Tag Archives: music

Album Reviews

1—->3—->5
Terrible—>Fantastic

5
Cloud Cult Advice From The Happy Hippopotamus
Dolphy, Eric In Europe
Dolphy, Eric and Booker Little Live At The Five Spot
Subtle For Hero For Fool
TV On The Radio Return To Cookie Mountain

4
Air Pocket Symphony
Allen, Lily Alright Still
Clinic Visitations
Dolphy, Eric Candid Dolphy
Dolphy, Eric Caribe
Dolphy, Eric Illinois Concert, The
Dolphy, Eric and Ron Carter Out There
Dolphy, Eric and Ron Carter Where
Kode 9 featuring The SpaceApe Memories Of The Future
Koxobx U Turn
Manson, Marilyn Antichrist Superstart
Manson, Marilyn Portrait Of An American Family
Manson, Marilyn Smells Like Children
Peterwick, Jim Live At Drummond Road
Stanley Brothers Complete Mercury Recordings, The

3
Bloc Party A Weekend In The City
Dolphy, Eric and Ron Carter Magic
Dosh Lost Take, The
Flatt, Lester & Earl Scruggs Bear Family
Pure Science Fabric 05
Richards, Craig Fabric 01
Shins, The Wincing The Night Away
Stanley Brothers 1947-1949
Stanley Brothers 1949-1953

2
Clipse Hell Hath No Fury
Panic At The Disco fever You Can’t Sweat Out, A
Tortoise and Chicago Underground Trio Live [19991023]
Various Artists Nu Cool

1
Various Artists Christmas In The Stars
Kweli, Talib and Madlib Liberation
White Magic Dat Rosa Mel Apibus Drag City 2006

Album Reviews

1—->3—->5
Terrible—->Fantastic

5

4
Cooder, Ry and V. M. Bhatt A Meeting By The River
Cowie, Mike Lucid Blue
G. Love Hustle, The
Ransom, Joe FabricLive. 20

3
Condor Do It Everywhere
Dr. John Very Best Of Dr. John, The
Likwit Junkies LJs, The
Meat Katie Fabriclive.21
ZZ Top Deguello

2
Digitata Sexually Transmitted Emotions
DJ Ty Boogie Remember This 5
Gabin Mr. Freedom
Glimmers, The DJ-Kicks
T.Raumshumiere Blitzkrieg Pop
Tetrasomia Holmes Ives Presents
Various Artists Brazilectro Session 7
Various Artists Roots of Acid Jazz, The
VCR VCR

1
Astor, Alan Everything Is Possible
Caribou The Milk of Human Kindness
Glovebox Glovebox
Ninja High School Young Adults Against Suicide
Sigur Ross Takk

Country Music’s Conservative Evolution

NPR has a short piece on country music and it’s dramatic turn toward conservatism in the second half of the 20th century. It is fairly interesting, so check it out of this type of talk is up your ally.

I find the piece most useful as a jumping point for other lines of thoughts. For example, how is country music conservative at all? Have you ever met someone not in the country music industry that was pro-Republican? Growing up in West Virginia and interacting with a fair bit of folk, bluegrass, alt-country, etc. musicians has left me with confident most of them are left-leaning, pot-smoking, root-for-the-underdog types–a description that does not fit well with the Republican party.

A similar confusion of a true music scene and a its industry cousin regularly happens with hip hop/rap. What, you don’t like rap because what you hear on the radio puts you off? Oh, okay.

To return to country music for a moment, I recall that when the Dixie Chicks latest album was released, a vocal minority targeted radio conglomerates to ensure that the new album was not played on the radio. This clear anti-freedom-of-expression signal by the music terrorists was expected to doom album sales. Although I do not know what overall sales were for the Dixie Chicks’ album, it was the number one selling album on iTunes for a long time. Oh, and they won a ton of awards, too.

Last, this subject reminds me of one of my most memorable Bill O’Reilly episodes. O’Reilly was in one of his frequent disputes, this time with Ludacris, and had some major hip hop magazine editor–I think it was the editor of Source–to discuss hip hop. Immediately, the interview took a predictable turn when O’Reilly started taking the piss out of hip hop because of its sexist and violent content. In an unusual response, the interviewee began spitting out Johnny Cash lyrics, all of which were incredibly violent and overtly sexist.

The point was not to dismiss problems with hip hop–how a music genre can be problematic baffles me–but to highlight the fact that plenty of music has these elements and it should not drown out the good material, or intent, of the remaining pieces. And there’s the whole double standard (vis-a-vis race) bit, too. Heh.