29
Jul

An Unsung Gem From JJ Cale

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We are still reeling from the loss of JJ Cale last Friday (Clapton!  Dear God, between the two, if you needed to take somebody….).  Related to this, we’ve had Cale’s under-appreciated 1981 Shades album on repeat at Chez Lefort, and the song that keeps creeping up on us is Wish I Had Not Said That.  As is true generally, the songs we loved the most of JJ Cale’s were not the blues-forward songs, but those that kept some distance.  Along those lines, Wish I Had Not Said That is a straight pop song featuring a lilting, languid melody accented by some synth whistling, along with Cale’s understated, remorseful lyrics.  RIP JJ. The song’s lyrics are at bottom.

Wish I Had Not Said That:

“You don’t come here too often
You make my day when you come around
You know I love you something awful
You’re a diamond I have found
Wish I had not said that, baby
If I could only close you out of my mind
Sunset passes oh so sweetly
Gives a man just time to think
Frees the image of your body
Fantasy is just a blink
Wish I had not said that, baby
If I could only close you out of my mind
It don’t matter what you’re into
If I could taste you once again
Feel the pain and the pleasure
We could make it to the end
Wish I had not said that, baby
If I could only close you out of my mind”

29
Jul

Watch The Avett Brothers at Newport Folk Festival–Coming to the Santa Barbara Bowl on 10/10

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The Avett Brothers have only played Santa Barbara one time, an affable, uplifting affair at the Arlington Theater a few years back. To get a feel for the band, check out below their performance over the weekend at the Newport Folk Festival of one of the all-time great sing-a-long songs I and Love and You courtesy of NPRThe Avetts are coming to the Santa Barbara Bowl on October 10th. Make sure you’re in attendance.

28
Jul

Sunday Morning Music: Watch Joni Mitchell Perform Solo in 1970 on BBC

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There’s no Chelsea for us today. But it’s a morning, and it’s Sunday. And the perfect soundtrack for a foggy Sunday morning is this solo performance below by Joni Mitchell for the BBC in 1970. While she had written and recorded many song gems by this juncture, Mitchell was just at the cusp of the realization of her songwriting powers. In this performance she plays some of her hits, but also performs two unrecorded songs that she would release the following year on her seminal album Blue.  For us the highlights are when Mitchell sits at the piano or with the dulcimer and plays For Free and California (Mitchell explains the germination of the latter in the video).  When Joni sits at the piano, the song structures evince more complexity than her guitar songs, and foreshadow her shift to open chord structures and jazz influences.  Superb stuff from a young (and needless to say, stunning) Joni Mitchell.

27
Jul

RIP JJ Cale

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The curtain has been brought down on JJ Cale, one of the most tasteful guitar players and songwriters of his generation.  Cale contributed many songs to the rock n’ roll canon, including After Midnight, Cocaine and Crazy Mama, and will be sorely missed.  Listen to a couple of particularly appropriate songs by Cale below. RIP JJ.

26
Jul
25
Jul

Watch Official Video For Volcano Choir’s (with Justin Vernon) Song “Byegone”

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We were teased earlier with a trailer from the impending new album Repave from Volcano Choir (Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon and musical pals), and then the audio of Volcano Choir’s song Byegone.  Now comes the band’s official video for the song.  Check it out below.  We love this song, and hope Repave is paved throughout with songs of this caliber.

25
Jul

Watch Belle & Sebastian Perform at Pitchfork Music Festival

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We’re still aglow recalling Belle & Sebastian’s bellissimo show last week at the Santa Barbara Bowl. To help revive that memory (or, horrors, if you missed the show) check out the big Belle band below performing I’m a Cuckoo and Stars Of Track and Field (swoon) at the Pitchfork Music Festival.

23
Jul

Watch Broken Social Scene Perform Unreleased Song “Where’s Your Heart, Where’s Your Mind?”

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Turns out that one of our favorite bands, Broken Social Scene, is (thankfully) suffering from a bit of hiatus interruptus.  The band mothballed itself indefinitely in 2011, much to the dismay of their ardent fans (including yours truly).  But last month BSS both headlined the Field Trip Arts & Crafts Music Festival and appeared on the Jimmy Fallon Show, all in celebration of the tenth anniversary of their label Arts & Crafts.  And now (via Consequence of Sound) BSS has released the video below of its live-performance of unreleased song Where’s Your Heart, Where’s Your Mind?.  Amongst other things, we like the renewed aggression and guitar play on the song, and hope for more interruptions by Broken Social Scene.

23
Jul

Listen to Ry Cooder & Corridas Famosos perform “Lord Tell Me Why” Off of New Album “Live In San Francisco”

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Back on August 31 and September 1 of 2011, national treasure Ry Cooder and his band Corridas Famosos played two shows at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco. By all accounts, they were two of the best shows of the year (please, no more rubbing in the fact that we missed it!).  The upshot is that the shows were recorded, and on September 10th Nonesuch will release the resulting album Live in San Francisco.  The Corridos Famosos band includes son Joachim Cooder on drums; Robert Francis on bass; vocalists Terry Evans, Arnold McCuller, and Juliette Commagere; Flaco Jimenez on accordion; and the ten-piece Mexican brass band La Banda Juvenil. Listen below to Cooder & Corridas Famosas perform Cooder’s own Lord Tell Me Why off the album.  More great sounds and another relevant message from Ry Cooder.

22
Jul

Watch Elvis Costello & The Roots’ New Video “Walk Us Uptown” From New “Wise Up Ghost” Album

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One of our most highly anticipated album releases of the year is a collaboration of two of our favorites, Elvis Costello and The Roots, on their collective new album entitled Wise Up Ghost (to be released on September 17th).  The first sampling has now been released in the form of a lyric video for the astonishingly great album-opener Walk Us Uptown.  It’s not surprising that we love everything about the song, which takes both artists back to their roots, if you will.  There’s a dash of funk-soul-brother, a dash of Brit-ska organ and some scratch reggae-guitar from Questlove and The Roots.  And there are Costello’s angrily political and well-penned lyrics sung with his trademark sneer that cauterized his early albums.  Cross-fires and cross-currents-ies.  Indeed.  If the song below is any indication, Wise Up Ghost will be one of the Best Albums of 2013.  In other Roots news, the band is scheduled to work next with the Reverend Al Green on his next album.  Can we hear an “Amen”?!