June 20, 2009

Norah Jones - Austin City Limits (2007)

This concert strikes me as really odd sounding.  It’s like listening to a really good band playing a bunch of songs they’ve never heard before.  Jones’s voice is by far the most interesting thing happening, but the songs are so light and, really, almost unsophisticated that it’s not really enough to just have a singer.  Of course, a voice is not a singer, and maybe Nina Simone could have found more in these songs.  Perhaps Jones is just distracted by the odd fit between band and song.

Then there’s this:

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Tags: Norah Jones Nina Simone songwriting singing intra-band relationships
June 13, 2009
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Tortoise - Beacons of Ancestorship

So Tortoise is coming out with a new album on 23 June.  I have kind of mixed feelings about Tortoise ever since I saw them on their tour with Daniel Lanois - they opened and played as his band.  It was almost as if Lanois had never heard Tortoise before, but they did a good audition, and it was politically feasible, so went with it; then, hearing them every night, he was forced to understand that their kind of music was very dry and cerebral, where his is emotional and immediate (live at least).

Almost as if.  At any rate, watching him interact with them on stage reinforced the sense I had developed, watching them, that their music was about as meaningful to me as a pile of calculators programmed to beep the tune to “Secret Agent Man”.  I loved It’s All Around You - at least I did one time on the road from Angel Fire to Taos, NM, when I determined it was my favorite instrumental album since Kind of Blue (!) - and TNT is a classic, so I was rather at sixes and sevens over the ordeal.

Perhaps they’re just best enjoyed in moments of solitary attention.  I remember that the Tortoise crowd’s stance was of awkward, arms-folded, second order reverie, such as would be expected of people who have primarily experienced something alone and unhindered by drink.

This new Tortoise track strikes me as rather an attempt to claw towards immediacy, so we’ll see what comes of the new album.

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Tags: daniel lanois listening music second order tortoise intra-band relationships
May 29, 2009
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The Real Ambassadors (hear “Remember Who You Are”)

This is a mostly out-of-print collaboration between Dave Brubeck and Louis Armstrong, along with a few other people.  The liner notes claim that this is a musical written by Dave and Iola Brubeck, but many of the high points consist of Armstrong singing very Satchmoey tunes - I suspect he contributed compositionally.

He was clearly the kind of guy who turned any group of people into “Louis Armstrong and a bunch of other people”.  It’s amazing to witness myself growing agitated listening to the chorus/Brubecky parts, only to be pulled right back into it by Louis.  I love Brubeck, I used to listen to Time Out, Time Further Out, Quiet as the Moon (Brubeck playing the Peanuts music), a live album or two.  It’s not that Brubeck fails (although the chorus does offer some screechy cacophonies), but that Armstrong is just such a bright light he casts shadows off everyone around him.

“Remember Who You Are” (side 1, track 4) is a killer.  I love the drums.  There’s so much reverb on the vocal, sounds like a plate reverb to me.  Trombonist Trummy Young sings the second verse.

Side 1: http://www.mediafire.com/file/jyzdgqfdlji/real_ambassadors_side_1.mp3

Side 2: http://www.mediafire.com/file/yi5ogohxzmj/real_ambassadors_side_2.mp3

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Tags: Louis Armstrong Broadway Dave Brubeck jazz Liner Notes intra-band relationships
May 18, 2009
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Jay Bennett - Whatever Happened I Apologize

(hear track 1, “Another Town Another Ride Another Window”)

Jay Bennett is utterly heartbroken.

Have you seen the Wilco movie, “I Am Trying To Break Your Heart”?  It’s basically a movie about Bennett up against the reality of politics and relationships.  The director put in a bunch of other stuff about how hard it was to get Yankee Hotel Foxtrot released, and a bunch of live and rehearsal performances (and how is it possible that those rehearsal shots all sound so great?), but the Bennett/Tweedy conflict is the story.

At the beginning, Bennett is a happy clam, turning instruments and playing knobs for all he’s worth.  When it comes to mixing, you see him trying to pick his way through his bandmate’s intentions like a beaten animal.  Finally, he’s alone, out of the band, on stage, and singing some kind of serious gloom - in a song which as far as I remember is actually a pretty nice lullaby or something.

Great vocal sounds.  I kind of expect Bennett to drop some crazy YHF-to-the-extreme sounds all over his music, but what I’ve heard is usually pretty straight ahead folk/rock.

The album’s available free, as noted on his myspace page, although the website he posts only showed up in a Google cache, for me.  Anyway here’s the file: http://rockproper.com/files/29/download.zip

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Tags: heartbreakt intra-band relationships jay bennett wilco folk-rock
November 23, 2008
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Tags: Buckethead Guns N' Roses hooks intra-band relationships process production songwriting