Re: Jim Lauderdale Tape Offer

1999-04-29 Thread vgs399

Just a comment on Lauderdale and most probably an unpopular one -
I really do like him but I have to complain  about the vocal mix on his last
cd.
Way too out front, pretty grating on the ears.  He has a nice voice, but
most of the cd sounds as though he had his lips stapled to the microphone so
it was amusing to me that it was titled "Whisper".
Tera
- Original Message -
From: Bill Silvers [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: passenger side [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, April 29, 1999 12:53 AM
Subject: Jim Lauderdale Tape Offer


 Three months ago, there was a thread here about "getting" Jim Lauderdale.
A
 few of us fans felt like Jim hadn't really gotten his due as both a great
 writer and performer. At that time, I mentioned that I'd made a "best of"
 Jim Lauderdale tape for a friend, and that maybe what I needed to do was
 compile another one, and make it available to the list. At that time,
 Jerald Corder and I started corresponding off-list, and we decided that we
 cooperate on making a tape for distribution to anybody who was interested.
 Soon after, Jerald suggested we also do a tape of songs written by Jim
that
 were covered or performed by others. After Jerald put it all together,
 there's now two tapes of those songs. I've got all five of Jim
Lauderdale's
 LP's, but Jerald is the repository for Jim Lauderdale material, whether
 performed by JL or by others.

 Jerald has put together three cool tapes of Jim Lauderdale material. The
 first is a "best-of" Jim Lauderdale, with tracks not only from his 5
studio
 albums, but songs from an unreleased album, prior to PLANET OF LOVE, and
 some singles from promotional records that Jerald's picked up. It's a nice
 collection, 90 minutes long, with a fair amount of it from out-of-print or
 hard to find records.

 The second and third tapes are from various artists, too many to list them
 all here but a mix of alt and standard country types, and of course
several
 from Lauderdale-loving George Strait. These covers fill two 90 minute
 cassettes.

 So, here's the deal. If you're interested in any or all of these tapes,
 send me an e-mail to this address. *DON'T REPLY TO THE LIST*, but reply to
 me here at my home address, [EMAIL PROTECTED] I'll send back a complete list
 of songs and artists on the covers tapes. Jerald's wife has done a nice
job
 making up cool-looking j-cards for the cassettes, and if I wasn't already
 involved with this thing, I'd sure want copies. I'll want you to send me
 blank 90 minute cassettes to dub the music onto, and a buck to cover
 postage. That's it.

 This is a chance to find out more about one of the great, underrecognized
 talents in country music. Write me off list if you're interested in
getting
 a copy of these cassettes. We're not expecting a flood of responses, BTW,
 but we'll adjust if so. g I'll give everybody till Monday May 3rd to
 respond.

 b.s.


 "Time begins on Opening Day" -Thomas Boswell






Clip: Don't take your guns to town

1999-04-29 Thread jon_erik

published: 4/28/99 Thursday, April 29, 1999

Country music's answer to the boy groups changes name!
Country music's answer to Backstreet Boys, N'Sync, 5ive and 98 Degrees, 
Young Guns is changing their name.  In light of the tragedy at Littlton
High 
School near Denver the teens have decided to rename themselves.

All of the members of Young Guns are teenagers from Alabama, Tennessee
and 
Texas.   The shootings deeply affected all of the boys.

``Young Guns was a name we came up with meaning the 'new kids in town'
with 
a country twist. I am sure there is another name that could convey the
same 
message, and we are currently welcoming suggestions from fans through the

internet at [EMAIL PROTECTED],'' commented member Cory J. Williams.
``We 
are also exploring other ways to help the kids there, maybe a concert at
the 
school, when things calm down, to pay tribute to the victims.''

The five boys are preparing for their debut release and promotion of the 
album with live performances.






Clip: Country Music Hall of Fame

1999-04-29 Thread jon_erik

Wednesday April 28, 2:13 pm Eastern Time
Company Press Release
Council Vote, Approval of Financing Clear Way for Hall of Fame 
Groundbreaking
NASHVILLE, Tenn.--(ENTERTAINMENT WIRE)--April 28, 1999--Approval last
week 
by the Metro Council of a $2 million allocation for the new downtown
Country 
Music Hall of Fame has triggered the financing needed to break ground at
the 
new facility.

Work on the $37 million project will begin within two weeks, and a formal

groundbreaking celebration is being planned for early in the morning on
June 
17 as part of Fan Fair, Country Music Hall of Fame Director Kyle Young
said. 


The new facility on Demonbreun Street will cover an entire city block 
catercorner from the Nashville Arena and directly behind a new downtown 
hotel and a city park.

``The unanimous vote by the Metro Council to allocate $2 million in 
tourist-related funds over the next four years set in motion all of the 
things we have been eagerly awaiting,'' Young said. ``It triggered the 
approval of financing from NationsBank, allowed excavation to begin and
let 
us begin planning a big groundbreaking ceremony as part of Fan Fair
Week.''

Young said $12 million had to be raised in order to allow ground to be 
broken on the site. A total of $10 million in cash and pledges was
gathered 
from private donors before Mayor Phil Bredesen and the Metro Council came
up 
with the Metro share of the project.

The Hall of Fame, slated to be completed by May 2001, will be the largest

tourist destination built in Nashville since Opryland opened in the
1970s. 
It is estimated that the new facility will draw at least 550,000 people 
annually and give a boost to tourism and hotel/motel revenues.

``We are excited about having our formal groundbreaking be part of Fan
Fair 
Week,'' Young said. ``Country music fans from all over the world are a
big 
reason why there is a Country Music Hall of Fame, and they deserve to be 
part of the ceremony.''

While Young was not ready to unveil all of the details of the Hall of
Fame 
groundbreaking ceremony, he said he expected it to be a fun event
honoring 
living members of the Hall of Fame and showcasing some of the music that
has 
made Nashville and country music popular worldwide.

``We will have some unique features to this event,'' Young said. ``It
will 
not be the run-of-the-mill dip-in-the-shovel and give-a-speech
ceremony.''


 
  
 
Contact:

 Network Ink Public Relations, Nashville
 Elizabeth Thiels, 615/297-0550, ext. 102
 or
 McNeely, Pigott  Fox, Nashville
 Mike Pigott, 615/259-4000




RE: Clip: Country Music Hall of Fame

1999-04-29 Thread Suzette Lawrence

Does anybody know all the words to Jimmy Lloyd's "I Got A Rocket In My
Pocket"? I can't figure them all out and Louann Barton's version has so many
cool growls and snarls it is hard to decipher.


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, April 29, 1999 1:01 PM
To: passenger side
Subject: Clip: Country Music Hall of Fame


Wednesday April 28, 2:13 pm Eastern Time
Company Press Release
Council Vote, Approval of Financing Clear Way for Hall of Fame 
Groundbreaking
NASHVILLE, Tenn.--(ENTERTAINMENT WIRE)--April 28, 1999--Approval last
week 
by the Metro Council of a $2 million allocation for the new downtown
Country 
Music Hall of Fame has triggered the financing needed to break ground at
the 
new facility.

Work on the $37 million project will begin within two weeks, and a formal

groundbreaking celebration is being planned for early in the morning on
June 
17 as part of Fan Fair, Country Music Hall of Fame Director Kyle Young
said. 


The new facility on Demonbreun Street will cover an entire city block 
catercorner from the Nashville Arena and directly behind a new downtown 
hotel and a city park.

``The unanimous vote by the Metro Council to allocate $2 million in 
tourist-related funds over the next four years set in motion all of the 
things we have been eagerly awaiting,'' Young said. ``It triggered the 
approval of financing from NationsBank, allowed excavation to begin and
let 
us begin planning a big groundbreaking ceremony as part of Fan Fair
Week.''

Young said $12 million had to be raised in order to allow ground to be 
broken on the site. A total of $10 million in cash and pledges was
gathered 
from private donors before Mayor Phil Bredesen and the Metro Council came
up 
with the Metro share of the project.

The Hall of Fame, slated to be completed by May 2001, will be the largest

tourist destination built in Nashville since Opryland opened in the
1970s. 
It is estimated that the new facility will draw at least 550,000 people 
annually and give a boost to tourism and hotel/motel revenues.

``We are excited about having our formal groundbreaking be part of Fan
Fair 
Week,'' Young said. ``Country music fans from all over the world are a
big 
reason why there is a Country Music Hall of Fame, and they deserve to be 
part of the ceremony.''

While Young was not ready to unveil all of the details of the Hall of
Fame 
groundbreaking ceremony, he said he expected it to be a fun event
honoring 
living members of the Hall of Fame and showcasing some of the music that
has 
made Nashville and country music popular worldwide.

``We will have some unique features to this event,'' Young said. ``It
will 
not be the run-of-the-mill dip-in-the-shovel and give-a-speech
ceremony.''


 
  
 
Contact:

 Network Ink Public Relations, Nashville
 Elizabeth Thiels, 615/297-0550, ext. 102
 or
 McNeely, Pigott  Fox, Nashville
 Mike Pigott, 615/259-4000



Re: Eddie Shaver

1999-04-29 Thread NancyApple


In a message dated 4/29/99 7:43:21 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

I guess Eddie has a tendency to overplay at times

Hey, this happened as he was going on stage, never even got to play. Had some 
kind of attack and was rushed to emergency. I know that part is true, as far 
as heart attack, or his condition now, I don't know
Nancy



Re: Clip: Don't take your guns to town

1999-04-29 Thread Darren Stout

 message, and we are currently welcoming suggestions from fans through the
 
 internet at [EMAIL PROTECTED],'' commented member Cory J. Williams.
 

I have a suggestion for them, disband.




___
Get your free, private email at http://mail.excite.com/



Re: Clip: Country Music Hall of Fame

1999-04-29 Thread KATIEJOM

In a message dated 4/29/1999 11:16:22 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 Does anybody know all the words to Jimmy Lloyd's "I Got A Rocket In My
  Pocket"? I can't figure them all out and Louann Barton's version has so 
many
  cool growls and snarls it is hard to decipher.

I don't know if this is the same song cause the credits say McAlpin/Longsdon, 
but, NRBQ does a great version on "All Hopped Up"/Red Rooster ('77).  It's 
showing BMI, so you might be able to do a search on their WEB site, too.

good luck,
Kate




Re: Jim Lauderdale Tape Offer

1999-04-29 Thread Ph. Barnard

Bill,  just to refresh my memory, you were recommending Planet of 
Love as the best Lauderdale album, right?

--jr.



Clip:Bluegrass Sprouts in Urban Landscape

1999-04-29 Thread Brad Bechtel

Bluegrass Sprouts in Urban Landscape
Cafe's open-mike night encourages novice players 
Sam Whiting, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, April 29, 1999 
©1999 San Francisco Chronicle 

URL: 
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1999/04/29/DD88506.DTLtype=music
 

Early this evening, a bunch of urban hillbillies will bang their battered mandolin and 
guitar cases through the double doors into the Atlas Cafe. They'll tune up, then turn 
and fill the room with the twang of bluegrass and old-timey string music. 

This is open-mike bluegrass, which once a month turns this hipster cafe in the Mission 
into a broken-down palace for country boys and girls lost in the big city. Anybody can 
play, either onstage or out in the crowd, picking their mandolins and bowing their 
fiddles in what amounts to bluegrass surround-sound. 

"Some people don't want to come up and take a solo, face the spotlight, so they just 
play in their seats,'' says Pam Brandon, a regular. "It works really well.'' 

A house band opens with "Cripple Creek.'' JimBo Trout high-notes the vocal. 

"Yeehaw,'' yells a man who might be taken for a skateboard thrash punk. The floor 
starts moving with toe-tapping. Those who want to move some more get up and dance 
energetically in the aisle between the bar and the bathroom. 

After a few traditionals, Trout asks if anyone wants to sing. Three hands go up. 

David Ray, a bold first-timer from Mill Valley, introduces himself and pours his heart 
into the lyric "I'm shiftless, I'm homeless, I'm a total disgrace/ Cuz I spent all my 
money at the rye whiskey place.'' The melody hits a few spots lower than that lyric, 
but Ray is no disgrace at all. A dog barks on the back patio, but there are no 
catcalls among the humans. 

Ray sings a few songs, then plays guitar for a few more. Suddenly he's one of the boys 
in the band. 

"Some are professionals, some are not,'' says Ray, a software engineer. "You don't get 
favored if you are a professional. 

"Everybody gets the same shot, which is good because there are shy people who are good 
and bold people who aren't so good.'' 

Going into its second year, the Atlas bluegrass concept is simple: "Every month we 
just show up and hack,'' says Brandon, who hacked her way from London. She trades her 
accent for a slow drawl as she sings "I'm Just Here to Get My Baby Out of Jail.'' 

"Various people come with various instruments, and we trade off in a friendly way,'' 
says Trout, whose job is to subtly signal a player when his time is up. It is not 
always easy. When rookies get their first taste of audience appreciation, many don't 
want to give it up. 

"Some people have no idea what they are doing, and they get up there and these guys 
can make them play decent,'' says Kyle Smith, who came from Georgia with a mandolin 
and blues harp. Bluegrass is social music. The strings and voices need company to 
sound right. "In the city, there is no other place for people learning how to play 
bluegrass to get up there and sing and play,'' Smith says. 

A few months ago the Thursday- night rattle worked a tacked-up poster loose from the 
wall. It swung down, dangling from the bottom tack, and was left that way until 
someone got up off the couch and retacked it, upside down. The Atlas fits the loose 
ambience of bluegrass. 

Half of the Thursday crowd looks as if it just blew in from the Dust Bowl, and the 
other half looks as if it came directly from a Grateful Dead show. There are members 
of eight or 10 local bands. 

At the bar is a rockabilly bassist with ducktail hair, letter jacket and rolled-up 
jeans. In back talking on a cell phone is the bassist for Tribe 8, the lesbian punk 
band. 

"People have exhausted the blues scene and the rock scene and the punk scene,'' Smith 
says. "It's another form of music that people are getting turned on to.'' 

Trout says he gets a half-dozen new players every time. Novices sit at tables and 
mimic the fretwork. It isn't far from the back to the front, though en route a few 
stop to drink some courage, laying their mandolins across the bar. 

"You can not know more than three chords and get up and sit in,'' says Brandon, 
daughter of the editor of the U.K. Northwest Bluegrass News. 

A few months ago, a woman who must have been in her 80s pulled herself up off the 
couch to show these kids how to pluck a mandolin. 

By night's end, they are down to paper cups for the draft beer. People dance in line 
in front of the unisex bathroom, next to the band. Brandon is known to improvise the 
lyric "Somebody bring me a Sierra Nevada'' until somebody does. There might be 20 
musicians, shoulder to shoulder. 

Tatsuya Suzuki, just in from Japan, knows little English, but he knows the language of 
a Scruggs- style five-string banjo. He's front and center all night, as if he'd 
reached the stage of the Grand Ol' Opry. 

"It's very good,'' he says of his one-night band. "Excellent.'' 

Re: Jim Lauderdale Tape Offer

1999-04-29 Thread Dave Purcell

Ph. Barnard wrote:

 Bill,  just to refresh my memory, you were recommending Planet of 
 Love as the best Lauderdale album, right?

Dear lord, no...it's Pretty Close to the Truth by two furlongs (getting 
ready for the Derby). One of my fave alt.country records ever.

Dave
np: Tom Petty box set, disc #3


***
Dave Purcell, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Northern Ky Roots Music: http://w3.one.net/~newport
Twangfest: http://www.twangfest.com



Re: Happy Birthday, Duke (+ Alejandro)

1999-04-29 Thread Carl Abraham Zimring

Good Lord, post a mention of the Duke centennial and suddenly
everybody's a program director!  There will be Ellington content next
week, but I also have to give props to plenty of fine new p2-related
releases, including Red Star Belgrade and Alejandro Escovedo.  Escovdeo,
BTW, put on yet another phenominal show last night at Rosebud.  If he's
coming anywhere near you, go.  Bring friends, even if it's against their
will.

Carl Z.
P.S. Anybody know who Al's bassist is for this tour?  His harmony vocals
seemed familiar, but I can't place them.  He answered to "Cornbread"
during the introductions. 



rocket in my pocket

1999-04-29 Thread Tom Smith

Lou Ann's and NRBQ's are both covers of the Jimmy Logsdon 
tune. Having a hell of a time finding either record at the 
moment, but the fellas I play with did figure it out.  Off the 
top of my head, I think one of the tougher couplets is - 
"Well Two In One's polish and 3 in 1's oil/A lotta lip flippin' 
makes my bad blood boil". 
Will pass 'em along if I can just find 'em.
Time to clean the basement,

Tom Smith



RE: Clip: Twangcast

1999-04-29 Thread Jon Weisberger

...who the heck is Heather Mills?

Sings with Dee Waylors, yes?

Jon Weisberger, Kenton County, KY  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.fuse.net/jonweisberger




J. Geils (was rocket in my pocket)

1999-04-29 Thread john friedman


 It may be a different song, but didn't J. Geils Band have song by 
that name.

Just heard they're going to be touring.  They were the second 
concert I ever saw back in '82.  Anyway, I'm psyched to see them, 
they put on an excellent live show.

Oh yes, for twang content, Gram Parsons used to cover "cry one 
more time," by them.  So there.

-J. Friedman


___
Get Free Email and Do More On The Web. Visit http://www.msn.com



Re: Happy Birthday, Duke (+ Alejandro)

1999-04-29 Thread Dave Purcell

Carl Z wrote:

 but I also have to give props to plenty of fine new p2-related
 releases, including Red Star Belgrade and Alejandro Escovedo.  Escovdeo,
 BTW, put on yet another phenominal show last night at Rosebud.  If he's
 coming anywhere near you, go.  Bring friends, even if it's against their
 will.

What he said.

 P.S. Anybody know who Al's bassist is for this tour?  His harmony vocals
 seemed familiar, but I can't place them.  He answered to "Cornbread"
 during the introductions. 

I was wondering the same thing. I thought I heard Al say Cornbread 
is from New Orleans, fwiw.

Dave


***
Dave Purcell, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Northern Ky Roots Music: http://w3.one.net/~newport
Twangfest: http://www.twangfest.com



Re: Rappin' Radney

1999-04-29 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 4/29/99 8:39:17 AM Central Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 On top of it being AOR themed, I'd venture to say it skews towards 
 women as well.  Some song about rainy days and staying under the 
 covers.  Don't get me wrong, it sounds like a good plan, I just 
 don't want to hear *him* sing about it. 


"Raining On Sunday" is my personal favorite song on the album, and I am way 
out of your demographic.

It ain't country, but who says it has to be?

Slim



Re: Clip: Twangcast

1999-04-29 Thread Mike Hays

 ...who the heck is Heather Mills?

 Sings with Dee Waylors, yes?

 Jon Weisberger,
INSERT into recent quality of writing thread?
Mike Hays
http://www.TwangCast.com  TM  RealCountry  24 X 7
Please Visit Then let us know what you think!

Mike Hays www.MikeHays.RealCountry.net
For the best country artist web hosting, www.RealCountry.net





FYI: SF Bay Area Rockabilly/Country shows

1999-04-29 Thread Brad Bechtel

WEDNESDAY  APRIL 28
Jeff Bright  the Sunshine Boys @ Agenda Lounge, 399 S. 1st, SJ 10pm
Blue Bell Wranglers @ Elbo Room, 647 Valencia, San Francisco 10pm $4
Cadillac Angels @ Henfling's Tavern, 9450 Hwy 9, Ben Lomond
The Chop Tops @ The Catalyst (in atrium), 1011 Pacific, Santa Cruz 9pm
The Hepsters @ Moe's Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz

THURSDAY  APRIL 29
Jim Campilongo  10 Gallon Cats @  Above Paradise, 11th St./Folsom, SF

SUNDAY  MAY 2
The Haywoods @ Club DeLuxe, 1509-11 Haight, San Francisco 930pm

MONDAY  MAY 3
The Bachelors @ Lou's Pier 47, 300 Jefferson, San Francisco 4pm
The Bachelors @ The Saloon, 1232 Grant, San Francisco 930pm

TUESDAY  MAY 4
Cadillac Angels @ Fuel, 44 Almaden Ave., San José 9pm
Dallas Craft SF Barndance: Dallas Craft  the Sofa Kings/Dave Thom 
Band/California Cowboys/Jim Campilongo/Larry Dunn @ DeMarco's 23 Club, 23 Visitacion, 
Brisbane 8pm

WEDNESDAY  MAY 5
Russell Scott  his Red Hots @ Agenda Lounge, 399 S. 1st, San José 10pm
The Hepsters @ Moe's Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz

THURSDAY  MAY 6
Jim Campilongo  10 Gallon Cats @  Above Paradise, 11th St./Folsom, SF

FRIDAY  MAY 7
Mike Ness/Deke Dickerson  the Ecco-Fonics @ 7th Note Showclub, 915 Columbus, 
San Francisco 9pm $20

SATURDAY  MAY 8
Red Meat/Oakland Medicine Show @ Starry Plough, 3101 Shattuck, Berkeley 945pm 
$5
The Bachelors @ 4 Dueces, 2319 Taraval, San Francisco 9pm

MONDAY  MAY 10
The Bachelors @ The Saloon, 1232 Grant, San Francisco 930pm

WEDNESDAY  MAY 12
Real Sippin' Whiskeys/Ruby Deluxe @ Elbo Room, 647 Valencia, SF 10pm $4
The Hepsters @ Moe's Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz

THURSDAY  MAY 13
Link Wray @ Bimbo's 365 Club, 1025 Columbus, San Francisco 8pm $15
Jim Campilongo  10 Gallon Cats @  Above Paradise, 11th St./Folsom, SF

SUNDAY  MAY 16
Sean Kennedy  the King Kats @ Club DeLuxe, 1509-11 Haight, SF 930pm

MONDAY  MAY 17
The Bachelors @ The Saloon, 1232 Grant, San Francisco 930pm

WEDNESDAY  MAY 19
Buck Owens/Red Meat @ Bimbo's 365 Club, 1025 Columbus, SF 8pm $25
Rockin' Lloyd Tripp  the Zipguns @ Elbo Room, 647 Valencia, SF 10pm $4
The Hepsters @ Moe's Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz

THURSDAY  MAY 20
Joe Goldmark w/ Jim Campilongo  the 10 Gallon Cats @ Amoeba Records, 1855 
Haight, San Francisco 6pm free
Jim Campilongo  10 Gallon Cats @  AboveParadise, 11th St./Folsom, SF

MONDAY  MAY 24
The Bachelors @ The Saloon, 1232 Grant, San Francisco 930pm

WEDNESDAY  MAY 26
The Rounders @ Elbo Room, 647 Valencia, San Francisco 10pm $4
The Hepsters @ Moe's Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz

THURSDAY  MAY 27
Randy Beckett's Rebel Train @ Starry Plough, 3101 Shattuck, Berkeley 930pm $4
The Bachelors @ Lou's Pier 47, 300 Jefferson, San Francisco 9pm
Sean Kennedy  King Kats @ Moe's Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz
Jim Campilongo  10 Gallon Cats @  Above Paradise, 11th St./Folsom, SF

FRIDAY  MAY 28
Sean Kennedy  the King Kats@ The Fog Bank, 211 Esplande, Capitola

SATURDAY  MAY 29
Asylum Street Spankers @ Great American Music Hall, 859 O'Farrell, SF

SUNDAY  MAY 30
Randy Beckett's Rebel Train @ Club DeLuxe, 1509-11 Haight, SF 930pm

MONDAY  MAY 31
The Bachelors @ The Saloon, 1232 Grant, San Francisco 930pm

WEDNESDAY  JUNE 2
Sean Kennedy  the King Kats @ Agenda Lounge, 399 S. 1st, San José 10pm

WEDNESDAY  JUNE 16
Big Sandy  his Fly-Rite Boys @ Agenda Lounge, 399 S. 1st, San José 10pm

SUNDAY  JUNE 20
Asylum Street Spankers @ Kuumbwa Jazz Center, Santa Cruz 7  9pm $16.80

WEDNESDAY  JUNE 23
Kim Lenz  her Jaguars @ Agenda Lounge, 399 S. 1st, San José 10pm

Sorry for getting this out late. Had a probelm with my computer drive that took some 
time to fix.

Steve Hathaway
San Jose, California
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





Re: Jim Lauderdale Tape Offer

1999-04-29 Thread William F. Silvers



Junior asked, Dave replied:

  Bill,  just to refresh my memory, you were recommending Planet of
  Love as the best Lauderdale album, right?

 Dear lord, no...it's Pretty Close to the Truth by two furlongs (getting
 ready for the Derby). One of my fave alt.country records ever.

Well I turned on to JL with PRETTY CLOSE TO THE TRUTH, and there are more
individual songs on it that belong with his best than PLANET OF LOVE, but
POL's a twangier record FWIW. It's also out of print though, and tough to
find, while PRETTY CLOSE can still be found here and there.  I'd say it's
PRETTY CLOSE...but it's pretty closer than Dave puts it. *Two furlongs*?!
Shoot, isn't 6 or 7 furlongs a standard race length below a mile or a mile
and an eighth? I say PRETTY CLOSE by a length, and POL made a nice stretch
run to make it a race. g

b.s.




Jim Lauderdale Tapes songs

1999-04-29 Thread William F. Silvers

Here's the individual songs and artists on the tapes that Jerald Corder
made up, in case you're interested.



Bill,

Here is the song information for all three tapes in case anyone wants to
know what is on them beforehand.

Jerald

What Am I Waiting For (Town South of Bakersfield)
Stay Out of My Arms (CBS unreleased)
Lucky 13 (CBS unreleased)
Maybe (Planet of Love)
I Wasn't Fooling Around
Planet of Love
King of Broken Hearts
I'm on your Side (Pretty Close To The Truth)
Why Do I Love You
Divide and Conquer
Run Like You
Don't Trust Me
Three Way Conversation
This Is The Big Time
Every Second Counts (Every Second Counts)

That's Not the Way It Works
Life By Numbers  (Persimmons)
Do You Like It
Please Pardon Me
Some Things Are Too Good To Last
Had A Little Time
Goodbye Song (Whisper)
Whisper
Take Me Down A Path
She Used To Say That To Me
It's Hard To Keep A Secret Anymore
I'll Lead You Home
Halfway Down (Promo)
Gonna Get A Life (Promo)
We're Gone (Whisper)

Covers

Side A

Kelly Willis - I'll Try Again
Jann Browne - Where The Sidewalk Ends
Shelby Lynne - Stop Me
Heather Myles - Stay Out Of My Arms
Dave Edmunds - Halfway Down
Kelly Willis - Not Afraid Of The Dark
George Strait - King Of Broken Hearts
Kelly Willis - I Know Better
Patty Loveless - Halfway Down
George Strait - Where The Sidewalk Ends
Mark Chestnut - Gonna Get A Life
Jon Randall - What You Don't Know
Mandy Barnett - Maybe

Side B

Mandy Barnett - Planet Of Love
George Strait - Do The Right Thing
Buddy Miller - Hold On My Love
Buddy Miller - Hole In My Head
Patty Loveless - You Don't Seem To Miss Me
Clay Blaker - It's Only Cause You're Lonely
Joy Lynn White - It's Better This Way
Buddy Miller - Love In The Ruins
Patty Loveless - I Miss Who I Was (With You)
Clay Blaker - Anyway
Joy Lynn White - Try Not To Be So Lonely
Buddy Miller - Love Snuck Up On Me
Patty Loveless - To Feel That Way
Clay Blaker - I May Be A Fool


Tape 2

Side A

George Strait - One Of You
Scott Joss - Doin' Time In Bakersfield
Joy Lynn White - Why Do I Love You
Deryl Dodd - It's Only Cause You're Lonely
Kathy Mattea - I'm On Your Side
Del Reeves - Diesel, Diesel, Diesel
George Strait - What Do You Say To That
Scott Joss - Stay Out Of My Arms
Gary Allan - I Wake Up Screaming
Dawn Sears - Planet Of Love
George Strait - We Really Shouldn't Be Doing This
Mark Chestnut - The King Of Broken Hearts
Rick Trevino - She Used To Say That To Me

Side B

George Strait - I Wasn't Fooling Around
Gary Allan - Forever And A Day
Mark Chestnut - I May Be A Fool
George Strait - Stay Out Of My Arms
Dixie Chicks - Planet Of Love
Vince Gill - Sparkle
Doug Supernaw - She Never Looks Back
Cicadas - Nothing
Perfect Stranger - It's Up To You
Bruce Robison - I Dream Too
George Strait - Nobody Has To Get Hurt
George Strait - What Am I Waiting For






Re: Rappin' Radney

1999-04-29 Thread john friedman

Slim:

"Raining On Sunday" is my personal favorite song on the album, and I am way 
out of your demographic.

It ain't country, but who says it has to be?

can't argue with you there.  as far as craftsmanship, vocals, 
lyric content...radney's stuff was good.  don't know, just kinda 
felt like i was in the middle of a general food's international 
coffee commercial g

clearly, he's at a different place than i am right now - that's 
all.

-JF


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RE: Topsoil Playlist for April

1999-04-29 Thread Richard Haslop

I'm currently reading the book, following the recent P2 raves, but it's
sold without the CD round here.  Anyone know where I can get it without
the book?  Tim O'Brien has been a favourite for a while and Dirk Powell
is fast becoming one as a result of his work in Balfa Toujours and his
If I Go Ten Thousand Miles album.  

Richard Haslop
Durban, South Africa

-Original Message-
From: Steve Gardner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 1999 5:24 AM
To: passenger side
Subject: Topsoil Playlist for April

7. Dirk Powell, Tim O'Brien  John Herrmann - Songs From the Mountain -
Howdy Skies
[This is the best CD of new fangled old-time music I've heard in a few
years.  Together, these three musicians have succeeded in putting a
soundtrack to the book Cold Mountain, written by local author Charles
Frazier.  This CD is only sold as a companion to the paperback version
of the book.  Check major retailers such as Borders and Amazon.com if
you have problems finding it.  Both the book and the CD are well worth
the search.]



RE: Updates

1999-04-29 Thread Richard Haslop

Tom

I'm at the office right now, without access to the album, but will get
back to you.  It's mainly English folkies, though, and includes Richard
 Linda doing the previously unreleased title track (circa "Bright
Lights" if memory serves).

And, on the subject of Thompson tributes, there's also an album called
His Master's Choice, or something like that, by English folksinger Dave
Burland.  Nice, but unessential, and along the lines of the Richard
Dobson Townes tribute, which I much prefer.

Richard
np - Bunny Wailer - DUBD'SCO Vols 12 

-Original Message-
From: Tom Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, April 24, 1999 5:31 PM
To: passenger side
Subject: Re: Updates 


Richard Haslop wrote:
 The World
 Is A Wonderful Place (is that what the English Richard Thompson
tribute
 was called? 

I haven't heard of this. Who's on it?

Tom Smith



Re: Rappin' Radney

1999-04-29 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 4/29/99 12:37:58 PM Central Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 clearly, he's at a different place than i am right now - that's 
 all. 

I think he is also in a different place than he has ever been before. It is 
an unusual album, and the story behind it is pretty strange. I got a promo 
almost a year ago, and it is just now getting released.

I hope he does well with it, even if the list Dad disses it. 

Slim



Re: FYI: SF Bay Area Rockabilly/Country shows

1999-04-29 Thread Debnumbers

Brad,

Nothing for May 14 and 15th?  I'll be in the area on business the 14th 
through the 21st.  Wonder if I can talk my business colleague into Buck 
Owens?  Mid-week, hmm.

Deb



Burning London, the Clash tribute album

1999-04-29 Thread Don Yates


I know I was going on the other day about how dated the Clash sound
nowadays, but jeez, they certainly didn't deserve this abominable
"tribute" album.  It kicks off with a cheesy rendition of "Hateful" from
No Doubt and then gets worse.  The Urge's version of "This Is Radio Clash"
is laughable, Ice Cube should never, ever have attempted "Should I Stay Or
Should I Go," Third Eye Blind do a typically faceless, limp version of
"Train In Vain," the Indigo Girls transform "Clampdown" into gag-inducing
coffeehouse f*lk, the Mighty Mighty Bosstones sound like they're goin'
through the motions on "Rudie Can't Fail," 311 turn "White Man In
Hammersmith Palais" into harmless pop-ska, Silverchair do what sounds like
a Spinal Tap parody of "London's Burning," and Heather Nova and Moby join
forces for a sparse piano-and-synth dirge version of "Straight to Hell."
Rising above the stink are the Clash-inpired Rancid's gutsy,
straightforward version of "Cheat," and Cracker's countrified version of
"White Riot."  Otherwise, this "tribute" album has to be one of the worst
tribute albums ever released by a major label.  Blech!--don




Bob Harris Country: BBC Radio 2 - Thursday 29th April 1999

1999-04-29 Thread Bob Paterson


BOB HARRIS COUNTRY  WEEK 17 29.04.99
99MA6251MLO 


CD  JUST ENOUGH ROPESUZY BOGGUSS
CD NOBODY LOVE, NOBODY GETS HURTCAPITOL 7243 8 57310-2


CD  MY OWN PECULIAR WAY WILLIE NELSON/EMMY LOU HARRIS
CD TEATRO   ISLAND 314-524 548-2


CD  I HOPE YOU WANT ME TOO  THE MAVERICKS
CD TRAMPOLINE   MCD NASHVILLE UMD 80456


CD  THIS DIRTY LITTLE TOWN  KIERAN KANE/EMMY LOU HARRIS/LUCINDA
WILLIAMS
CD DEAD REKONINGDEAD RECKONING DR 001


CD  SAME THINGS HAPPENED TO ME  JOHN PRINE
CD LOST DOGS AND MIXED BLESSINGSRYKODISC RCD 10333


CD  DOES HE LOVE YOUREBA McINTYRE
CD SINGLE   
INFO : REBA HAS 1 CONCERT AT THE ROYAL ALBERT HALL ON 4TH JUNE -
LISTENERS CAN RING 0870 444 4041 FROM THIS EVENING FOR TICKETS ALTHOUGH
THE OFFICE DOESN'T OPEN OFFICIALLY UNTIL FRIDAY 30TH APRIL***


CD  ACRES OF CORN   TOM RUSSELL / IRIS De MENT
CD THE MAN FROM GOD KNOWS WHERE FXCD 209


CD  LOVE GROWS WILD BUDDY MILLER
CD POISON LOVE  HIGHTONE HCD 8084


CD  'TIL I GET IT RIGHT TRISHA YEARWOOD
CD TAMMY WYNETTE….REMEMBEREDASYLUM 7559-62277-2



CD  BLUE MOON OF KENTUCKY   BILL MONROE  THE BLUEGRASS BOYS
CD COLUMBIA COUNTRY CLASSICS VOLUME 1   COLUMBIA 468119-2


CD  PILGRIM STEVE EARLE/DEL McCOURY BAND
CD THE MOUNTAIN GRAPEVINE GRACD 252


CD  SOUTH OF SANTA FE   BROOKS  DUNN   
CD BROOKS  DUNN 5  ARISTA NASHVILLE 07822 18865-2


CD  AMARILLOBIG HOUSE   
CD BIG HOUSEMCA NASHVILLE MCD 11446
-- 
Bob Paterson

http://www.ursasoft.com/bob

Bob Harris Country BBC Radio 2 (Researcher)
CMR DJ (Thursday nights 10-12)
 




lauderdale ?

1999-04-29 Thread Marie Arsenault





Bill:
Here's the individual songs and artists 

on the tapes that Jerald Cordermade up, 
in case you're interested.

Jim does a song live that has a woman's name in 
the chorus.
He's done this song every time I've seen him 
live. It's always the
last song of his set. It's very emotional and he 
just belts it out.
It's just breathtaking. Trust me. Anyone know 
the name of the song?
Is it on this comp tape? I think someone told me 
that it's not on any
of Jim's cds.

Anyway, thanks Jerald and Bill for pulling this 
together. I can't
wait to listen to it.

marie


Re: Rappin' Radney

1999-04-29 Thread Don Yates



On Thu, 29 Apr 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I hope he does well with it, even if the list Dad disses it. 

Well, I also hope he does well with it, even if I don't care for it.
Radney's a swell person, as is his awesome wife Cyndi Hoezle.  Back when
she was the Gavin mainstream country editor, she turned me on to the
Starkweathers, along with regularly giving updates about reissues from
country greats.  She really knows her shit, which is more than you can say
about too many other folks in the biz.--don




Re: Burning London, the Clash tribute album

1999-04-29 Thread Morgan Keating


I read the list of artists to appear on this a lil' while back and was
pretty horrified...you've now confirmed my suspicions...

morgan


At 10:55 AM 4/29/99 -0700, you wrote:

I know I was going on the other day about how dated the Clash sound
nowadays, but jeez, they certainly didn't deserve this abominable
"tribute" album.  It kicks off with a cheesy rendition of "Hateful" from
No Doubt and then gets worse.  The Urge's version of "This Is Radio Clash"
is laughable, Ice Cube should never, ever have attempted "Should I Stay Or
Should I Go," Third Eye Blind do a typically faceless, limp version of
"Train In Vain," the Indigo Girls transform "Clampdown" into gag-inducing
coffeehouse f*lk, the Mighty Mighty Bosstones sound like they're goin'
through the motions on "Rudie Can't Fail," 311 turn "White Man In
Hammersmith Palais" into harmless pop-ska, Silverchair do what sounds like
a Spinal Tap parody of "London's Burning," and Heather Nova and Moby join
forces for a sparse piano-and-synth dirge version of "Straight to Hell."
Rising above the stink are the Clash-inpired Rancid's gutsy,
straightforward version of "Cheat," and Cracker's countrified version of
"White Riot."  Otherwise, this "tribute" album has to be one of the worst
tribute albums ever released by a major label.  Blech!--don




RE: J. Geils (was rocket in my pocket)

1999-04-29 Thread Suzette Lawrence

I'm pretty sure that the J.Geils song is a different one from the Jimmy
Lloyd song.

-Original Message-
From: john friedman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, April 29, 1999 11:57 AM
To: passenger side
Subject: J. Geils (was rocket in my pocket)



 It may be a different song, but didn't J. Geils Band have song by 
that name.

Just heard they're going to be touring.  They were the second 
concert I ever saw back in '82.  Anyway, I'm psyched to see them, 
they put on an excellent live show.

Oh yes, for twang content, Gram Parsons used to cover "cry one 
more time," by them.  So there.

-J. Friedman


___
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Re: Clip: Country Music Hall of Fame

1999-04-29 Thread Jerry Curry


And.I say breathlessly, they may be hiring
librarians and archivists in their future.  
Damn, I'm keeping my eye on them.

I can see it now"Jerry, why are you heading to
your car with those Ernest Tubb masters?" g

JC




RE: rocket in my pocket

1999-04-29 Thread Suzette Lawrence

Thanks for the info.  That particular line was one that was giving me
trouble.

-Original Message-
From: Tom Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, April 29, 1999 7:46 AM
To: passenger side
Subject: rocket in my pocket 


Lou Ann's and NRBQ's are both covers of the Jimmy Logsdon 
tune. Having a hell of a time finding either record at the 
moment, but the fellas I play with did figure it out.  Off the 
top of my head, I think one of the tougher couplets is - 
"Well Two In One's polish and 3 in 1's oil/A lotta lip flippin' 
makes my bad blood boil". 
Will pass 'em along if I can just find 'em.
Time to clean the basement,

Tom Smith



Re: lauderdale ?

1999-04-29 Thread KATIEJOM

In a message dated 4/29/1999 1:59:54 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Jim does a song live that has a woman's name in the chorus.
  He's done this song every time I've seen him live. It's always the
  last song of his set. It's very emotional and he just belts it out.
  It's just breathtaking. Trust me. Anyone know the name of the song?
  Is it on this comp tape? I think someone told me that it's not on any
  of Jim's cds.
  
Bluebell, it's on Every Second Counts

K.



Re: Albini Rant

1999-04-29 Thread Tom Baker

This is pretty long, but what I've read of it sounds pretty interesting.
I believe that Steve Albini is a record producer. At least I know of
a Steve Albini that does this.  He is known for making pretty
raw sounding stuff.  He was the producer on Nirvana's "In Utero"
disc.  Perhaps what he says is similar to what happens with
movie productions?





  The Problem With Music
by Steve Albini
 excerpted from Baffler No. 5
 
  Whenever I talk to a band who are about to sign with a major
label, I always end up
  thinking of them in a particular context. I imagine a
trench, about four feet wide and
  five feet deep, maybe sixty yards long, filled with runny,
decaying shit. I imagine these
  people, some of them good friends, some of them barely
acquaintances, at one end of
  this trench. I also imagine a faceless industry lackey at
the other end, holding a
  fountain pen and a contract waiting to be signed.
 
  Nobody can see what's printed on the contract. It's too far
away, and besides, the
  shit stench is making everybody's eyes water. The lackey
shouts to everybody that
  the first one to swim the trench gets to sign the contract.
Everybody dives in the
  trench and they struggle furiously to get to the other end.
Two people arrive
  simultaneously and begin wrestling furiously, clawing each
other and dunking each
  other under the shit. Eventually, one of them capitulates,
and there's only one
  contestant left. He reaches for the pen, but the Lackey
says, "Actually, I think you
  need a little more development. Swim it again, please.
Backstroke."
 
  And he does, of course.
 
I. AR Scouts
 
  Every major label involved in the hunt for new bands now has
on staff a high-profile
  point man, an "AR" rep who can present a comfortable face
to any prospective band.
  The initials stand for "Artist and Repertoire," because
historically, the AR staff would
  select artists to record music that they had also selected,
out of an available pool of
  each. This is still the case, though not openly.
 
  These guys are universally young [about the same age as the
bands being wooed],
  and nowadays they always have some obvious underground rock
credibility flag they
  can wave. Lyle Preslar, former guitarist for Minor Threat,
is one of them. Terry Tolkin,
  former NY independent booking agent and assistant manager at
Touch and Go is one of
  them. Al Smith, former soundman at CBGB is one of them. Mike
Gitter, former editor of
  XXX fanzine and contributor to Rip, Kerrang and other
lowbrow rags is one of them.
  Many of the annoying turds who used to staff college radio
stations are in their ranks
  as well.
 
  There are several reasons AR scouts are always young. The
explanation usually
  copped-to is that the scout will be "hip" to the current
musical "scene." A more
  important reason is that the bands will intuitively trust
someone they think is a peer,
  and who speaks fondly of the same formative rock and roll
experiences.
 
  The AR person is the first person to make contact with the
band, and as such is the
  first person to promise them the moon. Who better to promise
them the moon than an
  idealistic young turk who expects to be calling the shots in
a few years, and who has
  had no previous experience with a big record company. Hell,
he's as naive as the band
  he's duping. When he tells them no one will interfere in
their creative process, he
  probably even believes it.
 
  When he sits down with the band for the first time, over a
plate of angel hair pasta, he
  can tell them with all sincerity that when they sign with
company X, they're really
  signing with him and he's on their side. Remember that
great, gig I saw you at in '85?
  Didn't we have a blast.
 
  By now all rock bands are wise enough to be suspicious of
music industry scum. There
  is a pervasive caricature in popular culture of a portly,
middle aged ex-hipster talking a
  mile-a-minute, using outdated jargon and calling everybody
"baby." After meeting
  "their" AR guy, the band will say to themselves and
everyone else, "He's not like a
  record company guy at all! He's like one of us." And they
will be right. That's one of
  the reasons he was hired.
 
  These AR guys are not allowed to write contracts. What they
do is present the band
   

Re: Albini Rant

1999-04-29 Thread Tom Baker

OOPS!!!  That was supposed to go to a friend b/c.

Tom Baker




Re: Burning London, the Clash tribute album

1999-04-29 Thread Svb442

In a message dated 4/29/99 12:59:31 PM EST, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

  I know I was going on the other day about how dated the Clash sound
 nowadays, but jeez, they certainly didn't deserve this abominable
 "tribute" album.  

this piece of crap was guaranteed the above by the getting the mostly the 
lamest of bands to contribute. there are so many great rock'n'roll/punk bands 
(backyard babies, streetwalkin' cheetahs, hellacopters, nomads, dimestore 
halos, d generation, etc) that would have done so much of a better job, it's 
pathetic that this is what they came up with. just more proof (as if anyone 
needed it) that the major labels really have their heads up their collective 
butts.

np-flatt  scruggs-back to the cross



blatant...self serving...s.o.b...

1999-04-29 Thread Matt Benz

OK- I wasn't gonna do this, I swore to myself that I wouldn't, but what
the hell, it's only one more promise broken:

The Sovines first cd awkwardly titled "truckers welcome" is now
available on Kingpin Records. You can get a copy from me by sending a
$10.00 check to Matt Benz, 305 West 6th Ave Columbus, OH 43201 Tho the
official release isn't for a few weeks, what the hell.

14 songs. 5 truck driving songs. 9 others. All original. Mostly rock and
or roll. 







Re: Rappin' Radney

1999-04-29 Thread john friedman


Don:
 
Radney's a swell person, as is his awesome wife Cyndi Hoezle.  ]

i thought i saw a ring on his finger.  i know he went through an ugly 
divorce...did their divorce not work out, or is she a fresh one?

while the topic seems to be open, alot of the songs seemed to be "guy 
f*cked up, wants to get back in" or "girl convinces guy that *he* f*cked 
up"  he seems a bit wounded, which he may in fact be.
so if the album largely autbiographical, y'all should give radney a big 
ol' hug next time you see'em.  i know i'd need one if those songs were 
about me.

-JF

Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com



McMurtry live?

1999-04-29 Thread Dave Purcell

Anyone have any strong opinions about James McMurty live? 
Jennifer H has seen him a number of times, but says he was such 
a jerk the past couple shows that she'll never see him again. 
Another pal tells me he's a don't-miss. Tough decision for Saturday 
-- McMurtry and Los Straitjackets (who I've seen and who are fun, 
but hey, Dick Dale is here on Tuesday) vs. Beaver Nelson solo. I 
just saw Beav on Tuesday, and I hear he's coming back soon with 
band in tow, and his show is 50 minutes up the road vs. McMurtry, 
who is five blocks from my house, so.?

Dave


***
Dave Purcell, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Northern Ky Roots Music: http://w3.one.net/~newport
Twangfest: http://www.twangfest.com



Re: blatant...self serving...s.o.b...

1999-04-29 Thread Dave Purcell

Duh, Matt...you missed the chance to distance yourself from the alt.country 
purist fanatic freaks

Dave

Matt Benz wrote:

 The Sovines first cd awkwardly titled "truckers welcome" is now
 available on Kingpin Records. You can get a copy from me by sending a
 $10.00 check to Matt Benz, 305 West 6th Ave Columbus, OH 43201 Tho the
 official release isn't for a few weeks, what the hell.
 
 14 songs. 5 truck driving songs. 9 others. All original. Mostly rock and
 or roll. 



***
Dave Purcell, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Northern Ky Roots Music: http://w3.one.net/~newport
Twangfest: http://www.twangfest.com



Songs From The Mountain (was: RE: Topsoil Playlist for April)

1999-04-29 Thread Jon Weisberger

The book is sold many places without the CD; the deal specified that you
couldn't sell the CD without the book, not (alas) vice versa.  Still, I
believe I saw something slide by on bgrass-l a couple of days ago that
indicated that the CD can now be sold on its own, so I'd say it's time for
P2-friendly mail-order types to check in with Howdy Skies Records (POB
120283, Nashville 37212; dunno about a phone, but when Traci Thomas returns
next week I'm sure she can scare one up).

Jon Weisberger, Kenton County, KY  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.fuse.net/jonweisberger




re: McMurty

1999-04-29 Thread Marie Arsenault




Anyone have any strong opinions about James McMurty live? 
Jennifer H has seen him a number of times, but says he was such 
a jerk the past couple shows that she'll never see him again. 
I saw McMurty once. Eaglesmith opened for him 
(which is why I went).
I thought McMurty was boring, lifeless, ehh. I 
didn't like the songs, too 
*singer/songwriter*-ish, absolutely nothing coming from the 
stage.
Take it with a grain of salt. I like Marah.

marie



Old 97's clip

1999-04-29 Thread Jerald Corder

Fighting chance 

Is the new, radio-friendly album by Old
97's a lightweight or a heavy hitter? 

04/29/99

By Thor Christensen / The Dallas Morning
News 

little voice shows up in Rhett Miller's
head from
time to time - the voice of an anonymous
Old 97's
fan speaking to him from the future.

" 'It's too bad the Old 97's tried to
sell out,' " Mr.
Miller says, imitating the voice, " 'and
still ended up
as total failures.' "

He laughs, as if to imply he's only
joking. But press
him a bit and the singer admits he is
indeed gun-shy
about reaction to Fight Songs, the
Dallas quartet's
new album that

hit stores Tuesday. Fans used to the
punky, twangy
rock 'n' roll of the group's first three
albums could
be startled by such poppy, radio-minded new
songs as "19" and "Murder (or a Heart
Attack),"
the CD's first single.

"I was really worried a month after we
[recorded]
it. I thought, 'Oh no! We've gone too
far.' But I'm
not really scared anymore," he says.
"Some people
aren't going to like it. But our real
hard-core fans . .
. they're still satisfied. They like it
and have forgiven
us the departure."

Forgiveness is a new concept to Mr.
Miller and his
bandmates. Formed in 1993 and named after a
Johnny Cash song, the band spent the
next five
years cranking out an uncompromising mix of
country, rock and punk that made them
darlings of
the alt-country scene championed by No
Depression magazine.

Acclaim from No Depression is nice, but
doesn't
earn you a gold album. The group's first
CD for
Elektra Records, 1997's Too Far to Care,
sold
26,000 copies - well below the
break-even point
for a major-label band.

So for Fight Songs, the band and Elektra
decided
to smooth out some of the edges by hiring
producer Andrew Williams of the Williams
Brothers (nephews of pop crooner Andy
Williams).

"Andrew made it more cohesive and
prettier and
did the things that don't come naturally
to us," Mr.
Miller says. "Rocking out and screaming and
jumping around come naturally to us. But
these
songs that I'd written and
[singer-bassist] Murry
[Hammond] had written were a lot more
introspective and quieter and prettier,
and I wanted
somebody to do justice to those."

On Fight Songs, prettier often
translates into
"much more marketable." With its breezy
melody
and ska-flavored, singsong guitar,
"Murder (or a
Heart Attack)" would sound right at home
on a
pop radio station next to the latest
hits by Sugar
Ray or No Doubt.

If "Murder" does become a radio anthem,
it would
be the first hit about a runaway feline:
Mr. Miller
wrote it about his roommate's cat,
Charlie, who
bolted from a window he'd left open.
(The cat
returned before the song was even done, Mr.
Miller reports.)

But while he says he's happy with the
way 

Old 97's review

1999-04-29 Thread Jerald Corder

Here's the review that ran with the article from the Dallas Morning News

Fight Songs' takes a different
track 

04/29/99

Fight Songs is the sound of the Old 97's
learning
new tricks while keeping their dignity
intact ... most
of it, anyway.

When they temper their twang with shiny
pop-rock, they score mixed results:
"Murder (or
Heart Attack)," the CD's first single,
is generic
radio filler, but "19" is a wonderful
chunk of ear
candy straight out of A Hard Day's Night.

But most of the group's other
experiments are right
on target. "What We Talk About," a
Latin-tinged
shuffle in the mode of Fastball's "The
Way," is the
perfect showcase for Ken Bethea's soulful
Tex-Mex guitar fireworks. The autoharp-laced
"Busted Afternoon" is the best song Ray
Davies
never wrote, and Murry Hammond's CD-closing
"Valentine" is an uncut folk gem.

Producer Andrew Williams applies a
high-gloss
finish to most of the CD, but don't be
put off by the
sheen. The Old 97's still throw plenty of
bare-knuckle punches on Fight Songs.

- Thor Christensen




Re: Old 97's clip

1999-04-29 Thread Tom Stoodley


Now here's a Rhett quote tailor-made for Mr. Purcell:

 "The world always has more room for three-chord songs where the chorus
 gets repeated a lot,"

*grin*  Summing up the style perfectly, I'd say.  Me, I dig it, but I
recall a conversation with Dave where he went off on exactly this tendency
of the 97s'...



Tom




Re: Albini Rant

1999-04-29 Thread alnjen

Speaking of great rants, has anyone got a copy of that "How to make a major
label album" rant that Ken Irwin from Rounder wrote and Jeff Wall posted to
the list a few months back?

Allen Baekeland

***

Boot Heel Drag can be heard on CJSW 90.9 FM , Calgary,AB
Tuesdays at 6:30 PM MST and on realaudio at www.cjsw.com.





re: Clip: Don't take your guns to town

1999-04-29 Thread jon_erik

I forwarded this to the list:

``Young Guns was a name we came up with meaning the 'new kids in town' 

 Or "New kids on the block," as the case may be.

with a country twist. I am sure there is another name that could convey
the same 
message,

 "The Rentboys?"  
--Jon Johnson
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Wollaston, Massachusetts




RE: McMurtry live?

1999-04-29 Thread SSLONE

McMurtry has sounded great live the three times I've seen him.  Don't go
expecting to hear stories about the songs or anything like that.  McMurtry
lets the character and personality of his songs speak for themselves for the
most part.  Occasionally he'll show a bit of his sardonic sense of humor
such as he did during a recent Baltimore gig when the tempo of one song
wasn't to his liking and he stopped the band ("That was swingin' like a dead
monkey.")  I enjoy most of the guy's music so for me it's a good show even
without the onstage banter (very much a lost art here in the 90s).  Song
selection-wise, a few too many of the duller songs from "It Had to Happen"
and not enough stuff from early gems like "Candyland" but enjoyable
nonetheless.

--Slonedog