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Holding the Bag - Band of Blue, Bobby and the Pressure Droppers, J.C. Flyer, Gypsy Paradigm, Gypsy SchaefferAndrew Kasab, Mission Players, The Soundmen, Vinyl Soup, Wasabi
Jesse Jarnow
2004-03-30

self-titled - Band of Blue
Semi-muscular guitar and thumping drums holds together the vaguely gospel-influenced Band of Blue. The band tries their hands at various genres (such as the light Latin swing of "Double Bob" which morphs into a kind of country blues groove), but they never let the music runaway with itself, which is nice, and - no matter what they try - it's all sort of integrated into their total sound. The group knows how to keep it concise, too, which is a plus (most of the tracks hover in the three-and-a-half minute range), though the impression is of songs that are much, much longer. And, since the tunes actually are short, this is actually quite alright. Band of Blue doesn't exactly break down boundaries, but they don't mindlessly repeat riffs and approaches, either. Right now, they seem to be stuck in a temporary early-stage purgatory before they figure out what they're going to do with themselves. Props for a cool album cover, too -- trippy without being tasteless. Jolly. Oblique Strategies sez: "Balance the consistency principle with the inconsistency principle." More info...

Rundown and Rioting - Bobby and the Pressure Droppers
Borrowing their band name from a Toots and the Maytals song, this Detroit outfit has a good go at making roots reggae despite being from an industrial city in the middle of America. And, despite their handicap, they do an okay job. Songs like "Flag Flying Children" are convincing, though other numbers like "Roadtrip To Toledo" don't entirely make it. Nonetheless, the whole album suffers from amateurish production, dripping the vocals in reverb and leaving the drums bone dry, and there are four ballads in a row on the album's second half (which is about three too many) despite John Greston's mightily restrained guitar playing, and Mark Johnson's surprisingly tasteful bass. Oblique Strategies sez: "Courage." More info...

Movin' On - J.C. Flyer
J.C. Flyer's Movin' On is inoffensively soft country-rock fare filled with unconvincingly hyperarchaic lyrics of the Old West and tales of outlaw mentality and other such bullshit. You know the stuff -- the title track references "home fires" that are left burning, "Outlaws on the Run" recreates a stage-coach robbery told from the perspective of a son who saw his outlaw father hung, "Alone With The Wind" (which follows) is, um, a sweet reminiscence of a father and child going fishing and stuff ("to say that I didn't love you would be a sin / because now I'm alone with the wind") and kinda incongruous after the previous track... and, well, so it goes. I suppose similar complaints could be leveled against, say, the Grateful Dead if I tried. But I'm not going to. This is quaintly nostalgic. American Beauty wasn't. Flyer gets fine support from extended-Dead family members Barry Sless, Rob Barraco, and others, but I've had enough gypsy women ("Towards The Sun"), horseback riding ("Thousand Trails"), and, um, The Wind ("Alone With The Wind") to last me a few lifetimes. Oblique Strategies sez: "(Organic) machinery." More info...

Canciones, Composiciönes, y improvisaciönes musicåles - Gypsy Paradigm
So, somebody handed this to me in the lobby before the Jammys, or somewhere, and I kinda mumbled "thanks," shoved it in my back pocket, and sat on it all night, so when I got it home the case was all mangled. But the CD seemed to be intact, so I thought I owed it to them to listen. This is a homemade disc in every way -- the cover is a handdrawn/Xeroxed illustration of a gypsy (?) wagon with handdrums falling out the back, the back is also Xeroxed (half-typed/half-handwritten) with an actual note in blue ink (in the same handwriting) affixed to the top ("please copy & distribute to kind folks everywhere!"). The music on the disc - recorded at various venues in Oklahoma - completely befits the packaging. The recording quality of the mostly live material is suitably subpar, but somehow endearing given the presentation. The jams - full on psychedelia with a touch of the latter-day groove - aren't too objectively enthralling, but they really sound great when pumped through the tin-can-and-wire technology the band apparently used to make this disc (proving, perhaps, that the whole reason the jamband scene rose to prominence in the first place is 'cause the music sounded good on the reigning cheap technology the day, cassette tapes... how's that for punk rock/DIY?) I dunno if I'd like this if it were polished and in a nice package, but I'm digging it right now. Oblique Strategies sez: "Use an old idea." More info...

self-titled - Gypsy Schaeffer
Sorry guys, my ears are shot right now. It's a gorgeous day and I've been listening to nothing but hippie funk for the past three hours, so anything but that would be an oasis... and, well, Gypsy Schaeffer's self-titled debut is just that oasis. Hey, they're straight-ahead jazz played earnestly and convincingly, which is a rarity these days. There are no crazy beats, no ridiculous time signatures, no DJs thwacking and scratching along, no hep covers... just an alto/trombone/bass/drums quintet from Boston playing mild-mannered charts that find their life in their melodies and plain ol' musical camaraderie and communication. Good for them. I dunno if this is great music or not, but it's certainly treating me very well under this set of conditions. Oblique Strategies sez: "Make a blank valuable by putting it in an exquisite frame." Moire info...

Crossing - Andrew Kasab
I have to admit, I'm totally partial to homemade releases, and Andrew Kasab's Crossing is so homemade that it makes my computer hum and vibrate with a strange buzz. The music itself is earnest singer-songwriter strumming with a little pit of post-Dave Matthews rhythmic kick (not to mention hyper-sensitivity) evident in Kasab's playing, which frequently detours off into deft fills. In places ("Regret"), Kasab sounds like he's fronting a band that's not actually there, and one can imagine the band swinging into a groove behind him, all busy basslines and semi-funky snares. The music, though, is better off without a band, leaving some amount to be imagined (which is more than can be said for most dudes with acoustic guitars). Oblique Strategies sez: "Consider different fading systems." More info...

Live and Livin' It - Mission Players

The Mission Players - all seven of 'em (which includes two guitarists, a keyboardist, a percussionist, and a sax player, plus rhythm section - are all fine musicians. For such a large ensemble, they manage to hold together fairly well without ever sounding too crowded. But, unfortunately (as much of an achievement as that is), they don't sound too interesting, either. Their music is a straight-ahead groove/fusion that shows little evidence of personality, nor much of an inclination to push at the boundaries of music as a means of a personal expression. The musicians lose themselves in, give or take, an album length groove, touched with solos, breakdowns, and occasional quasi-soulful vocals. It's something interesting for all the members to serve, something larger than them as individuals, and certainly a gateway for them as players, but not something that's necessarily interesting to listen to at home (live, however, might well be another story). Oblique Strategies sez: "Ask people to work against their better judgment." More info...

Pleasure In The Mess - The Soundmen

The Soundmen are a perfectly serviceable quintet, whose album - Pleasure In The Mess - is filled with stop-time funk, dense arrangements, distorted guitar wrapping around chunky Rhodes chording, some lite sax soloing, and... well, sailor, I think you know the drill. It's nice. Lots of little semi-composed flourishes that tie all the different sections and solos together and whatnot, and successfully make the whole thing a unified listening experience. Nonetheless, it's not necessarily a fully pleasurable listening experience. The Soundmen's sound is still a bit one-dimensional, falling to groove where there should be quiet, using distortion and effects where there should be emotion. Still, it's all good fun, and songs like "Don't Diss My Homies" are nice enough, even if there's just too much goddamn wah-wah pedal. Oblique Strategies sez: "Use an unacceptable color." More info...

Chasing Yesterday :- Vinyl Soup
Vinyl Soup's Chasing Yesterday is filled wall-to-wall with playful wah-driven hippie funk. It's charming, fun music that's probably a whole of fun to make, and a whole lot of fun to listen to if you happen to wander into a bar and see them playing on a Saturday night. For some reason, though, I can't imagine accidentally seeing them. Maybe it's a regional thing, or maybe I just go to the wrong bars up here, but Vinyl Soup's music feels very nostalgic to me, reminiscent of a simpler time -- and not because the music is retro in its inclination, but maybe just because it's entirely straight-forward. There's no irony, and certainly no posing. Their inclusive in the sense that there's nothing foreboding nor off-putting about their music (the quality that first attracted me to jambands back in high school), but - at the same time - it's also sort of a turn-off. There's nothing particularly challenging about this music, either, nothing to sink one's teeth into. But it's fun. "Cold Jaded Jane" sounds like Phish's "Dog Stole Things," "Mr. Jello" is the kind of nonsensical whimsy that my ex-housemates used to rag on but so what? If enough people believe in it, whimsy is fucking awesome. Perhaps Vinyl Soup will achieve critical mass someday. Oblique Strategies sez: "Reverse." More info...

Greetings - Wasabi
Unfortunately, Wasabi isn't the same Wasabi as the early '90s jamband supergroup of the same name (which featured three-fourths of the Spin Doctors, John Popper, Warren Haynes, and others). Instead, they're a fairly earnest quartet from Colorado, I do believe. Their music is pleasant, but - like so many - lacks personality, or at least the kind of musical invention that would separate their tunes from most other jambands. They're certainly competent enough, but they haven't quite why they're making music yet (at least, that's my impression). Still, there are nice moments on here, such as the twinkling Rhodes solo on the otherwise staid "Growin'," which seems to want to build towards a fantastic climax, but has a hard time breaking free from the mellow groove. Nonetheless, they're making music without artifice or smarmy/snobby pretention, and that's worth a brownie patch (or maybe just a pot brownie). Oblique Strategies sez: "Use 'unqualified' people." More info...

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