Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Put me on top (Aimee Mann) (LP 3049 - 3055)

Aimee Mann  Whatever (CD, Geffen Records, 1993) **** 

Aimee Mann  I'm With Stupid (CD, Geffen Records, 1995) *** 

Aimee Mann  Magnolia (Soundtrack) (CD, Reprise Records, 1999) *** 

Aimee Mann  Bachelor No. 2 or: The Last Remains Of the Dodo (CD, V2 Records, 2000) ***** 

Aimee Mann  Lost In Space (CD, V2 Records, 2002) **** 

Aimee Mann  The Forgotten Arm (CD, SuperEgo Records, 2005) **** 

Aimee Mann  @#%&*! Smilers (CD, SuperEgo Records, 2008) **** 

Aimee Mann  Charmer (Vinyl, SuperEgo Records, 2012) **** 

GenreAlt-pop, Indie-rock 

Places I remember: Real Groovy Records, JB Hi Fi, Fopp, HMV 

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Red Vines

Gear costume: I Was Thinking I Could Clean Up For Christmas

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

Active compensatory factors
: Red Vines was my first clue that I was on to a winner with Aimee Mann. So, I bought Bachelor No. 2, then Lost In Space, and then...I was gone burger.

There were a lot of traumas in her family background (long story short: an affair by her mother led to a divorce when Aimee was 3, then a kidnapping by her mother, and a second kidnapping/ rescuing by her father) which have surely influenced her view of life and relationships. Naturally, that kind of PTSD was going to eventually emerge in her artistic life. It's amazing that she's as well adjusted as she appears to be.

Her first solo album, Whatever, came after she left the band 'Til Tuesday. What a hilarious title - this is not music that is tossed off with a shrug of the shoulders. It's on Geffen, has both Roger McGuinn and Jim Keltner guesting and is a clear statement of intent: erudite songs, sung well, catchy melodies and with a sting in the tail/tale. 

She is amazing, is Aimee Mann. 

Follow up, I'm With Stupid, breaks out the electric guitars and boosts the bass, thus creating a tougher sound - more alt-rock than indie-pop. The three minute song length remains intact and as a second album it successfully shows a different side to Aimee's skills.

The Magnolia soundtrack came next (the film starred Tom Cruise so it generated wide exposure). Aimee features heavily (there are tracks by Supertramp and Gabrielle as well which jar a tad). A few of the songs were from earlier in her career and a few would turn up on her next studio album.

Her cover version of Nilsson's One is fantastic - she makes the song her own.

As I said above, it was Bachelor No 2 (etc) that gave me the chills when I first heard it. I couldn't stop playing it! I think it's her most commercial album, ironic given Geffen wouldn't release it because they didn't hear any singles. Yet Red Vines made for a superb single. 

The album was released by Mann independently on her own label - SuperEgo, and was a triumph!

Artistically, I think it's her first classic album. It sounds terrific and every song hits home. It sounds effortless too, which means it's assured and the result of Aimee's confidence.

The momentum was maintained for Lost In Space. By now the Aimee Mann style for textured, complex, wryly sardonic songs was embedded. She delivers again on this album.

The Forgotten Arm
is a concept album (about two characters who try to escape their problems but end up worse off) but still contains '
coolly elegant pop arrangements and displays of tart wordplay' according to one reviewer.

I can hardly ever follow the story line on concept albums so I just enjoy the songs and the performances. This one returns to a more alt-rock sensibility for the most part. I have to applaud her ambition with this album - and trying for something new.

@#%&*! Smilers
 has Aimee returning to a simpler, song-based process after The Forgotten Arm. It's reminiscent of Bachelor No. 2 and therefore it's hardly surprising it's one of my favourites. The piano and horn arrangement on Medicine Wheel are brilliant.

I think that's the thing with Aimee's songs. The brilliance factor is high, and consistent throughout these albums and therefore it's hard not to get complacent. 

The final album in my list is Charmer from 2012. It's the only one of hers I have on vinyl which is a shame. The packaging on her CDs and Charmer is usually superb. definitely value for money after she left Geffen.

Charmer is not a lot different to her previous work - melodies, sparky lyrics, hooks aplenty. Her standards remain high. I've yet to hear a bad or uninspired album from her.

Where do they all belong? I have a few gaps to plug post Charmer but I'm not sure if I'll chase her Christmas album from 2006.

Lucky star (Madonna) (LP 3038 - 3048)

Madonna  Madonna (CD, Sire Records, 1983) ****  

Madonna  Like A Virgin (Vinyl, Sire Records, 1984) *** 

Madonna  Like A Prayer (Vinyl, Sire Records, 1989) **** 

Madonna  Bedtime Stories (CD, Sire Records, 1994) **** 

Madonna  Something To Remember (CD, Sire Records, 1995) *** 

Madonna  Ray Of Light (CD, Sire Records, 1998) ***** 

Madonna  Music (CD, Warner Bros Records, 2000) **** 

Madonna  American Life (CD, Warner Bros Records, 2003) **** 

Madonna  Remixed & Revisited (CD, Warner Bros Records, 2003) **** 

Madonna  Confessions On A Dance Floor (CD, Warner Bros Records, 2005) **** 

Madonna  MDNA (CD, Interscope Records, 2012) *** 

GenreSynth pop, pop 

Places I remember: Shona Walding collection, Second hand shop, Music shop in Richmond (Nelson), Real Groovy Records, The Warehouse, Fives (Leigh-on sea),

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Holiday, Like A Prayer; Sky Fits Heaven (Ray Of light)

Gear costume: Till Death Do Us Part (Like A Prayer)

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

Active compensatory factors
: I find myself owning quite a few Madonna albums. She's had an incredible career.

It was the Live Aid appearance from 1985 that sealed the deal for me as it showed that Like A Virgin wasn't a fluke. Instead, she was a great performer - she put on a show that day and then some - a star was born, and I was onboard! When she did Holiday I was hooked! I still love that song.

Plus, of course, she looked really cool! A full length Madonna poster that I had on my classroom wall was very popular with the boys. 

That first album has some excellent songs apart from Holiday - Borderline, and Lucky Star. Of course, this being dance pop and 1983, the music leans heavily on synths and drum machines but her sheer presence transcends those production ticks. It's quite an assured start!

Her second album created a splash on NZ radio with the title track. So much so that the album went to number one! Except, I didn't initially buy a copy - mine would come many years later.

I was listening, but, being a tad music snobbish, I thought it was a kind of novelty song - done for shock value rather than something of substance. 
Her voice also sounded too high - kind of helium like, which meant I also avoided buying her next album - True BlueAs I said, it would take her Live Aid performance a year later to prove how wrong I'd been.  

It was her fourth album that won me over (I still don't have a copy of True Blue). The video for Like A Prayer was on high rotate on TV video shows and the time was right to jump onboard. These songs finally sounded like rock songs, rather than dance songs. I bought it in 1989 and the patchouli oil fragrance is still on the inner cover.

I sat out Erotica and her Sex book (I saw a copy and it was hardcore, and decidedly unsexy it seemed to me), but I was back for Bedtime Stories, her version of Marvin's Let's Get It On. I mean by that - romance and softness replaced the hard grind of Erotica. And it was good!

The thing I like about this one is the unified vision and sound. It's great for evening listening. As is the compilation album Something To Remember, which came out the next year.

It was an interesting presentation of her softer side via a collection of ballads. It 
included a reworked version of Love Don't Live Here Anymore as well as three new songs and a cover of Marvin Gaye's I Want You

Both of those albums righted the ship but then her next phase kicked off in spectacular fashion with the 5-star classic, Ray Of Light. Her voice was more mature, stronger and now an instrument of power.

Her collaborations with William Orbit resulted in a more experimental direction for this album and with Mirwais Ahmadzaï on the next one.

Ray Of Light
was an important stylistic shift and started the move towards more experimental genres like ambient and Eastern flavours. Important because she never stood still for long and this pioneering spirit continued on Ray Of Light. She wasn't ever a follower - up to this point at least, she was the innovator.

There are many highlights but I always come back to a couple of songs like Frozen and Sky Fits Heaven - one of her best ever songs.

Madonna emerged in 2000 on Music with a new look - as a cowgirl! The music wasn't a deep dive into country though. Instead, the experimenting with different genres continued, effectively too for the most part. I could probably live without the vocoder effects because those kinds of gimmicks tend to age quickly.

Her version of American Pie shows she doesn't need gimmicks, although the song ends abruptly - I'd love to hear a full version of the song.

American Life
is kind of Music Part 2. There are again some great moments, like Hollywood, Die Another Day and the title track and the vocoder is retained.

Madonna's Remixed & Revisited is a second compilation in my list (I've not included the straight Best of compilations). It's a seven track EP companion to American Life. Madonna's work lends itself to this remixed format and this EP provides value for money as it includes some MTV performances as well.

That includes her Like A Virgin/ Hollywood medley with Christina Aguilera, Britney Spears and Missy Elliot - worth the price of the EP on its own!

She was riding a real wave of commercial and artistic success and Confessions On A Dance Floor continued the momentum.

I got this while living in England and it was played a lot when we lived in Leigh-on-sea. Particular favourites are Hung Up and Sorry. Feels a lot more autobiographical in parts. The song for New York, for instance, feels like a heartfelt paean to her city.

I bought her next album - Hard Candy, but I sold it pretty quickly as it didn't do it for me. I was back on board for MDNA though.

At this point it's a little hard to see where Lady Gaga ends and Madonna starts. Certainly the harder edged dance pop of Lady Gaga has been an influence on MDNA.

This album reflects the Madonna post-divorce from Guy Ritchie in typical tough post-divorce fashion (Gang Bang is pretty nasty).  

It's a good album, different in its own way to Music, Ray Of Light, and American Life, but also linked to those other albums. There weren't too many hits on the album, at the end of the day.  

Where do they all belong? I haven't bothered with her last few albums, even though the response to both was positive. 

Madonna continues to defy the odds, she's not getting any younger, and delivers cool dance pop into the 2010s. How long can she continue with this kind of material though? She hasn't put out an album since Madam X in 2019 so the next one should be interesting as she closes in on her seventies.

Searching (Lynyrd Skynyrd) (LP 3036)

Lynyrd Skynyrd  Gimme Back My Bullets (Vinyl, MCA Records, 1993) ***  

GenreSouthern rock 

Places I remember: Margie's brother's collection.

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Searching

Gear costume: Give Me Back My Bullets

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

Active compensatory factors: I've written about the other Skynyrd albums I own before, both the studio efforts and the live ones.

Their fourth studio album came to me via Margie's brother who used to be a rep for Festival Records. I sold his collection for him (we had a 50-50 deal). He had them in old cardboard boxes and hadn't looked after them really. So, I sorted them out, cleaned them, priced them and sold them for him. Along the way I spotted a few to keep and this was one of them.

Tom Dowd was the producer chosen for this set of songs and it's not really a happy marriage. The recording just doesn't sound as exciting as their earlier studio efforts (I don't own Nuthin' Fancy*).

There are a couple of good songs but the album is a bit inconsistent, and the JJ Cale cover this time out - The Same Old Blues Again falls flat.

Where do they all belong? *I really should grab a copy of their third album, Nuthin' Fancy. I'm not sure why I haven't done that along the way.

And, that's if for L! Madness kicks off the M's next post.

Out on a limb (Lunatic Soul) (LP 3030 - 3035)

Lunatic Soul  Lunatic Soul (CD, Kscope Records, 2008) ****  

Lunatic Soul  Lunatic Soul II (CD, Kscope Records, 2010) ****  

Lunatic Soul  Impressions (CD, Kscope Records, 2011) *** 

Lunatic Soul  Walking On A Flashlight Beam (CD, Kscope Records, 2014) ***** 

Lunatic Soul  Fractured (CD, Kscope Records, 2017) ****

Lunatic Soul  Under the Fragmented Sky (CD, Kscope Records, 2018) ****

Genre: Prog rock

Places I remember: Fopp, HMV

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Cold (Walking on the Flashlight Beam)

Gear costume:
Out On A Limb (first album)

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

Active compensatory factors
: It's maybe a little hard for the uninitiated to figure out where Riverside ends and Lunatic Soul begins, even though they go in different directions.

Both are the musical children of Mariusz Duda - Polish bass guitarist, singer and composer extraordinaire.

Lunatic Soul began life as a side project for Duda - a very prog rock thing to do. The sound on the first album is a lot more experimental, atmospheric and short of guitars (generally, Riverside are big on guitars and prog metal sounds). Instead, it has ambient passages and uses electronic soundscapes to project a pretty heavy sound - the project is named Lunatic Soul remember.

The second album veers away from prog metal even more with hypnotic beats and electronics taking centre stage. It even sounds vaguely Middle Eastern at times. The lyrics by Duda maintain a very introspective stance throughout.

Duda was a busy guy - his third album under that name came out a year after Lunatic Soul II. 

Impressions is an album employing ambient sounds and with no vocals. Each of the tracks is called Impression I to VIII. It's another successful experiment. The ambient nature means it floats by very pleasantly.

Lunatic Soul took a bit of a rest as Riverhead were reactivated, but were then back for 2014's Walking On A Flashlight Beam.

Duda appears a lot more like his prog rock self on this one. The vocals are back and the songs are back. Not only that but they are prog rock length - in fact Pygmalion's Ladder is over 12 minutes long. The interest is sustained during these longer songs. I think this one is Lunatic Soul's best album to this point. 

Fractured
continues the momentum. Like the title and the cover image it moves the Lunatic Soul sound forward. As he said prior to its release: 
I’d call it dark melancholic trance with more electronics and more powerful sounds. But there will also be some lyrical fragments, and a couple of tracks will feature a symphonic orchestra I have worked with for the first time in my career.

The almost techno beats do take a little getting used to, but his bass sounds, his vocals, and other instrumental textures like sax contribute to the success of Fractured.

The final album in my list is Under The Fragmented Sky from 2018. It was intended as an addendum to Fractured but grew legs into a full album. It has predominately instrumental passages compared to Fractured but also builds well on that earlier album.

Where do they all belong? Their latest album from 2020 - Through Shaded Woods, so far has alluded me - will look for that one, although I'm not desperate for it. A lot more to come when we get to Riverside!

Sunday, January 5, 2025

Ain't it somethin' (Lyle Lovett) (LP 3029)

Lyle Lovett  I Love Everybody (CD, MCA Records, 1994) ***  

Genre: Country

Places I remember: Another one from Shona Walding

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Just The Morning

Gear costume: Record Lady

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

Active compensatory factors: I wouldn't normally buy an album by Lyle Lovett, not that I have anything against him, just that I prefer my country like Dwight Yokam.

This is a bit of a weird one in his catalogue - it's his fifth album but it consists of his early songs written prior to the recording of his first album.

I don't know enough about his work to consider this as better or worse than others. It's an interesting, stripped back set of songs including some wry observations and some great musical accompaniment.

Lyle has a nice and easy, laconic delivery that sells these songs well. I bet it sold a truckload!!

Where do they all belong? A one-off. As I said, I'm more of a Dwight guy.

Saturday, January 4, 2025

Can't explain (Long-View) (LP 3028)

Long-View  Mercury (CD, 14th Floor Records, 2005) ****  

Genre: Indie rock

Places I remember: I'm not sure how I ended up with this album. I can't explain.

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Further

Gear costume: Can't Explain

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

Active compensatory factors: Long-View are an English indie rock band, or were. This was their only album and I don't know too much about them.

So, to the album. It's pretty cool - tuneful, catchy, soaring, guitar based indie rock that still sounds great many years on.

Looks like Ron McVey is the main man of the foursome. He wrote most of the songs, sings and plays guitar. The band are rounded out by a drummer/bassist and a fellow guitarist. 

All very likeable. Why didn't they kick on and become huge?

Where do they all belong? A real one-off. I wonder what happened to them. An enigmatic presence in the collection.

Like I used to do (Seldom Scene) (LP 3027)

Seldom Scene  Long Time...Seldom Scene (CD, Smithsonian Folkways Records, 2014) ****  

GenreBluegrass 

Places I remember: JB Hi Fi

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Hickory Wind (Emmylou Harris is the guest)

Gear costume: What Am I Doing Hangin' Round (yes, The Monkees song)

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

Active compensatory factors: I know - I'm currently working through the L's, so what's the happs?

Sorry team, I misfiled this one, thinking the band was called Long Time...Seldom Scene. Doh. 

Never the mind. The Hamilton County Bluegrass Band albums have whetted my appetite for this most American of musical genres. So, when I saw it in the sale bins at JB Hi Fi it was a no-brainer.

Seldom Scene have been at it for many years, since 1971 in fact. They know what they are doing! Apart from the two featured songs above, there are some excellent covers on this set - songs by Dylan, John Prine, John Fogerty and of course, what would a bluegrass album be without a song by Bill Monroe?

Where do they all belong? Needs to go into its proper place in the S's.