Counting Crows Return to Form

Posted by bob, May 6, 2008 10:20 am - Permalink   

Counting Crows -- Saturday Nights, Sunday Mornings

Counting Crows’ latest, Saturday Nights and Sunday Mornings, comes just as its title advertises — a rockus Saturday night followed by easy like Sunday morning. It’s almost like two albums. It opens with guitars unleashed. Four of the first six songs are rockers echoing the best from Recovering the Satellites. Mixed in there is Ryan Adams co-penned “Los Angeles,” which is a good tribute to a mixed up town. “Cowboys” is the standout on the album. This one really sounds like it could have been on Satellites, which despite the brilliance of August and Everything After still seems to firmly hold the position as my favorite CC album.

After “Cowboys” the disk takes a hard left turn into mellow folk rock for most of the rest of it. We’re talking unplugged stuff for a number of these tunes. And they’re not bad. There’s no Shrek moments. They’re just quite the contrast to the guitars blazing through the first 6 tunes, songs that you groove on right away (which I will really want to see live); the second half of the album may take a while to set in. They’re more like “Speedway” or “Omaha” than “Chelsea,” but not monotonous, with some decent melodies. “Washington Square” is probably the standout. “Le Ballet D’or” echoes “Ghost Train” of August.

The pace picks up again on “You Can’t Count on Me,” which is getting radio play (I thought it was putrid when I first heard it, but was probably being overly harsh now that I’ve heard it again). The disc ends with another upbeat groove called “Come Around,” which is not like “Hangin’ Around” or “Round Here,” but is a fitting coda for this mix of rock and folk.

If the mellow portions of this disk don’t fall on their face with further listening, I think this album has a chance to land squarely in the middle of the heap of the Counting Crows catalog: August/Satellites (pick ‘em, both great), Saturday Nights, Desert Life/Hard Candy (I like both of these and continually flip-flop over which one I think is better, but then stop debating due to their inferiority to August and Satellites).

We’ll see. Saturday Nights at least is no worse than the last two albums and its highs are definitely higher. SIX YEARS in the making, could they have done better? Yeah, but if you’re a fan of the earlier CC stuff, you won’t be too disappointed. Duritz is going in the right direction, and losing weight, and getting the right cocktail of antidepressants. Hopefully there wil be a lot more to come.

Monotonix — Body Language EP out today

Posted by Tracy Sigler, April 22, 2008 11:50 pm - Permalink   

If your band lists “Sonics, Thin Lizzy, Royal Trux, Led Zeppelin, ABBA” as influences it’s a sure bet I’m going to check out your music. And when I read about your drummer’s penchant for crowd-surfing, with his drums, I gotta see what that’s all about.

Ladies and gentlemen… all the way from Tel Aviv… Monotonix!

Body Language EP comes today, April 22.

Gossip — Standing in the Way of Control

Posted by Tracy Sigler, April 17, 2008 7:52 am - Permalink   

Gossip was on Letterman last night and they rocked steady. This is the second time I’ve seen them perform “Standing in the Way of Control” on TV. Small on instrumentation and big on sound, I love this.

Gossip at MySpace
Gossip on Wikipedia

Major Maker — Rollercoaster

Posted by Tracy Sigler, April 1, 2008 12:41 pm - Permalink   

Here is a fun floaty pop song from Canadian band Major Maker, all the way from Canadia. “Rollercoaster” is a great grooving song to help you stay awake this afternoon, and it would be perfect for your summertime mix tape. If the boss isn’t looking try to watch the video; it’s worth the risk of reprimand anyway. Fans of Duran Duran’s “Rio” video are sure to love it. I’m guessing these guys probably weren’t even born when that debuted on MTV.

Check out more of their music

Dengue Fever — Tiger Phone Card

Posted by Tracy Sigler, March 1, 2008 2:12 pm - Permalink   

“Tiger Phone Card” is the prettiest and groovinest song I’ve heard in a long time. And the band Dengue Fever is, loosely speaking, consistent with this week’s theme of psychedelic music. Fresh and familiar strikes again, and I can’t get enough of it. This video is of a live performance at The Viper Room. They are playing at The Black Cat in DC tonight y’all! Oh, please, please come to The Orange Peel in Asheville, NC!

Hear the album version of “Tiger Phone Card” and many other great songs at Dengue Fever’s MySpace.

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