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Steve Holtje: May 4, 2008

Top 10 New Releases

  1. The Individuals – Fields/Aquamarine (Bar/None)

    In 2006 I wrote about the 1982 LP Fields (originally released by Plexus), “with everything early-’80s NY being hip right now, a reissue would be welcome.” Here it is, finally, along with their 1981 Aquamarine EP and a bunch of bonus tracks. The Individuals were Glenn Morrow (later of Rage to Live, and founder/owner of Bar/None Records), Janet and Doug Wygal (later of, naturally, The Wygals), and Jon Light Klages (who made an underrated solo album). They should’ve been stars; their angular, occasionally dissonant indie-rock still sounds great. The “hit” was “Dancing with My Eighty Wives,” but this is the sort of album where fans love pretty much every track and each is distinctive. Anybody who dug the Pylon reissue should check this out too.

  2. Sun Ra – Disco 3000 (Art Yard)

    A two-CD set topping 139 minutes, this contains the January 23, 1978 concert at the Teatro Cilak in Milan, Italy. Of course, there’s plenty of live Sun Ra available, but what makes this special is that it’s not his big-band Arkestra, just him (keyboards), John Gilmore (tenor sax, drums), Michael Ray (trumpet), Luqman Ali (drums), and occasionally singer/dancer June Tyson. And as sax fans and Ra followers know, any setting that gives Gilmore lots of room to blow is to be treasured. Gilmore is one of the great tenor soloists in jazz history, but because he devoted his talents to Ra’s band for most of four decades instead of pursuing the stardom he could easily have earned, his place in the sax pantheon is know only to cognoscenti. I think all of this material came out on various LPs, mostly rare; to have it all available in one place is wonderful, and even at import price it’s a relative bargain.

  3. Foals – Antidotes (Transgressive/Sub Pop)

    At first my reaction was “ho-hum, more post-punk revivalists,” but there are so many unusual touches that this is not more angularity-by-numbers. Sometimes it’s a little like Akron/Family chanting Franz Ferdinand songs, sometimes it’s more like the Rapture playing TV on the Radio. There are quirky horn charts, and the twirling, percussive guitar lines sometimes sound like they were transcribed from African 45s (say, Thomas Mapfumo’s chimurenga), or, when drenched in effects (“Red Socks Pugie”), like shoegazers dropped into the middle of a disco-punk-ska party band. There are two bonus tracks to attract fans who already have the English edition.

  4. Mudhoney – Superfuzz Bigmuff Deluxe Edition (SubPop)

    Nirvana had the breakout hit, Pearl Jam and Soundgarden had the major label success (and sales), but it was Mudhoney that was the heart and soul of grunge. To do a two-CD deluxe edition of a six-song EP may seem odd; what we really have here is a comprehensive look at Mudhoney’s first year. Disc one has the epochal “Touch Me I’m Sick”/“Sweet Young Thing Ain’t Sweet No More” single, Superfuzz Bigmuff, the “You Got It”/“Burn It Clean” single, Dicks and Bette Midler covers from the Superfuzz session that showed up on various SubPop compilations, three demos, and one outlier, a July 1989 cover of Sonic Youth’s “Halloween” for a split single. Disc two has a pair of short 1988 concerts. We hear “Mudride” four times and a few other songs three times, but I’m not complaining!

  5. Nigeria Rock Special: Psychedelic Afro-Rock & Fuzz Funk in 1970s Nigeria (Sound Way)

    The third Nigerian compilation from Sound Way this year is another winner. Most of the time there are elements of highlife or Afrobeat in the sound, but the guitarists tend to favor rockish styles and there’s lots of heavy, swirling organ fattening the sound. There’s a track here by Elcado that sounds like a cross between Santana, Traffic, and the Grateful Dead, Mono Mono’s instrumental “Kenimania” conjures up the Allman Brothers, and the guitarist of Original Wings sounds like he’d listened to Wes Montgomery, but the rhythm sections of these bands groove a lot deeper than their Western counterparts.

  6. M83 – Saturdays=Youth (Mute)
  7. Colin Meloy – Sings Live! (Kill Rock Stars)

    This is not an improvement on The Decemberists, from whose repertoire most of the songs come (two supplemented with allusions to old songs by Fleetwood Mac and Morrissey). But no matter how much intricate production and arranging is lost by stripping those songs down to just Decemberists leader Meloy’s voice and acoustic guitar, the songs still entertain, and the increased intimacy makes it an interesting tradeoff. And there is one previously unreleased song here, the charming “Wonder” (I’m not counting the snippet of “Dracula’s Daughter,” his self-proclaimed “worst song I’ve ever written”). At first it seemed like there were more, but research revealed them to be songs from EPs, but they do offer a welcome change-of-pace sprinkling of unfamiliar material (unless you’re a Decemberists completist). Plus there’s plenty of Meloy’s dry wit on display in between songs. Essential? No. Endearing? Absolutely.

  8. Billy Bragg – Mr. Love & Justice (Anti)

    Even more low-key than usual for Bragg, this one might slip under the radar, which would be a loss. Given a few listens, it’s subtly infectious. The energy level may be set at “mellow,” even with band backing, but the lyrics reside at “passionate,” whether political or personal – or both. It’s not an album for red states, that’s for sure. It’s no shock that he’s opposed to the Iraq War (“Sing Their Souls Back Home”) and tightening government control (“O Freedom”), but he mostly manages to pull it off without sounding pedantic. On the two-CD deluxe edition, he gets back to his solo roots by performing the whole album by himself on disc two.

  9. Tom Brosseau – Late Night at Largo (no label)

    This is a disc Brosseau is selling on tour; I got it last month when he did an in-store at Sound Fix. He’s a charismatic performer with a captivating voice, and this 2004 solo show captures him in his entertaining element.

  10. Nick Lowe – Jesus of Cool (Yep Roc)

    Don’t recognize that album title? That’s because when Lowe’s solo debut was released in the U.S., this 1978 classic was retitled Pure Pop for Now People. The track list was messed with as well, adding both sides of a 1976 single, but now all the material from both versions comes together, along with more bonus tracks. Fun and eclectic.