Kris Delmhorst: “Short Work” (2003)
The Boston singer-songwriter explores betrayal and payback on this smart country shuffle.
See also: Songs You May Have Missed #504 | Every Moment Has A Song (edcyphers.com)
Art is the music we make from the bewildered cry of being alive. ~Maria Popova
29 Mar 2021 Leave a comment
in Songs You May Have Missed Tags: kris delmhorst, short work
Kris Delmhorst: “Short Work” (2003)
The Boston singer-songwriter explores betrayal and payback on this smart country shuffle.
See also: Songs You May Have Missed #504 | Every Moment Has A Song (edcyphers.com)
26 Mar 2021 Leave a comment
in Video of the Week Tags: sofia shkidchenko, yodeler
25 Mar 2021 Leave a comment
in General Posts Tags: carole kiing
(via PBS American Masters) by Tom Casciato
Music fans old enough to remember 1971 can be forgiven if they remember it as the year of Carole King. That was the year, after all, when the “Tapestry” hurricane hit American culture – hit and never really left. 14 million units sold, four Grammy awards, two No. 1 singles (“It’s Too Late” and “So Far Away”), 25th on Rolling Stone’s list of the all-time greatest albums – you get the point. When its 50th anniversary came around this year, it was rightly hailed by Esquire as “an enduring reminder of how art can stay engrained in our cultural consciousness.”
The thing a lot of people don’t remember, though, is that 1971 was the year Carole King released two No. 1 albums. She followed “Tapestry” with an album called simply “Music.” Released just in time for Christmas, it hit the top of the charts by January of ’72, and went on to become another platinum seller, the second most popular album of her stellar career. It would have been an unforgettable milestone for most any other artist…
22 Mar 2021 Leave a comment
in Songs You May Have Missed Tags: graham parker, long stem rose
Graham Parker: “Long Stem Rose” (1992)
From his atypically ballad-heavy Burning Questions album, “Long Stem Rose” finds the erstwhile British pub rocker chanelling McCartney–or perhaps more accurately, George Martin.
Backed by a string quartet recorded “dry” to give it the intimacy of Macca’s “Yesterday” Parker successfully wrings every ounce of pathos from this pretty tune.
See also: Recommended Albums #37 | Every Moment Has A Song (edcyphers.com)