Jump to content
Jambands.ca

What are you listening to right now?


PassedOutGuy

Recommended Posts

http://bit.ly/HKnjqW

tumblr_m2k3ksV2Da1qjoyjs.jpg

Jack White - Blunderbuss

For all the records that have borne his name over the past five years — Dead Weather, Raconteurs, multiple guest spots and productions — it feels like we haven’t really gotten any unadulterated Jack White music since the White Stripes’ swan song, “Icky Thump.†And one listen to “Blunderbuss†shows why: He’s been woodshedding, carefully developing a template and a manifesto for a solo career that (incongruously, given his prolific output) begins with this album.

“Blunderbuss†has elements of nearly every project he’s worked on — even some of the 1950s bounce of the White-produced Wanda Jackson album on “I’m Shakin’†and “Trash Tongue†— but also shows sides that the self-imposed, regimented simplicity of the White Stripes didn’t allow. There are softer piano-driven songs (“Love Interruptionâ€) and, at the opposite extreme, filthy guitar raunch (“16 Saltinesâ€), but also elaborate tracks reminiscent of late-’60s psychedelia, like the Zombies or Small Faces: “Hip (Eponymous) Poor Boy†in particular is unlike anything White’s ever done, with a complex, hopscotching melody and rhythm; similarly, “I Guess I Should Go to Sleep†has a soaring vocal, a jazzy tempo and a violin solo. With a sound that’s vintage and organic but also very clean, the album is so diverse that virtually every song comes as a surprise — a trend that will continue on White’s forthcoming tour, where he’ll be bringing along two different backing bands (one all-male, one all-female, as seen on his recent “Saturday Night Live†performance) and deciding on the morning of each gig which band will accompany him that night.

“Blunderbuss†is familiar enough to please the fan base, adventurous enough to forge a new path ahead, and satisfying enough to make fans realize anew just how much we’ve missed Jack’s songs. But perhaps most of all, the album’s diversity and musical ambition show that the White Stripes were as on-message musically as they were sartorially — it wasn’t that Jack White couldn’t write complex songs, he just didn’t, and now that he is, Blunderbuss isn’t just (arguably) the best album of the year so far, it opens up a whole new world for him. —billboard.com

mp3@320

Track List

01 – Missing Pieces

02 – Sixteen Saltines

03 – Freedom at 21

04 – Love Interruption

05 – Blunderbuss

06 – Hypocritical Kiss

07 – Weep Themselves to Sleep

08 – I’m Shakin’

09 – Trash Tongue Talker

10 – Hip (Eponymous) Poor Boy

11 – I Guess I Should Go to Sleep

12 – On and On and On

13 – Take Me with You When You Go

http://bit.ly/HKnjqW

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWOsb9KThfE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dSLem5hLxLc

Edited by Guest
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Such a good album!

http://bit.ly/J9JpmX

tumblr_m2ofocjDQ81qjoyjs.jpg

Levon Helm - Electric Dirt

In a musical career that has spanned six decades, Levon Helm has made more than a few excellent albums working with other folks — most notably as drummer and vocalist with the Band, as well as backing Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Muddy Waters, John Martyn, Rufus Wainwright, and literally dozens of others. But as a solo artist, Helm’s record has been considerably spottier, with well-intended disappointments outnumbering genuine successes, so it’s good to report that at the age of 69, Helm has found his second wind as a recording artist, cutting two of his most satisfying solo sets in a row. Following 2007’s excellent Dirt Farmer, Electric Dirt is every bit as impressive and finds him sounding even stronger than he did on that comeback set. Dirt Farmer was Helm’s first album after a bout with throat cancer nearly silenced him, and his vocals sounded firmly committed but just a bit strained; two years on, Helm’s voice is nearly as supple as it was during his days with the Band, and even when it shows signs of wear and tear, his sense of phrasing and his ability to bring the characters in these songs to life are as good as they’ve ever been. While Dirt Farmer leaned toward acoustic music in the Appalachian tradition, Electric Dirt aims for a broader and more eclectic sound; “Golden Bird†sounds as if it could have been gleaned from the Harry Smith anthology, but the opening cover of the Grateful Dead’s “Tennessee Jed†swings with a solid New Orleans groove like an outtake from the Rock of Ages concerts, a pair of Muddy Waters numbers are subtle but passionate acoustic blues, “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free†is joyous gospel-infused R&B, and “White Dove†is fervent and heartfelt traditional country. Larry Campbell, who co-produced Dirt Farmer, returned for these sessions, as did most of the same band, bringing a similarly organic touch to the music, and the bigger sound of this album seems to suit everyone involved, with Helm’s drumming sounding especially lively and well-grounded. And though Helm only wrote two songs for this album, they’re two good ones, especially “Growin’ Trade,†a tale of an aging farmer who has taken to raising marijuana, and what could easily have been played as a joke is a moving account of one man’s conscience as it wrestles with his heritage and love of the land. Not unlike his old buddy Bob Dylan from Time Out of Mind onward, Levon Helm seems to have rediscovered his knack for making great records in what some might have imagined would be the latter days of his career; Electric Dirt sounds fresh, emphatic, and as effective as anything Levon has cut since the mid-’70s, and one can only hope he has a few more discs in him just this good. — allmusic.com

mp3@320

Track List

1) Tennessee Jed (Jerry Garcia, Robert Hunter) 5:58

2) Move Along Train (Roebuck Staples) 3:22

3) Growing Trade (Levon Helm, Larry Campbell) 4.22

4) Golden Bird (Happy Traum) 5:11

5) Stuff You Gotta Watch (Muddy Waters) 3:38

6) White Dove (Carter Stanley) 3:29

7) Kingfish (Randy Newman) 4:24

8) You Can’t Lose What You Ain’t Never Had (Muddy Waters) 4:01

9) When I Go Away (Larry Campbell) 4:32

10) Heaven’s Pearls (Anthony Leone, Byron Isaacs, Fiona McBain, Amy Helm, Glenn Patscha) 4:09

11) I Wish I Knew How it Would Feel To Be Free (Richard Carroll Lamp, Willy E. Taylor) 3:25

http://bit.ly/J9JpmX

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://bit.ly/IyelJD

tumblr_m2ogzn9LGP1qjoyjs.jpg

Levon Helm - Ramble At The Ryman

Levon Helm is one of rock & roll’s most indefatigable road warriors, a guy who would seemingly be happy to play every single night, but he’s also a cancer survivor who is over 70 years old, and spending his days in a tour bus doubtless doesn’t hold the sort of appeal it once did. Since 2004, Helm has been striking a compromise between his eagerness to perform and the rigors of touring with a series of shows he calls The Midnight Ramble, held at the recording studio located on the grounds of his home in Woodstock, New York. The Ramble shows feature Helm and his band playing with a handful of friends and guest artists each week, and the intimate gigs have been popular enough that Helm has been playing occasional Ramble-style concerts in larger venues in the United States and Europe. Ramble at the Ryman, as its title suggests, was recorded during a show at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium (the former home of The Grand Ol’ Opry) in the fall of 2008, where his band (led by multi-instrumentalist Larry Campbell and vocalist and mandolinist Amy Helm) plays a handful of classic tunes from Helm’s years with the Band and a couple numbers from his more recent solo efforts, while several guests step up to join the band throughout the evening, including Sheryl Crow, Buddy Miller, Sam Bush, John Hiatt, and Little Sammy Davis (the blues singer and harmonica player, not the late member of the Rat Pack). While Levon sings (and sings well) on several numbers, there are moments when one senses the revue-style show is partly in deference to his voice, which clearly isn’t as strong or as resilient as it used to be. But Helm is still one of the most soulful drummers alive, and his work behind the kit is solid and joyous throughout, and his ensemble, capable of turning on a dime from spare and somber string band arrangements to rollicking New Orleans-style R&B, is superb, and does right by the half-dozen Band classics on the set list without slavishly copying the original arrangements. The guests are all clearly delighted to be on-stage with Levon and bring their A-game, and even when his voice strains to hit the higher notes, Helm still performs with an authority few living musicians can summon. Ramble at the Ryman may not be the same as hearing Levon Helm play for a few dozen guests at his studio — or for a few thousand fans at one of America’s most venerable venues — but it captures a living legend on-stage proving he doesn’t have to rest on his laurels to win applause, and this is a hell of a party coming from a guy well past retirement age. — allmusic.com

mp3@320

Track List

1. Ophelia

2. Back To Memphis

3. Fannie Mae

4. Baby Scratch My Back

5. Evangeline

6. No Depression In Heaven

7. Wide River to Cross

8. Deep Elem Blues

9. Anna Lee

10. Rag Mama Rag

11. Time Out For The Blues

12. A Train Robbery

13. The Shape I m In

14. Chest Fever

15. The Weight

http://bit.ly/IyelJD

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://bit.ly/IE9y9N

Norah Jones - Little Broken Hearts

tumblr_m2sdykwqK81qjoyjs.jpg

Norah Jones’ debut album, 2002’s Come Away With Me, sold so many copies — roughly 20 million worldwide, making it one of the best-selling records of the previous decade — that she’s seemed fairly liberated ever since, especially once expectations of future blockbusters settled to something more realistic. Without losing her knack for impeccably classy professionalism, Jones has kept pushing her sound beyond the warmly accessible pop-jazz that launched her career, whether in the roots-country band The Little Willies or in her guest-vocal spots on last year’s Rome, the album Danger Mouse (a.k.a. Brian Burton) recorded with Italian composer Daniele Luppi and Jack White.

Ten years after her debut, Jones is ideally positioned for the subtle sonic makeover she undergoes on Little Broken Hearts. Written and recorded with Burton, who as producer gives the album a sonic edge that never overwhelms its star, Little Broken Hearts sounds like Norah Jones without bearing much resemblance to the work that once got her pegged as the world’s most commercially dominant jazz star. Trafficking in alternately sweet and icy singer-songwriter pop, it’s a reinvention, but not a radical one.

It helps that these songs delve into deep, dark matters of betrayal and loss — and address them in myriad ways, from the wounded grace of “She’s 22†to the vengeful hurt of “Miriam.†Along the way, Jones coos and struts her way through a handful of crackerjack pop songs: “Say Goodbye,†the smoothly sinister title track and the single “Happy Pills†all meet at the midpoint between Jones’ past work and the fizzy pop Burton makes with Broken Bells. Always more versatile than most people think, Jones fits all of this smart material to perfection, marking her second decade as a star while making her sound cooler and more unflappably sophisticated than ever. —NPR

mp3@320

Track List

01 – Good Morning

02 – Say Goodbye

03 – Little Broken Hearts

04 – She’s 22

05 – Take It Back

06 – After the Fall

07 – 4 Broken Hearts

08 – Travelin’ On

09 – Out on the Road

10 – Happy Pills

11 – Miriam

12 – All a Dream

http://bit.ly/IE9y9N

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had a poorer quality copy of the show on the 29th, but this one is really sweet. Highly encourage a listen.

http://bit.ly/JZCAPO

tumblr_m2wbycGPbh1qjoyjs.jpg

Levon Helm and Rick Danko

28 January 1983

Starry Night

Portland, Oregon

In early 1983, Helm and Danko did this tour as an acoustic duet. Rick is heard on the guitar and vocals, while Levon covers the mandolin, harmonica and vocals.

mp3@320

Track List

01 prolog

02 Caledonia

03 Evangeline

04 Down South in New Orleans

05 It Makes No Difference

06 Wealthy Old Farmer

07 Long Black Veil

08 tuning break

09 Rag Mama Rag

10 Sick and Tired

11 A Letter to Tom

12 Milk Cow Boogie

13 Java Blues

14 Short Fat Fanny

15 encore break

16 Every Night and Every Day

17 Willy And The Hand Jive

18 encore break 2

19 The World’s Gone Mad

20 Let’s Go Out in a Blaze of Glory

http://bit.ly/JZCAPO

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://bit.ly/Ky7aVV

tumblr_m3bjnprr5x1qjoyjs.jpg

Tedeschi Trucks Band - Revelator Live EP

The Tedeschi Trucks Band was founded in 2010 after both Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi put their solo bands on hiatus to form a new group that lets the married couple focus on making music together, and allows them to spend more time together while touring and recording.

The Live EP: Revelator features Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi and their Tedeschi Trucks Band in their element: Live.

Three of the four tracks are from the upcoming live album Everybody’s Talkin’ (coming May 22) along with a live version of “Don’t Let Me Slideâ€

mp3@320

Track List

1. Don’t Let Me Slide (6:51)

2. Midnight In Harlem (10:23)

3. Learn How To Love (9:28)

4. Bound For Glory (12:54)

Time: 39 minutes 36 seconds

http://bit.ly/Ky7aVV

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://bit.ly/IUVmvq

tumblr_m3d1fuZtsp1qjoyjs.jpg

Neil Young - Where The Buffalo Roam

This is a copy of the vinyl record of the OST. As far as I have been able to find, the OST has never been released on CD and is very rare to find on cassette.The DVD releases of this movie have an updated soundtrack in which all but Young’s “Home, Home on the Range†and Creedence’s “Keep on Chooglin’†have been removed and replaced by generic rockpieces, presumably due to copyright issues. The original soundtrack is on the VHS.

mp3@320

Track List

01. Buffalo Stomp - Neil Young With the Wild Bill Band of Strings

02. Ode to Wild Bill #1 - Neil Young

03. All Along The Watchtower - Jimi Hendrix

04. Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds - Bill Murray

05. Ode to Wild Bill #2 - Neil Young

06. Papa Was A Rolling Stone - The Temptations

07. Home, Home on the Range - Neil Young

08. Straight Answers + Dialogue - Bill Murray

09. Highway 61 - Bob Dylan

10. I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie Hunny Bunch) - Four Tops

11. Ode to Wild Bill #3 + Dialogue - Neil Young

12. Keep On Chooglin - Creedence Clearwater Revival

13. Ode to Wild Bill #4 - Neil Young

14. Purple Haze - Jimi Hendrix

15. Buffalo Stomp Refrain - Neil Young With the Wild Bill Band of Strings

http://bit.ly/IUVmvq

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://bit.ly/IGXk5b

tumblr_m3elj8oemD1qjoyjs.jpg

Grateful Dead

Dave's Picks Volume 2

1974-07-31 Dillon Stadium, Hartford, CT

This three-set wonder features the entire show from Hartford’s Dillon Stadium during the heart of the Wall of Sound era, July 31, 1974, four days after the release of the Dead’s fine Mars Hotel album. Dwarfed by the Wall’s irregular columns of speakers on a hot and humid Wednesday afternoon, the band thrilled the sold-out crowd of 20,000 with a far-ranging collection of tunes and jams that showed how far they’d come as musicians, songwriters and interpreters of others’ songs in their decade together. - dead.net

mp3@320

Track List

DISC 1

1. Scarlet Begonias

2. Me And My Uncle

3. Brown-Eyed Women

4. Beat It On Down The Line

5. Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo>

6. It Must Have Been The Roses

7. Mexicali Blues

8. Row Jimmy

9. Jack Straw

10. China Cat Sunflower>

11. I Know You Rider

12. Around And Around

DISC 2

1. Bertha

2. Big River

3. Eyes Of The World>

4. China Doll

5. Promised Land

6. Ship Of Fools

7. Weather Report Suite

8. El Paso

9. Ramble On Rose

10. Greatest Story Ever Told

DISC 3

1. To Lay Me Down

2. Truckin'>

3. Mind Left Body Jam>

4. Spanish Jam>

5. Wharf Rat

6. U.S. Blues

7. One More Saturday Night

8. Uncle John's Band

http://bit.ly/IGXk5b

Edited by Guest
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...