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 Post subject: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 7:05 pm 
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1. Foxy Shazam The Church of Rock & Roll

I didn’t know how to take this at first, then realized that’s a function of the band’s genius. Lead singer Eric Nally is equal parts Freddy Mercury and Andy Kaufman, and in concert the band behind him is capable of the kind of clowning that can upstage their frontman at any given moment, but on record the obvious weapon is the songwriting. As well as these guys can play (in at least two definitions of the word), they also manage to write songs brimming with hooks, intelligence, power, sensitivity, vulgarity and outright weirdness, each one better than the last, and all polished to a professional sheen. I can stand back and laugh at it all from a distance of detached irony, or I can get sucked into the moment, helpless to resist the pop drama in every 3 minute over-the-top opera they concoct. Both and either. Genius.



2. My Jerusalem Preachers

Maybe a whole new brew of “cosmic American music,” incorporating strains that didn’t yet exist back when Gram was first coining the term. I hear the expected melodic folk and rootsy Americana in this soup, but they’re boiling in a mishmash with the smooth gloom of 80s goth and the noisy clamor of 90s alt.rock. That’s a gumbo I ain’t never even smelled before, let alone tasted. Their debut last year was similarly schizo, but nowhere near so clearly the work of a single artistic vision (possible kudos to the production of Spoon’s Jim Eno, but probably more to do with the simple math of time x distance), and that makes all the difference.



3. Ian Hunter & the Rant Band When I’m President

In a year that tossed accolades at the geriatric set, further lionizing the likes of Neil, Bruce, Van, and (that charlatan of charlatans) Dylan, the one old guy who truly delivered has been roundly ignored. Hunter is over 70 years old, and here he’s put out the album I would’ve hoped the Stones to make as a follow-up to Exile. Profound, pissed off, and still plugged in to the r’n’r source, he also benefits from having an actual touring band rather than an assemblage of session musos. They don’t simply back him up, they step on his toes and elbow for space. Hunter’s Achilles Heel remains his penchant for the same tune-challenged ballad he’s been writing since “Trudy’s Song” derailed The Hoople (although his apparent insistence on hideous album covers is perhaps an even bigger weakness), but he keeps those moments down to a minimum, instead concentrating on the kind of surging rockers he’d mostly abandoned after Mick Ronson skipped out on his mortal coil. Easily his best since ’78.



4. The Pilgrims It’s Not Pretty

Roughly a zillion bands have worshipped at the stained altar of the Replacements in the last couple decades, and maybe five of them have even come close to matching the glory of their ragged idols. It’s the contradictory vectors that give most bands (and casual fans) the trouble, because the ‘Mats simultaneously distrusted success even while they held ambitions of immortality. The Pilgrims somewhat miraculously contain that same magic dichotomy. It’s Not Pretty sounds like it took as long to record as it took the band to run through a first take, and at the same time it sounds like a buncha guys putting it all on the line, reaching for the moon and stars, and taking a shot at greatness. For anyone who still believes in that stuff of old dreams, it’s like getting a hit from a defibrillator.



5. Needles//Pins 12:34

The brittle concision of Pink Flag meets the pure pop instincts of Singles Going Steady, and the fact both of those references come from the top of the class of ’77 is no mistake. These guys tap into a similar redefinition of rock moozik fundamentals as that first wave’s urge to kill the king. There’s no fat here. It’s all been trimmed down to their own singular vision of pop essentials. Vocals bark out hooks while guitars grind out their own, and it all tumbles out in an exuberant rush that’s over before you can settle on the couch.



6. Nick Waterhouse Time’s All Gone

Unapologetically retro, Nick Waterhouse starts with a foundation of 50s rock ‘n’ roll and rhythm ‘n’ blues, tosses in some soul and a modern eye to cool, and comes up with something that struts more than it rocks. Probably sounds best in a small dingy club rather than a concert hall too. Waterhouse’s reedy vocals and twangy geetar hold their own charm, but it’s the way he uses the horn section to propel the momentum that pushes this album over the top for me.



7. Devin Romancing
The voice is an acquired taste – a gravelly rasp so cartoonish it could emanate from a muppet – but once it clicks, it sticks. The sound around that voice nestles somewhere between punk and rockabilly, which isn’t exactly a new idea, but it’s all in the delivery. Commitment is the word, and Devin commits to this pose as if he was born a true believer. The cover pic makes me assume it is all a pose, however – and he seems too ambitious or too smart (or too dumb) to stay in this particular wheelhouse – but for right now right here a song like “I Don’t Think I” is as good as it gets.



8. Salim Nourallah Hit Parade

There’s really no use fighting that this album will get filed under the power pop category, but there’s much more to it than that modifier suggests. Nourallah knows his way around the Beatles-esque hook, no doubt, but he also knows how to play against that hook with surprising arrangement touches. Opener “38 Rue de Sevigne” starts as a soft ballad, but flashes of electricity playfully interrupt, portending its eventual acceleration. The witty character sketch “Travolta” openly hints at disco during the verses, then gives way to power chords at the chorus. “Goddamn Life” uses a circular guitar riff as both a thematic motif and its melodic hook. Every song holds some kind of subtle invention that rewards repeated listening. And as much as Nourallah is a craftsman of pristine pop, here he’s also surrounded himself with a band that doesn’t mind tracking a little mud on the carpet. The end result is fairly magical: power pop that transcends its own genre.



9. Archie Powell & the Exports Great Ideas in Action

Sometimes it’s all in the details. Archie Powell may not challenge the poppunkrockwhatever paradigm in any meaningful way, but he does manage to inject these songs with his unerring sense of dynamics. Sometimes, like on “I Need Supervision,” he’ll keep his foot off the gas until the 2nd chorus. Other times, like on “Metronome,” he’ll withhold the climactic hook until the song’s time is ticking down to near zero. And what’s remarkable is how those tiny twists pay off in such big ways, how effectively they sink in after repeated plays. If you wanted, I guess you could argue that it’s a case of craft over art (although I wouldn’t), but it’s doubtful anyone could argue that this is an extremely high level of craft.



10. Blackfoot Gypsies On The Loose

Don’t look here for anyone re-inventing the wheel. Instead, it’s all about looking at that worn-out old radial and realizing what a miracle of perfection that simple shape represents. This is yet another guitar ‘n’ drums duo, a configuration that has been abused a fair amount since you-know-who (White) and you-know-what (Black), but Blackfoot Gypsies mostly stay away from blooze and instead stick to rollicking party R&B, sounding a whole lot like ’65 Dylan fronting ’65 Stones (although occasionally breaking out the Ronnie Lane “Ooh La La”-style ballad). Yeah, you’ve heard it before, but you’ve also seen the hero’s journey a million times before and yet you’re still gonna line up for that next super hero flick at the multiplex, arncha? Some things are just part of human DNA. Might as well appreciate it when it’s done right.


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 7:20 pm 
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11. Chris Devotion & the Expectations Amalgamation & Capital

It’s hard to resist the relentless energy Chris Devotion tosses out with almost careless abandon on all 16 of these short, sharp tunes. If you need genre labels think pop/punk or punk/pop, although that really only tells part of the tale. For every slamming beat-the-clock burner there’s another song that sounds like an otherworldly transmission from an adrenalized 50s malt shop, and it’s those latter songs’ sense of classicist melody that makes this album impossible to leave off this list of faves.



12. Erin Costelo We Can Get Over

An album that didn’t win me over at first, a miscalculation I attribute to the second song, “Count to 10”, which is an annoyingly chipper ditty that sounds like a kissing cousin to Alvin & the Chipmunks. Minus that horrendous confection, We Can Get Over is remarkably assured adult pop that looks back at the days when Dusty Springfield and Dionne Warwick were hitting the Top 30 charts. Costelo possesses a voice that’s both airy and soulful, and it’s the latter quality that imbues these songs with the emotional weight to resonate beyond the melodic hooks. The arrangements meld Memphis soul to cosmopolitan 60s mod pop, and Costelo’s vocals float above the band, although always at the service of the song itself, employing tasteful restraint instead of soaring into the American Idol brand histrionics that beckon. And it keeps growing on me with every spin. Just as long as I skip that one song.



13. Budokan Spin A Little Gold

Okay, move along. There’s nothing to see here. Really. Nothing to see here other than a band that wears its influences proudly. The band name winks at Cheap Trick, “Saint Joan” pays lusty homage to Joan Jett, “Bastards of Feel” conjures the Replacements, the album cover sneaks in a hello to Elton John. And all those references would prove nothing more than good taste in record collecting if the band didn’t subsume their rabid fandom into such excellently rockin’ tunes.



14. Nude Beach II

Sure, they sound like a buncha kids trying to play “Born to Run” by memory after hearing it only once on an older brother’s eight track, but that’s where most of the charm emanates from. These guys harbor dreams that are big, huge even, so big they can’t possibly realize ‘em, which makes this a classic case of reach exceeding grasp, which in turn somehow adds up to magic, because they so clearly know what they want but can’t help but splay noise and mess all over these pop readymades. Not sure what’ll happen when they’re good enough to play ‘em the way they hear ‘em, probably something like Marah (poor fuckers), and I’ll probably still like them, just not quite as much.



15. Hacienda Shakedown

Produced by Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys, but retaining almost none of the staid blooze of that band, this is instead an impressively wide-ranging group of songs that understatedly rub against a variety of genres. On top of it all is a distinctly Lennon-esque sense of melody (finale “Pilot in the Sky”, in particular, could’ve believably been pulled off Mind Games), which is the common thread that ties the entire package together. It’s an album that expects the listener to come to it – nothing particularly made me take notice on first listen, but it kept me coming back and continually made me run to the stereo to see what song was playing. Eventually, I just had to give in to the pull.



16. Wanderlust Record Time

One of the 90s most criminally neglected bands (although that’s a long list) reunited for this master class on power pop. First single “Lou Reed” is perfection manifest; a muscular riff gives way to a plaintive verse that builds to a soaring chorus, and by the time of the final fade-out all you wanna hear next is this same song all over again. That fact that almost every song on the album comes close to a similar quality pretty much ensures that Wanderlust will be included on that even longer list of criminally neglected bands in the ‘10s.



17. Oh Mercy Deep Heat

Oh Mercy wunderkind Alexander Gow makes his move on this album, and it’s a move that will have fans of his previous output scratching their heads. Gow has deep sixed the touches of power pop and delicate acoustic minstrelsy of old – or at least buried ‘em deep - and instead he’s jumped headfirst into a strangely singular brand of, I dunno, let’s call it dance pop. The beat is big, horns litter the landscape, and groove usurps hooks as a song’s primary focus. It took me a long time to get my head around it. I kept waiting for a trademark Oh Mercy irresistible chorus – and the precocious little fucker never gives it up. He makes you work for it, makes you find your own way in. For me, the entrance came late one night, tired and alone, drinking a Manhattan, the hazy glow of the city spread out below, and suddenly the way “My Man” cribs the horn line from Roxy Music’s “Love is the Drug” made perfect sense. The rest of it all clicked into place. And now there’s no going back, for either of us.



18. Waves of Fury Thirst

The conceptual conceit of dark, scuzzy punk rock goosed by classic Stax/Volt horns is enough to make me do happy backflips. Forget that it’s an idea mostly borrowed from the Saints, because a) the Saints left it alone after Prehistoric Sounds found nothing but audience indifference, and b) it’s a totally great idea that MUST NOT DIE. So here’s Waves of Fury, pulling it off like they thought of it themselves, and even though the ultra-amateur vocals do their utmost to kill the whole enterprise, there’s still enough drama, tension, chaos, and future promise to keep me listening and loving.



19. Yukon Blonde Tiger Talk

The word lush has been as misused by our modern rock journo ignorati as much as bombastic and angular, but it’s a fairly accurate description of Yukon Blonde. It’s not just that the production possesses a rich depth, it’s the way the band piles harmonies on top of harmonies. A song like “Oregon Shores” starts fairly sparsely, but by the time the hook of the chorus kicks in the entirety is bathed in so much harmonic bliss it’s almost hard to take. This is what Fleet Foxes might sound like if they had a pulse instead of emulating the stillborn dullness of Crosby, Stills, & Nash. Yukon Blonde reaches for Brian Wilson as if Brian Wilson hadn’t got scared of rock music and negative ions.



20. White Wires WWIII

There’s no subtlety going on here. White Wires just grab a hook and hammer it into the ground, trebly guitar turned to eleven and fuzz bass turned to twelve. And it’d be a one trick dog, except the hooks just keep on coming. Because of the relentless melodic bamalama it’s inevitable White Wires get compared to the Ramones, which is totally fair just so long as the comparison makes it clear it’s the first four bruddas albums rather than the long string of journeyman punk rock frustration that started with End of the Century, because White Wires don’t seem to know anything except unbridled enthusiasm and forward momentum. It’ll be a sad day when that first ballad appears.


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 7:25 pm 
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21. Electric Guest Mondo
22. Caroline & the Treats Saturday Night Rock & Roll
23. Shovels & Rope O Be Joyful
24. New Electric Sound New Electric Sound
25. Justin Townes Earle Nothing's Gonna Change the Way You Feel About Me Now
26. Divine Fits A Thing Called Divine Fits
27. The Walkmen Heaven
28. AC Newman Shut Down The Streets
29. Diamond Dogs Set Fire To It All
30. The Connection Connection Collection

Also worthy of special mention are the Sharks, who put out four EPs this year but no full-length. Stick those EPs together and their brand of Libertines-style sloppy punk obnoxiousness would have been in my top 30.

Honorable Mentions:

Spencer P. Jones Spencer P. Jones & the Nothing Butts
The Breakups Running Jumping Falling Shouting
Various Cruelties Various Cruelties
One Like Son Start the Show
Kid Koala 8 Bit Blues
Kurt Baker Brand New Beat
Tim Rogers Rogers Sings Rogerstein
Two Wounded Birds Two Wounded Birds
Alabama Shakes Boys and Girls
Steve Adamyk Band Forever Won't Wait
Crusaders of Love Take It Easy... But Take It
Howler America Give Up
Bare Wires Idle Dreams
OBN IIIs OBN IIIs
Prima Donna Bless This Mess
Chuck Prophet Temple Beautiful
Natural Child For The Love of the Game
Honeymoon Stallions Honeymoon Stallions
Stag Chameleon
Jimmy Cliff Rebirth
Successful Failures Here I Am
The Undecided by Default Totally Undecided
Lissy Trullie Lissy Trullie
The Living Deadbeats Living Deadbeats
Throwback Suburbia Shot Glass Souvenir
The Hounds Below You Light Me Up In The Dark
Chelle Rose Ghost of Browder Holler
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard 12 Bar Bruise


EPs:

Tsar The Dark Stuff
The Sharks Leave Me Alone/ Pop! Punk!/ Good Ecstasy/ Burn London Down
The Van Buren Boys Hit It Quick
Eli "Paperboy" Reed Meets The Pepperpots Time and Place
The Dahlmanns Dumb Me Down
Dum Dum Girls End of Daze

Disappointments:

Imani Coppola The Glass Wall
Once and future Little Jackie has had an iconoclastic independent solo career, but here she aims for the mainstream and misses by a mile.

Cat Power Sun
The new one cuts The Greatest and You Are Free down the middle, and while it holds its own charms it still feels like a step backwards.

Jim Jones Revue The Savage Heart
I don’t begrudge ‘em the fact they wanted to try something slightly different – that’s the stuff that actually works best on this one – but I do begrudge ‘em the static, heartless attempts at “rock.” They never earned the quote marks around that word before.

Mynabirds Generals
It’s a step forward from their previous album, but at the cost of what made the debut so appealing. Maybe they’ll take a lesson from Cat Power and split the difference next time out.

Gentleman Jesse Leaving Atlanta
Play any one song on this album and it’s pretty great, play any one tune second and it sounds like the same song and a little less great. Repeat to diminishing returns.


Last edited by Radcliffe on Fri Jan 11, 2013 9:47 pm, edited 3 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 7:39 pm 
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do you have a 2012 mix up at your blog?

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 7:42 pm 
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toots Wrote:
do you have a 2012 mix up at your blog?

I'll post the mix once I get it together. Thanks for reminding me.


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 7:57 pm 
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I'll give you credit for one thing you mean old Canadian weirdo - you listen to a lot of music and you make me want to hear most everything you write up.

I think all I've heard on your list is Nude Beach (which will probably be in my top 3) and the one song off the Ian Hunter mix.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 8:04 pm 
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I liked that Devin and the Nude Beach albums. Curious about Needles//Pins.


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 8:45 pm 
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the only other person i know who likes Tsar....Missed out on their EP...will correct that this weekend!

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 11:21 pm 
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Always enjoy your lists and write-ups. Plenty for me to check out.

I love the My Jerusalem too. Happy to see the Salim Nourallah as well. I've really enjoyed all his solo albums as well as his debut with his brother, Faris. Really talented guy.


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 11:59 pm 
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http://www7.zippyshare.com/v/60953884/file.html

Mix of the top 20 plus a couple extra songs.

1. Foxy Shazam Holy Touch
2. My Jerusalem Preachers
3. Ian Hunter When I'm President
4. Pilgrims Snow Storm
5. Needles//Pins I Heart Your Drugs
6. Nick Waterhouse I Can Only Give You Everything
7. Devin You're Mine
8. Salim Nourallah Everybody Knows
9. Archie Powell & the Exports I Need Supervision
10. Blackfoot Gypsies Been Down This Road
11. Chris Devotion & the Expectations The Girl Is Leaving
12. Erin Costelo Let It Go
13. Budokan You Don't Stop Lovin' The Band
14. Nude Beach The Endless Night
15. Hacienda Don't Keep Me Waiting
16. Wanderlust Lou Reed
17. Oh Mercy Drums
18. Waves of Fury I Don't Know What To Make of Your Fucked-Up Friends
19. Yukon Blonde Oregon Shores
20. The White Wires Down on My Own
21. Shovels and Rope O' Be Joyful
22. Electric Guest This Head I Hold
23. New Electric Sound What If I Disappear
24. The Sharks Bye Bye Baby


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2013 2:09 am 
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Proving once again that British Colombia is an alternate universe. You are a (bi)national treasure.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2013 10:29 am 
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noice

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2013 11:44 am 
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I intended to check that Foxy Shazam first time around. Gonna remedy that. Nice job, Rads.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2013 12:45 pm 
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Awesome list, cheers for highlighting that Hacienda released another record, really rated the previous one.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2013 2:12 pm 
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Cool. Will check out most of these!

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2013 4:06 pm 
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ooh nice, tar


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 2:05 am 
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Nice work, lot's to investigate here.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 2:22 pm 
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only heard 2 of those and really liked 'em both (My Jerusalem, Yukon Blonde) so I guess I should try to hear a few of these. thanks for the mix.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 8:50 pm 
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Zero crossover except DDG EP being in your honorable mentions, but I'm not surprised. I'll listen to the mix and see if there was anything I'm sorry I missed last year.


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 1:51 am 
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Great breakdown. Spot on the Nude Beach, crossing fingers for the III. Foxy Shazam is normally so way out of my wheel house and they gave me fun through the whole year. Ian has become a favorite thanks to your long ago offered mix.

I'll tap the rest in good faith.


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 7:39 am 
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Great blurbs, Rads. The queue keeps growing...


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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 11:57 am 
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Radcliffe Wrote:
6. Nick Waterhouse Time’s All Gone

Unapologetically retro, Nick Waterhouse starts with a foundation of 50s rock ‘n’ roll and rhythm ‘n’ blues, tosses in some soul and a modern eye to cool, and comes up with something that struts more than it rocks. Probably sounds best in a small dingy club rather than a concert hall too. Waterhouse’s reedy vocals and twangy geetar hold their own charm, but it’s the way he uses the horn section to propel the momentum that pushes this album over the top for me.


Safe to assume he's a good RIYL for James Hunter?

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 1:18 pm 
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NP: Foxy Shazam.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Wed Jan 16, 2013 1:03 pm 
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And another thing... Your written reviews both display your own quirky passions and give a sense what the band might sound like. I'm listening to Ian Hunter and Pilgrims which both really please me. I wonder in your description/dismissal of the alter cocker rockers you didn't include Leonard Cohen. Hunter and Cohen, older than Morrison, Young, Springsteen far out-produced the rest.

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 Post subject: Re: Radcliffe's 2012
PostPosted: Wed Jan 16, 2013 1:43 pm 
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Cap'n Squirrgle Wrote:
NP: Foxy Shazam.


I wasn't sure on the first 2 songs. This sounds a bit like the type of music that would have ruled MTV in the 1980s...but the 3rd song "Holy Touch" is a fist pumping feel good hit.

_________________
Throughout his life, from childhood until death, he was beset by severe swings of mood. His depressions frequently encouraged, and were exacerbated by, his various vices. His character mixed a superficial Enlightenment sensibility for reason and taste with a genuine and somewhat Romantic love of the sublime and a propensity for occasionally puerile whimsy.
harry Wrote:
I understand that you, of all people, know this crisis and, in your own way, are working to address it. You, the madras-pantsed julip-sipping Southern cracker and me, the oldman hippie California fruit cake are brothers in the struggle to save our country.

FT Wrote:
LooGAR (the straw that stirs the drink)


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