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Digital Roundup: 5/14/14 (Article)
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
New this week in the Rhino Room at iTunes: Archie Bell & The Drells, I Can’t Stop Dancing This week’s Mono Monday release is the sophomore effort from the band that told radio listeners to “Tighten Up,” and while it wasn’t as much of a smash as its predecessor, you just can’t go wrong with that Kenny Gamble / Leon Huff title track. While the prolific songwriting duo also contributed another catchy number with “Do the Choo-Choo,” Bell’s own efforts shouldn’t be forgotten: “You’re Such a Beautiful Child,” “Do You Feel It?” and “Jammin’ in Houston” will all get your feet moving, while “Love Will
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Rhino Factoids: Led Zeppelin Attend the Ivor Novello Awards (Article)
Monday, May 12, 2014
37 years ago today, while on a break from the 1977 U.S. tour, Led Zeppelin – well, three out of four of ‘em, anyway (John Bonham was MIA) – attended the Ivor Novello Awards in London, where the band received an award for Outstanding Contribution to British Music. In addition to Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, and John Paul Jones, the band’s manager, Peter Grant, was also in attendance…and we know this to be true because it’s actually cited on the band’s official website. Yes, it was a fine time to be a member of Led Zeppelin, with the band’s last date before the aforementioned break having literally
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Spotlighting the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band (Article)
Friday, May 9, 2014
Today’s the birthday of Richie Furay, but rather than celebrate by looking back at his work with Buffalo Springfield or Poco, we thought we’d dig a little bit deeper and delve instead into the two albums he did in the mid-1970s with Chris Hillman and J.D. Souther. When Furay departed the ranks of Poco after the release of 1973’s Crazy Eyes album, he didn’t have to worry about embarking on a solo career right off the bat, thanks to good ol’ David Geffen coming up with the idea to team him with Hillman, who’d just come off playing with Stephen Stills’ Manassas, and Souther, whose street cred was
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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: GIL SCOTT-HERON / Twenty (Article)
Monday, May 5, 2014
Gil Scott-Heron saw something of a rebirth toward the end of his life. 2010's I’m New Here proved to be his swan song. It was a reminder that he was there. One that served to bring him, once again, to the fore. Save one popular song, his enormity had been felt most in other people’s work, and almost anonymously for the casual listener. It’s not a matter of the quality of his own work. His catalog is packed with spoken word, jazz and blues epics. Every song feels like it should be playing over a Super 8 montage, cut between him howling on a dark, smoky stage, and depictions of the life he’s
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Digital Roundup: 4/30/2014 (Article)
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Body Count, Body Count: Why not kick things off controversially, right? Ah, it seems like only yesterday that Ice-T turned the world at large against him when he decided to try his hand at heavy metal and, with his new band Body Count, released a song called “Cop Killer.” The track was always intended as a protest song rather than any sort of call to arms, and when Ice-T grew annoyed by the media attention surrounding the sound outweighing its musical merit, he had the Body Count album recalled and reissued without the offending track…and, for better or worse, that remains the case with this
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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: The Rock*A*Teens: A Primer (Article)
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Last week I had Okkervil River's Will Sheff guest on my SIRIUS XM radio show. I've been a fan of Sheff's music for a decade, but that's not what eventually connected us. Earlier this year, I learned, via this excellent piece he wrote, that Sheff and I share a certain obsession with a long defunct band from the 90s known as...The Rock*A*Teens. Go ahead, say their name out loud. I know you want to. It turns out the band is coming out of retirement this summer for a set of dates between May and August, from their home in Atlanta up to NYC. In fact, Sheff will be opening their show at (Le) Poisson
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Digital Roundup 4/23/14 (Article)
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
New this week in the iTunes Rhino Catalog Room: Long John Baldry, Boogie Woogie: The Warner Brothers Recordings: It may be a bit hard for British music fans to accept that folks on these shores are likely to be more familiar with Long John Baldry’s voice from giving voice to Dr. Robotnik on the animated Sonic the Hedgehog series than from any of his songs, but it’s almost certainly true: Baldry might’ve had a #1 song in the UK with his 1967 single “Let the Heartaches Begin,” but his highest-charting U.S. single, “Don’t Try to Lay No Boogie-Woogie on the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll,” only earned a
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The Folk Box: ‘the kind of album that changes lives’ (Article)
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
by Ted Olson The Folk Box is the kind of album that changes lives—I know this because it changed mine, assuredly for the better. And over the years I have heard that The Folk Box played an important formative role in the lives of many other people. About the time I was learning to stay upright on a bicycle (1967), I discovered my parents’ record collection, which contained a host of titles—classical and jazz, mostly—that held little appeal to a six-year-old. But one album captured my interest—a thick box set with an appealingly rustic, unpretentious front cover. Somehow that cover spoke to me
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Live from New York, It’s... King Tut? (Article)
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
36 years ago today, a certain wild and crazy guy took to the stage of Studio 8H at 30 Rock to perform a rockin’ tribute to an Egyptian pharaoh named Tutankhamen. If you’re familiar with the song in question – we’re talking ‘bout “King Tut,” of course – then you may be interested to know that the elaborate performance that unfolded on Saturday Night Live on April 22, 1978 was one that apparently surprised even the man who performed it. (Check out the original performance here.) In the pages of Saturday Night: A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live, by Doug Hill and Jeff Weingrad, it’s said
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This Is Planet Earth... Day (Article)
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
It’s April 22nd, and everybody knows today is Earth Day…well, except maybe for Dramarama fans, but we’ll cut them some slack because it’s a hell of a lot harder to find a rhyme for “second” than it is for “first.” There’s also the fact that “What Are We Doing Here?” is a really great, Beatle-esque song that’s really well-intentioned and shouldn’t be written off just because they were a day off. Besides, all that matters is this: if you’ve got even a passing interest in environmental protection, then today’s the day to demonstrate your commitment to the cause. (You can find a list of Earth Day
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