Tuesday, September 29, 2009

CD Review: Daryl Hall and John Oates


Daryl Hall and John Oates
Do What You Want, Be What You Are: The Music of Daryl Hall and John Oates
RCA/Legacy
By David Chiu

Rock and Soul, which is also the name of a 1983 hits compilation by Daryl Hall and John Oates, aptly sums up the career of one of pop music’s most successful duos ever. In the minds and hearts of many Hall and Oates will be forever remembered for their massively popular sleek dance rock hits of the early to mid ‘80s, but true fans also know about their blue-eyed soul and sometimes adventurous pop music. And of course the music also showcases the great songwriting and vocal talents of its namesakes (yes even John Oates is a terrific singer like his more visible partner). With a greater and renewed appreciation for Hall and Oates music today, the timing is more than appropriate for this new 4-CD career spanning box set .

Disc one begins with the boys' early songs, which seem more rooted in Motown than the Philly soul sound they became renowned for on their first records. Not surprisingly tracks from what is regarded as one of Hall and Oates’ best albums, Abandoned Luncheonette, are featured here, including their first big hit “She’s Gone.” The Philly-soul and pop hybrid songs carry through all of disc one and most of disc two (“Sara Smile,” “Rich Girl”) until the duo starting experimenting with rock in the later ‘70s (“It’s a Laugh”).

Then with the Voices album (1980), with “Kiss On My List” and “You Make My Dreams” was when the hits starting coming, which are essentially all on the box set’s third disc: “Private Eyes,” “I Can’t Go For That,” “Maneater,” “Out of Touch” and “Method of Modern Love.” Hall and Oates’ chart momentum considerably slowed down after that amazing period in the ‘80s but continued on with really heartfelt and touching music that recalls the best of their ‘70s (“Starting All Over Again,” “Storm Warning,” “I Want Someone”) work and now deserves another reevaluation on this final disc of Do What You Want. The closing ballad “Dreamer,” which was a 1972 demo that was rerecorded for this year, and one of several previously unreleased songs, is absolutely wonderful. Like the Bee Gees, Hall and Oates’ music, in whatever phase or style, strikes on two major fronts as great pop music and guilty pleasures.

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CD/DVD Review: Duran Duran

Duran Duran
Rio: Special Limited Edition
Live at Hammersmith ’82 (CD/DVD)
Capitol/EMI
By David Chiu

First released in 1982, Duran Duran’s second album Rio was their breakthrough and is now considered a classic. It was the definitive musical statement of British new romanticism for its art rock and disco rhythms. Sure it has two of the band’s most beloved hit songs in the title track and “Hungry Like the Wolf” (both of which sound great and timeless nearly 30 years on), but unlike other pop albums, Rio doesn’t contain throwaways or filler. There are disco-influenced rockers in “My Own Way, “Lonely In Your Nightmare,” and “Last Chance on the Stairway”; the gorgeous ballad “Save a Prayer”; and the weirdly hypnotic closing track “The Chauffer”. This new edition of Rio includes U.S. remixes, demos and B-sides that now give an already great record the deluxe treatment.

Simultaneously Duran Duran’s previously unreleased performance at the Hammersmith from 1982 is now seeing the light of day both in CD and DVD formats. Live From Hammersmith ’82 a great snapshot of the classic Fab Five lineup at the beginning of the mania that was about to set the world on fire. Playing a set list drawing from the self-titled debut and Rio, Duran Duran gives an energetic and exciting performance, dispelling any notion that they’re just pretty boys on the surface: singer Simon Le Bon prancing along the stage; John Taylor and Andy Taylor rocking on the bass and guitar respectively; Nick Rhodes’s atmospheric keyboard playing; and Roger Taylor’s extraordinary and powerful drumming. This is truly Duran Duran at its height. In addition to the one-hour Hammersmith performance, the DVD portion of the set also contains the memorable videos from the Rio album as well as clips of the band “performing” “Rio” and “Hungry” from the legendary Top of the Pops TV program.

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CD/DVD Review: The Stone Roses



The Stone Roses
The Stone Roses—Legacy Edition
Silvertone/Legacy
By David Chiu

With the release of their self-titled debut album in 1989, Manchester’s Stones Roses defined the ‘Madchester’ sound of the late ‘80s-early ‘90s and paved a path for ‘Brit pop groups like Oasis. The timing of the group’s arrival onto the scene was perfect as their music, along with the Happy Mondays’ was the soundtrack for young Brits who were into trippy ‘60s/dance pop and drug-induced euphoria (See the movie 24 Hour Party People to get an idea of the Manchester scene).

Upon listening to The Stone Roses album in this special 20th anniversary 2 CD/1 DVD edition, it’s easy to see why the self-titled debut was voted in best albums poll. Though the record has is grounded in hazy and psychedelic atmospherics, The Stone is also very varied musically and not one-dimensional of the album. There also some really strong and driving rock numbers like “(Song for My) Sugar Spun Sister” and “I Wanna Be Adored,” and funk with the bonus track “Fools Gold”; they’re offset by mood pieces like “Don’t Stop” and “Shoot You Down,” Even the album’s closing song “I Am the Resurrection” is a bit of an intriguing puzzle: starting off as a Phil Spector homage before morphing into a progressive funk workout.

As evident from a DVD of a terrific live performance at Blackpool Empress Ballroom from 1989 that graces this set, it is clear that the members of the band brought something so unique and distinctive to the proceedings: from the driving rhythms of bassist Mani and drummer Reni to John Squire’s versatile guitar playing and Ian Brown’s charismatic and delicate vocals. In addition to the original album and DVD, this special edition of the album also contains a bonus disc of demo recordings.

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Live Pictures: Damon and Naomi

Former Galaxie 500 members Damon and Naomi performed a set at Le Poisson Rouge on Sept. 19, 2009. Read my review in Microphone Memory Emotion:






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Friday, September 11, 2009

CD Review: The Feelies

The Feelies
Crazy Rhythms
The Good Earth
Bar None
By David Chiu

Right after Talking Heads and years before Vampire Weekend and Weezer, the Feelies emerged with their brand of brainy (okay, geeky) alternative rock music. The band from Haledon, New Jersey made few albums during their existence together during the ‘80s but their impact has been tremendous on many guitar-oriented modern rock bands that came after them. Last year the band reunited for some shows, including opening for Sonic Youth, and will be playing two sets at Brooklyn’s Southpaw on Sept, 13. Coinciding with the reunion are the reissues of the Feelies first two albums, now considered classics.

The band’s 1980 debut, Crazy Rhythms, lives up to its title. Like perhaps The Velvet Underground or Television’s debut albums, the Feelies’ first record is something that has not been heard in rock before or after. The best way to describe the sound is dissonant and minimalist pop music—it’s melodic in one sense because of the echoing guitar work of singers Glenn Mercer and Bill Million; and yet the rhythms, courtesy of drummer Anton Weird and bassist Keith DiNunizo, are jagged along with the detached vocals delivery. But there is no questioning the influence of post-punk sounds on the band’s stellar debut, especially on the excellent “Raised Eyebrows,” “The Boy With the Perpetual Nervousness” and “Fa Ce La,” and the driving punkabilly-like title track. (There’s also a manic cover of the Beatles’s “Everybody’s Got Something to Hide (Except for Me and My Monkey)”).

The Feelies took six years to record their sophomore album. By then Fier and DiNunzio were out and replaced by drummer Stanley Demeski (later of Luna) bassist Brenda Sauter, and percussionist Dave Weckerman. That second album, The Good Earth sounds a bit more mainstream, conventional, and rootsy compared to Crazy Rhythms. But it’s definitely not a sell-out. If some of the tracks sound a bit like R.E.M. (the title song, “On the Roof,” “Let’s Go”), it may be due to the fact that Peter Buck co-produced the album. The Good Earth may not be as cutting edge as Crazy Rhythms but it’s nevertheless a strong follow-up.

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CD Review: Big Star


Big Star
Keep An Eye On the Sky
Rhino/Ardent
By David Chiu

While they never sold huge amounts of records or scored hit songs, ‘70s Memphis-based power pop band Big Star developed a considerable and devoted cult following and has influenced many subsequent bands from the Posies to Teenage Fan Club. The Big Star sound would provide template for power pop that would be later mined by Cheap Trick and others: rock and roll aggression combined with Beatles-inspired pop hooks. As for the songs themselves, Big Star’s lyrics betray their catchy melodies and commercial aspirations because they were sometimes dark and very introspective, not exactly Top 40 material back then.

Big Star’s brief but consistent body of work makes up this lovingly-assembled boxed set, Keep An Eye On the Sky, which spans their output in the ‘70s (It does not feature material from the latter-day reunions in the ‘90s and today). For fans that only had Big Star’s first three albums, this set features previously unreleased alternate versions and mixes along with some rarities and demos. For example, there are some pre-Big Star material, including early solo work from Alex Chilton (the baroque “Every Day As We Grow Closer”) and Chris Bell (“Psychedelic Stuff”). The set then delves into familiar and great territory with tracks from the albums #1 Record and Radio City—cornerstone records for any power pop fan— from rockers such as “Feel,” “Back of a Car” and “In The Street,” to tender material like the coming-of-age poignancy of “Thirteen” and the graceful “The Ballad of El Goodo.” And of course there’s the great “September Gurls.”

By the time Big Star recorded Third/Sister Lovers in the mid’70s, members Chris Bell and Andy Hummel already left the band. Chilton and drummer Jody Stephens carried on and the result is what most people considered their most somber and masterful work. Any shot at improving their commercial fortunes went down the drain with this album-- there are some great songs from the haunting “Holocaust,” to the upbeat “Jesus Christ” and “Thank You Friends,” to the lovely Nighttime. The fourth disc on this set is a terrific, previously-unreleased live performance at Lafayette’s Music Room in Memphis in January 1973 focusing on #1 Record songs—it also features covers of T. Rex’s “Baby Strange” and Todd Rundgren’s “Slut.”

And while the box set is certainly an acknowlegement of the genius of singer/songwriter Alex Chilton and the musical contributions of Stephens and Hummel, it’s also a tribute to Chris Bell. He left the band after the first album and tragically died young in 1978 without getting any recognition. His most famous post-Big Star single, “I Am the Cosmos” is deservedly on the collection.

For fans of Big Star or great power pop music from that era, this set is an absolute must-listen. In some strange sense, the fact that Big Star never became huge during their lifetime ended up being a blessing in disguise.

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Interview: Michael Carey Schneider of Sneaker



SoCal Pop: An interview with Michael Carey Schneider of the group Sneaker
By David Chiu

From the mid-Seventies to the early Eighties, the sounds of Southern California pop music was distinguishable by these characteristics: superb (perhaps “slick” to some critics) musicianship; catchy melodies and hooks; lush arrangements and airy melodies; romantic lyrics; and an overall soft-rock vibe. It was background music for those in their cars cruising down the highway somewhere in Los Angeles as the sun sets.

The artists that best represent that sound are plenty but here are a few of the popular ones: the Doobie Brothers, Steely Dan, Pablo Cruise, Toto, Player, Chicago and Christopher Cross. It was a genre of music that was lovingly spoofed on the recent hit Web series Yacht Rock, which parodies some of those aforementioned pop groups.

Another act from that era was a six-man Los Angeles-based group called Sneaker. The group was formed by singer/keyboardist Michael Carey Schneider, singer/guitarist Mitch Crane and bassist Michael Cottage sometime in the Seventies. With the addition of drummer Mike Hughes, guitarist Tim Torrance and keyboardist Jim King, Sneaker (whose named was inspired the Steely Dan song “Bad Sneakers”), got a deal with Handshake Records.

Their self-titled debut album came out in 1981, produced by Steely Dan/Doobie Brothers guitarist Jeff Skunk Baxter, contained their rendition of Steely Dan’s “Don’t Let Me In” and “More Than Just The Two of Us.” The latter song, a lovely ballad sung by Schneider, became a Top 40 hit.


Sneaker also made the rounds on the TV shows such as American Bandstand, The Merv Griffin Shiw and Solid Gold. The group later recorded their sophomore record, Loose in the World (1982), but then broke up shortly afterward. Although the group never had the long and popular career of its more famous contemporaries of the Southern California pop era, the music lives on thanks to the Internet such as MySpace, where there are pages devoted to a Sneaker fan site and another that plays tracks from the two Sneaker albums. Old performance clips of the band performing on American Bandstand and Merv Griffin can be found on YouTube.

Today Michael Carey Schneider keeps the memory of the band alive, especially through the band’s Web presence. He recently spoke with NewBeats to enthusiastically talk about Sneaker’s underrated life and career.

Where are you from and how did you get involved in music?
I started writing songs when I was about 14. Mitch Crane—who moved a few years prior to that, he moved out from the Midwest to the same street we lived on. We were childhood friends. He had no idea of how to write a song. He was really great with taking a Sony 2-track machine way back in the ‘60s and learning how to go sound on sound, as we called it back then. We didn’t how to do this and Mitch was such a brain at that age. He would record me singing and playing and then we go do another track and he’d play bass and guitar. We started out as children doing these songs that we had no idea we were going to take seriously.

How did Sneaker come about?
Mitch Crane and I became ‘Schneider and Crane’ in the early ‘70s. Mitch was always shy, he didn’t like to sing. He’s 6 foot 2, very shy. I’m five foot two and very outgoing. We met up with Michael Cottage, who started a group with Mitch. Between myself, Mitch Crane and Michael Cottage, we started the group Sneaker.

Before we started playing originals in that nightclub, we played the Eagles, Steely Dan, Christopher Cross—all the stuff 30 years later that ended up being that West Coast sound. We had no idea we would be part of that West Coast sound. Of course we would be playing Beatles. Anything vocally that was it, because Cottage, Crane and myself loved three-part harmony. Believe it or not, I was inspired by Barry Manilow. [He] was the key to “More Than Just The Two of Us.”


You got signed to Handshake Records?
Handshake Records was started by Ron Alexenburg, who started Epic Records. Our manager at the time, Shelly Weiss, was the one who made everything happen for us. He had all the connections to everybody in the business. We were renting a house out in Granada Hills and when he heard us he quit his job working [as] Herb Alpert’s professional manager. He would bring the biggest people in the business [to our house]: This guy knew everybody. We got signed to Handshake Records on the strength of “More.” They loved that song so much.


What was it like working with Steely Dan/Doobie Brothers guitarist Jeff “Skunk” Baxter as your producer on your first album?
The things that he did…telling me to sing a certain way, and let’s have this instrument here, let’s do this backwards, let’s have you hit a bass drum here with a big sledgehammer. The songs sounded way better than I already thought they could ever. We owe a lot to Jeffrey for that sound. He played on the album, he produced our second album, he toured with us in Japan. He was always right there whenever we played gigs where we wanted to a little special boost for people: “Jeff Baxter will be with us tonight!” A sweet guy. I can’t say enough.

Your sound is characterized by harmonies, great musicianship, lush arrangements and production.
Even as a child I taught myself how to harmonize. Mitch is such a great guitarist, great writer, great singer. Our harmonies started way back then. We weren’t always on key on time but at least we knew what we were doing.

We actually had two kinds of sounds because Mitch was writing songs with me and Jim King. Jim’s more of a jazz writer…and I’m more of a commercial Top 40 guy. That’s where you see two different sounds. Like “Jaymes”—I wrote “Jaymes” with Mitch. That’s one of my most jazziest chord progressions I’ve ever written. That was inspired by “You Belong to Me” by Michael McDonald. It was written about a real person, Jaymes Foster, [producer] David Foster’s sister.

Mitch has that Michael McDonald voice, that kind of a soulful voice. I was always kind of compared to Air Supply’s Russell Hitchcock, the guy with the high voice. “They sound like Michael McDonald and Russell Hitchcock.” I always laugh when they said “Michael McDonald and Steve Perry.”

How did you co-write “More Than Just The Two of Us”? What was the inspiration behind the song?
Barry Manilow was very big at the time, so I was fiddling around with all these piano passages, and came up with what you hear on the record—the beginning. I don’t know how I came up with that. Mitch started singing a melody and lyric in the key I wrote it. When we went in to do the demo, Mitch started singing, and we have a demo of Mitch Crane singing the demo for More, trying to reach those notes. Luckily, he says “Schneider you sing it.” So I sang it, and all these years I have been so lucky to have been the lead vocalist on the Top 40 hit. Thank God it stayed in that key and Mitch let me sang it.


Mitch’s a great lyricist. He wrote the lyrics to all those songs. Mike Cottage did help on a couple. I didn’t know it at the time but Mitch was being separated from his wife in the late ‘70s And that song was about them getting ready to separate and divorce. I didn’t learn about that until years later. When we got on this label in Japan five years ago, and they wanted to know how those songs came about, I said to Mitch, “How did you come up with that?” And he goes, “That was because of my pending divorce at the time.” A lot of people took it in different ways—you can take it as a spiritual song.”

The band also made the TV rounds.
We were on the three hottest shows at that point in the ‘80s. they really had to like yourself to get you on there. Dick Clark comes up to me and goes “Michael, what do you think of this selling millions of albums?” (laughs). For him to think we should have sold millions was such a great honor. We didn’t quite sell a million but it didn’t matter. We were the Solid Gold Pick hit of the week, which was a very big honor. They put this little chyron thing on the TV in big letters: SOLID GOLD PICK HIT OF THE WEEK. We thought ‘This is it! We’re going to be famous!’ It was wonderful.

So why did you guys break up?
That’s a mystery. After we had our first album and more than stalled at #34. When the released “Don’t Let Me In” as our second single from that album. We just went in and did our second album. We were really big in Japan and we did a tour in the summer of 1982. And when we came home, I don’t know what happened. Things went weird. Out of nowhere. Ron Alexenberg decided to get rid of Handshake Records. I never got to talk to Ron and never got the straight story from anybody. We tried to keep it together for a while and we [then] kind of went our separate ways. Mitch went and quit the group, and I wasn’t feeling well to write with anyone else.

What did you do after Sneaker?
I didn’t do anything for a while. I went into music publishing and became a professional manager for Stephen Stills [from 1985 to 1991], learning more about the publishing end of music. I run the publishing company Sneaker songs that collects all the money when our stuff gets played on radio and TV. I was in another group trying to get another deal in a group called Spaghetti Western. We would play country rock, like the Eagles. When we go to Nashville to play at the clubs, they called us the Beatles of country music because our stuff was really commercial.

Do you still keep in touch with the other guys in Sneaker?
Mitch Crane, myself, Jim King and Mike Torrance still live out here in Southern California Some of us are still involved in music. Once in a while we’ll still be in touch. Mike Cottage went back to New Orleans, where he’s from, and he started a successful sound and lighting company. I just saw him three weeks ago. I talked to Jim King this week. Once in a while I ‘ll hear from Mitch. The only person I haven’t heard from is Mike Hughes. I haven’t heard from him and I’m worried about him. I haven’t heard from him since 1983.


Will music from the two Sneaker albums be reissued?
They were released in Japan in the early ‘80s. We did our Japanese concert in the late ’82. There were two people at the concert and each of them wanted to sign us.. Later on they started a record and they signed us to a Japanese label. I’m with friends in the business there to help me put something where people can download digitally or send them [a physical CD]. That will happen. I just don’t know when.

Do you look back with nostalgia about what you accomplished with Sneaker?
When I go to YouTube I see two groups who played “More Than Just The Two of Us” at a nightclub gig, and here I’m watching a group in the Philippines playing “More” in a nightclub. People [are] taking their time learning how to play it and sending me MySpace and Facebook messages asking me about Sneaker. I always have to remind myself when I get down [to] go ‘Look man, you did something that nobody did or will ever do again.’ I can’t tell you enough how wonderful it is after all these years to still have “More” and people still interested. I think you can hear the joy in my voice in this interview.

For information on Sneaker, visit these Web sites:
http://www.myspace.com/sneakertheband
www.sneakersongs.com
http://www.facebook.com/people/Michael-Carey-Schneider/1464036158

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Sunday, September 06, 2009

CD Review: The Beatles

The Beatles
Rubber Soul
Sgt. Pepper Lonely Hearts Club Band
Magical Mystery Tour
Yellow Submarine
Abbey Road
Capitol/EMI
By David Chiu

For a group that has bee revolutionary for nearly 50 years, the Beatles frankly have been kind of behind when it comes to the audio quality of their CDs (We’re not even going to touch on digital downloads). The sound on those original 1987 versions of their British albums is adequate but don’t reflect the improvements or upgrades in remastering that are so common these days.


But coming on Wednesday, Sept. 9, that’s all going to change when the Beatles entire studio catalog, including the Yellow Submarine soundtrack and Past Masters Vol. 1 and 2, is being reissued. And the results are damn good. The clarity on the remasters is remarkable, containing that extra sonic boost missing from the original CD issues—but nothing dramatic or completely revisionist that would offend purists who know every note on every album. Beatles fans and audio freaks can finally have something to celebrate.

In addition to much better sound, each album has a thick booklet of artwork, photographs and liner notes rather than the paper-thin sleeves of the original CDs. There’s also a QuickTime mini-documentary featuring footage and interviews from the Fab Four about the songs and album—they’re nicely produced but one wishes they were a little bit longer in length to add more historical perspective.

As for the albums—well they speak for themselves and don’t need much reiteration. Certainly the Beatles’mid- to late-period releases—in which they used the studio as an instrument in itself—benefits from the new sonic upgrade. And typical of each new Beatles release, it’s chance to revisit the great albums again. For example, the new edition of Rubber Soul could be considered a reflective Beatles albums deviating from its poppy predecessors and the start of their experimentations such as the use of sitar on “Norwegian Wood.” And a majority of that album contains many beloved tracks from “Drive My Car,” the lovely “In My Life,” and “Nowhere Man.”

If there is one Beatles album that definitely deserves a remastering is the masterpiece Sgt.Pepper, where the Beatles and producer really took recording to a whole new level. It is still remarkable how that album, with all its nooks, crannies and nuances, was made using the technology at the time. it’s a glorious trip to hear classics such as the title track, “Lucy In the Sky With Diamonds” and the grand finale “A Day in the Life” now with this fresh sonic treatment.

The same could be said for the whimsical Magical Mystery Tour, which follows in the same musical spirit of Pepper (“I Am The Walrus,” “The Fool on the Hill,” and especially the innovative “Strawberry Fields Forever”). And Yellow Submarine, while it contains only six band songs, including two that has already been released, has some wonderful movie-inspired artwork and packaging.




Abbey Road, the last Beatles album to be recorded, still retains its popularity and brilliance 40 years after its original release, containing George Harrison’s most popular songs in “Here Comes the Sun” and “Something” along with Paul McCartney’s brilliant medley “Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight/The End” and John Lennon’s “Come Together.”


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Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Live: Sharon Van Etten at Joe's Pub



Sharon Van Etten is a Brooklyn-based singer/songwriter who a few months ago released her debut album Because I Was In Love. If you like haunting yet graceful folk pop music, and live in the New York City area, check out her upcoming show at Joe’s Pub this Friday Sept. 4. Van Etten will also be at the Bowery Ballroom and Music Hall of Williamsburg on Sept. 27 and 28 respectively. For more information visit www.sharonvanetten.com or www.myspace.com/sharonvanetten.

Photo courtesy of Sharon Van Etten’s MySpace page.

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