Re: Changing Subject Lines

1999-03-03 Thread Jennifer Sperandeo
Title: Re: Changing Subject Lines



I guess this isn't so much about who's a good alt.country band as who I like these days, but here goes: the Pinetops from Winston Salem - I think that Jeffery Dean Foster (who is NOT JD Foster. he's a youngin') is a vivid, intuitive songwriter and the band that he assembled for his record Above Ground and Vertical is the tops - they're doing what might be called Uncle Tupelo but really they reind me of about 5 of my favorite bands all at once ...I think Beaver Nelson is the male Lucinda Williams - don't fuck up and miss him if you're gonna be in Austin...I love the Yay-hoos and think using Chip Robinson as the frontman is brilliant even if they're calling it the Backsliders...I like the emo-roots of Lou Ford...The new Hazeldine record (as yet without a home due to Unigram hell) is brilliant! Its the ulitmate Chick's Roadtrip Record...Pete Krebs from PORTLAND is the real deal (another great band performing great songs) Sweet Ona Rose coming from Cavity Search Records soon...Little Sue from PORTLAND has the vocal talents of Iris Dement, the spirit of Loretta Lynn and the relevance of Edith Frost or Freakwater...Fernando from PORTLAND is gonna shock you all with his new album (nothing you'd expect if you've heard his other stuff) rootsy psychedelic roots rock - you heard me right...isolated scenes come up with the most interesting stuff - big city clusterfucks don't seem to matter as much to their participants...or something...xoxo
--
From: Don Yates [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: passenger side [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Changing Subject Lines
Date: Mon, Mar 1, 1999, 6:23 PM




On Mon, 1 Mar 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Please divulge, Ms. Jdiva, the names of the really good stuff that's
 tickling your ear. I'm always one for your passionate opinion and I must
 confess to being a cynic at this point, not just regarding Tupelo
 knockoffs but the the whole alt-country (whatever that means) scene as
 well. Sad to say, but I have so little patience for CDs by guys with
 acoustic guitars or bands of post-college boys with a few twangy
 instruments and band names plucked from the twang cliche machine,
 countless of which are piled up in my office at this moment in time.
 Earnestness is one thing, finding something fresh to say is another.
 It's gotta be really something special at this point to make me want
 to write about it and/or listen to it a million times. The Damnations
 and Pete Krebs are the two that currently tend to fall into that
 category. 

I'm kinda with our LA rock critic on this one. Most alt-country albums
are undistinguished, cliche-ridden mediocrities (the new albums from the
Damnations and Krebs being two very big exceptions). I suppose you could
say the same about any other genre you care to name, but the volume of
twang-rock poo seems to be increasing to a dangerously high level.
Anyway, I'm also interested in hearing what's got the Austin twang-rock
queen so hot at the moment.--don





re: Changing Subject Lines

1999-03-03 Thread Jennifer Sperandeo
Title: re: Changing Subject Lines



This should read:

...Fernando from PORTLAND is gonna shock you all with his new album (nothing you'd expect if you've heard his other stuff) rootsy psychedelic rock en espanol - you heard me right...




Re: Changing Subject Lines

1999-03-01 Thread Ndubb

 I wouldn't dream of casting a politically incporrect pallor
 over any baby bands by identifying them by name, but trust me...there's some
 really good punk-tinged-country-rock going on out there. 

Please divulge, Ms. Jdiva, the names of the really good stuff that's tickling
your ear. I'm always one for your passionate opinion and I must confess to
being a cynic at this point, not just regarding Tupelo knockoffs but the the
whole alt-country (whatever that means) scene as well. Sad to say, but I have
so little patience for CDs by guys with acoustic guitars or bands of post-
college boys with a few twangy instruments and band names plucked from the
twang cliche machine, countless of which are piled up in my office at this
moment in time. Earnestness is one thing, finding something fresh to say is
another. It's gotta be really something special at this point to make me want
to write about it and/or listen to it a million times. The Damnations and Pete
Krebs are the two that currently tend to fall into that category. 

What was my point here?

Neal Weiss
np - Sleater-Kinney 



Re: Changing Subject Lines

1999-03-01 Thread Don Yates



On Mon, 1 Mar 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Please divulge, Ms. Jdiva, the names of the really good stuff that's
 tickling your ear. I'm always one for your passionate opinion and I must
 confess to being a cynic at this point, not just regarding Tupelo
 knockoffs but the the whole alt-country (whatever that means) scene as
 well. Sad to say, but I have so little patience for CDs by guys with
 acoustic guitars or bands of post-college boys with a few twangy
 instruments and band names plucked from the twang cliche machine,
 countless of which are piled up in my office at this moment in time.
 Earnestness is one thing, finding something fresh to say is another.
 It's gotta be really something special at this point to make me want
 to write about it and/or listen to it a million times. The Damnations
 and Pete Krebs are the two that currently tend to fall into that
 category. 

I'm kinda with our LA rock critic on this one.  Most alt-country albums
are undistinguished, cliche-ridden mediocrities (the new albums from the
Damnations and Krebs being two very big exceptions).  I suppose you could
say the same about any other genre you care to name, but the volume of
twang-rock poo seems to be increasing to a dangerously high level.
Anyway, I'm also interested in hearing what's got the Austin twang-rock
queen so hot at the moment.--don



Re: Changing Subject Lines

1999-03-01 Thread lance davis

Earnestness is one thing, finding something fresh to say is
another. It's gotta be really something special at this point to make me
want
to write about it and/or listen to it a million times.

np (again)--Steve, Del, and Iris. 20 down. 999, 980 to go . . .



Re: Changing Subject Lines

1999-03-01 Thread John Flippo


 Most alt-country albums are undistinguished, cliche-ridden mediocrities
(the new albums from the Damnations and Krebs being two very big
exceptions).

I bought the new Hadacol cd a few weeks ago and haven't been able to stop
playing it. Definitely my favorite of the year so far. Wondering if anyone
has seen them live yet?

John Flippo



Re: Changing Subject Lines

1999-03-01 Thread Terry A. Smith

 whole alt-country (whatever that means) scene as well. Sad to say, but I have
 so little patience for CDs by guys with acoustic guitars or bands of post-
 college boys with a few twangy instruments and band names plucked from the
 twang cliche machine, countless of which are piled up in my office at this
 moment in time. Earnestness is one thing, finding something fresh to say is
 another. It's gotta be really something special at this point to make me want
 to write about it and/or listen to it a million times. The Damnations and Pete
 Krebs are the two that currently tend to fall into that category. 
 
 Neal Weiss
 
Geez, Neal, if folks like you don't listen to those piles of twang
hopefuls, and then sift out all the crap, then we're gonna have to do all
the dirty work. C'mon, we depend on you guys to sacrifice your ears to the
common weal, to save all the rest of us schmucks from wasting untold
fortunes on Twang Devil, and Barbed Heart, and Cowboy Ear, and Dudley
Doright and the Mounties, and, aw, you know what I mean. So, buck up, son
and get back to work. There's another dozen pieces of twang shit to listen
to, in order to find that one diamond. -- Terry Smith (now, who the hell
is Pete Krebs?)



Re: Changing Subject Lines/Hadacol

1999-03-01 Thread rooney

John said:


I bought the new Hadacol cd a few weeks ago and haven't been able to stop
playing it. Definitely my favorite of the year so far. Wondering if anyone
has seen them live yet?


Yes.  Marie and I saw them here in Nashville weekend before last.  We loved
them.  Really nice guys, too.  Small crowd though, which sucked since they
drove all the way down here just for this show.  I would definately
recommend them live.

Ronni