billy g Wrote:
1. Rich Hope & the Evil Doers - Sweet Vanilla 4/5
I know nothing about Rich Hope and seemingly neither does AllMusic. Lots of stonesy guitar riffs. Either Rich Hope owes Damon Albarn for the use of all these Woo Hoo's or visa versa. I like this..kicks off the mix well.
Rich Hope has been a guitarist for a bunch of bands around Van. for quite a while now. He used to be a member of (now defunct) John Ford as well. He's got one previous solo album (
Good To Go). I'd say this song is the definite highlight of the Evil Doers album.
billy g Wrote:
2. The Honeydogs - Glee 4/5
I dl'ed their album "Seen A Ghost" back in the days when emusic offered unlimited downloads and I was more willing to sort through the crapstack in search of that unknown great discovery. I've stopped downloading stuff because I listened to way too much crap and apparently my ears were too damaged by the crap to often recognize the good ones. This is a lot better than I remembered and a lot rawer than I remembered them being. This is more stonesy even using the adjective "gin-soaked", where I remember "seen a ghost" as being more beatlesque. I'm going to pull out that honeydogs cdr and give it another spin but are you a big fan, rads?
I'm not a big fan - I had a similar reaction as you to
Seen A Ghost and sold it - but I consider their
Here's Luck to be one of the best "alt.country" albums since Wilco's
Being There. I think it's their best set of songs, and the production is perfect - but they definitely favor the Beatles over the Stones. This song is the gruff stand-out on
Everything, I Bet, which is otherwise quite similar to
Seen A Ghost.
billy g Wrote:
3. Two Dollar Pistols - Too Bad that You're Gone 3.5/5
Starts out with a little twang and gets better from there. This rating would be higher if the singers voice didn't at times remind me of Hootie. I have some Two Dollar Pistols and again never listen to them. Are you pulling the best of the best from these artists or am I ignoring some great shit in my collection?
Oh man, I wish you hadn't brought up that Hootie connection. Now I hear it too. I've got a bro-in-law who does that shit to me all the time (to wit: "hey, this Nathan Larsen reminds me of Culture Club"). Before I take action I'll have to figure out how to dispose of the body. Anyway, I don't have much in the way of Two Dollar Pistols (but Bloor sent me a $2DP ep collaboration with Tift Merritt that is excellent) - I pulled this song off a Yeproc sampler.
billy g Wrote:
4. Southern Culture on the Skids - Hittin' On Nothing 4/5
Nice cover. I'd probably rank this much higher if it were an original but I do like it. I've heard of them but I think this is the first song I've actually heard by them. I like it and they seem right up my alley. How are their originals? AMG seems to think highly of them. Where should I start?
Good question. I've got 4 SCOTS albums and they tend to blend into each other. The one that stands out for me is
Liquored Up And Lacquered Down, mainly because "Hittin' On Nothing" is on it. A word of warning: they ill-advisedly don't let the chick sing many songs.
billy g Wrote:
5. Marah - Head On 2/5
I just don't really get the attraction to these guys. It sounds very messy -lots going on and not much to draw me in. I guess this is where I get off the monger train.
Yeh, I can see that. Of course, the mess is what I like about it. I like to crank this one so loud that it sounds like the band is in my living room with the full horn section.
billy g Wrote:
6. Bedoin Soundclash - When the Night Hears My Song 2.5/5
I want to like this but ultimately it just doesn't have enough of a groove or melody to it to draw me in. Have you ever heard Venice Shoreline Chris (aka Chris Murray)? He plays solo old school acoustic ska. If you like this, you might dig him as well. I think he might be originally from Canada although he lives in LA now.
Never heard Venice Shoreline Chris, but seems like it might be something I'd dig. I really got into this Bedouin Soundclash album (
Sounding A Mosaic), but it hasn't had a very long shelf life. Figured this mix needed a detour from the rock - and in retrospect maybe I should've picked one of the band's more world beat-influenced things for you.
billy g Wrote:
7. Tommy Stinson - Hey You 3/5
Getting better again. What's this from? I have and really like Bash & Pop. I would have never predicted it but Paul Westerberg has probably been the most inconsistent solo artist of all the replacements.
This is from Tommy's
Village Gorilla Head, 50% of which I'd say is as good as anything Westerberg has done in his solo career. It's worth picking up if you can find it for cheap. And - damn - I rashly sold my copy of Bash 'n' Pop.
billy g Wrote:
8. Oh Susannah - Mama 3.5/5
I think this is the third Oh Susannah song I've got on various mixes from you. I don't mean that as a complaint, sometimes I need a good kick in the noggin that I need to take an artist more seriously. I'm liking this.
Yup - Oh Susannah is one of my fall-back favorites for mixes, because hardly anybody's heard her, but she's high quality. I've probably tapped her out too often, though.
billy g Wrote:
9. Kristi Rose - this Should Go on Forever 3/5
This is pretty but with some nice guitar licks. I get a little bored by the end. Still, I recognize that my not loving this is probably more reflective of how tough I am on female artists than the quality of the song.
I'm still looking for her
This Is Pulp Country album. I really like her voice - but I agree with your rating totally.
billy g Wrote:
10. Houndog - Cruisin Part I 3/5
I hear potential in the song but its not drawing me in. I suspect that this rating is severely penalized by my listening setting, at work at low volumes as opposed to the front porch with a wheat beer in hand and the stereo cranked.
Another intentional detour. This is the more experimental side of Los Lobos' David Hidalgo.
billy g Wrote:
11. NOra O'Connor w/ Andrew Bird - Sticks and Stones 4/5
Definitely dig this. I didn't see that snarl coming. what is this from?
This is the best performance on
Hard Headed Woman: A Tribute To Wanda Jackson - but there's a few other good'uns as well (like Neko Case, Laura Cantrell, and the song on this mix from Kristi Rose).
billy g Wrote:
12. John Ford - Dragged 4/5
This song makes me wonder whether I'm capable of really appreciately a good rock jam anymore. The 4 rating is a sum of the parts valuation. I really love parts, especially when there's not much going on but the slower groove of the guitar and the glamish vocals but when the song picks up and it rocks harder I start to lose interest. Some great parts for sure here but I'm undecided what I think of the song as a whole. Perhaps there's just too much going on for me to fully appreciate it. As a sidenote I'm not sure why I'm bothering to rate individual tracks as I seem to be giving everything a 4.
I went through about a month period of playing this song LOUD in the car - it was the only place that it sounded so good. When it speeds up it sounds like they've got Johnny Thunders AND Keith Richard in the band - but I've tried (and tried) to convert others and failed every time, so maybe it's all about the speaker settings in my car.
billy g Wrote:
13. The Zatopeks - The Night Spider Earned His Colours 3/5
I can enjoy it in the context of the mix but its got a bit of the feel of a throwaway song
I get a kick out of the mix of modern pop/punk and a kind of wistful, innocent '50s sock hop sensibility. That and that moment when the music stops and the chick says "he's hardcore, real hardcore" in that cuuute British accent. Slays me.
billy g Wrote:
14. Deaf School - All Queued Up 3.5/5
More glammy new wavish rock. Its got a bit of a theatrical feel to it with some nice punchy horns. I like it but again I'm not sure how much I'd dig it outside of the context of the mix.
Bought the album this is from (
English Boys/Working Girls) back in '78 without ever having heard a note. It became one of those inexplicable oddball favorites (along with Gruppo Sportivo's
Mistakes) that never even become well-enough known to be forgotten. One day I'll transfer the whole album to CD and see if "English Boys (With Guns)" is as good as I remember it.
billy g Wrote:
15. Nikki Sudden - Looking for a Friend 4.5/5
This is probably my favorite track so far. I dig the rollicking piano especially. I've had pretty limited exposure to the Swell Maps and no exposure to Nikki Sudden solo material. Clearly, I need to explore both more.
This is off Sudden's last album
Treasure Island, which has both Mick Taylor and Ian MacLagan on a few tracks.
billy g Wrote:
16. The Deadly Snakes - So Young and So Cruel 3/5
Seems like there are a lot of Snake bands these days. I'm not sure these guys are one of the better ones. A big drop in recording volume here might be contributing to that which is especially felt through the low volume work speakers. Sounds ok. Might like this more at home at higher volumes.
From last year's
Porcella. Pretty good album. Not essential by any means, but pretty good. And, yeh, it IS mastered at a strangely low volume. I hate that shit - totally messes up my mixes.
billy g Wrote:
17. Tift Merritt - Ain't Looking Closely Today 4/5
Nice simple song that doesn't try to hard to be too much. Everything fits together well and she's got a nice voice.
I liked Tift before I saw her live, but liked her even more after. She puts on a great show, rocks like a mofo, and is crazy hott to boot. This is from her
Tambourine release, which nails that southern soul thang pretty squarely on the head.
billy g Wrote:
18. CC Adcock - Y'all'd Think She'd Be Good To Me 4/5
Spoon'ish start to the song witht he Brittesque vocals and handclaps. But with some violin and twang added in. I like it more on repeated listens than I did at first. Give me more info.
From his
Lafayette Marquis album. He does that Noo Awlins voodoo swamp thing filtered through his white boy infatuation with the Stones. Jack Nietzche produced one of the songs ("Slangshotz 'n' Boomerangs", as I recall), but the whole album is one of 04's more pleasant surprises.
billy g Wrote:
19. Oranges Band - White Ride 3.5/5
More spoon'esque rock. I first heard them opening for spoon and the influences seem pretty strong. I like 'em but something seems lacking.
This is my fave Oranges Band song, mostly for that nearly one-note guitar solo.
billy g Wrote:
20. Crash Kelly - Penny Pills 3.5/5
Has most of the essential ingredients to a good song but still seems to be missing that little bit of magic. I like the harmonizing though.
Another one of those songs - like "Dragged" - that I flipped out over and subsequently couldn't find anybody who shared the sentiment. For me it's got the magic... maybe it's the car speakers again.
billy g Wrote:
21. The Everyothers - Like A Drug 2.5/5
I have a feeling I've heard this before, but I'm quite sure I haven't. Its not bad but still isn't really drawing me in. Maybe it has a little too much of a radio friendly rock vibe for me and the chorus bugs me.
I first listened to this album at a reckid shop and rejected it for that exact "radio friendly rock vibe" reason. Put it back in the stacks with great relief that I hadn't wasted twenty bucks on it. Then a CD-swapping acquaintance sent it to me completely unsolicited and I grudgingly put it in the 5 disc random play - and whaddaya know, the fucker won me over. There's a real Bowie "Queen Bitch" vibe to the album (although I wish they would've produced it like "Queen Bitch" rather than like Foo Fighters) that is pretty sweet.
billy g Wrote:
22. The Dee Rangers - This is Dee Day 3/5
Not bad but not much going on or drawing me in either.
The rest of this album (
Five Spanish Minutes) is pretty typical '60s garage rock fare, but then they end with this song and the singer tears his throat and heart out while they attempt a sort of R&B ballad. I might like this more for the effort than the result.
billy g Wrote:
Thanks Radcliffe for another fine mix. I don't like it as much as the other one but that's a hard yardstick to measure up against. If you could recommend I pick up one album from this mix what would it be?
This was a hard mix to make. I figured I'd try to find some recent stuff that might possibly NOT bore you, so it's full of second guesses and kinda veers all over the place. And, to answer one of your questions - yes, I'm definitely cherry-picking the best songs off a lot of these albums.
If I had to recommend one album from all of those, it'd be either Tift Merritt's
Tambourine or C.C. Adcock's
Lafayette Marquis. I might favor the latter.
Thanks a bunch for the review! I appreciate it!