Jerry's Quadraphonic and Audiophile Section? Again: Easily one of the best.
Jersey Boys
Finally, a Replacements Live Album!
Jessie Baylin
Being “old school” can be either a compliment or a nasty putdown depending on who’s doing the talking.
Joe Walsh on 200gm LP from Analogue Productions
Another week, another beautiful-sounding, wonderfully packaged reissue from Analogue Productions.
John Abercrombie 19442017
It's the dates as a leader on ECM that remain the most well-recorded part of John Abercrombie's legacy. The players he filled his ECM records with is a long and distinguished list, but he and his final quartet of Marc Copland on piano, Drew Gress on double bass (far left and left above), and Joey Baron on drums (far right) seemed to have special energy when they played together.
Johnny Winter
"I made my first record when I was 15, started playing clubs when I was 15. Started drinking and smoking when I was 15. Sex when I was 15. Fifteen was a big year for me,"
Jungle Boogie
And as the Beatles later mused, he’d done it alone.
Keep those rags and machines hummin'
One distinguishing mark of the "old" music business, i.e. the one before downloads, the one that made buckets of money, the one where half of my friends used to work, was that it was so big that folks on say, the classical side, had no idea who worked on the rock side. Even within the same company. They were different planets.
Kenny Rankin
If the cover of the latest issue of Uncut is any indication, “lost” albums never lose their appeal for the musicallyinclined or obsessed. Music fans always want what they don’t have or haven’t heard or hear is hard to get. It’s the allure of the forbidden record. And it’s a chief symptom of the record collecting psychoses.
Kiko and that Lavender Moon
Once there was a band of brothers from East Los Angeles...