sandy Denny and Nick Drake without being unfair or inaccurate, but like all great records "Sugaring Season" has a passion and identity that is singular. 

If you haven't listened to this record, please do yourself a favor. 
I have yet to write a review of Sugaring Season by Beth Orton, but as a music fan and writer I would be doing it and you a disservice not to give it Reverberations highest recommendation.

It has grown on me with every listen. While always a fan of Orton's I've never been struck as true or deep as by this record.

I could draw parallels to the work of Van Morrison, Sandy Denny and Nick Drake without being unfair or inaccurate, but like all great records Sugaring Season has a passion and identity that is singular. Like Astral Weeks or Five Leaves Left, for instance, what makes Sugaring Season so powerful is the the total impression its collection of fine songs makes. Good albums have good songs. Great albums have good songs that complement one another, sequenced in such a way as to make the listener feel that the flow of the record was ordained, inevitable.

If you haven't listened to this record, please do yourself a favor.
 
Enjoy this song from Sugaring Season:

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Bettie Serveert - Oh, Mayhem! (Second Motion) Visit blurt-online.com for a new review.

  Hello, Reverberations readers, your humble scribe is branching out some and contributing to various and sundry reputable journals. One such is Blurt. Blurt is both online and on your newsstands. This is a review just posted online with Blurt. The generous editor, Mr. Fred Mills, is cool with linking from Reverberations.  Everyone wins.

This review is of Bettie Serveert's Oh, Mayhem! on the Second Motion label.


 From here we direct you to the estimable Blurt:

http://blurt-online.com/reviews/view/4343/

Richard Thompson - Electric (New West) Visit blurt-online.com for a new review

 Hello, Reverberations readers, your humble scribe is branching out some and contributing to various and sundry reputable journals. One such is Blurt. Blurt is both online and on your newsstands. This is a review just posted online with Blurt. The generous editor, Mr. Fred Mills, is cool with linking from Reverberations.  Everyone wins.

This review is of Richard Thompson's Electric on the New West label.




From here we direct you to the estimable Blurt:



http://blurt-online.com/reviews/view/4340/

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Tyvek - On Triple Beams (In the Red) Visit blurt-online.com for a new review


 Hello, Reverberations readers, your humble scribe is branching out some and contributing to various and sundry reputable journals. One such is Blurt. Blurt is both online and on your newsstands. This is a review just posted online with Blurt. The generous editor, Mr. Fred Mills, is cool with linking from Reverberations.  Everyone wins.

This review is of Tyvek's On Triple Beams on the In the Red label


 From here we direct you to the estimable Blurt:

http://blurt-online.com/reviews/view/4327/