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Thursday, May 24, 2007
PARTY GIRL Charlie Rich The Complete Smash Sessions Polygram : 1992 [Buy It]
Our friends at Minnesota Public Radio are putting together a segment on campaign songs, so MW & MPR are forming like organized crime to pose the au courant musical question: What campaign songs should America's most enterprising and indefatigable candidates adopt?
BAM BAM Toots & The Maytals Monkey Man Berverly's : 1970 [Buy It]? UTAH MORMON BLUES Phil Pavey Available on: Jazzin' the Blues vol. 4 : 1929-1943 Document : 2000 [Buy It]? Readers of Moistworks - good news. We're opening the floor up to you! What do you think? We mean, really? We're interested. And, for once, we're talking big news: Obama, and McCain. Romney, Clinton, Edwards, and Hero Mayor Rudy G. - Important stuff!
OMG WTF LOL, right? But for serious - you're our BFF! So let us know, in the comments below. Ground rules?Surprise Us: TAKE ON ME [DEMO] A-ha [Unreleased]& Make Us Love You: NOBODY Larry Williams and Johnny Watson with the Kaleidoscope Okeh : 1967 Courtesy of [the newish & wonderful audioblog]: Office NapsTell The Truth, But Eschew The Obvious - RUN ON FOR A LONG TIME Bill Landford & The Landfordaires Columbia : 1949 Available on: There Will Be No Sweeter Sound : The Columbia/OKeh Post War Gospel Story 1947-1962 Legacy : 1998 [Buy It]& Off Point: BRENDA AND EDDIE Billy Joel Live : somewhere& Omit Those Words That You Find To Be Needless: ONCE The Feelings Dearling Darling Darla Records : 1990 [Buy It]
Bonus points for riffing off something whichever candidate you're on about said, or did, within the past few news cycles - we paying enough attention to you to know you're paying attention to that sort of thing so: we'll post the best songs next week, and who knows - you might even end up famous here or on the radio! Either way, any idiot with with a suitcase nuke can tell you that the fate of this free world we're building rests squarely and securely on your shoulders.
NB: Speaking of same, Moistworks' Astoria Bureau would like to take this opportunity to endorse Mitt Romney - who believe you us, the last thing we want is to see our friends and readers committing Sodomites and catching GommorrheaLabels: alex, country, gospel music, indie, pop, radio, reggae, soul
posted by Alex
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Wednesday, April 11, 2007
FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH Buffalo Springfield
Promo
Monterey
Smothers Bros.
FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH The Staple Singers For What It's Worth Epic : 1967 Available on: A Family Affair Kent : 2004 [Buy It]
FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH Miriam Makeba Keep Me In Mind Reprise : 1970 [Buy It]
FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH Sergio Mendes and Brasil '66 Stillness A&M : 1970 [Buy It]
WATCH THIS SOUND Slim Smith & The Uniques Camel : 1968 Available on: Best of: 1967-1969 [Buy It] Why can't my songs about trouble be popular? I ask. But people are tired. Sometimes people are tired of thinking of difficult and unpleasant things.
-Miriam Makeba
Andreas from Europe writes:Dear Moistworks folks,
as a reader from Europe I wonder if there has been, say in the last 12 or 24 months, a song (or songs) which, in your opinion, said something meaningful about the war in Iraq and the "war on terror" - we all know the classic anti-War songs, and, yes, of course, Neil Young did his (rather uninspiring, unfortunatly) share, but I sometimes have the feeling that it is a curious thing that this war is not really really really a big thing in contemporary music. This war is different from other wars, and so should the music "about it". or not ? We told Andreas that it seemed like the kind of question our readers like to answer, so let him know, in the comments below. In the meanwhile:
A HARD RAIN'S GONNA FALL The Staple Singers Use What You Got Stax : 1973 Available on: A Family Affair Kent : 2004 [Buy It]Labels: alex, gospel music, reggae, rock, soul
posted by Alex
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Wednesday, January 31, 2007
WADE IN THE WATER The Lincoln Four Quartette c. 1928 Available on: Vocal Quartets vol. 4 K/L/M (1927-1943) Document Records 2005 [Buy It]
WADE IN THE WATER The Soul Stirrers Available on: Sam Cooke's SAR Records Story: 1959-1965 ABKCO : 1994 [Buy It]
WADE IN THE WATER Booker T. & The MGs Available on: Soul Men Stax : 2003 [Buy It]
WAIT 'ROUND THE CORNER Leona & The Lovejoys Available on: The Daisy/Tiger Records Story Sundazed : 2003 [Buy It]
LET'S WADE IN THE WATER Marlena Shaw Cadet : 1966 Available on: Anthology [Buy It]
WADE IN THE WATER The Ramsey Lewis Trio Cadet : 1966 [Buy It]
"In all the songs of the slaves, there was ever some expression of praise of the great house farm," Frederick Douglass wrote in his memoirs. "Something which would flatter the pride of the owner, and if possible, draw a favorable glance from him:I am going away to the great house farm, O yea! O yea! O yea! My old master is a good old master, O yeah! O yea! O yea! But the flattery was mixed with "other words of [the slaves'] own improvising- jargon to others, but full of meaning to themselves." So, baptismal songd like "Wade in The Water" doubled as sets of instructions for escaping slaves: Wade in the water, they reminded you, so that the bloodhounds lose your scent.
The codes were subtle and/or site-specific, and not even slaves caught the gist of every song; it wasn't until his own escape that Douglass himself fully understood "the deep meanings of those rude, and apparently incoherent songs," or heard in them a "tale which was then beyond my feeble comprehension." (I've been reading, folks.)
The textual instability - an all-American slippage - gave the music much of its force, and accounts for a good deal of its crossover appeal. So, join us next week, when we trace Levi Stubb's tears straight back to the middle passage.Labels: alex, gospel music, soul
posted by Alex
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Saturday, December 30, 2006
16. CRY Joe Bataan Latin Funk Brother Fania/Vampi : 1972 [But It]
17. I NEED YOUR LOVE SO BAD Irma Thomas Imperial : 1964 Available on: Time Is On My Side Ace/Kent : 1996 [But It]
18. THANK YOU FOR SENDING ME AN ANGEL The Talking Heads More Songs About Buildings and Food WEA : 1978 [But It]
19. DEAL RAG Walter Taylor Gennett : 1930 Available on: American Primitive II: Pre-War Gospel Revenants (1897-1939) Revenant : 2005 [But It]
20. ALLAH U AKBAR Brand Nubian In God We Trust Elektra : 1992 [But It]
21. JESUS IS WAITING Al Green Call Me Hi : 1972 [But It]
22. I SHALL BE FREE Toots & The Maytals Monkey Man Trojan : 1969 [But It]
Read the first and second parts of this post.
16. At some point, this entire mix was going to be about current events; I got too depressed making that mix, and never finished it. But this was too good to leave off - another acoustic-era mash-up, set in Viet Nam, but coming soon to a theater of war near you.
17. From this Globe and Mail article:Truth be told, Hill[the guy who put the Velvet Underground Acetate, which MW posted here, up on eBay]'s not the most passionate of Velvet Underground fans. A recent graduate, in history, from Concordia University, he's president of the self-founded Irma Thomas and Minit Records Fan Club (Thomas is a New Orleans soul singer, Minit a now-defunct indie record label) and the publisher of a music fanzine called $2 (Comes with Mixtape).
"Right now I'm getting caught up in Christmas," he said. He'll be shutting up Backdoor Records and Pastries shortly to head out to Vancouver to visit his parents. Then early in the new year, he's off to Taiwan for a visit he describes as "part holiday, part scholarly." 18. Ask & receive.
19. From another article I wrote for FEED, c. 1998 or so: One label that's made inroads into the twenty-something market is John Fahey's Revenant, a two-man startup dedicated to "raw music with a strong spiritual core." Thanks to sleek packaging and articles in major rock periodicals, Revenant is spreading the old time gospel sound far beyond the borders of the Yazoo/Folkways audience. Though not limited to roots releases - their most ambitious project to date is a five-CD set of Captain Beefheart rarities - Revenant has managed to sell 10,000 copies of Dock Boggs' 20's recordings. Though hardly impressive by major label standards, the figure is more than many indie cult bands have mustered, and indicates a burgeoning market for the music. "I think people are interested in not being fooled," Dean Blackwood, Fahey's partner, e-mailed me recently: "Irony is a very important tool in the 'post-modern' age - people my age tend to use it as a primary mode of expression... I think a lot of people are just sick of it and want something direct and raw, much like they wanted when they found Elvis in '54-'55 or punk in '75 or garage rock in the '60s."
More than anything, it's Revenant's refusal to segregate its old time releases in a folk music ghetto that gives me hope for the next wave of roots music releases. Surely, seeing Charlie Patton, Charlie Feathers, and Cecil Taylor side by side in their catalog is a sign that the next generation of folk fans will judge the music I love on aesthetic, rather than ideological terms. "We are not in the business of writing theses and finding music to support them," Blackwood said. "If we don't think the music makes for compelling listening independent of some sort of analytical framework, we do our best to leave it alone." Among other things, "Deal Rag" features an early, passing reference to a certain "pig-skin game."
20. Another thing I got back into this year was 5% rap, which blossomed in the early 1990s, with groups like Brand Nubian taking a turn towards the radical, and Ice Cube producing uncompromising records by Kam and Da Lench Mob. The second iteration of "Allah u Akbar" to appear on this mix which, if it was a double-album, I'd have included the lead-off track from Kanye West's Late Registration
21. A sort of dry-run for Green's Belle album, and a song I must have listened to a thousand times this year. From Green's super-underappreciated Call Me.
22. Funny to find that this was recorded the same year as the Velvet Underground's Live 1969 - in part, because the organ, guitar, and arrangement sounds so much, and so unexpectedly like VU. And, like VU at their best, it's breathtaking.
And that, dear readers, is that. Thanks for tuning in, and see you in 2007!Labels: 5% rap, alex, gospel music, new year's mix, spanish grease
posted by Alex
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Thursday, November 10, 2005
AMAZING GRACE Rev. J.M. Gates Complete Works in Chronological Order September 1926 : Vol. 2 Document : 2005 [Buy It]
AMAZING GRACE 5 Blind Boys of Alabama Available on Collector's Edition Fuel : 2002 [Buy It]
AMAZING GRACE The Highway QC's Available on Jesus Is Waiting Collectables : 2001 [Buy It]
AMAZING GRACE The Swan Silvertones Saviour Pass Me Not Vee-Jay : 1962 [Buy It]
AMAZING GRACE The Soul Stirrers Sam Cooke's SAR Records Story 1959-1965 SAR/ABKCO : 1994 [But It]
AMAZING GRACE Aretha Franklin Amazing Grace Atlantic : 1972 [Buy It]
AMAZING GRACE John Fahey America Fantasy/Takoma : 1971 [Buy It]
AMAZING GRACE The Lemonheads Hate Your Friends Taang! : 1987 [Buy It]
When I was a wee lad growing up in the American wilderness, I thought "Amazing Grace" was a punk little ditty by the Lemonheads. When I grew to be a man, I discovered that the song has a more long-storied lineage: A Slaveship captain turned abolitionist - John Newton - wrote the words two and a half centuries ago. The melody came a few decades later. Over the years, the song as we know it's been appropriated by just about everyone - it's always been a hopeful tune for bloody times. And now, a few words on today's tracks: The good Reverend J.M. Gates used "Amazing Grace" as the occasion to descant upon the fashions of his day: "Atlanta gets her styles from New York. And New York gets her styles from Paris. And Paris gets her styles from Hell." Amen to that. Most of the great gospel quintets used "Amazing Grace" as a centerpiece of their sets - take the studio versions by the Soul Stirrers & Swan Silvertones, which couldn't be more different, or remarkable. And, of course, Aretha's sixteen-minute magnum opus is still worth a listen.Labels: alex, gospel music
posted by Alex
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