Various Artists
If I Were a Carpenter
(1994)
A&M Records
This is a true relic of the Alt-Rock era. Some of the best artists of the genre paying tribute to one of their most unlikely of influences...The Carpenters. 18 years later, it's still frickin' awesome!!!
Album highlights:
"Close to You" by The Cranberries
"Superstar" by Sonic Youth
"Rainy Days and Mondays" by Cracker
"Let Me Be the One" by Matthew Sweet
"We've Only Just Begun" by Grant Lee Buffalo
Friday, February 3, 2012
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Concert Review
Here is a review of Ryan Adam's show here in Louisville on Monday. I'm not a huge fan of this particular article, but since I didn't have time to write one myself - I shall link you to it. You'll get the idea.
It was magical and beautiful - and a giant swirl of everything that I imagined it would be.
Click here to read the review...
It was magical and beautiful - and a giant swirl of everything that I imagined it would be.
Click here to read the review...
Labels:
Concert,
Louisville,
review,
Ryan Adams,
The Palace
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Supergroup Jam for a Good Cause
Just got some exciting news about a fantastic project that Patterson Hood of Drive-by Truckers is working on. See all the info from the DBT camp after the jump.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
!!!Major Announcement!!!
My Morning Jacket will be headlining and helping to curate this year's 10th Forecastle Festival here on Louisville's waterfront. The festival with band members Jim James and Patrick Hallahan made the announcement this morning in a joint press conference.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Album Review
Black Kite
Karate Body Records
“Can someone tell me where I’m going; I forgot, caught up in the showing…”
-Silver Tongues
“Greater Times”
On their debut album Black Kite, Silver Tongues have finally given a voice to despondence. Something so dark but passively optimistic that you can’t help but want to submerge yourself completely in the quiet madness these nine tracks.
The album opens with a stomp, a clap, and a single note. Sparingly arranged “Highway” is uncomfortably intimate. It’s like rattling around in the skull of a man who’s caught in the fall between a ledge and the sidewalk below. Dave Cronin’s vocals are soaring and angelic, no question. But he also sings with a visceral urgency that drives the underlying pulse of Black Kite – and makes it an album that’s impossible to ignore.
Beyond the fact that my irrational ear decided the opening chord of the title track sounded The Beatles’ classic “Yesterday” – this is a band of innovators. A group of guys making something they’ve never heard but have always felt. And ultimately Black Kite is a mellow album. The band does a fine job of layering without sounding abrasive or self-indulgent. The tracks are often completely unassuming, but drive you to peel away each instrument, one-by-one, to catch a fleeting glimpse of the album’s emotional core. Michael Campbell’s guitar, while rarely ever stepping into the forefront – leaves stark, plucked notes all over the record, opening each track up so it can breathe. And when you have a band capable of such instrumental depth, it opens up Cronin’s lyrics to carry the weight of profundity throughout this collection.
It’s easy to get lost here, the way one could get lost in Springsteen’s Nebraska. Black Kite is haunting, no doubt, but there’s a sprawling airiness to it, as well. They seem to want to exist in that calmness that happens before an inevitable catastrophe. One of the few lessons I’ve learned in my thirty years is that there is an internal peace that comes with embracing pending doom – and that that embrace is precisely what Silver Tongues have captured so superbly on Black Kite.
By the time his voice swirls into the last song, the nostalgic “Home” – you’re ready to wind back around to a stomp, a clap, and a single note.
They will be performing January 28th at Headliner’s Music Hall w/ Cheyenne Marie Mize, and Dare Dukes. $5, 9:00 PM
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