A half dozen weekly fresh picks of tasty new music…
The Courettes – Talking About My Baby
They’re an electrifying garage rocking duo with an irresistible sixties pop sheen and style who head this way in April for a week of dates, buzzing their way down from Glasgow to Portsmouth also crashing in on London, Manchester and Newcastle. Check out this recent single released on Damaged Goods for a taster…
Jeff & Spencer Tweedy – Venus
A day after the sad passing of Television’s Tom Verlaine, Wilco’s main man and son shared this beautifully played cover of the track from the classic 1977 ‘Marquee Moon’ debut album and as Jeff testifies at the end of this clip, Verlaine “changed a lot of the way I look at writing songs and that’s a perfect song”…
Joanne Shaw Taylor – Just No Getting Over You (Dream Cruise)
By now Joanna is established as the real deal in terms of plugged in blues riffing excitement but her late 2022 album ‘Nobody’s Fool’ positively fizzed with the potential to push on to a far wider audience; happily that did not mean sacrificing two key elements, namely great songs and playing them like you mean it. For a glimpse of undiluted conviction watch this…
James Yorkston, Nina Persson & The Secondhand Orchestra – The Harmony
A track from this collective’s recent album ‘The Great White Sea Eagle’ released on Domino; it is not as if James Yorkston needed a lift, his 21st century folk music has been a dependable place to go for at least two decades that I can recall but listening to this musical pairing it does occur that Nina Persson’s voice can elevate absolutely anything she performs…
Marlon Williams – Easy Does It
Not all audience shot live clips posted on the internet are worth bothering with but occasionally you get one like this, captured with a clear picture and passable sound from the front and it gives a nice little taste of a live tour maybe you were unable to catch, in this case Marlon from late 2022 playing a tune off his latest ‘My Boy’ album…
Jonah Yano – Always
Beautiful imagery to match a gorgeous, soul soothing new Jazz tune from Jonah Yano as heard on his new album ‘Portrait Of A Dog’…
As the title sign posts, the Fresh Juice series of shows are set to be hour long mixes shared throughout the year featuring brand new music and spanning multiple genres. As much as this is a record collectors site that loves crate digging back across the decades and styles, there is never a shortage of new music coming out to get excited about and so, Fresh Juice will feature a selection of the latest, tastiest delights…
The Hooper – Nostalgia 77
What About Now – Scott McMicken and The Ever-Expanding
A half dozen weekly fresh picks of tasty new music…
Macho Macho – New Inbetween
Fresh out of New Zealand, this four piece of melodically charged, fuzzy guitar rocking warriors sound like the perfect tonic for a music industry too focused on the carpet crawling, box ticking, soulless middle management wet dream that is the Brit Awards over the past week (good to read about Wet Leg winning though); forget all that poncing and posing, this is the kind of purest attitude that keeps music exciting going forward and who knows, maybe the next wave really is going to rise out of Australasia…
Kevin Morby – Like A Flower
From Morby’s new soundtrack album ‘Music From Montana Story’ is this new video to accompany the release. The film is described as “a neo-western that tells the story of two estranged siblings who return home to the family ranch they once knew and loved, confronting deep and bitter secrets in the process”. Needless to say, new music from this artist never disappoints and Kevin’s writing is predictably superb within a soundtrack context. He has also released new tour dates which include a visit to the UK in June…
Jack White – Icky Thump
2022’s two album releases, ‘Fear Of The Dawn’ and ‘Entering Heaven Alive’, were both stonking, glossy slabs of new music from White (the second of the two was my favourite, it just had a little more of that old time variety that Jack excels in) but still, as this recent live film proves, it remains a thrill whenever he rips into the White Stripes back catalogue…
Sunny War – No Reason
From Nashville and nicknamed Sunny as a child, she removed the final letter of her Ward surname and dived straight into the world of punk and outsider music before arriving at folky/Americana via her capacity for acoustic fingerpicking and a song writing facility harvested from real life, lived experience. Her fifth solo album is called ‘Anarchist Gospel’ and was written after a relationship ended as Sunny was alone in a dark place, marking time until the end of the pairs accommodation lease was expired. If you think that has resulted in a bleak album though you are way off, as heard in this recent live performance, the music composed is both soulful and rich in nuanced writing…
My final pair of selections this week may stretch the term ‘new’ a bit but they fully deserve a share. This track by Florida artist Sophiethehomie has been around for a couple of years, originally available on the ‘Cabin Fever’ EP but it came to my attention last week on a radio show that said it is coming up for a re-release. Either way this is once-heard, forever hooked soul music with some intriguing little production quirks but above all, a pounding funk-drenched heartbeat of a sultry pulse that really grabs you by the ear lobes and holds on tight…
Ezra Collective – Where I’m Meant To Be (LP)
It happens every year, I have a list of my albums of the year then I play a record that I missed during those twelve months and it is instantly apparent that this should also have been in the running. And it is not as if I did not know how brilliant the Ezra Collective are, their jazz based melting pot of grooves and styles has thrilled aplenty in these current glory days of London jazz excitement but there you go, there are only so many hours in the day and this week was the first time I had listened to their most recent album. On this live session for Tiny Desk they played tracks from the record and yes, the rest of it really is as equally wonderous as this mouth watering taster suggests…
A series of Fruit Tree Records Mixcloud shows that celebrate not just the fabness of the Beatles, but an ever expanding musical universe that has blossomed from their brilliant melodic, psychedelic seed. In addition to some straight ahead Beatles music there are solo tunes, cover versions, fab inspirations and there are tracks with direct links, a more tenuous link (a writing credit or an appearance by a Beatle) or just simply tunes that are out-and-out Beatle inspired. This one has the potential to run and run so here we go, all together now…
Across The Universe – The Beatles (1969 Regal from the Various Artists LP ‘No One’s Gonna Change Our World’)
A Hard Day’s Night – Ramsey Lewis Trio (1965 Cadet Records from the US LP ‘Hang On Ramsey!’)
When We Was Fab – George Harrison (1987 Dark Horse Records from the album ‘Cloud Nine’)
Nothing Too Much Just Out Of Sight – The Fireman (2008 One Little Indian from the LP ‘Electric Arguments’)
Shiny Cage – Dukes Of The Stratosphear (1987 Virgin Records from the LP ‘Psonic Psunspot’)
Fame – David Bowie (1975 RCA from the LP ‘Young Americans’)
Great Day – Paul McCartney (1997 Parlophone Records from the LP ‘Flaming Pie’)
In My Own Time – Bee Gees (1967 Polydor Records from the LP ‘Bee Gees 1st’)
Hands – The Raconteurs (2006 XL Records from the LP ‘Broken Boy Soldiers’)
Lies – The Knickerboclers (1966 London Records from the LP ‘Lies’)
I’m Losing You – John Lennon (1980 Geffen Records from the LP ‘Double Fantasy’)
You Can’t Do That – Nilsson (1967 RCA Victor from the album ‘Pandemonium Shadow Show’)
Laura – Billy Joel (1982 CBS Records from the LP ‘The Nylon Curtain’)
Put The Message In The Box – World Party (1990 Ensign Records from the LP ‘Goodbye Jumbo’)
If Not For You – Bob Dylan (1991 CBS Records from the LP ‘Bootleg Series Vol. 1-3’)
Porque – Grupo Fantasma (2014 P-Vine Records from the LP ‘Problemas’)
Hello Goodbye (Take 16) – The Beatles (1996 Apple Records from the album ‘Anthology Volume 2’)
A half dozen weekly fresh picks of tasty new music…
Cvc – Sophie
Around the release of their debut LP ‘Get Real’ on CVC Recordings, this Welsh psych-rocking church village collective ham it up in their video for the infectious ‘Sophie’…
Sleaford Mods – UK Grim
Given the dire state of the times you would imagine that biting social commentary and music with a political protest edge to be bursting forth all over but as things are, it is to a band like Sleaford Mods we must turn for a devastating state of the nation address. The depressing aspect is of course, they really are telling it as it is…
Caitlin Rose – Only Lies
Caitlin Rose released a brace of stunning Americana albums to launch her career at the start of the 2010’s, the debut ‘Own Side Now’ especially was an absolute must hear. But then she disappeared from view for nearly ten years, the only clue I could detect that she was still involved in music was once spotting her as a backing singer for Margo Price. But then in late 2022 a new album ‘Cazimi’ suddenly arrived and happily Caitlin is continuing her resurrection into 2023 with numerous live dates, a very welcome return indeed…
Radio DJ Mark Radcliffe has always been a different class and a sincere champion of folk music. His Radio 2 folk show has recently embarked on a project in which artists have interacted with local people with an ambition to produce brand new folk tunes that, in the tradition of the form, sing of the lives of working folk today. The pedigree of artists working on the project was from the top drawer and predictably, Kathryn Williams (heard here performing a tune in collaboration with Chris Difford) was one of the best.
Brad Mehldau – I Am The Walrus
Brad Mehldau has always had an ear and appreciation for the music of the Beatles and whichever way he interprets their music, you can be sure he will tap into every nuance of melodic magic, uncover tones and textures of his own without ever dismantling the magic of the original composition. This clip is a taster of an albums worth of Mehldau Beatles recordings set to arrive this spring…
Here is the tracklisting information and vinyl source details for collectors on this latest Mixcloud show. Forbidden Fruit shows are going to be all about showcasing an eclectic range of music that, at the time of compiling, are proving to be rather elusive on the usual internet streaming platforms or at the very least, have fallen so far down the radar as to be almost indetectable.
Peach Plum Pear – Joanna Newsom (2004 Drag City Records from the LP ‘Milk Eyed Mender’)
I Live In The Springtime – The Lemon Drops (1967 Rembrandt Records US 45)
Itchy & Scratchy – Boss Hog (1999 City Slang from the album ‘Whiteout’)
From The Devil Himself – Viva Voce (2006 Amore!Phonics from the LP ‘Get Yr Blood Sucked Out’)
Portland Oregan – Loretta Lynn (2004 Interscope Records from the LP ‘Van Lear Rose’)
Rita May – Bob Dylan (1976 CBS UK 45)
Blackberry Blossom – Michelle Shocked (1992 Mercury Records from the LP ‘Arkansas Traveler’)
I Can’t Forget – The Pixies (1991 Eastwest Records from the LP ‘I’m Your Fan: The Songs Of Leonard Cohen’)
You Can’t Buy My Love – Robert Plant (2010 Decca / Es Paranza Records from the LP ‘Band Of Joy’)
Won’t Get Far – Hysterics (1965 Tottenham Records US 45 b-side to ‘That’s All She Wrote’)
Think Twice Before You Go – Van Morrison & Linda Gail Lewis (2000 Virgin Records from the album ‘You Win Again’)
Open The Door – Carolanne Pegg (1973 Transatlantic Records from the LP ‘Carolanne Pegg’)
A Marriage Made In Heaven – Tindersticks (1993 Rough Trade Records UK 45)
Rock Island Line – Lonnie Donegan (1999 Capo Records from the LP ‘Muleskinner Blues’)
Jealous Words – Richard Thompson (2003 Diverse Records from the LP ‘The Old Kit Bag’)
Al Bowlly’s In Heaven / The Very Thought Of You – Norma Waterson (1999 Hannibal Records from the album ‘The Very Thought Of You’)
January is a bit of a silly month for starting diets or trying to stay dry it turns out. I was going quite well with my alcohol free month but then Arsenal beat Manchester United and I was happy and in the mood to celebrate and… well I had done eighteen days dry, so to hell with it crack open a beer. January is actually far better suited to bunkering down away from the cold weather, eating too much comfort food and watching more TV than usual. Hence the cover image for this month’s playlist. Actor James Norton has been entertaining me all month with his deep, convincing portrayal of the psycho killer Tommy Lee Royce in the BBC’s ‘Happy Valley’ police drama series. I had generally avoided this kind of hyped series in the past thanks to an inbuilt and, it turns out, unjustified snobbery against such terrestrial offerings. My television viewing, limited as it is, was molded over the last two decades by classics such as The Sopranos, The Wire and Mad Men. These were all series with superb, slowly unfolding, deep storylines and fully developed, three dimensional characters that served to make TV viewing as rewarding as a fine cinematic experience. One change those series instigated was the style of episodic drama which, up to that point, always stuck to the formular of self-contained stories tied up in a single edition. Now, with HBO’s The Wire in particular, an episode was more like a chapter in a book, an installment in a larger story development unfolding at a realistic pace.
Consequently, whenever something like Happy Valley came around, I would not assume it to be of a similarly high standard, especially if it features an actress I associate with Coronation Street. But a little knowledge is a dangerous thing and I have found this month that UK TV drama matches in quality those aforementioned US pioneers. Happy Valley is easily worthy of comparison, the whole cast are utterly convincing and James Norton’s performance as the lead villain especially should see his profile rise considerably, a future Bond perhaps if the internet comment rumours I just read are to be believed? I also watched a new documentary about the late comedian Tony Hancock and two colorized classic episodes to follow. It delighted me how funny I found them, I have always been a fan of Hancock but occasionally over the past decade, probably because I only chanced upon internet clips of his sad declining years, I had wondered if his comedy had dated too much. Returning to the lad himself at his peak it is a different story, proper belly laughs confirming he really was a pioneering comic master, I shall be returning to more of his vintage stuff over the coming weeks.
Other viewing I have indulged in has been closer to my regular music documentary diet. There was a strange one on Sky about a great lost Nina Simone album. Firstly, do not go to this for an abundance of Nina footage, it is not to be found. Secondly, be mindful that documentary makers can weave a film out of the thinnest of threads. There was no great lost Nina Simone album, but there were a couple of song writers in the late sixties who, for one brief moment, might have had some of their songs recorded by Nina. They only met the singer once for a short, terse introduction and it is unknown whether the artist ever really gave the songs any attention, or even liked them. Still, a contract was signed with Nina’s people so the claim in the title did have a speckle of legitimacy. The music industry must be littered with the debris of aspiring song writers whose compositions might have once been considered for recording by a big-name artist. Nevertheless, the film makers gather together some of Nina’s old band members to back Emile Sande with the intention of interpreting the music just as Nina would have. The scene where Emile receives the original sheet music manuscripts and pours over them in hushed reverence like she has uncovered some previously unknown literary work by Dickens is excruciatingly cringe, but the actual work of knocking the songs into shape and playing them live at a Ronnie Scotts date is executed with class. Emile could easily take her career in a jazz direction but the suspicion remains, maybe Nina Simone neglected to record these songs because they were not that great?
There was also a four parter about Phil Spector in which it quickly became apparent they had no rights to use any of his classic recordings. Yes, there was plenty of wall-of-sound-alike snippets, an interview with Teddy Bear Annette Kleinbard (now Carol Connors) who sang parts of ‘To Know Him Is To Love Him’, various live clips including cool Ike & Tina Turner footage but no actual audio with a Phil Spector production credit on. Normally in music documentaries this is a massive omission that removes credibility and loses my interest but with Spector the story is just as much that of a convicted murderer as it is a music history. And given what follows, maybe the producers did not want to pay his estate an extortionate amount of money? I do not know, but if that is the case then fair enough. The story of his trial and conviction in tandem with the tragic story of his victim Lana Clarkson is horrific and hard to accept, especially as the impression emerges that this was a pathetic case of extreme ‘little man’ syndrome aside the possibility that Lana may have incurred his wrath by merely mocking his age, height or wig. Whatever instigated waving a gun in her face, it does seem like Spector had been an accident waiting to happen for decades, the recalled instances of him pointing guns at people are too numerous to ignore. In light of all this, it is a wonder that those indelible early sixties records have not been cancelled. What can be certain is this, from here on in they are far more likely to be referred to as Ronettes, Crystals, Darlene Love, Righteous Brothers or Ike & Tina Turner classics rather than belonging to Phil Spector, which is a kind of overdue artistic justice in a way.
A half dozen weekly fresh picks of tasty new music…
Shana Cleveland – Faces In The Firelight
This is a delightfully twilight tinged droplet of soothing psych pop from the La Luz songwriter who happily has successfully come through treatment for breast cancer in 2022. It is the first taste of her forthcoming solo album ‘Manzanita’ on the Hardly Art label.
Spoon – Wild
Still one of the best bands to come out of America this past thirty years, here is a recent TV appearance by Spoon apparently in tandem with their Grammy nomination in the best rock album category for their 2022 LP ‘Lucifer On The Sofa’
Nick Waterhouse is now arguably the premier exponent of that vintage, mid-century modern production sound. It is there in the spacey echoes of the recordings, the surf-like twang of the guitars or the proper production touches added like strings or sweetly sung backing vocals. In this video featuring new 2023 music from Nick he even has the period visual touches down but all of that would count for nothing if he were not writing great songs to wrap his stylings around and happily, he continues to do just that
Melissa Carper – From What I Recall
From the late 2022 album ‘Ramblin’ Soul’ released on Mae Music, this is an authentic dose of real-deal country that is so classic sounding, especially for something so new, that you have to double check it is not actually an old Hank Williams standard or such like. But this is all Melissa Carper and well worth seeking out
First Aid Kit – Out Of My Head
A recent live TV appearance following the welcome return of these singing siblings, taken from latest album ‘Palomino’. As before, they still retain that natural heavenly sound not to mention the happy knack of writing songs that take up residency in your head.
Norah Jones & Marc Rebillet – Everybody Say Goodbye
Norah Jones ‘Playing Along’ podcast involves her chatting and jamming with a musical guest. She is not the most natural conversationalist but she can communicate with pretty much anyone on a musical level. You cannot help but be on Norah’s side, she comes across as refreshingly ego-lite for someone so famous. This particular episode with Marc Rebillet took her the furthest out of her comfort zone, what with him being a master of improvisational funk, layered loops and electronic wizardry. The fascinating thing about the episode was heard in a moment where, much like Paul McCartney composing ‘Get Back’ on the spot in the Peter Jackson movie, the pair stumbled upon something that instantly, for a few golden moments at least, sounded like it had the potential to be a classic. As the jam ended Marc spotted it and seemed suitably blown away by what they had possibly just created, Norah was less interested merely asking with a touch of incredulity “do you want to finish it?” It makes you suspect this kind of thing must happen to her all the time when improvising with fellow musicians, like this is in her DNA and not an especially big deal. Anyway, the two of them quickly moved on and maybe that is where their classic co-write will remain forever? That clip has not been put up on YouTube but from the same episode we do have their slightly unhinged closing, funky jam…
Fruit Loop episodes served up in the our mixcloud music blender are aimed at your feet, these ones are for the dancers although they maintain the Fruit Tree Records prerogative of unlimited curiously cohesively selecting from multiple ages and styles. Below is this weeks tracklist with source information for collectors…
Nunya – Tom Scott & The L.A. Express (1974 Ode Records from the LP ‘Tom Scott & The L.A. Express’)
Mixed Bizness – Beck (1999 Geffen Records from the LP ‘Midnite Vultures’)
Avalon – Juliet (2005 Virgin from the album ‘Random Order’)
Birth In Reverse – St Vincent (2014 Loma Vista from the LP ‘St Vincent’)
Miss Parker – Morgan (2000 Source Records from LP ‘Organized’)
He Was Really Saying Somethin’ – The Velvelettes (1967 Tamla Motown UK 45)
It’s Written In The Stars – Paul Weller (2002 Independiente Records from the LP ‘Illumination’)
How Can You Tell Me – The Flirtations (1969 Deram Records from LP ‘Sounds Like The Flirtations’)
Sugar Free – Hank Crawford (1975 Kudu Records from the US LP ‘I Hear A Symphony’)
Legend Of A Cowgirl – Imani Coppola (1998 Columbia Records from the album ‘Chupacabra’)
The Golden Age – The Asteroids Galaxy Tour (2009 Small Giants Records from album ‘Fruit’)
Swastika Eyes – Primal Scream (2000 Creation Records from LP ‘Xtrmntr’)
How I Got Over – Roots (2010 Def Jam Records from LP ‘How I Got Over’)
I Take What I Want – Aretha Franklin (1968 Atlantic Records from LP ‘Aretha Now’)
Stuck – Caro Emerald (2010 Grandmono Records from LP ‘Deleted Scenes From The Cutting Room Floor’)
People – Gorillaz (2007 Parlophone Records from album ‘D-Sides’)
Begging You – Stone Roses (1994 Geffen Records from the LP ‘Second Coming’)
A half dozen weekly fresh picks of tasty new music…
The WAEVE – Kill Me Again
The WAEVE are Graham Coxon (from Blur) and Rose Elinor Dougall (previously of the Pipettes and various solo guises) together in life and in this, potentially ongoing, musical liaison. They have an eponymous debut album on the way and if this taster is anything to go by, it promises to be a corker…
Dave Rowntree – Devil’s Island
I often think I did well getting into Blur, they are indisputably one of the all time great British bands and since their splintering (although they do reconfigure occasionally, such as for live shows later this year) the solo releases and new projects frequently produce work to match the sounds they made together. And so it is that drummer Dave finally makes his singing debut in 2023 and rather delightfully, he is demonstrating far more than just superb drumming…
Fatoumata Diawara featuring Damon Albarn – Nsera
That this weeks fresh juice can offer a trio of top selections all with Blur connections proves they are still very much forward thinking, creative entities (and you can’t say that about many bands or band members 35 years into their careers). The way Damon Albarn picked up the world music baton this century reminds me of the always ground breaking work my next artist did in the previous one…
Peter Gabriel – Panopticom
It may have taken him twenty years but at least when Gabriel releases an albums worth of new music, which he is due to do in 2023 as well as undertake an arena tour, it is always something worth hearing. There is a value in taking your time although it’s hard to make a strong case for two decades, that’s barely a song a year, but then this is an artist who has always doggedly done things his own way and you have to take your hat off to those individualists, they are a rare breed…
Yazmin Lacey – Late Night People
Yazmin Lacey makes soul music with feeling and a razor sharp, adventurous cutting edge. She has a new album called ‘Voice Notes’ arriving in March and it is one that I have great expectations for, this is an artist that has been producing the goods for a while now and is worth your time and attention…
Lisa O’Neill – Silver Seed
One of the most resonant voices in folk music is releasing a new album called ‘All Of This Is Chance’ in February and it promises to be one of the must hear LP’s of 2023 if the early signs are anything to go by…