nathan k. // dishes (our sunday best)

Fellow Michigander Nathan K. recently dropped his spectacular Dishes LP and if you haven’t treated yourself to a listen then you’re missing out. I had the pleasure, and honor, of reviewing the full album before its official release. This album is well stocked with tender, yet dazzling songwriting.

This is an album that happens when someone loses an important link in their life. Nathans grandfather passed recently, and it is easy to imagine how many of these songs are the result his loss. So, on its face this is a collection of songs about heartache, but it also about taking that heartache and turning it into songs of reflection.  In the end it is also ultimately about refection, and finding one’s resolve to, if not rise above it, then to cope as best you can. In the end these are songs paying homage and honoring those who leave us while we still envision having them in our lives.Yes, we carry on without their physical presence. We go about the daily rigors of life with a loved one’s remembrance stitched permanently in our hearts. The album opens with the tranquil, “For Your Own Good” and the songs speak of frustration, youthful angst, well-intentioned advice, and perhaps a need to accept one’s doubtful compulsion towards personal destiny.

For Your Own Good lyrics

I was stopped on the side of the highway. I was stopped on the side of the road. I guess I was going too fast. I guess I was going too fast for my own good. He let me go with only a warning. He let me go with only these words. (He said) Son you should try to relax. Son you should try to relax for your own good. I spent the whole day just sitting in silence. I spent the whole day with the radio off. I couldn’t think of a good song to sing. I couldn’t think of a single good thing to save my life. It’s been so long since I stared at a sunset. I was a kid last time I really felt that, the world is a beautiful place. And I guess it’s a beautiful place but it’s hard to tell. And I get so tired of hearing my own voice. But I can’t never seem to want to seem to shut my mouth for shit. It makes me sick. I can’t stop thinking about what that cop said. I can’t stop thinking about what he told me. Said, “son you should try to relax”. And I really should try to relax for my own good.

It is songs like this which comprise a seemingly journal full of personal songs that flesh out the life stories and discoveries on full display within the Dishes album. There has been much written about this release, and with this writing I’ll further the accolades, simply because they are fully deserved. Nathan K. is singer/songwriter from Ypsilanti, Michigan, and he crafts songs that not only reflect the geographic and social landscape around him, but also how the aforementioned geographic and social landscape shapes his perception. The temperatures of his heart reflect the mercurial aspects of the seasons here, and his voice is a worthy conduit coloring our souls just as bright and dour as we are.  Peace. Continue reading “nathan k. // dishes (our sunday best)”

Nathan K. // Leave Them (Official Video) (Our Sunday Best)

If one could take all the suffering and beauty of Michigan. Its many closed factories and depressed economy, contrast all the dark negative reality with the natural beauty found in the more rural aspects of our environs; the running rivers, those deep blue lakes, the white-tail deer, and the wild turkeys. Take all this and distill it into song. Nathan K. provides those songs, narrates our state of being into beautiful odes. Songs forlorn and gorgeous with hope and a relentless optimism. Watch the Xack Gibson directed video for Nathans’ song “Leave Them” from the forthcoming record Dishes, out June 26, 2012. Peace. Continue reading “Nathan K. // Leave Them (Official Video) (Our Sunday Best)”

Howth // Wind Blows Cold

The band Howth sounds good. The music this five-piece band of friends create is warm and tasty to the ears like artisan fresh baked bread is to the palette. And like the aforementioned bread their music rises and transcends mere sustenance, the music is hymns for out souls. The song “Wind Blow Cold” is taken from the band’s Newkirk release. Peace. Continue reading “Howth // Wind Blows Cold”

Greensky Bluegrass // Handguns EP

The name Michigan is derived from the  Chippewa Indian word “meicigama” which translates into great water, and refers to the Great Lake. And perhaps our tears of happiness and sadness add to the dark-ribboned depths of those storied waters.

Somethings are immutable. The healing power of music is one such thing. Like a smooth shot of white lightning, the sounds of Greensky Bluegrass levels things out and calms a heated heart and buoys a hopeful one. It’s also the  perfect accompaniment to the dwindling light of day. From Kalamazoo, Michigan these fine men are brethren to our precarious seasons, our big sky and a wilderness none too far away just outside our front doors. And the music made by Dave Bruzza, Paul Hoffman, Michael Bont, Anders Beck and Mike Devol is more than fiddles and twangy homespun goodness, it is both remedy and heartbreak. Their music ferries us away to a place less log-jammed with complications, allowing our hearts spill into the larger bastions of the great lakes that dot the compass our home state. Grab a copy of the band’s Handguns EP (2011), and with songs like, “Don’t Lie”, “Cold Feet” and the epical beauty “All Four” it’s hard to deny their longstanding talent. Oh this is wholesome music, satisfying the partaker on a deeper level with every listen. Come frame your moments with GSBG and know kinship. You can catch ’em live at The Loft (April 12th), the Magic Bag (April 13th), and at Bell’s Eccentric Café (April 14th). And for more great music check out Greensky Bluegrass on SoundCloud and on find additional tour dates and band info at www.greenskybluegrass.com. Peace. Continue reading “Greensky Bluegrass // Handguns EP”

Carolina Chocolate Drops // Leaving Eden

Dom Flemons, Rhiannon Giddens, Adam Matta and multi-instrumentalist Hubby Jenkins are the North Carolina–based Carolina Chocolate Drops and they are just as organic and original as they are talented and modest. The music they make is like hot buttered Cracklin’ Bread and red-eye gravy for your ears. And with their latest release Leaving Eden, follow-up to their critically lauded label debut—2010′s Grammy Award–winning Genuine Negro Jig, they’re in right fine form. The album is out now on Nonesuch Records, I highly recommend the vinyl format by the way. You can also cop their music HERE and on iTunes. Forgive me, I’m crushing so hard on their song, “Pretty Girl”. Peace. Continue reading “Carolina Chocolate Drops // Leaving Eden”

Fox The Cat // The Old You (Video)

“No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it’s not the same river and he’s not the same man.” —Heraclitus

When you listen to Chicago-based 5-piece Fox The Cat (cool name by the way) you immediately pick up on a certain honesty and simplicity pouring forth from their music; like a spiritual geyser unleashed. One gets the feeling this is music well-wrought from a place not easily accessible to a lot of bands.  And too, like the above quote by Heraclitus, these songs are ever-changing. Not because they are mercurial or insubstantial, but because they are mood- and thought-provoking odes to life and living. And, because of the veritable richness and depth of the songwriting, deeper meaning can be discerned from each and every listen. So, it is hard to believe these guys recently assembled this already well-formed band in October of 2011. Perhaps, this is the kind of chemistry made possible by the close friendship shared between each band member. Watch the live acoustic rendition of their song, “The Old You” and you feel the intimacy and raw quality slip into a cracked window inside your heart. Below, check out the band’s self-titled EP after the jump. Casey, Abe, Jimmy, Luke and Paul thank you for the beauty of what you’ve rendered from the collective opening of your hearts. And, if only by virtue of our delighted first impression alone, Fox The Cat are most assuredly a band to watch. Check out the band’s Facebook page for the free EP download. Peace. Continue reading “Fox The Cat // The Old You (Video)”

Gardens & Villa – Spacetime (Video)

Do you want something funky and whimsical in your life to turn up the corners of your mouth? I hope you’re like me, because I can always use any and every excuse to smile my most infectious smile. Santa Barbara’s futuristic hippie-ish band Gardens & Villa have what it takes to plaster a permanent grin all over your good looking mug. Their sound is a complex mix of clam bakes, wooded forest trails and interstellar space travel all wrapped up with the glowing psychedelic rainbow bow of Chris Lynch‘s voice. It’s a party for sure, albeit a laid back and dreamy soiree. I just visited their bandcamp and grabbed a bit of their magic for myself. And I must say, thus far it’s the most satisfying purchase of the day. Peace. Continue reading “Gardens & Villa – Spacetime (Video)”

Sam Amidon – How Come That Blood + FM Belfast Remix

The gift of music, if its the right music, will keep on giving, and giving. Thanks to our friends from FM Belfast for sharing and introducing me/us to Sam Amidon. I’m rapacious for new music and I’ve been listening to “How Come That Blood” remixed by FM Belfast since FMB Tweeted the link, and I already love it. After searching for the lyrics the song may have so many meanings, but likely allegorical as befits the season. I have also posted Sam Amidon’s album I See The Sign via bandcamp. Merry Christmas! Peace.

(Via Bedroom Community)
 
And Sam’s Neil Young cover is really quite good as well. Enjoy!


 

fleet foxes // the shrine/an argument + video


 
Imagine the loneliness of this song, how it has traveled eons and ages, so far just to be here and now. My hat off to the guys from Seattle for creating such soulful and vision inducing fare. If you’ve listened to Fleet Foxes before then you know it changes you, or like a peyote trip it conjures up visages of inner-deep stirrings (at least for me) which transport you hither and yon. Then we’re treated to such a visual as the video for “The Shrine/An Argument” and we hang our collective mouths stupefied and drooling. I’ve watched this many times already, and I’ll surely watch it again and again. Dream me, I’m pinched. Peace. Continue reading “fleet foxes // the shrine/an argument + video”

The Black Atlantic – Reverence For Fallen Trees

Forgive me an oversight, it wasn’t my intention to deprive you of The Black Atlantic. Yes, they are good enough to want to hoard, and by virtue of their beautiful songs one would not hold it against me I trust. You can lose time, even days just as easily listening to their debut LP Reverence for Fallen Trees. These songs will assail you, working their way into the inner workings of your heart and head like tendrils of ephemeral light,  and like me, you will not be sated. The band is currently working on new material for their forthcoming Darkling, I Listen EP due early 2012, for additional details go here. Peace.

Also, enjoy this live recording of the more recent song “The Aftermath” recorded live in Shanghai, China.