The weekend has returned. The weather is turning fall-ish and my mood is turning happy-ish. I've put together a a list of albums here that I've acquired in the past several weeks. It's a pretty wide ranging list of time period and musical styles, so there's bound to be something here worth checking out. Enjoy.
Billie Eilish - Happier Than Ever:
Two years after the smashing success of her debut, the wunderkind teen
returns with a follow-up. I admit to be being very weary of a sophomore
slump, feeling it to be almost unavoidable when your first album is so
well-loved. Well, I should have had more faith! Billie doesn't attempt
to remake the last album, instead she embraces the brokenhearted
undertones of her debut and expands on the jazz club trip-hop vibe and
emerges as a complex figure. It's a trajectory Lana Del Rey had made
brilliantly, and Eilish seems poised to follow.
Swans - Leaving Meaning:
Released in the Fall of 2019, the 17th album from the NYC post-rock
band is their most current release. Though I've appreciated this band
for years, it's one of several bands that I came to absolutely love
during the pandemic. This album, like all of their 21st century records
is atmospheric and dark, and seems to illustrate those corridors of
thought that have always existed in my mind. Some music hits you
physically, some plugs right into you mind. This is Swans music does for me, and this album does as well.
Jeff Beck - Truth: The '68 debut solo album from the British Guitarist's post-Yardbirds band featured an up and coming singer named Rod Stewart and pre-Rolling Stones Ron
Wood. This is one of those records that it amazes me had never crossed
my path before. Sure, I'd seen it everywhere and knew that it was one of
those albums that everyone loved. And yes, I have been a big fan of
British Blues since my college days, but it took my recent interest in
Rod the Mod to get me to pick this one up and I'm glad I did. Beck's
guitar work is fantastic, and Rod is brilliant. One year later, Led Zeppelin would
release their debut album, it seems fairly clear to me that this was
one of the records that paved the way for their success.
Jackson 5ive - Maybe Tomorrow:
Released in '71, this is the iconic Mowtown group's fifth album, just
three years from their debut. Fresh off their hit parade of early
singles, this album's biggest hit is "Never Can Say Goodbye" which is
true gem. Michael still has his childish voice on here, but the older
Jacksons balance it well. Pure soulful pop that still sounds good on a
sunny day.
Elmore James / John Brim - Whose Muddy Shoes:
Recorded between '53 and '60, this is a split album released on Chess
in '69 and has tracks by both Chicago blues artists. Elmore James is the
bigger of the two names, but the talents of both are very comparable
and blend nicely. The Chicago blues was a little more jiving than
southern blues and there's clear elements of proto-rock on here. "I See
My Baby," "You Got Me,"
Arthur Lee - Vindicator: Released in '72, two years after Love took
a break, this is Lee's first solo album and is very much a blues rock
album. There's definitely hints of Hendrix on here, with a little of the
whimsy of Love added to it. There's lots of great tunes on this,
including "Sad Song," "Love Jumped Through the Window," and "He Knows a
Lot of Good Women." Certainly not an essential album of the period, but
still a good one and well worth the listen.