Highly recommended this month: The Comet is Coming, John K.
Samson
Highly recommended, reviewed earlier: Leonard
Cohen, Gord Downie
Well worth your while: Craig David, Solange, Tagaq, Donovan
Woods
As always, these reviews ran in the Waterloo Record.
Streaming is great for sample purposes, but please find a way to
directly support your favourite artists financially.
Blackie and the Rodeo
Kings – Kings and Kings (File Under:
Music)
Boys club! The all-male trio Blackie and the Rodeo Kings—Colin
Linden, Stephen Fearing and Tom Wilson—have invited some of their favourite
fellow dudes to join them on duets, which means familiar faces like Bruce
Cockburn, Buddy Miller and Rodney Crowell, but also relatively young pups like
City and Colour, Jason Isbell, and Eric Church. Linden’s day job on the TV show
Nashville helped him coerce the men
of that show (a.k.a. to viewers as Deacon Claybourne, Will Montgomery, Avery
Barkley, and Gunnar Scott) onto one track here. That’s one big sausage party.
To be fair, the Kings did court some Queens five years ago, on a
similar star-studded duets album featuring Emmylou Harris, Lucinda Williams,
Serena Ryder, Rosanne Cash and more. But if there’s a flaw here, it’s that
same-sex duets—assuming they’re not romantically inclined, which is all but a
safe bet in country music—don’t amount to more than a glorified role as a
backing vocalist, either by the guest or by a Rodeo King taking a backseat.
It’s also a strange concept for a group that was founded—a whopping 20 years
ago now—on three men sharing songwriting and vocal duties in the first place.
Regardless, there are plenty of obvious highlights with this
amount of talent involved. Raul Malo of the Mavericks is a joy to hear in any
context, and Nick Lowe fits in so well that one suspects he might well sign for
a full album as a fourth member; the same could be said of Jason Isbell. It
sounds like Nashville house party for expat Canucks to which we’re all invited,
and better hosts you couldn’t ask for. (Oct. 6)
Stream: “Live by the Song” feat. Rodney Crowell, “High Wire”
feat. Raul Malo, “Secret of a Long Lasting Love” feat. Nick Lowe
Who the hell is saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings? This
fiery London player first crossed my radar as a member of Sons of Kemet, an
award-winning jazz band with two albums under their belt, where he’s joined by
two drummers and a tuba player. Here, he joins a former funk duo and ends up
somewhere in outer space—not all that surprising, considering song titles like
“Journey Through the Asteroid Belt,” and the fact they claim Sun Ra as a major
influence (without ever trying to imitate him directly—that would be too
obvious a move and counterintuitive to the spirit of the great bandleader).
Indeed, Hutchings has recorded with the modern incarnation of the Sun Ra
Arkestra, as well as Courtney Pine’s Jazz Warriors, the Heliocentrics and
plenty more. Here, his saxophone journeys through some dubwise electronic filters,
and his rhythm section delights in turning beats upside down, often at a
propulsive tempo while Hutchings dips and glides above the tumult. Psychedelic,
electronic jazz doesn’t come better than this. (Oct. 6)
Stream: “Space Carnival,” “Journey Through the Asteroid Belt,”
“Cosmic Dust”
Craig David – Following My Intuition (Sony)
Who is Craig David? Not a household name here, but huge in his
native Britain, David became a star in 2000 when he was 19 years old, with a
uniquely British offshoot of R&B called “garage.” On these shores, he was
long forgotten when he showed up on a track on Kaytranada’s 2016 Polaris Music
Prize-winning album 99.9%; at home,
he was already plotting a comeback, having released several singles in advance
of this, his first album of original material in nine years (which also
features that Kaytranada track, plus a new collaboration). One of those was an
inspired reworking of Justin Bieber’s “Where Are Ü Now,” which David turned
into a song called “16”—a number that references David’s age when he got his
first break, the number of years since his 2000 debut, and the year of his
(self-prophesied) comeback.
What a comeback it is: this album hit No. 1 in Britain, and it’s
clear why: Following My Intuition is
not only a reintroduction to a great vocal talent, but a tour de force of
modern R&B songwriting and production. David cover almost all the bases:
hip-hop and grime-influenced club tracks; modern British house music, the kind
that drew Mary J. Blige to London for her best album in years; dancehall
flavours; straight-up, stripped-down ballads like “Better With You” or “All We
Needed,” produced by Dave Tozer, the man behind John Legend’s wedding classic
“All of Me.”
Following My Intuition is either the result
of Craig David, having nothing to lose, taking his title’s advice; or maybe
it’s all cold calculation, aiming to please any many people as possible. Who
cares? For a man who hasn’t had a hit on this side of the ocean in 14 years,
it’s clearly working for him. (Oct. 13)
Stream: “16,” “One More Time,” “Louder Than Words”
Fantastic Negrito – The Last Days of Oakland (Believe
Digital)
The only unfamiliar name on the Blackie and the Rodeo Kings’ new
album was someone calling himself Fantastic Negrito. What’s this all about? The
man born Xavier Dphrepaulezz is a late bloomer of sorts; the
multi-instrumentalist had a kick at the can with a major label deal as a solo
artist in the 1990s, which was derailed in a near-fatal car accident that put
him in a coma. It took him years to recover his guitar skills, and when he did,
the blues man Fantastic Negrito was born. A resident of Oakland, Calif., which
is now heavily gentrified now that next-door San Francisco has been priced into
oblivion, Mr. Negrito has plenty of reason to sing the blues as he witnesses
socioeconomic calamity engulfing his neighbourhood. The Last Days of Oakland is very much a 21st-century
blues album: all the traditional signposts are there, with nods to the genre’s
evolution over the last 100 years, but there’s no questioning in which year it
was recorded. There are (thankfully) no show-offy guitar moments, but
Dphrepaulezz has a, well, fantastic voice, particularly his range, from a
scowling growl to a glorious falsetto. (Oct. 6)
Stream: “Working Poor,” “In the Pines,” “Lost in the Crowd”
July Talk – Touch
(Sleepless)
More of the same, but better. If
you’ve tuned into rock radio in the past five years, you’ve heard the hits from
Toronto band July Talk’s 2011 debut album. As it picked up steam around the
world, the band kept putting off the follow-up. Good on them: nothing about
Touch sounds rushed or green; these songs were no doubt road-tested long before
they perfected them in the studio. Nothing here departs from the band’s
formula: crunchy, stomping guitar rock with co-ed lead singers, one gruff and
one lovely. They harmonize and play off each other more here than they did on
the debut, and to far greater effect. Tanya Tagaq shows up to help provide
rhythm on “Beck and Call,” and there’s a lyrical nod to the police brutality of
“starlight tours” and MMIW on “Jesus Said So.” July Talk might come across as a
feel-good, visceral party band, but there’s more depth to them than that, and
Touch is easily as good as mainstream rock gets in this country in 2016. (Oct. 20)
Stream: “Push and Pull,” “Strange
Habit,” “Jesus Said So”
John K. Samson – Winter
Wheat (Anti)
The Weakerthans’ John K. Samson has
emerged from his standard four-year hibernation period with his second solo
album (albeit one that features 2/3 of his former bandmates). There’s a reason
his fans are willing to wait so long for new material: because it’s always
worth it. As always, every track here is a short story unto itself, populated
by characters at crossroads in life—including, in an unusual twist for Samson,
characters that could be perceived as autobiographical, namely aging punks
reflecting on how those good old days might not have been so hot after all.
Samson’s sparse new musical
environs suit his songs better than the oft-raging rock band he formerly
fronted; full focus is on the lyrics, while a folkie, laid-back Neil Young vibe
does its best to stay out of the way. On the few tracks where the tempo picks
up, they’re driven entirely by acoustic guitars.
Samson has few peers as a lyricist:
Gord Downie, Neko Case are in the same class, though all of course have their
own unique style. Samson’s commitment to the simplicity of melodic folk
structure, much like Leonard Cohen’s, makes his prose that much more inviting,
drawing you further into the lives he chooses to illuminate.
John K. Samson has never made a bad
record, and he sure isn’t going to start now. (Oct. 20)
Stream: “Select All Delete,”
“Winter Wheat,” “Oldest Oak at Brookside”
Solange – A Seat at the Table (Sony)
Solange Knowles is no one’s little sister anymore. Technically,
of course, she’s the younger sibling of Beyoncé, but after Solange’s third
album—her first full-length in eight years, and her first new music since her
breakthrough 2012 EP True—landed at
No. 1 on Billboard the week of its
release, it’s clear that her own work stands in no one’s shadow.
There are plenty of top chefs in this kitchen—Rafael Saddiq,
Q-Tip, Dirty Projectors’ Dave Longstreth, members of TV on the Radio and
Vampire Weekend, with cameos from Lil Wayne, Andre 3000 and Kelela—but
Solange’s musical vision is consistent throughout, somewhere between the
abstraction of FKA Twigs, the hippie neo-soul of Erykah Badu and the
deconstructionist pop of Santigold. In an odd Montreal twist, there are also
contributions here from now-defunct confessional electro duo Majical Cloudz and
eccentric songwriter Sean Michael Savage—Solange has obviously been crashing
some Pop Montreal after-hours loft parties.
What it’s not is a pop record: Solange doesn’t go for the heavy
hooks, doesn’t want to teach the world to sing. She claims to have written the
harmonies before many of the melodies. Much of A Seat at the Table is a meditative, modern iteration of
R&B—not the darkness that consumes The Weeknd or Frank Ocean, but one that
repurposes the slow jam for self-care anthems and affirmations of black pride.
There are undoubtedly many political messages in these songs—made more obvious
by the powerful interstitial interludes, featuring her parents and, um, Master
P—but the music itself is so breezy, at times even featherweight, that it’s
entirely possible the point of the record could go right over your head. Which
would be a shame. But musical subtlety is Solange’s strong suit. (Oct. 13)
Stream Solange: “Cranes in the Sky,” “Don’t You Wait,”
“Borderline (An Ode to Self Care)”
Tanya Tagaq – Retribution
(Six Shooter)
Tanya Tagaq does not f--k around.
The earth is dying, we are killing it, and goddammit, this is what it sounds
like. That much can be inferred by the beauty and the horror evoked by the
sounds created by Tagaq and her band, violinist Jesse Zubot and percussionist
Jean Martin. But mostly, of course, Tagaq, whose singing voice is can be sweet
and fragile—and whose throat singing voice can be even more terrifying that
Linda Blair in The Exorcist.
Despite the power of her music, the
Polaris Prize-winning musician doesn’t entirely trust the listener enough to
get her message. Her press release states frankly: “This album is about rape. Rape of women, rape of the land, rape
of children, despoiling of traditional lands without consent.” In the event you
don’t visit her website, there’s a cover of Nirvana’s “Rape Me” that closes the
album, just in case you weren’t sure what it is you’ve just heard. (“I’m not
the only one,” she coos, no doubt as a nod to the MMIW issue she’s been
illuminating for years now, but even more powerful post-Ghomeshi/Cosby/Trump.)
She also has introduced spoken word
segments into her music, again underscoring the urgency of her environmentalist
message. It’s not subtle, and it’s not necessary: her music speaks volumes on
its own. Some guests are welcomed into the fold: most effective are Tuvan
throat singer Radik Tyülyüsh, a natural cross-cultural collaboration, and
Toronto’s Element Choir, whose orchestrated shrieks and howls have often
accompanied Tagaq’s Toronto shows, including performances at the Polaris gala
and at Massey Hall. Shad shows up as well.
Sadly, still no sign of a dream jam
with Diamanda Galas. Next time. (Oct. 20)
Stream: "Aorta,"
"Retribution," "Summoning"
Donovan Woods – They Are Going Away (Meant Well)
Toronto singer-songwriter Woods, who makes his living as a
writer in Nashville when he’s not performing his own songs, made plenty of new
fans with his breakthrough album earlier this year, Hard Settle Ain’t Troubled. That 10-song album was full of
perfectly miniature narratives and character studies; one of the many great
things about it is that there was no fat. What’s even greater about it, it
turns out, is that Woods left some even better songs on the cutting room floor,
which now surface on this four-song EP. “What They Mean (When They Say Crazy)”
sounds like an instant classic: why hasn’t some top 40 country artist glossed
this up and landed it on the charts already? (Oct. 13)
Stream: The whole thing. It’s four songs.
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