Saturday, July 27, 2013

Sound City


"Sound City" is the wonderfully entertaining documentary by Foo Fighter Dave Grohl about legendary recording studio (wait for it...) Sound City, located in a dumpy part of the San Fernando Valley. It's legendary status is due to all the great (or best-selling) albums recorded there over the years. When digital recording arrived, Studio City found fewer and fewer clients, and finally Dave goes back to Sound City to remove the massive analog mixing/recording deck and put it in his own home studio.

The interviews include Tom Petty, John Fogerty, Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood, Lindsay Buckingham, Barry Manilow (!), Trent Reznor, Paul McCartney....and a cast of thousands. They all have sweet stories of how much they loved the dumpy little studio with the big sound. There are embarrassing shots of '80s hair, and confessions of crushes on the receptionist.

There's a companion CD, and it's not really the soundtrack, because most of the performances aren't in the movie (or are woefully short snippets). Paul McCartney records with the remaining members of Nirvana, and it's in his throat-ripping mode. For me, the best song on the CD features Trent Reznor (Nine Inch Nails) and Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age) on the grindingly mesmerizing "Mantra". Lee (Fear) Ving's "Your Wife Is Calling" is fun, and I wouldn't be surprised if there's a knowing reference to it in a Simpson's episode someday.

As Dave says about the studio, "it might not be pretty, but it's for f-ing real". It's a fond look back at a process and a legacy that's still hanging on, thanks to fans like Dave Grohl. 

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Cowabunga, it's surf music!

 Summer's here and the time is right for waxing down our surfboards. I guess...  Never ever surfed, but I did own a pair of baggies once! Still, I listen to way more surf music than my wife can stand. Best overall collection is the "Cowabunga" box set, from which I burned off a sampling, from "Mr. Moto" by the Belairs to more contemporary tracks like "Killer Dana" by the Chantays and the smokin' live track "Honeybomb" by the Mermen.
 
   "Back to the Beach" had a fun soundtrack, with Annette updating "Jamaica Ska" with Fishbone, and an astounding version of "Pipeline" with Stevie Ray Vaughan and the Father of the Surf Guitar, Dick Dale. What was amazing about their version for me was that the howling, shrieking guitar was Dale's, not Stevie Ray. (Their appearance in the movie is criminally brief.)  
 
"Get A Board" is a collection of nobody you've ever heard of, but that's common in many surf collections. They're full of bands that never made it out of their local scene but still managed to put out great music (before radio became conglomerized and homogenized). Same with soul and R&B -- there's a wonderful show Saturday afternoons on KSER (The Dusties Show) that regularly features a Top 30 Countdown from a radio station in say, Chicago, from the early '60s -- and two-thirds of it is music you've never heard of because radio hadn't yet been sanitized so that you'd hear the same thing from coast to coast.
The 2 "Surf & Drag" comps are cool, and feature way better sound than "Get A Board" or "Pebbles", which are mostly compiled from scratchy 45s. "S&D" features many of the usual suspects (Boyce & Hart, Gary Usher, Roger Christian, future Beach Boy Bruce Johnston) because they were all over each other's records, and Brian Wilson might pop in to lend a background vocal or two. It didn't seem like a rivalry, just everyone pitching in to bang out as much product possible to sell. And you gotta love the Rat Fink covers!
One of the more interesting tracks on "Pebbles" --beside Dave Edmund's version of "New York's A Lonely Town", retitled "London's a Lonely Town (When You're the Only Surfer Boy Around") -- is the Gambler's "LSD-25". The liner notes suggest that way before the hippies discovered acid, surfers were regularly dosing themselves with LSD. Don't know how true that is, but it sounds like some historian has their work cut out for them!
"Summer Beach Party" was disappointing for me, because I was hoping for more of the songs that Annette would sing as she walked along the 'beach' (the set) with the 'moon' (lighting) illuminating her as she wondered why love was so confusing. I actually liked those songs! Still, we do get Nancy Sinatra singing "Geronimo" (and that sound you're hearing is Frank Sinatra turning in his grave.)                                                                                                                     
                                                                                       
 

Monday, July 8, 2013

Neil Finn: Brothers Again, and Return of the House

Neil got some great merchandising advice somewhere, because from here on, most CDs feature "Expanded Editions", most often a bonus DVD with bonus tracks and live versions. Yeah, it sucks that the initial CD comes out, and then later, presto-change, bonus stuff! Oh well, maybe it's a label decision...


                                                                                                                                                        
 In 2005, we get Finn Brother, Mach 2: "Everyone Is Here". Sigh. There are some excellent songs, and the DVD extras are really special, but...I don't know, there must be some strict timetable involved that requires Neil to release an album, ready or not. Again, some VERY good songs, but the program/skip button got a workout. I do watch most of the DVD tracks a lot, and for sheer inspiration, "Anything Can Happen" (both CD and DVD versions) is primo.

Then, in 2007, Neil reforms Crowded House and releases "Time On Earth". It's dedicated to late drummer Paul Hester, whose recent suicide was devastating to family, band and fans alike. As someone who has a number of family members who suffer from depression, the specter of suicide is always the unwelcome guest at the party, the unspoken question, the dark cloud. Suicide can seem like the only way out when you're in a dark, painful space. Only if you're lucky enough to have the clouds clear can you see how wrong that thinking is. I don't think it's the selfish choice we sometimes paint it as, but afterwards, the pain remains, nothing is fair, nothing makes sense, and the wound never really heals.

So it's no surprise that "Time On Earth" album sounds sad and emotionally raw. I respect Neil's courage and determination to forge on, but despite contributions from Johnny Marr and the Dixie Chicks, it's too sad. But at least Neil sports his latest spiky/tousled haircut!

...2010, and Crowded House releases "Intriguer" -- sigh of relief, thank God, it's not great but it sounds like a band on the mend. This one also comes with a DVD featuring 'live in the Neil's den' footage, and we get to see Sharon Finn singing back-up.



This album is a refreshing collection, and Neil's absurd mustaches lend welcome humor. Neil's charity work continues, with another version of the 7 Worlds Collide project released (unheard by me). Nice to see that the random (?) bandmates of the earlier project find ways to continue the partnerships. More evidence that family is one of the Finn cornerstones. 

Monday, July 1, 2013

Neil Finn, Part II: Solo and Otherwise

1995's "Finn Brothers" is another attempt for Neil and Tim to record together (the first attempt morphed into Crowded House's "Woodface"). The 1995 version has some interesting experiments, has more of a South Pacific feel, but the songs don't really gel for me. I like "Mood Swinging Man", "Last Day of June", and rilly like "Angel's Heap", "Paradise" and "Suffer Never". I'd actually missed this album when it was released, but a later live DVD featured some of the songs, and I was impressed, even more so when, with "Suffer Never", for example, I discovered that the fantastic live version (with members of Radiohead) owed everything to the original album version. So, 5 or so good songs, but not a home run for me.

Neil's true 'solo' release, "Try Whistling This", came out in 1998. My copy was either a cut-out or a promo -- either way, my good luck! A handful of various producers, rotating band members -- a recipe for disaster in some hands, but Neil and his latest crop of songs are the focus, and there are many excellent songs: "Souvenir", "Try Whistling This", "She Will Have Her Way" (very Beatle-y), "Sinner", "Astro", "Faster Than Light", and the perfect closer "Addicted". Okay, maybe it's a bit fussy production-wise on some songs, but that just means there are subtle touches to discover after the first few listens.

One of the things I really enjoy about Neil's lyrics is that they are both personal and universal, obscure and specific. Songs like "Into Temptation" or "Hole in the River" are fairly straightforward, as is "Addicted" -- but then he'll throw in a metaphor that I don't quite understand, so I have to fill in the blanks and take a guess. I get to find my own meaning in the song; given a sketch of what it's generally about, I get to infer my own resonance.

I was lucky enough to find a copy of the DVD "Neil Finn: Sessions at West 54th", a short-lived live-in-the studio series, hosted by David Byrne (!) This features Neil performing tracks from "Try Whistling This", plus a few Crowded House songs. Best part: as the show opens and Neil bounces onstage, he walks past the acoustic guitarist -- who looks maybe 15. Turns out it Neil's son, and this was my first indication how important family is to Neil. Later albums and DVDs feature so many family members, it's like a family reunion, with music!






Neil's album "One Nil" came out in 2001 as an import, and, spiffed up, resequenced, with 2 newer songs, came out here in 2002 as "One All". The 2 new songs on "All" are better than the ones dropped from "Nil", but the mix on "All" is a little too cleaned up for me. "Lullaby Requiem", a song about the passing of Neil's mother, goes a little over the top with the childen's choir, but in this instance, it's understandable.

               


2001 also saw another project from "Neil Finn and Friends: Live at the St. James", a project where Neil invites friends like Lisa Germano, Eddie Vedder, Johnny Marr and more (including 2 members of Radiohead) to New Zealand to rehearse a batch of Neil songs, among others, and perform them live. It's not the tired 'supergroup' concept, but more of a 'let's toss it together and see what sticks' fun experiment. I had the CD, but got rid of it when I saw the DVD. The DVD has 26 performances, the CD maybe 14 or 16 -- and it's so sad! The CD reflects the loss of Neil and Tim's mother, among others, and it's skewed to the view of someone coming to terms with mortality. The DVD, on the other hand, feels more like a celebration, and it includes Tim singing "I See Red" with Eddie Vedder, backed by (Neil's son) Liam's band, as Neil watched from a couch just off the stage -- you can't beat that! Johnny Marr also performs a song of his that I have yet to find anywhere else, and Neil does a cover of The Smith's "There Is A Light That Never Goes Out". It's also fun to see Lisa Germano, whose own material tends to be dark and introspective, step up and be fully and joyfully involved in the proceedings. This is one of my favorite DVDs, ever.


Next time: Finn Brothers once again, and the return (?) of Crowded House.