I-94 BAR TOP TENS

Barflies discuss their Best for 2011

Archive for December, 2008

Stewart “Leadfinger” Cunningham

Leadfinger (aka Stewart Cunningham).... has again lost his shirt on rock'n'roll!!!

Leadfinger (aka Stewart Cunningham).... has again lost his shirt on rock'n'roll!!!

“Inspired by Brian Wilson’s penchant for hanging out in his bathrobe all day playing piano, in 2008 I really enjoyed spending lots of time in my PJ’s and slippers, strumming a guitar – 20 odd years of playing in bands can do this to you but it beats working and it’s too hot for leather jackets in Australia. I suppose I should mention that I have a new album of rock’n'roll songs called ‘Rich Kids’ out any day now on the Bang! Records label. Merry Xmas.”

1. The Devil at My Door by The Nice Folk….won’t be officially released till 09 but throughout 08 I spent most of my free time producing and mixing this album by a young up and coming band from my home town, Wollongong. Despite rejection from a few rekid labels this killer album from a new gen of Aussie songsters is coming out on the Music Farmers label (www.musicfarmers.com ) in February. It’s kinda like Nick Cave, Tom Waits and Ed Kuepper dancing on Johnny Thunders grave…. on St Swithins day. The band has more members than the Barman has one liners but it’s fresh and new, amazing songs.

2. Eye by Robyn Hitchcock – released in 1981. Yes, it took me a long time to discover this but better late than never – send me a coupla bucks when you realise how good it is.

3. Brian Henry Hooper live at the Annandale Hotel 8th June 08. Brian was having some trouble for his solo acoustic set on this night, the guitar and vocal mic were feeding back etc., he wasn’t happy but for some reason it made the whole thing even better and it was still more rock’n'roll than the other bands I saw that night. Brian wears his heart on his sleeve with his songs. He threw his guitar down on the last song and stormed out of the venue.

4. Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner by Warren Zevon.

5. The Big Bang! Festival at the Tote Hotel, Melbourne August 15/16 - a celebration of all things to do with Bang! Records with Kim Salmon, Kill Devil Hills, Spencer Jones, Penny Ikinger, Bored! et al….and my own band, Leadfinger got to play too….one cynical Sydneysider suggested to me that it would be a weekend of back slapping, oh well…..it definitely was two brilliant nights of Australian underground music. 

6. Busking on my Dobro guitar at various places round Sydney and ‘the Gong’….good ‘craic’.

7. Eye Mind – the Saga of Roky Erickson and the 13th Floor Elevators by Paul Drummond. I still can’t believe those guys did what they did.

8. Acid Reign by The Hellacopters

9. Popsicle by Diamond Nights. Not sure when this came out but it’s a killer album to drive to.

10. Rory Gallagher – Irish Tour 74 DVD, a film by Tony Palmer. I have to thank Tim Rogers for telling me about this one…takes you back to the gritty glory days of 70′s rock… A totally non-digital world of denim and plaid in an Ireland of post-industrial gloom. After gig hootenanny’s in real Irish pubs where hirsute locals all join in with the band and everyone has a turn at the mic, guinness in hand, real people and music so far removed from reality tv, itunes and Hollywood it makes me cry in my beer thinking rock’n'roll was never so good. The live footage is fantastic too, I’m a fan.

Honorable Mentions…….You Am I live at The Cambridge Hotel in Newcastle, Electric Aboriginals by Awesome Color, Through the Cracks CDep by Leadfinger (well I liked it!!)

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Ashley “Oz Rock” Thomson


Occasional I-94 Bar contributor, drummer for Ghost Valley and The Kelpies. Ex-drummer for The Panadolls and guitarist-throat for Roll cage. Major nosebleed.

Red Fang – found this band using stumble upon, fuck now i love em, great mix of stoner, grunge and 70s rock, with a fair whack of themselves throw in, check this out for clip of the year.

Believe it or not R.E.M’s new record Accelerate. Fuck, I ain’t brought an REM record for yonks (15 years or more?) but it’s such a great album, bunch of short songs, most of em’ fast, and they sound pretty vital and present.

The Stones’ Shine A Light movie. I did a review here, and loved it.

Wall E – my favourite movie all year.

Butcher Birds – Brisbane – amazing.

Hits – Brisbane – amazing.

Brisbane – Bands – amazing.

Obama – Amen.

The Hard Ons live – such epic winding songs, best guys, they just keep on keeping on and keep on getting better.

Sex - I really thought i’d be sick of eating pussy at 47, but I hassle my missus every day for a root. Her cunt is sore but i’m happy.

Playing with my kid and his mates in Ghost Valley – best band i’ve been in since the Kelpies. hard to keep up though.

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Dave Laing

Dave Laing responds meekly to being told he looks like an Oakridge Boy by wise-ass young country gun Justin Townes Earle

Dave Laing responds meekly to being told he looks like an Oakridge Boy by wise-ass young country gun Justin Townes Earle


Best Rock’n'Roll Stuff of 2008   
by Dave Laing (Dog Meat/Savage Beat Records, occassional Ugly Things and I-94 Bar contributor)

Black Diamond Heavies – live & ‘A Touch of Someone Else’s Class’ CD
Wild, primal and LOUD R&B, like Ray Charles if he was trying to impress The Stooges. Great cover of Nutbush City Limits, and some killer originals. A perfect party record and an animalistic live band.  If we’re lucky they may have worked up their version of Bob Seger’s ‘Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man’ by the time they reach our shores in December. Don’t miss them!
 
Alejandro Escovedo  - ‘Real Animal’ CD
Not his best bunch of tunes, but his hardest sounding record. Like his beloved Lou, Mott and Stones, this guy is as adept with the quiet stuff as the loud stuff, and he’s got the songs and depth of soul to match his heroes.

Pierced Arrows live & ‘Straight To The Heart’ CD
Dead Moon is dead, long live the Pierced Arrows! Fred Cole is the sound and spirit of rock’n'roll personified, and his guitar sound is still the smokin’est ever.

Felice Bros live & ‘Felice Brothers’ cd
At first glance too much like The Band, but these guys have a completely unique spirit, great humor and great tunes to boot.

Chris Wilson – ‘All the Action’
Groovies singer returns with only second solo record in 20 something years. Album is patchy song-wise, but this opener, sort of an update/answer song to  ’Shake Some Action’, is an absolute ripper.

Roky Erickson & The Explosives live at Threadgill’s
Roky & co play of scorching full length set, in a beer garden type setting, out front of a legendary restaurant in Austin. Billy Gibbons appears on stage for last couple of tunes. How can you not love SXSW when it keeps throwing up things like this? For all the industry wankery, there is still a strong element that is all about the music,,,

Magic Christian live at SXSW
Awesome live shows around Austin during sxsw. Now where the fuck is that second album guys?

Buffalo Killers ‘Let I Ride’ /Hacienda ‘Loud Is The Night’
These two, together with the Black Diamond Heavies, make for a trio of killer albums released by Alive and produced by Dan of the Black Keys. Buffalo Killers sound like Cream playing Big Star, Hacienda are young Mexican guys from San Antonio with Beatles/Beach Boys fixation. Great songs and great sounds abound on both these albums.

Charlie Pickett &… ‘Barband Americanus’
Best single-artist reissue of the year. Killer rock’n'roll from Miami, for fans of the Dream Syndicate, Gun Club and Flamin’ Groovies.

‘Thank You Friends: The Ardent Records Story’
Best multi-artist resissue/comp of the year. Outlines the context in which Big Star developed beautifully. The rare and unreleased stuff from Big Star and contemporaries on disc 2 is awesome.

Justin Townes Earle live and ‘ The Good Life’ CD
Steve Earle’s son has one foot in the gritty singer -songwriter stuff of his dad and his namesake Townes Van Zandt, and one foot in old time country Hank Williams-style. A great singer and captivating performer – by the time you read this you’ve probably missed his first Australian tour.

Hitmen ‘Death by the Gun’
I missed their live shows this year, but this great version of Masuak’s old and unreleased Birdman gem, which will appear on cd in ’09, absolutely burns.
  
Eddy Current Suppression Ring ‘Primary Colours’
Still haven’t seen them live (no I don’t get out much anymore) but I’m finally convinced.

The Visitors reform
… and I fucking missed it
!!

Johnny Casino & the Secrets ‘I Am Who I Am Not Who You Want Me To Be’
Great songs, great playing, and the boy has become a great singer. Soulful journeyman-type rock’n'roll that reminds me of Scott Kempner’s fab first solo album from the early 90′s.

Graeme Day & the Gaolers ‘Triple Distilled’ (Damaged Goods)
Prisoners mainman outdoes himself and how. Furious energy, great tunes, and ‘Glad I’m Not Young’ could well be my personal anthem of the year (and yours too!).

HOLD THE PRESSES!
Apparently an advance release of the second Magic Christian album ‘Evolver’ is available for purchase here www.cahootsgraffix.com . My likely album of the year will be in hands in a week or so I’m hoping. Check Cyril Jordan’s killer new licks on the bands myspace site!!

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Clark Paull

 

Married, father of three, it’s taken me 51 years to get over growing up in Detroit.  Some would say it shows.

Top 10 time at the Bar always leaves me feeling a bit twitchy, overwhelmed with the prospect of composing trigger-happy, praise-riddled reviews of…well…not much.  Call me a curmudgeon, but nothing piques my interest much anymore (at least nothing from this millennium), so my spending has slowed down to a trickle. 

Here goes.  Living in the past, hold all calls… 

AC/DC – Black Ice 
The best line in 1986’s “Night of the Creeps” (still criminally unavailable on DVD – somebody wake up!) belongs to the great Tom Atkins, who, as Detective Ray Cameron, gives a houseful of anxious co-eds a heads-up: “Girls, the good news is your dates are here.  The bad news is they’re dead.”  He may as well have been talking about AC/DC in 2008.  Rest assured “Black Ice” will sell by the bushelfulls, the band more than content with their roles as seekers of the basic musical common denominator that will lead all of our 15-year-olds into the sea, moving backward at the speed of light, their faith in the  power of rock and roll to change a life unshakable.  Get out of their way! 

The Cramps – “Garbageman/TV Set” 
When a clearly-agitated, bug-eyed Lux Interior adamantly proclaims, “You ain’t no punk, you punk” to kick off “Garbageman,” it’s probably best to nod your head and say, “Yessir!”, thanking God and all the muses that he’s going to let you live.  For now.  It’s just about impossible to overrate this rigomortized Cramps mind splitter, which surfs out of nowheresville on the back of the sinister dark-hearted twelve strings of Bryan Gregory and Poison Ivy Rorschach and the jungle pulse laid down by Nick Knox, perhaps the coolest drummer EVER.  It wouldn’t surprise me if autopsies of all three revealed battery acid in their veins.  Spiritedly rudimentary, “Garbageman” is deliberate musical primitivism from a band who look to be cursed with bad genes and broken chromosomes and sound like they invented whatever genre you may want to lump them under.  And if they didn’t, well…you tell ‘em, not me.

The Jesus & Mary Chain – “The Power of Negative Thinking: B-Sides & Rarities 
Most of this box set is ear-bleeding psychedelic noise, a dense helix of sound, corrosive love songs drenched in adrenaline backwashes of sludge and slow-motion fuzz rubbing elbows and knees with shimmering pop delights like “The Hardest Walk,” “Some Candy Talking” and “Psychocandy,” the brothers Reids obviously smitten with sweets, the…um…pudendum, and any and all analogies and metaphors for both.  At times, Jim Reid’s crystalline, near-fragile whisper almost begs to be nailed to the deck to keep it from floating away yet there are moments – like the monaurally-titled “Suck,” “Ambition,” “Head,” and “Cracked” – that sound like some terrible accident in a tool and die works, as troubling as they are magnificent.  You know you’ll recover, but you’re not sure when. 

The Reducers – “America’s Best Unsigned Band” DVD 
Chances are, New London, Connecticut is the last place you’d expect the chosen keepers of rock and roll’s eternal holy flame to be hiding, but living their lives as if they’re part of the federal witness protection program has always suited The Reducers just fine.  If you come to “America’s Best Unsigned Band” in search of “Behind the Music”-style tales of reckless ingestion of hard liquor and illicit drugs, Tarzan sexuality, macho party exploits, compromised major-label albums which quickly race into the murk of bargain bins, or musos veering off the rails without a map and wandering the desert of public obscurity, you may as well not bother.  The Reducers just may have been slackers before there even was such a term, perfectly content to turn a simple Friday or Saturday gig around town into something special and depending on planetary alignment, perhaps the greatest night of your life, complete with old-school, Brit punk-influenced songs masquerading as time bombs set to explode within three minutes, crashing guitars galore, pogo dancing, and oceans of suds.  Rest assured: if you wanna rock, they were put on this earth to be your personal jukebox.  Long may they run. 

MC5 – “Kick Out the Jams” 
This album is now nearly twice the legal age to vote and drink in every state in the Union, the electronic apocalypse that forever placed Detroit, a noisy nowhere land in mid-America, on the map, an amp-rattling shack bash that’s required listening for anyone studying thermodynamics.  The title track, “Ramblin’ Rose,” “Rocket Reducer No. 62 (Rama Lama Fa Fa Fa),” the atmospheric, grimy slice-of-life “Motor City Is Burning,” and the tortured lament “I Want You Right Now” are alternately abrasive, mangy, and breathtakingly homicidal, ultimate needle-freak breakdowns punctuated with basic monster-mash guitars which howl like coyotes and die in glorious blazes of confusion.  If that sounds like your idea of a party, then you can’t live without it for another minute. 

T. Rex – “The Slider” 
When a recent drunken argument masquerading as a conversation amongst friends turned to perfect albums, I immediately spit out “The Slider,” still fully convinced 36 years after I bought it in 1972 as a perpetually-stoned 15-year-old that there’s not a wasted note on it.  No pun intended on the “wasted” part.  Unfortunately, the luxury of nearly four decades and now a lyric sheet have proved absolutely worthless in cracking the code of electric metal faun Marc Bolan’s insular world, one crammed and frought with hubcap diamond star haloes, mambo suns, white swans, Les Pauls, wizards, unicorns, gongs (banged), inner-planet love, and large, over-powered American automobiles.  But don’t let that stop you.  It still swings like Godzilla’s nuts in a tsunami. 

Nathaniel Mayer – “Why Don’t You Give It to Me?” 
I come to both praise and bury Nathaniel Mayer.  His ticket was punched 12 days ago as of this writing.  He was blessed with one of those voices you can recognize with a kettle boiling in the kitchen, an airplane overhead, and a garbage truck loading up in the street outside, surely one of Mother Nature’s greatest special effects, forged in fire and brimstone by the Goat Lord in a workshop somewhere far down below, bent, folded, spindled, mutilated, and stomped into shape then cooled in the River Styx.  He was an authentic American primitive hewn from the same piece of oak as Howlin’ Wolf, James Brown, Mitch Ryder, and Iggy Stooge (minus the acid, Ashetons, and barely-concealed man root, that is) whose every move should have been closely attended by a HazMat crew in full radiation togs.  You’ve been warned. 

New York Dolls – “Stranded in the Jungle/Who Are the Mystery Girls?” 
The Dolls’ cover of this Cadets R&B chestnut is hardly the best song on “Too Much Too Soon,” but its novelty appeal provides easy ingress for the uninitiated into their proto-punk back catalog, a slim but influential body of work the planet’s still trying to figure out 35 years on.  The guitars of Johnny Thunders and Syl Sylvain snarl, spit, and howl like a box of mongooses, cobras, and feral cats shaken up then fed into a wood chipper and while Nolan and Arthur “Killer” Kane may not have been bothered about studio gigs by Berry Gordy or the Funk Brothers, they nail the back beat to the floor then douse it with sprinkle of pomade, Night Train, and jaundiced blood.  As for Johansen, this may well be where the seeds of his desperate, lamented (at least in my house) Buster Poindexter persona began to germinate and then fester for the next ten or twelve years.  Thank God that ship’s sailed. 

Johnny Thunders – “So Alone” 
The Johnny Thunders ethos is among rock and roll’s most powerful and romanticized necrophilic myths, the former and now very-dead New York Doll constructing a template for tonsorial, sartorial, and sonic splendor with the practiced dress-to-kill-or-be-killed pose of a punk/gunslinger/junkie who’s just turned the corner from skid row where he’s developed a taste for drinking Vitalis, blazing, bastardized licks heisted from Chuck Berry via Keith Richards, diabolical, droning string bends, and snotty vocals promising a hustle, a fix, loaves, fishes, or a subway ride to nowhere.  He was a guy who never worried about which fork was for the salad.  “So Alone” is about as coherent as the dope-woozy, doom-struck, wise-cracking stumblebum Thunders ever got – or pretended to get – on his own, relying on hired sidemen like Phil Lynott, Steve Marriott, Peter Perrett, Steve Jones, and Paul Cook to bang it down and tart it up.  There’s no denying the guy was spoiling for a fight just about every time he strapped on a guitar, stuttering and wailing with the best of them.  How much of it he remembered afterwards is moot, but he was capable at will of approximating the sound of several household appliances throwing tantrums, dinosaurs in rut trying to get small animals off their backs, or a woman in hair curlers beating her kid in a supermarket.  Adding the solo guitar machismo of Jones and the power-punching drums of Cook to the mix was a flat-out stroke of genius. 

Alice Cooper – “Good to See You Again Alice Cooper” DVD 
If you pop “Good to See You Again Alice Cooper” into the DVD deck, do yourself a huge favor and haul ass immediately to the bonus features, one of which allows you to play only the concert(s) presented here, minus the series of “comedy” vignettes which unnecessarily attempt to tie things up into, uh, who knows what.  Whoever scripted the thing must have been banged to the gills on some queer mix of speed, mescaline, hash or cocaine because it plays out like a nightmarish hybrid of “Blazing Saddles” and “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World,” collectively about as amusing as Bob Saget’s snarky asides on “America’s Funniest Home Videos,” Jerry Seinfeld’s stand-up act, or a heart attack.  Minus the laugh track and defibrillators.  Is there no limit to the human suffering some people must endure?  But the live footage, culled from two Texas stops on the 1973 “Billion Dollar Babies” tour, is more than enough to make you forget Nixon, Watergate, the energy crisis, and terrorist bombings in the Mid-East.  Just a few short years after moving back to the singer’s birthplace, Dennis Dunaway, Michael Bruce, Neal Smith, and Glen Buxton managed to master the Motor City’s innate science of rhythm and delirium which, in conjunction with Alice’s cadaver shuffle, mannequin dismemberment, snake wrangling, and guillotine waltz, left my parents fully convinced the ruination of Western Civilization was in full swing and the moral fiber of American teenagers was in deep jeopardy.

 

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Scott Morgan (reprised)

The ex-Rationals singer – formerly with The Solution, The Hydromatics and Sonic’s Rendezvous Band and still with Powertrane, can’t stop at a Top 10 Detroit Soul Songs. Here’s another 10:

FINGERTIPS PART 1 & 2-STEVIE WONDER

MISERY-THE DYNAMICS

THE TWIST-HANK BALLARD AND THE MIDNIGHTERS

IT’S A SHAME-THE SPINNERS

SHOTGUN-JUNIOR WALKER AND THE ALLSTARS

BABY PLEASE COME BACK HOME-J.J. BARNES

I JUST WANT TO TESTIFY-PARLIAMENT

THE BELLS-THE ORIGINALS

I WANT YOU-MARVIN GAYE

COME ON AND SEE ME TAMMI TERRELL

SHALL I GO ON? WHOOPS FORGOT AN IMPORTANT ONE. AND BUBBLING UNDER, AT NUMBER 11

LONELY TEARDROPS-JACKIE WILSON

I THINK IT’S DESTINED TO BE A HIT!

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