Staff Trax: Roadside Graves, Goo Goo Dolls, Jimi Hendrix, Little Dragon, Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin, Alice in Chains, Fan Death and Beth Orton

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. Maybe you’ll find something you like, ya
dig?


Roadside Graves – “Ruby”
 
In this day and age of every random string or roots band claiming to have punk spirit oozing out of their scars and/or tattoos, it’s good to know that there are some actual examples that don’t have to tell that to you about such ethos for you to actually feel it. New Jersey’s Roadside Graves have been pretty prolific as of late, and while their recently released EP, You Won’t Be Happy With Me, is rife with turnpike-flavored kick-assedness, their 2009 LP, My Son’s Home, stands as their magnum opus. The standout track from that collection, “Ruby,” showcases the distinctive vocals of lead man John Gleason. His rootsy-gnarl seems to be tailor-made for a ringleader at one of those evil, haunted circuses that Scooby Doo used to triumphantly bring down. That said, should Scooby and that bitch Shaggy ever encounter Gleason and the Roadside Graves gang outside of a haunted circus, I’d put my money on the latter, for sure. –Kelly Dearmore

Goo Goo Dolls – “There You Are”



I got a few fans of the Goo Goo Dolls pissed at me a while back when I
said the band hadn’t made a good album since 1995. Well, I went back and
listened to 1998’s Dizzy Up the Girl, 2002’s Gutterflower and 2006’s Let
Love In
and I stand by my opinion 100 percent. I will say this, though: Before the Goos
had a fluke hit with the sappy ballad “Iris,” John Rzeznik and crew
were one of my favorite bands. In the wake of Paul Westerberg breaking
up The Replacements in 1991, the Goo Goo Dolls filled that alt-rock void
nicely. Hold Me Up from 1990 is still my favorite Goo record, full of
catchy tunes played loud and fast. Hell, I might just go see the band
when they hit Dallas in August, just hoping they will play “There You
Are,” the great single that never was from Hold Me Up. –Darryl Smyers


The Jimi Hendrix Experience
with Steve Winwood & Jack Casady – “Voodoo
Chile”


Oh, to be a fly on the wall at the infamous Electric Ladyland sessions.
This is not “Voodoo Chile (Slight Return).” This is the 13-plus minute
blues jam, featuring a gazillion New York hippies sitting on the floor
of the studio, and (a probably very stoned) Steve Winwood on the Hammond
B3 organ and Jack Casady of Jefferson Airplane on bass. Hendrix invited
them all back to the studio for an all-nighter after they jammed at an
area club. This take was actually taped at about 7 a.m. the following
morning, with everyone’s buzz still going strong. What else makes this
recording great is the spontaneity of the jam, and the towering,
passionate crescendos they bring it to towards the end. Put the stupid
fucking cell phones down for a lousy 15 minutes and soak this into your
ADD-tainted soul. –Alan Ayo


Little Dragon – “Blinking Pigs”



I was recently given a really great mix put together by Austin creative
type, Faith Gay. There were a number of tunes that caught my attention,
but one in particular has burrowed its way deeply into my consciousness–and I’ve now put it on mixes of my own. The song is “Blinking Pigs” by
the Swedish outfit, Little Dragon. I recently got around to tracking
down the band and found this video for the song. Enjoy!  -Doug Davis

Related


Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin – “Modern Mystery”



When Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin’s sophomore album, Pershing, was released a couple years ago,
it was the perfect album for a laid-back summer. The pop-leaning sound
of this indie rock trio was the perfect companion for me for most of
that year. But, the song that stuck out to me the most, and still does,
is “Modern Mystery.” –Lance Lester


Alice in Chains – “Right Turn”



The four acoustic tracks that comprise Alice in Chains’ 1992 EP Sap
couldn’t have been a bigger 180 from their debut full-length, Facelift.
The fact that it was released while Nevermind topped the charts and
albums by Pearl Jam and Soundgarden weren’t much further below, the move
was as bold as it was puzzling. Alice in Chains were content to not be
lumped in with the rest of the Seattle grunge scene, and they had dark,
new disc, full of newfound maturity and a gentler brand of melancholy to
show for it. As different as it proved being from the majority of their
catalog (what other AIC album could Ann Wilson of Heart have possibly
guested on?) it contains two of my favorite AIC songs, “Got Me Wrong,”
which I believe to be the best song they ever recorded, and “Right
Turn.” The latter featured guest vocalists Chris Cornell of Soundgarden
and Mark Arm of Mudhoney, and was credited as being performed by “Alice
Mudgarden” in the liner notes. An otherwise throwaway track gets major
life breathed into it by three of the scene’s absolutely stellar
vocalists–especially at the end, when all three are wailing over one
another. -Cory Graves

Related


Fan Death – “Reunited”







Dandi Wind
front woman, Dandilion
Wind Opaine, and friend, Marta Jacuibek-McKeever, together make up
Vancouver/Brookyln nu-disco outfit, Fan Death. Fan Death released its
five-song EP, A Coin For The Well, early this year, and “Reunited” is a
personal favorite off the EP. Plus, the song has an equally
catchy and entertaining video to go along with it. The band is set to
release its very first LP, Womb of Dreams, in early August, and if it
sounds anything like the duo’s preceding material, it should be a fun
purchase. -Catherine Downes


Beth Orton – “Central Reservation”



Last year, when my housemate of five years told me he was moving out to
buy a house with his girlfriend, I figured I should raid his CD
collection one last time and rip anything that caught my ear. Without a
doubt, Beth Orton’s first two solo albums grabbed me immediately. I
wasn’t so sure I’d dig her stuff, given her time with the Chemical
Brothers, an act I’m still not convinced is worth my time. But I
remembered seeing Orton perform “Conceived” on Letterman a few years ago
and being quite taken with the song. And for whatever reason, I think
of Orton when I see Sarah Jaffe play live. So, here’s a great
introduction to Orton without any bleeps, pops, and bloops to get in the
way of her wonderful voice and her songcraft. -Eric Grubbs 

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

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

Loading latest posts...