Album Review: Saxon – Hell, Fire and Damnation

Saxon – Hell, Fire and Damnation album cover

image courtesy of New Ocean Media

Album Review of Saxon: Hell, Fire and Damnation

Classic metal. That was always Saxon. All rock fans always respected Saxon and knew a Saxon concert would be a hell of a concert, even fans of less heavy, more melodic metal (which – who are we kidding? – was really melodic hard rock, and I say that as a huge fan of that subgenre). Well, Saxon hasn’t lost a step. Hell, Fire and Damnation is a heavy rock album full of classic old-style metal, varying significantly from song to song but always relentless.

The album starts with a minute-and-a-half spoken word opening, “The Prophecy,” delivered ominously by renowned English actor Brian Blessed OBE. It sounds like the opening proclamation of the sort of epic fantasy movie the album’s cover would suggest. The songs that soar are almost Dio-reminiscent, while others are merely weighty guitar-driven classic heavy rock.

The title track, “Hell, Fire and Damnation,” is a steadily plodding classic power rocker, with Biff Byford’s vocals echoing as if from a mountaintop. There’s plenty of power guitar, as well as dancing guitar solos, from axemen Doug Scarratt and Brian Tatler. And the rhythm section of Nigel Glockler (drums) and Nibbs Carter (bass) is heart-thumpingly heavy.

Next up, “Madame Guillotine” opens with a softer version of its dominant rhythm, one that’s interrupted only for a mid-song softly meandering guitar solo before additional instruments join back in and reintroduce the pounding rhythm.

Focusing on Marie Antoinette, that’s just the first of the historically-based songs on the album. Other historical subjects covered on the disc are Kubla Khan (“Kubla Khan and the Merchant of Venice”), the Battle of Hastings (“1066”), and the Salem witch trials (“Witches of Salem”). The band also goes historically supernatural on “There’s Something in Roswell.”

Album-ender “Super Charger” is a strong way to finish, full of energy and power. A great driving song, especially if you’re on the autobahn because with its tempo, there’s no way you’re keeping it below 120 mph – I mean, 193 kph.

My three favorite tracks are “Hell, Fire and Damnation,” “Madame Guillotine,” and “Super Charger,” but the album is so solid, I’m sure there’ll be plenty of disagreement. Hell, Fire and Damnation is a great beginning-to-end listen. The guitarwork is impeccable, and it’s probably the main reason this disc doesn’t feel too heavy to me, even though it’s clearly an awesome display of rock power. It will not disappoint fans of heavy rock. Aside from the occasional brief respite to showcase powerful vocals or fancy guitar shredding, this album is relentless old-school-power heavy rock.

Album Review: Emerson, Lake & Powell – Complete Collection

Emerson, Lake & Powell band photo

photo courtesy of Glass Onyon PR

Album Review of Emerson, Lake & Powell: Complete Collection (Cherry Red Records)

Last year, Cherry Red Records released a 3-CD box set of Emerson, Lake & Powell‘s music. 3 CDs? How is that possible when the band only released one studio album and one live album? Well, the self-titled album is disc one, featuring three bonus tracks – two B-sides and a “single edit” of “The Score.” The second CD contains The Sprocket Sessions, a live rehearsals collection heretofore only available as a bootleg, a 12-song album that features six of the songs from the debut album. The third album is the live album, Live in Concert.

Emerson, Lake & Powell – Complete Collection album cover

image courtesy of Glass Onyon PR

I know many of you will already know this, but I’ll include it for newbies to ELP. Of course, Emerson, Lake & Powell isn’t the classic line-up of ELP. That was Keith Emerson, Greg Lake, and Carl Palmer – Emerson, Lake & Palmer. The original ELP quietly broke up in 1979. In 1984, while Palmer was now a member of successful supergroup Asia, Emerson and Lake were auditioning drummers to hit the road again. They enjoyed performing with ex-Whitesnake drummer Cozy Powell. The band insists the “P” in Powell’s last name was just a coincidence, but nevertheless, it ushered in a one-studio-album version of ELP with Powell in place of Palmer.

I don’t think I ever owned any of ELP’s albums, though I was familiar with at least a couple of the songs, particularly “Touch and Go,” which received some airplay on MTV and moderate radio play; it actually hit number 60 on the Billboard Hot 100. And the Emerson, Lake & Powell version of ELP is the one that coincided with my music fandom, so this is my ELP.

My personal favorite track from the studio album, Emerson, Lake & Powell, remains “Touch and Go.” It soars with that big, open, we’re-performing-in-a-big-empty-warehouse echo that was present in many of the seventies and eighties progressive rock songs that crossed over to mainstream rock fans. It just feels expansive but also rockin’. A close second, for me, is album-opener “The Score,” which, like “Touch and Go,” features Emerson’s big, open organ-sounding keyboard sound. The original version of “The Score” clocks in at 9:10, so it makes sense there’s a “single edit.” The single edit still runs 6:11, though, so it’s still not exactly conducive to mainstream radio. (“Touch and Go,” meanwhile, clocks in at an airplay-friendly 3:39.) The whole disc is strong – it’s Emerson, Lake & Powell, after all, and these guys are legends for good reason – so your favorites may differ. Maybe you’ll like something mellower like “Step Aside,” a song that saunters along coolly and on which the keyboardwork is like a piano. The added tracks are cool, too. Notably, there’s a nifty instrumental version of “The Loco-Motion” that gets the full ELP treatment.

Emerson, Lake & Powell band photo

photo courtesy of Glass Onyon PR

Discs two and three in the box set – The Sprocket Sessions and Live in Concert – will probably be of the greatest interest to hardcore ELP fans. That is, if you don’t own the discs already. You’ll find five of the eight songs from the studio album on The Sprocket Sessions, with three of them – “Touch and Go,” “The Score,” and “Mars, the Bringer of War” – also appearing on Live in Concert.

The rest of discs two and three are primarily Emerson, Lake and Palmer songs. “Knife Edge,” “Lucky Man,” and “Pirates” are on both discs. Well, sort of. “Lucky Man” on The Sprocket Sessions is just a 48-second instrumental snippet. But “Pirates” runs 13-plus minutes on both discs, so you’re not getting shortchanged there. The Live in Concert disc closes with a medley of “Karn Evil 9 (1st Impression),” “America,” and “Rondo” that’s kicked off with the memorable ELP line “Welcome back my friends to the show that never ends.” If you’re a rock fan from that era, even if you had no idea what song (or band) it came from, you’ll still definitely remember that line. At least, that’s true for me. And yes, “America” is a musical nod to West Side Story. And thus ends the three-disc collection, quite a haul for an exceptional band of legendary musicians whose studio output was but a single album.

Album Review: The Rifters – The Enchanted World

The Rifters band photo

photo by Teri McCartney; photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

Album Review of The Rifters: The Enchanted World (Howlin’ Dog Records)

You may remember that country music was previously referred to as “country and western” music. The “and western” has been dropped from the moniker almost everywhere. But the Rifters are a reminder about that forgotten segment of the music spectrum, delivering a brand of Americana that mixes a western openness, folky songwriting, and a bit of country. If music can sound like the American southwest, then this is what that sounds like. And in case you don’t notice from the music itself, there are plenty of ranching and wide-open-spaces references in the lyrics. To me, the music seems folk-centered, so I’d probably just call it very good folk music, but my folk categorization is largely tied to the album’s song- and lyric-centric with a lot of guitar picking. However, the richer music bed and the harmonies suggest something bigger, so Americana is more likely a most representative category for this trio – Rod Taylor, Jim Bradley, and Don Richmond – and the talented musicians who joined them in the studio for a song here and there among The Enchanted World‘s fourteen tracks.

The Rifters – The Enchanted World album cover

image courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

“The Circle,” the first song on band’s recent album, The Enchanted World, opens with some attention-grabbing finger-picking that soon progresses to an overall soaring musical style and features a matter-of-fact vocal delivery that signals authenticity. And, with that, this particular, pleasant musical journey with The Rifters has begun.

“The Greatest Mystery,” next, is another standout slower number; then the tempo picks up a little on the third song, the title track.

“The Perfect Dance” is a nifty banjo-pickin’ country dancehall number strung together with clever phrasing in both the lyrics and the music.

“It’s Cause You Lived” follows, an ode to aging with a very soft seventies pop-country styled soundbed. It’s followed by a more uptempo “At the Foot of the Mountain,” a song that makes me think a little of John Denver’s “Country Roads,” with smooth vocals but supporting instrumentation that’s bit more rustic and elicits mental imagery more befitting of an episode of The Waltons.

The Rifters band photo

photo by Jim Cox; photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

“The Dollar Worth of Mother Earth” follows, earnestly and tunefully calling for humans to take better care of nature. Indeed, there’s nothing more “western” than a cultural connection to the land, caring about leaving nature unspoiled, taking care of the earth, taking our stewardship of mother earth seriously. In this case, the song is, lyrically, a bit of an apology from a generation that created this mess to those that follow, urging action.

I like that such a heavy song is followed by the playful “Tres Peis,” cheerfully honoring a friend’s joyful three-legged dog, before the Rifters slow things down with “The Wonder of You,” a song whose musical arrangement and performance make it seem like something you’d slow dance to during a barn dance.

Next up is one of my favorite songs on the disc, surprisingly one of the few this trio didn’t pen themselves, a cover of “Nothing is Free,” originally written and recorded by Moors & McCumber.  The Rifters’ performance is something special, with prominent string bass and fiddle parts providing the ideal soundbed for Rod’s vocal delivery.

The Rifters band photo

photo by Teri McCartney; photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

“That Lucky Old Sun,” a 1949 number one hit for Frankie Lane, is delivered by the Rifters as an engaging pretty-slow song performed with an old-fashioned, stripped-down delivery.

“So Many Different Things” is sneaky brilliant, as it reveals over a few very careful listens. It has a more uptempo delivery again, an uplift from the prior track; it doesn’t quite have the energy of “Nothing is Free” but is still one of the more moderately energetic songs in the collection. The vocals are simultaneously light and earnest. The violin also touches upon playfulness but with a tone that isn’t convincingly cheerful. In the end, the song musically portrays exceptionally well the weight of the world while still being hopeful and perhaps a bit defiant.

The Rifters live performance photo

photo by Dave Hensley; photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

“At the Rail,” next, is more unapologetically dark. Rod’s deep vocals are so deep and booming they’re nearly Johnny Cash-esque. The instrumentation is relatively simple – acoustic guitar, bass, and accordion – and the musical arrangement is sparse, with the instruments providing just the necessary support for the vocals.

The Rifters close The Enchanted World with a fun rendition of “Gentle on My Mind.” I’m most familiar with the Glen Campbell version. Of course, it was originally written and performed, with success, by John Hartford. The most recent band to find success with “Gentle on My Mind” was the Band Perry just a few years ago. Well, the Rifters’ outstanding rendition, with the assistance of Pete Wernick’s energetic banjo playing, sounds like a concert-ending song – or perhaps a bar-closing number – sending you home with a smile. You don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here. However, since this is an album, you can go back to song number one and play it again.

Album Review: Chris Wragg and Greg Copeland – The Last Sundown

photo courtesy of Chris Wragg

Album Review of Chris Wragg and Greg Copeland: The Last Sundown

Greg Copeland’s deep, hoarse-yet-smooth, rough-hewn vocals and Chris Wragg’s guitarwork, which is at times deft and at other times emits a soulful wail, are about as blues as it gets. The Last Sundown, the second full-length album from Chris Wragg and Greg Copeland, is a deep and powerful release, covering a broad swath of blues ground across its 14 tracks, which run the gamut of blues tempos and delivery styles.

The album kicks off with a blues wailer, a cover of Louisiana Red’s “Alabama Train,” a track you’ll enjoy almost immediately and one of just two covers on the album. Chris and Greg follow it with a slower number, “Can’t Shake These Blues,” an earnest but smooth song that will soon have you singing along with “I’ve been misused, and I’ve been abused, but I just can’t shake these blues.”

image courtesy of Chris Wragg

“Don’t Let the Devil Ride” is probably the funniest song on the album. The oft-covered Oris Mays track is absolutely done justice by Chris and Greg, from Chris’ riffs ranging from jagged to rip-roaring and Greg’s vocals primarily earnest but also acknowledging the lyrics’ silliness with his vocal inflection in the spoken word portion.

Before and after that fun number are a pair of songs that delve into shameful times in American history. “1964” is a soulful civil rights song on which Chris’ unnerving, dancing guitar line and the nuances of the song’s mix combine well with Greg’s heavy, rough-edged vocals, with spoken words “We got to love each other, y’all” near the end of the song providing the forward-looking words to live by. Meanwhile, “The Last Sundown” is told from the point of view of the great great great great grandson of a slaveowner and a slave talking to the slaveowner on the last night of his life, via emotional lyrics that include his closing words, “As I look so deep into your eyes, I get the chance to see just how a coward dies.” The tempo and the guitar riffs add to the power of the vocals and lyrics. The song’s closing lyrics are an indictment on just how little things have progressed since then: “I guess the only thing that changes in America is the weather.”

photo courtesy of Chris Wragg

“House Burned Down” takes on the task of following that powerhouse, and its softly sung and sparsely instrumented arrangement meets that task with aplomb. “Losing Hand,” next, is kind of a slow-rocking blues number with a nifty guitar hook, a probably crowd-pleasing “say yeah” lyric, and an always enjoyable rhythm – one of those songs you’ll turn up the volume to whenever you hear it.

“When the Cold Winds Blow” is perhaps the best slow-tempo song on the disc, with a slowly-plodding rhythm propelling the song forward. Meanwhile, “Miss Ruby” and “Just a Man” offer some mid-tempo enjoyment with varying soundbeds – “Miss Ruby” more booming, “Just a Man” more of a jazzy blues groove.

“After the Sun Goes Down” warrants mention, with a guitar line that’s almost a blues-based classic rocker before the album closes with one final slow, dark, and weighty number, “Gonna Be With My Maker.”

Beginning to end, The Last Sundown is a powerful album, impeccably performed and memorable. If you’re a blues fan, it’s an absolute must-hear.

EP Review: Robotic Hawks – All Business

photo by Kelly Davidson Studio; photo courtesy of Knyvet

EP Review of Robotic Hawks: All Business

Robotic Hawks are a catchy, old-school, pop-friendly, jangly guitar rock outfit from New Hampshire. They were winners of the “Rising Star: New Hampshire” award at the 2023 New England Music Awards. I checked my notes from my personal ballot – you know, the one I shared my snarky notes from in this Facebook post – and it turns out I really dug these guys’ music when I first heard it, while researching my votes for the 2023 ballot. In any case, swamped as I was (and always am) and knowing I had a huge review backlog, I didn’t reach out to Robotic Hawks at the time to ask for a review. Fortunately, their EP landed in my inbox anyway.

This 4-song EP, All Business, is, indeed, all business. Assuming, of course, you’re talking about the business of energetically fun alt/pop rock. Ahh, you know what I mean.

image courtesy of Knyvet

High-energy opener “High Maintenance” is my favorite on the EP. It has an alt-rock energy but still kind of a classic rock vibe. There’s a guitar sound in the song that reminds me a little of Green Day, but the track has more of a garage rock – catchy, hooky, in-tune garage rock, mind you – overall feel.

“Cab Ride” is just as energetic except for a couple bridges where the music slows before re-engaging, plus the buzzy guitar has more of an R.E.M.-ish, ’80s/’90s mainstream college rock vibe.

“Further” is a raucous rocker, as if the Robotic Hawks crossed the B-52s with the The Clash, added more tuneful but still edgy vocals, slowed the song down just a little, and gave it a funky rhythm.

The booming, echoing guitar strum found frequently on this EP also plays a prominent role in the final song of the collection, a hard-rockin’ version of Terence Trent D’Arby’s “Wishing Well.” This track shows a versatility the earlier tunes hint at and some playfulness in the instrumentation, but at no time is the band’s kickassingness compromised. Rather, this reimagining of such a well-known song just solidifies Robotic Hawks’ street cred.

I’d like to thank Robotic Hawks for delivering a wicked rockin’ EP that’s hard to describe, but hopefully I’ve done the songs justice in the above text. The tl;dr for this EP would be: Robotic Hawks’ All Business EP is energetic, fun, and catchy. Hear for yourself!

Album Review: Namedroppers – Starshine

Namedroppers band photo

photo courtesy of the Namedroppers

Album Review of Namedroppers: Starshine

The Namedroppers – Bobby T Torello (drums), Scott Spray (bass), Ron Rifkin (piano/organ), and Rafe Klein (guitar) – were named Blues Act of the Year by the 2023 New England Music Awards. They followed that in 2024 by releasing this disc, Starshine, containing ten songs ranging from rockin’ blues and bluesy rock to soaring soulful blues.

They kick things off with kind of a combination of those styles on the title track, a mid-tempo number featuring spoken-sung lead vocals from Rafe Klein with a chorus of background vocals from Ron and Bobby and, most notably, the soulful, standout supporting vox of guest vocalist Simone Brown.

Namedroppers – Starshine album cover

image courtesy of the Namedroppers

That’s followed by “Sweet Little Angel,” one of the two covers on the album, an exceptional rendition of the B.B. King classic that’s carried by engaging guitarwork but really driven home by its fun, tuneful, slightly growling lead vocal.

“Whiskey” is one of two songs on the disc featuring Bobby T on lead vocals, his grizzled voice providing a rough, in-character delivery.  Bobby T also lends his voice to the song “Rotten Person,” a hilarious, um… could it be considered a curse? On it, you’ll particularly dig the lyric “You’re a rotten person, you deserve desertion, and I really hope you end up alone.” I think we all know someone deserving of that particular curse.

The only other song featuring someone other than Rafe Klein on lead vocals is the band’s cover of “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” with Ron Rifkin handling the mic duties. The song has been so bluesified in this arrangement, with keyboard flourishes and a tunefully anguished, pleading vocal, that you almost don’t readily identify the original. And that, my friends, is how you perform a cover song.

Namedroppers band photo

photo courtesy of the Namedroppers

Probably the song with the biggest crossover, multi-audience hit potential on this disc is “Shades of Blue,” a song with a gentle, sneakily hooky guitar line that supports Rafe’s heartfelt vocals, with guest vocalist support from Carole Sylvan, who you’ll remember from a review of her album Love here at the Blog a little more than a year ago.

There’s a little two-song run in the middle of the album that I refer to as the disc’s “death section.” It’s comprised of a couple of lighthearted songs about passing away (or, rather, having passed away), “I Died You Cried” and “Can’t Take It With You.”

The only songs I haven’t yet mentioned are Starshine‘s final two tracks. “Red Sea Blues” is a heavy blues protestation/proclamation, while “Joy, Pain, Sky,” helped along by prominent guest vocals from Simone Brown, ends the album with a bit of joyfulness, which in the blues can’t come without some pain.

Starshine is a fun listen beginning to end (and on repeat), covering a lot of blues real estate, featuring a talented group of musicians with rather impressive bios. But hey, you can read about their pasts for yourself on the band’s website, because at the end of the day, it’s all about how those backgrounds come together to create the exceptional music on this disc; if you’re a blues fan, you’ll enjoy this record.

EP Review: MORRR – Marrow Weavers

MORRR – Marrow Weavers cover art

image courtesy of Unsung Hunger PR

EP Review of MORRR: Marrow Weavers (MFZ Records)

Italian artist MORRR, a musical identity of Dario Gatto, delivers a cool collection of dark, haunting music on Marrow Weavers. This album, originally released in 2022, was re-released in 2023 by MFZ Records, with the addition of a remixed version of its final track, “Tantalo,” by NTS Radio DJ Francesco Fusaro (aka Froz), one of MFZ Records’ co-founders.

Marrow Weavers is a collection of slow, haunting, dark music. It’s frequently depressively, hauntingly flowing but also mixes in some white noise-ish distortion to alter the power dynamic within the songs, creating MORRR’s uniquely original sound. This EP provides an encompassing experience that’s hard to convey in words, though I’ll try. Rest assured, it’s a powerful – but oddly coolly relaxing, given its darkness – listen.

“Riptide” is an edgy, yet slow-tempoed, opening track. It flows into the softer “Waking Up,” which begins mellow and, by slowly adding new instrumentation… well, wakes up, I suppose.

“These Wide Eyes” is a bit of a placeholder song, not so much as part of the EP but, rather, the em0otional mood it conveys is akin to the version of the smiley face emoji with a straight-line for a mouth. In the beginning and throughout most of the song, the mood and tempo are a slow, eerie creep with simple instrumentation before ending with a lot of buzz and activity; even then, the track never losing a feeling of emotional ambivalence.

Finally, the EP closes with two versions of “Tantalo.” Both versions feature the distorted, plodding twang that, for me, is the memorably signature sound of this EP. The original “Tantalo” would have been a fine enough sendoff into the ether, providing a cohesive ending to Marrow Weavers. However, on “Tantalo (Froz Chopped & Hopped Remix),” Froz adds in some more complex, layered sounds and a vibe that causes me to prefer the remix just slightly over the original. (Sometimes, collaboration makes things better!)

In any case, as a whole, complete listen, this is a cool five-song EP that allows the listener to pleasantly experience some dark moods. A couple of the “tags” at the end of this EP’s Bandcamp page that sum up the sound perhaps better than any new label I could come up with are “dreamwave” and “indietronica.” But really, it’s just a stylistically different example of the kind of cool, well-conceived, very original music I enjoy. Maybe you will, too.

Album Review: Mike Ward: Psychosongs – Love Never Rests

photo by Angie Ward; photo courtesy of Mike Ward

Album Review of Mike Ward: Psychosongs – Love Never Rests

Detroit-based, award-winning folk artist Mike Ward has delivered an everyman, heart-touching masterpiece with Love Never Rests. I’ve written before about how my inbox is overflooded with folk music, so I only write about those whose songwriting and delivery are impeccable, and even then only those few whose music really connects with me. And yeah, I get so much folk music, not even all of those. (But thanks to all for sending your music for review consideration. Even though I can’t review a majority of what I receive, I appreciate it.) But that’s not why you’re reading, so I’ll get back to the review…

image courtesy of Mike Ward

Mike has a roughness in his vocals that combine well with his matter-of-fact delivery, lending authenticity to his relatable, observational, slice-of-life lyrics. As for the Mike Ward: Psychosongs monitor, the “psycho” part is supposedly a reference to a nickname Mike earned playing hockey. (For me, being a hockey player makes him all that much more relatable. But it doesn’t really play a role in his music on this record, other than in a single line of “Compact Life.”)

Mike has a few different female backing vocalists on several songs throughout the album. On those songs, the intermingling of the vocals is often emotionally engaging and take those tunes to the next level. I noticed this particularly on “The Currency of Forgiveness” and “There I Was,” which are both very powerful songs that would be significantly less effective with just Mike’s single, though very compelling, vocal.

photo by Scott Kraus; photo courtesy of Mike Ward

Mike’s songs are relatable, as in “I Follow,” which features several lines you’ll smile and chuckle to in recognition of your own life or, at least, something you might have thought or felt while growing up. “Lost Love Letters” strikes up a bit of nostalgia, though in this song it’s an ode to memories sung from a third-person perspective. And the disc’s closing song, “Sunday Morning,” credited as a poem by Marjorie Ward (as opposed to the rest of the songs, that are entirely Mike Ward-penned), paints a richly-painted, detailed picture of everyday, familial Sunday mornings that might be familiar to many listeners. Meanwhile, “This Old Life Goes” is a song about aging, thinking about mortality and the meaning of life, seemingly spurred by running into a friend whose mind is beginning to fail, sung pleasantly and matter-of-factly – you know, like you’d expect from a top-shelf folk song. “Smile,” too, is another pleasant little ditty about aging, though it’s actually more about loss and remembering times from the past, family, and the relentless progression of time.

photo by Danny Ward; photo courtesy of Mike Ward

The entire album is exceptionally well-conceived and executed. Personally, some of my favorite songs – not noticeably better than the other tracks, just favorites because they connect with me – are “The Currency of Foregivness,” an upbeat song about love and commitment, “There I Was,” a song I enjoy in part because of the movement in the tempo and the fun lyric “Seems like I’ve living on the wrong side of nowhere,” even if I don’t relate to the vagabond life, “Compact Life,” a clever ode devoted primarily to embracing a life less complicated, and the heavier-feeling – both in lyric and in the power of the orchestration – “Something Anything,” which opens with the line “I’m looking for something positive today.”

As a whole, Love Never Rests is an exceptionally well-produced, written, and performed folk album. If you’re a fan of that genre or of singer-songwriters or well-written songs, then you ought to give it a listen.

More Recently

Love Never Rests is no longer Mike Ward’s most recent release. If you like what you hear here – or even if you don’t, I suppose – you can check out Mike’s August 2024 release Still Troubled, too.

Looking Ahead

Check the “Live” page of Mike’s website for performance dates. He currently lists a few performance that stretch from southeastern Michigan to southwestern Michigan. Despite his “psycho” nickname, though, I’m pretty sure Mike’s allowed to leave the state, so be sure to check periodically to see if and when he’ll be near you, even if you don’t live in the Great Lakes State.

Album Review: JK Collective – Ring Road

photo by Ariane Kok; photo courtesy of Jan Knetsch

by Eric Harabadian, Contributing Blogger

Album Review of JK Collective: Ring Road

JK Collective is a group of studio musicians and composers from the Netherlands that specializes in ‘60s-inspired rock and pop. Although they sound more than capable of handling any musical situation, the original songs performed on Ring Road strongly reflect their fascination with British, European and American-based classic rock.

album cover designed by Jasper Davidson; image courtesy of Jan Knetsch

Multi-instrumentalist and composer Jan Knetsch is at the helm here and leads his merry men of musicality down a road that is letter perfect in tone and texture. The dozen tracks here were sparked by Knetsch and his wife’s journey to the USA down Route 66 in 2022. Upon hearing The Beatles’ “I Saw Her Standing There” wafting from a roadhouse sound system, it stirred something in him to begin writing new music and tapping into that ‘60s-era style and feel. When Knetsch returned home to the Netherlands, he assembled this collective of musicians and got to work.

What you have here is a cadre of great original songs. “Ring Road Theme” is a mid- tempo rocker that blossoms on a bed of orchestral beauty. Woodwinds, strings and things blended with a wonderful and spirited melody really set the scene. “Together to Get Her” has a heavy British feel. It recalls the harmonic craftsmanship of The Hollies and The Beatles, with a touch of modern flair. The overall mood is upbeat, with a cool minor-ish guitar break. “I Don’t Wanna Give You Up” features great harmonies (hmm, I think I see a trend here… LOL!), with some tasty guitar action and a funky grooving bass line. “To Be Loved” features that Mersey Beat factor. There is also a predominant Beatle-esque sensibility, with a George Harrison-like slide guitar.

photo by Ariane Kok; photo courtesy of Jan Knetsch

“One Man Show” is very cinematic and taps into the bands’ penchant for storytelling. “The Mother Road” could almost be considered auto-biographical where it talks about traveling along Route 66. A ripping guitar solo and strong hooks bring it all back to the origin of JK Collective. “Work in Progress” spotlights the bands’ American influences, with a vocal nod to The Beach Boys. They’ve done their homework well and embody that freewheeling California sound. “Sweet Melody” sounds like Abbey Road-era Beatles. Superb harmonies, coupled with strings and brilliant hooks, make this a highlight. Continuing with The Beatles influence, there is no mistaking the “Eleanor Rigby” cadence and chamber string flourishes of “Roses in the Vale.” This track also vaguely recalls some of the early Moody Blues orchestral work. “Dreamers Drive” throws the whole works into the mix, blending woodwinds, strings, and straight up rock. And “My Song of the Day” rounds things out with a tasteful and well-placed acoustic ballad.

Ring Road is an album that shines a light on diversity and is very fluid in its songwriting approach. But there is a cinematic quality to their songs as well which taps into the JK Collective goals of licensing and marketing their music for films and video projects.

Album Review: Jason Kao Hwang – Soliloquies

Jason Kao Hwang – Soliloquies album cover

image courtesy of Jason Kao Hwang

by Eric Harabadian, Contributing Blogger

Album Review of Jason Kao Hwang: Soliloquies

Originally from the Midwest and currently based in New Jersey, Jason Kao Hwang is a classically-trained violinist and composer who specializes in a free jazz and improvisational approach to his instrument. He cut his musical teeth in the late ’70s and early ’80s playing with some of the heavyweights of avant garde jazz music such as saxophonist Anthony Braxton, saxophonist/flautist Henry Threadgill, and bassist Reggie Workman. Hwang, who is of Chinese descent, has also been heavily involved in world music that reflects his Asian-American heritage.

That wealth of musical and cultural knowledge is uniquely compressed into a dozen tight and expressive original solo violin etudes and improvisations. In particular, the strings master employs a specific technique throughout the recording called “pizzicato.” It is an alternate manner of playing where, instead of using a bow and swiping the violin strings, the instrument is “picked” or plucked similar to an approach on guitar. It’s a technique that gives the violin and each composition an entirely different and more percussive feel when compared with the way the instrument is primarily played.

In the dramatic arts soliloquies are intimate monologues where a character stands alone on stage to confide their innermost thoughts to the audience. Similarly, Hwang found a way to express himself in an improvisational and solitary context. Each original composition here tells part of a story. It’s a story that is a love letter to his parents and family’s first and second generation immigrant experiences.

The appropriately titled “At the Beginning” ushers in a demure and delicate melody on which the use of subtle pull-offs, trills and fleet-fingered picking is employed. The follow up “Hungry Shadows” develops those initial ideas and spotlights nuanced octaves and space. “Vagabond” navigates the melody in an unorthodox manner, with wit and strategic grace. Angular themes and well thought-out string bends and glissando define tracks such as “Spinning Coins,” “Remembering Our Conversation,” and “Encirclement.” Solo pizzicato in the hands of a sonic craftsman such as Hwang is magical because he refuses to be bound by the chains of conformity. Throughout his musical explorations on this album he makes his acoustic violin sound like a talking drum, flamenco guitar, and an Asian lute-like instrument called a Koto.

Every artist should grant themselves the opportunity to truly express who they are and where they come from. For all the sideman and collaborative work Hwang has done over the years, it’s nice to hear the soloist captured in his natural and familial element. And that’s what you essentially find here. “For the children of war survivors there are conversations with our parents we wished we had and could not,” explains Hwang in the liner notes. “I often wonder about my parents’ vague allusions to atrocities they survived in China during World War II because their trauma was far greater than I can imagine, even now, over 20 years since their passing. In Soliloquies I honor their courage by embracing their voices within mine, to sing into our unknowable silence encircling dreams. I am especially playing for my father, who endured multiple strokes, the last of which took his voice.”

Soliloquies is a dedicated listen and one that, in light of the stories behind each track, will draw you in with its earnestness, subtle delivery and powerful resolve.