Monthly Playlists

October 2021 Playlist

The Beatles story is arguably the most enduring in music history and it always seems to keep on giving. At the centre of it all was the creative partnership between Lennon and McCartney which was pretty much completely over by 1969. Following their bust up and subsequent 1971 song attacks on each other a truce was fairly swiftly arrived at and a civility prevailed whenever they spoke about each other in interviews henceforth. But, other than McCartney’s 1994 Anthology contribution to Lennon demos, there would be no more Lennon / McCartney collaborations. And yet… (I am fully aware there are thousands of Beatle heads who already know this) I became aware this month that there was in fact one more event that had escaped me. On ’Let Me Roll It’ McCartney had admitted he’d made a track very much in Johns style. What I did not know was, maybe being made aware of this, Lennon for his next album had wholesale lifted the central guitar lick from McCartney’s song and inserted it into his own ’Beef Jerky’. Does this make it the final Lennon and McCartney composition of Lennon’s lifetime?

Blatant thieving is a slight hidden theme of this months playlist. I also learned this month how, following the Staples Singers unmistakable borrowing of an Upsetters intro for ’I’ll Take You There’, Lee Scratch Perry had vengefully placed a totally out of context Staples sample at the beginning of ‘Cow Thief Skank’.

Just as I was putting the finishing touches to the tracklisting, I finally ended my enforced 18 month gig drought with three in the space of six days. All three were pretty fantastic too, firstly a seated show to witness Martha Wainwright open her life up like a book singing mostly tracks from her new LP written after her divorce. The support band, Bernice, were pretty special too playing a kind of folk-club electronica. Two nights later John Grant once again mixed stunning, melodic electronics with aggressively honest singer-songwriter soul baring. Then I took a recommendation on The Lathums who played a winning mixture of Housemartins, Smiths and Arctic Monkeys style guitar pop. Catching a band whose debut album had just gone to number one was not something I necessarily expected to see at this stage of my gig going life but it was delightfully uplifting, one of the best gigs I’ve seen in fact. If a rowdy crowd singing ”UKs number one number one” to the tune of KC & The Sunshine Bands ’Give It Up’ for a band who are getting attention for no other reason than they are writing great songs doesn’t lift you….well just give it up.

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Fresh Juice

Josienne Clarke

I’ll give you the bare bones of the low down on Josienne Clarke and invite you to dig deeper. She’s a singer songwriter who has risen to a respectable and acclaimed status, award winning even, as part of a traditional folk duo in which the relationship between herself and her partner turned dramatically sour and lead to an irreversible on stage parting of the ways. Her new solo album picks apart the debris of that relationship in, at times, unforgivingly graphic detail. It’s the sound of an artist finding their true voice, letting off steam, working through some challenging emotional baggage and audibly growing in confidence as we listen. The album, ‘A Small Unknowable Thing’, released on Corduroy Punk Records, is an intense and rewarding listen from the same lineage that bought us Bob Dylan’s ‘Blood On The Tracks’, Marvin Gaye’s ‘Here My Dear’ and John Grants ‘Queen Of Denmark’. The above film for the track ‘The Collector’ says it all visually for me, in the way that it portrays the artist looking at times fragile and diffident but resolutely determined in her preparation to fly. There doesn’t seem to be a vinyl edition available yet but this one’s going to rise to the top of the 2021 album pile all the same, I’m certain of that.

https://www.discogs.com/Josienne-Clarke-A-Small-Unknowable-Thing/release/19946713

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Fresh Juice

Nubya Garcia

It’s Proms season in England at the moment and, for all my interest in Classical music, the thing that has been a delight over the past few years is how major talent outside of the conventional Prom-like fields have been included. The pick this year has been a mesmerising set by the Jazz saxophonist Nubya Garcia, whose recognition as a vessel for musical progression not to mention her mature ear for melodic structure is wholly deserved. The much talked about ‘London Jazz Scene’ is certainly the most exciting collection of artists and sonic explorers to be found in 2021, to say they give you hope for the future is putting it modestly, this perpetually mixing and collaborating collective are tapping into the very source of everything that is magical about music. Right there at the centre of it all is Nubya Garcia, grace and poise personified, lost in music, never over playing and yet definitively bottling that ‘source’ whenever she breathes life into her instrument. 2020’s ‘Source’ album is a great place to start although Fruit Tree Records will return in the future to many more essential releases from this movement. If you want to go in for some ultra fresh juice however, why not check out the 2021 Record Store Day limited 12″ release on the Concord Jazz label here:

https://www.discogs.com/Nubya-Garcia-Source-Our-Dance-/release/19871125

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Fresh Juice

Aaron Lee Tasjan

Aaron Lee Tasjan is not a new name to Fruit Tree Records, he registered on the radar at least three years ago with his own ear catching brand of cosmic Americana. Now though, he is really showing the roots of his musical excellence, to such a degree that with latest album ‘Tasjan! Tasjan! Tasjan!’ even high profile pop pickers like Elton John are singing his praises. That he has gone on record to state The Beatles as a primary influence will be no surprise when you listen to this, the album is bursting at the seams with Fab sounds! From the liquid George Harrison guitar solos, to the sweet sounding production that echoes so much that was good in a post-Beatle pop world; you’ll hear waves of Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, The Pretenders and the Travelling Wilburys splash into your mind. But the key thing that Aaron has taken from the pop masters is that, before the sonic delights of the production were applied, he made sure he wrote an albums worth of hook filled, ear worm worthy pop songs. It’s rather an undervalued artform you know, especially when someone like Aaron Lee Tasjan makes it sound so natural and easy. Be sure to pick up a vinyl copy of this LP:

https://www.discogs.com/Aaron-Lee-Tasjan-Tasjan-Tasjan-Tasjan-/release/16782057

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Fresh Juice

PM Warson

Here’s a new artist who absolutely has to be heard by record buyers who love that vintage Soul and R&B sound harvested by the likes of Nick Waterhouse, Eli Paperboy Reed or as heard on the funky Daptone label. PM Warson is very much cut from that same cloth and he has paid his dues on the independent scene self releasing raw and classic sounding 45s. His debut album released on Legere Recordings is sure to be one of the most enduring albums put out in 2021, get it on vinyl now while it’s still affordable:

https://www.discogs.com/PM-Warson-True-Story/release/18333283

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Monthly Playlists

September 2021 Playlist

This months cover star is Marizanne Kapp, a South African cricketer who really impressed during the first ever final of the women’s Hundred tournament this month. I thought it was a top drawer sporting spectacle really, no matter what all the Cricket purists might have to say. Kapp drove the Oval Invicibles to victory with a devastating opening bowling display, an especially notable achievement in a Cricket format that tends to be driven by the aggressive power hitting of the batters. The thing that kept me glued to the action was the intensity of Kapp, she was just so fired up and in the zone, so much in fact that even when she gained the upper hand by taking wickets she could not let a smile emerge, the only emotions cracking the surface were determination and a burning desire for victory. Even when the game was won it was clear she’d pushed herself so far into the cause that she could not wind down and celebrate like her team mates, she seemed wholly drained. A magnetically gripping effort in top flight sport and exactly what the Hundred needed in it’s debut year, personally I hope it sticks around.

Musically the big news this month has been the death of Charlie Watts. His passing followed shortly after he’d announced his non-participation in forthcoming Rolling Stones shows due to a medical issue, stating typically drolly that “for one my timing was off”. I kind of hope the Stones don’t continue without him, if ever there was a band that just wouldn’t be the same without the original drummer it is surely them? I listened to a lot of the bands big hits when the news of his passing broke and what strikes you is what an incredible back bone he really was. The beating heart of Rock ‘n’ Roll indeed. And if that news wasn’t bad enough, the beating heart of Dub has left the stage in the past few days, with news of the death of Lee Scratch Perry also being announced.

Still, let’s be glad that incredible new music talent continues to arrive and there’s plenty of fresh juice to enjoy in this months playlist too. By the time I write the notes for Octobers playlist I may have even been to my first gigs in 18 months. I intend to step up the content on the Fruit Tree Records blob from here on in. I launched it not exactly sure what I was going to focus on beyond my journey in music discovery and enjoyment, looking both forward and back and joining a few dots along the way. But the ideas are all starting to come together now and I am ready to take this thing forward. OK well it’s all over now for this month but I’m free for more of this very soon but for now, just get your rocks off to the September 2021 playlist.

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Monthly Playlists

August 2021 Playlist

As the country has effectively removed all Covid restrictions, the past month has seen some large crowds return to sporting events some of which have been particularly memorable. The England football team reached the final of a major tournament for the first time in 55 years, they lost on penalties inevitably but for a brief moment the country seemed united in support of the beautiful game which always makes happy inside. Arsenal’s 19 year old Bukayo Saka missed the crucial penalty and we all felt mortified for him. The only positive that emerged after some vile racist trolling in his and two other players directions after the game was the way players, fans and the general public united in support of this wonderful sportsman and infectiously likeable character. Then within a few days cricket launched it’s new Hundred competition with again, some large crowds in attendance. Seeing as the aim of the fresh, shorter format is to attract a new audience then it’s good to see this working. It has to be said though, every other cricket fan I know is actively against The Hundred but I am not ashamed to say I’ve enjoyed it so far. I think I am a London Spirit man, captained as they are by my favourite Eoin Morgan alongside the ever entertaining, always unpredictable Ravi Bopara, but the ladies Oval Invincibles side also caught my eye. I’ll have to work that one out, you can’t support two London sides, it breaks every rule in the sports fans handbook!

The playlist seems to, unintentionally obviously, reflect the other ever present concern from July 2021 which is the climate. News stories of heatwaves, temperature records being broken, flash flooding and wildfires are a daily, depressing reality now. Even the UK weather is noticeably altered. Was there really anything like a conventional spring time this year or just a perpetual period of heavy rain storms finally broken by a mini heatwave? Anyway, if my monthly playlists are any sort of reflection of what’s been occupying my headspace for the previous month, then looking back over the collection of songs I can see a little hint of it in the songs about seasons and fire, more blatantly in that I followed up Villagers song about summer with the Housemartins ‘I Smell Winter’. Like John Peel used to say, “I don’t just throw these things together you know!” I can’t get too pretentious about any concepts though, the monthly playlist is and always will be a bookmark rounding up the Pop, Psych, Blues, Soul, Country, Folk, Rock ‘n’ Roll, Americana, Jazz, Prog and many other styles of musically exciting records floating through the Fruit Tree Records orbit at the present moment. So this is what I have in August 2021…

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Fresh Juice

The Coral

A Fruit Tree Records curated collection of recent Coral and related live activity around the release of superb new LP ‘Coral Island’

I watched the movie ‘Yesterday’ last night, the one about an aspiring singer-songwriter who discovers that the world has no memory or knowledge of The Beatles after a worldwide 12 second power cut. He uses this freak, unexplained circumstance to raid his memory of the Beatles catalogue and claim their songs as his own originals and realise worldwide fame and acclaim as the worlds greatest songwriter; a status emphasised by his eclipsing even the mighty Ed Sheeran. Much like the Fab Four I am all about spreading the love so I’ll set aside my personal feelings about Ed and give him kudos for being able to laugh at himself and at least acknowledge, on film, that the Beatle catalgue is greater than his own.

I enjoyed the film, after all it was a vehicle for a musical picture largely based around the Beatles catalogue, how could I not? And while there were representations of the John Lennon and George Harrison contributions to the canon, there were undoubtedly prime feature status given to the Paul McCartney numbers which, if you saw my ruminations in this months playlist, you’ll know is something on my musical mind right now. Yes I have been found guilty of undervaluing the work of McCartney but, as the man himself once said, it can take time for things to cut through and I too am a firm believer that the best stuff rises to the top eventually. That is proving true with McCartney but I am certain the sheer volume of great work produced by The Coral will prove ripe for rediscovery eventually too.

To just refer back to the film a moment longer, the scenes that rang most true in terms of the music scene today were those immediately after the lead character had realised the world no longer aware of The Beatles and he began presenting the songs as his own new works. Nothing happened, he continued to fall below the radar and would-be defining moments like the unveiling of his great new piece, in this case ‘Let It Be’, were flattened by short attention spans and untimely mobile phone interruptions. That’s how things are nowadays, great songwriters are not presenting to a world ready to give its appreciation to nuanced compositions of melodic splendour and structural inventiveness. A band like The Coral are a prime example of this. To the casual observer they may well remain filed away as psychedelic scousers from the early noughties who briefly rode the wave of garage rock revivalism that shone a while as the White Stripes blasted into the mainstream. They may not have paid quite such close attention to the fact that for nearly 20 years now, The Coral have carried on making music in a similar vein that has never dropped off in quality. The trouble is all too often, just being very good at the craft of songwriting isn’t news, it doesn’t grab the attention it deserves and can be taken a little for granted.

There is so much to be fascinated by in the two decades of Coral and related music making endeavours. So many incredible songs, I fully intend to go deeper over the time and write a lot more on here in appreciation of one of Liverpool’s greatest ever bands. For now though, I am drawing your attention to this years monstrous concept album ‘Coral Island’. Constructed in the style of an old sixties classic a-la ‘Ogdens Nut Gone Flake’ and complete with spoken word narratives between songs courtesy of James Skelly’s grandad, it is a record that is made to be experienced on vinyl and easily one of the essential albums of 2021. I urge you to get a copy here: https://www.discogs.com/The-Coral-Coral-Island/release/18541153

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Monthly Playlists

July 2021 Playlist

Cover star Paul McCartney was a Beatle. The Beatles are probably the number one band at Fruit Tree Records and they almost certainly always will be. Their adventure in songwriting and music progression, with particular emphasis on melody and lush major/minor chord progressions are at the very heart of what this blog and my journey in music collecting are all about. And yet, of late, I have come to feel that my appreciation of Paul McCartney has been lacking. Could it be I have taken for granted a touch his contributions to, well pretty much everything that is exciting about music and songwriting. All too easily overshadowed by the more aggresive Lennon or more laconic spirituality of Harrison, yet all the while McCartney has just gone about the business of being amazing at composing music and songs. Of course none of this is news, but I just wanted to make a little note as to why he’s this months cover star and why a couple of his tunes feature at the front end of this playlist. He’s been on my mind this month and I’ve been beginning to make amends by going a little deeper into his solo catalogue, it turns out even something like ‘Red Rose Speedway’, which I’d previously avoided on the grounds that Lennon was dismissive towards it and I thought the cover looked a bit naff, is actually a pretty good album. Don’t be surprised if you hear a bit more about this McCartney chap in the coming months playlists…

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