Thursday, January 9, 2014

If You Have Ghost

Ghost - "If You Have Ghost" (2013) - Republic Records

Hello Friends,

Great vinyl EP here courtesy of Swedish doom metal band, Ghost (or Ghost B.C. as they are known here in the States!)  

Five songs here including a tremendous cover of Roky Erickson's garage classic, "If You Have Ghosts" as well ABBA's "I'm a Marionette", Army of Lovers' "Crucified", Depeche Mode's "Waiting For the Night", as well as a live version of the bands original, "Secular Haze."

Kurt Cobain famously praised the song "Crucified" by Swedish Dance band, Army of Lovers, in his posthumously published journals.  Back in the day, Beavis & Butthead also liked the video but that was mainly because of boobs (video here and here's Ghost's version.)

In related Nirvana news, Dave Grohl produced this EP!  

Basically, here on Vinyl in the Valley, any band who's lead singer dresses like a Papal ghoul and goes by the name Papa Emeritus II is alright by us!

Hail Satan!

RATING: 4.5 Nameless Ghouls out of 5

Saturday, January 4, 2014

To All The Girls

Willie Nelson - "To All The Girls" (2013) - Sony Legacy

Hello Friends and Happy New Year!

We've got a great double LP on 180 Gram Vinyl on the platter tonight!  Its a 2013 release by Willie Nelson featuring 18 songs (new & old) that he duets with some of his favorite female singers (new & old).

Normally, we're pretty skeptical of "duet"-type albums because they usually wind up sounding gimmicky, over-produced and with no chemistry between the artists. When we saw "Top 40" names like Miranda Lambert, Sheryl Crow & Carrie Underwood among the list of performers we were a little skeptical to say the least!  But fear not friends, our old pal Willie pulls this record off with near perfection and it sounds just as good as any one of his many classic records! 

You don't need to go too far beyond the very first track to fall in love with the album! It kicks off with an amazing acoustic duet with Dolly Parton on a song called, "From Here to the Moon and Back."  Instant Classic!!  Dolly (who wrote the song) sounds great!  Willie sounds great! And this sets the stage for the rest of the record which features unobtrusive production and laidback arrangements with Willie's velvety vocal chords and his signature acoustic guitar playing providing a backbone for the rest of the album.



Side One is also home to duets with Miranda Lambert, The Secret Sisters, Roseanne Cash & Sheryl Crow.  Side Two kicks off with a raucous update of Nelson's own, "Bloody Mary Morning" (with Wynonna Judd) which is followed by a fairly saccharine-version of Nelson's classic, "Always On My Mind" (with Carrie Underwood).  Not a great version, but certainly not enough to ruin the album.  Side Two also has a great duets with Loretta Lynn (Merle Haggard's "Somewhere Between"), Alison Krauss ("No Mas Amor"), and Melonie Cannon (honestly, we're not even sure who that is!)

Side Three opens with the stunning "Grandma's Hands", a fiery and heartbreaking Bill Withers song featuring R & B singer, Mavis Staples.  Side Three is rounded out by songs with Norah Jones ("Walkin"), Shelby Lynne ("Til The End of the World") and 18 year old, Lily Meola ("Will You Remember Mine").

Side Four starts out with Emmylou Harris joining Nelson on a cover of the seldom-heard Bruce Springsteen song, "Dry Lightning".  Alt-country singer, Brandi Carlile, joins in on the Kitty Wells' classic, "Making Believe" and Willie's own daughter, Paula Nelson, joins in on a sublime versions of Creedence's "Have You Ever Seen The Rain?" (video here.)  

This would have been a very sweet and sappy end to this great album but Willie was never one to wallow too long in sentimentality.  The last track is an upbeat update of the Loretta Lynn-Conway Twitty cheater's duet, "After the Fire Is Gone" performed by Willie and Tina Rose (who, according to Google, is Leon Russell's daughter!)   

And there's nothing cold as ashes / After the fire is gone...

RATING: 4.5 Bloody Mary Mornings out of 5

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Hi-Fi Holidays: The Christmas Song

Nat King Cole - "The Christmas Song" (1963) - Capitol Records

Hello Friends,

Its Christmas Eve.  The shopping is done, the presents are wrapped, the punch bowl is brimming and the Christmas Eve Paella is nearly done.  Best of all, we've got an undisputed classic on the turntable tonight.

Nat King Cole would release his first and only Christmas LP in 1960 (entitled, The Magic of Christmas).  In 1963, Capitol Records would re-release this LP with a different cover and the updated version of the title track.

With his smoother-than-silk voice, Nat sings the definitive version of Mel Torme's classic, "The Christmas Song" aka "Chestnuts Roasting On an Open Fire".   Nothing sets the mood for a romantic Christmas Eve dinner party quite like this recording, friends.  

The Christmas Song by Nat King Cole by Christmas Song on Grooveshark

In addition to "The Christmas Song", Old King Cole sings classics like "Deck the Halls", "Adeste Fideles", "O Little Town of Bethlehem", "I Saw Three Ships", "O Holy Night", "Joy to the World", "O Tannebaum" (sung in its original German!), "Silent Night" and the lesser-known, "A Cradle in Bethlehem" & "Caroling, Caroling". 

The music on the record is conducted and arranged by Ralph Carmichael and features the usual lush and warm orchestrations that permeated Capitol releases of this era.  

By 1965, Nat King Cole would be dead from lung cancer leaving behind a legacy of some pretty great jazz-inspired popular music. Not only would this record become THE top-selling Christmas album of the 1960's, but it would become one of the most beloved records of Cole's career.

Merry Christmas everybody!

RATING: 4.5 feasts of the seven fishes out of 5

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Hi-Fi Holidays: Belafonte!

Harry Belafonte - "To Wish You A Merry Christmas" (1962) - RCA Victor

Hello Friends,

Originally released by RCA records in 1958 and then re-issued with Harry's incredibly photogenic face gracing the cover along with a slightly different B-Side in 1962, this album was a staple in homes of many a baby boomer.

There's gospel ("A Star in the East", "The Son of Mary") , calypso ("Mary's Boy Child"), folk ("Jehova The Lord Will Provide"), jazz ("Where the Little Jesus Sleeps"), and even a hint of country (the Johnny Cash-penned, "The Gifts They Gave").  What a talent this Belafonte cat is!  Pretty much the only stinker on the album is "The Twelve Days of Christmas" because that song sucks anyways.

The arrangements are, for the most part, quiet and reserved, the star of the record being Belafonte's familiar baritone.  Listening to this on vinyl, where you can really hear the quiver and intricacies of Belafonte's voice, is pretty much the only way to listen to this album! 

Again, not the best record for your Space Age Holiday soiree, but a perfect record to put when you come home from one.  Tired and buzzed, enjoying one last nightcap in the basking glow of your Christmas tree.

RATING: 4 in thy dark streets shineth out of 5

Friday, December 20, 2013

Hi-Fi Holidays: Pretty Paper

Willie Nelson - "Pretty Paper" (1979) - Columbia

Howdy Partners,

Smoke some if you got some because tonight we've got some Willie Nelson on the Christmas turntable.  Slick Willie really ended the 1970's in style with this festive LP featuring the likes of Booker T. Jones serving as producer and keyboard player; ex-Burrito Brother, Chris Ethridge on bass; longtime drummer, Paul English; and harmonica-player extraordinaire, Mickey Raphael, playing that "cuts through a fog"-style of harp.  (Its pretty much a reunion of the musicians and lineup used on the incredible, Stardust.)

Willie was at his peak in the late 70's in both creativity and record sales.  Interesting choice to close out this decade with an album of (mostly) traditional Christmas tunes, but all the selections here are performed in WIllie's inimitable style.  There's only a handful of artists that can perform songs like "Rudolph" or "Frosty" with no tongue-in-cheekiness and with the utmost sincerity.  

And speaking of sincerity...

Sixteen years prior to the release of this record, Willie wrote the song "Pretty Paper" which became a hit for fellow Texan, Roy Orbison, in 1963.  Inspired by a homeless veteran on a busy sidewalk during the holidays, the song is vintage Nelson.  Easy to hum along to, but heartbreaking nonetheless.      

Pretty Paper by Willie Nelson on Grooveshark

Pretty Paper by Roy Orbison on Grooveshark

RATING: 4.5 pretty pencils to write I love you out of 5


Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Hi-Fi Holidays: The New Possibility

John Fahey - "The New Possibility: John Fahey's Guitar Soli Christmas Album" (1968) - Takoma Records

Hello Friends,

We've got a little bit of a unique one on the Holiday Turntable tonight: a solo guitar instrumental album by American folk artist John Fahey.   Minimalist to be sure, Fahey's style combines avant-garde arrangements with a traditional country-blues style of steel string guitar picking.  The resulting music has a way of sounding both old and new at the same time. (Fahey's style was termed "American Primitivism" in the late 50's.  Besides Fahey, the most famous proponent of this style is guitarist Leo Kottke.)

The bottom line is if you enjoy well-played Christmas music on an acoustic guitar this record is a must listen.  (Also, we can't be positive, but this might be the first acoustic guitar Christmas album ever.  Couldn't find any examples of this style of music before 1968!)   

Released on Fahey's own label, Takoma Records, it remains the best-selling release of his 40 year recording career.  Its really good from start to finish with the triumvirate of Side One's "Auld Lang Syne", "The Bells of St Marys" and "Good King Wenceslas" being the record's high point!

RATING: 4.5 gathering winter fuels out of 5




is known as American Primitivism.  

This is another 

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Hi-Fi Holidays: Christmas with Chet Atkins


Chet Atkins - "Christmas with Chet Atkins" (1961) - RCA Victor

Hello Friends,

Its snowing out and we've got a real gem on the Christmas turntable tonight courtesy of the Country Gentleman himself, Mr. Chet Atkins.

This record is definitely one of our favorites!  Laidback and atmospheric like colorful Christmas lights reflecting off a freshly laid snowdrift at sundown. 

Released in 1961, and produced by Atkins himself, the arrangements are spare and crisp. Not a note is wasted.  Accompaniments are provided mostly by the background vocals of the Anita Kerr singers. The star of the record, of course, is Chet's six-string. Similar to our previous record, Sinatra's A Jolly Christmas, Side One features more popular carols with Atkins playing the electric guitar playing while Side Two takes a more traditional approach with Atkins going unplugged.  

The entire record is great with "White Christmas" and "Silent Night" being particularly good!  His take on "Silver Bells", however, is nothing short of stunning.

(A side note: If you've heard this album before on the Razor & Tie CD release from 1997, you haven't heard this album!  Listen to this on record!  You won't be sorry!)

The snow is still falling outside, there's no cars on the road; inside its warm, the tree is lit and we're pretty lit ourselves!  We're going to flip this record once more and probably pass out on the couch!  To the Holidays!

RATING: 5 rye manhattans in a snowstorm out of 5  

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Hi-Fi Holidays: A Jolly Christmas

Frank Sinatra - "A Jolly Christmas from Frank Sinatra" (1957) - Capitol Records

Hello Friends,

We're kicking off our Holiday festivities tonight with some Ol' Blue Eyes on the turntable. 

Incidentally, we're also celebrating the Chairman on the Board's birthday today (December 12th)-- he would have been 98!

A Jolly Christmas is Sinatra's second holiday album and first holiday record for Capitol. With the chorus and orchestra arranged and conducted by frequent Sinatra collaborator, Gordon Jenkins, the record tows the line between the jazzy-sentimentality of Sinatra's earlier records and the light-hearted corniness of some his late 50's, early 60's recordings. 

Its a record of two sides.  Side One being the "fun" side with secular classics like "Jingle Bells", "The Christmas Song", "Mistletoe & Holly", "I'll Be Home for Christmas", "The Christmas Waltz" and "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas".

Side Two is the more religious side with carols like "Silent Night" & "Adeste Fideles".

Both sides are good, but be forewarned merrymakers, this is not exactly a swinging Christmas record. The songs and arrangements are excellent, but the tone is mellow and contemplative.  Tiki T. and I are enjoying this one admiring our newly decorated tree while enjoying a glass bottle of wine or two!

Frank Sinatra - The Christmas Waltz


Happy Birthday you big goomba! 

RATING: 4.5 oh by gosh by gollies out of 5