PRINCE COVERS: A to Z

Posted on June 5th, 2009 by ekko

Okay, so this is a follow up to my review of Prince’s new double-release, Lotus Flower etc., a very strong album set.  Doing an A to Z of Prince covers is like herding cats: There’s only a few I’m reallly gonna get.  There’s a whole universe of his stuff.  What I’ve tried to do here is post only indie songs, and a wide variety of both the song covered and the genre of the cover, showing how his brilliant songwriting crosses barriers.  Z will be for zip, so don’t have a heart attack that not all songs are individually linked.

This is NOT Prince.

This is NOT Prince.

Prince: Great musician, or the Greatest Musician of Our Generation?

A is for When Doves Cry-The Afghan Whigs.

B is for The Beautiful Ones-Besnard Snakes. I love this kinda-creepy version of a just-mediocre Prince original.

C is “c”ouldn’t find a C that was really up to par, so I’m going with a second “B.”  But before you start bitching, know that it is Clash related.  So, maybe “C is for Clash Related”!  1999-Big Audio Dynamite

D is for When Doves Cry-Ani Difranco.  The angry folk version.  Really hot.

E is for If I Was Your Girlfriend-eels.

E is also for Manic Monday-Ephemera.  If you thought this was a Bangles original, you need to go back to school.  He actually wrote it for Vanity 6, one of his original girl groups from the ’80s.  I really like this version because it’s slightly slower and focuses almost exclusively on the vocals, which truly drive this song.

This is NOT Prince, either.

This is NOT Prince, either.

F should be for the Foo Fighters’ take on Darling Nikki, but it was released on a major label. Someday, maybe Dave’ll do the Radiohead thing.  He seems so perfectly disposed to be independent.

G is for Kiss by Garaj Mahal.  A bluegrass Prince cover!

H is for Rasberry Beret-Hindu Love Gods.  Re-released on Rhino’s independent label, “Encore,” this band was basically Warren Zevon fronting R.E.M.  A truly amazing album, eponymous, which all of you should run out and get right now.  Destroy anyone in your way.  In fact, I don’t usually sponsor a link to a store–I think you all should populate brick-and-mortar facilities–but for this record, I’m making an exception.  Go buy it right now.  Serioussly.

I is for I Feel For You-Izbella.  A Prince original that was done better by Chaka Kahn.  It’s strange how the only people who can do Prince songs better than Prince are females.  First Chaka on this one, then Sinead on “Nothing Compares 2 U.”  Of course, those ladies are such extraordinary vocalists, I’d listen to them sing the phone book.  (Not really.)

J is for Purple Rain-Jarflys.

K is for Love Bizarre-Keller Williams.  My absolute favorite Sheila E tune.

L is for Little Red Corvette-Pete Thurston.

M is for I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man-My Morning Jacket.  One of the best Prince covers ever.  Hands down.

N is for Starfish and Coffee-Matt Nathanson.  This is definitely my favorite of Prince’s lesser-known songs.  It’s sweet, sexy, cool.  Off his Sign O’ The Times record, his second best release.

O is for Of Montreal–two covers: Rasberry Beret and Baby I’m a Star.  Such a fun live band.

P is for Pac!  Pac’s Life-Tupac.

R is for When Doves Cry-Damien Rice.  An amazing acoustic version that will break your heard.

S is for the S part of Tegan and Sara, and their brilliant cover of When U Were Mine, which actually trumps Cyndi Lauper’s, which actually trumped Prince’s own version.

T is for All the Critics Love U In New York-TR3.  A live version that I included for two reasons: It’s so bizarre, and it’s a song that rarely gets the props it deserves.  Jazzy as hell.

And this is NOT Prince Harry.

And this is NOT Prince Harry.

U is for unable to find a good U, so here’s another B:When Doves Cry-Be Good Tanyas.

V is for very near the end, which is where we’re getting.

W is for Alex Westerberg.   I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man-The Replacements.  The 1980s indie/garage rock version.

X is this spot, to remind you to Digg, Stumble, and do whatever else to this post.  Come on, guys, don’t I deserve as much hits as MOKB?  (Answer me yes or don’t answer at all.  And clap if you believe in fairies.)

Y and Z are for Your Zipfile. Here it is.  Dig it.

PICTURE OF THE DAY (with Santigold!)

Posted on June 5th, 2009 by ekko

BONUS REMIX!

King Britt adds his classic boom bap to ‘Anne’ from Santigold’s debut album.

Anne-Santigold (King Britt remix) (YSI)

COMICS BREAK!

Posted on June 4th, 2009 by ekko

I don’t review comic books here, generally, although I may start doing so.  Increasingly, I’m discovering (thanks to my two boys) that comics have come along way since their low point in the late 1990s.  And I’m not talking about indie books, I’m talking Marvel.  X-Men is still an over-crowded, jumbled mess with far too many Wolverines running around, but the relaunch of New Mutants is proving to be a fantastic effort.  Now, I’m a 1970s-80s comic nerd, so I missed out on Legion–he’s the villain in the series—but my ignorance doesn’t detract a bit.  To his credit, Mr. Wells doesn’t waste a lot of time backstory or exposition: He assumes your knowledge, but doesn’t punish your lack of it.  In other words, I can figure out what’s going on pretty easily, and I dig it.  I wonder if the return of Chris Claremont to his own X-Men book will be equally as good?  Claremont was one of my favorite authors up until about Uncanny X-Men #200, but when I look at those books now, they seem wordy.  I’m hoping he hasn’t lost his touch for crafting great stories, but has learned a little bit from the Frank Miller school of letting artists tell the story, too.  (This isn’t to say that verbal economy is always good—Grant Morrison is unintelligible, largely because he refuses to tell the reader what the hell is going on.)


More than the New Muties, though, I’m here to write about the Amazing Spider-Man.  It was my favorite comic, hands down, when I was a kid, and it’s fast becoming my favorite again.  I know most people today favor the heavy-handed grit of Punisher (which is also pretty good these days, what with his Ant Man helmet and Iron man repulsors) or the pseudorealism of Daredevil (excellent) or the cynicism of Captain America (also excellent) or the adult humor of the new Deadpool (again, excellent), but for me, at bottom, the best comics will always be fun.  Yeah, it sucks to fight supervillains, but it’s fun to swing on webs and jump around and be twentysomething forever.  If it’s not fun then, eventually, the comic book will become a slog.  (See Batman.)

I’ve been a fan of Brand New Day since its inception.  The conceit (a deal with the devil essentially reboots a franchise) was kind of stupid, but I accepted it as a mechanism to get Spidey back to his roots.  I’ve loved that the book has stayed clear of most of the downright depressing details of the Marvel Universe–ever since they killed Cap, the MU has become dark and, frankly, overly interwoven, making staples like The Avengers basically unreadable.  Brand New Day has been about introducing wild new villains (Freak, Menace, e.g.), and even managed to tell a pretty complex tale of betrayal and police corruption without becoming heavyhanded.  It comes out three times a month, so there’s a few missteps (the Jackpot story and the Flash Thompson tale are two), but on the whole, the book is both reliable and suitable to read with your kids.  If your kids were old enough to dig the films, they should like this, too.

In the latest storyline, “American Son,” Spidey ventures a little too close to the mainstream Marvel Universe: It’s a Dark Reign crossover.  Dark Reign is terrible.  That the villains have been able to take over the world makes sense in the post-Civil War MU, but it’s still a truly bad idea.  It was one thing when the X-Men made the world so cynical that you felt dirty after reading it.  It’s quite another for the entire universe to be that way.  Note to the Marvel editors: Clean up your acts and get back to making good, self-contained stories about heroes.

But “American Son” doesn’t jump in to the drudgepot with both feet.  Instead, we get to see Harry Osborn and Peter Parker tease J. Jonah Jameson (who is now, in a brilliant comedic move, the mayor of NYC), pick up chicks, and come to accept Aunt May’s pending nuptials to J.J.J.’s father.  At the same time, the book shows depth and evil as Norman Osborn draws his son into his evil web . . . Or does he?

Much of what makes Brand New Day great is that it spends most of its time on Spider-Man, and Parker is a backstory.  Author Joe Kelly is clearly increasing Peter’s facetime here, but it seems to be for a purpose—not just backstory.  And while in costume, the book continues to be, well, Amazing.  Spidey’s rooftop reality check with Wolverine, in which Logan essentially dares Spider-Man to kill Osborn, is both funny and meaningful.  Wolverine is older than about five Spider-Mans, and he shows the kind of father-figure wisdom here that’s also apparent in his relationship with Kitty Pryde (in my son’s favorite current book, Wolverine: First Class).  Oh, and I have to mention Phil Jimenez’s artwork, too.  The panels in which Spidey uses Norman Osborn as a human piñata captured movement like it was animated.  I can’t wait to see how he draws The Dark Avengers in the next issue, on sale this week . . .

A COUPLE THINGS YOU OUGHTTA CHECK OUT . . .

Posted on June 4th, 2009 by ekko

In order of preference, four albums from the mailbag:

HOTEL EDEN-“A Way Back Home” (EP)

The best thing about Hotel Eden’s debut EP, “A Way Back Home” is that it doesn’t really sound like anything else out there right now.  It’s a crisp meld of pop electronica and “real” instruments, like crispy piano’s on “The Take-Home,” with pitch-perfect pop vocals.  The songs are instantly familiar and intimate without being trite or cliché.  This is one of the best EPs I’ve heard so far this year, and should be quickly added to your collection.  You won’t regret it.  On Solar Set records.

For fans of: The Stars, A.C. Newman, Peter, Bjorn & John, Feist.

The Take Home

SIX RED CARPETS-”Nightmares + Lullabies”

Six Red Carpets‘ debut album, which you can download absolutely free right here,is a cross between Radiohead and Smashing Pumpkins.  And yes, you should find that very intriguing.  I definitely recomment that you get the whole album! (follow the link)

IN CADEO-”Making Our Graves”

In Cadeo are offering 4 out of the 5 songs on their new album, Making Our Graves, for free at their website.  Why should you care?  Because this Brooklyn-based foursome sent me those 4 songs, and I dug ‘em enough to write ‘em up without a full album review.  That’s something I almost never do.

NATSTAR

Natstar is offering his humbly titled I Am Legend mixtape for free.  It’s not bad, and you sure can’t beat the price.  Click here for a direct link for the album.

AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST . . .


I’m giving a shout out to one of my favorite directors, Sam Raimi, who scored bigtime with one of the best horror films of the past 10 years.  Go see “Drag Me To Hell.”  Even if you’re not a fan of the genre, you will enjoy his deft camera work and non-CGI fx (as well as the CGI ones, of course).  Only Raimi could make the tired gypsy curse theme fresh and innovative.  And scary!  It was very reminiscent of his great work in Evil Dead 1 and 2.  My only complaint: Where was the cameo from Bruce Campbell???

AND STILL ANOTHER LAST . . .

Cover Me has a collection of Pixies covers–the entire album, “Doolittle,” covered.  I was never a huge Pixies fan, but it’s cool to hear this blogger’s great work . . .

PRINCE AND PASSION PIT

Posted on June 4th, 2009 by ekko

Today’s review is something unusual, and not just because it’s a twofer.  It’s because I’m taking a risk by reviewing two albums that were not submitted to me, I found them on my own, and that carry with them the specter of possible litigation.

First, I’m taking a risk by reviewing Passion Pit.  The album is being released in the U.S. on Frenchkiss records, an indie label, but I’ve read that Columbia Records is handling the band’s UK promotion.  That makes it not indie.  But I’m making an exception to my indie-only rule for two reasons: It’s indie in the U.S., and it’s a really great record.

Second, I’m reviewing a Prince album.  Prince has gone independent, selling his latest (3-disc!) album on his own via his own website and at Target, but that doesn’t stop him employing Web Sheriff.  In fact, he may be the only guy who has sued more folks over music rights than the RIAA.  So why would why I give him time on my site?  One reason is: He’s the Artist.  He created the music, so I get his being possessive of it.  But more importantly, he’s one of the greatest musicians of our time, LotusFlow3r is a project worthy of bearing his name, and he’s finally released something independently, so a review fits with my purpose here on this site to promote only those artists who aren’t backed by big money publicity machines.

But legal issues aside, there’s another reason to review these albums together: They’re two sides of the same coin.  Prince, regardless of his Religious bent or his pure musical intentions, makes dance music.  It’s what he’s always done, in one form or another.  But, let’s be honest, most clubs and kids are dancing to funk and instrument-driven R&B anymore.  They’re listening to synth-and-sample driven beats that focus more on the hook and the vocals than on a groovy guitar solo or a winding sax lick.  It’s just a fact.  Prince is old, and Passion Pit are new.

Now, I’m not in any way trying to suggest that “Manners,” the brainchild of 21-year-old Michael Angelakos, approaches the musical brilliance of any of Prince’s best works (which include, let’s remember, Sign O’ the Times, Dirty Mind, The Symbol Album, and one of the greatest records of all time, Purple Rain).  But Passion Pit’s debut does rate up there in terms of quality with some of Prince’s more mediocre works (such as Come or Crystal Ball).  It’s fresh and sunny, taking familiar sounds and themes (it’s regularly compared to Brian Wilson’s Pet Sounds) to new heights, it’s catchy as hell, and it’s almost impossible to avoid dancing while it’s playing.  That’s not very different from the young Minnesotan upstart who basically smoothed out James Brown’s rough edges and sprinkled in ‘80s androgyny.  Plus, Angelakos is already known for being a studio perfectionist.  Thus, the similarities continue.  By the way, “The
Reeling” has a synth beginning that reminds of some song I can’t quite put my finger on, but I know I’ve heard it before and it’s driving me insane.  Any help out there?

As for Prince, his new one is a triple(!) album and is being sold by Target (it’s a steal—three records for $11.98) or through his impenetrably complicated and self-indulgent website.  Actually, it’s not really a triple album.  It’s two Prince albums (LOtUSFLOW3R and MPLSoUND) and the decent-but-not-great “Elixir,” the debut album release of Bria Valente.  Still, either one of the Prince records is worth twelve bucks, so even if you never give Valente a chance, you’re still ahead of the game here.  It’s amazing that after 25 years, Prince is still releasing stuff worth listening to.  Some of the stuff here has already been released, but usually in different forms as demos, live tracks, etc., and when you’ve got a double album there’s bound to be some filler.  But the good news is, there’s not a lot of it.  There’s the ‘60s groove of “Feel Better, Feel Good, Feel Wonderful” and “There’ll Never Be Another Like Me,” a nice Latin rhythm on “Love Like Jazz,” playful blues on “Colonized Mind,” and good old classic rock and roll guitar work on one of the greatest cuts here, “4Ever.”  On “Chocolate Box,” Prince manages to make dirty funk without profanity or even the suggestion of something untoward.  He does seem, literally, to be saying that he’s “got a box of chocolates that will knock the socks off” the girls.  It’s innocent, fun, and funky as hell.  But the track that will probably get the most written about it is the cover of “Crimson and Clover.”  Although it’s not unusual for Mr. Nelson to do covers in his live act, to my knowledge he’s never recorded one before.  And even if he has, he’s certainly far better known for being covered himself.  The awesome thing about this cover of the ‘60s garagepsych cover is it’s seamless melding of “Wild Thing.”  It reminds me of the great song, “Stairway to Gilligan’s Island,” in which the lyrics to the one song were sung to the tune of the other.  That’s almost what’s done here, except that Prince jumps from one song back to the other and through the last one so completely, so fluidly, and so often that both songs cease to exist, and only one remains.  Plus, the guitar solo sizzles.  “LotusFlow3r” is definitely the better of the two albums here, but both are pretty cool and it’s hard not to see them as parts of the same record (kinda like GnR’s Use Your Illusion 1&2).

So, you get two recommendations here: Prince’s Lotusflow3r and Passion Pit’s Manners.  Buy ‘em both and get ready for an enjoyable afternoon.  But you’ll have to take my word for it because there’s no way in hell I’ll post a song by either artist.  And you probably won’t see me write again about guys when I don’t feel like I can (safely) offer you a sample.  This is a one-shot, so enjoy it.

To soothe you, though, why not dig some Prince covers?

Prince covers, A to Z: Coming tomorrow.

The Reeling-Passion Pit (Mike Snow’s remix).

PICTURE OF THE DAY: Baby Pizza!

Posted on June 4th, 2009 by ekko

Following my tradition of posting grotesque and/or disturbing baby pictures.  By the way, if you all didn’t keep telling me how offensive they are, I wouldn’t keep posting them!

VARIOUS ARTISTS-”Record of the Week Club”

Posted on June 3rd, 2009 by ekko

Record of the Week Club is a great experiment for charity.  Every week, musicians would show up at a record studio with the promise to record a song under the able guidance of award -winning musician Mike Petkau (of Les Jupes, and producer of Twilight Hotel).  They didn’t know who they’d be recording with or what the song would be about.  The result?  Jazz, punk, rock, and classical musicians were paired with songwriters, rappers, and even an opera singer and a song was created.

Some of the results are quite good–like “Step Outside” a jazzy, moody tune with a punk-like instrumental break that recalls Pink Floyd in its Saucerful of Secrets days, recorded by Joel Klaverkamp (The Hummers), Dave Quanbury (Twilight Hotel) and Andrew Workman (Ian La Rue & The Condor, The Haste).  I also really dug the energy on “Wails On” by DJ Co-Op (Electronic Artist), Bob Somers (ex-Bonaduces, ex-Paper Moon) and Steve Martens (Ash Koley).  I wish I could say that every song here is a winner (I can’t), but I can say that every song brings something interesting to the table and is worth at least a few listens.  And I can also say that the vast majority of the songs are very, very good.

Order it here.  The first $100 in sales from each track will be donated to the West End Cultural Centre to support their efforts to rebuild the greatest music venue in Winnipeg.

As a taste, I’m offering “Walkman,” my favorite cut.  Dig it, then order the album.

Walkmen-Ismaila Alfa (Solo Artist) Mark Penner (Moses Mayes)

BONUS UNLIKELY PAIRINGS!

Hey Ladies Night-Beastie Boys and Kool and the Gang (Mash up)

London Calling (Clash cover)-Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Dave Grohl, Steven Van Zandt

I Saw Her STanding There-Paul McCartney and Dave Grohl

PICTURE OF THE DAY

Posted on June 3rd, 2009 by ekko

CRACKER ACOUSTIC DUO-LIVE

Posted on June 3rd, 2009 by ekko

Cracker Acoustic Duo — made up of the two founding members of Cracker, Johnny Hickman and David Lowery — live, with guest Gregory Lisher on a few tunes.  From April 1, 2009, in Santa Cruz, CA.

01. Intro
02. One Fine Day
03. Sunrise In The Land Of Milk & Honey
04. Been Around The World
05. Teen Angst
06. Guarded By Monkeys
07. Friends
08. Lonesome Johnny Blues
09. Turn On Tune In Drop Out
10. Another Song About The Rain
11. Sweethearts
12. All Her Favorite Fruit
13. Eurotrash Girl
14. Dr. Bernice
15.  St. Cajetan
Encore:
01. Big Dipper
02. Be My Love

ZIP!

HOLLYWEERD-”Candy for Kleptos”

Posted on June 2nd, 2009 by ekko

Hollyweerd

are an odd collective from Atlanta who seem into the kind of rap/funk/rock fusion originated by OutKast.  They’ve got tight lyrics and some very creative beats–some of the most interesting music I’ve heard since MF DOOM’s MMM Food album, actually.  Even the interludes are fascinating.  But I can’t say much about them because . . . I can’t figure out who they are.  Their Electricity Showroom (direct link) is also worth getting, by the way.

Tastes:

Nothing to Worry About (remix)-Peter, Bjorn, & John feat. Hollyweerd
She’s So ATL / Love My Outerspace-Hollyweerd feat. Grip Plyaz / Hollyweerd

Get the whole mixtape!

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