Sunday, March 22, 2026

WEIRD AL COVERS LIVE Vol. 2 The Seventies - Mostly DEEP PURPLE Tom Petty DAVID BOWIE

WEIRD AL COVERS Vol. 2 The Seventies - Mostly 


Here’s the second volume of live performances by WEIRD AL & the band without an official name.  They’re sometimes jokingly referred to as The Innocuous Silhouettes, or The Boys In The Band (TBITB).  The core members are; JIM “KIMO”WEST, STEVE JAY, JON “BERMUDA” SCHWARTZ, & RUBEN VALTIERRA.  


These are live cover versions that prove they’re contenders for the title; THE WORLD’S GREATEST COVER BAND.  On Vol. 2 The Seventies - Mostly they play rock, pop, funk, rockabilly, punk, new wave, & heavy metal.


Some of the highlights are their versions of Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers’s Breakdown and Refugee, The MonkeesLast Train To Clarksville, & The Sex Pistols God Save The Queen.


Check out Vol. 1 here: WEIRD AL COVERS LIVE VOL. 1


Friday, March 20, 2026

Wintersleep: Awake Again in 2026

 

Could be wrong, but it seems like the "big in Japan" phenomenon applies less often to Canadian artists than those from other countries.  To phrase it less awkwardly: Canada seems to value its artists.  They don't have to go away to become famous or to be appreciated for their artistry.  There aren't many prophets without honor in the Great White North.  Again -- just one blogger's impression.  There may be exceptions. One bad apple might spoil the whole bunch, girl.

Case in point: the Nova Scotia band Wintersleep.  As the winter of 2026 comes to an end, there's a new album on the way called Wishing Moon, and a European tour begins in April.  

Perhaps you've slept on them?  Wintersleep began as a side project of another band called Kary.  Their self-titled debut appeared in 2003, followed by an untitled Wintersleep album in 2005.  I got into their music after hearing the amazing song Archaeologists on college radio.  I saw Wintersleep during their US tour supporting the 2007 album Welcome To The Night Sky, which remains a personal favorite. 

Members of Wintersleep also perform in a group called Contrived, and they released an album in 2024 called Addicted To Sadness.  Meanwhile, Wintersleep's frontman Paul Murphy has a side project called Postdata.  These are busy people.  You're probably busy too.  You don't have time to dig through Wintersleep's history and compile some of their best songs into a CD-length mix.  If only someone could spare you the effort and give you the lowdown.  A bird's eye view on the Wintersleep caper, if you will.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Weird Al Covers LIVE Vol. 1 - The Sixties CREAM Alice Cooper STEPPENWOLF The Beatles


Weird Al LIVE Covers Vol. 1 - The Sixties

It’s been said that THE WHO was THE WORLD’S GREATEST COVER BAND, because Pete Townsend’s demos were so thorough that he basically walked in & played the other guys a finished version of his latest song, and they learned their part.  They’re such good demos that three volumes of them SCOOP, ANOTHER SCOOP, & SCOOP 3 were commercially released.  As much as I love THE WHO, they were playing songs tailor-made for their strengths.


For me, the title of THE WORLD’S GREATEST COVER BAND would have to go to WEIRD AL’s band, because they capably reproduce nearly every style of music live, night after night.  And they kick ass!


So I present to you the FIRST volume of live performances by the band without an official name.  They’re sometimes jokingly referred to as The Innocuous Silhouettes, or The Boys In The Band (TBITB).  They even put out a song called "Al's Band".


I give you the core group of JIM “KIMO”WEST, STEVE JAY, JON “BERMUDA” SCHWARTZ, & RUBEN VALTIERRA (the newest member who’s been aboard since 1991).  These guys get my vote for THE WORLD’S GREATEST COVER BAND!


Here’s some tasty Weird Al Trivia: Guitar legend Rick Derringer produced Al's first six albums through 1989's UHF Soundtrack, when Al himself took over the production duties starting with 1992's Off The Deep End. Rick got the Stinky treatment here: IN THE MIX Rick Derringer


This is one of several compilations, with a special surprise that’s available nowhere else bringing it all home!





Saturday, March 14, 2026

CHROME COVERS: Songs of Damon Edge and Helios Creed

Chrome was a band that blew my mind when I first heard them as a teenager.  The surreal vocals and synthesizer of Damon Edge combined with the spacey guitar work of Helios Creed was irresistible. 

Damon started the band in San Francisco and released Chrome's debut The Visitation on his own Siren Records in 1976 (50 years ago!).  Helios joined for 1977's Alien Soundtracks. Edge & Creed experimented with recording techniques on that album and Half Machine Lip Moves (1979).  

Chrome then signed with Beggars Banquet and released Red ExposureThe rhythm section of John and Hilary Stench (formerly of Pearl Harbor & The Explosions) backed Damon and Helios on the next two albums, Blood On The Moon and 3rd From The Sun

Damon moved to France with his wife, Fabienne Shine (singer of Shakin' Street).  He formed a new Chrome lineup and released a series of albums between 1984 and 1994 (which have been collected on the Chrome Box II).  Helios Creed released his first solo album on Subterranean Records in 1985.  Later he found a home among like-minded folks at Amphetamine Reptile.

Damon died in 1995.  Helios and the Stench Brothers reunited under the Chrome name and began releasing new material, starting with 1997's Retro Transmission.  Helios Creed solo records continued to appear (often with his Chrome bandmates), and he also collaborated with Nik Turner on several projects.  He has also played with the Butthole Surfers and MGMT.  

2023's Blue Exposure may be the final Chrome album.  Helios is now 72 and was the beneficiary of a fundraiser last year to help pay for his care.  Buy some Chrome and Helios records from Bandcamp!

The best-known Chrome covers are Prong's version of "Third From The Sun" and the Jesus Lizard's medley "Chrome".  There's also a Chrome tribute album.  I've collected a variety of Chrome covers for today's share.  It's cool to see how Chrome has influenced metal bands, punks, industrial music, and noise rock.  Two recent covers that didn't make the cut are Imparity's version of "Third From The Sun" and last year's single by Anal Babes, with "Chromosome Damage" on the b-side.  

Chrome has also been sampled by Kendrick Lamar, Saul Williams, Billy Woods, Bradford Cox and Jim Thirlwell!  Hats off to Helios Creed, one of the gnarliest of all gnarly guitarists.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

IN THE MIX Tony Gilkyson Edition Vol. 1 - Lone Justice, X, Randy Weeks, & Chuck E. Weiss Guitarist!



IN  THE MIX Tony Gilkyson Edition Vol. 1


When I lived in San Francisco, I had a crazy girlfriend I turned onto my favorite hangout--a bar that had the same rockabilly band playing for free every Monday night.  The band was great, & the draft beer was cheap, & the bar itself was a hundred years old.  Because I was travelling for work, & she was there every Monday, when we split up, she got my watering hole in the separation.


So when I moved to Los Angeles, I set to work to find a similar set-up. Randy Weeks wrote Can’t Let Go, which Lucinda Williams included on her Grammy-Winning Car Wheels On A Gravel Road album, which afforded him his own night at The Cinema Bar, and a crack band.  Two other songwriters Mike Stinson, & Tony Gilkyson backed him on drums, & guitar, & they had lots of famous guests (like Lucinda Williams) drop in. 


Gilkyson is from a family of songwriters that includes his sister Eliza Gilkyson, and his father Terry Gilkyson who was nominated for an Academy Award for writing Bare Necessities for Walt Disney’s The Jungle Book.  He also wrote Dean Martin's #1 hit Memories Are Made Of This.


But while he's a great songwriter, what Tony was most known for was his guitar playing.  First with Chuck E. Weiss & The Goddamn Liars, then Lone Justice, and finally replacing Dave Alvin in X, who had replaced the legendary Billy Zoom.  Tony also produced albums for his sister, and Dances With Wolves author & poet Michael Blake.  He co-produced two of Chuck E. Weiss’ albums with Tom Waits, and also co-wrote some Goddamn Liar songs that are included in this compilation (if he can be believed).


Having seen him live at The Cinema Bar 11-12 times, easy, I can tell you that he's quiet, & unassuming, and nice, & one of the most tasteful rock guitarists there is.  And you can't go wrong with any of the albums he's put out as a solo artist.


IN THE MIX Tony Gilkyson Edition Vol. 1 contains a lot of X tracks from their Live At The Whiskey-A-Go-Go & Unclogged albums.  I feel that the admirable way Gilkyson filled Billy Zoom’s shoes live is one of the reasons the wayward guitarist returned to the fold.  Check out Tony's guitar solo on The Once Over Twice—it sounds like a creature born of atomic testing rising out of the water off the coast of Tokyo.  There are also cuts with Chuck E., Randy Weeks, & with Lone Justice on a night Bono joined the band onstage.  Volume 2 is already finished, but I’m pacing myself.


If anyone has this album by Tony & Michael Blake, it would help the cause:  https://www.discogs.com/release/3469721-Michael-Blake-6-Tony-Gilkyson-Im-Alive




 

Monday, March 9, 2026

Whistle While You Work - Music With A Lilt To Lighten Crime Fighting

In the comments of the previous Whistling selection, SSteve asked "What makes a man whistle?"  I put it in my own words here. It is a question that is short and the answer is wide. 


Unless you accept the obvious answer: Various ReasonsThat is, that there are lots of ways to which an artist gets to include whistling in a song.  The ‘kunstfluiter’, an artist whose signature modus is whistling, shows his art.  Often we hear whistling in movie/tv themes where my guess would be: drawing attention. 


Also in movies there is great variety. The G B & U is for me a proud whistle. Turks Fruitby Toots is a carefree live, being young, being in love, riding a bike and blissfully unaware.  Fritz Lang, in his 1931 movie M, uses the whistle as a wolf in sheep's clothing. The child does not know what horror awaits, but we, the viewers, recognize the whistle.


In lots of blues/folk music one would be happy to have strings to the guitar, and whistling adds something where the harmonica, cheap as it is, is unavailable or unpractical.  Often whistling lifts the mood, makes it feel that life is easy. 


There is a Dutch song in which the singer is annoyed by "that stupid song", that will not leave his head. And he sings: You whistle, hum or sing along willingly or not, you'll get mesjogge by that stupid song.


Everyone picks their own reason to whistle as part of a song. You can also ask, why not more often?  We have seen here the la-la-la, and sha-la-la.  We can ask why the word-less sounds like Great Gig In The Sky and The War Song (same singer Clare Torry) and seek more examples.  Sex sounds like Chakachas and Man.  The wordless vocal part in A Day In A Life, humming in Wand'rin Star.


Trying to stand out, or as I call it, re-inventing a wheel. Like "Hey, I know something original, add a whistle."  There are also ways of destroying a song. Introducing a band during a song, or public participation (Hey-ey  Hey-ey, Ho-oh, Ho-oh, Hey Hey Ho Ho aaaaaaaaaaah).


This selection now. It starts with one of my favorites Triggerfinger, a heavy duty band who made an unexpected cover with a lovely whistle. When you love power rock trios, listen to this band's other work.

The unification of this diverse selection through whistling works a treat here.  Recent recordings of oldies such as Georgie Fame together with the Einstürzende Neubauten and The ExThe Humor of Frank Pahl with the serious Elvis Costello.  Björk and The Pixies or the joyous rendition of Peggy Sue.


There are Vic Chesnutt, Billy Bragg, Edwyn Collins, and (for me till now unknown) Steven Page, who namechecks Linda Ronstadt.  Another great song is The Heads with Andy Partidge, I don't know how I got to get it, I'm glad I did.  And the set is finished by the French Zaz and I like to hear more French whistling.  Enjoy this set of 90s/00s and some 10s. 


Saturday, March 7, 2026

Comeback Special 2013

As we get into the 2010’s, the number of comeback albums increases significantly.  The 2012 Comeback Special was a two disc set, and today's 2013 compilation is as well. The increase is both mathematically and historically inevitable: in the 2010’s, there were simply more musical artists who could reunite than there were in earlier decades, and more music fans who might want to attend a comeback tour and buy a reunion album.  

In the 2010's, we had not yet reached the point of music consumers abandoning physical media. You could still buy a new car with an in-dash CD player.  Spotify came to the US in 2011, and it didn’t immediately dominate listening habits to the extent that it does in 2026.  

Another factor in the rise of the comeback album might be the decreased barriers to entry.  In the 21st century, artists can record and release their own music without a record label contract, and make something that sounds professional without going into a recording studio.  For example, Luscious Jackson’s 2013 comeback album was crowdfunded by PledgeMusic.  Jill Cunniff taught herself ProTools and produced the record. There were also new distribution channels.  CD Baby was founded in 1998, and partnered with iTunes in 2004.  The first Record Store Day was in 2007, and Bandcamp opened for business in 2008.  


The Drake meme accompanying today’s post can be applied to Geese, Bad Bunny, Drake, Kendrick, and my own musical prejudices.  For last year's 2025 Comeback Special, I disdained Counting Crows, Spin Doctors, and a few others.  For 2013, I have excluded the comeback albums from Starship, Johnny Hates Jazz, the Standells, and Osage Tribe (an Italian progressive rock band).  I listened to the Standells' album Bump several times, and I can only say that I wish it was a better record. The band Boston barely made the cut.


The biggest comebacks of 2013 were probably David Bowie’s surprise release of The Next Day, the long-awaited return of My Bloody Valentine, and Black Sabbath’s 13 (with Ozzy, Tommy, and Geezer, but without Bill Ward).  13 turned out to be the final Black Sabbath studio album, but we wouldn’t know that until 2025.  Greg Ginn and Ron Reyes hoisted the banner of Black Flag, but their 2013 return was not well-received.  If you’re a Britpop fan, the Suede reunion album Bloodsports was a big deal.  And if you live in New Zealand, the return of the Exponents (with a new album and a documentary film) was a major multimedia event. Damn, that Exponents song is good!


The longest gaps between albums among the 2013 comeback artists were the Standells (46 years), the British psychedelic band July (45 years), the aforementioned Osage Tribe (41 years) and the duo Delbert & Glen (40 years).  We have a wealth of Delbert McClinton's music here on the blog, and many more Comeback Special compilations.


P.S. There’s a great article about the Reivers in last year’s Austin Music Issue of the Oxford American magazine.  Read it here!