WSND set list: Deep Dive of The Beatles’ “Help!” album and soundtrack.

Thanks to all who listened to my Deep Dive of The BeatlesHelp! album and all the trivia around it. It was my last Deep Dive of the 2023 summer, and a lot of fun. Here’s the set list:

  1. The Beatles – Help!
  2. The Beatles – Help! intro
  3. John Barry – The James Bond Theme
  4. The Beatles – The Night Before (live)
  5. The Beatles – You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away
  6. Ken Thorne – From Me to You Fantasy
  7. Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers – I Need You (live)
  8. Dave Berry – The Crying Game
  9. Paul McCartney – Another Girl (live)
  10. The Beatles – You’re Going to Lose That Girl
  11. The Ramones – You’re Gonna Kill That Girl
  12. Ken Thorne – In the Tyrol
  13. Vanilla Fudge – Ticket to Ride
  14. Pink Floyd – Brain Damage / Eclipse
  15. The Beatles – Act Naturally
  16. Gary U.S. Bonds – It’s Only Love
  17. Ken Thorne – Another Hard Day’s Night
  18. The Beatles – You Like Me Too Much
  19. The Beatles – Tell Me What You See
  20. Elvis Presley – Trying to Get to You
  21. Ken Thorne – The Bitter End / You Can’t Do That
  22. Paul McCartney and Wings – I’ve Just Seen a Face (live)
  23. Ray Charles – Yesterday
  24. Frankie Lane – Answer Me, Lord Above
  25. Ken Thorne – The Chase
  26. Larry Williams – Dizzy Miss Lizzy
  27. The Beatles – Wait

Thanks for all those who tuned in over the summer! The Deep Dive should return this winter!

Keep your mind open.

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WSND DJ set list: Deep Dive of Tony Bennett

Thanks to all who tuned in for my Deep Dive of Tony Bennett on WSND. Here’s the set list in case you missed it.

  1. Tony Bennett – I Left My Heart in San Francisco
  2. Eddie Cantor – Margie
  3. Bing Crosby – Swinging on a Star
  4. Jack Teagarden – Harlem Jump
  5. Astrud Gilberto and Stan Getz – The Girl from Ipanema
  6. Joe Bari / Tony Bennett – Fascinating Rhythm
  7. Pearl Bailey – St. Louis Blues
  8. Tony Bennett – The Boulevard of Broken Dreams
  9. Tony Bennett – Because of You
  10. Hank Williams – Cold, Cold Heart
  11. Tony Bennett – Blue Velvet
  12. Tony Bennett – Stranger in Paradise
  13. Count Basie Orchestra and Tony Bennett – Chicago
  14. Tony Bennett – All the Things You Are (live)
  15. Tony Bennett and Billy Joel – The Good Life
  16. Tony Bennett – If I Ruled the World
  17. Tony Bennett and Bill Evans – Days of Wine and Roses
  18. Quacky Duck and His Barnyard Friends – Barnyard Song
  19. Tony Bennett and Henry Mancini – Life in a Looking Glass (live)
  20. Tony Bennett – Steppin’ Out with My Baby (live)
  21. Tony Bennett – Fly Me to the Moon (live)
  22. Tony Bennett and Amy Winehouse – Body and Soul
  23. Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga – Cheek to Cheek
  24. Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga – I Can’t Give You Anything but Love (Giorgio Moroder remix)
  25. Tony Bennett and Sammy Davis, Jr. – Don’t Get Around Much Anymore (live)
  26. Tony Bennett – I’ll Be Seeing You

Next week will be a new version of the Deep Dive in which I dive deep into one album. That album will be The Beatles‘ classic Help!. Don’t miss it!

Keep your mind open.

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WSND set list: Deep Dive of The Damned

Thanks to all who listened to my Deep Dive of The Damned on WSND. It was a blast. Here’s the set list:

  1. The Damned – New Rose
  2. Pretenders – The Phone Call
  3. The Sex Pistols – Anarchy in the U.K.
  4. Nick Lowe – Born a Woman
  5. The Damned – Neat Neat Neat
  6. Pink Floyd – Wish You Were Here
  7. The Damned – Problem Child
  8. The Damned – Stretcher Case Baby
  9. Culture Club – Church of the Poison Mind
  10. Motörhead – Stay Clean
  11. The Damned – Smash It Up
  12. The Damned – Machine Gun Etiquette
  13. The Clash – London Calling
  14. Eddie and the Hot Rods – Do Anything You Wanna Do
  15. The Damned – Wait for the Blackout
  16. The Damned – Disco Man
  17. The Damned – Generals
  18. The Damned – Fun Factory
  19. Captain Sensible – Happy Talk
  20. Naz Nomad and The Nightmares – Action Woman
  21. The Damned – Nasty
  22. The Damned – Is It a Dream
  23. David Vanian and the Phantom Chords – Frenzy
  24. The Damned – I Just Can’t Be Happy Today (live)
  25. The Damned – Shut It
  26. The Damned – Standing on the Edge of Tomorrow (live)

Next week is a Deep Dive of Tony Bennett. Don’t miss it!

Keep your mind open.

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Light in the Attic to reissue four classic Betty Davis albums – including one that’s been on the shelf for over three decades.

Photo by Mel Dixon

This year marks the 50th anniversary of Betty Davisʼ self-titled debut — an electrifying artistic statement that launched one of modern musicʼs most revolutionary figures. To celebrate the visionary singer, songwriter, producer, and fashion iconʼs broadly influential career, acclaimed reissue label Light in the Attic is revisiting four essential titles from The Queen of Funkʼs catalog: Betty Davis (1973), They Say Iʼm Different (1974), Is It Love Or Desire? (recorded in 1976, released in 2009), as well as the first-ever vinyl release of Crashinʼ From Passion, which captures Davisʼ final 1979 sessions. All four tiles were produced in close collaboration with Davis, who sadly passed away in 2022.

Betty DavisThey Say Iʼm Different, and Crashinʼ From Passion were remastered by Dave Cooley at Elysian Masters and pressed on vinyl at Record Technology, Inc. (RTI). For the aforementioned three titles, the accompanying booklets include a treasure trove of rare photos from the era, plus lyrics, and new liner notes by writer, ethnomusicologist, and Davisʼ close friend, Danielle Maggio, who integrates interviews that she conducted with Davis, marking her last-ever interviews. They Say Iʼm Different also includes a fold-out 24×36 poster. Is It Love Or Desire? was remastered by GRAMMY®-nominated engineer John Baldwin and pressed on vinyl at Record Technology, Inc. (RTI). The album includes liner notes from journalist, DJ, and professor Oliver Wang.

Each album will be available on CD, black wax, and in a variety of exclusive color variants. All titles will be released on August 25th. Read below for more information on Davis and the individual albums.

Pre-order Betty Davis Reissues

Listen To Unearthed Single, “Crashinʼ From Passion” (from 1979ʼs Crashinʼ From Passion)

Watch Trailer

Far ahead of her time, Queen of Funk Betty Davis (1944 – 2022) defied the limits of gender, race, and genre during her all-too-short career. She innovated with her space-age blend of funk, R&B, and blues and enraptured audiences with her raw and powerful vocals – then shocked (and awed) them with her provocative, sexually liberated lyrics. Unapologetic and independent, Davis smashed glass ceilings with gusto. To count a few, she was among the first Black models to grace the covers of Seventeen and Glamour, while later, she became the first Black woman to write, produce, and arrange her own albums.

When Davis released her self-titled debut in 1973, she was already a force in New York, London, and Los Angeles. She had opened one of NYCʼs most vibrant private nightclubs, penned songs for The Chambers Brothers and The Commodores, collaborated with Hugh Masekela, and inspired her then-husband Miles Davis to create the roots for jazz fusion on Bitches Brew. While she received numerous offers from record labels in those early years,

Davis also recognized the power of retaining control over her music. Fiercely DIY, she eventually signed a contract with Woodstock organizer Michael Langʼs Just Sunshine imprint, under which she released Betty Davis (1973) and They Say Iʼm Different (1974). In 1975, she made her major label debut under Island Records with Nasty Gal. Davis would go on to record two more albums—Is It Love Or Desire? and Crashinʼ From Passion—both of which remained unreleased for decades.

Oen relegated to cult figure status and frequently misunderstood, Davisʼ album recording career spanned less than a decade. While her music earned critical acclaim and respect from peers, it was regularly banned or disregarded, due to its sexual nature. As a Black woman in an industry controlled by white men, Davis found herself in a constant battle for creative control, oen to the detriment of her career. Never given the chance to succeed commercially, a disillusioned Davis retired from the spotlight in 1980.

From a modern lens, the path that Davis forged can be traced clearly throughout the decades, traversed by those who pushed the needle farther and fought for equality in the industry. Many of musicʼs brightest stars have counted Davis as an influence, including PrinceErykah Badu, and Janelle Monae, while rappers like Ice CubeMethod Man, and Talib Kweli have all sampled her work. In recent years, Davis has captured a new generation of fans, thanks to the use of her songs in such series as Mixed-ishGirlbossPistol, and Orange Is the New Black. In 2017, she was the subject of the acclaimed documentary, Betty: They Say I’m Different.

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Sam at Pitch Perfect PR.]

Rewind Review: Sugar – Copper Blue (1992)

It’s 1991 and Bob Mould has two solo albums under his belt after the break-up of Hüsker Dü. He’s a writing machine and is getting back to his punk roots after his Workboook album that was a bit subdued and full of folk influences. He’s not sure how his fans and the general public are going to react to the new material, however. It’s loud and raw, but also more melodic than his Hüsker Dü material. He hires David Barbe to play bass and Malcolm Travis to play drums for him and names the band Sugar after seeing a sugar packet at a diner (Free advertising at every diner and coffee shop in the world!). He and his bandmates then put down just ten of the many tracks Mould had written (the word is that he had around thirty) and the result becomes Copper Blue.

It turned out that Mould didn’t need to worry, as the album was a stunner and people were hungry for the sound he’d created in the early years of the grunge scene. The chugging, growling guitar chords at the start of “The Act We Act” were like manna from heaven for early 1990s radio stations eager to spin anything that vaguely sounded like Nirvana‘s Nevermind album (and Mould has openly spoken about how the success of Nevermind helped Copper Blue find an audience). “A Good Idea” is a roaring tale about twisted love and what it’s like to witness twisted love. Barbe’s bass thumps through the whole thing.

It flows right into “Changes” – a song about how nothing ever stays the same. “You can’t step into the same river twice,” as the saying goes, and “Changes” seems to reflect this as Mould sings about how he and his lover need to make serious adjustments to their relationship if it’s going to work. Mould’s chords on “Helpless” soar, as do his vocals about how hard he’s trying to help someone who is choosing to be helpless. Travis’ snare hits are like signal flares popping off to reflect Mould’s calls for help with the situation.

“Hoover Dam,” with its weird backwards synths, finds Mould in a strange place between madness and peace. The combination of his acoustic guitar with keyboard riffs is a nice one. ‘The Slim” has Mould grieving a lover after their death, and I can tell you that his lyrics are spot-on (“I felt your breath for a moment. I heard your voice for a moment. Then I looked back on my pillow. What you used to say, what we used to say.”). The guitars are almost manic, but they’re maintaining control. They’re managing it. It’s all you can do, really.

On the flip side of this, “If I Can’t Change Your Mind” has Mould trying to convince a lover that he’s going to be there no matter what, but they still won’t believe him despite all his efforts (“With all the crazy doubts you’ve got, I love you even still.”) “Fortune Teller” has that signature “Mould sound” of driving guitar chords backed by solid bass and drums and might be the closest to a Hüsker Dü track.

Mould’s lyrics in “Slick” use the imagery of a car crash (real or imagined?) to reflect his thoughts on his addictions, booze and love, and how they’re often the cause of his own harm. The fuzz on it is great, another metaphor for his roughed-up brain. The album ends with “Man on the Moon,” which has nothing to do with the R.E.M. song or the Jim Carey movie and everything to do with crushing riffs and rock anthem drums.

Copper Blue shook up the airwaves just when we needed it and probably made a lot of wanna-be grunge bands hang up their guitars. It’s a must-own if you’re a fan of Mould’s work.

Keep your mind open.

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WSND DJ set list: Deep Dive of Betty Davis

Thanks to all who tuned in for my funky, sexy Deep Dive of Betty Davis on WSND. Here’s the playlist.

  1. Betty Davis – Shut Off the Light
  2. B.B. King – You Upset Me Baby
  3. Big Mama Thornton – Hound Dog
  4. Jimi Hendrix – Castles Made of Sand
  5. Sly and The Family Stone – Everyday People
  6. Betty Mabry – Get Ready for Betty
  7. Betty & Roy – I’ll Be There
  8. The Chambers Brothers – Uptown
  9. Hugh Masekala – Riot
  10. Betty Davis – Live, Love, Learn
  11. Betty Davis – It’s My Life (alternate take)
  12. Miles Davis – Orbits
  13. Cream – Politican
  14. Betty Davis – Born on the Bayou
  15. Graham Central Station – It’s Alright
  16. Pointer Sisters – Yes We Can Can
  17. Tower of Power – This Time It’s Real (live)
  18. Betty Davis – Steppin’ in Her I. Miller Shoes
  19. Iggy Pop and Zig Zags – If I’m Luck I Might Get Picked Up
  20. Betty Davis – Game Is My Middle Name (requested)
  21. Betty Davis – Anti Love Song
  22. Betty Davis – They Say I’m Different
  23. Betty Davis – He Was a Big Freak (Record Plant Rough Mix)
  24. Robert Palmer – Which of Us Is the Fool
  25. Betty Davis – Dedicated to the Press
  26. Betty Davis – Is It Love or Desire
  27. Betty Davis – It’s So Good
  28. Danielle Maggio – It’s a Little Bit Hot Tonight

Next week will be a Deep Dive of a living legend – Alison Krauss. Don’t miss it!

Keep your mind open.

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Review: Motörhead – Live at Montreux Jazz Festival ’07

Recorded during their “Kiss of Death” tour in 2007, Motörhead‘s previously unreleased Live at Montreux Jazz Festival ’07 is another powerful live recording of Phil Campbell (guitar and backing vocals), Mikkey Dee (drums), and Lemmy Kilmister (bass and lead vocals) firing on all cylinders.

The set list include lots of bangers and some cuts you didn’t hear often during some other sets. Opening with “Snaggletooth” for example, is a nice touch. It wasn’t a common opener for them, and they unload it with the subtlety of a flamethrower. “Stay Clean” doesn’t give you time to breathe, as you’re too busy holding onto your face to keep it from being blasted onto the wall behind you. “Be My Baby” is thick with sludge and reveals how much Motörhead influenced early Nirvana records.

“That was kind of jazzy, wasn’t it?” Kilmister jokes after “Killers.” “One Night Stand” swings and shreds. Speaking of shredding, Campbell does a lot of it on “I Got Mine” with a solo that might sear your ears. Kilmister dedicates “Sword of Glory” to soldiers “fighting in Iraq for no good reason.”

“Who likes Thin Lizzy?” Kilmister asks, and then talks about how Phil Lynott was one of his heroes, before they rip in to a cover of Thin Lizzy‘s “Rosalie.” He gives a warning before the epic version of “Sacrifice”: “If you dance to this, you won’t have children later in life.” It is brutal and unforgiving. The mosh pit during this version must’ve been like the Battle of Helm’s Gate, only stopped by everyone’s jaws hitting the floor during Dee’s drum solo. It’s hard to tell what’s moving faster, his hands on the snares, cymbals, and toms, or his feet on the double kick drums. “Just ‘Cos You Got the Power” is slower, “So Phil can show off his new guitar,” Kilmister says. He does. Quite well.

“Going to Brazil” blasts by you in a heartbeat, followed by the always-sinister, always-heavy “Killed By Death.” “Iron Fist,” appropriately, pummels you. Kilmister’s bass on it is as relentless as a belt-fed machine gun. The acoustic “Whorehouse Blues” is a refreshing bit of fun after it, and a moment to inhale, exhale, and then go nuts when they finally get to “Ace of Spades.” The closer, “Overkill,” is over eight minutes of raw power. Dee’s double-bass kick-drumming alone will make your jaw drop.

It’s another fine live album in an already impressive catalog. Don’t miss it.

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Maria at Adrenaline PR.]

WSND set list: Deep Dive of AC/DC

Thanks to all who blew out their eardrums with me for the Deep Dive of AC/DC last night. Here’s the set list:

  1. AC/DC – Back in Black
  2. Rabbit – Too Much Rock ‘n’ Roll
  3. Masters Apprentices – Living in a Child’s Dream
  4. Sherbet – Summer Love
  5. AC/DC – Can I Sit Next to You, Girl?
  6. Fraternity – Seasons of Change
  7. Little Richard – Rip It Up
  8. AC/DC – Baby, Please Don’t Go (live)
  9. AC/DC – It’s a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock ‘n’ Roll)
  10. Anthrax – TNT
  11. AC/DC – The Jack
  12. AC/DC – Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap (requested)
  13. AC/DC – Ride On
  14. AC/DC – Whole Lotta Rosie (requested)
  15. The Brian Setzer Orchestra – Let There Be Rock (live)
  16. AC/DC – Riff Raff (live)
  17. Rick Astley – Highway to Hell (live)
  18. AC/DC – Girls Got Rhythm
  19. Ike and Tina Turner – Nutbush City Limits
  20. AC/DC – Givin’ the Dog a Bone
  21. AC/DC – Rock ‘n’ Roll Ain’t Noise Pollution (requested)
  22. AC/DC – Let’s Get It Up
  23. AC/DC – Thunderstruck (requested)

Next week is a Deep Dive of Betty Davis. I won’t be responsible for any babies conceived during that show.

Keep your mind open.

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Mort Garson takes us to “Zoos of the World” from an upcoming release of some of his classical material.

Photo courtesy of Sacred Bones

A master of playful sonic whimsy, electronic pioneer Mort Garson spent a lifetime quietly pushing the boundaries of synthesis. The latest track to his name, “Zoos of The World,” is baroque and unpredictable. Centered on warm keyboard patches that come together to replicate the tonalities of a retro-futuristic orchestra, the springy cut was taken from a 1970 National Geographic special. The track follows “Moon Journey,”the soundtrack to the live broadcast of the 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing, as first heard on CBS News. Nearly in tandem with the release date, July 20th will mark Garson’s 99th birthday, and the anniversary of the moon landing. Both taken from the forthcoming archival release Journey to the Moon and Beyond, out July 21 via Sacred Bones.

Journey to the Moon and Beyond advanced listening parties have been announced at the following locations for July 20, 2023:
 
Amoeba, San Francisco, US
Balades Sonores, Paris, FR
End Of An Ear, Austin, US
Family Store, Brighton, UK
Monorail, Glasgow, UK
Newbury Comics, Boston, US
Rough Trade, New York, US
Seasick Records, Birmingham, US
Stranger Than Paradise, London, UK

It’s hard not to use plant terminology when discussing the long, strange career –and subsequent renaissance– of Mort Garson. Like a seed buried deep and left to germinate for months (or in this instance, decades), his great body of work was scattered in record bins and tape closets and all but forgotten in pop culture. A classically trained musician and electronic researcher with a tireless work ethos that led to nearly over a thousand writing and arranging credits, Mort Garson’s music got buried in the topsoil of time.
 

When Sacred Bones first began their Mort Garson reissue project in 2019 with a proper reissue of Plantasia, the Garson-naissance began in earnest. Soon after, you could hear Mort Garson and his Moogs bubbling up on TV shows, documentaries, podcasts, hip-hop tracks, or anywhere else, the man a cultural phenomenon once more. (And naturally, just playing the vinyl reissue of Plantasia at home made every single plant in your house thrive.)
Like a perennial that returns with each new spring, the Mort Garson archives have brought to bear yet another awe-inspiring bloom. Journey to the Moon and Beyond finds even more new facets to the man’s sound. There’s the soundtrack to the 1974 blaxploitation film Black Eye (starring Fred Williamson), some previously unreleased and newly unearthed music for advertising. Just as regal is “Zoos of the World,” where Garson soundtracks the wild, preening, slumbering animals from a 1970 National Geographic special of the same name. The mind reels at just what project would have yielded a scintillating title like “Western Dragon,” but these three selections were found on tapes in the archive with no further information.
 

The crown jewel of the set is no doubt Garson’s soundtrack to the live broadcast of the 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing, as first heard on CBS News. That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for Moogkind. But for decades, this audio was presumed lost, the only trace of it appearing to be from an old YouTube clip. Thankfully, diligent audio archivist Andy Zax came across a copy of the master tape while going through the massive Rod McKuen archive. So now we get to hear it in all its glory. Across six minutes, Garson conjures broad fantasias, whirring mooncraft sounds, zero-gravity squelches, and twinkling études. It showcases Mort’s many moods: sweet, exploratory, whimsical, a little bit corny, weaving it all together in a glorious whole.
 

Maybe at the time it scanned as crass and opportunistic for Garson to apply his keyboards to subjects like astrological signs, the occult, hippiedom, houseplants, or the moon landing. But more than most other electronic music pioneers of his ilk, Garson foresaw the integration of such electronics into our daily lives, how they would allow us to engage with the world –in small daily things, popular trends, and big historical events– with our tweets, posts, reaction videos, and the like. In that way, Garson lived such history and then added his own little spin on things.

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Alex and Andi at Terrorbird Media.]

L7 announces tour dates in the U.S., Australia, and New Zealand.

L7 have announced two upcoming tours that will include shows in small venues.

Seeing L7 live is always a good choice, and seeing them in a small venue is a no-brainer. If you’re on the other side of the planet, check out this tour in December.

As you can see, the last two shows of that tour in Melbourne, Australia are already sold out. Bricks Are Heavy is a great album, and hearing all of it live would be a blast.

They’ve also announced a new single will be released soon, so keep your ears open for it.

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to L7!]