Music at Elsewhere

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Larry Jon Wilson; Larry Jon Wilson (1965 Records)

16 Sep 2008  |  1 min read  |  1

Strange though it may seem that in the same week Elsewhere gives a heads-up to the forthcoming album by the formidable Grace Jones, we also acknowledge this positively ancient country-folk singer. But Elsewhere has always found a place for the likes of Wilson, Ramblin' Jack Elliott and others in their 60s and beyond. Wilson won't be a familiar name -- his last album was a whopping 28... > Read more

Larry Jon Wilson: Heartland

Various: While My Guitar Gently Weeps (Universal)

12 Sep 2008  |  <1 min read  |  1

There's a lot wrong with this double disc compilation: the title track is from the late Jeff Healy not by its author George Harrison; Thin Lizzy's Still in Love With You is the studio version rather than the far superior live one; you get soft-rockers Bread (Guitar Man) and Matthews' Southern Comfort (Woodstock) jammed between Fleetwood Mac's Black Magic Woman and Peter Frampton's live Show Me... > Read more

Doobie Brothers: Long Train Running

Stereolab: Chemical Chords (4AD)

12 Sep 2008  |  <1 min read

Last week, for reasons too embarrassing to explain, we went on a brief bender of Roger Moore's Bond films. Awful, slow, wooden and guaranteed to have you asleep on the couch within 20 minutes. Anyway, my suspicion is that Stereolab might have been doing much the same at some point because there are a few tracks here which could have stepped neatly out of those soundtracks as incidental music... > Read more

Stereolab: Daisy Click Clack

Carrie Rodriguez: She Ain't Me (Manhattan)

12 Sep 2008  |  <1 min read

This alt.country/rock singer out of Austin and Berklee College of Music in Boston came to attention with her 2006 solo album Seven Angels on a Bicycle which won great praise from the likes of Lucinda Williams and Elsewhere for its melodic darkness delivered by Rodriguez in a voice pitched somewhere between innocence and experience. And she brought a Williams-like world weariness to some of the... > Read more

Carrie Rodriguez: Mask of Moses

Atlas Sounds: Let the Blind Lead Those Who See But Cannot Feel (Rhythmethod)

12 Sep 2008  |  <1 min read

This is either a strange coincidence or some weird serendipity -- but this solo album by Brandford Cox of the Atlanta band Deerhunter sounds like it has been made after he eavesdropped on my listenings in the past few weeks: a bit of JPSE's widescreen fuzzypop from Bleeding Star as filtered through Fripp & Eno's tonal landscapes, plus a colouring of Eno's moonscape Apollo, a seasoning of... > Read more

Atlas Sounds: Cold as Ice

Sonny Day: The Collection (Ode)

8 Sep 2008  |  <1 min read

It's a shame that it took Sonny Day's death last year to prompt this compilation, as one of this country's great journeyman musicians his career spanned from the early days of rock'n'roll and then through the Beatles/Motown era when he effortless shifted his style, taking in country and soulful material, and in '85 covered Springsteen's little known Saving Up.Sonny Day was a man who moved with... > Read more

Sonny Day: Things Will Be Different (1964)

Various: The Empire Strikes Back! (Glitterhouse)

8 Sep 2008  |  1 min read

Compilations and samplers don't often get a look in at Elsewhere (except for this week I note!) and this double disc stood even less of chance: it arrived about two months ago but after I listened to it and enjoyed it I lost the damn thing down the side of the bookcase. Which is where i found it last week.Ah well, better than . . .This is an excellent collection from the Germany-based... > Read more

Michael J Sheehy: Company Man

Everest: Ghost Notes (Vapor/Elite)

8 Sep 2008  |  <1 min read  |  1

We can make this easy, a kind of tick-the-boxes thing: this LA band of indie.rock-cum-alt.folk people are signed to Neil Young's label (yes, they have a slice of his brittle and stuttering guitar solo-style), have performed alongside or been in bands with John Vanderslice and the Watson Twins (Elsewhere favourites), Sebadoh and Folk Implosion, and they sometimes nod towards mid-period Wilco.If... > Read more

Everest: Reloader

The Rosie Taylor Project: This City Draws Maps (Bad Sneakers/Ode)

8 Sep 2008  |  <1 min read

This six-piece from Leeds have a charming alt.folk/indie.pop thing going which also has one ear on Americana. Okay, you've heard all that before, right? But there is something quite beguiling and emotionally disarming about their understatement, the wee splashes of colour from trumpet and French horn, the haiku-like lyrics ("cut from paper/a line of dolls/drawn-on dresses/ a biroed... > Read more

A Good Cafe on George Street

The Dutchess and the Duke: She's the Dutchess, He's the Duke (Rhythmethod)

8 Sep 2008  |  1 min read

About 20 years ago there was a short-lived but interesting "new folk" movement which emerged out of New York's Downtown. Following the success of Michelle Shocked's Texas Campfire Tapes ('86) came Roger Manning, Cindy Lee Berryhill and Kirk Kelly who sometimes rapped like Beat poets, pulled in a fair swag of young Dylan and Woody Guthrie, and dressed like they were auditioning for... > Read more

Back to Me

Jonathan Richman: Because Her Beauty is Raw and Wild (Vapor Records)

26 Aug 2008  |  1 min read

Some people know Jonathan Richman for being the singer-songwriter in the terrific New York new wave band The Modern Lovers -- although their "terrific" period was short-lived, in truth just the debut album which was produced by John Cale and spawned the classic songs Modern World (the title track), Pablo Picasso ("never got called an asshole"), Old World, Roadrunner and the... > Read more

Jonathan Richman: No One Was Like Vermeer

Death Vessel: Nothing is Precious Enough For Us (SubPop/Rhythmethod)

26 Aug 2008  |  <1 min read

Just bringing this one to your attention because the band name might sound like a warning to many.Nope, this isn't death metal or anything much louder than acoustic guitars (mostly) -- but even if you get past that misconception another may get you.I listened to this right through before I realised that it was actually a man singing, a guy called Joel Thibodeau (the singer/songwriter etc) who... > Read more

Death Vessel: Bruno's Torso

Miracle Mile: Coffee and Stars (Miracle Mile)

26 Aug 2008  |  1 min read

As with the equally wonderful Blue Nile, this UK band (of Marcus Cliffe and Trevor Jones plus guests) take a leisurely approach to albums and only release something when it is refined and ready.Miracle Mile too work the treacherous -- and often casually dismissed -- area of "adult pop", that is music based around memorable and sometimes delicate melodies, and lyrics that don't talk... > Read more

Miracle Mile: Yuri's Dream

Paddy Free: Karekare: Te reo o te whenua (Dub Conspiracy)

26 Aug 2008  |  1 min read

Despite being one of the founding fathers of New Zealand electronica -- in the ambitious multi-media outfit Pitch Black with Mike Hodgson -- Paddy Free is perhaps largely unknown to a new generation of musicians.I believe he makes much of his living off-shore these days and has always struck me as preferring to be out of the spotlight if he isn't performing (which has been infrequent as Hodgson... > Read more

Paddy Free and Richard Nunns: Whai Atu

Hellsongs: Hymns in the Key of 666 (Rhythmethod)

25 Aug 2008  |  <1 min read

It happens every now and again, someone turns a genre on its head -- like when Hayseed Dixie makeover hard rock as hoe-down bluegrass, Pat Boone takes metal classics and makes them big band ballads, or Metallica's music gets appropriated by a string quartet.This is familiar stuff, and Laibach taking Let It Be into aggressive martial music is a particular favourite at Elsewhere.So you only need... > Read more

Hellsongs: We're Not Gonna Take It (originally by Twisted Sister)

The De Sotos: Cross Your Heart (Ode)

25 Aug 2008  |  1 min read

If CDs are dead as we keep being told you do wonder why people not only keep making them, but also why record companies put so much effort into their expensive packaging -- like this from an Auckland-based band which shaves off a generous slice of Americana country rock (a mighty crowded genre) and wrap it up in an attractive package with a lyric sheet.Well, I guess Ode heard these crisp,... > Read more

De Sotos: '59 Cadillac

Beth Rowley: Little Dreamer (Universal)

25 Aug 2008  |  <1 min read  |  1

In the wake of the success of Duffy comes this bluesy singer from Bristol who also possesses a touch of French chanteuse and pop belter in her delivery, is courageous enough to open her debut album with a downbeat version of the old standard Nobody's Fault But Mine (which Led Zepp covered), deliver Dylan's I Shall be Released with a reggae shuffle (not good) and cover Willie Nelson's Angel... > Read more

Beth Rowley: Almost Persuaded

Pop Levi: Never Never Love (Border)

25 Aug 2008  |  1 min read

Recently Mika and Kylie proved the durability of mindless, glam-pop which comes splattered with glitter and huge choruses, not much in the way of emotional depth and is just a whole heap of mindless fun.Those who criticised the enormously enjoyable Mika (see below) for ripping off Queen rather missed the point -- which was to rip off Queen.Pop Levi is in the same territory: he keeps the songs... > Read more

Pop Levi: Wannamama

Various: Life Beyond Mars. Bowie Covered (Border)

25 Aug 2008  |  1 min read

The ever-increasing pile of tribute albums/covers is so high it is starting to topple under its own weight. Just last week Elsewhere offered the amusing lounge-sweet versions of heavy metal by Hellsongs.Bowie has always been ripe for covers and there have been any number of such projects already: the point of difference here is the obscurity of the bands (only Au Revior Simone, Kelley Polar and... > Read more

Leo Minor: Ashes to Ashes

Pete Molinari: A Virtual Landscape (Shock)

25 Aug 2008  |  <1 min read

English singer-songwriter Molinari's debut Walking off the Map was a beguiling, blatantly Dylanesque affair which found great favour at Elsewhere -- but this time out he's like a pub quiz: which song am I referencing now?Usually it's Dylan but he lifts shamelessly from Sam Cooke, Hank Williams, the Stones' in 65, young Donovan . . . And you gotta love a nasal line like this: "they all held... > Read more

Pete Molinari: It Came Out of the Wilderness