Songs You May Have Missed #414

boz

Boz Scaggs: “Sierra” (1994)

In 1994 Boz Scaggs delivered his first album for Virgin Records after nearly two decades with Columbia. The Some Change album sounded like a return to the warm, natural sound of his 70’s work and was arguably his best in years. The haunting “Sierra” is a highlight.

Songs You May Have Missed #413

adolf

Adolf Fredrik Girls Choir: “Vem Kan Segla (Who Can Sail?)” (2006)

Founded in 1971 by Bo Johansson, the Adolf Fredrik Girls Choir of Stockholm, Sweden is now ranked among the foremost in the world. It represents the Adolf Fredrik Music Classes, Sweden’s oldest specialized school, which dates from 1939 and was founded to allow children ages 11-16 an opportunity to develop their singing talents free of charge.

The results, as you can hear, are angelic.

“Who Can Sail?” is a solemn, dirge-like folk song from Swedish-speaking Finland.

Vem kan segla förutan vind,
vem kan ro utan åror,
vem kan skiljas från vännen sin
utan att fälla tårar?

Jag kan segla förutan vind,
jag kan ro utan åror,
men ej skiljas från vännen min
utan att fälla tårar.

Translation:

Who can sail without wind,
who can row without oars,
who can part from their
friend without shedding tears?

I can sail without wind,
I can row without oars,
but I cannot be separated from my
friend without shedding tears.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2025/04/15/songs-you-may-have-missed-775/

adolf 3

Songs You May Have Missed #412

pac air

Pacific Air: “Roses” (2012)

Info on this Los Angeles band is pretty scarce other than the following facts: They were formerly known as KO KO. Their 2012 EP is titled Long Live Koko and their full-length debut album is due June 11 of this year.

That and the fact that “Roses” is a catchy tune is all I can tell you. Their story has yet to be written.

Recommended Albums #48

ether

Steve Thorne: Into the Ether (2009)

Ironically in the era of music’s greatest-ever availability, more quality stuff goes unheard than ever before. The proliferation of releases today, combined with the rock genre’s less dominant status in the marketplace, have resulted in some very good rock albums going almost unnoticed.

thorne

British songwriter Steve Thorne’s Into the Ether is just a few years old and already out of print. I’m convinced it’s a better album than 90% of what sat on record store shelves for years in any of the past few decades–but so it goes for a musician whose style almost seeks out those cracks to fall between. He’s too British to be mass-marketed to Americans, too prog for straight rock fans, not prog enough for hardcore prog fans, too rock to be marketed as a singer-songwriter, too much of a singer-songwriter to be marketed as a rocker. And he’s way too low-profile to get much notice.

But he’s too good to be ignored.

The multi-instrumentalist Thorne enlisted a who’s who of high-caliber prog talent to record his third solo record: Pete Trawavas (of Marillion, Kino and Transatlantic) Nick D’virgilio (Spock’s Beard) Gavin Harrison (Porcupine Tree, King Crimson) Tony Levin (King Crimson, Peter Gabriel) John Mitchell (Arena, It Bites, Frost, Kino)…and on and on. They insure that there’s no fill, break or solo that’s merely dashed off. Each song is well-served with cracking performances by this all-star progressive rock lineup.

But is it a progressive rock album? I’d say it merely straddles the prog’s border with singer-songwriter rock. Although rather dark and dour in tone, it doesn’t set out to be particularly challenging, and other than the 7/8 time signature of “Black Dahlia” and a 5/4 moment here or there, it mostly lacks the rhythmic complexities that typically mark that genre.

The upside of that is, while prog album reviewers often commend an album that they refer to as “a thoroughly uncomfortable listen” or some such, Thorne’s clear objective is to make appealing music, even if his message is often a less than cheerful one. It’s hard to imagine any fan of melodic 70’s rock not appreciating a song like “Victims”, even if it is a rumination on the void we create by our self-imposed isolation from each other.

But if “Victims” isn’t hopeless enough, “Curtain” ought to do it. So convincing is its album ending “all is futility” statement and so heartfelt is Thorne’s lyric about the desire to bring down the thick red drapes (I was born by such fluke and I’m ready to die…) I honestly wondered if he’d make another album following Ether (he did). Still, it is beautifully rendered, as is the rest of Into the Ether.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2013/02/25/songs-you-may-have-missed-342/

Listen to: “Feathers”

Listen to: “Paper Tiger”

Listen to: “Black Dahlia”

Don’t miss: “Victims”

Listen to: “The End”

Listen to: “Curtain”

Songs You May Have Missed #411

winterpills

Winterpills: “Rogue Highway” (2012)

On Winterpills’ fifth album the Northampton, Massachusetts band have crafted another winsome batch of indie chamber pop and Shins-style rock. They’ve been at this for a bit now, and still undeservedly under the radar.

The harmony-tinged jangle-pop of “Rogue Highway” might bring Fleetwood Mac to mind just as the album’s gentler acoustic ballads evoke some of Christine McVie or Stevie Nicks’ softer moments. They share with the Mac and the Shins a knack for the less obvious, more insinuative harmony line.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/03/05/recommended-albums-10/

An Amazing ‘Evolution of Music’ in Under 5 Minutes

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