Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Graham Parker And The Shot: Steady Nerves (1985)

This record is credited to Graham Parker and the Shot. I will have to mention that GP referred to this record as his worst record, saying that it was "bloody terrible." Maybe that's why I haven't listened to this in ages.

Monday, January 27, 2020

Graham Parker and the Rumour: High Times - The Best of Graham Parker and the Rumour (1979)

Again, Discogs breaks up Graham Parker releases into a bunch of useless categories. Please, get a uniform entry for Graham Parker and aggregate all of his work under that entry! Here we have Graham Parker and the Rumour, which is different from Graham Parker and the Shot, Graham Parker and the Fact, Graham Parker and the Latest Clowns, Graham Parker and the Small Clubs, Graham Parker and the Twang Three, and Graham Parker! All are listed under different headings!

Anyway, this collection was released in 1979 in Australia, Japan, and New Zealand, and in 1980 in Canada. Bizarrely, they have separate entries in Discogs. Parker is massively underrated. He should have been much bigger.

Friday, January 24, 2020

The Parachute Club: The Parachute Club (1983)

This is a record I probably should not own. It was either free or a very cheap find, and I am not even certain that I have ever listened to it.

Despite the fact that this was a very popular record in Canada, it was never released on CD. It was released here on cassette and vinyl. It also had vinyl releases in Greece, Italy, and Yugoslavia.

The video has some recognizable Toronto scenes.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Panda Bear: Panda Bear Meets The Grim Reaper (2015)

Panda Bear is really Noah Benjamin Lennox, who is also a member of Animal Collective. This is his fifth record.
The lyrical themes of the album center around personal growth, although Lennox wanted to discuss issues on a larger scale because he wanted to avoid "self-obsession or narcissism". The drum programming on Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper was influenced by 1990s hip-hop. Specifically, Lennox cited Dust Brothers, Q-Tip, A Tribe Called Quest, Pete Rock, DJ Premier, 9th Wonder, and J Dilla as influences.

The opening track, "Sequential Circuits", is a neo-psychedelia song that was described as "swirling" and "a[s] pure as a babbling brook". "Tropic of Cancer" contains a harp sample from the Nutcracker suite and its lyrics concern the death of Panda Bear's father. His vocal harmonies on the song were compared to those of The Beach Boys. [source]
The set is pressed on two 150g records. I like this record.

Monday, January 13, 2020

Pan American: Cloud Room, Glass Room (2013)

I have quite a few releases from Kranky, but most are on CD. These include Labradford, Windy and Carl, and others. It's a really great record label, and I think I would like anything they released. This record from Pan American is simply sublime.

Friday, January 10, 2020

Robert Palmer: Heavy Nova (1988)

Confession time: I am not sure that I have played this record more than once or twice, and certainly not in years. I'm not even sure that I have committed the songs to memory, beyond Simply Irresistible. This is perhaps odd, because this was Palmer's most successful record. I think, by 1988, I was listening to far different music.

Wikpedia notes: "The name Heavy Nova derives from Palmer's love of both heavy metal and bossa nova rhythms." I had no idea.

After this record, I disconnected from Palmer, and really only paid attention when I heard of his premature death in 2003. Apparently, there were five studio albums that followed Heavy Nova, along with some live releases, and some compilations. I had no idea, and I have never heard any of it. By the way, I do not own any Robert Palmer music on CD.



Thursday, January 09, 2020

Robert Palmer: Riptide (1985)

I was a little surprised when Pete, my friend in residence, professed his positive opinion of this record. It just didn't seem to fit with the other music he liked. I could always count on hm to offer nearly never-ending suggestions of what to listen to next, but I was puzzled, but them I realized that he liked the new wave sound of Clues, which led him to Riptide. The records sound totally different, but at least it made sense.

This LP followed the huge Power Station record. Palmer was the lead vocalist, in case you were not aware. I liked this record instantly (my first copy was on cassette). I listened to this LP recently, and it reminded me of how much I like it. Even the Allmusic reviewer liked it, and awarded it 4.5 stars.

I was greatly pleased to see Palmer achieve some true fame. On the other hand, in later years, I was increasingly dismayed that many people only knew Palmer from the track Addicted to Love and Simply Irresistible, from the next LP. Worse, some dismissed him as a misogynist because of those two videos, and also the video for I Didn't Mean to Turn You On. Maybe he was, but the videos undermined the music, in my opinion. Imagine listening to Addicted to Love without associating it with that video.



Tuesday, January 07, 2020

Robert Palmer: Pride (1983)

I lost track of Palmer for a while after Clues, so this is a record I had to come back to, and for that reason, it never really said much to me. I guess I am just indifferent to this one, apart from You are in My System, which I think is a great track that sounds like it should have been on Clues. The album cover sucks, IMHO.


Monday, January 06, 2020

Robert Palmer: Maybe It’s Live (1981)

Maybe It’s Live contains six live tracks and some new studio tracks, the most popular of which is Some Guys Have all the Luck, a tune that Rod Stewart later covered, but not as well. I also own a promo copy of this record, packaged in a plain brown cardboard sleeve.