13th September 2024

Click HERE to listen again or to download the podcast (downloading & playing is more reliable). 

Manic Street Preachers - Decline & Fall
Frank Turner - Girl From The Record Shop
Bee Gees + AC/DC Mashup by WAX Audio - Stayin' in Black
Mk.gee - Lonely Fight
Sunflower Thieves - Driving Lessons
The Fray - Don't Look Down
Cat Power - Cross Bones Style
Alex Puddu - Il Cinema
The Bug Club - We Don't Care About That
Aria - Rectify Your Soul
Amyl and The Sniffers - Chewing Gum
Shanti Celeste - Ice Cream Dream Boy
Wunderhorse - Arizona
Joe Little - Green Fields
The Freshies - I'm In Love With A Girl On A Certain Megastore Check-Out Desk
Faces - Jealous Guy  (Live on In Concert, BBC, 21/4/73)
Jerome BlazĂ© - Emerge (For Sarah) 

8th September 2024

Titus writes:

First, many thanks to Lex for letting me choose the material for last week’s playlist – I hope you enjoyed my selection.  Second, I am resuming blogging this week with emphasis on a solo American singer/songwriter that I greatly admire – Cat Power.  You won’t be at all surprised that this is her stage name rather than her real name, and she was born as Charlyn Marie Marshall in Atlanta, Georgia, although nowadays she is known as Chan (pronounced Shawn) Marshall or Cat Power.  Her voice is fairly deep and husky, and over her 12 albums, many people have noticed the constant evolution of her songs, with a mix of blues, folk, soul and even punk.  ‘L.A. Weekly’  found most of her songs rather melancholy, and described her as “The Queen of Sadcore” -  a label that Cat Power herself disputed.  As a teenager she listened to The Smiths, Siouxsie & the Banshees, and The Cure, plus her stepfather’s record collection which included Otis Redding, Creedence Clearwater Revival and the Rolling Stones.  Perhaps a major event in her career was in 1996, when she signed for Matador Records, whom she was with for 22 years.
 
She made 3 sessions for John Peel, with one recorded at ‘Peel Acres’ on 18 June 2000 – this became famous in that she belted out 11 cover versions of tunes, including Dylan’s ‘Hard times in New York Town’ and Oasis’s ‘Wonderwall’.  To complement the original material that she was writing, she made the 2000 LP  ‘The Covers Album’.  Matador released this, but the contract for it allegedly consisted of a Post It note signed by herself and the founder of the Record Company. After a flirtation with the fashion industry, who liked her ‘neo grunge’ look, there was a hiatus until 2003, when Chan released her first album of original material in five years called ‘You are Free’.
 
In January 2006, Cat Power released, to great acclaim, her seventh album ‘The Greatest’ . This was a Southern soul-influenced LP of new material, augmented by several Memphis studio musicians, and unlike her previous work, gained mainstream success, making its debut in the Billboard chart at No. 34.  ‘The Greatest’ won her the ‘Shortlist Music Prize’ making Chan Marshall the first woman to win this honour. To continue my ‘Not a lot of people know that’ series that you all know and love, Chan became a celebrity spokesperson for a new line of jewellery from World famous fashion & perfume company Chanel.  Apparently Karl Lagerfeld had seen her smoking a cigarette outside the Mercer Hotel in New York, and chose her for the soundtrack to his Spring 2007 fashion show.
 
In 2008, Cat Power formed her own band called the Dirty Delta Blues Band, and her iconic ‘Song to Bobby’ (tribute to Bob Dylan) appeared on the ‘Juke box’ album.  During the same year, Chan and her band recorded their version of David Bowie’s ‘Space Oddity’ for a Lincoln car commercial.  Fast forward to 2012, and Cat Power released her most successful album to date called ‘Sun’, featuring her newly written material, and this received a media review of “a unique album, and worthy of a four star rating”.  Journalist Sarah Grant referred to it as “a passionate album of electronic music filtered through a singer-songwriter’s soul”.  I’m not a chart person as you know, but it is a fact that the LP debuted at No 10 in the Billboard chart.  In 2023 Marshall released her first live album, called ‘Cat Power sings Bob Dylan;The 1966 Royal Albert Hall concert’ and this year embarked upon a tour in support of the record.
 
So, that’s a whirlwind tour of Cat Power – broadly speaking, she and my favourite British female artiste PJ Harvey share similar traits, in that they are constantly changing and evolving.  I hope you like the track I have requested Lex to play, ‘Cross Bones Style‘ from the ‘Moon Pix’ album, which can be found here.

6th September 2024

Click HERE to listen again or to download the podcast (downloading & playing is more reliable). This was a guest playlist from Titus.

Cherez Richku Cherez Hai - The Wedding Present
The Vaccines - If You Wanna
(Glastonbury 2024)
Aurlus Mabele ( Feat. Loketo) - Malade de Toi
Brandy Clark - Stripes
Cat Power - Maybe Not
Half Man Half Biscuit - Tess of the Dormobiles
PJ Harvey - The Wheel (Primavera Sound Barcelona 2016)
Rick Astley & Blossoms - There Is A Light That Never Goes Out
(Glastonbury 2023)
Roy Harper - When An Old Cricketer Leaves The Crease
Paragon Sea - Fallout Sounds
Seagoth - Amorphous
Gorky's Zygotic Mynci - Country
Warrington-Runcorn New Town Development Plan - Busway
Waxahatchee - Bored
Orbital - Doctor Who 

30th August 2024

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The New Roses - Attracted To Danger
Laura Marling - No One’s Gonna Love You Like I Can
Ronnie Wood , Keith Richards & Rod Stewart - Mystifies Me
Hinds - The Bed, The Room, The Rain and You
The Hives - Countdown To Shutdown
Katy J Pearson - Maybe
Katie Gavin - Casual Drug Use
Homer feat. Hether - Deep Sea
Lucius feat. Adam Granduciel - Old Tape
She Drew The Gun - Mirrors
Kanda Bongo Man & Fayatess (live KoraAward Sun City) - Billi 
(See below)
REYNA - Mexico
Blondshell - What's Fair
Ash - Petrol (Remaster)
Joanna Sternberg - A Country Dance
Radio Free Alice - Spain
Shinedown - A Symptom Of Being Human 

24th August 2024

Titus writes:

Kanda Bongo Man (the person) was actually born Bongo Kanda, in Inongo, Belgian Congo – now Democratic Republic of the Congo, in 1955 (blimey, he’s nearly as old as Lex and me!) and is perhaps the most famous of all soukous musicians. He actually became the singer for Orchestra Belle Mambo in 1973, but his solo career only took off in 1979 after he moved to Paris.  I mentioned him in my blog of 3 December last year when I talked about African music as a whole, and raved about a former guitarist of his, the great Diblo Dibala, who is arguably the greatest guitarist of the soukous genre.
 
Kanda Bongo Man (the band) has always been superbly led by KBM himself, who has played guitar and been the vocalist.  The previous approach was to have one guitar solo at the end of several verses of the song.  He turned out to be revolutionary, by implementing guitar solos after every verse, and even the occasional guitar solo BEFORE the first verse.  This gave birth to the Kwassa Kwassa dance rhythm – this is where the hips go back and forth, while the hands move to follow the hips, if that makes sense.  I see it now, as a veteran lover of Kwassa Kwassa, but I concede I didn’t just a few short years ago.  As I said, Kanda Bongo Man has been a leader of many musicians in his long career, most notably Diblo, who although a really vital cog in KBM’s well oiled machine, moved on to begin his own successful solo career.  Kanda Bongo Man still tours both in Western Europe, Scandinavia and North America.  Locally for Lex there was an appearance in 2005 at the ‘LIVE 8:Africa calling concert’ in Cornwall, and locally for me, KBM performed at the Shrewsbury Folk Festival in 2022.
 
Discography-wise, Kanda Bongo Man have made 20 albums, from ‘Iyole’ in 1981 to ‘Lekette Bue’ in 2022,  and they have been recorded live on countless occasions, which e.g. You Tube & Spotify have for your delight on their channels.  You will not be at all surprised when I say that in the Eighties, John Peel & Andy Kershaw championed the music of Kanda Bongo Man and were key figures in introducing what was then generalised as ‘World Music’ to the mainstream.  KBM did 2 session for John’s Show, in 1993 and 2003.  I remember at the Glastonbury Festival in 2003, John’s co-host Jo Whiley (who had a terrific respect for Peel), couldn’t understand why he had sloped off one day – the reason was quickly unearthed when the cameras panned in on him dancing away on the hill, enjoying Kanda Bongo Man’s live set.......amazing because the great man rarely danced!
 
To summarise, most people, including myself, find this type of music incredibly joyous.  When you watch a soukous video the happiness leaps out at you and the skilled musicians all seem to be immensely enjoying themselves.  I mentioned to you that I had ventured down on the New York Underground to Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village, to seek out ‘Kwassa Kwassa’ CD’s.  Nowadays that area of Lower Manhattan mainly houses night clubs, record shops and indie boutiques,  but back in the day was known as true American Bohemia.  At the risk of sounding repetitious, I could choose enough music here to occupy the whole of Lex’s show, but in choosing one song, I have decided that the live recording made for the Kora Awards in Sun City of ‘Bili’ is perfect for a Friday night (or any night).  This features Kanda Bongo Man himself on vocals, and Faya Tess, who after her ‘Keba’ album was voted the best singer in Central Africa.  The track can be found here.

24th August 2024

Click HERE to listen again or to download the podcast (downloading & playing is more reliable). 

Stones & Guns n' Roses & AC/DC-Sympathy For The Devil In Paradise City
Kat Von D - Fear You
David Gilmour - Dark and Velvet Nights
Empire Of The Sun - Changes
Beabadoobee - Beaches
The Detroit Cobras - Shout Bamalama
(See below)
The Smashing Pumpkins - Sighommi
Katy J Pearson - Maybe
The Warning - Automatic Sun
Bullitz23 - Burn
The Pretty Reckless - Take Me Down
Crack Cloud - The Medium
arXx - Trouble
Dizzy Panda & The Perics ft Younique - Sirens Of Sunny Beach
Ruce Nasi Dory - Chata 131

18th August 2024

Titus writes:

Surprisingly enough, the Detroit Cobras are from Detroit, Michigan, and were formed in 1994.  They are a garage band, whose original line up was Steve Shaw on guitar, Mary Ramirez on guitar, Jeff Meier on bass, Vic Hill on drums and the late Rachel Nagy on vocals, and this band signed up to Sympathy for the Record Industry Records, releasing their first album ‘Mink, Rat or Rabbit’ in 1998.  After what seemed one hell of a gap, three years later they released  their second LP ‘ Life, Love and Leaving’ .  Unlike most of the bands I have featured in this blog, the band mainly chose to do cover versions of records from the 1950’s & 1960’s, and you may remember that when Jack White collaborated with thirteen Michigan-based bands to form his ‘Jack White’s Sympathetic Sounds of Detroit’ compilation album, the Cobras contribution was a cover of Otis Redding’s ‘Shout Bamalama’.  Needless to say, Peely championed them.
 
The iconic London-based Rough Trade Records signed the band, ever mindful that their retro-garage rock sound was very popular in the United Kingdom.  An E.P. ‘Seven Easy Pieces’ was released in 2003 and a year later came their third LP ‘Baby’ – this album went against usual Cobras’ protocol, in that it included one original song, ‘Hot Dog (Watch me eat)’.  This album became unusual in that the U.S Record Label Bloodshot tagged the tunes on ‘Seven Easy Pieces’ onto ‘Baby’.  The same Record Company released the band’s fourth album ‘Tied & True’ in 2007 – for all of you F1 fans, this was the year that the great and the humorous Kimi Raikonnen won his sole drivers’ World Championship.
 
The band became infamous for constantly changing their line-up, although their classic rock guitar sound always featured Ramirez.  The Detroit Cobras spent much of 2008 touring, and in 2009 headlined a tour with the Dex Romweber Duo supporting them.  I lost track of them in the immediately succeeding years, although I gather that they still played gigs, usually in their home territory of Detroit.  In 2014 they toured the Midwest and then the West Coast of the U.S.  In 2018 they broke with tradition, playing a couple of festivals in Germany and Spain, and the following year did an extended European Tour.  You won’t be at all surprised to learn that a 2020 tour was cancelled because of the Covid 19 Pandemic.  A 2022 tour was also cancelled in January due to the sudden death in New Orleans of co-founder member Rachel Nagy, who was just 48 years old.  It was such a sad loss, as Nagy was a captivating performer known for her magnetic voice and unbelievably strong personality.  The band put on a Rachel Nagy celebration show in August 2022, which was held in Detroit and the format of this show was so successful that the band reunited to repeat it at many West Coast venues.
 
The current line-up of the Detroit Cobras is Marcus Durant on lead vocals, Steve Nawara on guitar, Dale Wilson on bass, Kenny Tudrick on drums, and as they say “last, but by no means least” original co-founder Mary Ramirez on guitar. (Mary’s a.k.a. is Mary Cobra, fittingly).  To underline me bringing to your attention the constant changing of personnel within the band, no less than 31 members supplementary to the current line-up have played in some form for the Detroit Cobras.
 
I’ve referred to the LP’s & EP’s released by the band, and they also released nine singles between 1996 and 2018.  In addition, Munster Records have released an LP, CD and vinyl 7” single box set entitled ‘The Original Recordings (Singles and Unreleased 1995-97)’ as a compilation.  Like I have intimated in previous blogs, as a fan of many years, I am spoilt for choice when just making a request to Lex for just a single track......but I am going to choose (in dedication to Rachel) the Otis Redding penned ‘Shout Bamalama’ from the ‘Life, Love & Leaving’ album, which can be found here.