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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Bobby Rush. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Bobby Rush. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2020. december 27., vasárnap

PnM.MiX - 23 selected songs from ALLMUSIC FAVORITE BLUES ALBUMS 2020 (1h 45m)

PnM.MiX - 23 selected songs from  ALLMUSIC  FAVORITE BLUES ALBUMS 2020





2 0 2 0



Bobby Rush - Rawer than Raw /Dust My Broom

Johnny Iguana - Chicago Spectacular! / Stop Breakin' Down

Bettye LaVette - Blackbirds / Blues For The Weepers


Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters - Rise Up / Higher Love


Dion - Blues With Friends / I Got the Cure I Got The Cure feat. Sonny Landreth

Bob Dylan - Rough and Rowdy Ways / Crossing the Rubicon 


The James Hunter Six - Nick of Time / Till I Hear It From You

Randall Bramblett - Pine Needle Fire / Don't Get Me Started

Marcus King - El Dorado / The Well

Walter Trout - Ordinary Madness / Ordinary Madness

Sonny Landreth - Blacktop Run / Beyond Borders

Joe Bonamassa - Royal Tea / High Class Girl

Shemekia Copeland - Uncivil War / Money Makes You Ugly



Tinsley Ellis - Ice Cream in Hell / Your Love's Like Heroin

Dan Penn - Living on Mercy / Blue Motel



















2020. január 5., vasárnap

PnM.MiX - 22 songs from FAVORITE BLUES ALBUMS of AllMusic 2019

PnM.MiX - 22 songs from FAVORITE BLUES ALBUMS of AllMusic 2019

North Mississippi Allstars


"Whether it came from Chicago, California, Mississippi, or a festival that took place in Michigan 50 years ago, these blues albums represented the genre at its best.





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Greasy, bluesy jam band led by brothers Luther and Cody Dickinson, sons of Memphis studio legend Jim Dickinson.
North Mississippi Allstars - Up and Rolling / Up and Rolling
The North Mississippi Allstars bring it all back home on Up and Rolling, the band's debut offering for New West. Cody and Luther Dickinson (scions of the late producer Jim Dickinson) may have taken their brand of roots rock, dirty-blues crunch, soul, and funk across the globe many times, but they’ve never forgotten their roots in Mississippi's Hill Country mud. In 1996, Texas photographer Wyatt McSpadden visited the Dickinsons and took pictures of local hill country musicians Otha Turner, Junior Kimbrough, R.L. Burnside, and others, along with their musical families. All the musicians and their kin played together at Kimbrough's juke joint...  Up and Rolling clears away decades of cobwebs, dust, and wisteria vines from the doorway to the past: It's a family reunion offering that looks to the Hill Country's history and mystery for both its inspiration from the past and guidance to its present.


Austin, Texas-based bluesman known for his sharply-crafted songwriting and T-Bone Walker-esque lead guitar playing.
Seth Walker - Are You Open? / Underdog
Seth Walker answers the question he poses with the title of his tenth studio album through its music. The one-time blues specialist has widened his palette so his fleet single-string leads are a mere coloring on a collection of well-crafted songs that draw upon a variety of roots sounds. Walker doesn't limit himself to Southern sounds... nice accents to a collection that is largely grounded in mellow, deeply felt soul and blues that owes much to the past but isn't attempting to re-create olden days. Instead, Walker is deft and elegant, weaving together sounds and stories in a way that has a quiet, lasting impact.


Blues musician out of Kansas City whose rock-edged guitar work has topped the blues chart.
Samantha Fish - Kill or Be Kind / You Got It Bad
After releasing two excellent -- but very different -- records in 2017, Samantha Fish spent the last year undergoing some changes. She moved to New Orleans and left her longtime label Ruf Records for Rounder. The guitar slinger has always stretched herself musically. For years she soaked up examples imparted by mentors in her twin pursuits as a guitarist and bandleader, transforming what worked in her own image -- she remade the blues that way too. On Kill or Be Kind it's the worthy ambition to become a better songwriter...

Born and raised in Belgrade, Serbia, this singer, songwriter, and virtuoso pianist revisions American music through her Balkan heritage.
Katarina Pejak - Roads That Cross / Turtle Blues
...Cut in Texas and produced by Mike Zito, Pejak wrote 9 of the 11 tunes for the date. The two covers are fine readings of Joni Mitchell's "Sex Kills" and Janis Joplin and Big Brother and the Holding Company's "Turtle Blues." Her studio band includes the incomparable Laura Chavez on guitar, Jonnie Trevn, Jr. on bass, and Damien Llanes on drums. Pejak's singing voice sits at the treasure spot where Norah Jones, Victoria Spivey, and Bessie Smith all meet. Her songs here engage the wide range of American song forms, from blues and jazz to roots rock, loungey swing, and even Tex-Mex...


Soulful Irish singer/songwriter who combines folk, gospel, R&B, rock, and jazz, often with a mystical bent.
Van Morrison - Three Chords and the Truth / Dark Night Of The Soul
Over the past four years, Van Morrison has recorded no less than six albums. Most have been populated with excellent covers of blues, soul, and jazz standards with a smattering of original numbers woven in between. Three Chords and the Truth (titled after Harlan Howard's famous description of country music), is his first collection of all-new original material since 2016's Keep Me Singing. Morrison penned 14 of the 15 songs here. In addition to his road band, he recruited old friend, acoustic jazz guitarist Jay Berliner (who played on Astral Weeks) for some of the sessions. The album's sound is warm, punchy, and immediate, despite being cut in five studios...


Grammy-winning national treasure who has masterfully balanced gospel and secular music since her early years with the Staple Singers.
Mavis Staples - We Get By / One More Change
One of the most resonant songs Mavis Staples has been handed since her 2000s resurgence is "Love and Trust." Staples values the Ben Harper composition enough to have put it at the top of the set list for Live in London, and emphasized it even more by sharing the performance on Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2019, ahead of the parent release. With Live in London only three months old, Staples returns with another studio LP, this one written and produced by Harper... Staples then alludes to inhumane forms of confinement, all relevant in 2019, in similarly deep despair. Whether the songs are designed to motivate, mourn, or comfort, they're all sustenance. The everlasting potency of Staples' voice is a marvel.


Veteran Chicago harmonica virtuoso keeping traditional Windy City blues alive since the late '60s.
Billy Branch & the Sons of Blues - Roots and Branches: The Songs of Little Walter / Hate To See You Go
Billy Branch earned the throne of king of Chicago Blues harp during the last quarter of the 20th Century, then held it during the first decades of the new millennium. One of the keys to his enduring success is how he didn't merely keep traditions alive, he made sure to blend in elements of funk and soul into Chicago blues, a trick that brought new audiences into the fold while helping the music breathe. In this light, the 2019 album Roots And Branches: The Songs Of Little Walter-recorded with the Sons Of Blues, as nearly all of his albums are-doesn't seem quite so obvious as it might initially appear...


A Midwestern-based blues band that keeps the sound of Chess and Sun Records alive.
The Cash Box Kings - Hail to the Kings! / Smoked Jowl Blues
It's hard not to see the title of Hail to the Kings! as the Cash Box Kings celebrating themselves, but this 2019 album -- the group's second for Alligator -- makes it plain that the quintet can occasionally plant their tongues firmly in cheek. Case in point: "Joe, You Ain't from Chicago," where the group's twin leaders vocalist Oscar Wilson and harmonicist Joe Nosek do their best Bo Diddley and Jerome Green routine, trading barbs all intended to show how Nosek is truly a native of Madison, Wisconsin, not the Windy City. It's funny and it's smart, revealing that all of the Cash Box Kings are not only in on the joke, but that their hearts belong to Chicago. Certainly, Hail to the Kings! is an enthusiastic celebration of Chicago blues in all of its electric forms...


Texas guitarist who combines blues roots with contemporary soul and hip-hop.
Gary Clark, Jr. - This Land / Dirty Dishes Blues
... This Land is his toughest and most ambitious work to date, a bold and often ferocious set of songs that serves as a polyglot of African-American musical idioms and sharply articulate thoughts about American life in the midst of the Trump era. As on his previous albums, Clark frequently demonstrates he's a gifted and forceful guitarist, but on This Land, the songs are ultimately more important than the solos, and the rich, densely packed production, the melodic diversity of material, and the undiluted passion of the lyrics (and the way Clark delivers them) is what truly makes this album succeed...


The king of the contemporary chitlin' circuit, known for his raucous and red-hot mix of soul, blues, and funk.
Bobby Rush - Sitting on Top of the Blues / Good Stuff
Bobby Rush cut his first single in 1964, when he was already 31 years old, and 55 years later, the man is not only still making music, but he still sounds like a credibly raunchy love man at a time when most folks his age can hardly be bothered to get up off the couch. The swampy funk that was a major part of Rush's musical personality in his salad days is in short supply on 2019's Sitting on Top of the Blues, but his gift for grafting together deep soul and barroom-ready blues is as strong as ever, and the rough insistence of his vocals connects when he wraps his voice around his various tales of women trying to get the better of him (at least when he's not busy trying to get the better of them)...

Acclaimed Mississippi bluesman and member of the Bentonia blues school who also operates America's oldest surviving juke joint.
Jimmy "Duck" Holmes - Cypress Grove / Little Red Rooster
Jimmy "Duck" Holmes is one of the last practitioners of old-fashioned Mississippi blues, playing a variation that belongs to the Yazoo county town of Bentonia. Holmes kept that sound alive at his own juke joint and on a series of records in the 2000s, but the 2019 album Cypress Grove is designed as a vehicle to introduce the bluesman to a wider audience. Dan Auerbach, the lead singer of the Black Keys and head of the Easy Eye Sound studio and label, shepherded the project, bringing Holmes up to Nashville to record with a bunch of his cohorts, including guitarist Marcus King. Undoubtedly, this crew is much larger than the roster that usually shows up on a Holmes album, but Auerbach doesn't overload the grooves of Cypress Grove...

An 11-piece band, fronted by the married guitar slingers, that plays a righteous meld of rock, blues, gospel, and New Orleans funk.
Tedeschi Trucks Band - Signs / I’m Gonna Be There
Signs, the fourth studio album by the Tedeschi Trucks Band, poignantly addresses some of the major changes this 12-piece group has been through over the last couple of years. That said, it's hardly steeped in sadness, but acknowledges reckoning and acceptance while leaning on hope. In November 2016, longtime friend Leon Russell died. In January, Derek's uncle Butch Trucks committed suicide. In May, mentor Col. Bruce Hampton (to whom Signs is dedicated) suffered a fatal coronary on-stage during his 70th birthday celebration (which Trucks and Tedeschi witnessed). The same month, Gregg Allman died after a years-long battle with liver cancer. And in June, keyboardist Kofi Burbridge suffered a heart attack that required emergency surgery.
These events had an obvious impact on Signs, but it results in their most musically diverse offering yet. Sonically it remains in the band's trademark stew of blues, soul, rock, gospel, and improv, but also showcases a new songwriting sophistication and arranging skills...


Mississippi-born blues guitarist boasts a full-bodied sound and worked with Buddy Guy and Eric Gales before he could buy beer.
Christone "Kingfish" Ingram - Kingfish / Love Ain't My Favorite Word
At the ripe old age of 20, Clarksdale, Mississippi guitar slinger Christone "Kingfish" Ingram has been anointed "the next explosion of the blues," by no less than Buddy Guy. The proclamation is accurate. Ingram is young, but he's spent most of life pursuing the blues across the Delta and Chicago traditions, with nods at '70s hard rock and soul along the way... His musical influences range from Robert Johnson -- who supposedly made his deal with the devil not far from Ingram's home at the intersection of Highways 61 and 49 -- to Muddy Waters, Guy, and even Prince (he offers a hell of a cover of "Purple Rain" live). Kingfish was recorded in Nashville for Alligator Records and produced by Grammy-winning songwriter, bluesman, country singer, and drummer Tom Hambridge, who co-wrote most of these 12 songs with the guitarist...

Blues guitarist who matured from a rock & roll drummer into a master of the electric six-string.
Coco Montoya - Coming in Hot / Lights Are On But Nobody's Home
Two years after guitar slinger Coco Montoya returned to Chicago's Alligator label for Hard Truth, he follows with Coming in Hot. Montoya is one of the most prodigious and gifted electric bluesmen on the planet. He is a double threat as a deeply soulful singer and incendiary guitarist. Coming in Hot offers a kindred lineup to the one who knocked 2017's Hard Truth out of the park. Produced by drummer Tony Braunagel and engineered by Johnny Lee Schell (who helms the rhythm guitar chair on all but three tracks where Billy Watts guests), it also includes Mike Finnigan on keyboards, and bassist Bob Glaub on seven cuts (Mike Mennell sits in on the other four)...

The venerable Delbert McClinton is a legend among Texas roots music aficionados, not only for his amazing longevity, but for his ability to combine country, blues, soul, and rock & roll as if there were no distinctions between any of them in the best time-honored Texas tradition.
Delbert McClinton - Tall, Dark, And Handsome / Temporarily Insane
Retaining the Self-Made Men but adding saxophonist Dana Robbins, the jumping outfit he unveiled on the 2017 album Prick of the Litter, Delbert McClinton shakes things up for the swinging set Tall, Dark, And Handsome. Where Prick of the Litter settled into a mellow vibe, Tall, Dark, And Handsome is bold and restless, finding McClinton trying on all manner of blues for size... Such a casual switch in tone illustrates how Tall, Dark, And Handsome is the work of a master stylist, a musician who draws upon old, familiar sounds and creates something idiosyncratic and soulful in equal measure.


A gifted guitarist with an eclectic range of influences, Luther Dickinson has earned a reputation as an innovator in modern blues while also having a keen understanding and respect for its rich history. 
Luther Dickinson / Sisters of the Strawberry Moon feat. Amy Helm - Solstice / Sing to Me
Aside from co-leading the North Mississippi Allstars with his brother Cody, Luther Dickinson has spearheaded a number of solo projects drenched in American roots music since 2009. Solstice is a kind of companion to 2012's Go On Now, You Can't Stay Here by the Wandering -- Dickinson's first project with female vocalists. Longtime associates Amy LaVere and Sharde Thomas were part of the earlier group and contribute alongside gospel trio the Como Mamas, Amy Helm, and Birds of Chicago's Allison Russell...
Luther Dickinson, Amy Helm

A virtuoso on the pedal steel guitar, Robert Randolph jumped from spiritual to secular music and found an audience among blues fans, roots rock aficionados, and jam band followers with his fiery, passionate instrumental work and heartfelt music.
Robert Randolph & the Family Band - Brighter Days / Simple Man
...After first cutting his teeth in gospel music, Randolph has been storming stages across the country and around the world with his heavyweight fusion of blues, rock, and gospel influences, with the dirtied-up tone of his instrument wailing hard and crying with passion as he and his band draw sweat. With that in mind, it's hard to imagine why Randolph and his crew would want to go to Nashville and record with someone primarily associated with country music. But Dave Cobb, the hotshot producer who has been behind the controls for some outstanding released from Sturgill Simpson, Jason Isbell, and Zac Brown, isn't a typical Nashville studio guy, and on 2019's Brighter Days he's clearly eager to help Randolph is his mission to redefine the boundaries of the pedal steel...


A fiery guitarist who kept the sound of classic Chicago blues alive in the 21st century. / Modern blues band anchored by leader Nick Moss, vocalist Michael Ledbetter, and drummer Patrick Seals.
Nick Moss Band - Lucky Guy! / Simple Minded
The first time the Nick Moss Band recorded a full album with harpist Dennis Gruenling went so well, the gang decided to reconvene for a second set just a year later. Like many sequels, 2019's Lucky Guy! doesn't offer surprises, but it could be argued that The High Cost of Low Living didn't exactly shock either. That was by design. Moss and Gruenling make it their mission to keep the greasy sound of Chicago blues alive, and while they're traditionalists, they're not stuck in the past...



Guitarist and co-founder of the Fabulous Thunderbirds and older brother of Stevie Ray Vaughan with his own take on Texas roadhouse blues.
Jimmie Vaughan - Baby, Please Come Home / No One to Talk to (But the Blues)
...Issued by the U.K.'s Last Music Co. Baby, Please Come Home is another set of less-than-obvious covers drawn from the dusty shelves of vintage jump blues and R&B shuffles, rockabilly, doo wop, and country music. All are reworked in his hard-swinging back-to-basics style, delivered with raw passion as well as economy, his razor-blade six-string acting as a guidepost rather than driving force. The set was cut in mono mostly at the Fire Station in San Marcos, Texas, except for a couple of tracks captured live in Austin. Vaughan's cast comprises alternating groups of veteran friends....

Mississippi guitarist with a hybrid style that adds the grit and moan of the blues to the urgent energy of call-and-response gospel.
Leo Welch - The Angels in Heaven Done Signed My Name / Don't Let the Devil Ride
While it wasn't unexpected given his advanced age and health, the death of gospel bluesman Leo "Bud" Welch in 2017 felt altogether too soon. The Delta bluesman from Sabougla, Mississippi had been performing for most of his life. He gigged in juke joints, opened for touring artists such as B.B. King, Howlin' Wolf, Elmore James, and John Lee Hooker, and played in church, but he didn't release an album until he was 81...After his passing, Auerbach returned to the tapes, cut the selection to ten tunes, and added few overdubs. The end result is pure Welch, passionate and rootsy, from his percussive, jagged, sometimes spooky guitar playing to his elastic, gritty, vocal phrasing.

Contemporary guitarist from the Deep South who gained rare fame for a bluesman despite his interests, which vary from acoustic to rock.
Kenny Wayne Shepherd - The Traveler / Mr. Soul
Kenny Wayne Shepherd arrived on the scene as a blues guitar hero at 18 to an overload of media hoopla and pressure. At 40, he has evolved from the blues-guitar-slinger ghetto and become a mature musician whose wide-angle vision embraces American roots music -- blues, rock, country, and soul/R&B -- as an inseparable whole...  Neil Young's "Mr. Soul" is delivered with rowdy aplomb, a smoking update with horns pushing Shepherd's guitar into the red...  The Traveler continues Shepherd's trajectory of quality. The diversity in his musical approach, songwriting consistency, organic production, and passionate performances place it over and above anything else in his catalog to date.

Soulful singer/songwriter with a bent toward vintage-influenced R&B.
Eli "Paperboy" Reed - 99 Cent Dreams / In the End
Eli "Paperboy" Reed emphasized how his 2016 album My Way Home brought him back to his roots, underscoring the point with its very title. 99 Cent Dreams, its 2019 sequel, proves how true that assessment was. Working once again for Yep Roc, Reed stays focused on retro sounds and vintage vibes, drawing deeply from the Southern-fried sounds of Memphis but adding some sick uptown grooves reminiscent of both the Windy City and the Motor City. A former hotshot guitar slinger, Reed reins in his solos throughout 99 Cent Dreams, pushing song, and especially sound, to the forefront...




2019. augusztus 18., vasárnap

049 ALTER.NATION weekly favtraX 18-08-2019

ALTER.NATION #49
Sleater-Kinney, Big Thief, The Hold Steady, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Thee Oh Sees, Here Lies Man, Bobby Rush, Robbie Robertson, Ikebe Shakedown, Madison Cunningham, Field Mouse, Jenny Hval

weekly favtraX 
18 - 0 8 - 2 0 1 9

"The Center Won't Hold"




ALTER.NATION #49 on DEEZER


Arguably the most important punk band of the 1990s and 2000s, with feminist songwriting matched by taut melodicism and jaw-dropping sonic complexity. 
Sleater-Kinney - The Center Won't Hold from The Center Won't Hold
Weeks before the release of The Center Won't Hold, Janet Weiss left Sleater-Kinney -- a departure that clouded the record's reception, suggesting that the drummer perhaps wasn't happy with the trio's decision to collaborate with producer St. Vincent on the 2019 LP. Carrie Brownstein and Corin Tucker countered this perception by insisting it was Weiss' idea to work with St. Vincent, and the fact that the drummer is hardly buried in the mix suggests there may be no animosity among the various camps. Still, with Weiss' absence, the very title The Center Won't Hold seems prescient for the future of Sleater-Kinney, but it's also true the album is designed to suggest that the world is unmoored. In the age of Trump and Brexit, such a notion isn't far-fetched, and Brownstein and Tucker frequently allude to the roiling political tensions of the late 2010s, but they spend just as much of the record lamenting personal dissociation -- the alienation that arrives when too much time is spent time staring into tiny screens...

Brooklyn indie rock quartet steered by the vulnerable songwriting of singer/guitarist Adrianne Lenker. 
Big Thief - Not
Big Thief are really not fucking around. Instead of riding the wave of having released one of the most acclaimed albums of the year, they’re returning with another new collection just months later.... “Not” is a hell of a way to introduce that new album. After U.F.O.F.‘s intricate, meditative beauty enraptured critics and fans alike, “Not” is a roiling, fraying rock song, a totally different side of the band’s personality. Adrianne Lenker’s raw performance pushes her typically elusive vocals to their most ragged extremes; the band’s delivery is something like art school Crazyhorse; the whole thing is as desperate and cathartic as the bulk of U.F.O.F. was pristine and enigmatic. Big Thief have long been elemental. This time around, they’ve leaned deep into the fire.

Acclaimed and respected Minneapolis-bred indie rockers who boast a melodic, contemporary take on mid-'70s classic rock. 
The Hold Steady - Star 18 from Thrashing thru the Passion
Reconvening for a full album for the first time in a half-decade, the Hold Steady do sound a bit older on Thrashing Thru the Passion -- an evolution they do not attempt to hide at all, which is to their benefit. It's not so much that the group no longer crank their amplifiers until they bleed and push the tempo to the point that Craig Finn has to rush to spit out his words, although those are developments that are hard to ignore. It's that the Hold Steady seem so comfortable in their skin on Thrashing Thru the Passion that they allow themselves to fiddle with details in the margins. They let the pace slow just enough to allow themselves to deepen the colors and textures of their arrangements...

Australian psychedelic collective with an intense work ethic and a wildly experimental outlook that reaches from synth prog to folk rock. 
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard - Perihelion from Infest the Rats Nest
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard have dabbled in heavy metal before; their masterpiece Nonagon Infinity was metal adjacent, and other bits here and there across the group's expansive and ever-growing catalog have hinted at their love for pummeling rhythms, massed guitar riffing, and fantastical lyrical conceits. On 2019's Infest the Rat's Nest, the band go full metal. Often working in a small version of the band under the direction of vocalist/guitarist Stu Mackenzie, they've made a heavy-as-molten-lead song cycle about the death of Earth and the colonization of nearby planets by those who can afford it. It's fast, loud, and gnarly with traces of Metallica, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, and a number of second-tier British and American bands from the late '70s and early '80s who fused the energy of punk with the dual-track guitar solos, dystopian words, and riffage of early metal... King Gizzard aren't sugarcoating anything, either musically or thematically, and that makes for their most timely and political album yet. It's also one of their most musically compelling and impressive, too, and that's saying a lot.

Influential California combo that mixes wild garage-punk noise and unhinged psychedelic exploration with occasional bouts of prog and metal. 
Thee Oh Sees - Scutum & Scorpius from Face Stabber
Oh Sees' 2017 album Smote Reverser seemed at the time of its release to be just about as far as the band could push their combination psychedelic-metal-prog-jazz-garage sound before it might split into a million pieces. It was hard to imagine that John Dwyer and company could twist, fold, or mangle things any more than they were or that they could add more elements without capsizing the rollicking ship entirely. Face Stabber puts a lie to those preconceptions -- not only does the band take another step further out into space, they tumble through the abyss with an energetic fury that most bands can never conjure, much less one on their 300th album... Any band looking to play psychedelic music should look to this album (and Smote Reverser) to fully understand the possibilities that exist within (and far outside of) the style, and just how far a band with limitless imagination can go if they don't settle for clichés and easy answers, and push hard to make something unique and beautiful like the Oh Sees do here (and almost always).

L.A.-based quartet founded by Chico Mann that melds West African rhythms and harmony to hard rock's riff-based foundations. 
Here Lies Man - Iron Rattles from No Ground to Walk Upon
A product of the feverish creative minds of Antibalas affiliates Marcos Garcia and Geoff Mann, Here Lies Man began in 2017 as a hybrid of West African rhythms and '70s stoner metal riffing... The introduction of "Iron Rattles" further expands the group's sonic palette, setting the pace with an electric kalimba rather than a blown-out guitar riff. The colorful compositions, analog production, and foreboding synth interludes make the mini-album some of Here Lies Man's most captivating material.

The king of the contemporary chitlin' circuit, known for his raucous and red-hot mix of soul, blues, and funk. 
Bobby Rush - Slow Motion from Sitting on Top of the Blues
Bobby Rush cut his first single in 1964, when he was already 31 years old, and 55 years later, the man is not only still making music, but he still sounds like a credibly raunchy love man at a time when most folks his age can hardly be bothered to get up off the couch. The swampy funk that was a major part of Rush's musical personality in his salad days is in short supply on 2019's Sitting on Top of the Blues, but his gift for grafting together deep soul and barroom-ready blues is as strong as ever, and the rough insistence of his vocals connects when he wraps his voice around his various tales of women trying to get the better of him (at least when he's not busy trying to get the better of them). The vibe of Sitting on Top of the Blues is laid-back but not lazy...

The chief songwriter and lead guitarist of the Band, who later moved into film (acting, producing, scoring) and a solo career. 
Robbie Robertson - Let Love Reign
...He’s shared “I Hear You Paint Houses” from it already, which was directly influenced by the story that The Irishman is based off of, and today he’s sharing “Let Love Reign,” a track that was inspired by the Beatles.
In a statement (via Rolling Stone), Robertson said: “Some people think John Lennon’s dream about love and togetherness went up in flames. I think that’s wrong. It’s everlasting. There was something a little naive about John Lennon going around singing about peace, but in that period young people celebrating love and peace helped end a war.”

Horn-driven seven-piece band from Brooklyn crafts instrumental funk in the Afro-beat and psychedelic soul tradition. 
Ikebe Shakedown - Not Another Drop from Kings Left Behind
New York septet Ikebe Shakedown play what they refer to as "cinematic instrumental soul," which amounts to a thick, steamy brew of retro funk, psychedelic rock, and soundtracks ranging from Spaghetti Westerns to blaxploitation flicks. The group's compositions almost always include galloping drums and hand percussion, hot horns, and simmering organ, along with additional touches such as surf guitar licks and string arrangements. Kings Left Behind is their fourth full-length, and the first taped at Hive Mind Recording, a Brooklyn-based studio built and operated by two of the band's members, bassist Vince Chiarito and saxophonist Michael Buckley. Compared to the group's past efforts, Kings Left Behind doesn't seem to utilize quite as much echo or other trippy effects, and it seems a bit classier and more sophisticated...

Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter with sophisticated jazz, folk, and country influences. 
Madison CunninghamPin It Down from Who Are You Now
In the two years between debuting her jazzy, nuanced folk-rock songs on the self-released Love, Lose, Remember EP and presenting her full-length Verve debut, Madison Cunningham was invited to tour with the Punch Brothers and Andrew Bird, perform on Chris Thile's public radio show, and guest on albums by the likes of Bird, Matt Redman, and J.S. Ondara. For the unacquainted, the allure of her textured voice and sophisticated guitar playing is evident on said debut, 2019's Who Are You Now. Also apparent are songwriting inspirations that range from Joni Mitchell and Jeff Buckley to Fiona Apple...

Rachel Browne-led indie rock outfit who sharpened early shoegaze influences into a catchy blend of fuzz and jangle. 
Field Mouse - Skygazing from Meaning
Over the course of their first half-dozen years together, Field Mouse shifted away from early shoegaze influences toward a more streamlined guitar pop that still echoed with some of the shadowy quality of dreams. Any momentum was interrupted, however, following the release of 2016's Episodic and, more importantly, the outcome of that year's presidential election. The band essentially went on an unofficial hiatus, partly to focus on their personal lives but largely due to bandleader Rachel Browne being too demoralized -- and self-conscious about the place of art in the circumstances -- to write. After two years away from music, Browne was inspired by looking through some of her old poems and reached out to band co-founder Andrew Futral. The resulting Meaning makes an effort to find perspective and support structures in uncertain times...

This Norwegian singer/songwriter crafts thoughtful, uncompromising music under her own name as well as Rockettothesky. 
Jenny Hval - High Alice
Jenny Hval songs tend to get stuck on a phrase. With a more conventional songwriter, you might call this a chorus, but she has always made these recurrences sound like incantatory thought loops. On “High Alice,” the second single from The Practice Of Love, that phrase is “must be drawn to something.” Hval switches between points of view, so that they, we, I are all tied together in their collective search for definition.
She frames this search through Alice In Wonderland fabulism; we follow Hval through the looking-glass as she is drawn to these familiar childhood peculiarities: the queen, the clock, the ocean. Hval says this High Alice is “sketching out her rabbit hole,” drawing in shades of her own being. “We all want something better,” she sings, her music floating deeper and deeper into the subconscious.


Sleater-Kinney, Big Thief, The Hold Steady, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Thee Oh Sees, Here Lies Man, Bobby Rush, Robbie Robertson, Ikebe Shakedown, Madison Cunningham, Field Mouse, Jenny Hval