Gary
Pig
Gold:
January, 2004
Ten You May Have
Missed in 2003
In that tipsy-turvy year when Triumph the Insult Comic Dog's
Come Poop With Me outsold labelmate REM's latest
Best Of by a margin of twenty-to-one in most key retail
markets, and the RIAA's legal staff seemed the only entity
who can claim to have made actual musical hay in the bazaar
that was the 2003 Record Biz, I merrily continued to seek
sonic refuge by burrowing both ears deeply down within the
cultural subterrane I might like to call Outsider Music for
the In Crowd. So if you're up to joining me in taking a dip
beneath the r'n'r radar, come read with me as I exhume a mere
ten of my Frequently Forgotten Faves from '03
and in
absolutely no order other than the alphabetical, I must implore,
for those keeping score:
Johnny Dowd
Wire Flowers: More Songs from the Wrong Side of Memphis
(Munich Records)
www.johnnydowd.com
Quote: "In the winter of 1996, I retreated
into a small room to write and record songs on my four-track,"
explains Ithaca, New York's premier moving man with a six-string.
"Many of those recordings found a home on my first album,
Wrong Side of Memphis. " (Required Listening,
by the way, everyone!) "The rest are here. Different
versions of some of these songs are on Pictures From Life's
Other Side and The Pawnbroker's Wife, "Johnny
continues in his handy Wire Flowers liners, "but
what you'll find here are the original bad seeds." And
what stunningly glorious underbrush this is, from the
Safe As Milk Beefheart-break of "Monkey Run"
to the Elvis Sun Session -ready "I See Horses,"
the broken Buffalo Springfield "Ain't Got a Dime,"
clear on up and out towards the inevitable "Judgment
Day" (precisely the kind of anti-Americana which broke
the late, extremely great Rank and File up on their third
album, I'll have y'all know). But then there's the should'a
been "Cold Turkey" B-side "Rockefeller Eyes,"
the Jandek with a budget (and a libretto) "Black Rain,"
and still enough additional raw jewels left over
to score David Lynch's next three films
so long as Rick
Rubin promises to produce, that is. I admit, Johnny Dowd seems
to end up on my year-end tallies each and every twelve months
it seems. If you've ever wondered why, I heartily suggest
you give yourself some Wire Flowers today.
Jeremy
Pop Dreams
(Jam Records)
www.jamrecordings.com
Quoting liner notes again (though this time
those of no less an expert on the subject than twistin' shakin'
Beverly Paterson of Rock Beat International magazine),
"The first track on the album, "Pop Dreams For You
and Me," begins on a rather ghostly note before flexing
its muscles into a spinning romp of power pop glory. Stepping
into Byrds territory, "Walking With You" reels with
jingly jangly guitar magic and heaps of sun-kissed melodies
you won't soon forget. Rock solid rhythms pierce "The
Actor," while "Just a Song" is speckled with
a nice psychedelic motif, due to the snake charming fragrance
of some trippy sitar work. "Are You Afraid?" and
"What Friends Are For" both log in as straight-forward
pop pursuits that grip you by the ears right away and demand
to be played again and again. Pop Dreams also includes
a bright and bouncy cover of Lennon and McCartney's "Good
Night" that adds a whole new approach to the original
version." Well, Beverly, what can I possibly add to all
that but "Well said, ma'am! I couldn't have reviewed
it better myself
so as you can see, I didn't,"
not to mention, "Jeremy? Yessir, you've gone and made
your very best album to date." And as for the rest of
you out there, all I can say is there honestly wasn't a more
purely positive forty-six minutes of word, sound and above
all vision put out there in 2003, and you each owe it to yourselves
to partake fully this very instant. Close quote.
Tom Jones
Mr. Jones
(V2 Music)
www.tomjones.com
For those wondering what's been new (pussycat)
with Atomic Jones these days -- when he's not jamming da blooz
alongside Jeff Beck for Martin Scorsese or belting over Three
Dog Night oldies on "Good Morning America," that
is - here's a hep little platter that belatedly came my way
wherein Tom's latest in a long line of contemporary
collaborators is none other than Wyclef Jean! Okay, so often
these enforced pair-ups twixt yesterday's heroes and not-quite-so-oldies
but goodies often fall far flat, but Tom's always had an impeccable
ear whenever the need arises to hitch his stalling star upon
sympathetic shoulders (eg: Jerry Lee Lewis in '67; Prince
two decades later). So with a delightfully dub yelp of "one,
two, Tom's coming for you, three four gonna bust through your
door, five six you better lock up your chicks, seven eight,
before it's too late," Messrs. Jones and Jean embark
upon three quarter-hours of deadly Diddy-beating, Ron Isley-esque
RandB-moderne, and even a Folkways/Smithsonian-sampled lunge
at "Black Betty" that must have Ram Jam, not to
mention Leadbelly Himself, doing the funky chicken in their
graves. The main star throughout just has to be Tom's lyrics,
however: this is, I believe, the first time in his illustrious
forty-year career he's helped pen the majority of an album's
tracks, and whether waxing nostalgic on his Joe Meek / Squires
daze ("with a mike and a guitar I used to racket on any
stage"), bemoaning a fairer sexer's lack of attention
- yeah, right ("I serve you breakfast in bed, but you
say that ain't enough, so I take out the garbage on the weekend"),
or simply tipping his pelvic region on behalf of "my
people working, waking up at six in the morning, trying to
make an honest living ogi ogi ogi ogi oh") Tom's sentiments
are surprisingly candid and heroically heartfelt to a number.
The guy really should right a book already! Now, this entire
jizzle may conclude with a somewhat misguided remix-make of
"I Who Have Nothing," but hey, that's what the "skip"
button's for, right? So put down the man's latest ** Reloaded
** hits comp for a little while at least this year and let
** Mr. Jones ** in with his load too, alright? Coz
Tom
and Wyclef? Why, it's really not that unusual at all!
The Last
L.A. Explosion!
(Bomp! Records)
www.dannolte.com/last
When I eventually get to the West Coast chapter
of my Fallen Through The Cracks tome, more than special
mention will certainly be given to the mighty Nolte brothers,
Joe, Mike and David, and their criminally under-heard combo
The Last who, between roughly 1976 and 79, helped kick-start
the entire Los Angeles punk, paisley and/or power pop scene(s)
in a way the GoGo's, Germs, and even Plimsouls can only hope
to retrospectively rival. In this time, and in their prime,
The Last only managed to squeeze out one full album (which
upon release was stupidly criticized for being "too clean"
-sounding to an audience already being weaned for the likes
of Black Flag). But listened to today, luvingly restored,
remastered and repackaged in all its Living Stereo glory by
their veteran mentors at Bomp, L.A. Explosion provides
no less than a 21-track, 57-minute primer for pop-rock's anti-State
of the Art circa Joe's Garage and Tusk (between
sessions for which our heroes snuck in to do their overdubs,
just to put everything in its proper hysterical perspective).
Yep, you too can trace this seminal band's evolution from
back-alley Seeds 'n' Searchers regurgitators ("She Don't
Know Why I'm Here") to pseudo-nouveau surf-rockers ("Every
Summer Day"
.Murry Wilson, where are you?!!) through
to their brave, early championing of the second British
Invasion ("Bombing of London" especially Clashes
in a way I'm sure J. Strummer would've approved, while "Century
City Rag" - written 'way back in '75 after Joe Nolte
quit his highschool prog band, I kid you knot! - easily out-Wellers
the Jam with one Rickenbacker tied behind its back). Like
their East Coast offspring The Cheepskates, what truly set
The Last apart from the pack was always the sheer complexity
and inventiveness of its in-house songwriting (ie: "This
Kind of Feeling" and "Someone's Laughing" can
stand proudly against any Beau Brummels A-side),
but while never letting such craft get in the way of having
tons-o-laffs in the process, I'm so pleased to report (like
the Gene Vincent vs. Doors fistfight which is their bluejean-bottomed
take on, you betcha, "Be Bop A Lula" herein). Alas,
Get The Knack sorta overshadowed L.A. Explosion
upon its original release, then the various Bang(le)s
etc. who comprised the Last's audiences began to form their
own bands and, well
at least it's never too late to
marvel anew at the harmony-packed history littering this monumental
disc. At last.
Jack Pedler
D.T. Delinquent
(Race Records)
http://mywebpage.netscape.com/taylorzwin/JackPedler.html
It's taken over a decade since the man first
stepped off the drumkit behind some of his home and native
Canada's greatest bands (eg: Teenage Head) and recordings
("Red Red The Rocking Horse," for all you seven-inch
Seventies collectors), but Jack Pedler has finally, fatefully,
fitfully even released his Sgt. Pepper
no,
better still, his Who Sell Out
wait a minute,
I mean Boulders for the Empty Millennium. From its
initial blast of iron-curtained oompah's ("Wolfgang!
Where's the Jägermeister?" howls a lone voice in
the sonic wilderness) to the concluding in-the-bagpiped coda
of Celtic chaos, we're careened upon a journey into deepest,
dankest Dickensian strum and drang, buoyed with all the pointed
hilarity befitting a man of J.P's learned world-wisdom. The
title track, f'rinstance, takes only minutes to scale the
Roger Watery Dark Side of The Wall ( without requiring
any Gerald Scarfe artwork either!), courtesy of the patent
Pedler wordplay ("
looking like a comatose mangled
mannequin") while producer Georgie Fab's always artful
cellarful of nice noise churns restlessly beneath it all.
Elsewhere, Blood Sweat and Tears meets Rocky Horror ("It's
Not So"), our ol' pal "Baby H" lifts the oh-so-timely
spectre of war pigs everywhere, but our hero Jack nonetheless
can still take time out to take a drive -- whilst taking a
bride! -- in the car-tune to end all cartoons, "Hot Wire."
Whew! So, to quote the master yet again, if ever you should
find your laundry in a quandary, metaphorically speaking,
what's the worry? Just grab your little log, pull yourself
alongside the effigy campfire, snuggle up warm as toast, and
spend your way outta the hole, dammit, by plunking your big
bouncy bucks down for this delicately floured 'n' tickled
wizard's brew. Go ahead then. Don't be ascared! Trust in Jack.
The Playmates
Listen!
(K.O.G.A. Records)
http://u-go.to/playmates/
Thanks to David Bash and his truly International
Pop Overthrow festivals, musical wonders which under abnormal
circumstances might go relatively unheard altogether are most
thankfully brought straight to the undivided attention of
just the kinda people who still believe rock and even roll
has the unmitigated ability to amass, amuse, and in the case
of this Osaka combo's 2003 appearance at IPO NYC, absolutely
amaze . I admit, it took only three chords of The Playmates'
Hamburg Beatles-tempered set to make me a complete convert
for life, and the three of their CD's I've managed to grab
so far have barely left the trusty Pig Player ever since.
Interestingly, the most recent of these, Listen!, would
have nothing whatsoever to apologize for if, in fact, it was
named after Billy J. Kramer's 1963 long-player of the same
moniker, as the Mersey beats hard and fast throughout these
dozen tracks too (and, like Sir George Martin's most vital
and vintage recordings, the Japanese Listen! is also
produced in power-pounding Back to Monaural sound
you
better believe it takes a real band to mix down to a single
channel these days). So, where even to begin? Well, howzabout
the Pete Ham dates Eric Carmen "Sweet Girl," the
"Substitute"-era Who acoustic six-powered "In
The Dream," the Holland-Dozier-Holland-go-Walking-on-Sunshine
"Tears Are Fallin'" or even the shimmering Rubinoos-redux
of "Tale Of Summer"? Most aurally astounding of
all though must really be the Tokyo City Rollers-fashioned,
sleighbell-encrusted "Everybody's Rock 'n' Roll Winter,"
which brings back such fond memories of those chilly ChinniChap
egg-noggers from Top Of The Pops past. No, not since Ron Nasty
last helped Utopia deface the music we all know and love has
a mere thirty minutes flat so expertly summed up the raw,
raucous spirit of p-o-p in all of its sly, innocent and yes,
monophonic splendor. In just one more word then? LISTEN!!!
Jason Ringenberg
A Day at the Farm with Farmer Jason
(Yep Roc Records)
www.jasonringenberg.com
Attention! From the fine folk over at Yep
Roc, who've also just given us some grand new Fleshtones and
Big Sandy releases too, comes an alarmingly disarming charmer
which carries the following Parental Advisory: "This
CD contains songs that will have you singing along with your
kids!" Ladies and gentlemen, may I introduce you to the
one, the only Farmer Jason. Now you may remember his previous
incarnation as leader of those red-hot Nashville Scorchers
who, a couple'a decades ago, helped make Bakersfield safe
again for alternative airwaves
and quite some time before
Dwight the Yoakam ever squeezed into his first set of designer
Levis, by the way. But these days Jason seems rightfully content
to traipse the lower quarter before retiring onto the front
porch -- after the young ones have all been put to bed, that
is -- to pick the simple joys of life across his very own
green acres. The result is a harrowingly wholesome half-hour
which may smack some of uprooting Mister Rogers into the Hee
Haw cornfield, but in fact makes quite an airtight case that
the real future of music with such wit and melody
may ultimately rest upon the stages of your neighborhood community
centers, pre-schools and library recital halls. Still with
me? Then I suggest you join Farmer J. asap as he takes us
all on one family-friendly hayride courtesy of his ever-courageous
guitar pickin' chickens, encountering en route an old cow
(who sounds respectfully akin to J.R. Cash), a hog-hog-hog
(via a riff fully fit for the Duke of Steve Earle), and a
deere (as in John, that is) chug-chuggin' tractor. We learn
about sheep shearing and domesticated animals too - literal
pet sounds abound, of course - and even manage to mend
to some chores (plantin' that "Corny Corn") before
the sun duly sets on Jason and his farm, with the good Lord's
goodnight kisses and a heavenly vocal assist from Tahra Dergee.
You know, not since Jonathan Richman last crawled across the
kindergarten floor imploring "I'm a Little Dinosaur"
has listening been so, well, fun-damental!
Sleeping Giant
Excerpts from Late Music
(Nun Bett-R Productions)
You just can't live in New Jersey without
being touched by the knowing shadow of The Smithereens, and
their long-sitting drummist Dennis Diken is especially omnipresent
to even non-Jerseyites out there who still find themselves
regularly pouring over his digital Beach Boy and Lovin' Spoonful
liner notes. Personally speaking, when I asked Dennis to submit
a track to To M'Lou's He's a Rebel: The Gene Pitney Story
Retold, not only did a roller-rink-ready version of "Only
Love Can Break A Heart" eventually arrive in the mail,
but a Bonus Disc by his and Pete Dibella's nom-de-disque of
the moment Sleeping Giant mysteriously came packaged right
alongside same. Truthfully, listen after listen upon countless
listen later, I still cannot express fully how recklessly,
yet skillfully, the sounds imbedded therein effortlessly leap
tall gamuts between the lush, pulsing Anglo-Americana of Walker
Brother lineage ("The Sun's Gonna Shine In The Morning"),
late-Association-style psychedelicacy ("Temptation Cake")
and, if you can ever imagine such a cocky cross-breeding,
Spanky and Our Gang as wrestled mischievously to the studio
floor by Lindsey Buckingham (that gem's known as "In
Another Life"). Yet the melodic crux of this CD-EP just
has to be "Fall Into Your Arms," as subtly intense
as anything that other great drumming Dennis (as in Wilson)
conjured during his Sunflower prime, only to be followed
most logically by the high-as-a-llama Brian Wilson-worthy
"Standing In That Line." For those counting, that's
a big five for five, song-wise, and I bet there's at least
another half-dozen Sleeping Giants just waiting to be burned
and mailed my way by now too (nudge wink). You can bet that
upon immediate receipt of same, I shall continue to report
my full findings to you all, that's a giant promise.
True Love
I Was Accident
(Not Lame Recording Company)
www.trueloverocks.com
Now this is Power Pop - with the emphasis
on the Power. Ray Kubian, Keith Hartel and, yes, the Squirrel,
d.b.a. True Love, like to overdrive the guitars, ride the
crash cymbals wherever and whenever possible, then go that
extra decibel still by layering all with streams of glitter-socking
three-part vocal washes which "bap-bap" here, or
Flo-and-Eddie there
precisely whatever the true love
song in question asks for. And oh yeah, that's another thing:
the songs! Be they big bally ballads (such as "Don't
Mean Anything," "Service of the Knife," or
"Throwing Back the Ring," the latter of which drips
more heartache 'n' harmony than an entire Everlys box set)
or ear-wrenching corkers (like "Burn Rubber," let
alone the sleighbell-and-acoustic-propelled "Now,"
which comes complete with Wall of Spector saxes to boot) these
guys always know exactly what to say, and more importantly
how to say it, in usually three-minutes-twenty or less. Can
you say "lost art," anyone? Plus lyrically, there's
always lotsa love in these here true stories too ("Riot
Helmet" respectfully stops to nod Smokey Robinson's way,
while "The Genius" just might be that long-anticipated
follow-up to Los Mockers' "Coronation" after all).
Yet thankfully as well, there's seldom nary a trace of retro
in True Love's shake appeal, which one listen alone to the
fearlessly over-the-board "Time Dog" mix more than
demonstrates. Why, even Coyote Shivers should approve of the
extra-extraneous amp 'n' SG clatter which dribbles over the
ends of most of these tight taught tracks! And, like the above-raved-over
Playmates, this powerful trio can offer the goods off the
stage too, take it from me. Or better still, from yourself
someday in a rumpus room or true venue near you. So go check
'em out, buy three or four Accidents for yourself
and don't forget to tell the Squirrel that the Pig sentcha,
ok?
Various Artistes:
Albuzerxque, volumes 13, 14, 15
(Zerx Records)
www.zerxrecords.com
Those not already intimately familiar with
the self-styled "Okie musique concrète" of
New Mexican Mark Weber may be quite unprepared indeed for
the veritable Carnival of Sound he's assembled with the 50
tracks by the 29 artists on these latest three installments
of the Albuzerxque series. But those with a very open
mind, and ears to match, will find joys aplenty in the (to
cite but the most delectably) drunken Dixieland vs. bouncing
Brubeck of the Outpost Repertory Jazz Orchestra's "St.
James Infirmary," Mitch Rayes' touching lullaby-from-heck
"Crushed Little Baby," those legendary Bubbadinos'
quite possibly definitive "Paint It, Black" and
Stefan Dill's blisteringly alt. Byrds "Union County Stomp."
But that's not all, folks! There's a searing dollop of vintage
Varèse (C. K. Barlow's "Name Day"), the semi-electronica
update of Dylan's "Cough Song" as if, um, sung by
Lennon's Mr. Wok ("Dalai Lama Throat Clearings"
from Lisa Gill), the Bach-meets-Miles "Symphonia #9 in
F minor" by no less than the Jazz Chamber Ensemble, and
even some wholly Fug-calibre paranoic pickin' from the Zerx
master himself, Mr. Weber (as The New York Times
may still someday be referring to him as). Garnish it all
most liberally with slices of spoken word beatery, crazed
cowboy hop 'n' sing-alongs, mutant mariachi, plus fractured
flamenco and you have far, far more than simply the audio
equivalent of the best dern Open Mic in what remains of the
civilized world, you bet. Better hurry and sign up soon, though:
Last I heard, Albuzerxque 's already up to Volume
17 and counting
.
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