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Audacity
 

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Favorite external artists

Heart, Pat Benatar, Oasis, Nirvana, Monster Magnet, Mono Men, Joan Osborne, Kutless, Robert Johnson, Scorpions, Uli Jon Roth, Tom Jones, Veruca Salt, Vince Guaraldi, Ramsey Lewis, James Brown, Xavier Cugat, Johnny Adams, The Doors, Jimi Hendrix, Sweet, Grand Funk Railroad, Queensrÿche*, Soundgarden, Mudhoney*, Night Ranger*, Black Sabbath, Gordon Lightfoot, Foghat, Foreigner, Elvis Presley, The Cult, Beck, Winger, Kiss, Melvins, Gruntruck*, Stevie Ray Vaughan*, Joan Jett and the Blackhearts

 

Favorite tags

blues, Rock music, Funk, Folk music, country, Guitar, surf, bluegrass



Latest reviews

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Blogged my review here:
http://belredroad.blogspot.com/2009/10/sekshun-8-is-reason-for-eleven.html
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Funny thing about getting older: When I was 15, I expected that in 30 years I would be driving a Cadillac and listening to smooth jazz. Instead, I'm driving a pickup and listening to metal. Some things never change, despite the march of time.

Sekshun 8 released Black Winged Butterfly in 2009, but its sound is authentic early Nineties. In short, it rocks. Rocks like there's no tomorrow. Rocks at a volume that simply asks for more volume. It is the reason for the 11 on your volume control. Don't have an 11? Then twist it to 10 and attach the headphones to your ears with duct tape. You will hear licks and beats which pay honor to Soundgarden, Mother Love Bone, early Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, and Alice In Chains. My suspicion is that - at 15 - these guys were much like me.

In fact, "Watch the Burn" is written with the voice of someone at that age - the ultimate rebel, akin to Alice Cooper's "Eighteen" or "School's Out." It's about the kid down your street, the one with the dead flatbed Ford in the yard and the old dryer on the front porch. You know him; he took a wiffle ball bat to your rose bushes in the front yard last summer, and knocked over your garbage cans after you complained to his parents.

Together the songs "Three Blocks" and "Hooked" create a study in two ends of a lifestyle. The first song describes the pleasures some feel with over-indulgence through partying and drugs, while the second one describes in detail the sad results from doing so. While I will neither embrace nor endorse the lifestyle portrayed here, I will embrace the music as catchy, heavy, and thought provoking. Both songs go into overtime in painting a picture through words. I can feel the excitement of the first song, anticipating the all-night party that is only three blocks away. I can also feel the sickness and helplessness of Hooked as someone figures out they have taken too much of something and just want it to go away. Not a good place to be. If someone can listen to Hooked and then think that the druggie life is cool, then they need a lot more help than this album can provide. Understand this: I know from personal experience that this lifestyle tends to destroy a lot of lives - more than it helps. The subject matter is nothing to make light of. It's heavy stuff, because the end can be lonely and cold for anyone who crosses the wrong line. Maybe it was the band's goal to send the message that "life can be fun, but without self-control it will go straight down the toilet."

"Zombie Baby" keeps the visuals coming, creepy visuals that are like a window into the soul of someone who cannot love anything with bodily warmth. Alice In Chains - if they haven't heard it already - would be proud.

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Blogged my review here: http://belredroad.blogspot.com/2009/10/mad-mavs-black-sheep-truck-stop-of.html
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Even repetition has a place in society, especially if it rocks your ears off.

Who wrote the rules that state German Metal must rock harder than most? I never saw the communique, but I certainly approve. Scorpions have hammered their way through the decades like no other band. Michael Schenker - wunderkind of the axe - did time with some of Europe's biggest rock names. Uli Jon Roth is a true original whose creativity and howling axe work still bounces off the walls of concert halls around the Old World. While much of society equates German music to Electronika or Kraftwerk, I think of rock - hard, heavy, and well-crafted. The Unimog of the music world. Black Sheep by Mad Mav follows that tradition of German craftsmanship.

It has about a much bass response as you can get, short of driving a lowered 1987 Fleetwood with a bass tube in the trunk. The scratch guitar work is relentless, pushing the message hard through every track. There isn't one word spoken throughout the entire album; the music does all the yelling. A nice piece of trivia here is that Mad Mav is one guy. He does everything. Talk about 'creative control.' When you consider this is a solo project, the craftsmanship kicks up to a different level. And overall this is a capable album. Functional. Correct in every way. The mix is a headphone lovers paradise, so long as they're Seventies-style over-the-ear headphones. It even has the customary Evil Child artwork on the cover, modus operandi for any Metal album.

But it's repetitious.

Most of the tracks are great individually; they evoke the sense of an 18-wheeler running hammer down through a bad neighborhood at 65mph. Even a pair of 18-wheelers makes a ripping convoy. But when I listen to the entire album - track after track - it starts to sound the same. Think of it as a truck stop. You've got a bunch of trucks outside. They all look different. Different brand names. Some are idling quietly, while others are moving out and grinding gears. But they're all trucks. At a truck stop you learn to accept that you're surrounded by big rigs. With Black Sheep, you too can learn accept that many of the tracks have the same sound, beat, and even key. After all, this is the Truck Stop of Metal. So given the description, this poses the question, "Is there room in this world for Repetitive German Metal?"

The answer is a resounding and reverberating Yes.

Hey, not everything in this world can be unique at all times. This makes great background music, possibly because of the style and lack of vocals. Black Sheep shines as an album that can be played - in its entirety at full volume - while conducting such repetitious tasks as:

* Cut Rib Eye Roasts

* Hang Sheetrock

* Stir Tar

* Wack Weeds

* Cut Logs

* Wash and Wax four cars

* Dance mindlessly for hours in a sweaty Seattle warehouse with 180 disaffected twenty-somethings

* Display and unleash overwhelming affection for a loved one in a long-term overnight fling

So you see that repetition isn't necessarily a bad thing here. There's a place for Black Sheep. Like Mexican coffee beans or tobacco, this album can be mixed with product from another source to bring out the value in both. Alone, they are less effective than when they are blended. Try mixing this with White Zombie, Guns 'n' Roses, Monstermagnet, or even Black Sabbath to help break up the music style a bit. I love this album. Combined with others, I love it more.

My favorite tracks are 1, 5, and 9:

* The title track Black Sheep builds up with haunting sounds, and launches quickly into a driving assault of scratchy guitar and tight percussion. The vocal chorus and high-pitched solo guitar notes give it a gothic sound reminiscent of stone buildings and tall ceilings.

* If the act of building the Empire State Building had a song, it would have been Freak on a Trip. Various industrial sounds, coupled with repetition, make a song that sounds like a construction project.

* Pia.nist brings out the desperate sounds of a piano, keyboards, and a slowly-building wall of heavy bass tied to multiple guitars. The layering sets the mood of a man who has lost everything, looking towards either a future without hope or possibly a well-planned demise. Think of Elton John's Funeral For A Friend and GnR's September Rain, both songs with the same feeling.

In any case, listen for yourself!

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La Reaccion - NAKED DREAMS

La Reaccion

NAKED DREAMS

05/10/09

This stuff has an authentic 1960s Garage sound, which is a real favorite of mine. While not quite as extreme as The Sonics, it's capable straight-ahead rock. My favorite track is IT S REACTION, because it taps the garage band energy and knocks it into the next county. Close second fave would be the next track - LET IT GO - for its intro that plays with a unusual syncopation but launches into classic straight-cut rock within seconds.

If you don't download this album, don't blame me for missing some of the best garage music I've heard since Mono Men broke up.

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Amity in Fame - Dinner for One

Amity in Fame

Dinner for One

28/06/09

Artists are showing restraint on accoustic. You can tell they want to bust loose and kick the wall in...but they won't because it doesn't serve the album's goal. Nice use of power, melody, and mixing. Guaranteed smile from downloading this one. Relegate The Judge has those cool Eastern beats and harmonies, making this my favorite track.

Nice work!

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KnockOut - Demo

KnockOut

Demo

30/05/09

"My Friend" is my favorite track for the speed and the syncopation. It should be the first track on this Demo, followed by Fly Away, then Get Out!, then Drinkin' Love - which is too slow as an intro track.

Nevertheless I enjoyed listening to it and will to Favorites. Thanks!

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The beginning of the title track really gets me going. The band does a decent job a staying tight and cohesive; occasionally something will seem off beat a bit, but generally this is a very professional sounding release.

Nice work!

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Feld - Feld

Feld

Feld

20/05/09

Lots of variety and different sounds. I love the beat. Some of the instrumental harmonies caught me off guard. Infierno XX1 is my fave track because the mellow 70s organ and mild funk groove.

PlayPlay

I agree with one of the other reviews. It has a mellow 80s soundtrack feeling to it. Title describes it well.

PlayPlay

Generally tight, well coordinated. Songs rich in feedback and post-modern harmony. Arizona is my favorite, followed by Scratch Our Throats. Bird Song is a nice softened offering that explores a different side.

Nice work.

PlayPlay

Sounds like the soundtrack to a movie about evil underground creatures attacking a small Eastern European village. I like the addition of Mars Bringer of War to the track WW, other than that it's not something that I would sit down and listen to with a beer in my hand.

 

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Personal data

I like cheeseburgers.