It’s All in the Name

Once known as the Hawks when they backed Arkansas rockabilly singer Ronnie Hawkins, they jokingly dubbed themselves the Crackers. They finally became the Band when they served as Bob Dylan’s back-up group on the legendary The Basement Tapes done in Woodstock, New York, in 1967, following the songwriting legend’s near-fatal…

Three’s a Charm

Despite the way this undoubtedly will be marketed, there’s not as much novelty here as on 1994’s American Recordings: Johnny Cash singing a U2 song? Hell, he did that on Zooropa. Singing with Tom Petty and backed by various Heartbreakers? That’s all Unchained is. And sure, he offers his take…

Sidestepper

British-born Richard Blair takes his world music literally. He got his start in the recording studio engineering reggae and bhangra in Birmingham and then manned the controls at Peter Gabriel’s Real World studio, producing acts ranging from Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Geoffrey Oryema to Toto la Momposina. Momposina, the…

LL Cool J

G.O.A.T. stands for “Greatest of All Time,” and while LL Cool J may or may not be the greatest MC ever (I’m sure there’s a fella named Rakim who would take exception to that, and Kool Moe Dee is bound to be getting riled up right now just thinking about…

Secrets Kept

Drums line two walls at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida’s exhibition “Ritmos de Identidad: Fernando Ortiz’s Legacy and the Howard Family Collection of Percussion Instruments.” Drums fill the cases that sit in the middle of the room and cluster about the door. The sound of batá drums, the sacred…

Maria Is a Band

First came the name. “We actually had the name even before we dared to put a band together and play live,” says singer Michael Roderick about Maria, the rock group he founded with childhood pal Paul Molina. It may seem as if they’re commemorating the Virgin Mary’s Spanish nombre or…

Fame and Misfortune

There are many fine lines that all artists and would-be contenders must walk. There’s clever and stupid. There’s sincere and sentimental. There’s influential and influenced. The list is long, and achieving an authentic balance is always more instinctual than learned. Artistry is the illusion that something mundane can walk for…

Jets to Brazil

The smart, unflashy white guitar rock known as emo has become the faceless new face of indie, and, in the form of its sophomore effort, Four Cornered Night, genre standard-bearer Jets to Brazil has released the music’s most high-profile album. Throughout the record’s first five songs, Four Cornered Night sounds…

The Beach Boys

The Beach Boys did make more than just one great album — speaking of Pet Sounds of course — before they became an oldies-circuit cliché and a mere job for Mike Love. This two-for-one re-release of Sunflower and Surf’s Up, from 1970 and 1971 respectively, proves that. With this release…

Easy to Slip

Some bands benefit from the box-set treatment and some don’t. Falling into the latter category is Little Feat, on Rhino’s Hotcakes & Outtakes: 30 Years of Little Feat. The box takes four compact discs, eighty-two tracks, and five hours to prove that the band’s best work was done on its…

Slow and Low

It’s only 9:00 a.m., but Al Sparhawk is wide awake. Such is life when you’re the father of a six-month-old. As young Hollis Mae Sparhawk lets out an exuberant squawk and her dad gushes on and on about the joys of fatherhood, it’s clear the elder Sparhawk is no ordinary…

Richard Buckner

It’s seldom a good thing when songwriters decide to indulge their literary pretensions and try to set the great American novel to music. For every Paul Kelly, who did a bang-up job back in 1989 with his interpretation of Raymond Carver’s So Much Water So Close to Home, there’s a…

Loretta Lynn

On radio the legends of country music might as well be dead and buried. In the recording studio, though, many of that genre’s greatest singers are proving that traditional country music is still very much alive. And this is traditional country in the most vital sense of the word: It…

Jesus’ Favorite Singer

Is this the home of Rebert Harris?” I asked anxiously. The woman who had answered the phone said yes. “Rebert Harris of the Soul Stirrers?” Yes, she said again. I told her I was writing a story on the legendary gospel quartet from Trinity, Texas, and I wondered if I…

Drama Queen

I can’t tell anecdotes,” says Julieta Venegas, between bites of a take-out sandwich in an empty hallway at the Latin Alternative Music Conference (LAMC) in New York City this past August. “I’m no good at it,” she continues. “I have to paint situations.” On her celebrated sophomore release, Bueninvento (Goodinvention),…

Bryter Now

People never forget where they were when Kennedy was shot. Or John Lennon. Or the first time they saw the Beatles or the Ramones or Nirvana — on TV. Certain momentous occasions never leave us. For me, I’d add the first time I heard Nick Drake coming out of my…

Still Alive!

It shouldn’t be this easy to get Peter Frampton on the phone, but it is: A publicist for DreamWorks Pictures calls, asks if you’re interested in talking to the man, and five days later, he’s on the other end of the line at the appointed time. Twenty-four years ago, such…

Merle Haggard

It’s easy to predict which songs will receive the most attention on If I Could Only Fly, the new Merle Haggard album being distributed by the indie-punk label Epitaph. In the manner of the black-and-white, wrinkle-centric photo that introduces the album (à la Johnny Cash at American), it’ll be the…

John Lee Hooker

These are some of John Lee Hooker’s earliest recordings, probably his second recording session ever, but one can never be sure given the numerous labels he recorded for early in his career. This is certainly the first time that all twenty of his recordings for the Savoy label have been…

Shipwreck Songs

When Fito Paez arrived in the United States for the first time in 1989, the police at the airport gave him a thorough workover. “I didn’t have the right look to get in,” remembers the gangly, long-haired singer currently in Miami to record a new disc. Laughing, he adds, “I…

The Imperfect Beast

Don Henley’s massive 1989 hit “The End of the Innocence” was a complex piece of songcraft that reminds me of the kind of portraiture that Paul Simon writes on a good day. Paced at a crawl, with co-writer Bruce Hornsby’s immediately recognizable keyboards underpinning the melancholy sentiment of the lyric,…

A Bad Experience

The cynic won’t care, the skeptic won’t understand, and the true believer will be overwhelmed: Nearly 30 years to the day of Jimi Hendrix’s death, here come 56 more unreleased-unavailable-unattainable tracks from a man more prolific in death than in life. Three studio albums before his death, three hundred or…