Wednesday, August 26, 2009

News: Bob Dylan's Holiday Album

Bob Dylan is issuing Christmas in the Heart on Oct. 13, according to Columbia Records. The collection will feature songs such as “Must Be Santa, “Winter Wonderland,” "Here Comes Santa Claus,” and “Little Drummer Boy.” All future royalties from the album’s sales will go to Feeding America.

“It’s a tragedy that more than 35 million people in this country alone -- 12 million of those children – often go to bed hungry and wake up each morning unsure of where their next meal is coming from,” said Dylan in a press release announcing the album. “I join the good people of Feeding America in the hope that our efforts can bring some food security to people in need during this holiday season.”

Cover artwork for the new album is below.

Source: Columbia Records, bobdylan.com


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Sunday, August 23, 2009

CD Review: (500) Days of Summer

Various Artists
(500) Days of Summer: Music from the Motion Picture
Sire
By David Chiu

This movie soundtrack to (500) Days of Summer, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel, sports Hall and Oates (“You Make My Dreams)”, Carla Bruni (“Quelqu’un M’a Dit”), Simon and Garfunkel (Bookends), and Wolfmother (the hard-rocking “Vagabond”). Aside from those, the soundtrack is a very hipster alt-rock collection of tunes from Regina Spektor (“Hero,” “Us”) to Doves (“There Goes the Fear”) and Feist (“Mushaboom”). The Smiths are well represented here with the immortal classic “There’s a Light That Never Goes Out” and “Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want.” Rounding the soundtrack off is She and Him (featuring Deschanel on vocals) doing a poignant country-ish cover of the Smiths’ “Please.” Like the great memorable soundtracks before them, this one is full of really strong eclectic songs adding up to something very cohesive and listenable.

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CD Review: New York Dolls

New York Dolls
‘Cause I Sez So
Atco/Rhino
By David Chiu

Continuing on their reunion from a few years ago, the New York Dolls continue to roll on with their latest ‘Cause I Sez So, a special album in that it was produced by Todd Rundgren, who previously helmed the group’s classic debut 36 years ago. Featuring surviving original members David Johansen and Sylvain Sylvain, the Dolls continue deliver bombastic ballbusting rockers with punkish attitude and garage rock sensibilities as in the title track, “Exorcism of Despair” and “Muddy Bones.” But in contrast to their earlier albums the group on Cause I Sez So also branch out stylistically with the poppy “Better than You”; the tender “Lonely So Lonely”; the folkish “Making Rain”; and the bluesy “Nobody Got No Bizness.” The Dolls also remake “Trash” from the debut album this time as a reggae-like number. This may represent an older and perhaps mature version of the Dolls, but ‘Cause I Sez So is still a enjoyable no-frills rock and roll album

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Friday, August 21, 2009

CD Review: Cheap Trick


Cheap Trick
The Latest
Big 3
By David Chiu

To Cheap Trick fans, there are musical elements and references on the band’s new album that they will recognize from previous great albums. For example, the beginning drum beat on the mindlessly catchy “When The Lights Are Out” is so reminiscent of “ELO Kiddies” and the punky “Alive” sounds like it could have been on the Dream Police record. While The Latest is a nod to the past, it captures the band at their most rocking to date with some barnstorming burners such as “Everyday You Make Me Crazy” and “Sick Man of Europe”; the new album also contains some very Beatlesque numbers from the soulful “Miracle” to “Everybody Knows.” Fans of Cheap Trick’s glory years from the self-titled 1977 album through 1980’s All Shook Up will find The Latest much to their liking.

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

News: Tracklisting for New Queen Compilation


The final tracklisting for the upcoming Queen compilation, Absolute Greatest, has just been released today. As part of a daily contest on the band’s Web site that had ran in the last couple of weeks, fans guessed which song would make it on the single disc 20-track collection for prizes. Fittingly “Bohemian Rhapsody” was the 20th and last song on this compilation.

The tracks on Absolute Greatest are as follows:




1. We Will Rock You
2. We Are The Champions
3. Radio Ga Ga
4. Another One Bites The Dust
5. I Want It All
6. Crazy Little Thing Called Love
7. A Kind Of Magic
8. Under Pressure
9. One Vision
10. You're My Best Friend
11. Don't Stop Me Now
12. Killer Queen
13. These Are The Days Of Our Lives
14. Who Wants To Live Forever
15. Seven Seas Of Rhye
16. Heaven For Everyone
17. Somebody To Love
18. I Want To Break Free
19. The Show Must Go On
20. Bohemian Rhapsody

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Wednesday, August 19, 2009

From the Archives: An interview with Melissa Auf der Maur


Melissa Auf der Maur is scheduled to appear at Brooklyn's Knitting Show on Oct. 17 as part of the Royal Flush Festival.  To coincide with that event as we also continue to celebrate NewBeats.com's tenth anniversary, here is an interview with Auf der Maur from 2004. 

Melissa Auf der Maur: Not Just the Bass Player Anymore

By David Chiu

"Life is about change and evolution--I like trying new things in life," says bassist Melissa Auf der Maur, as someone who certainly lived through those changes professionally. Most alternative music fans know that Auf der Maur had a front row seat in two of the '90s biggest bands first as a member of Hole, and then later joining the Smashing Pumpkins. She played behind two charismatic singers Courtney Love and Billy Corgan of those respective bands

Now the Canadian musician is entering the second phase of her musical career, from side player to frontwoman. Using her last name as the moniker of her new solo outfit, Auf der Maur released her self-titled debut this past summer. Those who were familiar with her work on Hole and the Pumpkins will find Auf der Maur (Capitol) in the similar musical vein-sweeping, hard-driving alternative rock.

Capitol Records had given the record a big promotional push, and the artist has been a regular on the media circuit from the New York Times to the Tonight Show. It might be easy to say that the record was conceived with commercial aspirations in mind, but Auf der Maur says there was no hidden agenda involved. "I'm not someone who is calculating other than making music that I love," says the affable and articulate artist via phone during a tour stop. "The fact is I love heavy rock music and I always have. That's what inspired me to play music. This sounds exactly the way I intended it to be because it sounds like what I hear in my head."

Singing isn't something new to Auf der Maur; in addition to her bass playing duties, she provided harmonies along with Courtney Love during her stint with Hole. But it was a totally different experience having to record and sing on her own material for her own album. It is why she cites the first single off the album "Followed the Waves" as one of the important tracks she recorded. "That was a song where I really got over this complex that I had-the fact is that I am a choir-trained nice Canadian girl who is not angry and does not want to be angry or scream, and I always had the complex of my voice couldn't fit in rock music," she remembers. "I basically wrote the music, closed my eyes, sat scared to try to sing over it, and saying exactly as it is on the record. I listened back and it gave me the extra boost of confidence that I needed."

Performing live, however, is a different story as she learned while doing the first ever shows on her own. Now the focal point on stage and with no one like Courtney Love and Billy Corgan to play behind, Auf der Maur is now responsible to connect with the audience. "In terms of between songs, it's up to me to say, 'Hello Ohio! How are you?' And to also have the energy to really connect with your words when you are trying to speak to these people. I'm totally happy and comfortable with it."

The album was a couple of years in the making as Auf der Maur began to write and record her own material after the Pumpkins' breakup. Wanting to maintain artistic control throughout the album, she financed the record without record company help. For the record, she used her friends Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age) Eric Erlandson (Hole), and James Iha (Smashing Pumpkins) to play on it, and employed Chris Goss (Queens of the Stone Age) to produce it. "I approached Chris because I wanted to make a big, heavy soundscape record," she explains.

Auf der Maur's music is built on a hard rock foundation with swirling atmospherics, charged guitars, and her intense, rhythmic bass playing (i.e. "Lightning is My Girl") though elements of pop seeps its way in (i.e. "I'll Be Anything You Want," "Overpower Thee"), adding some variety. It is a reflection of the artists' musical influences growing up listening to Blondie, the Smiths, Jane's Addiction, and the Smashing Pumpkins. "For people who were familiar with the record I made with Hole [Celebrity Skin], the thing I most contributed to that band are the vocal melodies and harmonies," she says. "I love melody and singing and harmonies. That's definitely in the record of course."

One of the interesting and poignant touches on Auf der Maur is towards the end when one hears a lady yodeling. That was Melissa's 100-year old grandmother, who recently passed away earlier this year. "She's a huge inspiration in my life," Auf der Maur says proudly of her. "She was really passionate about things that she loved family music, and her home country of Switzerland. My grandmother always painted pictures the Alps in my mind standing on a table and yodeling at the top of her lungs. That was her on her 100th birthday with the still same fire and passion for her homeland, which has a lot to do with just my romanticism and sentimentality of my roots, my ancestors, and my grandmother."

It was the sense of family that nurtured Melissa's interest in music. Her father was a journalist, and her mother was Montreal's first woman rock DJ. "I was very lucky," says Auf der Maur. "My mother raised me on her amazing record collection and sent me to music school. From seven years old on, so I've always played music. It's always been part of my life. By the age of 17, I was a DJ at a Montreal bar and I was going to see an exciting wave of music in the late '80s and early '90s." Not just content of spinning discs, she started to make music too. When it came to closing time, she and her colleagues would turn the bar into a rehearsal space where everybody jammed.

In the early '90s, Melissa formed a band called Tinker. It was around this time that she saw the Smashing Pumpkins play in her hometown and met Billy Corgan through interesting circumstances. "They blew me away and my friend next to me said, 'I hate them,'" Auf der Maur remembers. "He threw a bottle at Billy, and got into a fistfight with him during the show. Then I went to introduce myself to Billy after the show and apologized on behalf of Montreal and said I was devoted fan from that moment on.

"A couple of years later, I wrote a letter to Billy and asking if Tinker can open up for the Smashing Pumpkins when they came through town on their Siamese Dream tour. After I played that show, he told me, 'You're going to be in my band one day.'"

However the call back from Corgan six months later was not an invitation to join his group, but for an opening spot in his friend Courtney Love's band Hole when their bassist Kristin Pfaff died from a drug overdose. Auf der Maur joined the band in 1994, toured with them, and recorded Celebrity Skin (1998). In 2000, she was asked by Billy Corgan to join the Pumpkins to replace their bassist D'arcy, and stuck with them until they broke up. "In many ways, my experience in the bands before were like an education process," she acknowledges. "I've been graduated to the place of being able to know who I am, know what I want, and know how to do it."

2004 is beginning to look like a busy year for Auf der Maur in terms of touring, one of her favorite aspects of the musician's life. She has already headlined her own shows while being the support act for the Offspring and the Cure. "I love to see the world and connect with people through music," she says. "All of this is more than I ever hoped for. That's my favorite way to share music. Even if you don't speak the same language you still rock to the same music and feels so cozy and makes the world so small, and I love it."

Whatever interesting twists and turns her career has taken her, it all comes down to her love and respect for the power of music. "The making of the record was all I really thought about it at the time," says Auf der Maur. "Even when I was making it I didn't really think about releasing it-I was just making it because I love music. I wanted to live this utopic reality for a year, make the record of my dreams, and play with all my favorite friends. Everything since then was a bonus."


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Saturday, August 08, 2009

CD Review: Factory Records


Various Artists
Factory Records: Communications 1978-1992
Factory/Rhino
By David Chiu

Those who saw the excellent 2003 film 24 Hour Party People got a glimpse of the music from Manchester, England record label Factory, co-founded by the colorful Tony Wilson. The label’s most famous acts were Joy Division, New Order and Happy Mondays but they were only part of the story, as this cool and wonderful box set—a digital-only release—attests. Lasting only 14 years, Factory released music that spanned post-punk to electronic New Wave to rave/acid house music, a.k.a. ‘Madchester.’ In between those dominant styles were pop, dance, reggae and experimental music.. In addition to its edgy, alternative sense of cool in the music, a huge part of that was due to producer Martin Hannett in the early days, Factory’s identity was also shaped visually through the innovative art of designer Peter Saville. Not suprisingly, most of the songs on Communications belong to Joy Division (“She’s Lost Control” Transmission, Love Will Tear Us Apart), New Order (“True Faith,” “Temptation,” “Blue Monday”) and Happy Mondays (“24 Hour Party People,” “Kinky Afro,” “Hallelujah”). But there are also some acts represented on the box including some well known (OMD’s early version of “Electricity,” James’ “Hymn to a Village”) and obscure as far as American tastes are concerned (The Durutti Connection, Section 25, The Distractions). The set also includes a booklet including an essay by Paul Morley and track-by-track annotations describing the history of this label and the important people behind it. If there was any proof of how cool and important Britain was to the history of alternative music, Factory Records stood out as the main example.






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Kaki King: The Exhibition




Kaki King
The Exhibition
Littlefield
Brooklyn, NY
August 7, 2009

Friday night at the Brooklyn’s Littlefield art-performance space was the official opening of The Exhibition, a collection of artworks made of actual guitars. Created and spearheaded by guitarist Kaki King, the exhibit was a showcase of 16 artists/fans interpretations of guitar art drawing from King’s songs.

Drawing a mainly large and hipster crowd, the one-night only show featured the unique creations hanging on a wire. (The Littlefield is architecturally reminiscent of Long Island City’s SculptureCenter, sans the performance stage). Using blank guitars donated by King’s guitar company Ovation, these artists made unique art that incorporated various media from paint to found objects. Some of these included Reni Papananias’ “Sad American,” which was a luggage containing old items; and Andrea Arceneaux’s “Pull Me Out Alive,” which incorporated graffiti-like designs.

The main highlight of the evening was Kaki King, who performed a couple of the songs that were inspired for some of the guitars, including “Night After Sidewalk.” For anyone who has never seen King perform live, it is certainly an event just to see how she finger picks the guitar strings to create sounds that are rich, full and tuneful. To casual folks, her style is reminiscent of both classical guitar playing and the avant-garde.

The performance was capped off with her rendition of her 2004 song “Playing with Pink Noise.” Sitting on a chair underneath white plastic tarp on the stage floor, King put on pink paint on her fingertips and played to the original prerecorded song on her blue guitar. As she explained in an interview for Spinner, the purpose was to show how her fingers traveled on the guitar as she was playing it. Over the course of the song, the audience members saw pink painted streaks and blotches all over the guitar. It will be later auctioned off for VH1’s Save the Music.

One is used to seeing guitars displayed as artifacts of music history in places the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Annex. However, the Exhibition offered a more unique take on the stringed instrument as an art object in itself.

Photos from the evening: http://www.flickr.com/photos/41238022@N05/sets/72157621982931348/

For more about The Exhibition and photos of the artists at work, visit http://www.facebook.com/KakiKingTheExhibition?ref=mf

Read an interview with Kaki King about the show on Spinner.com.



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