I had a couple of trips to Half Price Books in Cedar Rapids that yielded a couple of interesting things.
Laughing Stock – Talk Talk (CD Polydor 847 717-2, 1991)($3.00) This is a CD that has been on my “if I ever see one” list. Laughing Stock was the last formal release from Talk Talk and commercially their biggest flop. Talk Talk started their career in the synth-pop arena with bands like Duran Duran, Depeche Mode, Communards, and Japan. The soulful vocals of Mark Hollis catapulted singles like “It’s My Life” (later covered by No Doubt) and “Talk Talk” into the top of the world’s singles charts. Following the success of their 1986 album Colour of Spring Hollis changed the direction and sound of the band into a more Jazzy, improvized sound that sparked the end of the band. Laughing Stock and its predecessor Spirit of Eden are in retrospect considered “Post Rock” and the earliest examples of this sound. After the split-up of Talk Talk Hollis would record a solo album that is a continuation of the sound established by the last two records. I really enjoy this album and am happy to have it in my collection. I’m not sure that I think this album fits in the “post rock” genre, but it has the same melancholy acoustic feel as David Sylvian‘s Secrets of the Beehive
which is my favorite of his catalog.
Can’t Stop Won’t Stop – A History of the Hip-Hop Generation – Jeff Chang (Hardback Book St. Martin’s Press ISBN 0-312-30143-X, 2005)($7.98)(MSRP $27.95) This is a heck of a deal! I love finding stuff like this at HalfPrice. This is probably the best book on the history of Hip-Hop. I’ve just started reading this, but already it has been an eye-opener. I can see that this will be a reference for me later. If you get a chance to pick one of these up at HalfPrice I recommend it.

One of my favorite releases from this Spring has been Everybody by the Sea and Cake. I listen to it at least once a week on the iPod. Thrill Jockey announced yesterday in their e-mail newsletter that there is an iTunes only three-track EP titled Anybody with songs that were recorded during the sessions for Everybody.
Following a weekend of really bad weather in Eastern Iowa, I wasn’t sure whether we were going to see this show. As I posted earler, Allen from Six Parts Seven had reached out to let me know that they were playing in the area as part of a tour they were doing opening and backing Merge artist Richard Buckner.
Allen also gave me the setlist that was played that night: “Conversation Heart,” “Stolen Moments,” “Awaiting Elemental Meltdown,” “Night Behind the Stars,” and “Knock At My Door.”


Growing up one of my favorite instrumental songs was “Green Onions” by Booker T. and the MG’s. When I started listening to the mid-Nineties Acid Jazz movement, the instrumental and keyboard driven music reminded me of the grooves of the MG’s. Around this same time the formidable Blue Note Records released a compilation titled The Lost Grooves – Rare and Previously Unissued Slices of Funk from the Vaults of Blue Note 67-70. This compilation was solid great grooves from beginning to end and included Grant Green, Lonnie Smith and Lou Donaldson. According to the liner notes penned by Bob Belden, the period of 67-70 represented a transitory period for Blue Note — moving from the bop styles and leading to the 70’s fusion. Blue Note signed a number of artists who all represented the funk-fueled jazz. In the 90’s the massive Blue Note catalog was being sampled by DJ’s and they responded with this album as well as their own hip-hop act US3. Around this same time the Beastie Boys released Ill Communication that had Hammond B3-driven funk instrumentals (assisted by Money Mark) and the subsequent EP The In Sound from Way Out that collected the instrumentals plus a couple of other tracks.