Tuesday, June 9, 2009

What's Spinning Now (June Edition - Part 2)

This Month (in alphabetical order)

Ani DiFranco - Saratoga, CA 9.18.06 (2-CD)
This is the 11th in Ani's Official Bootleg Series - a number of live albums currently covering shows from 2002 to 2007, only sold at live shows and her web site (www.righteousbabe.com). I've been listening to Ani since college and consider her to one of the pre-eminent songwriters of our time. I was able to see her live twice last year and she puts on a great show.

Bill Callahan - Sometimes I Wish We Were An Eagle
He's been releasing albums for almost 20 years (most of them under the moniker Smog) but I just discovered singer-songwriter Bill Callahan through a recent Pitchfork review. The vocals are subtle and live in the land somewhere between talking and singing. I like it a lot, but have a difficult time describing why.

Elvis Costello - Secret, Profane and Sugarcane
What are you doing to me, Elvis? I'm a huge fan of your work; I have 15 of your albums and after listening to this one for about a week I think it may be the low point. I hope I'm wrong and I'm not giving up yet. The album is all acoustic which is fine, but this album frequently falls awfully close to country. And, we can't have that, Elvis.

Georgia Anne Muldrow - Olesi Fragments Of An Earth
The New York Times compared her upcoming album favorably with Amy Winehouse. The new album isn't release yet so I got her previous effort. I don't think I understand the comparison fully - at least this album seems to be more rooted in jazz and hip hop.

Isis - Wavering Radiant
I should have known better. No matter how good the reviews are, any band described as "sludge-metal" and "deeply rooted in metal and hard-core" is not for me.

Leonard Cohen - Live In London (2-CD)
First, I have to say, I had no idea Leonard Cohen is turning 75 this year. In my mind he's a contemporary of The Beatles or Simon & Garfunkel, but apparently he was well into his 30s when he broke through as a singer in the late 60s. Anyway, this is a great album: a mix of his classic songs and a number of spoken word poems. I really wish I'd gone to his show on this tour - his first American tour in 15 years - who knows if I'll get another chance.

Passion Pit - Manners
This full-length album follow-up to the previous EP Chunk Of Change seems to have a few good tracks, but generally doesn't seem to be my cup of tea. Although, Sleepyhead, which can also be found on this album, remains a great, fun, move-your-entire-body song.

Phoenix - Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
This French band is touring the US this summer, but they are not coming to Phoenix. What's that all about? No matter, I don't think I'd go anyway. I like the single Lisztomania, but the rest of the album hasn't grabbed me yet.

Sonya Kitchell - This Storm
The season finale of the TV show The Unit ended with a montage and a song that really caught my attention. Thanks to Shazam and my trusty iPhone I learned it was Sonya Kitchell's great song Soldier's Lament. The rest of the album seems promising.

Tori Amos - Abnormally Attracted To Sin
I like most albums by Tori - my favorite is Boys For Pele - and this one seems good so far.

The Vaselines - Enter The Vaselines (2-CD)
This is essentially a re-release of the 1992 compilation album The Way of the Vaselines: A Complete History with an additional second CD with demos and live tracks. Apparently Kurt Cobain described Eugene Kelly and Frances McKee as his "most favorite songwriters in the whole world" and named his daughter Frances Bean Cobain after McKee.

Well, they were only active for a few years in the late 80s, and only released a couple of EPs and one album, so this is pretty much their collected works. They have recently reformed for a tour which spawned the release of this album. I was not familiar with them during their original stint, and I've only listened to the first disc so far, but it seems promising.

Wavves - Wavvves
Holy crap - with the emphasis on crap - what a noise-fest. This album has received great reviews across the board but I don't get it. Maybe I'm too old for this. One sign would be that I recently read a short article about one of their shows and I couldn't tell whether the writer thought it was great or absolutely terrible.

White Rabbits - It's Frightening
More indie post-punk. I think I like several of their songs - a bit too early to tell...

1 comment:

Rothko said...

what is your primary source...i phone, i pod, satellite radio, pandora? do you purchase CDs and playback on home system? do you ever visit allmusic.com?