Single Review: Slowlight Quartet – “Full Beam, Alan”

Slowlight Quartet

photo courtesy of Slowlight Quartet

Single Review of Slowlight Quartet: “Full Beam, Alan” (Jazz Sound Records)

The Slowlight Quartet is Tom Quilliam (saxophone), Paul Loraine (piano), Ian Paterson (bass), and John Hirst (drums). “Full Beam, Alan,” released last September, was the band’s first single release in seven years.

Slowlight Quartet

image courtesy of Slowlight Quartet

A synth opening, which recurs throughout, simply adds texture to what is an at-times mellow, at-times disruptively chaotic jazz number. Personally, I enjoy some of the more traditional pianowork, notably offering respite from some of the more aggressive elements in the song. It also works well combined with saxophone during the song’s final 40 seconds or so, raising the energy to a comfortable yet relaxed level to close things out.

Overall, it’s a pleasant song – with brief, interspersed periods of chaotic noise to keep it interesting. An enjoyable tune well worth hearing.

More Recently

Since the release of “Full Beam, Alan,” the Slowlight Quartet has released five songs across four singles, the most recent being a two-song single, “Superbia”/”Eveliina,” with guitarist Athol Cassidy and vocalist YVA lending their talents to the foursome for the recording. All of the Slowlight Quartet’s recordings can be found on the Jazz Sound Records bandcamp page.

Looking Ahead

Keep up with the latest Slowlight Quartet news and information via the band’s linktree and its Facebook and Instagram pages.

Album Review: 8084 – Live 4play

8084

photo courtesy of 8084

The Backstory

My first 8084 concert was in 1990, in my role as a “Lost in the Midwest” columnist for the east coast-based hard rock magazine Tough Tracks magazine. It was an assignment that allowed me to continue churning out reviews while I was away from Boston, during a summer internship in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Vermont-based 8084 was one of the top touring bands on the hard rock club circuit; I covered their performances at the local stop on that circuit, Paolo’s.

Well, after achieving a bit of success during their genre’s heyday, 8084’s legend continued to grow, most recently with occasional concerts around Vermont, drawing huge crowds for special evenings of the band’s original, old-fashioned, guitar-driven melodic hard rock music, headlined by musicians who hadn’t lost a step since their younger days. Well, if they’ve lost a step, it doesn’t show up in their music, at least.

The band actually got its start years before my first 8084 concert, in 1982, with the current line-up of Randy Smith (lead vocals and acoustic guitar), Andre Maquera (guitar and vocals), Frank Barnes (bass and vocals), and Gary Spaulding (drums and percussion), plus the late Charlie Hawthorne.

Album Review of 8084: Live 4play

8084 – live 4play

image courtesy of 8084

Live 4play is a classic live album, channeling all the energy of the band’s live performances. Yet, despite the live aesthetic, 8084 went to great lengths to ensure that the recording quality was exceptional, suitable to be interspersed with studio recordings on a radio or personal playlist. That’s something I’d posit isn’t the case for a lot of live albums, including some very famous ones. 8084 recorded several concerts to ensure they could select album-worthy versions of every song, and it’s apparent. Of course, there’s still that live feel, with the occasional crowd noise, particularly at the beginning and end of some songs, and there’s a little clever between-song banter at the beginning of a few tracks. But perhaps most importantly for a live album, Live 4play captures that live-show energy level that’s hard to duplicate in a studio.

Sonically, 8084 most easily recalls ’80s rock ‘n roll, that era of energetic live performances, soaring vocals, crunching guitars, and melodic tunefulness. Randy Smith’s vocals do, indeed, soar – and man, can he ever hit the high notes! – mixing well with guitar-heavy songs and more spacious melodic rock songs alike. When the songs soar, I could place 8084’s songs back-to-back with Giuffria. On other tracks, the Vermont rockers sound a bit more like the Dokken-to-Warrant melodic hard rock cohort. Throughout, though, there’s a timeless, classic rock flavor that’s gritty and grounded in decades-spanning rock tradition, recalling rock bands that used significantly less AquaNet than the aforementioned outfits. My point is that, despite the temptation to make the obvious, easy, lazy comparison to ’80s rock bands, 8084’s music is really more timeless arena rock than poppy ’80s hard rock.

8084

photo courtesy of 8084

Studio versions of most – but not all – of the songs on Live 4play can be found on one of 8084’s first three studio albums, spanning 1986-1991, all currently just available for digital download at the 8084 website: the band’s self-titled debut album from 1986, the 1989 release Love & War, or the 1991 EP Satisfaction Guaranteed. (A Satisfaction Guaranteed CD is part of my personal collection.) The remaining songs can be found by exploring 8084’s music on Spotify, either from the band’s 2005 digital album The Last Great Train or via its more recent Spotify singles.

Live 4play – a hefty 15-track disc, so I won’t be going strictly song-by-song with this review – begins with a 35-second hype-tape styled countdown “Intro” before launching into the lo-fi, distorted crunchy guitar opening of terrific, thumping disc-opener “Learning 2 Live.”

“Hold On” is an uptempo vox and axe-driven number with an energy and tone that reminds me of an amazing yet somehow criminally underappreciated melodic hard rock band, Danger Danger.

The opening chord of “Badman” reminds me just a bit of the main riff from Rick Springfield’s “I’ve Done Everything For You” before veering off into its own identity. After the opening, 8084 utilizes an attention-grabbing voice-only opening verse, then provides catchy, high-energy musical support with ample whammy and a memorable rhythm that makes this one of my personal favorites on the disc.

8084

photo courtesy of 8084

Sticking to the “whammy” theme, “Lonely at the Top” actually begins with some whammy-focused between-song banter before the music starts. The song itself is a soft, airy ballad with guitarwork akin to what you might find in a similarly-paced Dokken ballad and vocal harmonies in the chorus. The cool thing about a hard rock slow song from a talented band like 8084 is that the guitarwork is so interestingly textured.

Next up is another of my favorites on the album, “She Comes to Me,” one of the most hook-laden tunes on Live 4play, and the one song that prominently features a Bon Jovi-esque talk box, used in all its “wah-wah” glory to artistic perfection. Aside from being unavoidably catchy, “She Comes to Me” is just so damn fun!

“Alright” is a somewhat more straightforward rock song that utilizes a hint of vocal gravel more often than it soars, as the music and vocals express sensitivity that suitably accompanies the lyrics. “When I Think of You” keeps the tone soft, even moreso than “Alright” but paced and styled more like a melodic hard rock ballad.

The energy level immediately jumps back to 11 with “Rosita,” as lively vocals combine memorably with recurring guitar squiggles – not exactly a hook, but it serves the same purpose – resulting in a memorable song that strikes me as a likely crowd favorite.

8084

photo courtesy of 8084

“I Can’t Feel You,” one of the band’s more recently-penned songs, released as a single in 2018, is flavored a little differently from the older songs in the collection. It’s more modern, clearly showing that the band has remained musically up-to-date, writing rock songs with updated sonic sensibilities in a way that will still appeal to longtime fans. While great music is timeless, it’s songs like this one that’ll be more likely to gain traction on forward-looking playlists.

In the same vein, I get the same more modern vibe from the cooler, ’50s/’60s rock-influenced strummer “Yesterday,” on which the vocals are crooning in nature, voicing heavy lyrics worth listening to. This particular song is also more recent, a 2009 release from Randy Smith’s solo Bittersweet album, which also spawned this 2011 YouTube video.

The jangly opening of “Hideaway” brings the energy level – and the guitar intensity – back up to arena filling levels.

Live 4play closes with “Surrender,” a solid, stylistically familiar guitar rock ballad with crunchy guitars, a soaring voice, and rhythmic noodling in the guitar bridges that ranges from standard hard rock act riffs to fast-paced fingerwork to some eerie, hauntingly-tinged stretches, always, of course, finding a comfortable path back to the chorus. The song is a fitting ending to a long-form album like this, setting the listener down gently and pleasantly. Aside from the fact that you’ve just listened to 65 minutes of music and probably need a bio break, “Surrender” returns your musical mindset back to a good place to “rewind” and listen to the album all over again.

More Recently

8084 actually just dropped a new single – “Vegas” – to Spotify and YouTube on October 15th.

8084 was also nominated for a New England Music Award in the Rock Act of the Year category. Voting has concluded, and NEMA winners will announced during a ceremony in Foxborough, MA on November 12th.

Looking Ahead

8084 live performances tend to be events, so they’re well worth making an effort to attend. Right now, the “Live Dates” page of the band’s website lists a single date: Saturday, November 4th at the Higher Ground Ballroom in South Burlington, Vermont. Obviously, check back periodically for new concert dates to be added.

Single Review: Gary Gleason – “Why Don’t We Dance”

Gary Gleason

photo by Jessie Glockner; photo courtesy of Gary Gleason

Single Review of Gary Gleason: “Why Don’t We Dance”

Singer-songwriter-guitarist Gary Gleason splits his time between Virginia, New England and Nashville, meaning there are three locations that can lay claim to this talented musician as one of their own. His most recent single, “Why Don’t We Dance,” showcases his steady voice, his engaging song-performance skills, and his adept songwriting skills, with an attention to every detail, via an enjoyable, memorable song you’ll quickly welcome as a favorite entry on your playlist.

The song itself, from beginning to end, makes me picture a big dancehall with a stage up front, a big dancefloor, and tables around the edge. From the first notes, you know it’ll be a classic slow song, and when Gary’s vocals begin, you discover you’re in for a ballad of the ’70s pop country-sensible, smooth crooning variety.

It’s reminiscent of Garth Brooks’ “The Dance” with the richness of the vocals and flowing nature, but there are more upfront guitar strums to catch your attention from time to time, as well. The song itself flows smoothly, as if it could be closely related to Lee Ann Womack’s “I Hope You Dance.” I also hear a little of Kenny Rogers’ “Through the Years” in the song’s style. And, finally, I think “Why Don’t We Dance” would be an ideal vehicle for a rich voice along the lines of George Strait’s.

Of course, for “Why Don’t We Dance,” Gary’s voice just the right mix of rich and smooth, and after a several listens, I can’t imagine anyone else singing it. I’m sure you’ll feel the same way.

More About the Song

Gary Gleason co-wrote “Why Don’t We Dance” with Monty Lane Allen (Alan Jackson and Grand Ole Opry) and Robert Arthur (Brad Paisley’s team).

Looking Ahead

Keep an eye on the “Events” page of Gary’s website for upcoming performances. And consider following Gary’s YouTube page to remain abreast of the new videos he releases from time to time.

Album Review: Tokyo Tramps – Fearless Heart

Tokyo Tramps – Fearless Heart album coverAlbum Review of Tokyo Tramps: Fearless Heart

Tokyo Tramps are Boston blues/blues-rock mainstays. Guitarist/vocalist Satoru Nakagawa and bassist/vocalist Yukiko Fujii have spent twenty-plus years as Boston-based blues rockers, and they’re still among the city’s best. I delved more deeply into Tokyo Tramps’ background in my review of the band’s I’m a Tiger EP, so you can read that review for more detail; here, I’ll just focus on the band’s new album, Fearless Heart.

Tokyo Tramps’ music could be equally described as blues rock or rockin’ blues, but since the former can be used to describe a broad swath of rock ‘n roll, the latter – or the fact that the band’s songs straddle the two terms – is probably more informative. The bluesier portions of the album have a raucous barroom nature, while the rock ‘n roll component hints at the band’s classic ’60s and ’70s blues-based rock influences. Mostly, I hear an amalgam of influences buried in the band’s sound, but on one or two of the songs, you can quite specifically hear the Tramps “try sometimes” and “get what (they) need.”

From the very first spin you’ll enjoy the unique blues rock sound that makes Tokyo Tramps music quickly identifiable, but I’d recommend giving this album multiple listens; each listen, especially after the first few, reveals more subtleties. The hooks are rather sneaky, and there are suddenly significantly more “wow” moments upon the tenth or fifteenth journey through the album than there were initially. Before you know it, your two initial favorite songs have miraculously become eight.

The album kicks off with the jangly blues-based rock guitar lead-in to “Sweet Melody,” a rough-edged funky symphony of unity that’s held together by hypnotizingly melodious guitarwork and a sweet groove.

Bluesy classic rock guitar crunch motors “Mississippi and New Orleans,” another song that’ll leave listeners jamming to the axework, eyes closed, especially when enjoyed with headphones on.

“Where Did You Hide Your Love?” is next, with a little more psychedelic vibe, followed by “Blues Leave Me Alone,” whose hauntingly jangly, low-fi distorted axework supports the mild anguish in the vocals.

The band revealed a desire to incorporate ’70s rock sounds into this particular album, mentioning both the Stones and Derek and the Dominos. And, in fact, next track “Open the Door” is the song on which I most hear some “Layla”-esque elements mixing with the Tramps’ trademark rockin’ blues sound.

This marks the halfway mark of Fearless Heart. A lot of albums begin to fade on the “B side,” but as strong as the first 5 songs of Fearless Heart are, this album just keeps finding next ways to top itself on the back half.

“Can’t Find My Way Home” is a bit of a country blues swayer-and-twanger, and I really dig the vocal interplay between the bandleaders on this track.

Next up, “Loneliness is a Social Disease” has the pep and playfulness of a ’50s rocker, almost, and it’s definitely a rockin’ good time. “Heart of Life” follows, with an earnest vocal delivery and a steady rhythm supporting the song; its rhythmic blues rock tempo hints at a jazzy meander throughout, but that’s a head-fake, as the song’s tempo remains consistent.

“I Don’t See My Star Tonight” slows things down, a blues dirge with some soft guitar noodling that adds just enough liveliness to make for an interesting journey.

And the album closes with what’s probably my favorite song on Fearless Heart, “Young Lion.” The interplay of Satoru’s and Yukiko’s vocals on this song are fun, effective, and catchy. (You’ll sing along with one or the other of them, probably not always the same from one listen to the next.) And the guitars navigate a blues-rock journey. It’s a lively, fitting close to the Tokyo Tramps’ newest album.

More Recently

The Tokyo Tramps have been nominated for two major music awards this year. They are finalists in the Blues Act of the Year category by the New England Music Awards. NEMA voting has concluded, and the winners will be announced at the awards ceremony on Sunday, November 12th. They are also on the final ballot in the Boston Music Awards‘ Blues Artist of the Year category. BMA voting continues until November 17th, with the awards ceremony scheduled for December 20th.

Looking Ahead

Check the “Live Schedule” page of the Tokyo Tramps’ website for upcoming performances. You can catch the band live tomorrow, Sunday, October 15th, starting at 11:00 AM at the Sunday Blues Brunch at the Hard Rock Cafe Foxwoods in Ledyard, CT. Be sure to check the band’s website periodically as new dates are added.

Single Review: Ben Davis Jr. – “Winding Binding Road”

Ben Davis Jr.

photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

Single Review of Ben Davis Jr.: “Winding Binding Road”

I first heard Ben Davis Jr.‘s amazing talent when I listened to his 2019 Suthernahia album, an awesome mix of lyrical, musical, and vocal originality that somehow got lost in my CD pile until it was kind of old. Seriously, go check out songs like “I Think You Should,” “I Can’t Get Enough,” “Sunday Morning”… well, OK, the whole disc, showcasing Ben’s amazing bluesy Americana, with an original “Suthernahia” small-town spin I guarantee you’ve not heard before. This dude is truly one of a kind, absolutely something special.

Ben Davis Jr. – "Winding Binding Road"

image courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

And that brings us to his newest release, the single “Winding Binding Road,” which is what I’m officially reviewing tonight. Hip, country-rock guitarwork kicks things off energetically, soon joined by Ben Davis Jr.’s inimitable, easily identifiable, twangily smooth, relatably earnest voice. The tempo stays up all the way, driven by a dancing guitar line and a steady, pulsing beat, buoyed by a mid-song key change, even maintaining its pace through a lighter fret-picking bridge late in the song.

A fun, danceable number, “Winding Binding Road” will leave you panting, out of breath if you remain on the dancefloor for the entire song. Panting and grinning. It’s a terrific introduction to the exceptional talent of Ben Davis Jr.

Having said that, while you’re checking out this song, like I said earlier, do yourself a favor and explore more of his music catalog. You will thank me later.

Looking Ahead

The “Tour Dates” page on Ben’s website currently lists for upcoming shows, all in October: Tomorrow, Saturday, October 14th at Club Vinton in McArthur, Ohio; Friday, October 20th at Loose Rail Brewing in Canal Winchester, Ohio; Saturday, October 21st at Market Street Listening Room & House Concerts in Waverly, Kentucky; and Saturday, October 28th at Twisted Vine Family Vineyard in Patriot, Ohio. Be sure to check Ben’s website regularly to see more upcoming performances when they’re added.

Album Review: Carole Sylvan – Love

Carole Sylvan – Love album coverAlbum Review of Carole Sylvan: Love

Carole Sylvan‘s hall of fame voice is the driving force behind this soulful, blues-influenced R&B album, Love. An established New England/New York treasure with an admirable career-to-date, a solo album like this provides an opportunity to experience Carole’s performance skills in all their glory.

The album showcases Carole’s vocal range right off the bat, from explosive power to soft, rich, resonating warmth, with its first two songs. Memorable, powerful, energetic “What Do You Call It? (I Call It Love)” provides get-to-your-feet energy, while the smooth, flowing “To Love Somebody” follows with laid-back, jazzy warmth.

Not to be outdone, and perhaps it’s the choir-like harmonies, but “I Still Love You Anyway,” a balladic powerhouse with soaring verses, is so powerful that it’s almost a religious experience.

Fourth track “Love to Love” is the bluesiest cut so far on the disc, with playful, tempo-boosting horns making frequent, well-timed incursions into the song, seeming to battle with Carole’s voice for emphatic power. Then the lyrics – and Carole’s delivery – join the playfulness on the funky-soulful “Keep It Clean.”

Carole’s vocals launch into powerhouse/diva orbit on the powerful “Lighthouse,” a song during which her voice will give you goosebumps during some of its most commanding moments.

The funk returns on “I Cry For You,” which I can envision as an on-stage showpiece; also, a song on which you’ll be convinced Carole coolly sings “well, well, well” way more often than she really does – that’s once; actually twice, but consecutively and not again. (Go back and listen again; you’ll see I’m right.)

Next up is the most widely-recognized song on the album, “Tennessee Whiskey.” Carole’s version is of the soaring, soulful variety and, once you’ve heard it, may well become your favorite rendition of this ubiquitous standard. The music and tempo is pretty straightforward, with few liberties taken, though the instrumental bridge is quite nice, particularly the nifty horn-work, but oh, mostly you’ll simply dig that voice! (Fun quiz: How many syllables are there in the word “warm”? Ha! Yeah, you’re not even close!)

“The Only One Around” is a hip, jazzy number that’s perhaps the most of each – the hippest and the jazziest – found in this collection.

Carole closes the disc with a one-minute “Love to Love (Reprise),” tying the disc together nicely with its recollection of the cool groove from “Love to Love,” providing a nice fade-out ending to Love.

More Recently

Love was a 2021 release. In 2022, Carole released another full-length disc, Something Goin’ On.

Carole was inducted into the New England Music Hall of Fame this year, celebrated during the NEMHOF induction ceremony on September 30th.

Carole has also been nominated for a New England Music Award in the Soul/R&B Act of the Year category. Voting has concluded, but NEMA winners have not yet been announced; that will occur during a ceremony in Foxborough, MA on November 12th.

Album Review: Gráinne Duffy – Dirt Woman Blues

Grainne Duffy

photo by Rob Blackham; photo courtesy of Cobra Promotions

Album Review of Gráinne Duffy: Dirt Woman Blues

Holy moly, do we at the Blog ever love Gráinne Duffy, as evidenced by all the unabashed gushing in my review of her Voodoo Blues album a couple years ago. Well, she is back and every bit as talented and engaging as ever on her new album, Dirt Woman Blues, so get ready for several paragraphs of effusive praise.

Grainne Duffy – Dirt Woman Blues

image courtesy of Cobra Promotions

Indeed, if you’re not yet familiar with Gráinne, you’ll have your “oh, my god!” moment – the one I had when I first heard Voodoo Blues – on disc-opener “Well Well Well,” a snarling blues number that somehow manages to be grizzled and gritty yet crisply modern and energetic. And that voice! I stand by my Joanna Dean comparison, but I’m hearing a bit of similarity to Danielle Miraglia – Boston’s resident flagbearer in the “how is she not already world famous?” music club, blues division. There are hints of Janis Joplin in there, too. So, basically, one song into the album, and you’ll realize you’re listening to one of the best blueswomen on the planet… and you still have eight more new songs to enjoy for the very first time!

Grainne Duffy

photo by Rob Blackham; photo courtesy of Cobra Promotions

By comparsion to the disc-opener, “Dirt Woman Blues” is a tonally darker and more brooding blues number. There’s not the hint of rock ‘n roll you found on “Well Well Well.” “Dirt Woman Blues” also features this neat little audio trick, a flip to grainy AM radio-quality vocals at the beginning of the chorus, as if the whole world reverts from technicolor to black and white, truly fitting for this raucously pleading, distortion-infused, internally-wailing blues plaint.

“What’s It Going to Be?” follows, introducing a lighter, strumming personality – almost what you might expect from Sheryl Crow, if she sang the blues. It’s a welcome respite from the preceding intensity; very cool.

Grainne Duffy

photo by Rob Blackham; photo courtesy of Cobra Promotions

The next track, “Running Back to You” is a groovy blues Gospel-style number that glides along smoothly until the chorus, when Gráinne’s vocals intensify. I’m also fond of the bridge after the second chorus, first the nifty vocal turns of phrase and then the heartfelt cries of the guitar solo.

Next up, the beat that drives the rhythmic “Rise Above” meld with Gráinne’s muddy pop-soul vocals to create what could best be described as cool, bluesy alt-rock. It’s followed by “Sweet Liberation,” a jangly, distorted-guitar blues-rock love-in that harkens back to the ’60s and ’70s, the era of peace, love, and… well, liberation. Oh, and the song ends in a badass, semi-frantic, axe-filled jam leading to an era-appropriate quick stop.

Grainne Duffy

photo by Rob Blackham; photo courtesy of Cobra Promotions

The blues Gospel returns on “Hold On to You,” the musical equivalent of a slowly-moving, howling, oh-so-blue raw nerve. “Yes I Am” follows, a raucous blues-rock protest anthem.

“Killycrum” closes the disc with a smooth, folky blues groove, and it’s on slower songs like this one, when the music is less dense, that the well-placed, effective cracks in Gráinne’s vox are at their most effective and apparent.

And with that, after just nine songs, it’s over. Beginning to end, Dirt Woman Blues is a great disc. On it, singer-axeslinger Gráinne Duffy again solidifies the expectation that a well-deserved coronation as blues royalty draws ever closer. And if you don’t yet know her music, this is your chance. You’re in for a rare treat! And it makes me jealous because you only ever get one first listen to Gráinne Duffy.

Grainne Duffy

photo by Rob Blackham; photo courtesy of Cobra Promotions

Looking Ahead

To find out where Gráinne is performing, follow her Facebook page. Via that, you’ll discover info about two upcoming shows in Northern Ireland: a Saturday, October 14th show at the Braid Arts Centre in Ballymena and a Friday, November 24th show at The Court House in Bangor.

 

Single Review: Jason LaPierre & Kelsey Blackstone – “When I’m With You”

Jason LaPierre & Kelsey Blackstone

photo courtesy of Kelsey Blackstone’s management

Single Review of Jason LaPierre & Kelsey Blackstone: “When I’m With You”

Soulful pop vocalist Kelsey Blackstone and jazz-trained guitarist Jason LaPierre team up to deliver “When I’m With You,” a memorably catchy, timeless single that harkens back to the jazz-infused pop hits of the seventies. At first listen, I immediately thought – stylistically – of Little River Band’s “Reminiscing.” Of course, the differences are obvious. “When I’m With You” sports a rich, modern sound bed, for example, and you’ll find soaring background vocal howls, via studio magic, in place of some of those seventies harmonies. Beginning to end, Kelsey’s voice features a smooth soulfulness that rounds the edges of this lively song, but do keep an ear out for the hint of a growl where appropriate.

Jason LaPierre & Kelsey Blackstone – "When I'm With You"

image courtesy of Kelsey Blackstone’s management

This tune will have a place on my permanent personal playlist, and if you give it a listen, it’ll probably find a spot on yours, too. While you are likely to find “When I’m With You” on several year-end “song of the year” lists this year, the accompanying cool, playful music video has, at least, landed “When I’m With You” a 2023 New England Music Awards “Video of the Year” nomination. (Voting ended on October 1st; we’ll learn how Jason and Kelsey fared when the results are announced in November.)

Jason LaPierre & Kelsey Blackstone

photo courtesy of Kelsey Blackstone’s management

Looking Ahead

Of course, the results of NEMA “Video of the Year” voting will be announced on November 12th at the New England Music Awards ceremony/concert in Foxboro.

Also, Jason and Kelsey each have linktrees (Jason’s here and Kelsey’s here) to direct you to their social media accounts and help you stay current with their release and performance schedules. Per Kelsey’s Bandsintown listing, you can catch her October 12th at the Rockwood Music Hall in Boston, October 19th at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY, and October 28th at the Midway Cafe in Boston. I don’t see any live performances listed anywhere for Jason, but his Spotify artist page does show he has collaborated on three more singles since the spring release of “When I’m With You,” so he has been keeping busy.

Album Review: D.C. Anderson – House Concert

D.C. Anderson – House Concert

image courtesy of D.C. Anderson

Album Review of D.C. Anderson: House Concert

This is a cool concept for an album. D.C. Anderson is an accomplished stage and screen actor, and these 11 songs – including 3 on which he’s credited as the lyricist – are enjoyably combined in a house concert-like set; hence, the album title. The performance is stripped-down, with only pianist David Robison for accompaniment, allowing D.C.’s voice to carry the remaining weight, his nuanced delivery providing all the necessary “color” and support. There’s a theatrical delivery to every song on the record; stylistically, it’s the sort of album you might expect from a star of musical theater, an anthology of songs performed as if from Broadway soundtracks, whether or not the songs were drawn from actual musicals.

What better way to kick things off than with Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “Some Enchanted Evening,” which D.C. opens with haunting vocals, evoking images of a pitch-black theater, a performance beginning, with the singer walking into a single spotlight before a silent audience, anxious with anticipation. The voice and piano build over the course of the song, increasingly emphatic. What a great way to kick off an evening, an album, or, of course, a house concert. As you may know, I love a record with well-ordered songs, and this is a strong way to start.

Next, D.C.’s performance of “I Wanna Know You” from Anne of Green Gables is a powerful follow-up, with the vocals-and-piano arrangement giving this recording a much more fragile intimacy than is likely to be easily achieved on a big stage.

“There Ain’t No Devil” brings – believe it or not – a lighter, softer, more relaxed tone to the album, though still very theatrically delivered, which can safely be said about any of this collection’s eleven songs.

The slightly playful airiness continues, as evidenced initially by ivories that sound mischievously tickled at the opening of “While There is Still Time,” offering an enjoyable glide through lyrically heavy waters. Unabashed fun follows, as D.C. enthusiastically delivers the satirical “Loving That Lamb of Mine,” delivering Alan Chapman’s playful lyrics with zest.

D.C.’s voice cracks with emotion next, as he delivers a stirringly serious, slow-paced performance of Todd Almond’s “God is Good.” D.C. is the lyricist for the next number, “Janice and Martin,” which adds a bit more pace and feels perhaps closer to folk – theatrical folk, mind you – than the other songs in the collection.

This House Concert turns playful again, dipping into Song of the South for the ebullient “Sooner of Later,” which is, in fact, a quite proper lyrical follow-up to “Janice and Martin.”

D.C. wrote the lyrics for the next two tracks. First, “Crazy Still to Do,” sounds like it should be my favorite song from an irreverent musical, with cool lyrics like “I’m sorry for what’s missing. I’m missing something, too. But so’s you hear, I’ll make this clear, I’m crazier than you.” With a nod to song ordering, it’s the third of a really well-arranged sequence, both topically and musically.

Next up, “Song for Artists” is a bit more serious and sincere, as it soars musically and vocally, delivering a message of, as you might guess from the song title, thanks to artists. Following, D.C. closes the record with a slow-building, powerful delivery of Susan Osborn’s “Bright Angel,” setting the song down for a soft landing to draw his House Concert to a close.

I’d recommend a beginning-to-end listen of this record. The songs, in order, ebb and flow enjoyably, with tempos (and levels of seriousness) varying throughout. And, after a few listens, certainly you’ll have favorite songs that you’ll want to play individually from time to time, as well. Personally, I’m particularly fond of D.C.’s arrangements and delivery of “Crazy Still to Do” and “Some Enchanted Evening.”

More Recently

House Concert was released in early 2022. More recently, in 2023, D.C. released the album Sharing the Night with Darkness.

Looking Ahead

D.C. will be performing live in Chicago on Sunday, October 22nd and in New York on Sunday, November 12th. You can find time and location details for those performances on the “calendar” page of D.C.’s website; check back periodically as more performances are added. You’ll also find the occasional update about D.C.’s goingson on his Facebook page.

Single Reviews: Brian Muratori – “Jagged Edge” and “Endless Summer”

Brian Muratori

image courtesy of Brian Muratori

Single Reviews: Brian Muratori – “Jagged Edge” and “Endless Summer”

The Backstory

I’ve known Brian Muratori for decades. When we were both “under 21” we used to hang out at the same all-ages dance clubs in West Michigan. Of course, back then, he wasn’t a professional singer, and I wasn’t a music journalist. His first professionally-recorded album, The Italian Rocker, was released a couple years before I started writing reviews. (The dude’s younger than I am; he just got an early start.) I did eventually get a chance to review one of his recordings, his “Starting Over” cassingle, for Geoff Wilbur’s Renegade Newsletter in the mid-’90s. (I’m pretty sure it’s been decades since I last typed the word “cassingle.”) Well, the cool thing is that Brian and I are both still at it, continuing to ply our respective trades in the music business.

Brian Muratori

image courtesy of Brian Muratori

The Review

Stylistically, Brian’s voice is that of a top-flight lounge crooner, a performer with a firm grasp of all the pop, soft rock, and pop-rock vocal stylings necessary to make an evening of music into a fun, memorable event. Brian has released several singles over the past year. I’ve chosen to review two that are representative of his skills – one from Brian’s At the Hollywood Party collection and the other his most recent, post-Party single. The first, “Jagged Edge,” was released in late 2022 and is included on Brian’s At the Hollywood Party album on Spotify. The other single, “Endless Summer,” is Brian’s most recent release; it dropped – fittingly for a “summer” song – late in the summer, just a few weeks ago.

“Jagged Edge,” kicks off with light, classic soft pop-rock power-synth and a pleasant rhythm, and it’ll soon have you bopping along as well-placed oohs and ohs complement Brian’s groovy delivery, with his insistent vocal build-up leading into smooth choruses.

Brian Muratori

photo courtesy of Brian Muratori

“Endless Summer,” meanwhile, begins with a beach-pop chorus of “oohs,” leading to soft adult contemporary verses and chorus, with occasional dancing guitar riffs adding color and flavor. This cool summer number is an updated, groovy throwback tune that harkens back to soft rock’s heyday.

“Jagged Edge” and “Endless Summer” are fun songs, and Brian’s voice can carry them well, mustering up all the storytelling nuance necessary to deliver a great final product. They’re convincing proof that “an evening with Brian Muratori” would be a fun live event. While I picture an upscale night of dinner an crooning, his style would also play well in an intimate theater or smoky barroom setting, if smoky barrooms were still a thing. These tunes would also be well-placed in Hallmark movies, likely with some crisper, less jagged production to help them blend more easily into the soundtrack.

In the end, these singles – and Brian’s other songs, some of which you’ll find on Spotify – paint a picture of a talented, modern-day crooner, and I’m pleased to hear Brian carrying on that fine musical tradition. Stylistically, Brian’s music is well-timed to take advantage of the existence of the yacht rock genre, into which his music fits easily.

Beyond These Songs

If you dug the two songs I reviewed, other standouts I’d recommend to yacht rock fans include Brian’s 2022 single “You Had to Go and Change on Me” and, from At the Hollywood Party, “Alligator Drive” and “Ooh Baby I Think You’re Driving Me Crazy.”

Looking Ahead

Brian Muratori’s Facebook page would be a good place to start if you want to remain abreast of new single releases and other artist news. You can also find new songs, as they’re released, on Brian’s Spotify and Bandcamp pages.