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Jay Nachman with Graham Parker and the Rumour - Graham Parker's Howlin' Wind (2025)

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In over twenty years of publishing this blog  Jay Nachman , author of  Graham Parker's Howlin' Wind , is the only person I have worked with that I've ever had the privilege of meeting in person. Working with Jay the last few years has been a pleasure. He's helped me discover some fine music - and we've become friends - but I can honestly say that I've never given a good writeup about any music, book, or live performance simply because I learned about them from him or anyone else who has ever asked me to provide them with some positive publicity for their work. So, believe me when I tell you that  Graham Parker's Howlin' Wind is a book worthy of your time. Even with all the knowledge I've acquired about pop and rock music over many decades of listening to it, and I do mean many - I still remember watching The Beatles' American debut live on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964 - there are still genres and artists that I n...

The Red Button - She's About To Cross My Mind (2007)

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Despite their obscurity Seth Swirsky and Mike Ruekberg have a good reputation within the music industry. Swirsky has written songs for Rufus Wainwright, Al Green, Tina Turner, and Taylor Dayne. Ruekberg composed the soundtrack for the independent film Dummy and in 2007, they released their first of three albums together as The Red Button. The Red Button blend all of the major components that the best power-pop has to offer: melody, harmony and hooks. It's the British Invasion sound for the new millennium. She's About To Cross My Mind is for music fans who cherish the sound of the early Beatles, The Raspberries, The Searchers and a few more groups that flew to America from England during the swinging 60s. The album's first single and lead track, "Cruel Girl," is something the mean side of John Lennon could have written in 1963. "Floating By" is a dead ringer for a post-touring years Paul McCartney track. It's got a little "Penny Lane...

The Animals - The Best Of The Animals (1987)

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The Best Of The Animals has been released in multiple configurations. The first album from 1966 contained eleven tracks. In 1987, it was re-released on compact disc with a couple of replacement songs, a new running order, and four additional tunes. Both formats included the longer, 4:29 rendition of "House of the Rising Sun" instead of the edited-for-radio 45 rpm. The cover photo is identical on both the LP and CD. On this updated collection of tunes, the American hit single of "We've Gotta Get Out of This Place" was replaced with the UK version that's considered inferior to the one appearing on the original vinyl. Apparently, ABKCO Records received enough negative feedback from fans that they brought the US version back when a third, very different compilation was issued in 2004 that used Direct Stream Technology (DSD) to make a superior sounding CD. The original Animals were a short-lived outfit. Many of the usual creative differ...

Almost Hits: Marshall Crenshaw - Someday, Someway (1982)

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CD players were first introduced to the United States in early 1983. That made Marshall Crenshaw's second LP, Field Day , the last, new, 33 1/3 rpm album I bought in the 1980s. Unfortunately, I found it boring. All of the songs sounded exactly alike. On the other hand, I believed his eponymous debut was perfect, and I still believe that today. I hadn't purchased a CD player yet when I started buying discs, but I made sure I was going to be well supplied on the day I brought my Onkyo single disc player home from a long out-of-business chain store named Stereo Discounters. Among my initial purchases were Crenshaw's soon-to-be classic that I only owned on a poorly recorded homemade cassette that I dubbed from a friend. On that spectacular release, the rocker went out of his way to look and sound like Buddy Holly while playing a masterful combination of rockabilly, power pop, and garage rock that quickly resonated with music lovers, critics, and musici...

Last Albums: World Party - Dumbing Up (2000)

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For much of its existence World Party was primarily a solo project of Welshman Karl Wallinger rather than a full-fledged band. He frequently played most of the instruments himself, and at other times he operated much like Steely Dan did with the leader hiring musicians for each project as needed. World Party made five albums beginning in 1986. Their recording career ended in 2000 due to Wallinger's poor health. Unfortunately, he died in 2024 at age 66. Not long after  Dumbing Up  was released, the ex-Waterboy suffered a brain aneurysm that kept him inactive for many years. Later, Wallinger returned to performing live. He also recorded with Peter Gabriel, but there were no more World Party records. Upon its release,  Dumbing Up  reached only #64 in the UK, and it never charted at all in the United States. It was World Party's least successful commercial effort even though - artistically - the record rivaled all of Wallinger's earlier work.  The singer...

Brinsley Schwarz - Shouting At The Moon (2025)

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Brinsley Schwarz has been discussed here several times before in two ways: as part of his namesake, pub-rock band and as a solo artist . You can't go wrong with either one. Schwarz spent a handful of years playing lead guitar as the nominal leader of his early '70s quintet followed by decades as a sideman in the same role for Graham Parker and the Rumour. In recent years, the English rock veteran has become a singer-songwriter making music his own way.  Shouting at the Moon is his third solo album. Schwarz easily creates a groove, sets a mood, and proves his worthiness as an axman, all without pretentiousness or excessive volume. He doesn't possess a strong set of pipes, but as always, his vocals are pleasingly straightforward and quite easy on your ears. Schwarz's lyrics aren't cryptic, but they aren't trite or obvious either, so you need to pay attention. It's always the best way to enjoy intelligent songwriting. On ...

Samara Joy - Samara Joy (2021)

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I wrote about Samara Joy McLendon's jazz and gospel inflected Christmas EP  almost two years ago, but I shouldn't have waited so long to discuss the first of her three full length albums. So, let's do it now. This eponymous debut was released when she was only twenty-one years old, even before she graduated from college with a magna cum laude designation. The young singer - who doesn't use her last name professionally - comes from a very musical family. Her father and paternal grandparents are renowned gospel singers, so music is in her blood. She was introduced to jazz in college at SUNY Purchase where she was the valedictorian of her graduating class. The still young singer has already won five Grammys, including the sometimes cursed Best New Artist award in 2023. The good news is unlike Milli Vanilli or The Starland Vocal Band she's not going to disappear any time soon. This twelve song set is all about Joy's vocals. Like Ella Fitzge...

Patsy Cline - Birth Of A Country Legend (1996)

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This is going to be an unusual post. It's a review of a very good, country music CD with a sociological perspective, and I believe it's worth reading even if you're not interested in Patsy Cline or country music. What's under discussion here is one of the seemingly endless, posthumous releases of Cline's recorded work, but this disc,  Birth of a Country Legend , is unique. It's a rare, live CD featuring seventeen songs Cline sang on her visits to Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts . For those of you who are too young to have grown up with him, Godfrey was one of early television's legendary pioneers, and his importance cannot be overstated. In the 1950s, along with Lucille Ball, Jackie Gleason, Milton Berle, Sid Caeser, Steve Allen, and others, he helped make the young, popular medium the primary source of home entertainment. Godfrey's talk and variety series was a ratings juggernaut due to his downho...