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Tag Archives: Ben Patton

I get mail: Mark Bacino, Brother Dynamite, Richard Restaino, and more

17 Thursday Oct 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

≈ 1 Comment

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65MPH, Ben Patton, Brother Dynamite, Mark Bacino, Poppy Robbie, Randy Klawon, Rich Restaino, Rob Moss

Mail comes in pretty regularly around here. Few come typed or neatly written but nevertheless I get a veritable load of missives pleading their poprock case. That’s today’s reality: artists have got to wield their creativity to sell as well produce fine music. So let’s get on with rewarding that initiative shall we?

Over the past quarter century the arc of Mark Bacino’s musical stylings have branched out from the focused power pop of 1998’s Pop Job .. The Long Player and 2003’s The Million Dollar Milkshake to the sophistico-pop sound of his latest LP Top of the World. Bacino’s got a McCartney-esque facility with song styles and the selections here range from the swinging AM pop of “Kaylee Hughes” to the breezy Linus of Hollywood-like “Not That Guy” to the music hall-ish “Why Does This Woman Love Me?” My fave though is the spot-on seventies soft rock ballad “Young Heart.” Brother Dynamite’s new single “The Girl’s In Love” is a luscious eighties FM radio throwback. It’s a great song but the vocal arrangement is positively hair-raising, in a good way. Can album number 2 be far off? Let’s hope not. Poppy Robbie returns with a cover of outsider/lofi pioneer Daniel Johnston’s “Mind Contorted.” Drawing on his folk rock predilections, Robbie delivers a touching performance of a song that reflects Johnston’s mental health struggles. Chatteris UK’s 65MPH is practically a singles machine, pumping out e-equivalents of 45s seemingly like clockwork. His latest “Gene” sounds like Billy Bragg joined a britpop band. The harmonica solo is just an extra special bonus!

I love the driving guitar sound Rob Moss gets on his new album with The Skin Tight, simply entitled Records. Kick-off track “We Just Don’t Know” sets the tone of what you can expect, chugging rhythm guitars and somewhat ethereal, voice-of-god talk-singing from Moss. Standout track for me here is “You and Time.” Love the soaring Steely Dan lead guitar lines and the album’s hookiest melodic twists and turns. Superior song-smith Ben Patton wrote me a while back about something, something called The Something Review. Patton’s unique cleverly structured song style is everywhere here, from the show opener “The Something Revue” to “I Hope My Therapist Likes Me.” Along the way he writes songs about bugs, the darkest part of the night, and a doctor’s routine procedure. Basically, nothing is off limits for a song with this guy. Think Randy Newman, but without all the darkness. I’d particularly recommend “Before I Fall In Love” as a pretty gorgeous tune. Randy Klawon has been on a bit of a singles tear lately but his new song “Tonight” is really something else. There’s a madcap, careening feel to the song that is so endearing. Stylistically, the track balances Merseybeat and Wings influences in an impressive way. You can dip in just about anywhere with Rich Restaino ’s catalogue and find yourself a real gem. His latest EP Mixtape has got a smoking instrumental called “Earworm.” Such wicked guitar tones on both the tasty lead licks and chugging rhythm work. Then “In My Dreams” cooks along with a honky-tonk meets rockabilly vibe. Or you can dial up a dose of Restaino’s signature ‘grown up folk’ sound on “The Back Nine” and “Nothing Add.” The former is an Arlo Guthrie-esque social commentary on getting old while the latter spends two folky minutes telling us he has nothing to say. From the catalogue check out the Replacements-ish “Don’t the Stars Look Big Tonight?” from his 2022 EP Lucky and “Civil War” from the 2016 LP It’s a Golden Age for Creeps.

Have you got a poprock song that needs some blog love? Get that stationary out, drop me a line, and tell me all about it.

Photo courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr page.

The lighter side of poprock

02 Friday Feb 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

≈ 2 Comments

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Bart Davenport, Ben Patton, Four Eyes, Grand Drifter, Jacob Slater, Sam Wilbur

Sometimes we turn down the stereo, crank up the indirect lighting, and get mellow. As a genre, poprock has got that kind of flexibility. So today we shine our light on the lighter side of melody-rich tune-age. You can light up a Gauloises now.

Last year Bart Davenport re-released his 2003 LP Game Preserve. The whole enterprise was a deep dive into the sonic textures of the 1970s: singer-songwriter, light rock, a bit of yacht, veering into early Eagles territory here and there. But the track that really grabbed me was the flamenco-styled opening cut, “Sweetest Game.” Talk about light touch! The acoustic guitar backing is so elegant and spare, the vocal intimate and understated. On his 14th album Burlington Vermont’s Ben Patton demonstrates his mastery of decades of songwriting styles. Hyde’s Hill Henhouse covers so many bases, from straight up soft rock to mannered 1940s word play. For the former, there’s “Making The Most of Space” or “Does It Have to Hurt So Much,” both exhibiting that effortless easy-listening flow anchored with subtle hooks. By contrast “Don’t Mention Jane to Jim” has the clever pacing and arch commentary of a Noel Coward lyric. Musically the record puts its songs in various settings: samba (“Romantic to a Fault”), novelty (“My Own Monster”), jazz (“Put on a Tie”) and country (“Hyde’s Hill Henhouse”). Songs like “I Hear Good Things About Naples” strip things back to their most essential elements as Patton drapes his vocal over the tune with an exacting delivery. Or you can just bask in the simple sweetness of the tender “Cancel All My Plans.”

When I reviewed Grand Drifter’s “As the Days Change” last year I was struck by the dynamic tension established between the lush acoustic guitars and single note piano work. Andrea Calvo makes this sound central to his Grand Drifter project on the rest of his most recent EP Paradise Window. Opening cut “Drawing Happiness” is most similar to the previously featured tune, with a slightly more Latin flavour. “Beautiful Praise” adds drums and jangly guitars in a way that strikes a more 1980s indie British guitar band sound. On “Unrecorded Feelings” a more Bacharach feel surfaces while “Peaceful Season” turns back to the Latin themes. Then piano comes to fore on the title track “Paradise Window” floating over an atmospheric cloud-like backing. Final track “Memory and Dust” trades guitar and piano lead lines under an ethereal vocal. Another artist that can effectively paint a sonic picture is Jacob Slater. On Pinky, I Love You the sound is striking, echoing like a big, empty, dimly-lit room late at night. There’s not much more here than acoustic guitar and vocals but Slater shapes these two into a distinct ambience. “One For the Pigeons” falls into a solo John Lennon meets Elliott Smith register while “I Do” feels very Ben Watt in that early spartan EBTG period. But the album highlight for me is “Kissin’ Booth,” so reminiscent of the first Suzanne Vega album, with perhaps just a dash of Big Star. This is a mood album, whether making or reflecting it.

Generally Athens Georgia native Erin Lovett hangs with just a ukulele and her voice in the guise of her musical personality Four Eyes. She has a particular penchant for holiday tunes, accent on Halloween. Occasionally she breaks out a more full band performance, as on “Walk Me To My Door” from 2014’s Our Insides. Sometimes she offers up an inventive ‘live radio play and music event’ that runs to 20 minutes – Dead Girl. But her most recent EP The Freaky probably best captures her oeuvre. The songs sound like they emerge from a melody museum, fitted with bits of past musical glory, driven by plucky strings here, driving organ chords there. Opening cut “Vampires” reminds me of Vashti Bunyan. “The Dead Can’t Rest” lurches along fueled by bleating organ shots. “Never Change” is just straight up acoustic guitar folk. But through it all Lovett’s songwriting is lyrically evocative with tunes that get in your head. Well as we amble toward the exits on this post we can excerpt something from Sam Wilbur’s new record The Age. Here the stand out track for me is “South Carolina,” a bittersweet example of Americana that leverages piano, fiddle and competing vocals lines to fill out its aural landscape.

Light and easy can be good, as long as the hooks are strong. So make sure to set these suggestions aside somewhere for when the mood strikes.

Photo courtesy James Vaughn Flikr collection.

I get mail: Dude, The Mother Z’s, Justin Levinson, and Elephonic

20 Monday Nov 2023

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

ARP!, Ben Patton, Dude, Elephonic, Justin Levinson, The Mother Z's, The Muggs, Tony Muggs

People write me. Really talented people. What can a poor scribe do but write about these great rock and roll bands?

With his band The Muggs Detroit rock and roll mainstay Tony Muggs has delivered 6 albums of distinctive heavy blues rock. But his solo albums have a decidedly different flavour. Under the Dude moniker he released 2012’s Kid Gloves and this year’s Autobiograffitti, the latter coinciding with his book of the same name, and the contents are more solidly pop. The vibe is very Beatles 1966. There’s whimsey, there’s drone, there’s sometimes even a heavy kick lurking beneath the poppy melodies. Having said all that, Kid Gloves’ opening cut “Not Exactly Where I Should Be” actually suggests a Monkees sense of fun. By contrast “Sweet Danielle” matches a more Beatles “I’m Only Sleeping” melancholy pop while “Two Minutes Hate” is more in “Tomorrow Never Knows” or “She Said She Said” vein. Then again “Soliloquy” sounds very Pugwash to me. A decade later the Beatles influences spread from 1966 to 1968 on Autobiograffitti. There’s a more loose, old school rock and roll vibe on tracks like “Ahh Geez Louise” or a touch of Nesmith’s country mode Monkees on “Devil’s In My Whiskey Once Again.” But other tracks like “Red Coat For Sale” are Revolver-era rocking tight. Both “Mary Mary (Quite Controversial)” and “You Are So Wonder” harken back to that “Doctor Robert” or “Paperback Writer” feel. Then the record ends on a more dreamy psychedelic pop note with “Tomorrow Is Promised to No One.”

The Mother Z’s are a brother and sister duo that have the DIY punky immediacy of Jonathan Richman or The Violent Femmes. It’s been almost ten years since they waved goodbye to fans with a variety of acoustic collections and b-sides. Since then brother Andy released a host of work as ARP! while sister Becca exited the music scene. But now they’re back together with a new EP Rest It Straight and the results are less frenetic, more acoustic, but no less engaging than their earlier work. “Non, Merci” launches things with a cool strut, evincing a Replacements kind of rough band togetherness. “Rest It Straight” offers up an alluring swing featuring a Spoon-like rhythm section. “Sheboygan” and “Meredith” have a country rock-folk feel akin to Rank and File while “Holy Smokes!” has the makings of an Americana classic. And don’t miss the tender openness on display within “Postcard from Chicago,” definitely the should-be single.

Collamer Circle represents some double-barrelled Vermont songwriting action from Justin Levinson and Ben Patton. I’ll admit, there were times when I thought I could discern when songs tipped more towards one writer or the other. For instance, having waded through Patton’s 12 fabulous albums, tracks like “Send Some Love My Way” and “Then and There” seemed to exude his distinctive turns of phrase and melody while “Mirabelle” just captured his penchant for old-timey whimsy. But for most of the album I couldn’t tell who wrote what, so aligned are these artists in their melodic MO. Opening cut “Madeline for the Win” is exhibit A, a classic Levinson/Patton cleverly structured pop song, both in tune and lyrics. Altogether I’d say the collaboration has a 1970s AM radio flavour. “California Sun” has a west coast beach sound washed with a bit of yacht rock. I hear something like Leo Sayer’s boppy pop singles on “Baby You’ve Arrived” while “I Need Somebody Now” builds to a brilliant melodic arc in the chorus. Then again, “Lead Me To You” could be seen as a more Beatlesque effort. But the record’s stand-out, should-be hit single is undoubtedly “Tin Foil Hat Parade.” This tune breaks out into more timeless poprock territory, conjuring the feel of any number great songs from Squeeze or Split Enz.

With his new Elephonic project Blow Pops and Lackloves leader Mike Jarvis attempts to distil the very essence of poppy rock and roll. And given a few plays of his new band’s self-titled debut I’d say he’s largely succeeded. Opening cut “Until the Sound” is a cacophony of sounds that still somehow gel together, vibing a load of 1980s English guitar bands. But other points reach farther back, reinventing a Merseyside feel on tracks like “Wonderin’.” I mean “Why Can’t You Listen” almost sounds like a With The Beatles deep cut, the song structure is so early Beatles but wrapped in a more contemporary sound. From there it’s like a tour of different decades, with the various songs accenting different pop music moments. There’s a 1960s Latin horns wash on “Durango,” a sunny early 1970s AM pop sheen to “Freedom Bells,” while “Rapid Transit” exudes a late 1970s penchant for acoustic rock with ominous overtones. And then we have songs that defy easy categorization like “Memphis UK.” This one swings with a “His Latest Flame” shimmy, touched up with some striking guitar flourishes. Really, Elephonic is an obvious ‘best of’ list addition.

Why Can’t You Listen
Memphis UK

Hard to believe people this talented have to write and send their own pressers but that’s what being an artist has come to today. Why not put paid to that effort by making it rain across the hyperlinked band sites added above for your convenience.

Photo ‘Mostly It Was Something To Fill Up Her Empty Days’ courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.

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