This week, my mother-in-law and I decided to pick the scariest new release we could find to share with you.By consensus between us, this week’s scariest music is:
Susan Tedeschi owns what is arguably the best blues voice to be found anywhere.The album is a sometimes funky set of blues-rock and soul that showcases her vocal pyrotechnics.If you’ve never heard of Tedeschi, you need to listen to this immediately.
A small ensemble of strings and voices that presents the beautiful sound of Jordanian music.Choral harmonies deliver expressive, heart-tugging songs over a background of oud and hand drums.
Black Milk creates a powerful, fresh soundscape for his rhymes.Seriously heavy backbeats with accents of trumpet, organ, and outer space electronics.Lyrics never stray far from creative self-promotion.
Rock backdrops support subtle songcraft.A basic lineup of guitar-bass-drums-and-sometimes-piano is doused in reverb, with an understated vocal finesse that sets it apart from other bands in this style.Snow Patrol is radio-ready, but likely to wear better than the majority of what’s getting airplay these days.
Aterciopelados play a sort of acid rock en espaƱol – artsy, psychedelic, and immensely hip.Guitar, bass, drums, and tenor-range vocals are refracted through a prism of sonic effects, and augmented with everything from tabla and ocarina to Tuvan-style singing.This one will split your mind open.
Breathe deeply and empty your body of tension with this cycle of slow, atmospheric pieces.Electric organ, vibraphone, and spare drums characterize the sound. Bohren & Der Club of Gore has invented a new genre that is the opposite of heavy metal: weightless metal.
This legendary guitar rock combo has been scoring high on the bombast-o-meter for decades.Their newest album is true to form.Shuffle it on your iPod, and you’d mistake the songs for deep cuts from earlier albums.This is a worthy AC/DC record, although I’d skip the trip to Wal-Mart and listen to it for free on their website:
Hank Williams III – Damn Right, Rebel Proud (country)
Serious country with a raw edge and attitude.His foul mouth dressing-down of the Grand Ole Opry is classic.This is alternative country in the same sense that his grandfather was an alternative to the highbrow country of his own day.
! Buena Vista Social Club – Buena Vista Social Club at Carnegie Hall (world)
A decade after the fact, you can finally hear what all the fuss about BVSC was about.The pristine production of the original studio release made these masters of Cuban son sound like a museum piece instead of a dance party.The concert recording has the hot sound and live energy that characterize the roots of salsa.If BVSC is still on your “I should listen to that someday” list, listen today, and listen to them live.
Now listen to the live version of Buena Vista Social Club “El Cuarto de Tula”
* Little BigTown – A Place to Land (country)
Hipster bands have capitalized on some pretty unusual influences, but I never thought I’d see the day that someone could make Fleetwood Mac sound cool again.Little BigTown poses larger-than-life vocal harmonies in a rootsy tableau with country overtones.An easy listen that manages to avoid being Easy Listening.
Menahan Street Band – Make the Road By Walking (jazz)
An all-star New York big band with veterans of funky groups like the Dap Kings and Antibalas.Surprisingly, it’s not the rhythm but the texture that’s the compelling part of this record, with horn-heavy instrumental soul laced with vibraphone and keyboards.
Williams’ unpolished vocal style has a love-it-or-hate-it appeal; I’m definitely in the love camp.A solid album of literate honky-tonk, including a duet with Elvis Costello and a random AC/DC cover
A quirky gem of Japanese pop.The instrumentation is expansive – xylophone, harmonium, steel drum, recorder – and the vocals are breezy.I can guarantee you that you haven’t heard anything quite like this before.
Sexton is an artist who takes the singer part of singer-songwriter seriously.He has a resonant voice moves freely from bluesy to sensitive to falsetto.The album is a live set from a recent tour of folk festivals.
Forget the three songs you’ve heard in endless rotation on classic rock radio.Pretenders have rediscovered the jagged soul of rock & roll and etched it into this record.They’ve traded in the Hall of Fame for the garage, and pumped up their sound with strong shots of blues and country.Possibly the best work they’ve ever done.
* Bob Dylan – Tell Tale Signs: The Bootleg Series Vol. 8 (folk)
Bob Dylan’s outtakes are better than 99% of other songwriter’s best.This series covers the period from 1989 to the present, when most agree he resumed making excellent music.It’s mostly simple and straightforward songs, some solo, others with a band, but with the singing in the spotlight.He’s at a point in his life where he’s got something to say and nothing to prove, which makes for some powerful music.
A global mosaic ofbeats, vocals, drums, and instruments ranging from piano to kora.Serious influences from Africa, India and Jamaica, with bursts of American techno.
Trippy.Molina’s repetitive patterns of affected vocals and percussion have a hypnotic quality.Her music has a global sensibility that seems to emanate from a parallel universe.
This list will give you a sense of where I'm coming from:
1. Radiohead - In Rainbows (rock) 2. Herbie Hancock - River: The Joni Letters (jazz) 3. Galactic - From the Corner to the Block (rap) 4. Chaka Khan - Funk This (R&B) 5. I'm Not There: Original Soundtrack - (folk) 6. The Silk Road Ensemble - New Impossibilities (classical) 7. Make Farris - Salvation in Lights (gospel) 8. Kenny Wayne Shepherd - Ten Days Out (blues) 9. M.I.A. - Kala (world) 10. Steve Earle - Washington Square Serenade (country)