B-Sides in the Bins – #6 – Cedar Rapids, IA 1/26/07

I had been contacted by Allen from the Six Parts Seven as a result of adding them as a “friend” on MySpace regarding their upcoming tour opening for and backing Merge artist Richard Buckner which will be rolling through Iowa, stopping in Des Moines and Iowa City. A couple of years ago a friend of mine turned me on to the Six Parts Seven (helpfully abbreviated 6P7 by all of the cool kids) and for a bit I was catching up on them and had considered seeing them when they hit Des Moines back then. Somehow I missed that they had a new album that came out on Tuesday. So, I called up one of the few remaining dedicated record stores in Cedar Rapids which is a CD Warehouse, they had the 6P7 new album Casually Smashed To Pieces. I had them hold it for me and I made a trip over there. I picked up some other titles while I was there. They have a small collection of used vinyl, and they have their used and new titles mixed together with a dedicated $1 section, which sometimes has good stuff.

Casually Smashed to Pieces – Six Parts Seven (CD Suicide Squeeze S-052, 2007) ($12.99). Only one copy in stock. First listen is pretty good. I think that Six Part Seven can be safely categorized as an instrumental post-rock group. Stay tuned for a record review and probably a review of their live show at the Picador in Iowa City on 2/26. According to their MySpace page they are also going to do a Daytrotter Session on the 25th, so we can look forward to mp3 goodies from that.

Get a special MP3 EP from Six Parts Seven which includes two tracks from their new album.

999 Levels of Undo – Steve Fisk (CD SubPop SPCD460, 2001) ($1.00) One from the bargain bin! Steve Fisk is possibly best known for his work in the instrumental group Pell Mell. He joined the band when they moved to SubPop as a keyboardist. Steve has had a pretty substantial solo career in electronic music and also does production work regularly. This album has one track with Pell Mell bass player Greg Freeman credited with “relocated fractal bass applications” titled “Amateur European.” Mostly an electronic album, but has Kim Thayil from Soundgarden on a couple of tracks as well. In place of a standard CD booklet, there are separate unbound pages with re-interpretations of the bizarre cover art by other artists on one side and song information on the other. Interesting album, but mostly because I collect Pell Mell-related releases.

Mad Love – Linda Ronstadt (LP Asylum SE-510, 1980) ($1.99) One from the crates of used LP’s that this store carries. Mad Love was an attempt for Ronstadt to ride the wave of late Seventies/early Eighties popularity of “edgy” woman artists like Pat Benatar, Debbie Harry and others. I bought this one because it was one of my favorite tapes that Dad bought at the time. I used to listen to this one non-stop. At the time I would have been twelve. The album had three charting singles from it at the time: “How Do I Make You” (#10 on US Pop Charts), “Hurt So Bad” (#8 on US Pop Charts), and “I Can’t Let Go” (#31 on US Pop Charts) (Wikipedia entry on Linda Ronstadt). My favorite song on the album was her cover of Neil Young’s “Look Out For My Love.” At the time I didn’t know that this was a Neil Young song– nor would I even know who Neil Young was!

This album has a number of interesting details. It is produced by Peter Asher from folk act Peter and Gordon who went on to produce albums from James Taylor, Bonnie Raitt, Randy Newman and 10,000 Maniacs. The album itself is made up of cover songs. In addition to the aforementioned Neil Young cover, it includes songs from L.A. New Wave/Power Pop group the Cretones, whose guitarist and principal lyricist and vocalist Mark Goldenberg provides guitar and background vocals for the entire album. There are three covers of Elvis Costello songs that he publically expressed his distaste for. The sessionmen on this album list like a who’s who for L.A. at the time: Russ Kunkel on the drums along with Danny Kortchmar who were part of “The Section” and seemed to be on everyone’s album at the time. On background vocals was Kunkel’s late wife Nicolette Larson– who incidentally took a cover of the Neil Young song “Lotta Love” up the charts in 1979. Still a favorite record of mine.

Stuff in the bins I didn’t buy for $1. Just Say Yo and Just Say Mao which are really great samplers of the Sire catalog from the early Nineties. Very cool remixes and other odd tracks from bands like Depeche Mode, Book of Love, The Smiths, etc. I might still go get them as lala.com fodder. Cool Down Time from Dan Zanes. This is the first solo record from former Del Fuegos frontman. Great record, sounds like the Del Fuegos for obvious reasons. Produced by Mitch Froom who did the Fuegos records. I haven’t been too interested in his children’s records that they sell at Starbucks. I guess they are supposed to be parent-friendly. Also possibly good lala.com fodder.

Los Lobos – The Town and the City (review)

When I read the interview in Paste Magazine September 2006 issue with Los Lobos where they said that their new album The Town and the City was a return to the experimenting they started with 1992’s Kiko I was interested in hearing it. The last Los Lobos record I had purchased was their 1998 release Colossal Head, which I still pull out probably once a year.

Kiko, Colossal Head, and This Time (released in 1999) are all co-produced by Mitch Froom and Tchad Blake and are considered their “experimental trilogy.” These albums employ odd rhythms and production techniques also found in the side-project group The Latin Playboys that included Louis Perez, David Hildalgo from Los Lobos as well as Froom and Blake.

Tchad Blake was pulled into the project to provide mixing duties which gives The Town and the City a feel familar to the trilogy and the Latin Playboys.

In a similar fashion to the trilogy albums, The Town and the City fell together almost on its own. Per the video podcast freely downloadable from the band’s website, the album started with instrumental tracks that Hidalgo recorded at home that moved the album into the theme that it has. The instrumental that would become “The Valley” moved Perez to write lyrics that he describes as fitting the theme of “place” that this album has. Indeed, all of the tracks in one way or another deal with the idea of place or home that the narrators have. Louie Perez comments in “Writing” episodes of the podcasts that the majority of the songs are written in the first person, which is unique to this album. In fact, he wanted to make sure that the songs had words that fit David’s voice.

The podcast that I mention above is part of a 5-part video podcast available from the band website and is a series dedicated to the making of The Town and the City featuring interviews with Louie Perez, David Hidalgo, and Steve Berlin primarily. I think that the video podcasts are a perfect compliment to the album and I recommend downloading these and watching them. I think they serve as a nice roadmap to the album and demostrates how excited the band is regarding this release. I hope this signals the beginnings of more artists and labels taking this approach of “bonus” material available. My only disappointment is that they didn’t include the podcast on the CD itself as it is an audio plus data CD. The CD includes a script that basically launches the band’s website in your browser. I will have to back these up to a CD-R or something for posterity.

One thing that I haven’t seen much discussion about in the reviews of The Town and the City is the album artwork provided by Jaime Hernandez of the graphic novel “Love and Rockets” fame. Similar to Los Lobos, Hernandez’s work is from the Hispanic-American perspective. Since the album is so tied to the sense of Hispanic culture and growing up in East L.A. having the packaging done by Hernandez provides a nice synergy to the album. According to the video podcast episode on the artwork, the art used in the album booklet is similar to the interstitial artwork that Hernandez uses in his novels– pictures of scenes with little to no people and dialog. In the video Perez mentions that he pitched an idea to do a graphic novel of The Town and the City as a future project. I sincerely hope they can find time in their collective schedules to pull that off.

The theme of the album is surrounded in a sense of place and although it has that common thread, each of the songs can stand on its own. Stylistically, The Town and the City fits with the other “experimental” Los Lobos albums in that it is all over the map– bluesy numbers like “Hold On” and “If You Were Only Here Tonight”, salsa-fueled numbers like “Chuco’s Cumbia,” and “No Puedo Mas,” to straight up rockers like the radio-bound “The Road to Gila Bend.” Los Lobos draws its influence from all over and this album shows it. Apparently the album had a different feel to it until they added “Gila Bend” and “Free Up” which are more light and uplifting than the other tracks. In the podcast Steve Berlin says that it gave some variation to the record– a dark-to-light and fast-to-slow progression of songs.

Los Lobos is an underrated band. They are a hard-working and seemingly constant touring machine drawing from a very extensive back catalog dating back to 1978. They are most known for their cover of “La Bamba” and possibly this is the albatross from their good intention to draw attention to another cross-culture influence in Richie Valens. Because Los Lobos is considered by most to be more of an AOR band, I think that the experimental nature of the band is missed. The only Los Lobos albums I owned before this album were Kiko and Colossal Head and I didn’t dig much deeper. Since I’ve heard this album I went back and picked up This Time and The Neighborhood.

Los Lobos Official Website

Podcasts for The Town and the City

Download The Road to Gila Bend.

Download The Town.

Los Lobos - The Town and the City Purchase The Town and the City on iTunes

Rare Calexico on iTunes

If you are a fan of Calexico, there are some things that you can only get on iTunes that I would recommend. Also, iTunes is a good way to get one track off of a compilation that you might not want to purchase the whole compilation to get.

I was out on iTunes this week as someone on the Yahoo Group Casadecalexico posted about a collaboration between Calexico and the Notwist on a compilation for the German label Hausmusik. While I was there I did some searching for other things Calexico and turned up some neat things. Click on the iTunes buttons to preview or get.

There is a free podcast of the show that Calexico did at the 40 Watt Club in Athens, GA in 2006.

Calexico - Calexico: Live in Athens Calexico: Live in Athens

Here is the Calexico and the Notwist collaboration I mentioned above titled “Careless.” I like this track a lot. Sort of a cut-up mix of Calexico.

Calexico & Notwist - You Can´t Always Listen to Hausmusik - But... - Careless “Careless” from You Can’t Always Listen to Hausmusik- But…

A Million Mercies & Calexico - You Can´t Always Listen to Hausmusik - But... - Freunde “Freunde” is another track from this compilation, this time collaborating with A Million Mercies. I’m not familiar with them, but you get to hear Calexico in German!

Calexico seems to be one of those bands that typically is drafted for tribute albums.

Calexico - I Am A Cold Rock. I Am Dull Grass. - Calexico - I Send My Love To You “I Send My Love To You” from the Will Oldham tribute album I Am A Cold Rock. I Am Dull Grass. A nice ballad. This album seems to be out of print according to the CDBaby site. I would recommend getting the whole album as it also has artists like The Iron and Wine, Mark Kozelek, Pinetop Seven, and The Court and Spark.

Calexico - I Am A Cold Rock. I Am Dull Grass. Here is the whole album for I Am A Cold Rock. I Am Dull Grass.

Calexico - Nothing Left to Lose: A Tribute to Kris Kristofferson - Casey's Last Ride “Casey’s Last Ride” from Nothing Left to Lose: A Tribute to Kris Kristofferson. This is another cool tribute. Calexico is joined on this tribute by Califone, The Court and Spart, Richard Buckner, Howe Gelb and Grandaddy.

Calexico - Nothing Left to Lose: A Tribute to Kris Kristofferson Here is the link for the full Nothing Left to Lose: A Tribute to Kris Kristofferson

Calexico - Por Vida - A Tribute to the Songs of Alejandro Escovedo - Wave “Wave” from Por Vida: A Tribute to Alejandro Escovedo. This compilation is pretty much a who’s who of the Americana/Alt-Country and others genre including Lucinda Williams, Lenny Kaye, Steve Earle, Sally Timms (Cowboy Junkies), Jennifer Warnes, John Cale, Los Lonely Boys, The Cowboy Junkies, Charlie Sexton, Howe Gelb, Ian Hunter, The Jayhawks, Sheila E., Chris Stamey, Son Volt, Rosie Flores, Charlie Musselwhite, M. Ward with Vic Chesnutt, the Minus 5, and Alejandro himself. Quite a cross-section of artists coming out on this one which shows what an underrated musician Alejandro really is.

Calexico - Por Vida - A Tribute to the Songs of Alejandro Escovedo Here is the link to purchase or sample the whole Por Vida album.

Calexico - I Am the Resurrection: A Trbute to John Fahey - Dance of Death “Dance of Death” from the I Am The Resurrection: A Tribute to John Fahey album. On this album Calexico is joined by Davendra Banhart, the Fruit Bats, M. Ward, Grandaddy, Peter Case, and Howe Gelb. I guess Calexico must call Howe when they get these gigs!

Calexico - I Am the Resurrection: A Trbute to John Fahey The link for the whole I Am The Resurrection: A Tribute to John Fahey album.

Calexico - At the Crossroads: A Benefit for Homeless Youth - All the Pretty Horses “All The Pretty Horses” from At The Crossroads: A Benefit for Homeless Youth. This is also on the 2001 Tour-only CD Aerocalexico. A pretty lullabye but also a little dark it seems.

Calexico - Graciously: A Gulf Relief Compilation - Griptape Heart “Griptape Heart” from Graciously: A Gulf Relief Compilation. This song is also on the 2005/2006 tour-only CD The Book and The Canal. A great song with a slide guitar that reminds me of George Harrison. This compilation has Steve Wynn, Devotchka, Robyn Hitchcock, John Doe, and fellow Tucsonites Friends of Dean Martinez (whose first album included members of Calexico and Howe Gelb) and (surprise!) Howe Gelb. Howe’s song looks like it takes the “hand jive” rhythm across four songs: “I Want Candy,” “I Know What Boys Like,” “Who Do You Love,” and “Not Fade Away.” Kind of an 80’s meets 50’s thing. I may purchase that track! There was an article in the June/July 2006 issue of The Believer that followed the history of this famous rhythm. Apparently the hand-jive rhythm derives from a West African rhythm called the Juba Rhythm– which is a 3/2 syncopated rhythm made famously popular by Bo Diddley in 1955 on his “Bo Diddley” song, which was copied by everyone. (Source: “Schema: The Ends of Innocence”, Gustavo Turner, p36, The Believer, June/July 2006).

Calexico - Graciously: A Gulf Relief Compilation This is the link for the Graciously album.

Calexico - Do You Think You Will Be Different When You´re Through - Gift X-Change “Gift X-Change” from Do You Think You Will Be Different When You’re Through which is another Hausmusik compilation. This track also is on the Aerocalexico CD. A Christmas song.

Gotan Project - Inspiración - Espiración - La del Ruso (Calexico Version) “La Del Ruso (Calexico Version)” from the Gotan Project remix album Inspiracion – Espiracion. The Gotan Project is a Paris-based Electronic Tango group, I guess. Calexico collaborates with the Gotan Project on this track.

iTunes is also a great way to pick tracks off of a soundtrack. Conveniently, iTunes carries the expensive soundtrack to the movie “Dead Man’s Shoes” which features four tracks from Calexico.

Calexico - Dead Man's Shoes (The Soundtrack) - Crooked Road and the Briar “Crooked Road and the Briar”

Calexico - Dead Man's Shoes (The Soundtrack) - Untitled II “Untitled II”

Calexico - Dead Man's Shoes (The Soundtrack) - Untitled III
“Untitled III”

Calexico - Dead Man's Shoes (The Soundtrack) - Ritual Road Map “Ritual Road Map”

Calexico - Buscemi: Late Night Reworks, Vol. 1 - Cristal Frontier “Cristal Frontier (Buscemi Remix)” from Belgian remixer Buscemi’s album Late Night Reworks a light clubby remix.

The last thing on this list is the incredible Live Session EP that you can only get on iTunes except for one track that I mentioned in an earlier post– the “Guns of Brixton” cover.

Calexico - Live Session - EP Calexico 4-track Live Session EP. Includes “Roka,” “Bisbee Blue,” “Guns of Brixton,” and “Return to Spring.” Well worth the $4.99.

I created an iMix on iTunes of the individual tracks– 18 of them including the Live Session EP. To purchase all of the tracks it would cost $17.82– not bad considering what it would cost to acquire all of the albums, and the fact that quite a bit of this is out-of-print. Note: This will only be available for one year.
Click Here for Rare Calexico on iTunes iMix icon

Fender Baritone Jaguars and the Bass VI

In early December I picked up a new guitar from Bob’s Guitars in Cedar Falls. It is a Fender Jaguar Baritone Custom (025-9400-300). This is the second Fender Baritone I’ve owned. I traded a Jaguar Baritone Special HH (025-9300-306) that I also purchased from Bob’s in 2005 on it.

The current Fender Jaguar Baritone models are descendants of the legendary Bass VI that Fender manufactured from 1961-1975. A unique guitar, the Bass VI was inspired by the Danelectro 6-string bass introduced in 1956. Tuned E-e, the Bass VI bridged the gap between an electric bass and an electric guitar. The Bass VI was used notably by Robert Smith of the Cure and Jack Bruce of Cream. Since Cream was the prototype for a Power Trio, Bruce had to play the dual role of rhythm guitar and bass to Clapton’s lead guitar. I became interested in the Bass VI through some interviews I read with Doug McCombs from Tortoise where he talks about the Bass VI and how its distinctive tone impacts his playing. McComb’s side project Brokeback is influenced by and is a showcase of the Bass VI. A bass player myself, I was interested in an intstrument that would allow me to play six-string while taking advantage of my bass background. My bass style is influenced heavily by New Order’s Peter Hook who tended to use the upper registers of the bass for melody. I believe that Hook also played a Bass VI from time-to-time. So, I felt that a Bass VI-style guitar would be up my alley.

I started looking into getting a Bass VI last year, and was disappointed in how much it would cost to get an original vintage Bass VI. Most of them are going for upwards of $3000. In 1995 Fender introduced a 1962 Bass VI reissue. These reissues are going for as much as the originals on eBay. Due to the scarcity of these guitars– they never really took off originally, and I’m sure the 1995 reissues were also not very popular– some Bass VI fans got organized on the Internet and started a campaign to get Fender to bring the VI back.

The petition was successful. In 2004 and 2005 Fender introduced the two Jaguar Baritones currently in production– the Custom and the HH. Further, in 2006 they announced that a 1962 Bass VI reissue would be available from Custom Shop as a Limited Edition available only until 12/31.

In Spring of 2005 I started looking into the new Jaguar-based baritones. I did some calling around and it turned out that Bob’s in Cedar Falls was one of the few stores in the area carrying one. West Music in Cedar Rapids said that they didn’t carry one because they were “speculative” guitars– which I assumed to mean that Fender wasn’t sure if they were going to continue production of these. The model that Bob’s had was the black and chrome HH edition– “HH” means dual humbucking pickups. I visited the store and tried it out with a friend and bought it. I really liked the way it looked and played and it matched my black and white American Precision Bass. The Baritone Custom came in a more traditional sunburst color scheme with a tortoise pickguard.

Unfortunately, there wasn’t enough information available about the Jaguar Baritones when I bought the HH. I had assumed incorrectly that the two Baritones were different only in pickup configuration and color. The Baritone Special HH has a 27″ scale versus the Baritone Custom’s 28.5″ scale. The Special HH tunes to B-B (B, E, A, D, F#, B) whereas the Baritone Custom can be tuned in standard E-E (E, A, D, G, B, E)– just like the Bass VI. The Bass VI has a 30″ scale which allows it to be tuned an octave below a standard guitar. The Baritone Custom uses the same gauge strings as the Bass VI as well. Compare this to a standard Jaguar’s scale of 24″.

My remedial 6-string skills don’t include being able to transpose chords to accomodate the B-B tuning– although all of the chords I know “work.” I could have capoed the guitar for E, too. It wasn’t until this year when I was looking through the Fender catalog that I noticed that Fender had re-named the Baritone Custom as a “Bass VI Custom” and moved the guitar to the bass section. The Bass VI Custom has the same model number as the Baritone Custom did (025-9400-300). This was a smart move on Fender’s part as it drives the point home about the Custom’s Bass VI heritage as well as clear up any confusion about the product. The guitar was debatably incorrectly called a Baritone anyway as it wasn’t tuned to B-B.

When I went to Bob’s in December, they had the Custom with the original “Baritone Custom” labeling instead of the new “Bass VI Custom” labeling. This was only a minor disappointment, really, as the guitar is identical in every other respect. One of the complaints about the original Bass VI was that the tremelo made the guitar knock out of tune easily, so Fender addressed that in this guitar with a fixed bridge. The Baritone HH also has a fixed bridge. I was surprised how much difference the inch and a half makes in playability and tone between the HH and the Custom! While the HH was definately has a low-end growl to it– which is helped a lot with the humbucker pickups– the Custom sounds more like a bass. The string gauge contributes to that as well. The longer neck is a bit disorienting if you are expecting a regular guitar. One of the guys from Bob’s commented on that right away when he was tuning the guitar up for me.

Overall, I’m very pleased with this guitar. It is a bit like braving new territory for me as a guitarist. I’m spending a lot of time figuring out what sounds the best. Like a bass, the Custom sounds best single note playing like surf or western sounding. A lot of barre or power chords sound good in the upper registers of the guitar. I need to figure out what I’m going to do amp-wise. I can tell right now that reverb is a necessity.

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