mercoledì 18 aprile 2012

Bap Kennedy – Sailor's Revenge

Clamorosa quanto tardiva affermazione per questo songwriter Nord-Irlandese fratello del non meno noto Brian Kennedy. L’ex Energy Orchard, molto apprezzato per le sue collaborazioni con artisti del calibro di Van Morrison e Steve Earle e, più di recente, con Mark Knopfler dei Dire Straits, con il quale ha registrato questo nuovo album “Sailor Revenge”, oltre ad averlo accompagnato in numerose apparizioni live, culminate con ben cinque serate alla Royal Halbert Hall, Bap firma uno degli album più belli e coinvolgenti della stagione che merita di diritto la prima pagina. Anche 2cd. Limited edition con brani scelti dai suoi dischi precedenti.



For nearly any singer/songwriter on the planet, the idea of collaborating with Mark Knopfler would be the stuff of fantasy. But for Bap Kennedy, it was just the latest in a long line of projects with high profile, and highly respected, musical legends. For a man who has worked with Steve Earle and Van Morrison, to name just two, an offer to record an album in the Dire Straits frontman's own studio was another musical milestone. The Sailor's Revenge, the album that Kennedy wrote and Knopfler produced, features songwriting that grows stronger with every listen - assisted, of course, by Knopfler's distinctive delicious guitar and tasteful widescreen production Bap’s first encounters with the record business were as rhythm guitarist, lead singer and primary songwriter for Belfast rockers Energy Orchard, with whom he recorded 5 albums. When the band left Belfast, they established themselves as legends of London’s live music scene. It was while he was in Energy Orchard that Kennedy first worked with compatriot Van Morrison, who gave the band several support slots to supplement their own hectic touring schedule of both the USA and Europe. When Energy Orchard split up, Bap had little time to rest, because alt-country superstar, and longtime Energy Orchard fan, Steve Earle soon contacted him, suggesting that he would produce Bap’s first solo album. Kennedy agreed, and soon found himself on the plane to Nashville, TN, where he would record Domestic Blues. Earle described Bap as “the best songwriter I ever heard,” and the album featured several of Nashville’s most highly regarded musicians, including Jerry Douglas, Peter Rowan and Nanci Griffith. It was a real success, getting into the top ten of the Billboard Americana chart. Kennedy’s song Vampire appeared in the soundtrack for Hollywood film You Can Count On Me - which won two awards at the prestigious Sundance film festival and received two Oscar nominations - and 3 songs from the album were used for cult classic Southie. More touring of the U.S.A. cemented the acclaim. The follow-up album, Lonely Street, was an artistic project based on, and dedicated to, two of Bap’s childhood musical heroes, Hank Williams and Elvis Presley. In more ways than one, it was music that was made for the love of music, and this was reflected in the consistently positive responses from critics at respected music magazines including Q and Mojo. Once again, Kennedy’s work was used in a Hollywood soundtrack – this time it was ballad Moonlight Kiss, used for one of the key scenes in hit rom-com Serendipity (starring John Cusack and Kate Beckinsale), which is now a modern-day Christmas classic. Bap’s next album, The Big Picture, was a return to working with Van Morrison, who had supported Kennedy since his Energy Orchard days. The Big Picture was recorded at Morrison’s studio, and included a Bap and Van co-write, Milky Way. The album also featured guest vocals from Shane Magowan, lead singer of The Pogues, on the song On the Mighty Ocean Alcohol, and a reading from Carolyn Cassady, one of the leading figures from the Beat generation of American writers, at the end of the beautiful Moriarty’s Blues. More excellent reviews from Mojo, et al, cemented Kennedy’s reputation as a songwriter growing more mature with every release. The time following the release of The Big Picture was to mark profound changes in Bap’s personal, as well as professional, life. Shortly after Kennedy had brought his hard-living ways to an end, he worked with Mark Knopfler for the first time – appearing as a special guest for Knopfler’s tour of the USA and Europe, including five nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was during this period that Kennedy met his future wife, Brenda Kennedy, an artist and songwriter herself who had also written several bestselling books on Autism and Asperger Syndrome under her previous name of Brenda Boyd. Bap also produced Brenda’s album Banish the Blue Days. For Howl On, released in 2009, Bap recorded in his native Northern Ireland for the first time in his solo career and, much like with Lonely Street, returned to writing a series of songs on a subject that had fascinated Bap in childhood. This time, it was a look at his youthful love for all things American, and the story of the moon landings, not portrayed as a technological feat, but as a moment in the lives of the real people who worked on the Apollo program. This was a collection of human stories held together by the shared thread of Apollo, and told beautifully by Kennedy. This was followed by a successful tour of the UK and Europe, highlighted by a memorable performance at the Glastonbury festival. Bap continued his touring with several highly successful one off gigs, including work with the renowned Belfast/Nashville festival, and performing in the highly regarded South by Southwest festival in America. Bap was also honoured during this period to become patron of Autism NI, which he had become involved with through his wife Brenda. The Sailor’s Revenge features Kennedy’s most mature and sophisticated songwriting to date - an achievement in itself when you consider his back catalogue – as well as the instantly recognisable guitar work of Mark Knopfler, who also produced the album. Knopfler is joined by a collection of the most highly respected session musicians, such as Jerry Douglas and Glenn Worf, combining to ensure that the musicianship on The Sailor’s Revenge is every bit as good as the songwriting.

mercoledì 11 aprile 2012

Nanci Griffith - Intersection

Parlare di Nancy Griffith è come introdurre personaggi del calibro di Johnny Cash o Hammylou Harris... vere e proprie leggende viventi del country, persone che ne hanno fatto con la loro vita la storia e che hanno saputo superare lo "steccato" del genere per proporlo ad un pubblico piu' vasto. Per loro il country è uno strumento che permette di esprimere la propria vena poetica e questo cd non fa eccezzione dove accanto a molte cover bellissime troviamo nuovi brani inediti di primissima qualita'. Nanci è un gioiello del cantautorto made in Usa e siamo veramente felici di questo nuovo album che ci permette di parlare ancora una volta di lei.



A Conversation With Nanci Griffith

Mike Ragogna: Nanci, your newest album, Intersection, seems to be an extremely personal one, and you recorded it in your home. Can you go into that a little?

Nanci Griffith: Well, Pete Kennedy was the one who came to me and said that he knew that I was writing a lot and he was also aware of the fact that I didn't want to be in a studio. Being in the studio involves transporting yourself to LA or New York, then actually getting to the studio daily. I don't want to do that. So, he suggested that he bring his studio down from New York and set up shop in my loft space. We just recorded at the house, kept it all inclusive. The album came out very personal and very live. It's very live.

MR: Can you tell us about some of the musicians on the album?

NG: Pete and Maura Kennedy are the core of what I do these days. I have really bad arthritis in my hands, and they really help me with the things that I struggle with on the guitar these days. Then there's Pat McInerny who's been my drummer for 25 years. It was just us and a couple of visitors. Peter Cooper and Eric Brace came in and sang vocals, and all of the neighborhood children came in and sang on the song, "Come On Up, Mississippi." We only had one other person come in, and that was Richard Steele to play the banjo. It was just a really fun, all in the family kind of experience.

MR: Let's talk about a few of your songs, beginning with the anthem, "Hell No." That song is not only your first single, but it also has a message behind it.

NG: That song came to me so quickly, it was one of those songs that just stood up and said, "Hello." I was not satisfied with some of the things that had happened in my life in the past couple of years, and I just got to the point when I wasn't going to take it anymore. Don't ask me how I'm doing if you don't really wanna know, you know? The song is so universal, and has even become tied to the "Occupy" movement. Every time we play the song live, people are up on their feet, pumping their fists, clapping and celebrating. Most of the time, they're doing this never having heard the song before either. It's great, I really love it.

MR: Do you believe that we're moving into an age where people are beginning to stand up in protest again?

NG: I sure hope so. In my opinion, seeing our republican nominees for the Presidency should be getting everyone fired up. For instance, I didn't even know why Newt Gingrich was in the running. I honestly thought that he didn't have a prayer, but I've been proven wrong. It's scary. We've talked so much about getting the money out of politics in Washington, D.C, and Newt Gingrich is one of the Washington insiders that we are trying to get rid of. He's one of the people spending millions of dollars while attacking the others that are doing the same thing. They seem to care more about money than they do about anything else.

MR: Right on. Let's talk about another of your strong message songs, "Bethlehem Steel."

NG: We were playing at The Bethlehem Arts Center, which was built directly in front of the abandoned steel mill. They've used the Steel Mill as the backdrop of that stage...it's massive. The Mill also has a stained glass window that is lit up during shows. It's almost like there's a movie going on behind you, or something. The movie Deer Hunter is what came to mind when I wrote that. Just a side note to all the ladies...Robert De Niro runs naked through the streets of Bethlehem exactly 47 minutes into the film. (laughs) Performing there was one of the only times that I was on stage that I was tempted to break the connection and the eye contact with the audience so that I could turn around and look at the Steel Mill behind me.

MR: Beautiful. And you also have an ode to 9/11 on this album.

NG: Yes, I do. The song is called, "Davey's Last Picture" and it's a true story written by my assistant Robbin Bach. She was actually in New York with her son, Beau, tooling around the village when they came across this group of firemen washing off their truck. Beau wanted to stop and meet the fireman, so they did and they were very sweet to him. He got his picture taken with a few of them, including a man named Davey. Then, Davey passed on 9/11.

MR: That's very powerful. Another of your songs is "Just Another Morning Here," one you recorded a while back.

NG: Yes, and we kind of laugh about it, only because it took Peter Cooper and Eric Brace to fill Phil Everly's shoes on the recording. (laughs) I make fun of them for that.

MR: Nanci, I've noticed that you create from a very deep place. What is your creative process? How do you go about writing?

NG: Well, it's very spontaneous for me these days. I'm not disciplined as I used to be about it. In fact there's a song on the record called, "Stranded On The High Ground," that I wrote while a group of workers were working on the stairs in my home. I went to take a nap, and had a dream that I was in the middle of a field with Dobie Gray and we were singing that song and doing the Ricki Lake dance. He should get ghostwriter privileges on that song because it was written a couple of months before he passed away. I knew he'd been ill, and he was on my mind, that's probably why I dreamed of him.

MR: Wow. Now that's an intersection with us--Dobie Gray. We were friends, and I did a duet with him in 2008 called "Home" about bringing the troops home and fixing New Orleans. He was awesome and a bit of an activist, something most people don't know about him. By the way, one of my favorite lines in "Stranded..." is, "If you're standing on the high ground, there's no where to go but down."

NG: Well, it's very true. That's why you have to hold your ground!

MR: You also did a Loretta Lynn song on Intersection called, "High On A Mountaintop."

NG: I have always been a very big fan of Loretta's, but never recorded anything by her because I was too intimidated. I thought it was time on this album - especially since I know Loretta and I've even written about her. She's very aware of that. She's also always been very kind and giving to me, so I knew that I really wanted to do something of hers on this album. Of course, I probably picked the most complicated song she ever wrote in her life. (laughs)

MR: (laughs) But, of course, you handled it with grace.

NG: Well, thank you. She can fit more words into one line than anyone else, ever. (laughs)

MR: (laughs) Now, one of my favorite songs from your catalog is "Trouble In The Fields." It's such a heartbreaker.

NG: That song meant so much to me then. Maura O'Connell was the first one to cover that song, and she had a hit with it in Ireland. That kind of paved the way for me. I still think that she did the best job with that song of anyone, including me, so much so that my great uncle, who was 92 at the time, had her version of "Trouble In The Fields" on his answering machine if he was out in the field and couldn't answer the phone, not mine. I thought it was really sweet. It wasn't cool, but it was sweet. (laughs)

MR: And speaking of Ireland, "It's A Hard Life Wherever You Go" is another of your great anthems. I especially love the line, "If we poison our children with hatred, then a hard life is all that they'll know."

NG: And I believe that's true. I don't think we're socializing our children properly. School used to be as much about education as it was about socializing. There are so many school districts now that no longer have a physical education program so that these kids can get their aggression out on a basketball or play some kickball. They need time to throw things at each other. (laughs) It used to happen a lot more, and that just doesn't exist anymore.

MR: Do you feel like there's an answer to that problem?

NG: Well, the answer has always become that we can't afford it. We don't even have the arts in schools anymore. I think every child has a creative notion in them. But at the same time, having been a schoolteacher, I believe that if a child has a knack for the arts, they'll find it. Any arts class was always a breath of fresh air to the children that had a passion for it.

MR: So true. Getting back to Intersection, I wanted to talk with you about the song, "Never Going Back." Never?

NG: Well, I don't intend to go back. (laughs) I love that song. To me, it means that I've done this, I know this, I've walked away from this, and I don't want to do it.

MR: Nanci, having the wealth of experience that you do, do you have any advice that you'd like to give to new artists?

NG: Work...you know? I mean, I respect people who are able to work well on their computers and such, but don't rely only on that thing. Work. Get out your real instrument with strings or keys and play music. Sometimes, I feel like we're heading in the wrong direction in that regard because I believe that being completely electronically based can stifle the creativity. You're not creating a sound, it's already created for you.

MR: I often worry about that myself, since technology has made it so easy to slack off. So, what does the immediate future hold for you?

NG: Well, I am going to be touring all over Europe. We're in Europe for a little over a month

. MR: Wonderful. Any chance you'd like to make a quick prediction on the upcoming Presidential election?

NG: Oh, gosh. I don't know. I mean, I have a bumper sticker on my truck that says "Blue Girl in a Red State." I have no predictions. It's been so odd lately that anything can happen.

MR: (laughs) I agree. Nanci, this has been such a huge pleasure for me. Thank you for coming to spend time with us.

NG: Thank you so much for having me, Mike.

Intervista tratta dall'Huff Post

giovedì 5 aprile 2012

Lyle Lovett - Realese Me

Lyle Lovett was one of the most distinctive and original singer/songwriters to emerge during the '80s. Though he was initially labeled as a country singer, the tag never quite fit him. Lovett had more in common with '70s singer/songwriters like Guy Clark, Jesse Winchester, Randy Newman, and Townes Van Zandt, combining a talent for incisive, witty lyrical detail with an eclectic array of music, ranging from country and folk to big-band swing and traditional pop. Lovett's literate, multi-layered songs stood out among the formulaic Nashville hit singles of the late '80s as well as the new traditionalists who were beginning to take over country music. Drawing from alternative country and rock fans, Lovett quickly built up a cult following which began to spill over into the mainstream with his second album, 1988's Pontiac. Following Pontiac, his country audience declined, but his reputation as a songwriter and musician continued to grow, and he sustained a dedicated cult following throughout the '90s.



Born in Klein, Texas -- a small town named after his great-grandfather, a Bavarian weaver called Adam Klein, which later became a Houston suburb -- Lovett was raised on his family horse ranch. He didn't begin his musical career until he began writing songs while he attended Texas A&M University in the late '70s, where he studied journalism and German. While he was a student, he performed covers and original songs at local folk festivals and clubs. As a graduate student, he traveled to Germany to study and continued to write and play while he was in Europe. However, he didn't begin to pursue a musical career in earnest until he returned to America in the early '80s. Upon his return to the States, Lovett played clubs throughout Texas, eventually landing a spot in the 1983 Mickey Rooney TV movie Bill: On His Own. The following year Nanci Griffith, whom Lyle had interviewed for a school paper while he was in college, recorded his "If I Were the Woman You Wanted" on her Once in a Very Blue Moon album. He also sang on the album as well as her 1985 record Last of the True Believers. Guy Clark heard a demo tape of Lovett's songs in 1984 and directed it toward Tony Brown of MCA Records. Over the next year, MCA worked out the details of a record contract with Lyle. In the meantime, he made his first recorded appearance on Fast Folk Magazine, Vol. 2 #8 later in the year. Lovett signed with MCA/Curb in 1986, releasing his eponymous debut later in the year. Lyle Lovett received excellent reviews, and five of its singles -- "Farther Down the Line," the Top Ten "Cowboy Man," "God Will," "Why I Don't Know," and "Give Back My Heart" -- reached the country Top 40. Despite his strong showing on the country charts, it was clear from the outset that Lovett's musical tastes didn't rely on country, though the genre provided the foundation of his sound. Instead, he incorporated jazz, folk, and pop into a country framework, pushing the musical boundaries of each genre. Pontiac, his second album, revealed exactly how eclectic and literate Lovett was. Greeted with overwhelmingly positive reviews from both country and mainstream publications upon its 1987 release, Pontiac expanded his audience in the pop and rock markets. The album charted in the lower reaches of the pop charts and slowly worked its way toward gold status. While his pop audience grew, his country fan base began to shrink -- "She's No Lady" and "I Loved You Yesterday" both made the Top 30, but after those two songs, none of his other singles cracked the country Top 40. It didn't matter that Lovett's country audience was disappearing -- Pontiac had gained enough new fans in the pop mainstream to guarantee him a strong cult following. To support Pontiac, he assembled His Large Band, which was a modified big band complete with guitars, a cellist, a pianist, horns, and a gospel-trained backup singer named Francine Reed. Lovett recorded his third album, Lyle Lovett and His Large Band, with his touring band. Like its two predecessors, the album was well-received critically upon its early 1989 release, and it performed well commercially, peaking at number 62 and eventually going gold. Perhaps because of the album's eclectic, jazzy sound, the album produced only one minor country hit in "I Married Her Just Because She Looks Like You," but his straight rendition of Tammy Wynette's "Stand by Your Man" received a great deal of attention in the media. Following the release of His Large Band, Lovett settled out in California, which signaled that he was abandoning country. After settling in Los Angeles, he spent the next two years collaborating and working on his fourth album. In 1990, he produced Walter Hyatt's King Tears album; the following year, he sang on Leo Kottke's Great Big Boy and donated a cover of "Friend of the Devil" to the Grateful Dead tribute album Deadicated. Also in 1991, he made his acting debut in Robert Altman's The Player, which was released in the spring of 1992. A few months after The Player hit the theaters, Lovett's fourth album, Joshua Judges Ruth, was released. Boasting a heavy gospel and R&B influence, Joshua Judges Ruth was his most successful album to date, peaking at number 57 and going gold. On the whole, the album was ignored by country radio, but pop audiences embraced the record, and Lovett became a staple on adult alternative radio and VH1. Despite the success of Joshua Judges Ruth, Lovett became a near-superstar for a completely different reason in 1993 -- his surprise marriage to actress Julia Roberts. Upon the announcement of their marriage, Lovett became the subject of many gossip segments and tabloid stories, elevating him to a level of fame he had not experienced before. Lyle's first project after his marriage was a role in Altman's 1993 film Short Cuts. He didn't release another album until the fall of 1994, when I Love Everybody hit the stores. A collection of songs Lovett wrote in the late '70s and early '80s, I Love Everybody continued his move away from country, and it was the first record he had released that didn't expand his audience in some way. After it entered the charts at number 26, it disappeared 13 weeks later, failing to go gold. Lovett and Roberts divorced in the spring of 1995, and Lyle began to retreat from the spotlight somewhat, spending the remainder of the year touring and writing. Lovett re-emerged with The Road to Ensenada, the first album since Pontiac to be dominated by country songs, in the summer of 1996. In addition to performing well on the pop charts, where it entered at a career peak of number 24, The Road to Ensenada performed strongly on the country charts, entering at number four. The two-disc covers album Step Inside This House followed in 1998, featuring mostly underexposed material penned by some of Lovett's favorite songwriters (many of whom hailed from Texas). In 1999, Lovett issued his first concert record, Live in Texas, and his soundtrack to the Altman film Dr. T. & the Women followed a year later. Smile, a collection of songs recorded for various movie soundtracks, appeared in 2003, followed that same year by My Baby Don't Tolerate on Lost Highway. The label also released It's Not Big It's Large in 2007 and Natural Forces in 2009. A holiday EP, Songs for the Season, appeared in 2011, and a couple of tracks from it ended up on Release Me, Lovett's final album on his Curb Records contract, which appeared in 2012. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
Tratto DA CMT GET COUNTRY

mercoledì 4 aprile 2012

Counting Crows Undewater Sunshine

I Counting Crows sono un gruppo statunitense di alt rock formatosi a San Francisco nel 1991. La popolarità della band ha avuto inizio nel 1993, anno dell'uscita del singolo Mr. Jones, presente, poi, nell'album d'esordio August and Everything After. Membri originari e cofondatori della band sono il cantante spezzacuori di dive made in hollywood Adam Duritz, e il chitarrista, David Bryson, che facevano parte, entrambi, della band The Himalayans. Inizialmente, infatti, si trattò di un duo acustico. Il pezzo Round Here, degli Himalayans è stato pubblicato dalla nuova band, nell'album d'esordio. Il loro genere malinconico fece breccia nei giovani della "Generazione X" che cercavano un'alternativa alle chitarre "cattive" della scena musicale rock di Seattle. La band, perciò, fu formata da musicisti locali e, poi, scritturata dalla Geffen Records. Il primo album, August and Everything After, realizzato nel 1993, fu un grande successo anche grazie al singolo Mr. Jones, ispirato al padre di un amico d'infanzia di Adam, il bassista degli Himalayans Marty Jones. Lo stile del cantante Adam Duritz è stato, molto spesso, paragonato a quello di Van Morrison. I testi delle canzoni, quasi tutti scritti da Duritz narrano, perlopiù, di vita quotidiana. Nel 2004 hanno collaborato con i BLØF per il singolo Holiday in Spain, di gran successo in Belgio e Paesi Bassi. Nel 2005 sono stati candidati all'Oscar per la canzone Accidentally in Love, inclusa nella colonna sonora di Shrek 2. Nel 2011 hanno pubblicato l'album August and Everything After: Live at Town Hall, composto esclusivamente dai brani del loro primo album August and Everything After suonati dal vivo in concerto tutto esauruto al Town Hall di New York nella stessa scaletta dell'album tranne per Raining in Baltimore riproposta in medley con l'iniziale Round Here. Ne è stata pubblicata anche una versione in DVD, primo video ufficiale del gruppo. Con questo ultimo album di cover i Counting Crows vogliono trasmettere ai propri fans l'emozione che si prova in ogni loro concerto dove è la musica a farla da padrona. Come dice lo stesso Duritz dopo essersi esaminato molto tempo interiormente cercando attraverso la scrittura e la musica di sviscerare ogni contraddizione e voglia di vivere della cosidetta Generazione X ora è il momento di farsi quasi coccolare dalla musica altrui ma non come covers, ma come fonte di ispirazione..... non sono i Counting Crows a suonare le varie covers che compongono il cd ma sono le covers che diventano parte del complesso, ne assorbono l'anima e si mescelano nel gruppo. Grande cd, grande voglia di vivere, grandissimi musicisti e un cd assolutamente da avere.