Anthony Braxton – Seven Standards 1985, Volume 1

Seven Standards, 1985, Volume 1

Anthony BraxtonSeven Standards 1985, Volume 1 Magenta MA-0203 (1985)


A pretty awful album.  Braxton leads his group through a plodding set of standards in an uncharacteristically boring fashion.  The horrendous 1980s production values don’t help matters at all.  Braxton must have needed the money or something.  Actually, he definitely needed the money. This came along at a time when the jazz industry favored a certain kind of neoclassicist to the exclusion of musicians like Braxton so he was to some extent struggled to adapt to economic realities of the time.  Just don’t judge the guy by this pile of crap.

Fats Waller – Ain’t Misbehavin’ (Quadromania Jazz Edition)

Ain't Mibehavin' (Quadromania Jazz Edition)

Fats WallerAin’t Misbehavin’ (Quadromania Jazz Edition) Membran (2006)


Without a doubt one of the greatest stride pianists in jazz, and arguably THE best.  Not only was Fats Waller a great piano player, he was a consummate songwriter and stylist able to turn out recordings with impressive speed and regularity.  Probably his greatest strength was being able to take literally any song, no matter how bad, and turn it into something fun, charming or sometimes even impressive. Waller and also his band–typically small combos — always featured impeccable musicianship.  It really is a shame that Waller and others from his era, like Fletcher Henderson, haven’t received as much attention from modern jazz listeners as they probably deserve.

There are four solid CDs worth of material here recorded between late 1935 and early 1943, and not really a bad track amongst it all.  A tremendously rewarding and enjoyable set to hear.  While this may not be a definitive selection of Waller’s material — fair enough considering the formidable quantity of recordings he left behind in his short life — it never ceases to sound great.  The remastering is aces.  A more comprehensive overview of his career is If You Got to Ask, You Ain’t Got It!, but you still can’t go wrong with this set.

Bobby Womack – The Poet

The Poet

Bobby WomackThe Poet Beverly Glen BG-10000 (1981)


Bobby still can sing and write like he used to.  Problem is this album doesn’t always sound sympathetic to what Bobby does best, but overtly tries to appeal to listeners into Prince as well as the “quiet storm” crowd.  Take the airy backing vocals — no need for those.  Anyway, this is a very serviceable album even if it’s not his best.  If it hadn’t been recorded in the early 1980s it might have been better.

Bobby Womack – The Poet II

The Poet II

Bobby WomackThe Poet II Beverly Glen BG-10003 (1984)


It’s probably no surprise that this one suffers from a number of the usual faults of 1980s production values.  The synths take away from it.  Guest Patti LaBelle, as expected, mostly just adds showy vocalizations like she’s trying to impress talent show judges.  This one is definitely not a good representation of Womack’s talents

DJ /rupture – Special Gunpowder

Special Gunpowder

DJ /ruptureSpecial Gunpowder Very Friendly VF013CD (2004)


DJ /rupture (b. Jace Clayton) is good at what he does. While his acclaimed mix album Minesweeper Suite took a sweeping, big picture look at the possibilities in reorganizing and reconstructing music, Special Gunpowder is his first attempt at recording all the raw material himself. Now his beats hardly ever stay in one place long. The fluid sounds are ever changing, ever evolving interpretations of folk music from around the globe. Maybe that is necessary, as the opening overture recites: “Philadelphia is on fire, and watermelon is all that can cool it.” Direct associations are no longer enough for some climates. In its abstract and irrational state, Special Gunpowder completely avoids the labels “cultural piracy” and “intellectual colonialism” that go along with the appropriation and reuse of folk music. DJ /rupture adds new contexts.   He expands the possibilities of individual components by bringing them together in a comprehensive way that allows each to contribute effectively in its own way. It may take some effort embrace this music in all its myriad nuances. Still, making the effort is recommended. The groove — elusive may it be — is there. If Special Gunpowder offers anything for listeners, it’s the opportunity to look beyond the prison of those few experiences and desires close to us. It’s a chance to see all the different parts come together for little while. Plus, it rocks with some sweet dance floor beats

U2 – Zooropa

Zooropa

U2Zooropa Island CIDU29 (1993)


Much derided, yet this works well enough as furniture music.  It’s mostly passable filler of no real consequence, but “Zooropa,” “Numb,” and even “The Wanderer” manage to be better than anything on the offensively obnoxious Achtung Baby.  And, for what it’s worth, this album cover is sort of the epitome of a certain early 1990s aesthetic.

U2 – Rattle and Hum

Rattle and Hum

U2Rattle and Hum Island CID U27 (1988)


Truthfully, there a few decent moments here, and they are all up front: “Helter Skelter”, “Desire”, “Hawkmoon 269”.  A few other scattered patches are okay too (“Pride (In the Name of Love)”, “God Part II”), but most of this is quite overblown.  It is this pretentious aspect of U2 (plus Bono‘s megalomania) that makes them almost impossible to like.

Laurie Anderson – Big Science

Big Science

Laurie AndersonBig Science Warner Bros. BSK 3674 (1982)


Laurie Anderson found unexpected popular success in the 1980s.  Her music is dominated by a “performance art” aesthetic, that goes with her art school background.  There was a cable TV show called “Six Feet Under” where one of the main characters goes to art school and encounters there another student who does performance art concerts that seem directly inspired by Laurie Anderson.  Anyway, Anderson doesn’t “sing” much, but rather does very deliberate spoken word recitations, in a detached and deadpan way that is almost a monotone at times, characterized by many pauses between words for dramatic effect.  She isn’t “rapping,” though there is a kind of rhythm to her speech.  Occasionally she uses a vocoder to create a computerized vocal effect (which would have seemed rather futuristic back in 1982).  The music is generally minimalistic, with lots of repetitive figures that create vamps, which actually do change gradually over the course of each song.

Big Science features studio recordings of songs excerpted from her long performance piece United States, a complete live recording of which was issued two years later.  She is preoccupied with a critique of contemporary capitalist society, without resorting to polemic.  She instead relies on a tone rife with what can be called kynicism — or what might equally be called “classical” cynicism, something Anderson seems to have adapted from William S. Burroughs.  This is a critique, though, because Anderson isolates and focuses attention on the sorts of things that social forces of the time relegated to the background and took for granted (for precedent, look to Thorstein Veblen‘s classic sardonic takedown of the rich, The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899)).  She takes the commonplace and makes it suddenly seem strange.  The title track is one good example, as she comments on the awed reverence of scientism, opening the song with wolf howls (kind of hilarious when given a moment’s thought) and singing the lyric, “Big science / hallelujah,” against an organ to provide the impression of a futuristic Benedictine religious chant.  Take also the opener, “From the Air,” which has Anderson playing the role of an airline captain providing instructions as her plane is about to crash, in an (as it turns out) incongruously calm voice.  It is that sort of juxtaposition that Anderson develops on many of these songs, throwing into relief the bizarre motives and unnatural customs that prop up contemporary society.  Later in the song she says, “Put your hands over your eyes / jump out of the plane / there is no pilot / you are not alone / standby.”  The improbable hit song was “O Superman (For Massenet).”  What all the songs have in common, though, is a commitment to making the listener experience their critiques rather than explain them or simply lecture the audience with a series of conclusions.

This album, for all its focus on the technological banality of 1980s consumer culture in middle America, has held up remarkably well.  There is a kernel of interest here to anyone dubious of all sorts of other electronic distractions that emerged even years and decades later.  But Anderson also goes beyond just a focus on technology to fairly universal human interpersonal concerns.  If there is a flaw it is that the last two songs (the medley “Let X=X / It Tango“) aren’t quite as engaging as the others, or at least are kind of different than everything that precedes them, but that is a small quibble.  This is the album that launched Anderson’s career, and it remains the place to start for newcomers.

Doug Randle – Songs For the New Industrial State

Songs For the New Industrial State

Doug RandleSongs For the New Industrial State Kanata KAN 5 (1971)


Doug Randle had been around the music business for quite some time before his Songs for the New Industrial State was recorded in Toronto in the early 1970s.  It is built on the type of Sunshine Pop vocals, horn section arrangements and harpsichord flourishes that would have been quite popular five years earlier.  But this isn’t exactly pure Sunshine Pop.  It has a rather bleak outlook that recalls the darker aspects of Carpenters albums of the period.  In a way, it’s much like the famous Nicholas Ray film Bigger Than Life in which a way of life just sort of cracks.  Randle wasn’t much of a lyricist.  His words (he doesn’t sing on the album) land with a thud as often as not.  Yet the contrast between the lyrics and the arrangements might be seen as a very early attempt at the ironic distancing that became commonplace in bourgeois indie pop a few decades out.