Thursday, August 27, 2009

Casual Listening -- Matisyahu, The Very Best, Imogen Heap

Casual Listening

a review of cool new music

by Jeff Pinzino

August 28, 2009

Matisyahu – Light (rap)

Matisyahu’s musical utopia seamlessly fuses rap, reggae, and cosmopolitan pop in a sonically adventurous, politically conscious cocktail. Thickly laid percussion tracks keep the party moving.

Listen to Matisyahu “We Will Walk

The Very Best – Warm Heart of Africa (world)

Call it “Africa: The Remix.” Malawi vocals shine over percussion, synthesizers, and samples with a bounce that sets it a step above most crossover efforts. Guests include M.I.A. and Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig.

Listen to The Very Best “Warm Heart of Africa

Imogen Heap – Ellipse (rock)

While “quirky female singer-songwriter” describes an awful lot of artists these days, Imogen Heap’s new album is top shelf. Vocals counterbalance electronic sounds to deliver songs that crack with the pain and joy of relationships.

Listen to Imogen Heap “Earth

Roy Hargrove Big Band – Emergence (jazz)

Hargrove has one foot in classic big band styles and one in modern jazz harmony. He’s obviously enjoying the expanded possibilities, from a standard like “My Funny Valentine” to a Coltrane-meets-Ellington art piece like “Requiem”

Listen to Roy Hargrove Big Band “Requiem

Mariachi El Bronx – Mariachi El Bronx (Latin)

There’s an additional layer of romance to mariachi that’s sung in your native tongue. This set of English-language tracks has the tunefulness of Simon & Garfunkel set to trumpets. A fun concept well-executed.

Listen to Mariachi El Bronx “Cell Mates

Skillet – Awake (rock)

Heavy rock just this side of metal, with plenty of hooks amid loud, distorted guitars.

Listen to Skillet – “Hero

p.s. The music’s old, but the recordings are pristine on Woody Guthrie’s box set My Dusty Road. If you’re a Woody fan, it’s priceless. If you’ve never really spent time with Woody, this is the collection to get. Here’s This Land is Your Land.

* highly recommended

! highest recommendation

Check out the blog at http://casuallistening.blogspot.com . Follow me on Lala here

To subscribe or unsubscribe, or just to say hi, send an e-mail to jeffpinzino@gmail.com.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Casual Listening - Delbert McClinton, Cachao's Mambo All-Stars, Terence Blanchard

Casual Listening

a review of cool new music

by Jeff Pinzino

August 21, 2009

! Delbert McClinton – Acquired Taste (blues)

You’ll hear more of the American landscape in this album than anything short of hopping a cross-country freight train. Soul, blues, bajou, rhum-boogie, all with pitch-perfect production. Rattletrap drums, warbling organ, and a voice that’ll burn the rust off an old Cadillac. After more than 40 years in the business, McClinton’s at the top of his game.

Listen to Delbert McClinton “Mama’s Little Baby

* Cachao’s Mambo All-Stars – Como Siempre (Latin)

Mambo is where salsa came from, and its brassy, dance-demanding sound plays as well today as it did 70 years ago. The band carries on the legacy of Israel “Cachao” Lopez, one of the originators of the mambo in Havana. A big horn section with flute, guitars, chorus, and lots of percussion – ¡QuĂ© sabroso!

Listen to Cachao’s Mambo All-Stars “Alto Songo

Terence Blanchard – Choices (jazz)

Give Blanchard credit for adding a most unusual instrumentalist to his ensemble: Cornell West on mystical rumination. The spoken word makes an interesting counterpoint to cool jazz charts stamped with Blanchard’s unconventional melodies and shimmering trumpet work.

Listen to Terence Blanchard “Jazz Man in the World of Ideas” and “Him or Me

Sean Paul – Imperial Blaze (reggae)

Paul is a master of the singsong delivery and hopscotch rhythm that distinguishes dancehall from conventional hip-hop. You’ll find big hooks and boisterous attitude in this crowd-pleasing set.

Listen to Sean Paul “So Fine

Choo Choo La Rouge – Black Clouds (rock)

Scruffy, tuneful rock & roll with retro tendencies. Wilco fans should feel right at home.

Listen to Choo Choo La Rouge “Here Come the Guns

Linzay Young & Joel Savoy – Linzay Young & Joel Savoy (Folk)

Honest, unpretentious Cajun music with two fiddles and two voices. Spare, beautiful songs and some uptempo numbers whose charm lies in their simplicity.

Listen to Linzay Young & Joel Savoy – “Mercredi Soir

* highly recommended

! highest recommendation

Check out the blog at http://casuallistening.blogspot.com . Follow me on Lala here

To subscribe or unsubscribe, or just to say hi, send an e-mail to jeffpinzino@gmail.com.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Casual Listening - Ayelet Rose Gottlieb, Polkastra, Kitty, Daisy & Lewis

Casual Listening

a review of cool new music

by Jeff Pinzino

August 14, 2009

! Ayelet Rose Gottlieb – Upto Here/From Here (jazz)

After a hundred years, is it still possible to say something new in jazz? Gottlieb demonstrates powerfully that there is. Harmonically intricate compositions weave cords of melody out of voice, saxophone and trumpet. Blank verse, sometimes her own words and sometimes Middle-Eastern poetry, matches the unexpected, beautiful, and sometimes jarring music.

Listen to Ayelet Rose Gottlieb “Wrong Rain (Bird Thoughts)

Polkastra – Apolkalypse Now (world)

If polka is musical comfort food, Polkastra is your immigrant grandmother who knows the secret ingredient that makes it taste so good. Here, they play a global sampling of polka music, played on everything from accordion to bassoon to didgeridoo.

Listen to Polkastra “Clarinet Polka” (on Bassoon)

Kitty, Daisy, & Lewis – Kitty, Daisy, & Lewis (blues)

Blues is one of a handful of art forms where sounding raw and unpolished is a sign that you’r doing it right. The trio captures the grit of classic blues without any glitz. It’s music that belongs on an old 78rpm record (and believe it or not you can actually get this album as a series of 78’s).

Listen to Kitty, Daisy, & Lewis “I Got My Mojo Working

I’m going to stop here this week, because you should all be listening to the treasure trove of concerts NPR managed to pull down from this year’s Newport Folk Festival. Legends such as Pete Seeger, Judy Collins, and Del McCoury and rising stars such as Gillian Welch, Iron & Wine, Fleet Foxes – 30 concerts in all. Find it all here.

* highly recommended

! highest recommendation

Check out the blog at http://casuallistening.blogspot.com . Follow me on Lala here

To subscribe or unsubscribe, or just to say hi, send an e-mail to jeffpinzino@gmail.com.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Casual Listening -- Cyro Baptista's Banquet of the Senses, John Zorn, Junkyard Rebellion

Casual Listening

a review of cool new music

by Jeff Pinzino

August 7, 2009

* Cyro Baptista’s Banquet of the Senses – Infinito (world)

In the best Brazilian tradition of borrowing something from everywhere and swirling it all together. Drums and percussion drive each song, and you'll find everything from flutes and gongs to melodica and bird whistles to carry the tune. This truly is a "banquet of the senses," so go and eat well.

Listen to Cyro Baptista “Kwanza

John Zorn – O’o (jazz)

A small, vibraphone-led jazz ensemble with tropical overtones. This set is lively and tuneful, with straight-ahead numbers and even some rock-influenced tracks. If the regular reviews of his various projects in this space haven't convinced you, the music should: this guy can do anything.

Listen to John Zorn “Miller’s Crake

Junkyard Rebellion – Rebellion Politik (rap)

The "rebellion" moniker fits both the sonic innovation and the progressive politics of the group. Some live instrumentation as well as studio wizardry, and more than a little spoken-word influence among the rhymes.

Listen to Junkyard Rebellion “Original Assumption

Aphrodesia – Precious Commodity (world)

Animated Nigerian-style funk from an American band. Aphrodesia has a solid horn section and full-throttle drumming designed to get you moving.

Listen to Aphrodesia “Special Girl

Watermelon Slim – Escape From the Chicken Coop (blues)

Slim is one of the more innovative bluesmen playing today, bringing a sense of immediacy to a venerable form. This set mixes in enough country twang to make for good driving music, especially if your vehicle of choice is an 18-wheeler on a cross-country haul.

Listen to Watermelon Slim “Caterpillar Whine

Yim Yames – Tribute To (folk)

A 6-song solo tribute to George Harrison. Reverb-laden and ruminative, Yames' intimate re-interpretations manage to find new emotional terrain in familiar songs.

Listen to Yim Yames “Long, Long, Long

Also worth a listen: Selaelo Selota, Solillaquists of Sound, Zabe da Loca

* highly recommended

! highest recommendation

Check out the blog at http://casuallistening.blogspot.com . Follow me on Lala here

To subscribe or unsubscribe, or just to say hi, send an e-mail to jeffpinzino@gmail.com.