I created this survey as a companion to a Kansas City compendium that serves as the outline for my appearance on the radio program Eight One Sixty on Tuesday, July 2.
The Top Ten Musicians of the Decade
1. Kanye West
2. Kendrick Lamar
3. Jóhann Jóhannsson
4. St. Vincent
5. Flying Lotus
6. Bill Frisell
7. Rihanna
8. Drake
9. Taylor Swift
10. Future
The Top 25 Albums of the Decade
1. Kendrick Lamar- Good Kid, M.A.A.D City 2012
2. Kanye West- My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy 2010
3. Frank Ocean- Channel Orange 2012
4. Rihanna- Anti 2016
5. Earl Sweatshirt- Doris 2013
6. Kendrick Lamar- To Pimp a Butterfly 2015
7. Kanye West- Yeezus 2013
8. Chance the Rapper- Coloring Book 2016
9. St. Vincent- Strange Mercy 2011
10. Ambrose Akinmusire- When the Heart Emerges Glistening 2011
11. Kanye West- The Life of Pablo 2016
12. Jlin- Autobiography 2018
13. Kendrick Lamar- Damn 2017
14. Vince Staples- Summertime '06 2015
15. Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah- Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah 2012
16. Jill Scott- Woman 2015
17. Solange- When I Get Home 2019
18. Robert Glasper- Black Radio 2012
19. Killer Mike- R.A.P. Music 2012
20. Jóhann Jóhannsson- Orphée 2016
21. Beyoncé- Beyoncé 2013
22. Brad Mehldau- Highway Rider 2010
23. Brockhampton- Saturation II 2017
24. Miranda Lambert- The Weight of These Wings 2016
25. Drake- Scorpion 2018
The Top 25 Songs of the Decade
1. Kanye West- “Ultralight Beam” 2016
2. Tyler, the Creator- "Yonkers" 2011
3. Nicki Minaj- "Beez in the Trap" 2012
4. Pusha T featuring Kendrick Lamar- “Nosetalgia” 2013
5. Lorde- "Royals" 2013
6. Drake- “Nice For What” 2018
7. Kendrick Lamar- “Bitch, Don’t Kill My Vibe” 2012
8. Ledisi- "Pieces of Me" 2011
9. Taylor Swift- “Getaway Car” 2017
10. Akwid- "California" 2010
11. Run the Jewels- “Close Your Eyes (And Count to F*ck)” 2014
12. Nas and Damian Marley- "As We Enter" 2010
13. Leela James- "Tell Me You Love Me" 2010
14. ASAP Rocky- "Purple Swag" 2013
15. Kanye West- "Power" 2010
16. Pusha T- "Numbers on the Boards" 2013
17. Cardi B- “Bodak Yellow” 2017
18. Skating Polly- "Alabama Movies" 2014
19. Rick Ross featuring Kanye West and Big Sean- "Sanctified" 2014
20. E-40 with YG- "Function" 2012
21. Das Racist- "Rainbow In The Dark" 2011
22. Waka Flocka- "Hard In Da Paint" 2010
23. Rihanna with Kanye West and Paul McCartney- “FourFiveSeconds” 2016
24. Rosalía- “Malamente” 2018
25. Donnie Trumpet & the Social Experiment- “Sunday Candy” 2015
The Top 25 Concerts of the Decade
1. Kanye West- Sprint Center 2013
2. Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds- Midland theater 2014
3. Joyce DiDonato with the Philadelphia Orchestra- Carnegie Hall (New York City) 2015
4. Bobby Rush- Living Room at Knuckleheads 2013
5. Deftones- VooDoo Lounge 2011
6. Chance the Rapper- Midland theater 2015
7. The Dubliners- Royal Albert Hall (London) 2012
8. Mary J. Blige- Sprint Center 2013
9. David Byrne- Muriel Kauffman Theatre 2018
10. Maze- Municipal Auditorium 2014
11. The Art Ensemble of Chicago- Tennessee Theater (Knoxville) 2019
12. Miranda Lambert- Sporting Park 2013
13. Pharaoh Sanders- Blues Alley (Washington D.C.) 2014
14. Salif Keita- Town Hall (New York City) 2017
15. Lawrence Brownlee and Eric Owens- Folly Theater 2017
16. Erykah Badu- Sprint Center 2018
17. Future- Petco Park (San Diego) 2018
18. Philip Glass and Tim Fain- Helzberg Hall 2012
19. Anthony Braxton and Jacqueline Kerrod- American Turners Club (Louisville) 2018
20. Miguel- Midland theater 2015
21. Bettye LaVette- Knuckleheads 2014
22. Juan Gabriel- Sprint Center 2015
23. Enrico Rava's Tribe- Winningstad Theatre (Portland) 2012
24. Merle Haggard- Uptown Theater 2015
25. Os Mutantes- Granada 2010
(Original image of the Soul Rebels at the Gem Theater in 2017 by There Stands the Glass.)
Showing posts with label Tyler the Creator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyler the Creator. Show all posts
Saturday, June 29, 2019
The Top Musicians, Albums, Songs and Concerts of the Decade
Labels:
Bill Frisell,
Drake,
Earl Sweatshirt,
Flying Lotus,
Frank Ocean,
Future,
Jlin,
Johann Johannsson,
Kansas City,
Kanye West,
Kendrick Lamar,
music,
Nick Cave,
Rihanna,
St. Vincent,
Taylor Swift,
Tyler the Creator
Friday, May 17, 2019
Another One
“We the Best Music!” DJ Khaled is ridiculous. Yet because the hip-hop svengali is in on the joke, I laugh with him rather than at him. Khaled’s Father of Asahd suffused me with unqualified joy as I drove through Kansas City with the windows rolled down today. Hearing titans like Cardi B, Nas, Post Malone and Beyoncé rap and sing on state-of-the-art beats accentuated the gorgeous spring day. The project’s only real flaw is yet another weak Chance the Rapper track. Aside from providing further confirmation that Chance lost his mojo more than a year ago, Father of Asahd is indeed “another one.” The star-studded “Holy Mountain” opens the album.
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Tyler, The Creator is a weirdo. That’s hardly news. Yet with the release of his new album I finally understand that he’s also a card-carrying music nerd. Every track on the breakup-themed collection Igor seems to be based on either a dusty R&B song or a vintage pop nugget. His radical remakes of oldies pay homage to the past even as they break new sonic ground. Here’s “Earfquake”.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
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Tyler, The Creator is a weirdo. That’s hardly news. Yet with the release of his new album I finally understand that he’s also a card-carrying music nerd. Every track on the breakup-themed collection Igor seems to be based on either a dusty R&B song or a vintage pop nugget. His radical remakes of oldies pay homage to the past even as they break new sonic ground. Here’s “Earfquake”.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Year-End Clearance
All bets are off. I suppose it’d be nice to act my age in 2018, but I don’t think it’s in me. I walked out of a distinguished jazz concert on Sunday. Blame Brockhampton.
The urgency of Saturation III, the third album of 2017 from self-professed “best boy band since One Direction” obliterated my patience for bop formalism. How can I relish the sound of June 1964 when “Boogie” is happening in December 2017? Saturation III isn’t perfect- the new release contains the best and worst songs of Brockhampton’s crazed career- but its vitality makes almost everything else seem stale.
N.E.R.D’s No One Ever Really Dies is similarly inconsistent. Even so, the highs are the stuff of codeine dreams. Had I waited another week to publish my year-end best-of lists, Saturation III and No One Ever Really Dies would have placed prominently.
I wish I also embraced Revival. While I’m predisposed to like Eminem, his new album induces involuntary eyerolls and reflexive raspberries. I should have known that there’d be side effects to my obsessive listening to Future all year.
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I was a guest on Chris Haghirian’s Eight One Sixty radio show on December 5. I featured tracks by Samantha Fish, Vince Staples, Isaac Cates & Ordained, Brother Ali, Pistol Pete, Bobby Watson and Syd in the year-end best-of program.
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An article about my work on behalf of the Kansas City Jazz Calendar is in the December issue of Jazz Ambassador Magazine magazine.
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I recently named The Matchsellers, The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra and The Floozies the KCUR Bands of the Week.
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John Scott of the Green Lady Lounge is Plastic Sax’s Person of the Year.
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My most recent weekly music previews for The Kansas City Star were published here and here.
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Pat DiNizio of the Smithereens has died. He appeared to be in very poor health when the band performed at a community festival in downtown Overland Park in 2016.
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Kevin Mahogany has died.
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Johnny Hallyday has died.
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Keely Smith has died.
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The jazz guitarist Mundell Lowe has died.
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The jazz drummer Sunny Murray has died.
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Leon Rhodes of the Texas Troubadours has died.
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The Chicago jazz pianist Willie Pickens has died.
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Saxophonist Ralph Carney has died.
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Blues man Leo “Bud” Welch has died.
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After dreading the obligation for months, I finally hit play on Chuck Berry’s posthumous album Chuck. It’s fine.
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I regret overlooking Downtown Boys’ Cost of Living this year. RIYL: the Clash, relevant rock, Priests.
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The vintage Ghanaian party album Ebo Taylor and the Pelikans has been reissued. RIYL: Osibisa, highlife, Fela.
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Tyler, the Creator’s Tiny Desk Concert outing is vastly superior to his recent perfunctory concert at the Truman.
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Dustin Lovelis adds a polished spin to the psychedelia of Syd Barrett and Ty Segall on Been Hit Before. (Via S.S.)
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My former coworker Glenn Jones delivers “A Different Kind of Christmas Carol”.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
Friday, November 10, 2017
I Spit My Heart Out, Looking Out For My Best Interests
The king is dead. Long live the kings.
Following last night’s slightly disappointing concert by Tyler, the Creator, I’m officially switching my primary deviant hip-hop allegiance to Brockhampton. Tyler behaved like a semi-responsible adult at the Truman. That’s not what I want from the disruptive artist I fell hard for in 2011.
Brockhampton is right on time. ”Junky” is among the thrillingly subversive anthems on the mind-boggling Saturation 2. (Saturation, the first album the Texas collective issued in 2017, isn’t quite as transcendent.)
The so-called boy band is loaded with transgressive young talent. I fully expect two or three of its members to become mainstream stars who will inevitably disappoint me a few years from now. Until then, the thrill isn’t gone.
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I reviewed Tyler, the Creator’s concert at the Truman for The Kansas City Star.
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I write weekly music previews for The Kansas City Star.
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I named Katy Guillen & the Girls the KCUR Band of the Week.
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Blaque Dynamite’s Killing Bugs is an insanely dense experimental funk album. RIYL: Flying Lotus, the low end, Thundercat.
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Jerry Granelli’s Dance Hall is like Hudson 2.0. Veteran jazz cats- in this case a group that includes drummer Granelli, guitarists Robben Ford and Bill Frisell- cover classic rock, blues, jazz and R&B staples by the likes of Bob Dylan, Charles Mingus and Fats Domino. It’s redundant fun.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
Wednesday, September 06, 2017
Concert Review: Rich the Factor, the Popper and Don Juan at 7th Heaven
“I’m KC!” I don’t wear Kansas City-branded t-shirts and I’ve never used a #kcpride hashtag. Yet as the Popper performed his latest anthem about Kansas City in a parking lot on Troost Avenue on Labor Day, I realized that I may be Kansas City’s truest music enthusiast. Not only did I begin documenting my longstanding devotion to the sound that made the town famous at Plastic Sax in 2007, I have concurrently chronicled the rap scene that’s produced the only other hometown sound to make a significant global impression during that span.
In the four-and-a-half hours I spent at the free outdoor event sponsored by 7th Heaven, Rich the Factor, the Popper and Don Juan were among the prominent artists who expressed appreciation for their longstanding partnership with the scrappy retailer. Bucking music industry trends, CDs are sold alongside the apparel lines of Kansas City rap heavyweights at the store.
As I wrote in a 2016 album review, Rich the Factor is “a veritable legend on the streets of the city’s urban core.” He affirmed his status during an auspicious headlining performance. Don Juan performed “I Am the Street” after boasting that “I started that Tech N9ne sh*t” and reminding onlookers of his affiliation with the late Mac Dre. Rush Borda, Chauncey Clyde and the teen duo Candii Gyrlz were among the other notable acts at the makeshift rooftop stage that validated my obsessive dedication to the most essential Kansas City music.
I posted video snippets of sets by Rich the Factor, Don Juan and The Popper to my Instagram account. I also documented 7th Heaven’s Taste of Troost party in 2009.
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I named the forthcoming Gorillaz show at the Sprint Center my concert of the month for The Kansas City Star and Ink magazine.
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The Project H is KCUR’s Band of the Week. My on-air segment will appear online in this space.
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I write weekly concert previews for The Kansas City Star.
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I recount my experience at the Charlie Parker Jazz Festival in Tompkins Square Park at Plastic Sax.
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I hope the reports that the Kansas City musician Ben Juneau has died are incorrect.
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Walter Becker of Steely Dan has died.
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Holger Czukay of Can has died.
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I opted to attend Noise Fest at Davey’s rather than the Kansas City Irish Fest at Crown Center last weekend. Most of the acts I saw at the shambolic event sponsored by Leavenworth’s Big Pharma Records were merely uninspired dudes who manipulated feedback and static. Only Pussyvision’s riveting freakout redeemed my break with tradition.
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A$AP Mob’s Cozy Tapes Vol. 2: Too Cozy is rude, childish and without any redeeming social value. Needless to say, I'm all about it. Here’s “Perry Aye”.
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The members of Algiers and I clearly like a lot of the same records. It’s odd, consequently, that I can’t get into The Underside of Power. RIYL Solomon Burke, futuristic gospel, Elvis Presley. Here’s the title track.
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Eric Revis’ astounding Sing Me Some Cry is RIYL Ken Vandermark, temerity, David Ware.
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While it’s not exactly complex, Lil Uzi Vert’s Luv Is Rage 2 is shockingly multidimensional. Color me (very) impressed. Here’s ”How To Talk”.
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New Order’s Power, Corruption and Lies turned my world around in 1983. Even with its overt tributes to Suicide and David Bowie, I hear LCD Soundsystem’s American Dream as a heartfelt homage to the seminal release.
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If Tyler, The Creator is really as miserable as he sounds on Flower Boy, he’s likely going to be utterly despondent when he's 50. RIYL: cranks, Earl Sweatshirt, misanthropes. Here’s ”Who Dat Boy”.
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I can’t be sure that I’ve listened to Ozuna’s ridiculously slight Odisea. His reggaeton is the wispiest music I’ve heard. Here’s “Una Flor”.
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I don’t loathe Portico Quartet’s Art in the Age of Automation because the ensemble has shifted away from jazz. I simply can’t stand the sound of soulless ringtones.
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P.O.S’s verses on Shredders’ ”Flipping Cars” are stupendous.
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The gratuitous volume employed by Mogwai at a Matador Records showcase at SXSW in 2001 came just shy of making my ears literally bleed. I was unable to flee because I was working the show. I’ve held a grudge against the Scottish band ever since. Even so, I’ve fallen hard for Every Country’s Sun.
(Original image of Rich the Factor by There Stands the Glass.)
Labels:
Candii Gyrlz,
Chauncey Clyde,
Don Juan,
Eric Revis,
Gorillaz,
Kansas City,
Lil Uzi Vert,
Mogwai,
music,
Ozuna,
Pussyvision,
Rich the Factor,
Rush Borda,
The Popper,
The Project H,
Tyler the Creator
Monday, June 08, 2015
Misusing Your Influence: Music Midway in 2015
I’m embarking on a blogging break. I’ll return in two or three weeks. Here are listings of my favorite things from the first half of 2015. See ya, suckers!
Favorite Songs of 2015 (So Far)
Call it the To Pimp a Butterfly stipulation- I elected not to duplicate any artists on my songs and albums lists. (Spotify playlist)
1. Tyler, the Creator- “Smuckers”
2. Venom- “Long Haired Punks”
3. Madisen Ward and the Mama Bear- “Silent Movies”
4. Sleater-Kinney- “Bury Your Friends”
5. Kenny Lattimore- “Nothing Like You”
6. Butch Walker- “21+”
7. Future- “F*ck Up Some Commas”
8. Courtney Barnett- “Dead Fox”
9. John Moreland- “Cherokee”
10. Charlie Wilson- “Touched By an Angel”
11. Maroon 5- “Sugar”
12. Ryan Bingham- “Fear and Saturday Night”
13. Big Sean featuring Dr*ke and Kanye West- “Blessings”
14. Father John Misty- “The Ideal Husband”
15. Joywave- “Nice House”
16. Chedda Da Connect- “Flicka Da Wrist”
17. Chris Stapleton- “Whiskey and You”
18. Lila Downs- “Balas y Chocolate”
19. José James- “Lover Man”
20. Little Big Town- “Girl Crush”
21. Maysa- “Last Chance For Love”
22. Kanye West- “All Day”
23. Doomtree- “Cabin Killer”
24. Mat Shoare- “Murder”
25. Pops Staples- “Better Home”
Favorite Albums of 2015 (So Far)
Call it the To Pimp a Butterfly stipulation- I elected not to duplicate any artists on my songs and albums lists.(Spotify playlist)
1. Kendrick Lamar- To Pimp a Butterfly
2. Rudresh Mahanthappa- Bird Calls
3. Mark Ronson- Uptown Special
4. Ghostface Killah and Badbadnotgood- Sour Soul
5. Marc Cary- Rhodes Ahead, Vol. 2
6. Dominique Sanders- A True Story Based On…
7. Jodeci- The Past, The Present, The Future
8. Tech N9ne- Special Effects
9. Action Bronson- Mr. Wonderful
10. Alabama Shakes- Sound & Vision
11. Young Fathers- White Men Are Black Men Too
12. Jazmine Sullivan- Reality Show
13. J.D. McPherson- Let the Good Times Roll
14. Donnie Trumpet & the Social Experiment- Surf
15. Yelawolf- Love Story
16. Dead Sara- Pleasure to Meet You
17. Bob Dylan- Shadows In the Night
18. Colin Stetson and Sarah Neufeld- Never Were the Way She Was
19. Liturgy- The Ark Work
20. Valentina Lisitsa- Plays Philip Glass
21. Donny McCaslin- Fast Future
22. Viet Cong- Viet Cong
23. Terence Blanchard- Breathless
24. Matt Kane & the Kansas City Generations Sextet- Acknowledgement
25. Earl Sweatshirt- I Don’t Like Sh*t, I Don’t Go Outside
Favorite Reissues of 2015 (So Far)
1. The Supreme Jubilees- It’ll All Be Over
2. Next Stop Soweto: Zulu Rock, Afro-Disco and Mbaqanga 1975-1985
3. Thomas Mapfumo- Lion Songs: Essential Tracks in the Making of Zimbabwe
4. Led Zeppelin- Physical Graffiti
5. Michael Angelo- Michael Angelo
Favorite Performances of 2015 (So Far)
A brief romp in New York City made a big impression on me. Aside from items 3, 6 and 24, all shows took place in the Kansas City area.
1. Mark Dresser, Myra Melford and Matt Wilson- Take Five Coffee + Bar
2. Charlie Wilson- Sprint Center
3. Lee Konitz with the Dave Douglas Quintet- Jazz Standard
4. Four Fists- Riot Room
5. Helmet- RecordBar
6. Joyce DiDonato with the Philadelphia Orchestra- Carnegie Hall
7. Sufjan Stevens- Midland theater
8. Lauren Krum with the Project H- Westport Coffee House
9. Merle Haggard- Uptown Theater
10. Avishai Cohen, Tal Mashiach and Nasheet Waits- Take Five Coffee + Bar
11. Sleater-Kinney- Uptown Theater
12. Max Raabe and Palast Orchester- Helzberg Hall
13. Crobots- Penn Valley Park
14. Luke Bell- Riot Room patio
15. Hellyeah- Midland theater
16. Bill Frisell- White Theatre
17. Peter Schlamb’s Electric Tinks- RecordBar
18. John Doe- Knuckleheads
19. Ebony Tusks- Riot Room patio
20. Chris Hazelton’s Boogaloo 7- Green Lady Lounge
21. Robert Randolph & the Family Band- Town Center Plaza
22. Duncan Burnett and the Ministry- Riot Room patio
23. Various Blonde- Pizza Bar
24. Noah Preminger Quartet- 55 Club
25. Eddie Moore and the Outer Circle- Take Five Coffee + Bar
Favorite Opening Acts of 2015 (So Far)
1. Doug E. Fresh- Municipal Auditorium, for Guy
2. Ben Miller Band- Uptown Theater, for Blackberry Smoke
3. Joe- Sprint Center, for Charlie Wilson
4. Apocalyptica- Midland theater, for Sixx:A.M.
5. Joywave- Midland theater, for Vance Joy
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
Labels:
Dominique Sanders,
Doug E. Fresh,
Four Fists,
Joyce DiDonato,
Kansas City,
Kendrick Lamar,
Mark Dresser,
Matt Wilson,
music,
Myra Melford,
Tech N9ne,
The Project H,
Tyler the Creator,
Venom
Monday, April 20, 2015
Percy Sledge, 1940-2015
Tears come easily for me. Music often acts as the trigger, and classic R&B voices get me almost every time. I just cued up Percy Sledge’s out-of-print 1994 album Blue Night and was immediately overcome by emotion. Listen for yourself. Damn. Sledge died last week.
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I reviewed Lil Boosie’s wack concert at the Midland.
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I reviewed a solid concert by Sixx:A.M. and Apocalyptica.
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I reviewed Matt Kane & the Kansas City Generations Sextet’s Acknowledgement at Plastic Sax.
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I didn’t know about Tony Bennett’s secret weapon until I first saw Ralph Sharon perform with the vocalist in the 1990s. Sharon died on March 31.
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Johnny Kemp has died.
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After years of conjecture, a collaboration between Tech N9ne and Eminem has been released.
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Todd Clouser’s Chant is RIYL: Allen Ginsberg, beatniks, John Trudell. Clouser created a video for “You the Brave.”
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Lila Downs’ Balas y Chocolate is a lot of fun. RIYL: Vicente Fernández, parties, Kinky.
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Tyler, the Creator’’s Cherry Bomb is much better than I anticipated. And yes, “Smuckers” is the hip-hop event of the year.
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Kenny Lattimore’s Anatomy of a Love Song is RIYL: Luther Vandross, classic R&B, Marvin Gaye. Here’s the video for “Love Me Back.”
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The-Dream’s silky Crown is RIYL: Michael Jackson, radio playlists, Future.
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Beethoven, Period, a collaboration between Matt Haimovitz and Christopher O’Riley, is my default work soundtrack.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
Labels:
Apocalyptica,
Kansas City,
Kenny Lattimore,
Lil Boosie,
Lila Downs,
Matt Kane,
music,
Percy Sledge,
Ralph Sharon,
Sixx:A.M.,
Tech N9ne,
Todd Clouser,
Tony Bennett,
Tyler the Creator
Tuesday, October 08, 2013
Album Review: King Khan and the Shrines- Idle No More
I have a hunch that Idle No More, the new album by King Khan and the Shrines, will come to be considered a classic recording. The busy horn section and frenzied attack find precisely the right level of obstreperousness for a garage rock/R&B revivalist project in 2013. Yet an album like Idle No More needs to be field tested. I haven't the time, stamina or the cab fare to determine its true worth. Initial clinical trials, however, indicate that it's a masterpiece of psychotic reaction.
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The Midwest Music Foundation has released the free 21-track compilation Midwestern Audio Vol. 2 - Electric Hullabaloo.
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The Revisionists- a band featuring Brad Cox, Betse Ellis, Jeff Harshbarger, Kasey Rausch and Mike Stover- is featured in a video produced by KCUR.
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Radkey performed on Later… with Jools Holland.
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Yawn Johnson's self-titled mix tape is available at Bandcamp. RIYL: Danny Brown, 816, Death Grips.
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MilkDrop and D/Will made a video for "Ayo D!".
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Cheers! The Telegraph reports on the boozy state of the pop charts.
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My cousin is featured in a Tiny Desk Concert.
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Kneebody's new album The Line is RIYL: Snarky Puppy, the Project H, jazz nerds. The band is cosigned by Luciana Souza, Meshell Ndegeocello and Brad Meldhau in its EPK.
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Tyler, the Creator- not Miley Cyrus- embodies the zeitgeist. Experience the many moods of "Tamale".
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Here's the ECM player for Tim Berne and Snakeoil's Shadow Man. RIYL: Andrew Hill, Richard Davis, Eric Dolphy.
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After I absorb the new Pusha T album, I hope to break the seal on many other albums released today. The There Stands the Glass list includes Pepe Aguilar, Alter Bridge, Danny Brown, V.V. Brown, Cage the Elephant, CBGB: Original Motion PIcture Soundtrack, Miley Cyrus, Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr., Darkside, Deap Vally, Patty Griffin, Albert Hammond, Jr., Lyfe Jennings, Jesu, Tim Kasher, Korn, Amos Lee, Scott Miller, Harold Lopez Nussa, Of Montreal, Anders Osborne, Gretchen Parlato, Parquet Courts, Maurizio Pollini, Lee Renaldo & the Dust, RJD2, Kenny Rogers, William Shatner, Sleigh Bells, Stone Temple Pilots and Yuja Wang.
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Kansas City Click: My official picks are published here.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Album Review: Ces Cru- Constant Energy Struggles
I've been tracking Ces Cru's gradual ascendence on Kansas City's hip hop scene at There Stands the Glass for over five years. I was happy for the duo when they signed to Strange Music. It's the big break they deserve. So what does Ces Cru rap about about on the new album Constant Energy Struggles? They rap about about the big break they deserve. The dominant subject matter of the album is disappointing. I have limited tolerance for self-absorbed careerist raps. The first five songs on Constant Energy Struggles are about Ces Cru's status in the hip hop community. What a waste. The superlative production and dazzling flows of Godemis and Ubiquitous are markedly superior to most of the competition. I don't need Ces Cru to overstate the obvious. "When Worlds Collide" is representative of the album's best and worst qualities.
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Bobby Rush's outing at the Living Room in Knuckleheads might be my favorite performance of 2013. Here's my review.
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UMKC created a fine tribute to Aaron Markarian, the Conservatory of Music and Dance student who was recently murdered in his off-campus apartment.
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"If You Say So", a song from the Grisly Hand's forthcoming Country Singles album, is RIYL Lone Justice, X, Gram and Emmylou.
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A friend insists that Wavves' Afraid of Heights is "the most important album in fifteen years." Nope. It sounds like a really good album by the Get Up Kids, Green Day or Weezer. And that's good enough for me.
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Fred Eaglesmith chides Johnny (Cash)-come-latelys.
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"So you guys are into jazz?" Wolf continues Tyler, the Creator's ongoing troll.
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Kansas City Click: My official picks are published here.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
Friday, February 15, 2013
I'll Spot You
My lifelong dream has been fulfilled. Thanks to a new phone that works almost seamlessly with a streaming music service, I enjoy instant access to a significant portion of the world's recordings from any location. By paying Spotify $9.99 a month, I can listen to Thelonious Himself at the dentist's office. Rihanna is there for me on the treadmill. Rocket To Russia makes standing in line at the post office more bearable. I can take a midnight stroll with Igor Stravinsky.
It's a far cry from the years I in which I made a weekly trip to one or two record stores to spend all the money I could spare- usually just $10 or $20- on a handful of albums.
A friend characterizes Spotify as an updated version of Napster. And to be sure, Spotify's interface isn't appealing. Unlike my friend's allegiance to the social aspects of the competing streaming service Rdio, using Spotify is a solitary affair. Yet in spite of glaring holdouts like the majority of the ECM Records catalog, I'm attracted to Spotify's superior selection.
I'm using Spotify's playlist feature to track my favorite music of 2013. I've already listened to 39 new albums in their entirety. My favorites are listed in order here. A list of my favorite songs of 2013 is here.
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John Medeski overthinks his forthcoming solo piano album.
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The surviving members of Big Boys reflect on their careers and the evolution of American punk.
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Who's in for Rocklahoma? (It's only 234 miles from KC…)
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Neither his charisma nor Earl can salvage Tyler, the Creator's disappointing new "Domo 23".
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Erik Voeks puts a Lindsay Buckingham-esque spin onBad Company Blue Oyster Cult's "Burnin' For You".
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2 Chainz!
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Kansas City Click: My official picks are published here.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
It's a far cry from the years I in which I made a weekly trip to one or two record stores to spend all the money I could spare- usually just $10 or $20- on a handful of albums.
A friend characterizes Spotify as an updated version of Napster. And to be sure, Spotify's interface isn't appealing. Unlike my friend's allegiance to the social aspects of the competing streaming service Rdio, using Spotify is a solitary affair. Yet in spite of glaring holdouts like the majority of the ECM Records catalog, I'm attracted to Spotify's superior selection.
I'm using Spotify's playlist feature to track my favorite music of 2013. I've already listened to 39 new albums in their entirety. My favorites are listed in order here. A list of my favorite songs of 2013 is here.
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John Medeski overthinks his forthcoming solo piano album.
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The surviving members of Big Boys reflect on their careers and the evolution of American punk.
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Who's in for Rocklahoma? (It's only 234 miles from KC…)
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Neither his charisma nor Earl can salvage Tyler, the Creator's disappointing new "Domo 23".
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Erik Voeks puts a Lindsay Buckingham-esque spin on
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2 Chainz!
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Kansas City Click: My official picks are published here.
(Original image by There Stands the Glass.)
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