Tuesday, February 21, 2023

The Pure Pop 4 Now People Singles Club 2023 #1

 By Henry Lipput

Because no one asked for it I’ve decided to bring back the Pure Pop 4 Now People Singles Club. I did a few posts in this vein back in 2021 when a lot of things were shut down including, it seemed, my brain. Although I was still listening to and enjoying music, I was having a difficult time thinking of words to express how I felt about it. Things have changed in so many ways and, as Stan Laurel once said to Oliver Hardy: “Remember how dumb I used to be? Well, I’m better now.”

To begin the new year of Pure Pop 4 Now People I’m highlighting four singles I’ve been digging that have been released since January.  This may be a monthly or semi-monthly thing going forward as I already have more singles I want you to know about.

Tugboat Captain, “Flash of Light” (Bandcamp)




Is Tugboat Captain doing it backwards? Their new single “Flash of Light” starts with the sound of a train crossing like the end of Pet Sounds or the musical freight train at the close of “Strawberry Fields Forever.” The song then morphs into the trademark blend of Alexander Sokolow's vocals, Buddy Caderni's’s keyboards, the TC team’s backing vocals. It’s an interesting change from how they've built songs like the great “If Tomorrow’s Like Today” from 2020’s Rut but just as important in the band's evolution.

Joe Peacock, “On Fire Again” (linktree)



The new single from Joe Peacock, the self-described genre-hopping storyteller, is the rocking, punk-guitar driven “On Fire Again. ”  The song was inspired by the man who, at seven, holds the record for being struck by lightning the most times (it’s clear from the lyric “I didn’t want to be a lightning rod” this guy had no wish to win any awards). At first I thought it might be the perfect driving song but having watched the video it’s not a trip I would want to be taking in a car any time soon. 

The Nature Strip, “I Cannot Deny You” (Bandcamp)


Back from their hiatus since 2018’s Past Pacific EP, Australia’s The Nature Strip has reunited and, as they announced on their Bandcamp page, “working towards a new album.” The third single since then is “I Cannot Deny You.” The song began when Pete Marley handed off his killer riff and chord sequence to co-writer John Encarnacao who wrote the lyrics and melody and sent it back to Marley the next day. The Nature Strip has lost none of its rock bona fides and, based on the three songs released so far, the new album will be a rocknroll bonanza.

Confusion Boats, “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” (Bandcamp)


Brian Dear of Confusion Boats has been coming up with Beatles and Beatles-related covers for a long time and the latest and the fourth one to be released “I Want to Hold Your Hand” is the best. With the slowed down and soulful vocal of Andrew Lubman, Dear and fellow Boater Fernando Perdomo lay down the original arrangement for Abbey Road’s “Oh! Darling” on top. It’s just such a brilliant move that I’m sure no one saw it coming (I certainly didn't and have been playing it for people since it came out) and the result is amazing.


Thursday, February 9, 2023

A Few Of My Favorite Things, 2022 Edition – Part Two: The Singles, EPs, Live, Compilation, and Reissues

 By Henry Lipput

Part Two of my 2022 year-end review is for the singles, EPs, a live release, a compilation, and reissues that I've enjoyed over the course of the year. I hope you've enjoyed what I've been writing about throughout the year and I encourage you to buy a download, a CD, or a record to support indie music.

SINGLES

Peter Hall, "In Plain Sight" (Bandcamp)








Peter Hall continues to amaze and “In Plain Sight” is pop of the highest quality. It’s also included in his latest (mini) album About Last Night (Subjangle).

The Bablers, "You Are the One for Me" (Big Stir Records)








“You Are the One for Me” is a banger of a power pop track. It’s one of the songs from an album by this Finnish band yet to be released in the US.

The Boo Radleys, Keep On With Falling (thebooradleys.com)








Keep On With Falling” is the second single and title song from the band’s first album since 1998. (The band is releasing a new album in June!). It’s a great, joyous slice of the Boos led by Sice’s always welcome vocals.

EPs

Theatre Royal, Beneath the Floor (Bandcamp)








Although “Ship Beneath the Floor” had a video made, “Talking to Tracey” is my favorite song from the band’s terrific Beneath the Floor EP. Reworking tracks not finished for 2020’s wonderful Portraits album plus another new track. Favorite track: “Talking to Tracy

The Black Watch, the neverlands of spoken things (ATOM Records)








On the EP, with the title track of the black watch’s new album (to be released in March), John Andrew Fredrick and company are again plugged in and ready to bring on the fuzz and the crunch to the melodies. Favorite track: “the neverlands of spoken things

The Magic Es, Talk in Tongues (Bandcamp)








I’ve been enjoying the indie rock sounds The Magic Es have been making since I reviewed their first album, It Goes On, back in 2017 for CoolDad Music. On their new EP they are back to being a trio and with songs like “Gone” are still making sounds I enjoy. Favorite track: “Gone

LIVE

Silver Haar, Live (Bandcamp)








Silver Haar’s Light’s Out EP was a 2021 favorite for me and they’ve followed it up with a live set with many of the songs from that EP. Adding an extra guitarist they’re expanded their sound and also expanded the length of songs to bring new elements to the mix. Favorite track: "Lights Out"

COMPILATION

Various Artists, Have Yourself a Merry Indie Christmas (Bandcamp)







In 2021, the Welsh journalist Kevin McGrath but together, V4Velindre: Charity Mixtape for the NHS, an amazing 50-song collection of indie artists to raise funds for Cardiff’s Velindre Cancer Center. Last year he went even further and assembled a two-volume, 108 song mixtape to raise funds for Crisis, a UK-based charity the helps the homeless. Favorite track: “Snowboardin'” by The Pearlfishers

REISSUES

Blake Babies, Sunburn (American Laundromat Records)







One of the great things about reissues (if they’re done well) is that you hear things you didn’t hear before and that’s the case with this marvelous release. This reissue is for more than long-time fans of Sunburn; it’s a must-have for lovers of great pop music and is the first time the album has been available on vinyl for over 30 years. Favorite track: “Train

Jon Brion, Meaningless (Jealous Butcher Records)








When is a reissue not a reissue? Jon Brion’s brilliant album Meaningless was released in 2002 only in CD and digital formats. Yeah, the CD has been gorgeously remastered and counts as a reissue, but the vinyl wasn’t available in ’02 which makes this an even more important release.  Favorite track: “Hook, Line and Sinker




Tuesday, January 31, 2023

A Few Of My Favorite Things, 2022 Edition – Part One: The Albums

By Henry Lipput

My favorite albums in 2022 were a great mix of old favorites, recent favorites, and brand-new favorites. In the following paragraphs I’ve spotlighted the releases that tickled my ears the most, added links to where you can find them, and chose my favorite tracks from each of them (where available I’ve included links to where you can hear the songs). As in the past this list of albums is only Part One of my 2022 year-end review; Part Two, with singles, EPs, live releases, compilations, and reissues, will hopefully be posted by the middle of February (since for some reason my blog doesn’t let folks subscribe if you follow me on Twitter or Mastodon you’ll see Part Two as soon as it’s posted).

Freedy Johnston, Back on the Road to You (Forty Below Records)








Although it’s been seven years since Freedy Johnston’s Neon Repairman, from the opening notes of his great new album Back on the Road to You it’s clear he hasn’t missed a beat. My favorite songs on Back on the Road to You recall the things I’ve liked in his past work like the glorious pop of “There Goes a Brooklyn Girl” made me think of Never Home’s “I’m Not Hypnotized” and the five-minute long instant classic “Somewhere Love” has the same melancholy vibe of his masterpiece Blue Days, Black NightsThe first song, “Back on the Road to You,” and the last, “The I Really Miss Ya Blues,” bookend the album and express the feelings of long-time Johnston fans who, for nearly a decade, have had the really miss him blues. Favorite track: “There Goes a BrooklynGirl

Karen, Karen (Old Bad Habits Label)








Karen is a British supergroup made up of musicians who have worked with other bands: Davey Woodward on vocals and guitar (The Brilliant Corners, The Experimental Pop Band, Davey Woodward and the Winter Orphans), Hugo Morgan on bass (The Heads, Loop), and Tom Adams on drums (Beatnick Filmstars, Secret Shine, The Total Rejection). Karen released an EP, Filwood Broadway in 2018 and the self-titled release Karen is advertised as their first and only album. Woodward’s songs chronicle working class Brits (“Carrier Bag”) and rocky romances (“Too Late”). I’m a sucker for Woodward’s broken-hearted, yearning vocals as well as his lyrics whether it’s for a love song or a story song. Favorite track: “Estuary

Lannie Flowers, Flavor of the Month (Spyderpop Records/BigStir Records)








One of my favorite discoveries of 2021 was the reissue of Lannie Flower’s album Home. In 2018 Flowers was working on the songs that would become Home but also coming up with some that didn’t fit his vision of the album. Rather than putting those tunes aside he decided to issue them as free monthly downloads as a March to Home series. Flavor of the Month contains theses songs (remixed by Flowers) but also the new single “Summer Blue” and is the first physical release of these songs (and if you buy the vinyl for Flavor you’ll get a CD containing the original March To Home tracks). The album is a masterful collection featuring straight-up rock and roll with some power pop thrown in for good measure. Favorite track: “What Did I Know

The Shop Window, A 4 Letter Word (Bandcamp/Spinout Nuggets)








Love is all over the new album, A 4 Letter Word from The Shop Window: there’s love in the lyrics and love in the playing of the songs. Band is also a four-letter word, and this love is best shown in the way the four members of the band (at the time of the album’s recording) love playing together. This is clear as soon as the needle hits the vinyl on the album’s first song, “Eyes Wide Shut,” it’s clear from Mann’s opening licks and jangles, the solid background provided by Martin Corder’s bass and Phil Esphee’s drums, Syd Oxlee’s keyboard washes, and then the intertwined vocals of Mann and Oxlee. Favorite track: “Lay of the Land

Josh Rouse, Going Places (Yep Roc Records)








I’ve been a fan of Josh Rouse’s music since 2005’s splendid Nashville album. His latest, Going Places, is almost as good. Rouse spent the last few years his family in Spain, writing songs to be played in a small club; I had a ticket to see him in a small club here in Pittsburgh but wasn’t ready yet to be out in a group of people (my loss). With its tune-heavy songs (“Henry Miller’s Flat” and “Hollow Moon”), his gentle vocals (“Indian Summer”), and arrangements that feature the use of horns and some cool old-school organ fills (“Apple of my Eye”), Going Places is made to be heard live (but equally excellent on your stereo or headphones). Favorite track: “Apple of my Eye

Tamar Berk, start at the end (Bandcamp)








Singer-songwriters can be a serious bunch and Tamar Berk is no exception. On her second solo album (a strong follow-up to 2021's the restless dreams of youth -- no sophomore slump for Berk), she once again writes honestly about adult relationships. Perhaps not intended as a concept album, the album opener, “Your Permission,” opens the door for her to put on various moods and attitudes in her songs: “Can I ask your permission/To be someone else today/To say what I want to say/In a different sort of way.” The songs range from rockers (“real bad day”) to piano-based confessionals (“you already knew”) and dancing-around-the-living-room pop (“alone tonight”). Favorite track: “tragic endings

SUPER 8, Universal Journey (Bandcamp)








Universal Journey from SUPER 8 aka Trip aka Paul Ryan is an out-of-this-world delight. The album is the first since 2020’s collaboration on the Lisa Mychols and SUPER 8 album (Mychols provides guest vocals on many of Universal Journey’s songs).  The opening and closing tracks on Universal Journey (“Universe,” “Feel,” and “The World Is Happening”) make up a soundtrack to a viewing of the incredible Webb telescope photos. And “Galactic 9,” with vocals from Mychols, is the sexy sound of space travel with visions of a ship full of mile-high-and -a-half members. Favorite track: “Cracks in the Pavement

The Jazz Butcher, Highest in the Land (Tapete Records)








I knew little to nothing about the band The Jazz Butcher when its leader Pat Fish died in 2021. But the people whose musical opinions I respect on Twitter had a lot to say about the importance of his music to their lives. As a result, I've been listening to, and enjoying, their final album and the first in nine years, The Highest in the Land. The album is full of wonderful tunes and there’s a block of gorgeous ones in the middle of the album: “Sea Madness,” “Don’t Give Up,” “Amalfi Coast May 1963.” It has certainly given me a good reason to take a deep dive into the band’s back catalog (founded in 1982 they had an 11- album run in the first 13 years of their career)Favorite track: “Never Give Up

The Vague Ideas, New York Letters (Trouserphonic)








New York Letters is set during the period John Lennon lived in New York between 1971 and 1980 and this unique idea is the result of a collaboration between US-based musician and writer Mare Rozzelle and UK-based songwriter and musician Glenn Prangnell. The songs take the form of letters and messages both to and from Lennon. “Bread and Jam (Letter to Julian)” fittingly recalls Double Fantasy’s “I’m Losing You” as John writing to his young son and the amazing “Revolution 9”- inspired “Prelude to the Lost Weekend” is Prangnell’s look at Lennon’s state-of-mind as he leaves Yoko. The last two songs on the album are the saddest as well as the most beautiful. “When You Turn Five (Lullaby for Sean)” is the future that neither of them will see together. And “No More Crying (Message to Paul)” is a love song to McCartney; it’s his version of “Here Today” and even begins with the same chord.  Favorite track: “No MoreCrying (Message to Paul)

Armstrong, Happy Graffiti (The Beautiful Music/Country Mile Records)








With the release of his radiant third album Happy Graffiti Armstrong (Julian Pitt) has made it clear, with his trademark DIY use of vocals, acoustic guitars, and synths, he doesn’t sound like anyone else because he has a sound all his own. One of the themes in Armstrong’s work is the idea of walking with a friend or partner and having a conversation to work out problems. In terms of musical themes “Keep on Walking,” for example, is one of Happy Graffiti’s songs in which upbeat arrangements bump up against melancholy lyrics. “Eyes Open Wide” and “In a Memory,” however, are straight-up gorgeous sad songs. Favorite track: “Songbird

Caleb Nicols, Ramon (Kill Rock Stars)








Ramon is not only the album’s title but also the last name Paul McCartney took when The Beatles had their first real gig in 1960 as the backing band for Johnny Gentle on a tour of Scotland. On “Ramon,” Nichols borrows the line “Ram on, give your heart to somebody soon” from McCartney’s RAM. Nichol’s take is just as lovely and melancholy. The centerpiece of the album is the relationship between Mr. Mustard and Captain Custard. “Mustard’s Blues” recalls McCartney’s “Let Me Roll It” and the neatly six-minute “From a Hole in the Road” (or is it a hole in the heart?) with its repeated line “I’ve been dreaming you” and then “I still dream of you” becomes a mantra. The final song on Ramon (and my new favorite Christmas song) is “I Fell in Love on Xmas Day.” Favorite track: “Ramon

Crossword Smiles, Pressed & Ironed (Big Stir Records)








Ringing guitars, short sharp bass lines, wonderful close harmonies, and tunes a-plenty, that’s what you get on Pressed & Ironed, the debut album from Crossword Smiles. The band is a brand-new collaboration between Detroit, Michigan, pop stalwarts Tom Curless (guitar, drums, and vocals) of Your Gracious Host and solo efforts and Chip Saam (bass and vocals) of The Hangabouts as well Curless’s backing band The 46% (and Neighborhood Weekly Radio’s Indie Pop Takeout).  Inspired by the sound of 80’s and 90’s college radio, Curless and Saam dip into their musical grab bags to create songs that both reflect and build on what they’ve grown up listening to. Favorite track: “Feet on the Ground


Sunday, January 1, 2023

Love is a 4 letter word

 By Henry Lipput

Love is all over the new album, A 4 Letter Word (Bandcamp/Spinout Nuggets), from The Shop Window: there’s love in the lyrics and love in the playing of the songs.

The lyrics on the album are about the many ways a person makes the journey to find or keep the love of their life. On “The Lay of the Land:” “I won't fall out with love/It’s the meaning of life.” And “Lighthouse” uses the metaphor for a beam of light that guides you to safety: “When you radiate light/It’s a window to the heart of you/A lighthouse of hope/Sending a beacon to my core.” “That Feeling” works in much the same way with a message of love lighting the way: “I’ll be your rock/On a stormy day/I’ll be your sun/When the skies are grey.”



Band is also a four-letter word, and this love is best shown in the way the four members of the band (at the time of the album’s recording) love playing together. The Show Window is obviously a tight-knight unit; two of its members, Carl Mann and Syd Oxlee, have known each other since the mid-90s.

As soon as the needle hits the vinyl on the album’s first song, “Eyes Wide Shut,” it’s clear from Mann’s opening licks and jangles, the solid background provided by Martin Corder’s bass and Phil Esphee’s drums, Oxlee’s keyboard washes, and then the intertwined vocals of Mann and Oxlee. The band is a four-man operation that operates as one and they love the distinctive sound they make. This happens throughout the album.

You may have heard the four songs The Shop Window released prior to 2021’s The State of Being Human (a year-end favorite) as well as the four before the new album but you’d be wrong to categorize the group as a singles band. A 4 Letter Word shows this talented four-some achieving so much more. You can hear it on the wondrous “Dancing Light,” the jangly “It’s by Design” with its too-quick Corder and Esphee solo, and as The Shop Window takes a trip down Morrisey-Marr lane with the dance-around-the-living room vibe of “Circles Go Round.” And that’s just for starters.


Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Three madmen but one sound

 By Henry Lipput

Madman in the Rain (The Beautiful Music), the new album from Washington, D.C.’s own Dot Dash, is a jangle-filled, melodic treat and the long-awaited follow-up to the band’s most excellent 2018 Proto Retro.

What have they been doing during the time between the albums? Well, if you follow any of the Dot Dash social media feeds, you know they’ve been touring and performing, probably playing songs from Madman in the Rain and no doubt giving audiences a thrill with the new sounds (and they're touring behind the album as well).

One of the highlights of listening to Madman in the Rain is the extremely clean mix. Producer Geoff Sanoff (he also plays keyboards on the album, occasionally channeling his inner Steve Neive) proves that the trio of Terry Banks (guitar and vocals), Hunter Bennett (bass), and Danny Ingram (drums) are equal partners in the band’s sound.



Another highlight is the clever lyrics. On “Airwaves” they use a word that gives you the (correct) impression that here is a thinking man’s jangle: “So goodbye and good luck/I hope things turn out alright/Where you’re going/In the gloaming/In the night.”

“Trip Over Clouds” has both some wordplay and Joan of Arc: “Joan of Arc/I put the fire out/But beware of sparks/It’s a lost art playing Name That Tune/While you’re whistling in the dark.” Both “Space Junk, Satellites” and “Tense & Nervous” have references to songs by The Jesus and Mary Chain, Everything but the Girl, The Cars, and The Knack. “Tense & Nervous” also tells the story of a wild road trip: “Caught a ride on a whirling tornado/Ending up in Juarez on the way to Laredo/How did I get here?/ How can I get back?/To Candy-O and Get the Knack?”


Tuesday, December 6, 2022

They’re Leaving Home

By Henry Lipput

“My House” (Bandcamp) the new single from Birmingham, UK’s 3 Little Wolves, is a song of both hope and dread.

Despite their name, 3 Little Wolves is a five-piece consisting of Paul (vocals and rhythm guitar), Corrine (keyboards and samples), Leong (lead guitar), Dale (bass), and Khay (drums). Their new song is a follow to July’s “Torch Song” and a preview of their debut album Fires in the Night being released in early 2023.



With more than a little jangle and a major, almost ominous lead guitar, “My House” is driven by thumping drums. The song’s sing-along chorus gives the band a chance to face down the situation by looking forward to a better future. “Can’t you see/We have to go/I never did anything/I never want anything.”

It’s a situation many of us have faced, whether because of a choice we’ve made or one in which we’ve had no say in the matter, causing us to leave a job, a relationship, or the place we’ve called home. You always hope things will be better on the other side.


Wednesday, November 30, 2022

This crossword is no puzzle

 By Henry Lipput

Ringing guitars, short sharp bass lines, wonderful close harmonies, and tunes a-plenty, that’s what you get on Pressed & Ironed, the debut album from Crossword Smiles (Big Stir Records).

The band is a brand-new collaboration between Detroit, Michigan, pop stalwarts Tom Curless (guitar, drums, and vocals) of Your Gracious Host and solo efforts and Chip Saam (bass and vocals) of The Hangabouts as well Curless’s backing band The 46% (and Neighborhood Weekly Radio’s Indie Pop Takeout).  Inspired by the sound of 80’s and 90’s college radio, Curless and Saam dip into their musical grab bags to create songs that both reflect and build on what they’ve grown up listening to.



“Feet on the Ground” is the blast that begins the album. It’s the sound of Big Star if Chris Bell was still in the band for the Radio City sessions (Pressed & Iron’s “Take It on the Chin” is the corresponding Alex Chilton track). Another nod to their influences is highlighted in “This Little Town.” With its Amanda Brown-sounding violin and Robert Forster-like rhythmic guitar jabs, it’s like the late, great Go-Betweens take on Simon & Garfunkel’s “My Little Town.” And what can I say about the sad and beautiful “October Leaves?” It’s a song about broken hearts that might break yours as well.

The album’s first single, “Parallel Lines,” is infused with that college radio vibe and the video would have been a staple on MTV’s 120 Minutes. The second single, “The Girl with a Penchant for Yellow,” is kicked off with an A Hard Day’s Night guitar crash and a dreamy musical phrase. It’s about a woman who wants to be noticed and packs her suitcase as if she’s leaving home; but she’s in a world of her own as she has her “ears on tight.” There’s also a man on the move with “his briefcase packed and ready to pick a fight” with the girl.

Although there’s no resolution, what is clear is the song brings along Saam’s bandmates from The Hangabouts, Greg Addington and John Lowry. Even cooler is, following the release of Pressed & Ironed, it was announced that Curless would be joining The Hangabouts and the band was working on new material for a forthcoming album. Curless and Saam will be joined by Addington and Lowry at a Record Release Party for Pressed & Ironed on January 6th at Trinity House (opening the show is Pure Pop fav Chris Richards of The Legal Matters and Chris Richards and the Subtractions)! You can get tickets here.

“Second Guesser” is a delight with some fine backing vocals (something you might have heard on a Beatles record; are they referencing “Girl” in the middle eight?) and excellent lead guitar work. Like “The Girl with a Penchant for Yellow,” but more fleshed out, it’s a story song. It’s left up to the listener as to whether these two become Terry and Julie or they never meet up because they think too much about it.