March 31, 2023

Laurie And The Sighs - Laurie And The Sighs (1980)

posted by all-musicrecords

Take one listen to the first and only LP by Laurie and the Sighs and it won't surprise you to learn that vocalist Laurie Beechman is best known as a Broadway star. 
The 1980 album is a showy burst of energy that mixes hard-edged arena rock a la Pat Benatar with spiky, tongue-in-cheek power pop to create consistently fun results.

Prior to the album's release, Beechman played in famous theater productions such as Annie and The Pirates of Penzance. 
After signing with Atlantic Records, Beechman and the Sighs hoped to find success venturing into rock and roll territory. 
During a time when Benatar was at the top of the charts, it would seem that Beechman, whose physical and musical similarities to the popular singer were not exactly subtle, would be a marketable act for her label. Unfortunately, Laurie and the Sighs received little support from Atlantic and soon faded into obscurity.

The LP rocks harder than you might expect, and it's clear that Beechman put everything she had into belting out the tunes. Some of the material, such as the brief jolt of Face to Face, an amped-up cover of the 60s Claudine Clark hit Party Lights and the aggressive Stop Telling Me No, even shows traces of punk. The LP only slows down once with the rock opera ballad Your Bridge Is Burning.

After the album failed to make a dent, Beechman turned back to musical theater, going on to star in Cats, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Les Miserables. Unfortunately, after a diagnosis of ovarian cancer in 1988 - which went into remission and then returned in 1995 - Beechman passed on in 1998 at the age of 44.


Tracklist

A1.  Midnight Love - 3:19 
A2.  Touch Me - 3:40 
A3.  Party Lights - 3:07 
A4.  Love Hostage - 2:53 
A5.  Face To Face - 1:41 

B1.  Never Go Back - 3:51 
B2.  Your Bridge Is Burning - 3:17 
B3.  Runaway - 2:14 
B4.  Stop Telling Me No - 2:15 
B5.  Burning Up - 2:40 

March 26, 2023

Heatwave - Rod Temperton (1979)

posted by all-musicrecords

Heatwave is a Dayton, Ohio based funk/disco band formed in 1975. Its most popular line-up featured Americans Johnnie Wilder Jr. and Keith Wilder (vocals) of Dayton, Ohio; Englishmen Rod Temperton (keyboards) and Roy Carter (guitar); Swiss Mario Mantese (bass); Czechoslovak Ernest "Bilbo" Berger (drums); and Jamaican Eric Johns (guitar).
They are known for their singles "Boogie Nights", "The Groove Line", and "Always and Forever".

Rodney Lynn Temperton (9 October 1949 - 25 September 2016) was an English songwriter, producer and musician.
Temperton was the keyboardist and main songwriter for the 1970s pop music, disco and funk band Heatwave, writing songs including "Star of a Story", "Always and Forever", "Boogie Nights", and "The Groove Line". 
After he was recruited by record producer Quincy Jones, he wrote several successful singles for Michael Jackson, including "Thriller",


Tracklist

A1.  Boogie Nights - 5:03
A2.  That's The Way We'll Always Say Goodnight - 4:19
A3.  The Groove Line - 7:28

B1.  Sho' Nuff Must Be Love - 4:05
B2.  Always And Forever - 6:17
B3.  Razzle Dazzle - 4:17

March 24, 2023

Iggy Pop - Zombie Birdhouse (1982)

posted by all-musicrecords

Zombie Birdhouse is the sixth solo studio album by American rock singer Iggy Pop. It was released in September 1982 by record label Animal.
Zombie Birdhouse was recorded on 16-track in June 1982 at Blank Tape Studios in New York City. Chris Stein of Blondie produced the album.
On the three albums he recorded for Arista Records in the late '70s and early '80s, Iggy Pop often seemed to be going out of his way to sound like a commercially viable rock musician, or at very least someone who was not quite as strange as his public reputation led people to believe. 
In 1982, after Iggy's contract with Arista lapsed, he was offered the opportunity to work with Blondie mastermind Chris Stein, who not only produced Zombie Birdhouse, but originally released the album on his own short-lived Animal Records imprint, and Iggy seemed to approach the album as his opportunity to let loose with every musical and lyrical impulse that wouldn't have passed muster on the label that gave us Barry Manilow and Whitney Houston
After the perverse attempt at a dance-pop album that was Party, Zombie Birdhouse certainly seemed like the right idea; Rob DuPrey, who handled the keyboards, guitars, and programming and wrote most of the music, came up with a set of interesting pop tunes, skeletal but full of ideas and sharp angles, often suggesting a less pretentious and more emotionally direct corollary to the arty approach of the David Bowie-produced The Idiot. But sadly, Iggy himself didn't rise especially well to the occasion here; his lyrics are often a bizarre mélange of free-association without any clear focus, and one senses that Stein was a bit too awed by working with his hero to have the nerve to tell him when his vocals were wandering off-pitch (or out of tune altogether). 
Zombie Birdhouse was in many ways a noble experiment, and it's never less than interesting, but it also rarely works the way it's supposed to; ultimately, this album's a failure, but it's certainly one of the most interesting and ambitious failures of Iggy's career, which ought to count for something.


Tracklist

1.  Run Like a Villain - 3:00 
2.  The Villagers - 3:46 
3.  Angry Hills - 2:55 
4.  Life of Work - 3:44 
5.  The Ballad of Cookie McBride - 2:58 
6.  Ordinary Bummer - 2:40 
7.  Eat or Be Eaten - 3:14 
8.  Bulldozer - 2:16 
9.  Platonic - 2:39 
10.  The Horse Song - 2:57 
11.  Watching the News - 4:10 
12.  Street Crazies - 3:53 

Reissue bonus track
13.  Pain and Suffering - 3:39 


March 23, 2023

Ghost - Hypnotic Underworld (2004)

posted by all-nusicrecords

Despite a seasoned aversion to hippies, I purchased Ghost's gorgeous self-titled debut in 1993 at the Princeton Record Exchange, about three years after its release. Fresh out of an SST-dosed high school experience, the Tokyo band's crystalline chamber folk, swirling incantations, and tendency to play and squat in Buddhist temples, abandoned churches and caves not only signaled my entrance into a more expansive musicality, it linked them on an aesthetic and spiritual level with the apocalyptic folk of one of my favorites, Current 93. 
Besides the dream catching, the group's uncanny ability to turn new-age atmospherics into blistering psych transcendence linked them solidly with Magic Hour, another of my early obsessions.
And though I'm still patiently awaiting the collaboration with David Tibet (who, interestingly enough, is currently working on a project with psych pin-up boy Ben Chasny), I was floored in 1995 when Ghost and Magic Hour went on tour in the U.S. and Japan. To my ear, both groups benefited. On one side, the trip inspired the jingly acoustic-centered instrumentals, "SunsetOne" and "SunsetTwo", on Magic Hour's final opus, Secession '96
It also planted the seeds for Ghost's 2000's full-length collaboration with ex-Magic Hour rhythm section, Damon Krukowski and Naomi Yang on the best Damon & Naomi record in some time. For Ghost, Magic Hour's rock excess invaded their pristine habitat, leading to the mastery of a heavier, rock-monster strain of psychedelia on subsequent releases. And nowhere is the rock more intense than on Hypnotic Underworld.
Since Ghost's inception in Tokyo in 1986, the band has released consistently solid, ambitious records; but on their seventh full-length, the sextet transcends all of their prior rock outings (though the beautiful psych-folk Snuffbox Immanence still stands as the best of their quieter material). It's the first long player since 1999, and it combines the strongest aspects of its predecessors, resulting in an unbelievably beautiful mix of ethereal improvisation, blasted guitar (think Zeppelin), heady prog, Golden Earring swagger, Incredible String Band-styled naturalism, a gorgeous, slow-motion, circus-music cover of Syd Barrett's "Dominoes - Celebration for the Gray Days", and a melancholy take on Earth & Fire's "Hazy Paradise".
Toying with the usual end-of-album epic, Hypnotic Underworld unfolds assuredly with the 23-minute title track. Broken into four distinct movements, the first, "God Took a Picture of His Illness on This Ground", is a 13-minute improvisational piece recorded live in the studio. It's spare, discordant heterophony lined with intermittent percussion, electronic bursts, brushed or scraped strings, down-the-well percussion, and whinnying saxophone. 
The instruments Ghost brings to this record-- contrabass, cello, mellotron, lute, Celtic harp, recorder, hurdy gurdy, tabla, 12-string acoustic guitar, theremin, flute, bouzouki, etc.-- create strong, surprising musical landscapes. The second section, "Escaped and Lost Down in Medina", a seven-minute, multi-layered piano-and-horn-driven epic (check out the tambourine in the left track) evokes the dense and sprawling work on 1994's live record, Temple Stone, as well as some anonymous 60s jazz freakout or fellow Japanese improvisors, Trembling Strain. But it's the three-minute third section, "Aramaic Barbarous Dawn", that sets the tone for the remainder of the album. 
Opening with near-cricket chirps and fabulously catchy O.D. oscillations, it tears into heavy guitar riffs and a rock-anthem chorus of voices before multi-instrumental vocalist Masaki Botah takes control, rising from the other voices, and arcing as triumphantly as Queen. 
The opening suite is capped with "Leave the World!" a 22-second exclamation of death-metal drumming (cymbals, snare, hi-hat) and frantic keys.
Each of the seven remaining compositions locates an enjoyable moment, before tearing beautifully through to the other side: "Piper"'s forlorn whistle launches into 70s jazz-rock and back; "Holy High" introduces pulsing Celtic psych; and the ten-minute "Ganagmanag" moves from flute swells downward into plucked strings a prog time-shift, echoed shouts, Botah's breathy count-offs, and tribal drums. Everywhere, empty spaces are lined with powerful augmentations like tiny trills, subtle noise accents, repetitions, and rock flourishes. 
For instance, when the Barrett cover that closes the record whispers to an end, the band kicks into a stage-clearing maelstrom of manic church organ, vibrating shouts, gongs, bells, war drums, and wiry feedback. It's this sort of unexpected pomp and swagger, mixed with the solemn ambiance, that clearly separates Hypnotic Underworld from the tree-hugging psychedelia of yore. 
Much more could be said, but it's more important to state plainly, in barest terms, that Ghost have emerged as one of the most formidable (and important) rock bands I know. And Hypnotic Underworld is their rollicking masterwork.


Tracklist

1.  Hypnotic Underworld  
    (a)  God Took A Picture Of His Illness On This Ground - 13:32 
    (b)  Escaped And Lost Down In Medina - 7:09 
    (c)  Aramaic Barbarous Dawn - 2:55 
    (d)  Leave The World! - 0:22 
2.  Hazy Paradise  (Music By, Lyrics By – Chris Koerts) - 4:53 
3.  Kiseichukan Nite - 5:04 
4.  Piper - 6:42 
5.  Ganagmanag - 10:04 
6.  Feed - 7:07 
7.  Holy High - 6:10 
8.  Dominoes - Celebration For The Gray Days  (Lyrics By – Syd Barrett) - 6:44 


March 22, 2023

Claudia - Claudia (1981)

posted  by all-musicrecords

Claudia is an american pop singer, worked together with Erich Bulling.
In the early eighties many young female singers released albums in the wake of the successful light pop trend starter by Olivia Newton John. In 1981, Erich Bulling and Humberto Gatica oversaw one of these projects for Claudia, a newcomer who was signed on the Scotti Bros. label.

“Claudia” featured ten songs that included mostly pop up-tempos with a couple of ballads and inoffensive rockers. 
The singer’s voice wasn’t bad but rather unimpressive. The rhythm arrangements by Bulling and the instrumental performances, however, were first class stuff. David Foster played keyboards and synths on the album accompanied by peers like Steve Lukather, Mike Baird, Carlos Vega and Dennis Belfied. 
The record presents ear candy mid-tempos like “Jamie” and “Back Again,” both co-written by Belfield with Jay Gruska and Don Freeman respectively. “I Want To” is extremely pleasant and prominently features Richard Page’s unique voice. “Stay” is a soulful ballad well performed by Claudia and backed up by Foster on fender rhodes. Gary Herbig on sax, Lee Ritenour and Lukather on guitars all played tasteful solos on the album. The best song on the album, “Jamie,” was also sung by Debbie Boone on her 1979 self-titled album. 
During the sessions for this album Claudia and Bulling also appeared on the very good pop/fusion album “Standing On The Outside” by The Kazu Matsui Project feat. Robben Ford. Claudia sung the ballad “Save Your Nights For Me” co-written by Bulling.


Tracklist

1.  Yesterday’s Dream - 3:33
2.  The Road To Good Bye - 3:12
3.  Jamie - 3:47
4.  There You Go Again - 3:27
5.  Back Again - 4:01
6.  Handle Me Right - 3:27
7.  Stay - 3:32
8.  Don’t Stop Now - 3:41
9.  I Want To - 3:49
10.  No Love Lost - 3:39

March 21, 2023

The Tomorrowpeople - Golden Energy (1997)

posted by all-musicrecords

Ambient popsters the Tomorrowpeople formed from the ashes of the Dallas, TX-based Brutal Juice, reuniting singer/guitarist Gordo "Buzz" Gibson and drummer Ben Burt; onetime Toadies bassist Darrel Herbert, guitarist Jody Powerchurch and keyboardist John Norris
Psychedelic rock band from Dallas, Texas. Originally active from 1996 to 2000.
After recording 1996's unreleased Scuzzy Ports, a year later the Tomorrowpeople issued their official debut LP, Golden Energy; the group signed to Geffen soon after, with the label re-releasing the album in 1998. 
During their career, The Tomorrowpeople played and toured with such groups as Tripping DaisySpoonCentro-matic, Sixteen Deluxe and Third Eye Blind.


Tracklist

1.  Theme Allison - 6:03 
2.  Youth In Orbit - 4:15 
3.  Beneath The Valley Of The 3rd World Sugardaddies - 1:03 
4.  Something 4 Joey (Acoustic Guitar, Mixed By – Wes Martin) - 4:49 
5.  Queen Of Earthly Delights - 5:22 
6.  Psyched By The 4-D Witch - 1:30 
7.  Mercitron - 4:06 
8.  Favorite Song - 3:41 
9.1.  Gidget Goes To Court - 2:11 
9.2.  (silence) - 4:48 
9.3.  Windows Wide - 5:46 


March 20, 2023

Bryce Janey - Blue Moon Rising (2022)

posted by all-musicrecords

Outstanding 12th studio disc by this awesome blues/rock guitarist from Iowa featuring 10 songs of excellent, dynamic, soul-powered, blues-based, retro-fied, six string mojo that stands tall & lands solid between a rock and a blues place. 
Bryce Janey is the real deal: an authentic, bad-ass, Stratmaster guitar slinger with way-kool, whiskey-soaked vocals who will rock your damn blues away. 
On "Blue Moon Rising", Bryce Janey turns up the "Janey Juice" and takes us on an awesome musical ride with his guitar fueled, power trio mojo train that rocks solid with pure "down home" certfied blues power deep into the night featuring Dan Johnson on bass & Eric Douglas on drums. 
Complete with strong memorable songs that define bluesy excellence, "Bad Moon Rising" is an essential blues rockin' heavy guitar disc from Grooveyard Records that is highly recommended to fans of Robin Trower, Billy Gibbons & ZZ Top, Rory Gallagher, Johnny Winter, SRV, Doyle Bramhall II, Chris Duarte, Jeff Healey, Walter Trout, Craig Erickson, Dirty Dave Osti, Tony Spinner, Chris Aaron, Buddaheads, The Janeys and to the good people who dig all the previous, excellent Bryce Janey discs.
Bryce Janey has released his 12th album.
And he may have released his best album yet! If you are familiar with Bryce he has a very soulful voice . Has a little grit underneath too which I find appealing.
He is no slouch on the guitar. More tasteful playing rather than just shredding.He also has some meat on the riffs. Bryce brings the songwriting talents to write great blues rock songs. You think by now the well may have run dry. 
I think he is at his best when he gets a groove going. He really has alot of groove in this album. Keeping the groove in The Grooveyard Records label!
So big kudos for supplying some much needed superb blues rock for 2022.


Tracklist  

1.   Back in the Day - 5:40
2.   Blinded - 6:08
3.   Strategy - 4:40
4.   Blue Moon Rising - 4:32
5.   Breaking Away - 3:56
6.   Misunderstood - 4:52
7.   Pain in My Heart - 6:07
8.   Lonesome Train - 5:13
9.   Future Blues - 4:31
10.   It’s Not Too Late to Say Goodbye - 6:08


March 19, 2023

Sigue Sigue Sputnik - Sputnik: The Next Generation featuring Hotei (1996)

posted by all-musicrecords

Sigue Sigue Sputnik were a British new wave band formed in 1982 by former Generation X bassist Tony James.

The band was reformed once in the 1990s (featuring Tomoyasu Hotei on guitar and Christopher Novak singing) releasing Sputnik: The Next Generation and once again in 2001 with Martin Degville and Neal X, which resulted in the release of Piratespace. 

The reformed Sigue Sigue Sputnik continues to play live, and it has also produced a number of remixes of other artists' work.
In 1995, James and X formed a new version of the band with Christopher Novak (vocals) and John Green (keyboards). 

Their song "Cyberspace Party" was a hit in Japan; an album, Sputnik: The Next Generation, was also released there, selling 50,000 copies.
It is a fascinating take on the Sigue Sigue Sputnik sound but also includes some tracks more reminiscent of George Michael and T. Rex. The lead singer who is now known as Sam Butcher (who almost became the new Boy George in 2006 then went on to join Paleday) does a great job on this album and it is well worth getting.


Tracklist

1.  Like There's No Tomorrow - 4:59
2.  Hot Stuff - 3:54
3.  Hippy Ship - 4:15
4.  Dream City - 4:03
5.  Youth Juice - 3:54
6.  Mona Lisa Overdrive - 4:24
7.  Spaceage Journey - 4:42
8.  This Is Terrorvision - 4:11
9.  Cyberspace Party - 4:16
10.  Baby Wonderful - 4:54
11.  Energize Me - 4:11
12.  King of Planet Love - 3:47
13.  Heartquake Hotel - 3:45
14.  Futures on Fire (With Rock 'n Roll) - 4:47
15.  Cyber City Never Sleeps - 4:18