Lee Scratch Perry's Visions of Paradise

4466.jpg

I have this personal website compartmentalized because I realize that not every one of my friends is interested in exactly the same set of things that I am. And that’s not only “OK”, it’s beautiful.

However, I think everyone should love Lee “Scratch” Perry. If you’re not familiar with this brilliant artist, I suggest you get familiar with Google.

And I also suggest starting with this off-beat documentary: Lee Scratch Perry's Vision of Paradise | True Godfather of Reggae.


  • Follow Lee “Scratch” Perry at Facebook

  • Follow Lee “Scratch” Perry at Twitter

  • Purchase Lee “Scratch” Perry’s music at Amazon


Dubspace :: The Harmonidub Edition

Dubmonica3.jpg

Another installment in the Dubspace series, this time highlighting harmonica.

I know not everyone likes harmonica in their dub (Brainwashed says of the Lee “Scratch” Perry tracks featured here as including: “a few questionable harmonica intrusions”) but piss on it. Music-loving is subjective and I like harmonica in my dub. Maybe you will too.

This playlist features some repeat artists from the same albums so I’ve just included the albums represented for the visuals rather than every track.

Enjoy.

Tracklisting:

  1. ‘Melody Maker’ by Keith Hudson

  2. ‘Verdict in Dub’ by Clive Chin

  3. ‘Whatever We Do’ by Ruts D.C.

  4. ‘Enlightened’ by Lee “Scratch” Perry

  5. ‘Last of the Jestering’ by Clive Chin

  6. ‘Militant’ by Ruts D.C.

  7. ‘Space Craft’ by Lee “Scratch” Perry

  8. ‘Shi-cago’ by Dennis Bovell

  9. ‘Wire Dub’ by Clive Chin

  10. ‘Sonny’s Lettah (Anti-Sus Poem) by Linton Kwesi Johnson

  11. ‘Rhythm Collision’ by Ruts D.C.

  12. ‘Heavy Rainford’ by Lee “Scratch” Perry

  13. ‘Dubwise Situation’ by Clive Chin

  14. ‘Melody Maker Version 2 (Harmonica and Bongo Drum) by The Chuckles (from the Hudson Affair compilation)



Joe Henry Live At Sessions at West 54th

Screen Shot 2020-08-08 at 2.43.27 PM.png

Joe Henry live for Sessions at West 54th, season 02 with an introduction by Billy Bob Thornton pretending to be Joe Henry. Sadly there is more Billy Bob than actual Joe and music on this but the two songs featured are great. Have you seen the full set anywhere around?


Setlist:

  • “Like She Was A Hammer”

  • “Great Lake”


  • Visit Joe Henry’s official website

  • Follow Joe Henry at Facebook

  • Follow Joe Henry at Twitter


Dubspace (02) :: A Holiday At The Sea Playlist

dubspacetat.jpg

A Holiday at the Sea playlist of 20 more Dub heavy hitters.




Tracklisting:

  1. “Binshaker Dub Plate” by Twilight Circus Dub Sound System

  2. “Black Rock” by Black Jade

  3. “Daisy Temple” by Serge Gainsbourg

  4. “Fence Dub” by Vital Dub

  5. “Mother Liza” by Jimmy Radway

  6. “Fire Bun” by Ja-Man All Stars

  7. “Worrier” by Joe Gibbs

  8. “Dub MPLA” by Tappa Zukie

  9. “Bubble Up” by Wayne Jarrett

  10. “Zombie Zones” by Dennis Bovell

  11. “Dub To The Vein” by Skin, Flesh & Bones

  12. “Jungle Shuffle” by Morwell Unlimited

  13. “Satisfied Dub” by Ossie Hibert

  14. “Dub Out” by Oku Onoura

  15. “JBC Days & Proper Education Dub” by Mikey Dread

  16. “White Whale” by Ranking Barnabas

  17. “Dem Never Know” by Rhythm & Sound (with Jah Cotton)

  18. “Tempo Dub” by Rupie Edwards All Stars

  19. “Channel One In Dub” by Linval Thompson

  20. “Genesis 1-11” by Sly and the Revolutionaries



Dubspace :: A Holiday At The Sea Playlist

Dubspace.jpg

Clasp the helmet and lower yourself into the Dubspace.

20 Dub heavy hitters.

Enjoy.



Tracklisting:

  1. “Love and Fire” by Ruts DC

  2. “Independent Intavenshan” by Linton Kwesi Johnson

  3. “Black Right” by Keith Hudson

  4. “Staga Dub” by King Tubby

  5. “Babylon Gone Down” by Yabby You

  6. “Jumping Jack” by Herman Chin Loy

  7. “Above and Beyond” by Lee “Scratch” Perry

  8. “In King David’s Style” by Mad Professor

  9. “Some Bizarre” by African Head Charge

  10. “Back Weh” by Prince Far I

  11. “Capitol Radio Rock” by Sir Coxsone Sound

  12. “East Of The River Nile” by Augustus Pablo

  13. “Higher Ranking” by Dennis Bovell

  14. “Blood On His Lips” by Scientist

  15. “Refraction” by Phase Selector Sound

  16. “Swords of Vengeance” by Prince Jammy

  17. “Stalag” by Winston Riley

  18. “Theme Dub” by Jah Lloyd

  19. “The Road Is Rough” by Tommy Cowan

  20. “Sata Dub” by Errol “Flabba” Holt


  • Browse other Holiday at the Sea Music Playlists










Playlist: Apothecary of Wonders

Screen Shot 2020-06-11 at 9.45.29 PM.png

Here is a fun mix I’ve been listening to in the office lately. I thought you might like it.

Sort of works with a musical mood, sort of doesn’t. Just the way I like it.

An international flavor travelogue.

An auditory exploration.

Tracklist:

  1. “Wandering Melodic Road “ by The Tune

  2. “Nobody Knew The Time” by Beasts of Paradise

  3. “Reflection” by Faran Ensemble

  4. “Chyraa Khoor” Huun-Huur-Tu

  5. “Signs” by Eishan Ensemble

  6. “The Imam” by Sun City Girls

  7. “Junkanoo” by Exuma

  8. “Bismillah” by Sarathy Korwar

  9. “Biba Sada Dil Mor De” by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan

  10. “Shudh Sarang” by Pramod Kumar

  11. “Farah 'Alaiyna (Joy Upon Us)” by Ahmed Abdul-Malik

  12. “Mustt Mustt (Extended)” by Kiran Ahluwalia

  • Browse other Holiday at the Sea playlists.

  • Visit the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow page where you can find:

    • “Wandering Melodic Road “ by The Tune on Episode 10.

    • "Nobody Knew The Time" by Beasts of Paradise on Episode 13.

    • "Reflection" by Faran Ensemble on Episode 03.

    • “Chyraa Khoor” by Huun-Huur-Tu on Episode 19.

    • "”Esoterica Of Abyssynia” by Sun City Girls on Episode 26.

      • Browse other Holiday at the Sea posts about Sun City Girls

    • "Junkanoo" by Exuma on Episode 10.

    • "Bismillah" by Sarathy Korwar on Episode 08.

      • Browse other Holiday at the Sea posts about Sarathy Korwar

    • "Shudh Sarang" by Pramod Kumar on Episode 03.

    • “Farah 'Alaiyna (Joy Upon Us)” by Ahmed Abdul-Malik on Episode 28.

    • "Mustt Mustt (Extended)" by Kiran Ahluwalia on Episode 02.

      • Browse other Holiday at the Sea posts about Kiran Ahluwalia.

  • Browse other Holiday at the Sea posts about Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.

  • Download a PDF of the Jewel Case art if you’re in to that sort of thing.

Grateful Dead: Playing In The Jam (A Holiday At The Sea Mix)

Screen Shot 2020-06-03 at 12.52.41 PM.png

Ever wonder what “Playing In The Band” might sound like as an extended instrumental free-jazz-space-rock suite? Well, I did.

Inspired by Save Your Face and their various Grateful Dead mixes, I edited six different performances of “Playing In The Band” into an instrumental suite.

I’m not entirely happy with a couple of the transitions, but I dig how it turned out overall, seeing as how I am not a professional, I didn’t actually spend that much time on this, and I really only made this for myself to listen to either while I work or commuting. Enjoy.

Here are the deets for the six pieces making up the Suite:

  • 00:00 - 11:39 :: 09.21.72 at the The Spectrum in Philadelphia, PA (released as Dicks’s Picks 36)

  • 11:39-25:45 :: 03.24.73 at the The Spectrum in Philadelphia, PA

  • 25:245 - 34:47 :: 11.10.73 at Winterland Arena in San Francisco, CA (released as part of Winterland 1973: The Complete Recordings)

  • 34:47 - 44:09 :: 05.17.77 at Memorial Coliseum, U of Alabama, MS (released as part of May 1977)

  • 44:09: 52:31 :: 05.28.77 at at Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT (released as To Terrapin: Hartford '77)

  • 52:31 - 56:27 :: 05.28.77 at at Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT (released as To Terrapin: Hartford '77)

I chose these performances for no real reason other than that this is the time-period of the Dead that I listen to most and these shows happened to be on my laptop when I decided to try out this idea.

And if all that weren’t enough goodness, here’s an instrumental edit of the mammoth “Playing In The Band” from the Pacific Northwest '73-'74: Believe it If You Need It (Live) set (Live at Hec Edmundson Pavillion, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 5/21/74).

Enjoy.

  • Visit the Grateful Dead’s official website.

  • Follow the Grateful Dead on Facebook.

  • Follow Grateful Dead on Twitter.

  • Purchase Grateful Dead music on Amazon.

Oki Ainu Dub Band

1_3jhfbe44an7umt7fxawly.jpg

Oki Kano (加納 沖, Kanō Oki) was born in Hokkaido, to a Japanese mother and an Ainu father (renowned wood sculptor Bikki Sunazawa) and grew up in Kanagawa Prefecture. After graduating in crafts at the Tokyo University of Fine Arts and Music, he moved to New York in 1987, where he worked as special effects artist on film productions. He returned to Japan in 1992, and was presented with his first tonkori - the traditional stringed instrument of the Karafuto Ainu.

Oki uses the tonkori, an Ainu stringed instrument, in his performances and mixes traditional Ainu music with reggae, dub and other styles of world music. He also plays guitar and traditional Ainu percussion instruments.

Dive in to the band’s music.

First up is “Suma Mukar”:

Next is the title track from the Sakhalin Rock album Sakhalin Rock.

And here is a live performance

“Filmed at the FMM Sines Festival in 2007, this is a traditional Ainu bow and arrow dance performed by Futoshi Ikabe, to a deep dub mix by the band with Naoyuki Uchida at the desk.”

  • Visit the official website.

  • Follow Oki Dub Ainu Band at Facebook.

  • Purchase Oki Dub Ainu Band’s music at Amazon.

  • Hear "マナウレラ - Matnaw Rera" by Oki Dub Ainu Band on Episode 06 of the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow.

"Egad Józsi, and (what about) the mask?" (A Holiday At The Sea Quarantine Playlist)

Screen Shot 2020-05-04 at 4.02.12 PM.png

Here’s a Quarantine-inspired playlist. With a story arc of sorts. Sort of like a concept album, except it’s a mix.

Curious? Why don’t you give it a listen. I’d like to hear someone else try and describe the journey of discovery I was trying to capture here. What do you think? How would you tell this story?


Playlist:

  1. “Cold Hard Times” by Lee Hazlewood

  2. “Don’t Come Around Here No More” by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers

  3. “We Will Become Silhouettes” by the Postal Service

  4. “T.B. Sheets” by Van Morrison

  5. “Sorry You’re Sick” by Ted Hawkins

  6. “It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)” by R.E.M.

  7. “American Heartache” by the Wood Brothers

  8. “Down With Disease” by Phish

  9. “Down With Desperation” by Sammy Brue

  10. “Sometimes It’s Hard” by Rainer

  11. “Consider the Ravens” by Dustin Kensrue

  12. “Love Is Everywhere (Beware)” by Wilco

  13. “Shelter From The Storm” by Bob Dylan

  14. “Love Knows (No Borders” by Howe Gelb

  15. “I’ll Be Your Shelter” by the Housemartins

  16. “Sisters and Brothers” by the Vespers

  • Browse other Holiday at the Sea playlists.

Ali Akbar Khan: Live from Delhi (1981)

Screen Shot 2020-04-12 at 12.08.06 PM.png

Today we feature a 1981 concert from Sarod master Ali Akbar Khan in Delhi.

I originally got this recording in my tape-trading days by mistake. I was doing a big trade with a guy, like 10-12 shows. Mostly jazz/funk/groove/jam type stuff (Medeski Martin and Wood, Galactic, Greyboy Allstars, that kind of thing). When the other package arrived, there was one unmarked CDR. I e-mailed the guy and asked what it was because when I put it in my player, no information came up. The other person said they had not meant to that CDR to be in my box, it was supposed to go to someone else, but that it was a recording of Ali Akbar Khan in concert.

In all honesty, I was not ready for this music then and the CDR sat in a pile for years. Then, one day a few years ago, as my musical palette was expanding, I not only pulled out the concert but looked it up online to learn more. The fantastic Flat, Black, and Classical came to the rescue with a full-write-up! Included in their piece are the following observations and details:

The two pieces on this cassette almost sound like two different concerts (which could be the case). An alternative explanation for the differences in aural character between the two is that adjustments at the mixing desk were made during the show, which can often occur.

The first piece is an alap and jod section of Raga Miyan ki Malhar. This has a slightly dull upper end and some minimal distortion at the dynamic peaks. I would have though it was an issue with azimuth adjustment, but the fact is that the second piece sounds more full and with a crisp upper end in comparison. Because of the way cassettes are made, a cut had to be made in the longer piece so that the sides were about equal in timing. The first section of Raga Desh Malhar is on the same side of the tape as the entire alap and jod of Raga Miyan Ki Malhar, but sounds exactly like the rest of the raga on the other side of the tape. So it was not a case of one side of the tape being played with incorrect azimuth. I stitched together the longer piece in a way that is noticeable but not jarring.
Overall, it is an extremely enjoyable live performance from Ali Akbar Khan and tabla maestro Shankar Ghosh, who unfortunately died in late January of this year.


Ali Akbar Khan: Sarod
Shankar Ghosh: Tabla

Side 1: Raga Miyan Ki Malhar: alap and jod
Side 2: Raga Desh Malhar: gats in vilambit (slow) teentaal and medium

I don’t know where your musical palette is at these days, but I highly recommend serenading your Quarantine with some Sarod.

Hiss Golden Messenger Defend Public Schools

a0905398008_16 (1).jpg

North Carolina’s Hiss Golden Messenger is one of my favorite current live acts going. And not just because lead-man M.C. Taylor’s wife is a public school teacher like my own. But that certainly helps.

Hiss Golden Messenger has fought to remain a voice of light in the growing darkness. To see how they have been this for me, just browse some of the posts marked “Hiss Golden Messenger” here at Holiday at the Sea. Taylor’s honest approach to fighting for hope is something that resonates with me the way few current artists have.

The band’s new project, Forward, Children: A fundraiser for Durham Public Schools students, sees the release of a live recording from one of the band’s home-town concerts on 01/11/20 of this very year; just before the Quarantine hit. Taylor says of the release on the band’s Facebook page:

Good morning! Today, we put out into the world ‘Forward, Children: A fundraiser for Durham Public Schools students.’ This is a fully multi-tracked, mixed and mastered 15-song live Hiss album from our performance at the Cat's Cradle—one of our most venerable hometown venues in the North Carolina Triangle—on January 11th, 2020. It is available for download on Bandcamp now and will hit all streaming services on April 3rd. ALL proceeds—every penny—from this record benefit students in the Durham Public Schools system that are currently struggling with food insecurity in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak. At a time when anxiety seems to be our default emotion, I realize that this is a big ask, but I implore you to donate as much as you can to help feed our kids that depend on public school in order to eat. And while listening on the streaming services is the way that many of us interact with music these days, purchasing this album on Bandcamp puts far more food on the table. Dig deep, please. There are so many people to thank in the making of this album—so many that I could easily take up the rest of this section naming them all. Special love, however, goes to the Hiss band: Phil Cook, Chris Boerner, Alex Bingham and Al Smith, and our engineer Luc Suèr, who recorded and mixed this show. When I hear a performance like this in light of where we all are now, it’s amazing what stands out to my ear: Community. Gathered joy. Spirit, and a little bit of sorrow. What a Saturday night feels like in our little shared corner of the universe. May we find those times again soon. Changed, perhaps, for the better. Thank you all for listening.

Stream the album here:

Purchase the album (and help Durham public schools) here.

  • Visit Hiss Golden Messenger’s official website.

  • Purchase the album (and help Durham public schools) here.

  • Follow Hiss Golden Messenger at Facebook.

  • Follow Hiss Golden Messenger at Twitter.

  • Support Hiss Golden Messenger at Bandcamp.

  • Purchase Hiss Golden Messenger’s music at Amazon.

Fine China: 'Trees At Night'

Screen Shot 2020-03-22 at 6.58.12 PM.png

I love to promote local music.

Phoenix guitar-pop heroes Fine China have returned with their new single ‘Trees At Night.’

Here’s what singer / songwriter Rob Withem has to say about the track:

“In my home growing up there was an odd assortment of vinyl records among which were new age type albums by artists like Andreas Vollenweider and Mannheim Steamroller, and a whole stack of Windam Hill samplers from the early 80’s. I always was drawn to the songs with nature sounds, songs that sort of had a setting in which they existed. With ‘Trees at Night’ I wanted to combine that approach with pure pop music. So a song not only is a song but it lives in a place.“

Though the track is certainly not “New Age,” you can certainly feel that touchpoint. The track definitely has an 80’s feel and captures a nostalgic move but remains original and engaging.

Lyrics :

If you asked me for a moment
If you told me as a friend
That I'm going on alone

In the shadow of the moonlight
There's a ghost upon the room
I'm going on alone

Faces in the leaves speak with voices we deceive not
Rivers get the land both beautiful and damned
But it's on my mind and it's in the trees at night

I don't want to be a lion and I never was a lamb
Is my heart beating or is it just a hologram

Faces in the leaves speak with voices we deceive not
And the rain waters the land for the lonely and the grand
But it's on my mind and it's in the trees at night

  • Visit Fine China’s official website.

  • Follow Fine China at Twitter.

  • Visit Fine China’s page at the Velvet Blue Music page.

  • Purchase Fine China’s music at Amazon.

Frank Lenz: Pyramid

ZJPI8iuQ.jpeg

Nearly every piece you read about Frank Lenz begins the same way; something along the lines of:

“Frank Lenz is likely a name you’re not familiar with. But it’s just as likely that you’ve heard him play. Lenz started learning the drums at age 8 and is an accomplished studio drummer who has played with Pedro The Lion, the Lassie Foundation, Duraluxe, Richard Swift and Starflyer 59 and the Weepies, just to name a few.”

Once you read it, it’s understandable why so many pieces begin this way. That’s an impressive resume but it doesn’t tell the whole story. Lenz is also an accomplished songwriter, composer and player in his own right. Allmusic tries to describe Lenz’ solo material this way:

“After playing with several indie bands, Lenz developed his original work as a solo musician, mixing the pop of Burt Bacharach with the rock of Steely Dan, along with jazz fusion and Stevie Wonder-style R&B.”

The Pyramid, Lenz’ latest release (out now) is none of those things. Though not a score, listeners might be tempted to think otherwise. CD Baby describes the album as: “drum and synthesizer music,” noting: “all analog instruments and recording

At six songs just under 30 minutes, Pyramid might seem like an EP but this is not throwaway music. Nor is it casual music. Nor is it a soundtrack (unless you just play it along to life). It is certainly immersive music but it is much too engaging to relegated to the background. Sometimes cacophonous, sometimes groovy, this likely isn’t going to be something you throw on for your dinner party. But you will definitely want to throw on the headphones and give it some attention. This is layered music made with care that deserves to be listened to with attention. The liner notes say:

Pyramid was recorded over 4 years while testing different synthesizers and experimenting with sounds that would translate into the grainy expanse. With a focus on analog warmth and depth the record was recorded with the least amount of digital signature, source sounds were recorded digitally but everything else was balanced and mixed using only analog equipment and finally committed to tape. The hope was to create the sound of sand and sky and mystery. Although sounding improvised, the music was arranged deliberately almost through-composed with the intent of creating a constant ebb and flow of tension and release.”

Notice what the notes say: “With a focus on analog warmth and depth the record was recorded with the least amount of digital signature, source sounds were recorded digitally but everything else was balanced and mixed using only analog equipment and finally committed to tape.” And that it took four years. The care and attention to detail is apparent. This is a rich, warm sounding record where the ambiance is as much a player as the notes being played.

Lenz says that “The hope was to create the sound of sand and sky and mystery” and sometimes it’s the reviewers job to just get out of the way and just point at things. I have lived with this music for a couple of weeks now and I’ve struggled with the right poetic descriptions but I can’t do better than “the sound of sand and sky and mystery.”

The album ebbs and flows through, jingles, jangles, clinks and clanks, sometimes evoking the feeling of free-jazz (album opener “Drumb Solo”) or the nearest-to-straight-rock the album gets with one of my favorite tracks from the album “Metatronix,” where Lenz barely hints at the funky grooves he’s often known for. The piece swirls with feedback and gurgles with notes just beneath the haze, all while Lenz’ propulsive percussion keeps things moving forward.

Penultimate track, the playfully titled “Plenty Sex Teen Erection” has the releases first official video. It’s also the closest we get to some of the groove Lenz is known for. A propulsive beat sits just underneath an undulating synth line that brings you in and wraps you up in its repetition without becoming repetitive. The track would feel right at home on a Krautrock compilation and I definitely mean that as a compliment. As one reviewer says on the song’s Youtube page: “This song and video rocks my world. I want to roll around in ketchup and mustard now.” I mean, if you’re going to chase “the sound of sand and sky and mystery,” why not do it rolling around in ketchup and mustard, right?

“Tiger Beat Singalong,” the album closer plays with enough retro feels that one might find it at home on the Stranger Things soundtrack, though it’s Lenz’ percussion that keeps the music grounded with just a hint of swing while the music builds, becoming more urgent, almost with a post-rock feel.

Pyramid is a welcome addition to an already rich catalog and will be the soundtrack (though it is not a soundtrack album) to my drive home tonight. I know it’s probably not considered good form to end my review by quoting another review, but, as PopMatters says:

“At just over 24 minutes, Pyramid could almost be considered an EP. The run time is probably the least appealing aspect of this tremendous, playful, weirdly executed, and highly enjoyable album. Frank Lenz has engineered a "mad scientist" vibe that is both quirky and groove-oriented, and the listener can't help but wish there was more of it.”

Now where’s the ketchup and mustard?

Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp 03 by Jeich Ould Badou

a1449156224_16.jpg

Over the past couple of months, I have been pleased to pass along the announcement that 10 years later, the Sahel Sounds was following up their fantastic Music From Saharan Cellphones compilation with the ground-breaking compilation, Music from Saharan WhatsApp.

“For the year of 2020, Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp." Every month, we'll be releasing an EP from a musical group in the Sahel. Every album will be recorded on a cellphone, and transmitted over WhatsApp, and uploaded to Bandcamp - where it will live for one month only. Available for pay as you want, 100% of the sales will go directly to the artist or group. After one month, the album will be replaced by another one, until the end of the year.”

The label says of this third installment:

“This month we go to Mauritania to one of the premiere players of the tidnit, Jeich Ould Badou. Coming from a hereditary family of musicians, Jeich's tidnit (the Mauritanian lute) is updated, with built in phasers and pre-amps. Jeich is well known in Nouakchott, where he regularly gigs in weddings and invitations. Here he presents a series of WZN recordings, instrumental classic Mauritania music, for dancing: three songs recorded at home with the drum machine, and one live invitation recording with percussion.”

credits

released March 16, 2020

Jeich Ould Badou - Tidnit
Boss DR-770 Drum Machine (Tracks 1, 2, 3)

Recorded by Jeich Ould Badou on iPhone 7, March 2020
Album Art by Christopher Kirkley

Tuareg Guitar: Welcome To Saharan Desert Rock

Screen Shot 2020-03-13 at 7.35.33 PM.png

I have made my love of Tuareg Guitar music known to you, dear friends. So the following mix should come as no surprise. As if any of you are waiting around to be surprised by the music mixes I post. But, hey, you go have your own weird daydreams, alright?!

The Sahel Sounds Records Tuareg Guitar page says:

“Tuareg guitar has become one of the most popular folk music in the contemporary Sahara. Originally political ballads, created in exile in Libya, today the sound has expanded to encompass everything from introspective love songs, blistering psychedelic rock, and synthesizer and drum machine. At its core, the music still relies on poetry to transmit a message, carried by the pentatonic solos of a guitar.”

Here is a mix of songs from some of my current favorite Tuareg albums.

Tracklisting:

  1. “Itous” (Live) by Tamikrest

  2. “Nar djenetbouba” by Tinariwen

  3. “Wiwasharnine” by Mdou Moctar

  4. “Idrach” by Timasniwen

  5. “Afous Dafous” by Tartit

  6. “Ici Bas” by Songhoy Blues

  7. “ASCO” by Ali Farka Touré

  8. “Chebiba” by Tallawit Timbouctou

  9. “Imigradan” by Les Filles de Illighadad

  10. “Alemin” by Group Inerane

  11. “Tenere” by Afous d'Afous

  12. “Tekana” by Etran Finatawa

  13. “Dounia” by Toumast

  14. "Amidinin Senta Aneflas” by Terakaft

  15. “Tamudre” by Imarhan

  16. “Ameji (douleur)” by Imaran

  17. Tumastin by Amanar

  • Browse other Holiday at the Sea playlists.

Hope Is A Mood More Than A Color (A Holiday At The Sea Playlist)

Screen Shot 2020-03-15 at 3.07.39 PM.png

I was going through some old files on my computer the other day and I came across the art for a mix called “Hope Is A Mood More Than A Color”. I don’t remember making this mix but I do remember listening to it in the car.

I have racked my brain trying to remember the circumstances of putting together this mix and I can’t. Oh well, because the title and mood of the mix certainly seemed like they would be appropriate for the current coronavirus social distancing experiment. So, no matter where you currently find yourself on the social distancing scale, enjoy some music:

Tracklisting:

  • “Distress Signal” by Jeremy Casella

  • “Guess I’m Doing Fine” by Beck

  • “Don’t Be Sad” by Whiskeytown

  • “Fires” by David Ramirez

  • “Day O Day (Love So Free)” by Hiss Golden Messenger

  • Shelter From The Storm by Bob Dylan

  • “Wild Horses” by the Rolling Stones

  • “Everything (Overture")” by Chris Bathgate

  • “Hope” by Dirty Three

  • “Old Man’s Town” by the Hollands!

  • “Keep Your Head Up” by Ben Howard

  • “Headache” by Seryn

  • “Letting Go And Holding On” by Shawn Skinner and the Men of Reason

  • “Western States” by Matt Haeck

  • “Good Good End” by Waterdeep

  • Browse all the Holiday at the Sea playlists.


Gratefully Dead With Pigpen

Screen Shot 2020-03-11 at 9.23.10 AM.png

I started a mix of some of my favorite Pigpen Grateful Dead tunes in 2019 around the time of his birthday (09/08) with the plan of posting it at the anniversary of his death (03/08). A few months ago, I finished the mix I wanted to post, did some quick artwork if anyone wanted it. And then I forgot about it. And March 08 came and went and the post sat in my Drafts. So here it is.

These are some of my favorite Pigpen Grateful Dead. Tracks. What are some of your favorites?


Tracklisting:

Next Time You See Me

Mr. Charlie

Easy Wind

Hard To Handle

Turn On Your Love Light

Smokestack Lightning

Hurts Me Too

Big Boss Man


Source Material:

Here is where each track came from if you’re interested in that sort of thing:

Next Time You See Me: “Hundred Year Hall” (04/26/72: Jahrhundert Halle Frankfurk, Germany)

Mr. Charlie: Europe ‘72 (disc two)

Easy Wind: Workingman’s Dead

Hard To Handle: The Honky Chateau” (06-21-71 )

Turn On Your Love Light: “Hundred Year Hall” (04/26/72: Jahrhundert Halle Frankfurk, Germany)

Smokestack Lightning: History of the Grateful Dead, Vol. 1 Bear's Choice (02/08/70)

Hurts Me Too: Europe ‘72 (disc two)

Big Boss Man: Skull & Roses


  • Download the mix as individual files including jewel case artwork.

  • Visit the Grateful Dead’s official website.

  • Follow the Grateful Dead on Facebook.

  • Follow Grateful Dead on Twitter.

  • Stream the entire show at Live Music Archive.

  • Purchase Grateful Dead music on Amazon.

  • Purchase A Long Strange Trip: The Inside History of the Grateful Dead by Dennis McNally at Amazon.

  • Purchase The Dead book: A social history of the Grateful Dead by Hank Harrison at Amazon.

Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp"

0015022684_10.jpg

The Sahel region of northwestern Africa, spans several countries including: Mauritania, Mali, and Niger, and includes dozens of languages and dialects. This region produces some of my favorite music in the world (browse my posts tagged “Tuareg”). And one of my favorite labels putting out some of my favorite music is Sahel Sounds.

Pitchfork says that at least part of the reason label owner Christopher Kirkley chose to work in the Sahel region was “in part because it was so hard to find English-language information about it.” The label’s website says:

“We work directly with artists that we represent and aim to have input and control over artistic endeavors. All profits are shared 50/50. We’re committed to using culture as a means of communication, helping our artists build careers, and listening to good music.”

Preview the trailer for 2016 German trailer about the label (which is available to watch at Amazon Prime):

In 2010, the label put out the terrific and fascinating Music From Saharan Cellphones compilation. The compilation’s Bandcamp page provides some context:

a0423370325_10.jpg

“Music from Saharan cellphones is a compilation of music collected from memory cards of cellular phones in the Saharan desert.

In much of West Africa, cellphones are are used as all purpose multimedia devices. In lieu of personal computers and high speed internet, the knockoff cellphones house portable music collections, playback songs on tinny built in speakers, and swap files in a very literal peer to peer Bluetooth wireless transfer.”

The compilation not only helped highlight music from the region but was, for many, the first exposure to Tuareg guitar wizard Mdou Moctar, whose album Ilana (The Creator) was one of my favorites of 2019. Now, 10 years later, the label presents the follow-up to the ground-breaking compilation, Music from Saharan WhatsApp.

“For the year of 2020, Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp." Every month, we'll be releasing an EP from a musical group in the Sahel. Every album will be recorded on a cellphone, and transmitted over WhatsApp, and uploaded to Bandcamp - where it will live for one month only. Available for pay as you want, 100% of the sales will go directly to the artist or group. After one month, the album will be replaced by another one, until the end of the year.”

The label profiles the first installment at the Bandcamp page:

“This month's release comes from Agadez guitar band, Etran de L'Aïr. Translated to "Star's of Agadez," Etran is one of the longest running wedding bands in a city renowned for guitar. Constantly playing in the outdoor weddings, both in the city and the surrounding countryside, Etran play exhaustive concerts, late into the night. Even for a guitar band, they push the instrument to the extreme, with three guitars playing simultaneously, soloing over one another, creating a dreamy cacophony of sound. This session was recorded at night in their home in Abala, just outside the center of Agadez. "We invited friends over to the home, for encouragement," says Moussa "Abindi" Ibra. "But we asked them not to make too much noise, for the sake of the recording."

Preview the first EP here:

Head over to the Bandcamp page to download the first installment and track future releases.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Facebook.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Twitter.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Youtube.

  • Support Sahel Sounds at Bandcamp.

  • Browse “Sahel Sounds” at Amazon.

Holiday at the Sea's Favorite Music of 2019

Screen Shot 2019-12-07 at 6.55.45 PM.png

2019 has been a great year for music. From 30-minute mind-melting jams to Tuareg guitar and all kinds in between. I LOVE year-end lists. I love seeing what other people loved, especially if I can find something I hadn’t heard before. And to a lesser extent, who doesn’t like having their tastes confirmed by people much cooler?

But I don’t necessarily like ranking everything. After all, every list is subjective. And is there really any music that is “best”? Maybe you preferred one album to others, but does that really mean it’s “better”? Excuse me while I step off of my soapbox.

And I don’t like not hearing what people recommend. So, as you already know, I made a four-volume mix of some of my favorite music of the year, which I hope you’ve already checked out. If not, feel free to do so here and here and here and here. Also, just one more time of review, I chose 50 songs this year but only 49 albums since ‘Sideways’ by Seryn was released as a single.

Now that you’ve had a chance to to hear the songs, here is the complete list in alphabetical order.

  • I Was Real by 75 Dollar Bill

  • Mandatory Reality by Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society

  • Ancestral Recall by Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah

  • U.F.O.F. by Big Thief

  • Sahari by Aziza Brahim

  • RE_CORDIS by Bruno Bavota

  • i,i by Bon Iver

  • V by The Budos Band

  • African Giant by Burna Boy

  • Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest by Bill Callahan

  • Ghosteen by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds

  • All My Relations by Cochemea

  • A Good Time by Davido

  • Grow Towards The Light by Dire Wolves

  • Sun Cycle / Elk Jam by Elkhorn

  • Pianoworks by Eluvium

  • Blue Values by Eamon Fogarty

  • All Time Present by Chris Forsyth

  • Gold Past Life by Fruit Bats

  • One Of The Best Yet by Gang Starr

  • One Step Behind by Garcia Peoples

  • The Unseen In Between by Steve Gunn

  • Back At The House by Hemlock Ernst and Kenny Segal

  • The Gospel According to Water Joe Henry

  • Terms of Surrender by Hiss Golden Messenger

  • More Arriving by Sarathy Korwar

  • Miri by Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba

  • Sauropoda by L'Eclair

  • Ilana (The Creator) by Mdou Moctar

  • Stars Are The Light by Moon Duo

  • Three Chords and the Truth by Van Morrison

  • All Mirrors by Angel Olsen

  • Desire Path by One Eleven Heavy

  • Phoenix by Pedro the Lion

  • Rainford by Lee “Scratch” Perry

  • Purple Mountains by Purple Mountains

  • Rose City Band by Rose City Band

  • ‘Sideways’ by Seryn

  • Out of Darkness by Some Dark Hollow

  • Illegal Moves by Sunwatchers

  • Amankor / The Exile by Tartit

  • Amadjar by Tinariwen

  • Preserves by Matt Valentine

  • Father of the Bride by Vampire Weekend

  • Remind Me Tomorrow by Sharon Van Etten

  • Come On Up To The House: Women Sing Waits by Various Artists

  • Water Weird by Wet Tuna

  • Ode To Joy by Wilco

  • The Sisypheans by Xylouris White

  • Walk Through The Fire by Yola

///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

  • Listen to Volume 01 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

  • Listen to Volume 02 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

  • Listen to Volume 03 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

  • Listen to Volume 04 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

    ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

Holiday at the Sea’s Favorite Music Label of 2019

L-493271-1462371599-8187.jpeg.jpg

My Favorite music label of the year would have to be, without a doubt, Brooklyn’s Beyond Beyond is Beyond. Self-describes as: "“Music for Heads, by Heads,” which just about sums it up. More a vibe than a genre. A way of thinking than a particular style.

With five out of my favorite 49 albums of the year; (Dire Wolves, Garcia Peoples, L'Eclair, One Eleven Heavy, and Matt Valentine (plus, if I had expanded my list or included an “Honorable Mentions” section, this list would have expanded even more. That De Lorians is really good to mention only one more), no other single label presented as much music that I wanted to hear this year.

I can’t wait to hear what’s next.

  • Visit the Beyond Beyond is Beyond website

  • Visit Beyond Beyond is Beyond’s Bandcamp page for all the goodies

  • Follow the label on Facebook

  • Follow them on Twitter

Holiday at the Sea's Favorite 2019 Music Mix (Volume 04)

Screen Shot 2019-12-07 at 6.55.45 PM.png

Today we dive in to Volume 04 of a 4-volume playlist of some of my favorite music of 2019. And, just to review one last time: there are 50 songs, but only 49 albums represented, since ‘Sideways’ by Seryn was released as a single. We’ve already heard a lot of great music and this last installment is no exception if I do say so myself (and I do).

I hope you enjoy this last installment of the series.

Volume 04:

Volume 04 Tracklisting:

  1. ‘Come On Up To The House’ by Joseph from the album Come On Up To The House: Women Sing Waits

  2. Spinning Song’ by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds from the album Ghosteen

  3. ‘U.F.O.F.’ by Big Thief from the album U.F.O.F.

  4. ‘Goin’ by Wet Tuna from the album Water Weird

  5. ‘Walk Through The Fire’ by Yola from the album Walk Through The Fire

  6. ‘All Mirrors’ by Angel Olsen from the album All Mirrors

  7. ‘Utopia In Blue’ by Eamon Fogarty from the album Blue Values

  8. ‘Margaritas at the Mall’ by Purple Mountains from the album Purple Mountains

  9. ‘My Phoenix’ by Pedro the Lion from the album Phoenix

  10. ‘Be Kind’ by Matt Valentine from the album Preserves

  11. ‘Her Arrival’ by Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah from the album Ancestral Recall

  12. ‘Endless Dave’ by L'Eclair from the album Sauropoda

  13. ‘Good Ol' Vilayati’ by Sarathy Korwar from the album More Arriving

///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

  • Listen to Volume 01 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

  • Listen to Volume 02 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

  • Listen to Volume 03 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist