Bring Out the Gimp

The personal blog of Shawn Conner

Archive for the tag “albums”

Revisited: Rickie Lee Jones’ Pirates

Rickie Lee Jones Pirates album cover image

Rickie Lee Jones, Pirates (1981).

I couldn’t believe I no longer had this record.

I had a sudden hankering this past week to hear “We Belong Together”, the album’s opener, but was mortified to find Pirates missing from my collection – I must’ve got rid of it when I sold a whole whack of vinyl a couple of years ago before moving. Strange, since the record was such a huge part of my adolescence.

Growing up, I loved this album; listening to it today, I find it just as beautiful, wise and mysterious as I did as a teenager. Jones released it in 1981, two years after her debut; I think I might have bought Pirates because Rolling Stone gave it five stars (I was an inveterate Rolling Stone reader in those days). For a 16-year-old who was into the Clash and Elvis Costello, Jones’ sophomore record was pretty heady stuff. Then again I loved Steely Dan (couldn’t get enough of Greatest Hits) as well, and they’re a big influence on the record (Donald Fageneven plays synth), particularly in the penultimate track, the eight-minute jazz odyssey “Traces of the Western Slopes”.

Rickie Lee Jones Rolling Stone magazine cover

I think I had this!

But it’s the album’s street poetry that I responded to most – Jones’ visions of bohemia on songs like the title track, “We Belong Together”, and “Living It Up”. So many lines from this 30-year-old record have become part of my pop-culture hard-drive: “How could a Natalie Wood not get sucked/Into a scene so custom-tucked/Now look who shows up/” (“We Belong Together”); “Cleveland forgot/Memphis forgot/Where they were coming from” (“Woody and Dutch on a Slow Train”); “Oh my sad-eyed Sinatras” (“Pirates (So Long Lonely Avenue)”).

There are other things I love about this record. “We Belong Together” starts out like a forlorn, night-time New York piano ballad – but then, suddenly, midway through, it starts to swing! – but only briefly; but then, it swings again at the end. I love the moods of this record, how varied it is, from the street-poetry one-two punch of “We Belong Together” and “Living It Up”, which is followed by the brief, tragic “Skeletons” and the finger-snapping street-party mood of “Woody and Dutch On a Slow Train to Peking”. Jones opens Side 2 with “Pirates (So Long Lonely Avenue)”, which sounds to me now like her version of Bruce Springsteen‘s “10th Avenue Freeze-Out”, and ends with a perfect whisp of a song, “The Returns”.

Rickie Lee Jones photo

So cool… Rickie Lee Jones circa 1980… I think.

Also on Side 2, “A Lucky Guy”, is probably the clearest thing the album has to a pop song; it reached #64 on the Billboard charts (“Chuck E.’s in Love”, from Jones’ debut, went to #4). I would imagine Pirates must have surprised people hoping for a repeat of her debut’s more traditional pop song approach. The album has never quite got its proper due, but I’m not the only one who thinks it’s one of the best records he’s ever heard.

Jones has released quite a few albums since, and many are notable, including the follow-up EP Girl At Her Volcano (which, I have to admit, I did not get at the time at all); The Magazine (which features one of my all-time favourite Jones songs, “It Must Be Love”); Flying Cowboys (which features another of my all-time favourite RLJ tracks, “Rodeo Girl”); GhOsTYhead (I think it’s the title track where she sings about doing Ecstasy); The Evening of My Best Day (“It Takes You There”); and 2007′s The Sermon on Exposition Boulevard.

I recall liking that last record, though I can’t remember a song; I listened to it while preparing for an interview with Miss Jones for one of the papers I was writing for at the time. I think I asked her about Olympia, Washington, where she spent some of her teens, and of course the record she was promoting. But I don’t think I asked anything about Pirates, which is a shame; today I would probably grill her about it. Then again, everything you need to know is there in the grooves.

Album review – Boston Spaceships’ Let It Beard

Let It Beard album cover

Boston Spaceships’ Let It Be is out today. Huzzah!

Who needs Guided by Voices for a good time?

Forget about the Guided By Voices reunion that’s been taking place at music festivals around the U.S. this year.

While Robert Pollard conducts a final go-round with his beloved indie-rock outfit, the songwriter’s other life as a recording artist is way more interesting. Already this year has seen a number of Pollard releases, including his collaboration with former GBV guitarist Doug Gillard as Lifeguards, a collaboration with Big Dipper guitarist Gary Waleik under the name Mars Classroom, and at least one solo album.

Crazily, each one has been worthwhile, and each has offered up several songs that stand up with the very best of Pollard – an astonishing claim, considering the literally hundreds of songs he’s written and recorded, including what is perceived as his heyday with the ’90s versions of Guided by Voices.

Let It Beard is the fifth and arguably the most ambitious album by Boston Spaceships, comprising Pollard and former GBV bassist Chris Slusarenko, as well as drummer John Moen. A 26-song rock album, Let It Beard stretches Pollard’s songwriting and adds to his sonic arsenal; usually a guitar-bass-drums traditionalist, for Let It Beard Pollard opens the recording studio doors to allow in a cellist and even what sounds like a banjo (“Let More Light Into the House”).

Boston Spaceships illo

The album also features guest appearance from Wire‘s Colin Newman, J. Mascis (guitar solo-ing up a storm on “Tourist UFO”) and Steve Wynn. It’s been advertised as “a subconscious concept album about the sorry state of rock ‘n’ roll” but, thanks to Pollard’s willfully obscure and colourful metaphors, you can listen to Let it Beard and happily think it’s about facial hair growth, mayonnaise or the joy of pushing together two inherently opposite words (“Chevy Marigold”).

In the past, Pollard has shown himself to be a master of Who-like anthem-rock, Beatles-esque pop, and even ’70s prog and glam, and Let It Beard is firmly in the rock/prog camp, but with enough melodic finesse to please pop fans. I’m only on the third listen, and the record is still offering up its treasures; it’s all immediate in its own way but a few more spins will be required before the classics are outed.

However, I can unreservedly recommend Let It Beard to Pollard and Guided by Voices fans; the album also makes another strong argument that, far from behind him, Pollard’s best moments are happening right now.

Order Boston Spaceships’ Let It Beard here.

Album review – Bruce Springsteen, Working On a Dream

bruce-springsteen-working-on-a-dream-album-cover-picturejpg

The new Springsteen album reviewed

- by Adrian Mack

In 2000, I watched Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band from the bleachers at the Tacoma Dome and sobbed like a big girl’s blouse.

I was with my dad. We had waited 20 years to see the Boss. It was easily one of the two or three top concert experiences of my life.

In the nine years that have passed, I have become a miserable cunt who more or less hates everything except my family, a handful of old country albums, and Australian sex movies from the ’70s. That’s just part of the aging process and nothing to get your knickers in a twist over, but it makes my job difficult…

(Want to know what long-time Springsteen fan Adrian Mack thinks of the new album? Read his full Working On a Dream album review)

Album review – Lily Allen, It’s Not Me, It’s You

Lily Allen It's Not Me It's You album cover image

New album from bed-hopping British songstress

- by Kate Reid

The title of Lily Allen‘s new album, It’s Not Me, It’s You is a snarky testament to the gallivanting girl in her twenties.

Lily and I are cut from the same cloth (I’m 24 and single), so I feel her on the bed-hopping blame game, but I feel even more for the poor sap who inspired “Not Fair”. The galloping, country-influenced romp through Lily’s worn sheets introduces us to a gentleman who’s “not like all them other boys”- apparently because he’s considerate everywhere but in the bedroom…

(Want more of Kate Reid on Lily Allen? Read her full It’s Not Me It’s You album review)

Album review – Scott Weiland’s “Happy” in Galoshes

A “blind” taste-test of the new album from the Stone Temple Pilots frontman

- by Michael Kissinger

Scott Weiland ust released his second solo album. Who knew he had a first one? I’m guessing it sounds like a cross between Stone Temple Pilots, Velvet Revolver and a whole lot of pure-grade heroin.

But you know what? Actually listening to albums before you review them is for suckers. It just takes too much time—time that could be better spent watching videos of adorable cats doing adorable things on YouTube. But enough chitchat, I’ve got some pussies to surf.

(Read Michael Kissinger’s “Happy” in Galoshes album review)

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