Friday, July 31, 2015

Live: The Can't Tells - Nothing Heavy

Mohammed Ali - "They must have the skill and the will, but the will must be stronger than the skill"

The best under 1,000 hits song you'll ever hear. His soprano is elegant and understated, wistful, and full of mood and is so well counterbalanced by a forward bass and drums part. This is the will exceeding the skill. These are young budding musicians who have written something that is so much more than the sum of it's parts. Enjoy

Song Here

New Material: The Revivalists - Stand Up

The Revivalists - Stand Up

About three years ago I published a review about the revivalists and their last album, "City of Sound." Three years later, and here we are with a new offering. In the last review, my thesis was that this band was versatile--as a band from New Orleans should be they incorporated funk, jazz, blues, as well as vibes and feelings from arena's of music like alt rock--and that it was on the strength of their musicianship, vocals, and intensity that ultimately held the album in cohesion rather than having it fall to be a collection of pieces. In this review, and more importantly in these live session videos, what became most apparent to me--more even than the musicianship--is that last quality: the intensity.

This band feels hungry. Which is not to say that they haven't had success recently. They've been touring extensively in the three years since their last album: all across the west, in their home town, through the south and even up the north east. What I can't get over is the feeling that they know how close they are to the big time. Face it--these guys are to maroon five as real bread is to wonderbread. Although in the same genre of "bread", the real thing is so much better because of it's rich and nutty flavor (and understanding and appreciation for the history of bread) and yet the other one beats it out in sales every single time. I think they know this. I think they know exactly how close they are to breaking through, and how much better they are than a lot of bands getting airtime. That's what makes this album, and these live sessions, so electric. This is exactly when you want to see a band. It's not only the sound, the songwriting, the lyrics, etc... It's the feeling of hunger that pervades all of it. It's like a wave in the ocean. The wave is big, you can hear it, you can see it mounting bigger and bigger, but what really gets you is that tugging of the undercurrent at your waste, pulling you into it. That's the aura of this band. Maybe that's why the album is called mountains and men. There's his band--these men--and their mountain.  We get to listen to them try to climb it.

This band is electric. Enjoy this selection of their live performances. Enjoy the full throated roar of the alto sax. Enjoy the wail of that sweet solemn steel guitar. Most of all, enjoy that undercurrent, that pulling feeling you get when you stand in front of a wave, that pulling feeling you get when you a band whose trying to reach for something so bad.

Stand Up

Keep Going

Monster

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Song of the Day: For the Imperiled - Roy Montgomery


For the Imperiled - Roy Montgomery

It's a full moon out today, just as it was when I first heard this song four years ago this November. I wouldn't have remembered that if I hadn't listened to the whole thing in the middle of a field, half freezing in the middle of the night, watching a bank of clouds run parallel to a moon that had a full halo around it in addition to being full and in the middle of the sky. It's a completely absorbing little offering. There's no lyrics, and I doubt there's anything I can add to it through description. All the same, when we have lot's of songs about things, it's kind of nice to have a song that isn't really about anything, but is just mysterious kind of hypnotizing brick of something somebody made.

Song: Here