Staff Trax: Wilson Pickett, Dom Kennedy, Yeasayer, Ash

Welcome to Staff Trax, the weekly feature here on DC9 where we shed some light on the music we've been enjoying of late, regardless of the touring or album release schedules that tend to bear the focus of most of our coverage. Consider it a chance for you readers to...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Welcome
to Staff
Trax
, the weekly feature here on DC9 where we shed some light on
the music we’ve been enjoying of late, regardless of the touring or
album release schedules that tend to bear the focus of most of our
coverage. Consider it a chance for you readers to get some more insight
into our own
personal tastes. And a chance to slam us for our crappy ones.

Wilson Pickett feat. Duane Allman – “Hey Jude”
Arguably, this is the most significant, underrated, underplayed classic rock song that AOR radio tragically glazed over. Pickett’s goosebump-inducing vocals on this cover the The Beatles’ “Hey Jude” tear through the clouds where James Brown’s voice hits and quits. Duane Allman, who was poised to become one of the world’s greatest rock guitarists (should he have lived longer), trades barbs of solo and vocal with Pickett at the end. All the while, The Memphis Horns singe and pierce the air behind them. It’s true history from a late ’60s recording session in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, and a real moment of light for rock and roll. –Alan Ayo

Dom Kennedy – “Long Way Home”
Anyone
savvy in the burgeoning-of-late world of indie rap should know that,
beneath the surface of much of the stuff that gets all of the radio
spins (and, let’s be honest, cheapens the genre as a whole), is a
coast-to-coast movement of self-made emcees who refuse to play the game
in order to gain mainstream popularity. One of these rappers is the
self-produced and self-distributed Los Angeles native Dom
Kennedy. A couple weeks back, he released his latest album, From the
Westside, With Love
, which contains this track “Long Way Home.” Old
school production, smooth delivery, nostalgic subject matter, and an
overall good vibe drives this album to the fore of hip-hop releases in
2010. –Nic Hernandez

Yeasayer – “Ambling Alp”


This
week, I continue my advocacy for Yeasayer as a brainy pan-musical art
band that swings for the fences in its music and supporting collateral. This video for “Ambling Alp,” the first single off Odd Blood is by
Radical Friend, a video production team originally formed at the
Savannah College of Art and Design and now residing in Los Angeles. Says Yeasayer frontman Chris Keating of Radical Friend: “Give them a year or so
and they’ll be making some really wild features.” –Doug Davis

Ash
– “Burn Baby Burn”


Right
around the time I grooved to Rival Schools in the summer of 2001, I
also listened to Ash’s Free All Angels quite a bit. Considered a return
to form for the band after the darker Nu-Clear Sounds, this record
proved that the band still had legs to walk on. As a personal aside, I listened
to a copy of this record quite a while before its proper release (thank
you, BearShare!), but I still bought it when it came out in England
(thank you, CD-Wow!) and then again in the U.S. a year later (Thank you,
Kinetic, even though you went out of business a year later!). –Eric
Grubbs

Related

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...