Posted in Listed

20 Musical Musings – 2026 (Part 1)

The BeatlesAnthology 4 has not been met with the same rapturous praise that their recent expanded albums have received. Nonetheless, there are some delights to be found on the newest anthology addition that stretches from the band’s earliest recording days right up to 2022. A few highlights include “I’ve Just Seen A Face (Take 3)”, “All You Need Is Love (Rehearsal For BBC Broadcast)”, and “Baby, You’re a Rich Man (Takes 11 & 12)”.  Perhaps a bit inessential for some but it would take more than two hands to count highlights from the 2 disc set.

The two main songwriters from British Britpop/Shoegazers Lush have released very good albums in the past few years. Emma Anderson’s Pearlies + the Piroshka albums that Miki Berenyi has released. Early in 2025, Miki released Tripla under the Miki Berenyi Trio moniker. Excellent songs include “8th Deadly Sins” and the dreamy “Ubique”. These next generation of releases by the Lush ladies have been a joy.

The much acclaimed Big Thief has been one that I’ve struggled to get into.  I appreciate them more than really enjoyed their albums. That changed with last year’s solo album from singer Adrienne Lenker and continued with the band’s latest release, Double Infinity. Finally, their music clicked on an album that many others loved as well.  All this time it’s been me with the issue, not you.

While others have long since listened, I’m still working my way through the David Bowie box sets that have been released over the years. The boxes that collect all the official releases and group by certain eras has been a bit of a mixed bag at times but finally reaching his Berlin Years on the brilliant A New Career in a New Town (1977-1982) released in 2017 was a glorious listen. It’s been one where each new album listen made me excited for the next to hear the next one. A highwater mark in the legend’s career, this will be a set returned to again and again.

I ordered Kim Deal’s 2024 album from a local record store with normally fast shipping times but this one seemed to take ages, to the point of thinking I already had it in the collection when the call came that it had arrived. It took a minute to finally have in my hands but the impression of the album was immediate, Nobody Loves You More could have been released some time in the 90s and would not sound out of place with the great records from that period. Several decades later, Deal sounds as relevant as ever as she sings, “coming around is easy/coming down is rough”.

The world has genuinely been a scary place at times this year. War, bombs, rampant racism/antisemitism, random violence, drug abuse, homelessness, etc. I don’t make it out to as many local band shows as I used to but did attend the Death Cassette show at Winnipeg’s fantastic Blue Note Park venue. The punk rock energy was a cathartic release from all of the world’s turmoil. The beers were cold and the energy was electric. Punk rock lives, the kids are alright.

When walking through the hallways of high school in the late 80s/early 90s, sounds from the golden age of hip hop was regularly being blasted. Some albums I was fully onboard with and others passed me by.  One of those albums that got away from me was the classic 3 Feet High and Rising from Long Island, New York’s De La Soul.  Famously the disc has not been re-released in years due to original record label Tommy Boy not bothering to get clearances for the sample heavy tracks. That changed in 2023 when it finally saw the light of day again, in slightly altered form. Well worth the wait to finally hear daisy chain era tracks like “The Magic Number” and top 40 hit “Me Myself and I”, among the many.

I heard about the new Geese album when it released and knew it was getting some great reviews. I made the mistake of listening to the Sound Opinion podcast guys who completely trashed the experimental album.  So it sat in my playlist for ages before finally getting back around to it months later. The podcast guys got it all wrong – Getting Killed was a helluva album that was chaotic at times but also had the melodies and tunes to back it up.  My pick as album of the year – this one is a classic.

The last I had heard about Jason Isbell and Amanda Shires was from the excellent 2023 documentary Running With Our Eyes Closed. I hadn’t heard about their relationship since then and was sad to hear that they have gone their separate ways. Isbell’s newest album, Foxes in the Snow talks a lot about old and new relationships. Working with engineer/producer Gena Johnson, he put out the album that is heavy on acoustic guitar and personal matters. When he played the Winnipeg Folk Festival in July of this year, the acoustic guitar was put to the side several times so he could riff heavily with his band The 400 Unit.  One of the great concert moments of the year.

For those of us that hit the drinking age in the 90s, 2025 was a big year for nostalgia.  Suede released a terrific album as did their former tour partners, Manic Streat Preachers. It was their album, Critical Thinking that caught my attention. Never short on ear catching songs, “People Ruin Paintings”, “Brushstrokes Of A Reunion”, and “Decline and Fall” all held up through the year.

Posted in Album Reviews

Jason Isbell – Foxes in the Snow (2025)

There was palpable tension with wife Amanda Shires running through the 2023 Jason Isbell documentary Running With Our Eyes Closed.  It was still sad news to hear that the couple had broken up and Isbell was pursuing a new romance with painter Anna Weyant.  The breakdown of one relationship and start of another runs through Isbell’s new acoustic album, Foxes in the Snow.

Once again working with engineer/producer Gena Johnson, the only sound on the album comes from Isbell. Gut wrenching songs include “Eileen” where he sings that “Eileen, you should’ve seen this coming sooner” and later, “My own behaviour was a shock to me”. “Gravelweed” touches on how love songs take on different meanings in ending relationships on a track that also alludes to a life of past drinking problems. “True Believer” is another one of these songs with lyrics so personal, it’s tough to listen to the chorus.

With a new love in his life, there are moments of lightness as well.  “Ride to Robert’s” is a fun night out at the saloon with talk of a new love while “Open and Close” is directly about the Calgary born Weyant.  Great moments appear everywhere including opening track “Bury Me” with it’s great chorus but the dark times are never too far away as Isbell later sings, “the thing that nearly took me out was loneliness and alcohol”. 

There is nothing flashy on Foxes in the Snow, just extraordinary songwriting, great singing and some terrific guitar singing. The fact that Isbell can keep the listeners attention all the way through the album is a testament to his immense talent.

8/10

Posted in Album Reviews

Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit – Weathervanes (2023)

Jason Isbell is having a helluva year.  HBO is home to the very good Isbell documentary, Running With Our Eyes Closed. He is set to appear in the Martin Scorsese movie Killers of the Flower Moon and he just released his new album with his band the 400 Unit, Weathervanes.  The album opens immediately with Isbell’s voice on “Death Wish”.  Eventually strings appear, piano twinkles with percussion bits.  Another reviewer likened it to The Cure, this is an apt description – a country Robert Smith singing of loving someone suffering through depression.

That song is a departure from the rest of the album.  “Cast Iron Skillet” has a bit of a twist on modern country with the line, “Don’t wash the cast iron skillet/Don’t drink and drive, you’ll spill it”.  A warm acoustic guitar envelopes “Strawberry Girl” while “King of Oklahoma” tackles the hard luck story of a chap trying to stay afloat while thinking, “never thought I’d wind up this far behind”. Isbell lets his voice soar on “Middle of the Morning”. The lockdown track inspired by his personal experience is a good one where he makes the claim that “I’m tired of living in the moment and sleeping through the dream”.  An adult remembering that he wanted to be a spaceman.

Isbell’s musical gift is making smart lyrical choices.  Two of the standouts see him thinking about far bigger issues than the usual hunting/fishing/drinking songs that fill modern country radio.  “Save The World” immediately ups the intensity on a track about a school shooting in Nashville and how to process what that means for the country and his family.  “White Beretta” tells the story of Isbell driving his girlfriend to the abortion clinic back in the late 90s.  Not sure if they are making the right decision, he let the girl make the decision regardless of his mental struggles.

Jason Isbell’s music on Weathervanes expands the palette and also pulls it back into familiar country territory.  There are bits of keyboard, atmospheric moments, and several times where he adds 80s rock into the mix.  But it still goes back to the stories he tells on songs like “Volunteer” that tells of a boy being raised by parents who were just kids. He doesn’t always hit those heights but there are enough great moments on Weathervanes where Isbell reaches for being one of America’s great storytellers.

8/10

Posted in Listed

Favourite Distant Discoveries 2016

4.  Gwenno – Y Dydd Olaf (album):  Formerly of The Pipettes, 2015 saw the re-release of Gwenno’s debut album all in her native tongue of Welsh.  We’ve yet to pick up the Super Furry Animal’s Mwng so this was our first introduction to the wonders of the Welsh language (other than a night on the tiles in Cardiff all those years ago).  Gwenno’s vocals sound like they could have been recorded in the 60s while the digital undertones don’t sound dissimilar to Broadcast.  Lead track “Chwyldro” and the hushed vocals of “Golau Aall” are just two of the many highlights.

3.  Cold War Kids – First (song):  On our old radio show, Cold War Kids’ “We Used to Vacation” got played quite a bit.  The rest of the album wasn’t the greatest so they  fell out of favour until we heard this coming from the girlfriend’s iPhone. Having been released in 2014, “First” keeps popping up in TV shows and movies thereby being discovered by another batch of music fans every few months.  We weren’t the first to say how great this song is and I’m sure we won’t be the last.

2.  The Rolling Stones – She’s a Rainbow (song):  Late in 2015 we bought a pile of discs from The Rolling Stones so having been dipping into them here and there since then. Not knowing many of the songs from 1967’s album  Their Satanic Majesties Request, when we finally listened, we fell in love instantly with “She’s A Rainbow”.  A shouty, happy delight with a  piano that always seems to need winding up before it gets going, this is the Stones at their most poppy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ya4R7ZswMwA&w=320&h=183

1.  Jason Isbell – Something More Than Free (album):  We’ve been reading about Isbell for a few years and after seeing his fifth studio album riding high on so many 2015 year end charts, we finally gave it a spin.  Glad we did.  “24 Frames” is an instant classic with “How To Forget” and “Children of Children” close behind.  We didn’t do a year-end list last year but if we did one today, Jason Isbell would be very close to the top.