Archive | November, 2009

The Bands at Bauska Castle: Peter Bradley Adams

12 Nov

While he is not a band, he is certainly good enough to count as several musicians. Here is a little profile on a musician who deserves a lot more credit than he receives.

Peter Bradley Adams

Beauty is rarely found in musicians today. Musical beauty, the type that has you staring at your wall while you listen to the album in absolute awe of the pure emotion that is being displayed. The kind that you feel after you listen to a classical piece that a composer has slaved over for many days perfecting the string sections ending crescendo. The type of beauty that allows you to nod your head and exclaim, “This is why I listen to music!.” Peter Bradley Adams displays these immaculate brush strokes with his brand of americana melodic folk. He is a master of his craft and it shows.

Adams combines his delicate melodies that are both sweet and smooth with his extraordinary lyric capabilities. His personal lyric is well displayed in “Los Angeles” on his recent release “Leavetaking.” Adams sings his tribute to the city of Los Angeles and finishes the song softly singing, “Well they say the Big One’s gonna come, And you’ll fall into the sea, We will know that then your work is done, And your angels will go free.” While the song remains a constant lull throughout, as the song ends, and the piano holds its last note and the guitar plays its fading echoing riff, the listener is given the impression that they are too hovering over the clouds like the freed angels in the song.

Yet, the song that may leave the largest mark is the song with no words. Adams, having studied classical piano, combines his excellent organizational skill and composer ideas, to form “Song For Viola” a short instrumental piece that ends the album. A quiet piano plays slow notes as a viola inserts an emotional reverberation of strings. The piece gradually grows to its climax where the two instruments blend with each other in a tasty musical concoction and then the viola fades and the piano is left alone again playing it’s initial notes until it drops off leaving a lingering echo that ends the album. This may be considered risky, to end an album with a short instrumental piece, but Adams vanquishes any doubts. In a way this is the perfect ending. He lets his smooth melody entrap listeners and makes a lasting impact, leaving the listener with the gentle sound of a viola instead of his voice. Since, no voice can replace the emotion and ambiguity of a single instrument.

Check Out: Entire “Leavetaking” album

Only $8.00: http://www.amazon.com/Leavetaking-Peter-Bradley-Adams/dp/B001AZ8BHI

Lyric of the Day #67: “One Man Wrecking Machine,” by Guster

10 Nov

Guster

“Here in the present tense
Nothing is making sense”

These lyrics are from Boston band, Guster, whose fame came as a college band and has spread forward in the world that has followed. Currently the song is playing on my IHome and I thought, well hey, I have not done a true lyric of the day in a while, so, for today’s post we will delay top lyricists for next week and you all can get a taste of one of Guster’s best songs.

The reason I love this song is partially in the lyrics above. I like Guster’s emphasis on the present befuddlement. Ha! That is such a funny word. I am sorry, it just is.

Looking at the lyrics another part that says a lot is:

“I want to pull it apart and put it back together
I want to relive all my adolescent dreams
Inspired by true events on movie screens
I am a one man wrecking machine”

These lyrics are a calling back to the innocent times of adolescent dreams, of the sweet freedom of college. If we say life is a movie then, as the character in this song is travelling through times, he is experiencing his life falling apart and himself, alone, as the one man wrecking machine. I always found these lyrics to be truthful and real and that is one of the reason I like Guster. What do you all think?

Lyric# 16

10 Nov

“He tried the playboy-thing on two friends thinking that they’d never know.

They say he got caught in a trap and it snapped/ He’s not around anymore…”

hint: This artist opened for Eric Clapton at Madison Square Garden.

Answer: Poor Johnny, by Robert Cray

Court Links: Dhani Harrison and Steven Tyler

9 Nov

An interesting combination of links to keep your day rolling well. Dhani Harrison, son of Beatle George Harrison, who also looks incredibly like George (probably because he is George’s son) is taking a large role in working on the next Rock Band (Rock Band 3). Now, I am working under the impression that Dhani can practically do anything he wants because of who is father is. Here is how I think the interview went with the Rock Band employers

Dhani: So, I really believe I can bring a lot to the manufacturing of the game

Employers: Can I have your autograph?

Anyway though, Dhani longs to make the controllers more real so people can actually learn a little about playing instruments, while playing the game. Cool. But, I don’t believe people play Grand Theft Auto to learn how to kill people and solicit drugs. Maybe video games should be left to what they are, and that is fake releases from the real world.

Link: http://kotaku.com/5399206/rock-band-3-will-teach-you-how-to-play-proper-music

Wow, he really looks like George

In other news, Steven Tyler may be leaving Aerosmith after their current tour to explore solo opportunities. What does this mean? Aerosmith tour next year.

Link: http://www.fmqb.com/article.asp?id=1578127

Court Poll #3 Response: “A Day in the Life”

8 Nov

YEAH!

Woohoo! 10,000 views. I must say that I never thought we would reach this mark but I am so glad that I was wrong. Thank you visitors for your continued visits to this blog. Josh, Anthony and I are eternally grateful. That may have been over the top, but, it does not matter. I can only hope that we can reach the 100,000 view mark sometime before I graduate college, or… at the end of this year. Hey, a person can dream can’t they.

I would also like to apologize for not notifying you guys of 2/3 writers of this blog’s escapade to Oswego this weekend to visit brothers of Delta Sigma Phi. We had an awesome time and, even though Sunday is usually an off posting day, I thought I would put up my response to the court poll, even though, as I am sure everybody realized, picking the best Beatles song is just hard.

I thoroughly enjoy The Beatles music. Yeah, that may be the best way to put it. I don’t know if I could put it any other way without sounding obsessive and, well, weird. As the initial post said, The Beatles can be split up into three different hair stages. When the hair was well-kept, short, and conservative, The Beatles were putting out pop songs that, while certainly corny, were still the best and most catchy of the time. The hair began to grow and the albums Rubber Soul and Revolver came along and The Beatles were not the innocent fab four any longer. When the hair became unkempt, The Beatles had succumbed to drugs and psychedelia and, like with their pop masterpieces of a few years prior, their psychedelia was the best. Yes, one thing with The Beatles was, no matter what type of music, they were arguably playing in the top tier.

In the poll I attempted to sample from all types of Beatles music and, trust me, it was so tough to get it down to five songs. That was painful, imagine how hard it was to pick one. Yet, as I have been saying for many years, there is one particular Beatles song that sticks out because of its lyric, musicality, originality, and plain awesomeness. Yes, while I can sing the “na, na, na” from “Hey Jude” forever and while the sounds of “Elanore Rigby” send shivers down my spine and while the lyrics of “Let it Be” get to me every time and while “Yesterday” is just beautiful, there is one song that does it for me completely and that is “A Day in the Life” off of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Here’s why.

There is just something striking about this masterpiece that is symbolic of The Beatles, incredibly well-written and thought provoking, and is just good music. The song has three parts, similar to the Beatles progression into the band they became in the late 60’s. The song begins in the late middle stages of the Beatles with the first verse which focuses on a dreamy melody and an interesting lyric which is highlighted in the most eye-opening line, “He blew his mind out in a car, He didn’t notice that the lights had changed” which just breaks you out of the airy state the song puts you in. The harmony is quintessential Beatles which is perfect. But, after the verses something odd happens. The voices drop out, the music becomes a little louder and starts building up to a climax, the Beatles middle stage is done and taking over is a weird psychedelic mix of the contradiction of cacophonous and oddly harmonious music. A thousand pianos hit a disjointed note and all of a sudden it seems the song will certainly fall off a cliff and fly away into nothingness, but, no, Stop! We have traveled back in time to early Beatles. The alarm clock rings and the day begins. He gets out of bed, finds his way downstairs and has a cup, grabs his coat and his hat, makes the bus two seconds flat. The song bounces up and down like a happy tune, like the Beatles singing about seeing a face they can’t forget. But then he finds his way upstairs and his a smoke and somebody spoke and I (he) went into a dream and, just like that, we are back into middle-late Beatles strung out harmony, back to the verses of the Beatles that continue to transcend time, back to the build up of the end of the song, the early-middle-late Beatles all mixing together to form that moment of pure bliss and after it is all done the song stops and left echoing around the track is the perfect chord, the defining E, that every instrument plays. The Beatles end their best work and the record needle slides  to the endless inner core’s rotation, which is the least the Beatles could do, to allow your spinning mind a chance to recover.

The Beatles 1962 A little later Stage 3