You know me as a taste-making, trend-spotting, genre-hopping surfer of the zeitgeist - and I would modestly suggest that I am all of those things and more. 😇, as I believe they say (or possibly 😉).
But sometimes, after a long hard day, I find I'm not in the mood for Tsonga disco or Bulgarian prog or psychedelic cumbia or such like. For comfort listening, I need some classic cowboy crooning, which means either Marty Robbins or Frankie Laine.
Last night it was Frankie's turn. Here are a couple of tracks from a CD called "Country Laine" which is a reissue of two 1961 albums, "Deuces Wild" and "Hell Bent For Leather!".
"Moonlight Gambler" - Frankie Laine
"The 3.10 To Yuma" - Frankie Laine
For an extra treat, here are a couple of fine cover versions of two of Frankie's biggest hits.
Thursday, 27 February 2020
Tuesday, 25 February 2020
The Long Goodbye: Part 3
Bulgaria. Third in our series featuring the music of the 27 EU Member States, and one of only three that I haven't been to yet. Hopefully I'll get a chance to put that right. The word on the street is that Plovdiv is poptastic.
Outside Bulgaria, Trio Bulgarka are probably the artists of whom you are most likely to have heard. They appeared on a Kate Bush album in the late 1980s and along with Marta Sebestyen from Hungary were at the forefront of a brief craze for East European folk music around that time. I'm not sure the attempt to incorporate (then) modern sounds works in their favour, but it is certainly an improvement on the Singing Nun's disco period, which we featured last time out.
"20-ti Vek" - Shturtcite
"Ne Me Gleday Taka Momche" - Kamelia Todorova
"Pustono Ludo I Mlado" - Trio Bulgarka
"Proksima" - Srebrynite Grivni
"Sbogom Klas" - Rositsa Kirilova & Agrirovi Brothers
That is all pretty old stuff, so let's try and bring things a bit more up to date. The word on the trendier end of the aforementioned street is that Bulgarian Trap is all the rage, so here is some to sample. To my inexpert ears it sounds a lot like the Trio Bulgarka track. We then go back to 2007 to enjoy what may be the only time a Jew's harp (or the Bulgarian equivalent) has featured at Eurovision.
Outside Bulgaria, Trio Bulgarka are probably the artists of whom you are most likely to have heard. They appeared on a Kate Bush album in the late 1980s and along with Marta Sebestyen from Hungary were at the forefront of a brief craze for East European folk music around that time. I'm not sure the attempt to incorporate (then) modern sounds works in their favour, but it is certainly an improvement on the Singing Nun's disco period, which we featured last time out.
"20-ti Vek" - Shturtcite
"Ne Me Gleday Taka Momche" - Kamelia Todorova
"Pustono Ludo I Mlado" - Trio Bulgarka
"Proksima" - Srebrynite Grivni
"Sbogom Klas" - Rositsa Kirilova & Agrirovi Brothers
That is all pretty old stuff, so let's try and bring things a bit more up to date. The word on the trendier end of the aforementioned street is that Bulgarian Trap is all the rage, so here is some to sample. To my inexpert ears it sounds a lot like the Trio Bulgarka track. We then go back to 2007 to enjoy what may be the only time a Jew's harp (or the Bulgarian equivalent) has featured at Eurovision.
Sunday, 23 February 2020
Single Song Sunday
It's one of the most covered songs of all time, so it was inevitable that we would get round to featuring it in Single Song Sunday eventually. It is, of course, "Louie Louie".
We start off with the song that inspired the man who wrote the song that inspired them all, Cuban band leader Rene Touzet's arrangement of "El Loco Cha Cha". You will probably all be familiar with Richard Berry's 1955 "original". You'll certainly all know The Kingsmen's hit version from 1963 which really kickstarted the whole craze. And those of you from the UK and of a certain vintage may recall the mellower than you would expect version by Motorhead.
After that, we're all over the place. Toots & The Maytals provide the Mandatory Reggae Version. The Neighb'rhoods freak out. Mario Allison reclaims it for the Latin world with some late 60s Peruvian boogaloo, while Simba convert it into a slab of early 70s Afrorock. I can't find the words to describe what Barry White does.
Then we finish off with a song inspired by the FBI investigation into the version of the song that inspired them all.
Then we finish off with a song inspired by the FBI investigation into the version of the song that inspired them all.
"El Loco Cha Cha" - Rene Touzet
"Louie Louie" - Richard Berry
"Louie Louie" - The Kingsmen
"Louie Louie" - Motorhead
"Louie Louie" - Toots & The Maytals
"Louie Louie" - Honey Ltd
"Louie Louie" - Mario Allison y Su Combo
"Louie Louie" - Wilbert Harrison
"Louie Louie" - Simba
"Louie Louie" - Neighb'rhood Childr'n
Thursday, 20 February 2020
Seventies Style
Earlier this week I was in Belfast for a couple of days and built some time into my schedule to visit Time Slip Records in Botanic Avenue and some of the many charity shops in the same street (Charity Chic would love it, he should get himself over there as soon as the Boris Bridge is built).
In Save the Children I found a large collection of CDs that had been given away with the Daily Express in 2003 and 2004. All of them were called things like "Essential 70s" or "Classic 60s", and indeed all of them had seven or eight tracks from that decade. But all were padded out with loads of new recordings that they claimed were "in the style of" whichever decade it was. I was sufficiently intrigued to buy one of them. This one.
Here are two of the "new 70s-style tracks" from 2003. The first one picks itself, and I've chosen the second because The Micky Sharpe All Stars are the only one of the genuinely real acts to feature twice. There seems to be one more "z" in "Suzzanne" than is necessary. Maybe they did that deliberately to distinguish it from the much less funky Leonard Cohen tune.
"Disco Rodeo" - Teenage Sensations
"Suzzanne" - The Micky Sharpe All Stars
We'll finish off with one of the actual 70s hits. This one is just about as essential as they get.
In Save the Children I found a large collection of CDs that had been given away with the Daily Express in 2003 and 2004. All of them were called things like "Essential 70s" or "Classic 60s", and indeed all of them had seven or eight tracks from that decade. But all were padded out with loads of new recordings that they claimed were "in the style of" whichever decade it was. I was sufficiently intrigued to buy one of them. This one.
Here are two of the "new 70s-style tracks" from 2003. The first one picks itself, and I've chosen the second because The Micky Sharpe All Stars are the only one of the genuinely real acts to feature twice. There seems to be one more "z" in "Suzzanne" than is necessary. Maybe they did that deliberately to distinguish it from the much less funky Leonard Cohen tune.
"Disco Rodeo" - Teenage Sensations
"Suzzanne" - The Micky Sharpe All Stars
We'll finish off with one of the actual 70s hits. This one is just about as essential as they get.
Sunday, 16 February 2020
Mellow Manu
Some suitably smooth sounds for a Sunday morning, courtesy of Mr. Big Blow himself, Manu Dibango. If I tell you they're from an album called "Rasta Souvenir", you will be able to guess what style of music he was influenced by at the time of recording.
"Night Jet" - Manu Dibango
"Full Up" - Manu Dibango
Today's clip has nothing at all to do with Mr Dibango, it's here because it makes me happy - especially the man who pops up about 20 seconds in.
"Night Jet" - Manu Dibango
"Full Up" - Manu Dibango
Today's clip has nothing at all to do with Mr Dibango, it's here because it makes me happy - especially the man who pops up about 20 seconds in.
Wednesday, 12 February 2020
The Long Goodbye: Part 2
Welcome to the second stop on our 27 date farewell tour of the EU. Today: Belgium. Famed for tasty beer, moules-frites and Mannekin Pis, two of which are excellent things.
Musically, Belgium is well known as the home of Jacques Brel, Plastic Bertrand and The Singing Nun - two of whom feature below, although not perhaps in the form you expect. But there is so much more.
We bring you some sex, some Sex Pistols, two fine slices of Belgian new wave from 1983, and the mighty Bobbejaan Schoepen. You really should read his life story, it's an amazing tale of how a Boy from Boom conquered the world, having been locked up twice by the Nazis for insolence and set up the Belgian version of Dollywood along the way. Fortunately the track I've chosen was recorded before he "lost his virtuoso whistling ability due to a surgical intervention".
"The Third From The Left In The Top Row" - 2 Belgen
"Lady Sex" - Eddy Dyan & The Saints
"Johnnie Sexpistool" - Arbeid Adelt!
"Matchbox Car" - The Scabs
"Kun Je Fluiten, Johanna" - Bobbejaan Schoepen
Musically, Belgium is well known as the home of Jacques Brel, Plastic Bertrand and The Singing Nun - two of whom feature below, although not perhaps in the form you expect. But there is so much more.
We bring you some sex, some Sex Pistols, two fine slices of Belgian new wave from 1983, and the mighty Bobbejaan Schoepen. You really should read his life story, it's an amazing tale of how a Boy from Boom conquered the world, having been locked up twice by the Nazis for insolence and set up the Belgian version of Dollywood along the way. Fortunately the track I've chosen was recorded before he "lost his virtuoso whistling ability due to a surgical intervention".
"The Third From The Left In The Top Row" - 2 Belgen
"Lady Sex" - Eddy Dyan & The Saints
"Johnnie Sexpistool" - Arbeid Adelt!
"Matchbox Car" - The Scabs
"Kun Je Fluiten, Johanna" - Bobbejaan Schoepen
Monday, 10 February 2020
No Haiti Haters Here
If the combination of weather, politics and Monday morning has you feeling down, we have the perfect pick-me-up. Lakou Mizik describe themselves as "a powerhouse collective of Haitian roots music with a soulful energy an a mix of styles", and that is certainly true of their debut album "Wa Di You', which came out in 2016.
As "Poze" demonstrates, one of those styles is something remarkably close to Cajun music. So it maybe isn't a huge surprise that their new album "HaitiaNola" features many well-known New Orleans musicians as guests. I've not heard it yet but I'm definitely going to check it out.
"Poze" - Lakou Mizik
"Anba Siklon" - Lakou Mizik
For the video I had a look for "Haitian Divorce" by Steely Dan, but all I found were versions by an alarmingly large number of tribute bands. You deserve better than that, so here is some more from the lads and lasses of Lakou Mizik.
As "Poze" demonstrates, one of those styles is something remarkably close to Cajun music. So it maybe isn't a huge surprise that their new album "HaitiaNola" features many well-known New Orleans musicians as guests. I've not heard it yet but I'm definitely going to check it out.
"Poze" - Lakou Mizik
"Anba Siklon" - Lakou Mizik
For the video I had a look for "Haitian Divorce" by Steely Dan, but all I found were versions by an alarmingly large number of tribute bands. You deserve better than that, so here is some more from the lads and lasses of Lakou Mizik.
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