Posted in Album Reviews

Paul Simon – There Goes Rhymin’ Simon (1973)

With a more serious tone, “American Tune” has a great Simon vocal on a song that was written soon after Nixon was elected.  It’s a tough world politically at times “but it’s alright”. Paul Simon’s third solo album, There Goes Rhymin’ Simon opens with the classic lyric – “When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school”. Further into that #2 hit, “Kodachrome”, Simon sings of the joys and beauty of taking pictures.

Like that first song, the 1973 album is mostly an easy-going affair with subtle beats and acoustic guitars, a bit of piano.  Horns add some flair to “Take Me To The Mardi Gras”, that sits in contrast to the very New York song “One Man’s Ceiling Is Another Man’s Floor” about cramped apartment living, the kind of sound Billy Joel would later ride to the top of the charts.

With a more serious tone, “American Tune” has a great Simon vocal on a song that was written soon after Nixon was elected.  It’s a tough world politically at times “but it’s alright” he tells us. The infectious “Loves Me Like A Rock” closes out the album with the repeated lines of “she love me, love me, love me, love me”.   There Goes Rhymin’ Simon went top 5 in most major markets around the world and is a further showcase of Simon’s songwriting that captures the thoughts and feelings of being a young man in the early 70s.

9/10

Posted in Album Reviews

The Charlatans – Wonderland (2001)

For their first album in the 2000s, The Charlatans initially decamped to LA to work with producer Danny Saber.  As noted in interviews, the funk and soul sounds of LA combined with sunshine and copious amounts of cocaine influenced Wonderland.  The first album with keyboardist Tony Rogers lets go of their organ sound and instead embraces electronica with throbbing basslines.

“You’re So Pretty – We’re So Pretty” shows this new sound right away.  It is The Charlatans version of The Rolling Stones going disco or Primal Scream going to Memphis in the early 90s.  On several tracks, singer Tim Burgess adopts a falsetto vocal with single “Love Is The Key” being the most successful as the band stomps along behind him. “I Just Can’t Get Over Losing You” is the track most overtly influenced by LA’s funk scene and includes terrific instrumental passages in the second half of the song.

Several songs like “And If I Fall” and “Wake Up” have really strong choruses that keep the album buoyant.  “A Man Needs To Be Told” is a softer one with acoustic guitar as Burgess sings, “A man needs to be told/There is a world going on”.  A bit on the nose with the childlike Burgess personality.  Like the finest of white powders that rob a person’s soul, so too does it rob this album of the typical life affirming anthems that The Charlatans produced throughout the 90s. However, the band wanted to change things up which they accomplished on the mostly successful Wonderland.

7.5/10

Posted in Album Reviews

De La Soul – 3 Feet High And Rising (2023 Edition)

Formed while going to high school in New York, De La Soul was a trio of Posdnuos, Maseo and Trugoy the Dove (RIP). Catching the attention of producer Prince Paul, the group released their debut album 3 Feet High and Rising in 1989, smack in the middle of the golden age of hip hop.  The album as a kaleidoscope of styles using samples from jazz, funk, soul, psychedelia, and rock records.  Collaborating with like minded groups A Tribe Called Quest and The Jungle Brothers, De La Soul introduced their sound called the D.A.I.S.Y age (Da Inner Sound Y’all) to the rap community.

Based on a Schoolhouse Rock! track, “The Magic Number” is an effervescent song where “De La Soul posse consist of three/And that’s the magic number”. “Eye Know” takes a Steely Dan sample from “Peg” and adds horns from a Mad Lads’ track and Otis Redding’s whistling for a new sound as bright as a sunny day. “Tread Water” sees the trio introduce members of the animal community with a beat that keeps the story moving before the Hall and Oates sampling “Say No Go” tackles the crack epidemic sweeping through their neighbourhood.

“Me Myself and I” was the band’s first and only top 40 hit, it’s the one that helped their tape make into ghetto blasters in high schools around the world.  The track sees each member sing about their own unique personality and style, downplaying the hippie image that was attached to them at the time. “De la soul is from the soul/and in fact I can’t deny../and from me, myself and I”.  On that hit single and throughout the album – the band along with Prince Paul revel in a sophisticated and experimental sound that keeps it light and youthful.  The sample heavy album was held back from digital release for years as they worked out agreements to clear samples (or make slight changes) that Tommy Boy Records originally neglected to bother with.  Regarded as an 80s classic album, an all time great rap disc, and included in the US Library of Congress – 3 Feet High and Rising is a cultural landmark recording.

10/10