Music in general

ehhh............i never really considered them to be reggae. maybe reggae'ish, but i did listen to them a lot. i don't really have a take on sublime. i thought they made some amazing music while together. especially their early albums. i've got an old album with bradley and guitar that is amazing. always wondered what he would have sounded like if he was still alive.
 
Oh no, I agree that they weren't pure reggae in any form. I was just curious as to what others thought about what they did, bringing reggae in with the ska and punk influences. Sublime is one of my favorite bands of all time, and I still wish we could have heard what Bradley would have continued to produce had he lived. His line "watch and we'll take hip hop to a higher ground" from KRS-ONE is haunting to me, as I always thought he'd do something more with the hip hop influnces that would pop up on his records.
 
If you liked Sublime LPKingsfan, what do you think of Slightly Stoopid? I'm not a fan of a lot of their albums, but "Live and Direct" is one of the best acoustical albums I've heard.
 
Talking about punk, since there are alot of North California folks around here...

I used to love when I was in college the band called Dieselboy from Santa Rosa. I don't think they have ever had a big hit or anything, but I find my self to this day singing some of their song in my head or if I come accross one of their songs on one of my mix CDs I get really into it :)

It was cool that when I bought Freaks and Geeks dvd set there was an unaired episode where Dieselboy played 2-3 songs as a background band at some bar.
 
Ben Harper - Both Sides of the Gun (3/21/06)

B000EGEKWO.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg


Disc 1
1. Morning Yearning
2. Waiting For You
3. Picture In A Frame
4. Never Leave Lonely Alone
5. Sweet Nothing Serenade
6. Reason To Mourn
7. More Than Sorry
8. Cryin’ Won’t Help You Now
9. Happy Everafter In Your Eyes

Disc 2
1. Better Way
2. Both Sides Of The Gun
3. Engraved Invitation
4. Black Rain
5. Gather ‘Round The Stone
6. Please Don’t Talk About Murder While I’m Eating
7. Get It Like You Like It
8. The Way You Found Me
9. Serve Your Soul

excellent album. just got it today. if you're a fan of ben harper's music, its another must-have. the guy is so incredibly talented...and he hasn't put out a bad album yet...in 8 tries (including one stellar live album). there's bob marley influence on this album. there's rolling stones influence. there's jimi hendrix influence. there's neil young influence. and then there's just ben being ben. he's got his own flare and attitude that makes him one of the most accessible international artists today not named U2. check it out!
 
If you like country, you need to check out Josh Turner. Fantastic baritone voice with a nice range and good ear.

As an aside, I just recently discovered that Wal-Mart has an assortment of music compilation CDs available in different categories. I've purchased a couple. It's a nice way to get a feel for some of the newer stuff out there, especially if you don't listen to a lot of radio...
 
Year Long Disaster - EP

200.jpg


http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=4096706

this band is definitely worth checking out. they're relatively small right now. they mostly play smallish venues: nightclubs, bars, etc...but my prediction is that they explode in the relatively near future, leastways within the LA underground, which is a great springboard for mainstream success.

Year Long Disaster is:
- Daniel Davies (son of legendary Kinks guitarist Dave Davies) - guitar, vocals
- Rich Mullins (formerly of Karma to Burn) - bass
- Brad Hargreaves (of Third Eye Blind) - drums

if you dig on classic rock in the vein of led zeppelin, zz top, and cream, you absolutely must check out year long disaster. they have some songs posted on their myspace page. i recommend the mad shrew and victory at sea, for starters.

MM-danrichStanceWS.jpg


for more information, here's their bio, which is quite an interesting tale of fate:

"BIO

"Anything that does not spring from tradition is plagiarized. Begin drawing and painting like the old masters; after that always do as you wish, you will always be respected"
Salvador Dali

Year Long Disaster took Salvador Dali’s words to heart when they began constructing the mainframe ideas that would form their fundamental musical intentions. Modifying, in their own right, the original blues models of The Masters; Cream, Free, ZZ Top, Black Sabbath, and Led Zeppelin among others, Year Long Disaster are more apt to play shuffles as the base backbeat and to define choruses as whichever dynamic moment of the song appeals as most memorable. This moment may manifest itself in a riff, a recurring vocal line, or in a sonic assault stemming from sheer energy. Riffs may extend past 4 bars. Lyrics may not repeat themselves. Year Long Disaster embraces the humanity and simplicity in songwriting with the ability to improvise, allowing the audience to be involved in moments that will never exist again.

This band’s work is also a reflection, one of the innumerable reflections of what they as individuals accomplish, write, and think. The pedigree of this band is complex and unusual. Lead guitarist and singer Daniel Davies is the 23-year-old son of Dave Davies of the Kinks. He was born in London and spent the first nine years of his life touring the world with one of the most legendary live acts of all time. Daniel can be seen as an infant in the arms of Susan St. James during an episode of Saturday Night Live, as she introduces his father’s band. At thirteen, Daniel and his family moved from London to Los Angeles. Three years later his parents split, and Daniel moved in with his neighbor and godfather, movie director John Carpenter. Daniel lived with the Carpenters until his graduation from Hollywood High School. He then set out on his own to play music. For three years, he worked menial jobs and failed random drug tests for even more menial jobs, until he walked into a Hollywood grocery store to buy vodka. It was there he met bass player Rich Mullins.

Mullins had been in Los Angeles four days when he met Davies. Mullins had just moved from Holland, and was nurturing a gorilla-sized drug habit when he met Davies in the alcohol section of Pavilions. Mullins had been a founding member of the West Virginia instrumental hard rock band Karma to Burn. Karma to Burn had released three albums on Roadrunner Records, toured the world extensively and opened for such acts as Metallica and Pantera. Mullins left Karma to Burn to play in the Dallas, Texas band Speedealer. It was a feeble attempt to geographically remove himself from his addiction. In about seven months he was bandless and homeless, abandoned by Speedealer on a street corner in San Francisco. From there he took a plane back to Holland in another feeble attempt to geographically remove himself from his addictions. A couple of weeks prior to meeting Davies he had been convinced by some Dutch friends to take a CD he had recorded in Holland to some industry friends in Los Angeles. He arrived in Los Angeles only intending to stay one month. Within a week of meeting Daniel they were inseparable friends living in a one room apartment in Laurel Canyon, drinking two fifths of vodka a day, smoking as much crack as their other friends could afford. After only a month of ‘friendship’ Daniel and Rich went to Music Cares Foundation and asked for help with their addictions. They were placed into CRI-Help rehab. They spent a month there together. They then spent six months in a sober living halfway house. They finally moved out back into the world, sober, in December 2003.

Eleven months later Daniel and Rich saw drummer Brad Hargreaves play live at the Scene Bar in Glendale with a band called Hours and Minutes. They were extremely impressed with his musicianship. They got his phone number and asked him if he wouldn’t mind ‘jamming’. They had no idea Brad was already a member of the eight times platinum selling group Third Eye Blind. Remarkably, Third Eye Blind had just played the Kinks on the NBC show American Dreams. Hargreaves, upon learning that Daniel’s father was Dave Davies, became intrigued and agreed to try a couple of practices. The trio instantly bonded and Year Long Disaster was born."
http://www.ovrcast.com/html/projects/yearlong/
 
reggae


Sashamon- One Time Maybe


This dude is making some wonderful reggae right now. He comes outta Hawaii and his music definitely has that island feel to it. His sound is very acoustic and his voice is distinct.
 
i took a little hiatus from this thread, but i'm coming back with a vengeance, baby!!! things are heating up as 2006 releases are starting to overlap each other. today's topic:

Pearl Jam - self-titled (May 2, 2006)

B000ETQRCM.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_V54165026_.jpg


1. Life Wasted
2. World Wide Suicide
3. Comatose
4. Severed Hand
5. Marker In The Sand
6. Parachutes
7. Unemployable
8. Big Wave
9. Gone
10. Wasted Reprise
11. Army Reserve
12. Come Back
13. Inside Job

i just got a leaked copy of this album yesterday, and i've gotta say, its verrrrrrrrry good. shades of 'ten' and 'yield' here. this album is oddly inappropriate considering the direction rock & roll is going today, but its also oddly appropriate considering the direction rock & roll should be going. 1994 is back, baby!!!

Amazon.com description:
"If its debut album 15 years ago made Pearl Jam apprehensive with success, the Seattle quintet better buckle in for a return to eminence. On its eighth studio release--and first since 2000--the band socks away the adventurous experimentation that dogged some of its most recent records to investigate a post-September 11, war-ravaged world overflowing with urgency and significance. "It's the same everyday in a hell manmade/What can be saved, and who will be left to hold her?" lead singer Eddie Vedder wonders in "World Wide Suicide," one of several contemptuous rants on the Bush administration. Yet the album's spark is more than political. Songs like "Life Wasted," "Comatose" and "Big Wave" embrace the garage-rock past, as guitarists Mike McCready and Stone Gossard play off each other with the primal lucidity of a decade ago and drummer Matt Cameron, one of rock's best, adds raw backing vocals to Vedder's polished craft. But Pearl Jam also turns up some of its most harmonious works since "Daughter," including "Marker in the Sand," with its radio-ready chorus, the tuneful "Parachutes" paced by Gossard's divine strumming, and the burning narrative and Urge Overkill punch of "Umemployable." Finally Vedder pleads for a lover's return in "Come Back," a keyboard-soaked love song complete with a chilling Gossard solo. It's got a soulfulness that begs for Sam Cooke to sing it and an originality that shows that a vibrant and cocksure Pearl Jam is back in town--and ready to retake the world." http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...686926-6920960?_encoding=UTF8&v=glance&n=5174

headbang.gif


coming soon, a review of, arguably, the most anticipated release of 2006: Red Hot Chili Peppers - Stadium Arcadium [Double LP] (May 8, 2006)........
 
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excellent post, im looking forward to hearing it. i love pearl jam. cant wait for the chili peppers release either, im a huge fan.
 
well...this review is coming much sooner than i had planned. just got a leaked copy of RHCP new album this morning, and just finished listening to it the whole way through...twice. while its still fresh and unbiased in my head, here we go:

Red Hot Chili Peppers - Stadium Arcadium [Double LP] (May 9, 2006 [US])

B000EMGAOY.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_V52611145_.jpg


Disc 1: Jupiter
1. Dani California
2. Snow (Hey Oh)
3. Charlie
4. Stadium Arcadium
5. Hump De Bump
6. She’s Only 18
7. Slow Cheetah
8. Torture Me
9. Strip My Mind
10. Especially In Michigan
11. Warlocks
12. C’mon Girl
13. Wet Sand
14. Hey

Disc 2: Mars
1. Desecration Smile
2. Tell Me Baby
3. Hard to Concentrate
4. 21st Century
5. She Looks To Me
6. Readymade
7. If
8. Make You Feel Better
9. Animal Bar
10. So Much I
11. Storm In A Teacup
12. We Believe
13. Turn It Again
14. Death of a Martian

in a quasi-return to their roots, the red hot chili peppers blow me away once again with an incredibly ambitious double album release. any music heads out there? you all probably know the dangers of releasing a double album. i simply refer to this danger as the "filler factor." you never want to release a double album for the sake of quantity. filler tracks are a no-no, and a band can get away with a few on a double album, but at the risk of alienating their audience. stadium arcadium, fortunately, doesn't suffer from the filler factor greatly. there are a few tracks that are subpar, but the album is home to a whole helluvalotta winners. i think "jupiter" is the stronger of the two discs. dani california, slow cheetah, she's only 18, warlocks, c'mon girl...it rocks, raps, and soars at a frantic pace. the second disc, "mars," seems much more experimental. john frusciante is let loose for the first time in all his years as the chili peppers guitarist. he has redefined what it means to be a modern rock & roll guitarist, and pays tribute to jimi hendrix with his wailing-wah-wah-filled guitar solos. the band returns to funk, and flea's slap-bass is in top form. but anthony kiedis has also elevated his melody to a level that was only touched briefly on the chili peppers last release, "by the way." he can still rock a rhyme, but he learned how to sing at some point as well. as for chad smith, well...he's the quiet yet ever-consistent drummer that paces a band highlighted by guitar-and-bass gods. the last word: at 28 tracks, with a host of b-sides awaiting release, this album is the culmination of everywhere the peppers have been for the duration of their careers. this band practically has "sex, drugs, and rock & roll" tattooed on their balls, and this album is just as much a time of reflection as it is a step forward for the LA greats.

and if ya don't trust me, here's a quick review from Amazon.com:

"Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers calls the band’s first new album in four years, Stadium Arcadium, the most-anticipated album of the spring, "the best thing that we’ve ever done…. There’s this weird kind of sublime, subliminal undercurrent that is suggestive, in a spirited way, of our earliest records." Exuding all the passion, energy and funked-up rock that have made the Red Hot Chili Peppers one of the most popular bands in history, the 2-CD Stadium Arcadium, simply put, will knock your socks off."
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...1/102-7992640-9001715?s=music&v=glance&n=5174

be sure to BUY this album on may 9th. i preordered my copy days ago. support the peppers!

headbang.gif
 
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Padrino said:
well...this review is coming much sooner than i had planned. just got a leaked copy of RHCP new album this morning, and just finished listening to it the whole way through...twice. while its still fresh and unbiased in my head, here we go:

Red Hot Chili Peppers - Stadium Arcadium [Double LP] (May 9, 2006 [US])

B000EMGAOY.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_V52611145_.jpg


Disc 1: Jupiter
1. Dani California
2. Snow (Hey Oh)
3. Charlie
4. Stadium Arcadium
5. Hump De Bump
6. She’s Only 18
7. Slow Cheetah
8. Torture Me
9. Strip My Mind
10. Especially In Michigan
11. Warlocks
12. C’mon Girl
13. Wet Sand
14. Hey

Disc 2: Mars
1. Desecration Smile
2. Tell Me Baby
3. Hard to Concentrate
4. 21st Century
5. She Looks To Me
6. Readymade
7. If
8. Make You Feel Better
9. Animal Bar
10. So Much I
11. Storm In A Teacup
12. We Believe
13. Turn It Again
14. Death of a Martian

in a quasi-return to their roots, the red hot chili peppers blow me away once again with an incredibly ambitious double album release. any music heads out there? you all probably know the dangers of releasing a double album. i simply refer to this danger as the "filler factor." you never want to release a double album for the sake of quantity. filler tracks are a no-no, and a band can get away with a few on a double album, but at the risk of alienating their audience. stadium arcadium, fortunately, doesn't suffer from the filler factor greatly. there are a few tracks that are subpar, but the album is home to a whole helluvalotta winners. i think "jupiter" is the stronger of the two discs. dani california, slow cheetah, she's only 18, warlocks, c'mon girl...it rocks, raps, and soars at a frantic pace. the second disc, "mars," seems much more experimental. john frusciante is let loose for the first time in all his years as the chili peppers guitarist. he has redefined what it means to be a modern rock & roll guitarist, and pays tribute to jimi hendrix with his wailing-wah-wah-filled guitar solos. the band returns to funk, and flea's slap-bass is in top form. but anthony kiedis has also elevated his melody to a level that was only touched briefly on the chili peppers last release, "by the way." he can still rock a rhyme, but he learned how to sing at some point as well. as for chad smith, well...he's the quiet yet ever-consistent drummer that paces a band highlighted by guitar-and-bass gods. the last word: at 28 tracks, with a host of b-sides awaiting release, this album is the culmination of everywhere the peppers have been for the duration of their careers. this band practically has "sex, drugs, and rock & roll" tattooed on their balls, and this album is just as much a time of reflection as it is a step forward for the LA greats.

and if ya don't trust me, here's a quick review from Amazon.com:

"Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers calls the band’s first new album in four years, Stadium Arcadium, the most-anticipated album of the spring, "the best thing that we’ve ever done…. There’s this weird kind of sublime, subliminal undercurrent that is suggestive, in a spirited way, of our earliest records." Exuding all the passion, energy and funked-up rock that have made the Red Hot Chili Peppers one of the most popular bands in history, the 2-CD Stadium Arcadium, simply put, will knock your socks off."
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000EMGAOY/qid=1146431672/sr=2-1/ref=pd_bbs_b_2_1/102-7992640-9001715?s=music&v=glance&n=5174

be sure to BUY this album on may 9th. i preordered my copy days ago. support the peppers!

headbang.gif

go buy this album NOW!!!
 
woohoo! after an incredibly extended break from reviewing albums, i'm back, baby! and do i have a surprise for all of you!

Deftones - Saturday Night Wrist (10/31/06):

B000ION6F4.01._SS500_SCLZZZZZZZ_V39330875_.jpg


1) Hole in the Earth
2) Rapture
3) Beware
4) Cherry Waves
5) Mein (feat. Serj Tankian of System of A Down)
6) U, U, D, D, L, R, L, R, A, B, Selct, Start
7) Xerces
8) Rats! Rats! Rats!
9) Pink Cellphone (feat. Annie Hardy of Giant Drag)
10) Combat
11) Kimdracula
12) Riviere

okay...so friday the 13th is officially a lucky day this year! one of my connections in radio was able to hook me up with a promo copy of the deftones new album today, so i thought i would promptly begin working on a review for the album, since it is the most anticipated album for sacramento area music this year, and the most anticipated for myself, in general. i'm listening to it for the third time in a row now, and here are my first impressions, in typical review format...

ten seconds is all it takes. by then, 'saturday night wrist' has sucked you in, tumbling you around with huge drumkicks and grinding guitar riffs...leaving you immediately dizzied...and what follows is pleasure and pain pricking at your senses, delightful, heavy, and deeply gratifying. 'hole in the earth,' the album's lead-off song and first single, marks the deftones return in the best way possible: it's immediately recognizable as being the work of its makers. there are certain trademarks, developed over a more-than-decade-long career, that instantaneously make an impression...and yet 'saturday night wrist' as a whole seems even more expansive and exploratory than any of the band's work since their creative peak, 2000's 'white pony.'

in regards to the album's first track, 'hole in the earth is a perfect representation of where the band is presently. it captures in four minutes so many of the multitude of facets that wonderfully pepper 'saturday night wrist.' riffs are absolutely on the heavy side, the drumming is crisp and unrelenting in its guidance of the album's direction (which twists and turns throughout), and chino moreno's vocal performances are faultless. from the ethereal beauty of tracks like 'beware' and 'cherry waves,' to the brutality of 'rapture' and 'combat,' this album dips and soars with a grace rarely achieved by bands belonging to the harder rock persuasions. 'saturday night wrist' means as much to modern rock & roll as any album made with the intent to push the boundaries of the musical period in which they were crafted. its deceptively tuneful, see-sawing between melancholic reflection and jaw-clenching frustration. here's the best allegory i can come up with: this album is like a manic depressive refusing to accept his medication. it incorporates disparate elements of heavy metal, punk, alternative rock, classic rock, and electronica rock within its tumultuous grooves, and there's also enough cohesion between the mortar blasts to keep the music tight and unified.

yes, 'saturday night wrist' is incredibly experimental and innovative, but it also overflows with undeniable hooks, which serve as reminders that first and foremost, deftones will always be about strong, emotionally resonant songs. today's deftones have emerged stronger, smarter and more excited as a result of their experiences. as one of the few acts lumped into the nu-metal scene in the 90's who have maintained musical credibility throughout their career, deftones have again showed that their creative fires burn much brighter than all of their pigeonholed peers. whether they were ever truly a nu-metal outfit is something that only the individual can determine. what is a complete certainty, though, is that regardless of sub-genre classification, deftones are a fantastic friggin' rock band. that much is smack-yourself-silly obvious after listening to the track-by-track cohesiveness of 'saturday night wrist'. count along with me, why don’t you?

...just be sure you're nowhere near anything easily breakable during the moment when those truly massive drums kick in. ;)

~Padrino
 
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Hi I'll get this out of the way now.

I'm Adam and I LOVE Evanescence.

I hope we can still have a cool friendly relationship now that this horrible secret is out. ;)
 
woohoo! after an incredibly extended break from reviewing albums, i'm back, baby! and do i have a surprise for all of you!

Deftones - Saturday Night Wrist (10/31/06):

B000ION6F4.01._SS500_SCLZZZZZZZ_V39330875_.jpg


1) Hole in the Earth
2) Rapture
3) Beware
4) Cherry Waves
5) Mein (feat. Serj Tankian of System of A Down)
6) U, U, D, D, L, R, L, R, A, B, Selct, Start
7) Xerces
8) Rats! Rats! Rats!
9) Pink Cellphone (feat. Annie Hardy of Giant Drag)
10) Combat
11) Kimdracula
12) Riviere

okay...so friday the 13th is officially a lucky day this year! one of my connections in radio was able to hook me up with a promo copy of the deftones new album today, so i thought i would promptly begin working on a review for the album, since it is the most anticipated album for sacramento area music this year, and the most anticipated for myself, in general. i'm listening to it for the third time in a row now, and here are my first impressions, in typical review format...

ten seconds is all it takes. by then, 'saturday night wrist' has sucked you in, tumbling you around with huge drumkicks and grinding guitar riffs...leaving you immediately dizzied...and what follows is pleasure and pain pricking at your senses, delightful, heavy, and deeply gratifying. 'hole in the earth,' the album's lead-off song and first single, marks the deftones return in the best way possible: it's immediately recognizable as being the work of its makers. there are certain trademarks, developed over a more-than-decade-long career, that instantaneously make an impression...and yet 'saturday night wrist' as a whole seems even more expansive and exploratory than any of the band's work since their creative peak, 2000's 'white pony.'

in regards to the album's first track, 'hole in the earth is a perfect representation of where the band is presently. it captures in four minutes so many of the multitude of facets that wonderfully pepper 'saturday night wrist.' riffs are absolutely on the heavy side, the drumming is crisp and unrelenting in its guidance of the album's direction (which twists and turns throughout), and chino moreno's vocal performances are faultless. from the ethereal beauty of tracks like 'beware' and 'cherry waves,' to the brutality of 'rapture' and 'combat,' this album dips and soars with a grace rarely achieved by bands belonging to the harder rock persuasions. 'saturday night wrist' means as much to modern rock & roll as any album made with the intent to push the boundaries of the musical period in which they were crafted. its deceptively tuneful, see-sawing between melancholic reflection and jaw-clenching frustration. here's the best allegory i can come up with: this album is like a manic depressive refusing to accept his medication. it incorporates disparate elements of heavy metal, punk, alternative rock, classic rock, and electronica rock within its tumultuous grooves, and there's also enough cohesion between the mortar blasts to keep the music tight and unified.

yes, 'saturday night wrist' is incredibly experimental and innovative, but it also overflows with undeniable hooks, which serve as reminders that first and foremost, deftones will always be about strong, emotionally resonant songs. today's deftones have emerged stronger, smarter and more excited as a result of their experiences. as one of the few acts lumped into the nu-metal scene in the 90's who have maintained musical credibility throughout their career, deftones have again showed that their creative fires burn much brighter than all of their pigeonholed peers. whether they were ever truly a nu-metal outfit is something that only the individual can determine. what is a complete certainty, though, is that regardless of sub-genre classification, deftones are a fantastic friggin' rock band. that much is smack-yourself-silly obvious after listening to the track-by-track cohesiveness of 'saturday night wrist'. count along with me, why don’t you?

...just be sure you're nowhere near anything easily breakable during the moment when those truly massive drums kick in. ;)

~Padrino

okay...saturday night wrist officially released today. check it! it's amazing!

a few other albums of note were released today as well (NOTE: ron artest's new album is not one of these). i might get around to reviewing a couple of them sometime later. :)
 
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