Archive for the ‘Album O' The Week’ Category

Album O’ The Week: Evil Urges

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

Hey folks. Bro in law Adam set me onto this fun one: My Morning Jacket’s Evil Urges. I was initially interested because I had heard the radio release on the local alt station. The song I was familiar with was a nice, hooky, alt-country singalong. What I encountered on this cd was much more than what I had bargained for. I heard some of Phish, Beck, Prince, and even some Neil Young in these crazy cats. It was great to listen to an album that was this diverse. I’m doing something different with this album, though. What I tend to do with new music is listen to the whole album over and over until I know all the songs, and then for about a week I’ll wake up in the morning with the songs jam-locked in my brain. It happened with Harvest, it happened with The Odd Couple (another one thanks to Adam). SO it ain’t happening with this one. I’m determined to enjoy this one correctly.

Album O’ The Week: What A Night! A Christmas Album

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

Most of you know how much I love the holidays, and each year I find myself getting increasingly more Christmas cheer than ever before. This year for my birthday Matt bought me Harry Connick Jr.’s newest disc, “What A Night! A Christmas Album,” which was released the day after my birthday. Suffice it to say… the boy knows.

I’ve been playing it non-stop, so it’s only appropriate that I blog about it this week. Like any other Connick Jr. album, the songs are well-orchestrated and leave you humming new riffs that you will now forever associate with “Have A Holly Jolly Christmas.” Although it hasn’t yet taken the place in my heart that belongs to his 2003 album “Harry for the Holidays,” I have to admit that it’s pretty cute to hear him singing along with his daughter Kate who has some SERIOUS CHOPS!

As always, you can preview the album in the Amazon widget in the sidebar. And if you need a serious boost of Christmas cheer (which some of you Scrooges REALLY need!), download it to your iPod and try to withstand crushing hardcore on H Jr.

Also, I always link you through to Amazon because I prefer buying mp3s from their site over iTunes. But I’m sure you can find it there as well.

album of the week

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

Priscilla, as you know, has been out of town this week, communing with teachers in Charlotte on an epic Lord Of The Rings-esque business trip. As a result, she has been limited in her ability to contribute to the blog. I, trusty reader, have taken the helm and have been posting the pre-written daily d’s for your viewing pleasure. Impressed?

Priscilla asked me to offer up the weekly album, and I warned her that what I would put up here would most likely make her skin crawl, but she agreed nonetheless. So without further ado, I point you to Easy Star All-Stars’ maiden opus, Dub Side of the Moon.

Dub Side of the Moon

This is a brilliant effort from musicians under the reggae/dub label Easy Star who cover, in its entirety, Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon.  Those of you familiar with Floyd’s presentation (big ma and company, come on now) know that the band is fond of the slow, trudging, trippy format.  This style lends itself commensurately to that of dub, which is a studio-altered, delay-effect-laden treatment of reggae. Think Bob Marley meets Roger Waters on the set of Buck Rogers.

I know, you think I’m an idiot. Well, I am.

I discovered this album when I lived in Columbus, which has a great music scene. This tour came to Little Brother’s, and I convinced Priscilla to go with me. She came, and even appeared to enjoy herself, though later I learned that it was all a ruse to continue the impression that she loved all of the music I loved. She actually ground her teeth to small nubs that evening. I, however, was floored.

I’m sure you’ll be as well.

PS: It works with Wizard of Oz, too!!

Album O’ The Week: Getz/Gilberto

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Weeks ago, John sent me an email telling me I needed to download “Into the Blue Again” by The Album Leaf. Since then, I have only previewed the songs and have yet to download it and therefore cannot give a true “yay”  or “nay.” I will, however, say that it sounds much more up Matt’s alley than mine. The instrumentation sounds pretty fun and creative which often draws in my arrangement-minded hubby moreso than myself. All this to say let’s all download it together! And listen together! And review together! In true online community fashion.

What I HAVE been listening to a lot of this week is Getz/Gilberto in preparation for yesterday, and the song that Matt always writes for me on either our anniversary or my birthday. He is such a gifted songwriter and last year’s tune was a lovely samba along the vein of Getz/Gilberto. So all week long I’ve been spinning the album only to be thrown for a loop when Matt busted out the guitar last night to play me a song that sounded very much influenced by Coldplay! See why I love him so much? He can go from MMW to Getz/Gilberto to Coldplay and back again, wooing me all the while. And whether or not he’d like to admit it, my birthday song from 2003 sounded very recent Elvis Costello-ish!

At any rate, until Matty records all these songs for you to listen to, you’re going to have to listen to Getz/Gilberto and try to imagine him playing all of those songs. Not entirely a difficult thing to imagine. And I challenge you to NOT become instantly relaxed and/or immediately crave a martini. Check out the sidebar widget for more.

An Evening with Hungrytown (in their van)

Monday, September 8th, 2008

Editor’s Note:

Our first guest post this week comes from Justin Shatwell, an editor over at Yankee Magazine who writes a music column there. We met while working together, and after a brief, five-minute conversation about his impeccable music taste, we pulled out the safety pins to become blood brothers. He’s by far the hippest cat to ever reside in the Granite State and walks around making quotable quotes all the time. When I asked him to write a guest post, his response went a little something like this:

Funkiest Priscilla,

If the young and disaffected clamoring for a better tomorrow on the internet were a revolutionary guerilla army, you were our Che Guevara.

Peace,
Justin

What’s not to love? And here’s a little music review by him of a band you NEED to check out…

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There are few instances when it is either safe or socially respectable to follow strangers back to their van. Spending an evening hanging out with folk musicians is a borderline case in both regards. Lucky for me, they weren’t just any folk musicians, they were husband and wife vagabonds Rebecca Hall and Ken Anderson, otherwise known as Hungrytown. And it wasn’t just any van, it was the Blue Meanie, their custom built twenty-two foot long wannabe Winnebago. Inside they crammed a bed, shower, toilet, kitchenette, and desk. It’s wireless, has room for their instruments, and carries all the gear they need to set up impromptu recording sessions. It’s also blue and stocked with diet soda which they serve up liberally to guests.

If you ever, in a fit of youthful idealism, declare your intention to work for the U.N. and your parents demand to know where that will get you in life, refer them to this post. Ken, a reformed lawyer whose first official act was to retire, and Rebecca, an erstwhile English major, kicked around the lower echelons of the world service for years before deciding to follow in the footsteps of the Carter family. They quit, cashed in their pensions for a small house in Vermont and their big blue touring machine (the van was more expensive), and they haven’t looked back since. I caught up with them five years into their odyssey after they rocked the geriatric face off the Rutland Free Library.

The first thing that strikes you about Hungrytown is how damn cute they are. Seeing them on stage, you’d swear this whole “folk musician” thing was just an extended second honeymoon. The show is full of sidelong glances, little jokes, and matrimonial barbs. Before one song Rebecca reminded Ken “Now don’t forget the new intro” in the same tone one might use to remind their husband to bring the car in for an oil change or to empty the lint trap before drying the linens. They’re genuinely having a good time. They’re the type of unspoiled musicians that are still perfectly pleased to be playing a thirty seat room half-filled.

Musically Hungrytown is like few folk acts out there. Not because they’re pushing the envelope with turntables and electric sitars, but because they’re doing exactly the opposite. Ken and Rebecca kick it way old school – like 1930’s old school. Most folkies I know either try to modernize the genre or go the traditional Celtic route. Hungrytown opts instead to revisit the golden age of Appalachia. The majority of their music is purely American, referencing the kind of acts that played the Grand Ole Opry when Elvis and Johnny Cash were kids. The twist is that most of the songs, though ancient, are brand spankin’ new.

Ken and Rebecca discovered folk relatively late in their musical lives. While they were international bureaucrats, they kept their sanity playing separate gigs in New York. Rebecca was a jazz singer and Ken played drums for a rock outfit. It was only after a conversion experience with an old folk anthology that Rebecca started toying around with Americana. Ken didn’t join her until he filled in for her regular bassist for a major gig (in order to achieve this feat, he had to learn how to play the bass in three days. If that’s not love, Cupid can freakin’ eat me). For whatever reason, they found in folk something they didn’t find elsewhere. They have an incredible knack for writing songs that sound so authentic they might be referred to as forgeries. They also found something they can do well together, which sounds cheesy as hell, but seriously, isn’t that what we all want? They take the trials and tribulations of their daily lives (like those involved in buying a new house or living with your husband in a very small van), craft them into simple versus, and hurl them back in time. The soul of the songs is modern, but they sound like something that should be coming out of a gramophone.

Hungrytown is definitely worth a listen. They may be a little too authentic for some tastes, but the charisma of their live shows it worth seeing in-and-of-itself. It is a rare thing these days to see a band that really took the leap of faith to become musicians. It’s easy to quit your job at Starbucks to chase the dream; leaving behind a secure high-paying job to hit the road in a genre that rarely brings in a lot of cash, that’s something else entirely. The drive required to do that is something hard to describe, but they where it on their sleeves at every concert. It’s worth going to one of their shows just for the inspiration. I guarantee it’ll be an experience as classic as their sound.

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You can preview their album “Hungrytown” in the sidebar widget. Enjoy!

Welcome, Lil’ Album O’ The Week!

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

You might have noticed a cute little widget in the sidebar. Yes, oh yes, we’re starting an Album O’ The Week over here at Verbal Intent. Once a week, I’ll update and post about the album I’m currently listening to with a bit of a review for you. Let me know your thoughts on the musak, and as always send me your suggestions of music that I should be listening to.

This week, I’m listening to a ton of Tom Freund’s new album “Collapsible Plans” produced by our very own Ben Harper. I have a lot of mixed feelings about this album. On the one hand, I love it because it sounds like Ben Harper’s music just sung by a different guy. But when you hear it right next to older Tom Freund you almost feel like Ben Harper beat the heck out of Tom and forced him to become a soulful black dude instead. Not that it’s bad, it just doesn’t sound fully like Tom Freund.

At any rate, he’s a heck of a songwriter and can sing while playing upright bass which is a remarkable feat in and of itself. Ask Matty.

You can preview some of the songs from “Collapsible Plans” in the little Amazon widget in the sidebar. Enjoy!