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Monthly Archives: March 2024

Marc my words: Marc Jonson and Marc Valentine

26 Tuesday Mar 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Artist Spotlight

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Marc Jonson, Marc Valentine

I grew up with a lot of Marks. Generally speaking, if your name was Mark you were second string on the basketball team and a get-along-with-everybody kind of guy. But if your name was spelled ‘Marc’ a whole new level of cool was involved. Today’s two Marcs show you why that is so.

We’ve reviewed two great albums Marc Jonson recorded recently with Ramirez Exposure but left his solo work untouched. Partly that results from the challenge of coming to grips with his unwieldy career. Things kicked off in 1972 with a baroque folk album for Vanguard (Years) but from there it’s hit and miss with rare album outings in 1992 (12 in a Room), 2000 (Last Night on the Rollercoaster), and 2017 (Marc Jonson and the Wild Alligators). But now we have an album that attempts to fill in the blanks – Groova Tismo. The record pulls together a dynamic collection of demos recorded in his NYC Cordelia Street apartment between 1979 and 2012. No surprise the tunes effortlessly evoke a Phil Spector early 1960s pop atmosphere. Things kick off so Roy Orbison-fine on the endearing “Honey Boy.” The Beach Boys also haunt these proceedings on tracks like “The Man Who Walks On Air” and “I’d Cry.” Other 1960s artists reflected here might include The Four Seasons (“Turn It On), Buck Owens (“I Don’t Have You”), and The Searchers (“The Moon”). But the 1970s get a look in too with shades of Eric Carmen (“Never Gonna Fall in Love Again”) and Gordon Lightfoot (“Lonesome”). Personal fave: love the lurching hooks colouring “November Paintbrush.” More than a collection of leftovers, Groova Tismo sounds like the coherent artistic statement of a should-be star.

On his new album Basement Sparks Marc Valentine continues a delightful reinvention of 1990s power pop that falls somewhere between Fountains of Wayne and Bowling for Soup. There’s a slight punk snarl on tracks like “Tyrannical Wrecks” and a groove that says the dance floor will see some body contact. But for the most part the songs here mine a sweet poppy guitar grind familiar to fans of Farrah and FOW. Exhibit A could be “Eve of Distraction” or “I Wanna Be Alone.” Album opener “Complicated Sometimes” sets the tone with a sophisticated rocky pop tune that says should-be hit, though early release single “Skeleton Key” is another strong ‘hit’ contender. “Strange Weather” is more a pop stomper, relentlessly driving home its hooks. Then “You Are One of Us Now” shifts things into more 1980 Cars territory. I’m also partial to “Repeat Offender” with guitars-to-the-front melodic presence. This is a record with a strong sense of fun, as apparent on “Opening Chase Theme,” though tender moments slip in too, as can be heard on the Farrah-ish “Ballad of Watt.”

https://youtube.com/watch?v=CrQOPzaCbss%3Fsi%3DINNp_ZxPCLQO_XzP

Looking to get cool? You can purchase it from these guys in popular song form from various poprock music purveyors. Just tell them ‘Marc’ sent you.

Photo courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.

Marching into melody: Brent Seavers, Hanemoon, Wesley Fuller, and Svenssen

22 Friday Mar 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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Brent Seavers, Hanemoon, Svenssen, Wesley Fuller

Melodies don’t just happen, they require a setting, an introduction, a prelude before they are unleashed on the unsuspecting listener. Today we march into solid melody territory with four acts that know how to throw out a hook.

Brent Seavers enters Exhibit B into evidence of his poprock genius. And with songs like these, selecting a jury for this case won’t be a problem. Things kick off with two tracks that marry Beatlesque specs with a youthful performance worthy of The Strypes. Check the break-out lead guitar work on “Rollercoaster Ride” that vibes an “I Saw Her Standing There” intensity. Or note the nice jangle interlude and very Beatles bridge centring “Of Poetry.” Early Elvis Costello fans are going to love the cool organ work all over this record.  “Push Me Down” works the organ hard for a serious dance party tune. “The Noble Cause” reminds me of Mark Everitt the way the words seems to chase the tune all over the song, buffeted by a subtle bed of cool organ. “Stumbling” has a jamming strut, again supported by more great organ work. A keen ear can hear a load of other disparate poprock influences on this album, like Squeeze (“The Universe and I”), Plimsouls (“No Perfect Way”), Oasis (“Fuzz Off”), and yes The Decibels (“Raining In My Head”). Stand-out tracks for me include the lush 1960s ballad “Lullaby” and the should-be single “Till It’s Over.” The latter rides a lurching set of seductive hooks that will pull you in like a planetary gravity well. Exhibit B is all the evidence you really need that Seavers is guilty of turning out criminally hooky tunes. And he’ll probably do it again.

On Rain or Shine Berlin’s Hanemoon strike a balance between elements of jangle, rough edge folk, and indie rock. It’s a record all about sonic shading, where sounds become like different hues of colour. From the outset “My Circle Line” links the album’s lineage to bands like Teenage Fanclub, Dropkick, and more distantly the Byrds. “Why Don’t You Walk Away” has sibilant guitars up front, though the overall effect is more sombre than your typical guitar band. “When I Look Around” verges on poppy rock with a breathy Elliot Smith vocal. And are those jazz guitar chords I hear shading “Deeper Than Down”? Honestly the mood on Rain or Shine is more wet than dry. One imagines songs like “Old From New” soundtracking endlessly dreary rainy days, helping make things more bearable. But there are lighter moments too. “Let’s Do the Magic Thing Again” has a brighter tone, accented by gently rippling lead guitar, while “Got a Date Tomorrow” has a driving hypnotic quality. I love the subtle keyboard adds to the REM-ish, seasonal love-letter “Is It Summer.” Then record closer “Comets” comes on like a late-breaking should-be single. Sometimes a record captures or creates a mood, like David Sylvian’s Brilliant Trees. This is one of those LPs.

The opening cut of Wesley Fuller’s bold new long-player All Fuller, No Filler knows how to build tension. “Back to Square One” doles out keyboard lines like an outtake from Who’s Next, only to suddenly segue to a slow glam march into its main melody. It’s Fuller’s mastery of many different genres and eras of popular music that is so striking on this LP. There’s 1970s folk pop on “Jacaranda,” a definite Wings vibe to “Everything is Strange” and “All of My Dreams,” and even bit of disco kick on “The Velvet Affair.” But there’s never just one influence. The latter track synthesizes so many 1970s sonic elements: slick AM pop, dance, and a killer hook lodged deep in the chorus. Or listen to how Fuller expertly steers a straight-up AM pop feel into the emerging 1979 new wave challenge on cuts like “Alamein Line” and “Inside and Out.” On the broader song line-up, the record see Fuller alternate between perfectly crafted pop gems like “Pacific Coast Highway” and his penchant for hooky, dance-able stompers like “Trade War” and “House of Love.” I love how he borrows that Beach Boys echo-chambered organ to set the mood for a 10cc/Beatles pop workout on “Look No Further.” You get the picture – All Fuller, No Filler is a very special album, a testament to an emerging pop master.

Norwegian band Svenssen hail from the small seaside town of Bryne, about an 8 hour drive from the nation’s capital Oslo. But there’s nothing provincial about their brand of melodic rock and roll. On Svenssen Sings Falling Out of Fashion the band deliver four finely crafted pop tunes that harken back to Kinksian themes of societal disruption but the sonic vibe is more early 1980s to my ears. The opening cut and title track “Falling Out of Fashion” has a Madness/Split Enz pop intensity that exudes maximum fun. “Dutch Courage” slows the tempo, brightening the jangle somewhat. “We Are Animals” has a shuffle groove that is a bit more seventies. Then on the wrap-up song “Hair of the Dog” the atmosphere is more Man Called E to me. And then we’re done, all too soon. Come back Svenssen, bring more songs!

You can take these melodies to go. Just click on the links to package them up.

Photo of ‘Found Kodachrome Slide – Plant City’ courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.

Spotlight single: Frank Royster “Someday”

17 Sunday Mar 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Spotlight Single

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Frank Royster

The reliably good Frank Royster returns with a retro-drenched mellow melody that locates Liverpool somewhere in 1960s southern California. The opening rhythm guitar gives off a strong Texas Bobby Fuller Four vibe, only to shift sonic templates with the addition of some bright 12 string electric guitar. When the track finally settles into its own groove the distinct Beach Boys and Beatles elements meld together effortlessly, producing something eminently listenable over and over again. Not surprisingly, the video features sun, sand and wistful Royster playing his acoustic guitar on a boardwalk as pictures of a couple I assume are his parents flash on the screen as well as footage of a couple more Royster’s age walk a beach hand in hand. The lyrics pitch the singer as hopeful (‘someday, I’m gonna make you happy’) while the images show successful couples growing old together. “Someday” is Royster’s third stand-alone single to be released in the last two years, preceded by “Miss Information” and “Open Door.” What is interesting is how all three land in slightly different musical registers, which bodes well for his upcoming album still in preparation. In the meantime, if you haven’t followed Royster’s past work you are in for a treat. Both 2007’s Through the Years and 2010’s Innocence is Bliss are solid efforts that fans of Don Dixon or Bill Lloyd will love.

You can preview Royster’s material on Soundcloud and YouTube (including a creative re-interpretation of Elvis Costello’s “Only Flame in Town”) or just hang with him at his website and Facebook locales.

Photo courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr page.

Songs for weary travellers

14 Thursday Mar 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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65MPH, Crowded House, Escape Artists, Faraways, Gentleman Jesse, Get Set Go, Ivar and Tommy Go To Hollywood, Kevin Nichols, Luke of Ulysses, Mike Browning, Robby Miller, Scoopski, Seasonal Falls, Slaughter Beach - Dog, Softjaw, Spencer Segelov and Great Paintings, Tall Poppy Syndrome, The Kings, The Rockyts, The Shop Window, The Stanford Family Band

Nothing fixes the mind on travel quite like winter. Particularly those last lingering months where you can feel the season ebb but not quite subside. But getting somewhere ‘not winter’ is an effort for those of us north of 40 degrees latitude. That’s why we’ve assembled some musical accompaniment for soon-to-be weary travellers.

Ottawa’s The Rockyts have evolved from an amazing 60s sound-alike beat group on their 2020 debut album to a sleek 1980s new wave machine with singles that have come out over the past year. “Without You” creeps into view with a Cars-like muted electric guitar and vocals, only to break out in the chorus with full band impact. Crowded House may not climb the singles charts like they did in their 1980s heyday but that doesn’t mean they can’t still craft a killer tune. Their new single “Oh Hi” has all the classic Neil Finn song markers. There’s lilting slow-build hooks around every corner and Finn’s ear for unusual instrumentation remains undiminished. Hard to find out much about Escape Artists except a Go Fund Me page from a Tennessee duo suggesting an album is on the way. So far I’ve found three singles – basically, a maxi-single. From those choices I think “Around the Block” is a delightful bit of Tom Petty name-checking poprock. ‘What would Tom Petty do?’ they ask with a driving sense of Petty-ish aplomb and his special mix of guitars and organ. The mysterious band 65MPH hail from Chatteris UK, a small market town near Cambridge. I can’t imagine that’s the speed limit there. Sonically, the band sound like they’ve been stamped from a Paul Weller-meets-Billy Bragg mould, and that’s no bad thing. Their recent single “Small Miracles” casts a plaintive vocal against a mostly solo guitar backdrop to good effect. I love the striking effect Spencer Segelov and Great Paintings get on “The Contender.” The lead guitar line carries the tune but the overlapping vocals gives the tune lift, with a choir-like transcendence. Very 1980s American college radio.

Crowded House – Oh Hi
Escape Artists – Around the Block

Ottawa’s (as in Canada folks) Robby Miller rides a fine line between good old boy rock and roller and smooth poppy rock. His recent single “Everything Is Nothing” combines a bit of both, with up front jangly guitars and a low key vocal carrying the melody. Reminds me a bit of some of the mellow hits from The Fixx. Last year mellow popsters The Kind Hills made my top 25 singles list with their uplifting song “Let Youth Take Over.” Now they’re back in a new guise as Seasonal Falls. Still mellow, but drawing from a different sonic palate this time out. The hush vocals and standout guitar tone on “Used To Be Fun” are both exquisite while the tune is amble-along-in-the-sunshine good. The Shop Window manage to combine 1980s indie guitar pop with a folkie vibe on “I Run.” The vocals hit me as a little bit Outfield while the guitar has a shimmer and ring reminiscent of The Silencers. Legendary Canadian band The Kings are primarily known for an FM radio staple (“Switching to Glide/This Beat Goes On”) that has been in near constant rotation since its release in 1980. And then, not much. They did have other great material but just couldn’t match that early success. Now if you’ve missing that signature Kings sound there’s good news – the band have a brand new album out called Longest Story Ever Told. It is uncanny how much it sounds like no time has passed at all. Check out “Always Off the Deep End” and see for yourself. Faraways are a completion story. Active in the 1990s they split early in the new millennium. But as Covid swept the planet all that down-time had former band members drifting back to their unfinished songs. The result is the aptly named EP Decades of Dormancy. The standout track for me is the psychedelic “Ruby Ring of Love” with its Sgt. Pepper droney vocals, sitars, and killer organ fills.

Faraways – Ruby Ring of Love

Since his standout solo debut album Class Act Mike Browning has been drip releasing engaging new singles. “Just One Day” has a western Texas Buddy Holly groove. This song sounds so freshly pressed out of a 1961 rockabilly scene or Everly’s Cadence records release. More Texas can be found on Get Set Go’s fabulous LP Outworlder, particularly on the intoxicating single “Your Boy.” The song seems so early 1960s simple and endearing but an increasing sophistication emerges and intensifies as it plays on. Drunk Dial Records promise to get their artists loaded and then have them record an original tune and a cover. Gentleman Jesse’s original “Where Time Stands Still” has a wildness about it, maybe one drink over the line, but still maintaining its energetic focus. Another act drip releasing a load of interesting songs is Scoopski. “Nocturnally Yours” brings together heavy dollops of nerd rock a la Weezer and straight up FM radio rock bombast. And the results are a freakin’ fun, hummable good time. Slaughter Beach, Dog put out a fab new record last September entitled Crying, Laughing, Waving, Smiling but didn’t have room for one last song. “I’m In Love” is a country-ish soft rock Valentines tune of a different order. Catchy and disturbing at the same time.

Feel the insurgent drive of Softjaw’s recent single “Pleased With Me.” It’s got 1970s group singalong vocals, Keith Richard guitar licks, and strong party vibe. There’s a looseness that is so tightly performed here. By contrast, Kevin Nichols keeps striking a discordant tone throughout “Looking at the Ocean” butting up against melodic hooks that just won’t quit. One part grunge, another part Swervedriver. Sixties holdovers Tall Poppy Syndrome get 2024 started with a song that draws from multiple decades on “This Time Tomorrow.” There’s a touch of psychedelia of course but also mannered Moody Blues vocals, pumping organ shots, and insistently strong hooks throughout. Of a particular time but also seemingly timeless. The Stanford Family Band are a wonderful throwback to that early 1970s dreamy pop on “Love Me a Bit.” It was an era where piano moved up into the spotlight on AM radio singles and Beach Boys stopped having hits but influenced everybody and everything on the charts. This group have got a heavenly arsenal of background vocals riding a solid bed of piano chords. Luke of Ulysses carry on our Cars revival tour on their single “Car Trouble.” Though I also hear Nick Gilder coming through their clipped vocal style. And then there’s guitar god moment in the middle. This is a great synthesis of styles.

Tall Poppy Syndrome – This Time Tomorrow

Wrapping up our 21 song support playlist for weary travellers is something I can’t quite put my finger on. Described as a mysterious Norwegian duo, Ivar and Tommy Go To Hollywood certainly get top marks for an inventive name. But what they represent musically on “Bore Me to the Moon” is less clear. Things start off very English guitar band or Front Bottoms but listen to what comes up in the background. The band put together a veritable tapestry of vocal interplay that buffets the indie rock guitar drone and deadpan vocal that is fronting the tune. I don’t know what it is but I like it.

You can get on the bus Gus and needle-drop your way through this audio travelogue. I don’t know where you’re going but I think you’ll enjoy getting there more with miles of melody to choose from.

Photo courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr page.

Smarty-pants poprock: Day Dreems, Lord Esme, and Pale Lights

09 Saturday Mar 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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Day Dreems, Lorde Esme, Pale Lights

Rock and roll was more loins than literary at the start. Beat over beatnik. Then Bob Dylan came along and made smart cool. The Beatles took notice and let loose a barrage of working class smarts, particularly from Rubber Soul on. Since then popular music has thrown up a whole raft of smarty-pants popsters then and again. Today’s post features a trio of brainy melodians, ready to wow you with music and words.

Day Dreems is here to denaturalize your world. Musically and lyrically that is. San Francisco and Portland music veteran Day Ricardo pulls together a brilliant rumination on gender, bodies, oppressive nostalgia, intolerance, ADHD, and more on this self-titled debut album. Musically the LP falls somewhere in between the exquisite melodies of Squeeze and Crowded House. “F Natural” creeps into being like a cut from that Difford and Tilbrook solo record, wending its way toward a big reveal that ‘natural’ isn’t always right or good. As Ricardo sings, “Silly humans sometimes get things right, like music and electric light.” The vocals on this album are so eerily Glenn Tilbrook at times, as on “Easy” and “Fountain of Truth.” Then “The Bad Old Days” takes an uber cool organ line to shift into the compressed pop territory of acts like Linus of Hollywood. Things can be wistful, like “Let’s Be Lonely” which evokes those early 1960s angst ballads. The record also has some real rocking turns, like the ADHD-exploring “Brain Drain.” At other points Lennon’s Walrus haunts “Lady Beetle” in quite an inventive way. By the end “There’s a Light” teases us with a lilting, beautiful tune whose vocal sounds like a cross between Neil Finn and Glenn Tilbrook. Day Dreems is a lush sonic treat, heavy with hooks, and something inspiring to say.

I’m not saying Lord Esme offer a treatise on analytical philosophy or anything but there’s something sophisticated lurking behind their smart LP design and endearing, mellow guitar pop. Take a good look at the cover of A Nice Sit Down. It’s eye-catching, radiating bright colours and a sense of fun. Introducing the record, both “Shane Warne” and “Cold Canberra Nights” have a folky dissonance lurking in their electric guitar combo style. But then “Succulent City” drew me in with seductive saxophone. So cool-jazz in an Everything but the Girl or Sade way. “Number in my Pocket” shifts things into a more shimmery guitar pop mode, though some great organ pops up pleasantly here too. “Alison Rhodes” rides an organ swell like a merry go round ride while “Booking a Flight” sets a mystery tone with a minor key. The sax returns strongly in the cool album closer “Lots of Money.” Maybe you never hung out at those hip coffee houses but put this on the spinner and people might think you did. In a good way.

I fell hard for Phil Sutton’s early 2020s band Love, Burns. I had an inkling he had earlier vehicles but never really followed up … until now. Waverly Place allows me to catch up on the 2000 and teens timeline of releases from Sutton’s previous project Pale Lights. Get ready for tunes oozing breezy pop goodness, peppered with striking lead guitar-led melodies. “Fourteen Stories Tall” captures this perfectly, seeming like a cross between sixties pop-folk and confessional eighties indie rock. Title track “Waverly Place” gives this formula a 1980s English vibe, kinda like Lloyd Cole or Roddy Frame. The guitar tones on so many songs here are remarkable. “Twisting the Knife” has a lead guitar chirp like a siren luring all jangle guitar fans to keep hitting repeat while the vocal comes off like a well-adjusted Lou Reed. The organ work here is pretty special too. “Dearest Virginia” sounds like a single to me with its insurgent quality, adding just a hint of Morricone to the background vocals. With 13 tracks on this career-covering compilation there’s a lot to enjoy – jump in anywhere. Personally “You and I” is my hands down fave. The chord changes so remind me of The Crickets’ “Don’t Every Change” (particularly as covered by The Beatles).

You don’t need a PhD in poprock to spot some smart tunes when you hear them – like these. It’s not homework or anything but a click on the links above will be its own reward.

Photo courtesy Marcu Ioachim Flikr collection.

An invite to The Parties

05 Tuesday Mar 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Artist Spotlight

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The Parties

I know San Francisco’s The Parties from two LPs and two EPs released between 2007 and 2010. There might be more releases out there but the band’s Bandcamp page is limited to this quartet. But what a formidable foursome they represent. There is a jocular rock and roll confidence to their performative stance, ably sustained by a generous load of jangle and a delightfully youthful demeanor. For this post I invite you to enjoy The Parties, featuring one signature tune from each release. Just enough to whet your appetite and get you primed for more.

It seems fitting to kick things off with the title track “The Parties” from 2007’s The Parties EP. There’s a strong late-1980s jangle-drone here I associate with The Primitives or The Church. While the rest of the album has a rough, almost punky elan, this single is a smooth sensorium of this kind of sound. On 2008’s Can’t Come Down “Cold Life” has a sunshine jangle feel that reminds me of the Cyrkle in their Neon period. Then the title track “Cryin’ Shame” from 2009’s Cryin’ Shame EP expands the sonic palate again, this time adding a Rank and File/Grapes of Wrath rocking folky feel, with jangle of course. By the time we get to 2010’s Coast Garde things have gotten much grander. “Suite: Feet Back On the Ground / I’m Sorry / Going Away Girl” is a seven-minute epic that breezes by, enveloping you in its magisterial Byrdsian charms only to segue to something more jangle pop in the end.

You wanna party? Check out all the other cuts populating their EPs and LPs at their Bandcamp site here. It won’t be an early night if you do.

Photo courtesy James Vaughn Flikr page.

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