Music

The Lost Art Of Liner Notes: Billy “Crash” Craddock – Mr. Country Rock (1973, ABC Records)

Posted on by Paul in Albums, Classic Albums | Leave a comment

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One of the things that we’ve lost since downloading and streaming took over as our main sources of music is the effort put into the packaging and presentation of music, specifically the effort put into liner notes. A recent crate digging exposition led to the acquisition of some “new” used records and got me to thinking that they just don’t make liner notes like they used to back in the day. Many of the older records of the ’50s,’60s, and ’70s would feature someone (some sort of notable music industry figure, maybe the artist themselves, or perhaps just some random writer looking to make a quick buck) waxing poetic about the contents of the record. Sure, albums today can still feature pretty extensive notes, but they’re of a different nature and as time moves on, these kinds of glowing testimonials have definitely fallen from favour. Too bad – just imagine what could have been if famous “punk” Ivanka Trump had been given the chance to give us her thoughts in the packaging for Nirvana’s In Utero.

With this in mind, we celebrate the glory of the liner note by having a look at the back cover of Mr. Country Rock by Billy “Crash” Craddock. Yes, it’s true – aside from having the nickname “Crash,” Billy Craddock also has the audacity to refer to himself as “Mr. Country Rock,” which is weird. Ain’t it? Gram Parsons should have kicked this guy’s ass for making such a claim.

Behold, the liner notes. I’m not sure who wrote this and I’m not really sure what they’re on about (“Electric sunglasses?” “Hard throbbing dance rhythms?” Psychedelic bumper stickers?), but go ahead and behold:

Ain’t it weird? I mean the way it happens sometimes.

A guy starts out to be a rock ‘n roll star, and they promote him with ads and bumper stickers and electric sunglasses and what not, and then they sit back and wait for the money to roll in.

But the magazines with yesterday’s news start piling up on the table by the visitor’s couch – their yellowing advertisements constant reminders of mistakes the geniuses would rather forget. And the crumbling bumper stickers giving way to shiny psychedelic messages such as “See Ruby Falls” or “America, Love It Or Leave It.” And another promising star-to-be becomes one more might have been.

Then somebody remembers, and somebody believes – and together they work in new directions toward new goals:

Country music – slashing twin fiddles and wailing steel guitars, mixed with the infectious beat of rock – the hard throbbing dance rhythms that exploded rock almost overnight as the pop music of the young and young at heart.

Country rock. A hybrid compound, a style, a formula for success for a might-have-been who made it to the top – and who intends to stay there:

Mr Country-Rock, Billy “Crash” Craddock.

Ain’t it weird?

Monday Song Reviews – Charly Bliss, Baio, Night Things, Bleachers, etc.

Posted on by Ricky in Music | Leave a comment

baio

Every Monday, Spotify suggests me a new playlist. So I decided it’s a decent idea to listen to these new tracks.

Everything Everything – Can’t Do
Sounds like a rock band trying to awkwardly fit into the dance-disco craze right now. Like when Starsailor did Four to the Floor, only that song was good. This song might have been a hit in 2004 but sounds a bit tired now.

Charly Bliss – Glitter
I like Charly Bliss’ album this year. Like their other songs, Glitter sounds like ’90s era power pop that is strengthened by the lead singers saccharine voice. I dont know why I used saccharine, but yeah it fits.

Mesia – Spirits
Whispery vocals against a bassy drum beat. Doesn’t really make me want to listen again.

Low Island – Holding it Down
I feel like Future Islands has already got the “islands” band down so it’s hard to look at this band and not think about them. Also, there is a band called Low. This song began and ended without me really noticing.

Baio – Philosphy!
One of the few solo acts spun off Vampire Weekend, Baio is back after a failure to launch attempt a few years ago. This song has a nice funkiness to it with a nice sax line. APPROVED!

Night Things – Cost of the Summer
Another ’80s inspired pop song, with a nice synthesizer part that makes me feel like this song could be a soundtrack for an ’80s era drama that takes place in Miami or California that has a good looking cast and really bad acting. I like the duo male/female vocals, so this song is okay. It might be one minute too long

Bleachers – Hate that You Know Me
This song sounds like a ’90s song. I think that’s the only way i can describe music now. I envision a ’90s high school movie, where the lead character is a skater and then the female character is a less cool character, and this song plays during that down period where they like each other, but then a conflict from the past threatens to derail this unlikely love and it’s just a montage of the two characters being all sad and shit. Obviously they’ll get back together because the lead character learns to become a better person but that is probably done to another song.

Childcare – Dust
Not sure what this song is aiming for, or who the target audience is. It is good in a non-offensive, won’t distract while you are working but making noise at the same time kinda way.

Smooth Ends – Be a Man (Radio Edit)
This song is one you would hear while shopping at Urban Outfitters. It’s got a friendly beat, some light synthesizers and a non-abrasive voice. Its catchy but not in a memorable kind of way. I laugh at the Radio Edit thing cos is this song ever gonna get played on radio anyway?

SXSW Review; Matt Maeson, Agnes Obel, March 17, St. David’s Sanctuary

Posted on by Gary in Concerts, Everything, Music, South By Southwest | Leave a comment

 
I saw two acts as part of the “traditional” (for me) Communion Night at St. David’s Sanctuary this year.

Matt Maeson

Matt Maeson
As with each new generation of pop music, Matt Maeson’s songs are full of emphasis. They are overt and attention seeking. It’s something worth putting on Instagram but may not stay with you by happy hour Saturday evening.

Even though they were delivered in a church with just a guitar, the dramatic pauses, the obvious epic-tempo, the produced and formulaic melody and structure asks one to listen, but can’t produce the substance and soul.

I’m probably doing it wrong – I don’t have the acronym and meme vocabulary of an 18 year old to correctly comment on this. Nonetheless, I don’t have any sentiments against Maeson – he certainly has the vocal range and talent, and no one doubts his authenticity. Yet a music video where a pastor synchronized his punches to music really made me (and everyone) cringe, just a little.
 
Agnes Obel

Agnes Obel
I have heard cello concertos in an orchestral setting, and always felt that they were simply alternative, deeper voiced violins. But that’s mainly because they can be buried by both the composition and the sheer number of instruments. I haven’t appreciated their power (albeit amplified) and versatility until now. Perhaps Agnes Obel is right in her more pared-down and focused approach to composition. Whether it’s completing sentences of opposites or driving a marching bass line, the cello proved incredibly apt at supplanting the air conditioners in supplying the atmosphere. That was a surprise that the recordings never did convey.

When the red lights came on before she took the stage, I thought that it would pass. But Obel constructs everything intentionally, and of course lighting is the other half of the ambience. And the lighting is best bloody dark. She was visibly annoyed when this illusion was broken and shafts of light peaked in with the swelling audience mid-song. She sang the main registers here and left the flourishes to the percussionist. It was no surprise that she would play “The Curse”, the 2013 hit that first drew our attention to Obel’s song writing. And of course “Familiar”, the single from her new album Citizen of Glass continues in that austere tradition. Beautifully flowing, intense yet personal, it’s a successful way to integrate classical elements for modern sensibilities. You are led to follow each melodic development instead of a fully-assembled harmonized sound.

SXSW Review: Totally Mild, All Our Exes Live In Texas, March 16, Brush Square Park

Posted on by Gary in Everything, Music, Reviews, South By Southwest | Leave a comment

Totally Mild

I will admit that I had never heard of them until this year’s SXSW, but Melbourne-based Totally Mild ended up on my list on the strength of “Move On” from their last album, Down Time. It’s a bubbly vocalized piece with a music video that showed the band members drinking and regurgitating milk. Hearty, mind-bending, sardonic stuff. Since then, they have delivered another short album titled Alive in Denmark.

The lead vocalist Elizabeth Mitchell has a naturally high-pitched and clear voice that resonates well. She needs to – their music is moody, expressive and forlorn with twisting passages spanning quite a range. “The Next Day” is a good example. It’s like a slower version of a coloratura’s training scales. Listening to them in the BBQ tent really made me feel like an exemplary irony. Should I feign philistine and continue to shove food down my throat, or stop chewing midway to better hear the lyrics? Test this out for yourself with “More” – I’d stop half way.
 
All Our Exes Live In Texas
Fluttering women have no patience to stay in Texas – they belong in Sydney, Australia. That’s why they left all their exes in Texas. At least that’s the story I made up. In truth, members of All Our Exes Live In Texas are from Sydney, and so are their exes. The Texas came in for a rhyme and dime.

All Our Exes appear to have coalesced as a revenge band – and playing at SXSW while their male counterparts (also a band) fester in Sydney gave them some degree of satisfaction. One would be hard-pressed to say that they are performing out of spite. They were playful and energetic (that would be anything other than head-bobbing in folk music). In a short set consisting of just 5 songs, each is enjoyable with bright melodies and close harmony. The rendition of their showcase “Boundary Road” is fairly true to the recording. It’s fun to guess who would be singing which part, as each seem equally capable of a similar range. All in all, not bad for their first time singing live in Texas.