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Generating Jean Caffeine

09 Tuesday Sep 2025

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Artist Spotlight

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Aimee Mann, Amy Rigby, Chrissie Hynde, Jean Caffeine, Marti Jones, Mary Lou Lord, Patti Smith

Jean Caffeine is an American indie treasure. Over her long career she’s hit all the alternative scenes: punk in seventies San Francisco, no wave in New York City, Americana in Austin, and a decidedly more poprock feel on recent albums (Love. What Is It?) and singles (“I Don’t Want To Kill You Anymore”). She’s a clear manifestation of the positive dialectic between artist and scene. Now she’s got a new LP Jean Caffeine Generation ready and it is a heady mix of social commentary, heartbreak and hooks to spare. Following recent music distribution trends, she’s drip released most of these songs already as singles but somehow they still manage to cohere together as an album. I’ve reviewed most of the material already over the past year or so, comparing her to the likes of Patti Smith, Mary Lou Lord, Amy Rigby, Robin Lane, Marti Jones, and Chrissie Hynde. And I stand by those assessments. But listening to the songs as an LP Caffeine’s own distinctive voice really comes through, one part all rock and roll heft, the other emotional pop vulnerability.

Album opener song “Love What Is It?” is a poppy saunter in the park, adorned with melodic asides that seem thrown in but land perfectly. At various points it really reminds me of Marti Jones or Aimee Mann. Then comes “Big Picture,” a track that hasn’t appeared anywhere and it’s a hooky winner. “I Always Cry on Thursday” starts so nondescript but the chorus breaks out with a melodic intensity that is irresistible. Crying also features on “Another Crying Christmas,” a track that avoids the seasonal saccharine by dialing into some emotional depth and rock and roll edginess.  “I Know You Know I Know” uses verbal repetition and a 1980s computer game keyboard tone to draw you right in. What I hear on “Circuitous Routes” is a cool strut, so Chrissie Hynde. I also appreciate Caffeine’s deft ability to weave political themes into her work without sacrificing their ear-worminess. “I Don’t Want To Kill You Anymore” is so brilliantly understated, a slow-groove girl-group homage that’s a far cry from “He Hit Me (And It Felt Like a Kiss).” And it takes a rare talent to make “Mammogram” a winning tune. Caffeine’s cover of The Who’s “The Kids Are Alright” is just ramshackle fun. A bit of performance art closes things out on “You’re Fine.” You don’t spend time in NYC’s 1980s art ghettos and not catch the bug.

Jean Caffeine is a product of her era, from youthful punk to senior songstress. But generating Jean didn’t just happen. Spend some time with Jean Caffeine Generation to get a sense of her genius at work.

Pull up the covers

09 Saturday Aug 2025

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Poprock Themepark

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ABBA, Aimee Mann, Badfinger, covers, Davey Lane, David Bowie, Jeremy Fisher, Mark Aaron James, Mark Ward, Marti Jones, Robert Crenshaw, Simple Minds, Sofa City Sweetheart, Squeeze, The Cars, The Dahlmanns, The Extensions, The High Frequencies, The Vogues, Tom Petty

Covers can feel like an artistic cheat. Why write something new when there’s a wealth of material out there that’s already proven to be popular? But covers can be an equally exquisite creative outlet in the right artistic hands. So here we pull out some pretty fabulous covers from acts that certainly know their own way around a songwriter’s desk.

Our first song triplet reaches back to the sixties and seventies. Robert Crenshaw steps out of his brother’s shadow on his 2003 long-player Dog Days and takes on a real classic pop wonder with a cover of The Vogues 1966 hit “Five O’Clock World.” Artists as varied as Julian Cope, The Proclaimers and Bowling for Soup have taken a stab at it but Crenshaw’s version really lands. Mark Ward’s new album Translator offers a wide range of covers but his take on Badfinger’s “Baby Blue” hits the power pop guitar and vocal marks. Sometimes artists seem to deliberately take up material pretty far flung from their usual melodic haunts. Like Mark Aaron James’ cover of ABBA’s “The Name of the Game.” This is not an easy song to knock off at karaoke. It’s got strange pacing, plenty of tempo change-ups, and a melody that curves in unusual ways. James gets the tune across in an original way.

Robert Crenshaw – Five O’Clock World
Mark Aaron James – The Name of the Game

Moving toward the new wave turn of the decade capping off the 1970s The Pictures lead guy Davey Lane gives us a less English version of Squeeze’s kitchen-sink singalong “Up the Junction.” It’s got a rougher edge, slightly less winsome, perhaps more drink-along than sing-along – but good. The Dahlmanns know their Tom Petty and give us a taste on their 2024 Lucky EP. Their version of “A Thing About You” is less snarly, more power poppy, and utterly delightful. By contrast, Canadian Jeremy Fisher deconstructs The Cars super-hit “My Best Friend’s Girl,” adding mischief, some pipe solos, and background vocals with just enough cheese to be enjoyably ironic.

Arriving in the 1980s The Extensions reinvent the Simple Minds’ iconic movie tune “Don’t You (Forget About Me).” They seem to slow things down, lower the angst level, but dial into the song’s sincere heart. Lisa Mychols likes to collaborate and her new vehicle is The High Frequencies. Catch their magnetic cover of David Bowie’s “Modern Love.” It’s another song that sounds so easy to do but needs a certain kind of energy to really come together – this band does it justice. Another artist that is hard to cover is Aimee Mann. Her work is just so her that it’s hard to imagine other possible versions. But Marti Jones, another artist with a distinctive vocal approach, pulls it off on her cover of Mann’s “Put Me on Top” from her 1993 solo debut Whatever.

Marti Jones – Put Me On Top

Wrapping up this covers extravaganza is an elegant re-make of Elliott Smith’s “Waltz #2 (XO)” from the ever so piano-delightful Sofa City Sweetheart. The accompaniment is spare, just piano and Juan Antonio Lopez’s aching vocals.

Photo ‘Found Kodachrome Slide’ courtesy Thomas Hawk Flikr collection.

Cover me! Marshall Crenshaw “Whenever You’re On My Mind”

15 Wednesday May 2024

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Artist Spotlight

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Field Day, Marshall Crenshaw, Marti Jones, Michael Fiore, Ronnie Spector, The Kavanaghs, Whenever You're On My Mind, Zach Jones

With just five songs featured on this post it may appear to be an abbreviated episode of Cover Me! but I still think it’s worth your while stopping by. “Whenever You’re On My Mind” is one of my all-time favourite songs. For me, there’s just no way anyone is going to touch the transcendent beauty of Crenshaw’s original. Initially recorded during sessions for his debut album, the song didn’t quite fit and ended up the lead single on his fabulous second LP Field Day. Talk about making a good first impression, the track opens the album with one of the most seductive guitar hooks of all time, the vocals are a master class in power pop elocution, and the production is so brilliantly, sibilantly Steve Lillywhite good. Frankly, running the search engines on YouTube, Bandcamp and iTunes, it doesn’t appear that a lot of people have been up for the challenge of covering such a formidable composition and performance. But there have been a few worthy attempts.

We start with Marshall, of course. For a different take from the single and album cut you can find a live version of “Whenever You’re On My Mind” on his 2021 collection The Wild Exciting Sounds of Marshall Crenshaw. The 1983 video for the song is worth a viewing too, if only for its time capsule feel for an early 1980s look and ambience.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=l-or2AET9L4%3Fsi%3DRAX_qnuXVD6WKEHO

In terms of covers, we begin with the most inventive. Working with REM producer Don Dixon, Marti Jones put out a number of albums in the 1980s that saw her put her stamp on a host of songs from the likes of Elvis Costello, Dwight Twilley, David Bowie, and John Hiatt. Her cover of “Whenever You’re On My Mind” appeared on her 1986 album Match Game, which Marshall Crenshaw played some 12 string guitar on, though not on his song. What is striking on her cover is how she changes the vocal emphasis on the lines in the chorus. Girl group legend Ronnie Spector did a whole EP of Marshall songs on 2003’s Something’s On My Mind. She too added a few surprising twists and turns to the song’s melodic arc here and there that really work. I only know Zach Jones from his spot-on Monkees reincarnation track from 2020 “Must Be On My Way.” His 2016 acoustic approach to covering “Whenever You’re On My Mind” lightens the power pop intensity, gentling the vocals and guitar attack. The effect is reassuring rather than bracing. I really like the guitar tone and ramshackle vocal on Michael Fiore’s cover from the same year. There’s a rehearsal space Replacements vibe to this rendition. The Kavanaghs hail from Rosario, Argentina and put Marshall’s song on the b-side of their 2021 single “Going To The Beach.” The latter is more of a vamp-ish rocker so their cover shows they can’t handle the more melodic side of the street too. Why more people don’t cover MC is a mystery to me, given the results on display here with just these five submissions.

Marti Jones
Ronnie Spector

Need more Marshall? Who doesn’t. Get on over to marshallcrenshaw.com to find your Marshall merch, show tix, latest news and records.

Around the dial: Jack and Eliza, Don Dixon and Marti Jones, and Chris Corney

30 Wednesday Sep 2015

Posted by Dennis Pilon in Around the Dial

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Chris Corney, Don Dixon, Jack and Eliza, Marti Jones

Jack and Eliza “Hold the Line”   jack and elizaThis Brooklyn duo have an eerie vocal presence and their songs largely consist of a great trebly guitar and their overlapping singing, which is sometimes harmony, sometimes countermelody. Jack sounds quite Shins-like on this track but there is also a Mamas and Papas feel, if that group had gotten into some darker material. This song is drawn from their solid 2014 debut EP No Wonders. Their new album is Gentle Warnings and features a few tracks from the EP. Another solid song featured on both is “Secrets.”

Jack and Eliza website

Don Dixon and Marti Jones “Why, Why, Why”   martijonesdondixon                                        If Don Dixon had only ever recorded the song “Most of the Girls Like to Dance (But Only Some of the Boys Do)” I would have been happy. But fortunately he has continued to record, sometimes with his very talented partner, Marti Jones. This song is from their joint 2011 album Living Stereo and features a great chorus that largely describes my marriage.

https://poprockrecord.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/09-why-why-why.m4a  Don Dixon and Marti Jones Facebook

Chris Corney “America”   Chris Corney AMCorney leads The Ravines, who have a great new album that I plan to write about soon. But this track is from his 2012 solo album, Airways Mansions. Though from Bedford, England, there is something very American to me about Corney’s sound. Too poppy to be Springsteen-esque and yet the song establishes its cinematic quality right from the start – you can see the montage rolling by: factories, dilapidated fences, old cars, etc.

Chris Corney website

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