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Post by petrolino on Nov 15, 2019 22:43:31 GMT
Juliana Hatfield, Mary Lou Lord, Kay Hanley [N.E.] & Mary Timony [D.C.]
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Juliana Hatfield & Mary Lou Lord : Subway Sets
'Boston constructed the first public park, Boston Common in 1634; the first public school, Boston Latin, in 1635; and the first subway system in the nation, known as the Tremont Street Subway, in 1897. Then there's the first inoculation, telephone, and industrial arts school (not to brag). Newer firsts include the Big Dig, which set a precedent for smart urban planning around the globe, and of course there's the first social media network (Facebook) too.'
- North Bennet Street School
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Juliana Hatfield
Juliana Hatfield was born on July 27, 1967 in Wiscasset, Maine. She was raised with her brothers in Duxbury, Massachusetts, a historic seaside town near Boston. As she entered her teenage years, around the close of the 1970s, Hatfield started catching on to the raging punk scene, inspired by a deep, developing passion for Californian outcasts X. She attended Duxbury High School and Boston University, later studying at the Berklee College of Music in Boston. During her college enrollment, she came under the spell of Wisconsin sinners Violent Femmes. She's since studied fine art and painting at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.
'Take me to the ocean and leave me there, Leave me all alone with the sun and the air, I float around all day long, It won't be long before I'm gone (I'm gone), I float around, I'm sinkin', sinkin', sinkin' down, Feel like I'm gonna drown, In this stinkin' town, Show me the way to the shore, Throw me out 'cause I'm, So, so, so, so bored ...'
- 'Feelin' Massachusetts' (Juliana Hatfield)
'Universal Heart-Beat' - Juliana Hatfield
Blake Babies were formed in Boston in 1986 by multi-instrumentalist Hatfield, guitarist John Strohm and drummer Freda Boner. Hatfield posed a dual threat on guitar and bass, with the permanent bass guitar position being filled by different musicians at different times, including Seth White and Evan Dando (the Lemonheads). Blake Babies worked closely with a crew of dedicated in-house experimentalists stationed at Fort Apache Studios, notably producer Gary Smith and engineers Paul Q. Kolderie and Sean Slade, who'd perform duties on the local scene for the Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Dinosaur Jr, Volcano Suns, Throwing Muses, Pixies, Buffalo Tom, Sebadoh, Come and Belly among others. Hatfield and Strohm also played in formations of the Lemonheads, a Boston-based rock 'n' roll outfit fronted by Dando.
"My dad was raised in Indiana but later in life ended up living in Houghton, Michigan. He got a job at a hospital up there. That's where he died, in Houghton. My mother was raised in Detroit. I used to visit my grandparents in Birmingham when I was a kid."
- Juliana Hatfield, Pencil Storm
"When 'Innocence and Experience' (1993) was originally released, it definitely felt like an afterthought to me. I cared strongly about our albums and EPs. I was so wrapped up in the creation and release of each of them, and so concerned with the reception, but by the time this record came out, the Blake Babies felt like a thing in my past and it didn’t mean much to me.
Like Juliana (Hatfield) just said, I feel differently now, and I appreciate the current release of this compilation of songs from every stage of the band’s first and primary incarnation. I think it’s a nice sampling."
- Freda Boner, Rock & Roll Globe
Blake Babies
'Nicely, Nicely' (1987) 'Earwig' (1989) 'Sunburn' (1990) 'God Bless The Blake Babies' (2001)
Blake Babies perform live at The Rathskeller in Boston on October 30, 1988
When Blake Babies disbanded, Hatfield embarked upon a solo career. She also formed her own musical unit, The Juliana Hatfield Three, with Dean Fisher on bass and Todd Philips on drums. She plays many instruments - for her album 'Peace & Love' (2010) she wrote every song and played every instrument (she also produced it, engineered it and released it independently through her own music label, Ye Olde Records).
"The conundrum of the Northeast’s summer resort towns (the Hamptons, Montauk, Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard) is that you will inevitably run into many of the same city folk from whom you’re seeking a weekend’s reprieve. Enter Duxbury, long believed to be the best-kept secret of Massachusetts’s South Shore—the stretch of coast between Boston and Cape Cod. A haven for people who prefer the quiet seclusion of a small town to the social offerings of city life, Duxbury includes a sprinkling of notable residents who keep their day-to-day out of the limelight, like Aerosmith’s Joe Perry and former Citigroup chairman John S. Reed. Completely escaping city life is Duxbury’s value proposition—Truman Capote stayed nearby the summer he wrote Breakfast at Tiffany’s. At about a four-hour drive from New York City and just under an hour from Boston, Duxbury may not be the most accessible town, but the rewards of finally getting there are manifold: an historic, picturesque town completely unmarred by tourism; world-class waterfronts; a bustling community with active sports, arts, and social goings-on; impossibly fresh seafood; and more New England charm than an L.L.Bean catalogue."
- Todd Plummer, Vogue
"I need to be alone at home, I’m not a person who can go to a coffee shop and write, or read, I find it’s too distracting to concentrate when there are other people around and music or whatever, I need to be alone in my apartment. It’s not very big, but there are a few places where I like to do most of the writing, like at the kitchen table, or sometimes I’ll move into the living room. It’s mostly done at the kitchen table."
- Juliana Hatfield, AllMusic (article published January 18th, 2019)
Duxbury, Plymouth County
As a solo recording artist, Hatfield's been joined in the studio by Richard Butler (Psychedelic Furs), Peter Holsapple (the Db's), Mike Watt (Minutemen), Dot Allison (One Dove), Mikey Welsh (Weezer), Andy Chase (Ivy), Jody Porter (Fountains Of Wayne) and tour buddy Liz Phair. She's also collaborated on artistic projects with Paul Westerberg (the Replacements), Tanya Donelly (Throwing Muses) and inventor Walter Sear. Hatfield, Donelly and Kristin Hersh (Throwing Muses) are members of John Wesley Harding's 'Cabinet of Wonders', a live-action musical variety show. "Nineteen-ninety-two was the inaugural year of the “women in rock” era: a stretch of several years when artists from Courtney Love and PJ Harvey to Meredith Brooks unwittingly formed a cohort of so-called girls with guitars and the phrase “girl power” seeped into the popular lexicon from the underground precincts of the riot grrrl scene. Juliana Hatfield was at the heart of this zeitgeist. In 1992, Hatfield had just broken up her college band Blake Babies and released her solo debut Hey Babe on Mammoth Records. Hey Babe was among the most successful independent releases of the year; 25 years on, it remains a largely forgotten minor masterpiece. But the release of a newly remastered Hey Babe on the American Laundromat label this month will reintroduce listeners to a coming-of-age album for the solitary female misfit. At the time of Hey Babe’s release, the riot grrrl movement was normalising the expression of female rage, offering a crucial framework of empowerment for female listeners. But Hey Babe offers a landscape of emotion – self-disgust, second-guessing, depression, cautious optimism – that has no place in a reception model so narrowly hinged on “empowerment”. The album dwells on muddled feelings, elevating confusion and insecurity over anger. Its 11 songs build entire worlds out of the state of feeling small, delivered in a voice that skids from girlish wail to shattered mumble. The album’s centrepiece is the song Ugly, an acoustic instruction manual on living with low self-esteem. “I’m pretty lost but I don’t want to be found/ My tiny screams don’t make a sound,” sings Hatfield. Hey Babe’s tone of disquiet has made it all too easy to overlook Hatfield’s foundational role in the “women in rock” genealogy. This reflects our cultural preference for so-called “vehement passions” over “minor feelings”. Cultural critic Sianne Ngai notes of the western literary tradition: “Something about the cultural canon itself seems to prefer higher passions and emotions, as if minor or ugly feelings are not only incapable of producing ‘major’ works, but somehow disabled the works they do drive from acquiring canonical distinction.” This explains a lot about the record’s unfairly diminished role in the alternative rock narrative. Hatfield herself stopped playing its songs shortly after it was released. “Immediately after recording the album, I was really embarrassed by it,” she explained to Billboard, “but now I’m really proud of myself.” Hey Babe will strike a chord with a new generation of listeners who are shy, ambivalent, inward and emotionally complex."
- Laura Fisher, The Guardian
"Juliana Hatfield has been on a roll. Her last three records have arguably been some of the best work of her 33-year music career. Pussycat (2017), was an unplanned rally-cry against the Trump regime, sometimes more subtle than others, but never without her signature pop overtones and cutting lyrics. Weird (2019), her most current release, leaves the political sentiments behind in favor of a modern indie-pop-rock sound. And the …Sings Olivia Newton-John (2018) covers collection, a nod to her musical hero, was nothing short of a masterpiece. And then there’s the back catalog. Her first band Blake Babies were a bit less refined and polished, but brought a real charm to the table with that innocence, and her early solo records – including her commercial high-water mark The Juliana Hatfield Three – Become What You Are (with her biggest hit single “My Sister”) were staples of early 90’s alternative rock and MTV’s 120 Minutes. The 20 years between this recent renaissance and her early alt-rock success were a little quieter for Juliana, in the world spotlight at least. She delved into some side projects – Some Girls, Minor Alps (with Matthew Caws of Nada Surf), and The I Don’t Cares (with Paul Westerberg). There were Blake Babies and JH3 reunion albums and short tours, and a string of solo records and EPs that often cast-aside the ear-worm poppiness for a darker, more sparse and spacious sound. Her touring schedule slowed down considerably, and while she never disappeared from the public eye, sightings were certainly less frequent. In 2009 she published her auto-biography When I Grow Up: A Memoir, a revealing and compelling look into her career, anxieties, and personal life."
- Jeremy Porter, Pencil Storm (article published June 18th, 2019)
Juliana Hatfield
'Hey Babe' (1992) 'Become What You Are' (1993) 'Only Everything' (1995) 'Bed' (1998) 'Beautiful Creature' (2000) 'Juliana's Pony : Total System Failure' (2000) 'In Exile Deo' (2004) 'Made In China' (2005) 'How To Walk Away' (2008) 'Peace & Love' (2010) 'There's Always Another Girl' (2011) 'Juliana Hatfield' (2012) 'Wild Animals' (2013) 'Whatever, My Love' (2015) 'Pussycat' (2017) 'Juliana Hatfield Sings Olivia Newton-John' (2018) 'Weird' (2019) 'Juliana Hatfield Sings The Police' (2019)
'Blood' (2021)
'Dumb Fun' - Juliana Hatfield
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Interview Excerpt : 'Juliana Hatfield's Bed, Unmade' (published in 2012, The Old Grey Cat)
TOGC - Is white chocolate your favorite drug?
JH - Yes! (Often, when I say “you” in a song I mean “I,” like in much of “Sunshine,” and often, when I say “I” in a song, I mean “you.”) Although I have recently really cut down on the sugar, almost completely — I was/am kind of a sugar addict and I realized it was dragging me down.
TOGC - What are your go-to albums, i.e. the ones you’ve returned to over and over again throughout your listening life?
JH - Really, just all the classics that wouldn’t surprise you — stuff that stands the test of time and isn’t dated like a lot of other stuff: Neil Young, Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, stuff like that.
TOGC - What was the first 45 or LP you purchased with your own money?
JH - It might have been Soap Opera by the Kinks. I don’t remember the details, but I remember loving that album and listening to it tons and singing along with my best friend, Robin.
TOGC - Which of your albums/songs do you consider your best (and why)?
JH - I think there are good moments on every record but i think that none of them is great all the way through. I feel I haven’t made my best album yet — it will be down the road.
TOGC - You almost named “There’s Always Another Girl” after a phrase from John Irving’s “The World According to Garp,” “Speeches Delivered to Animals and Plants.” What are some of your favorite books/novels and have they (ever) influenced your songs?
JH - Sometimes books get into songs — phrases, titles, ideas, characters — but I think more often it is films that work their way in. “Mabel” is all about the character of Mabel from “A Woman Under the Influence” and “Vagabond” from There’s Always Another Girl is named after the French film Vagabond—and the song is all about the film, about the girl in the film, a very haunting film.
'Physical' - Juliana Hatfield
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Massachusetts
Pixies perform 'U-Mass' at the Paradise in Boston
"And I was pretending that I was in a Galaxie 500 video ..."
- 'Stratford-On-Guy' (Liz Phair)
Galaxie 500 in Cambridge, Massachusetts
'23 Minutes In Brussels' - Luna with Jane Scarpantoni & Tom Verlaine
'For The Birds' - The Juliana Hatfield Three
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Mary Lou Lord
Mary Lou Lord was born on March 1, 1965 in Salem, Massachusetts. She busked on the subway system in Boston, Massachusetts, gaining attention on the Red Line. She was a founding member of the band Chupa which included Jason Hatfield (Juliana Hatfield's brother) on guitar. The band's rhythm section, Shawn King Devlin and Brian Dunton, were both members of Dumptruck. Guitarist Mary Timony (Autoclave) replaced Lord when she chose to leave the set-up and the band changed its name to Helium.
Mary Lou Lord
'Oh, Wonder' - Gordan Gano & Mary Lou Lord
Lord's sporadic recording career has been a stop-start affair, which has seen her record original songs, material submitted by the Bevis Frond, and songs written by Daniel Johnston, Elliott Smith and others. Her relationships with songwriters Kurt Cobain (Nirvana) and Elliott Smith led to some dark days but she was able to get through them. Her album 'Got No Shadow' (1998) features contributions from Roger McGuinn (the Byrds), Nels Cline (the Geraldine Fibbers), Shawn Colvin and Money Mark. She abandoned her recording career in 2005 due to spasmodic dysphonia, but she picked it up again the following decade. She has since returned to recording and performing.
"I’m not the most prolific writer out there and I’m very fussy as well. But I think overall everything worked in my favor. At the time when the labels were coming around, a lot of indie bands were getting signed and all the girls were getting signed, I knew there was going to be a backlash and I didn’t want to get caught in it. So I felt it was better to wait."
- Mary Lou Lord, Rolling Stone
'Lights Are Changing' - Mary Lou Lord & Juliana Hatfield
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Post by petrolino on Nov 16, 2019 23:31:08 GMT
Kay Hanley & Aimee Mann : Ships Ahoy
"Boston was founded in 1630 by English Puritans fleeing religious persecution. On 29 March 1630 a fleet of 11 ships carrying 700 people sailed from England to Massachusetts. They were led by John Winthrop (1588-1649). At first the people settled at Charlestown, which had been founded the year before. However fresh water was short so most of the new settlers moved across the river to a peninsula called Trimountaine. In 1630 the new settlement was named Boston after Boston in England from which many of the settlers came. The Puritans hoped to create a 'city on a hill' i.e. a shining example of a Godly society for the entire world to see. Instead they created a society just as intolerant as the one they had left. The Puritans went to America fleeing religious persecution but they in turn persecuted the Quakers who they called a 'cursed sect'. A Baptist named Obadiah Holmes was publicly whipped in Boston in July 1651. In October 1659 two Quakers named William Robinson and Marmaduke Stevenson were hanged in Boston. Another Quaker named Mary Dyer was hanged on Boston Common on 1 June 1660. Nevertheless the new settlement flourished. In 1631 the first sailing ship built in America was launched from Boston and soon the shipbuilding industry thrived. There was also a flourishing whaling industry and a fishing industry."
- Tim Lambert, 'A Brief History Of Boston, Massachusetts, USA'
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Kay Hanley
Kay Hanley was born on September 11, 1968 in Boston, Massachusetts. She was raised in the Dorchester neighbourhood, a traditionally blue collar area (Donnie Wahlberg of New Kids On The Block & Mark Wahlberg of Marky Mark And The Funky Bunch lived just across the street). An accomplished guitarist and songwriter from an early age, Hanley performed Catholic songs locally. She became a founding member of the band Letters To Cleo in 1990, alongside guitarists Greg McKenna (City Rivals) and Michael Eisenstein, power bassist Scott Riebling, and drummer and percussionist Stacy Jones (American Hi-Fi). Jones left to join Veruca Salt in the mid-1990s (Hanley's close friends with Nina Gordon), to be replaced by drummer Tom Polce for the band's third studio album. The dissolution of the group in the year 2000 has proven to be temporary, with reunions in 2008 and 2016.
"I have to remind people all the time (especially my mom) that my goal is not to reach a mass audience but to consistently put out my own version of good pop music to as many, or few, people who want to hear it. Letters to Cleo never made massively popular records, and I probably never will either, but I'll always make music, so if you want to hear it, I'll keep making it."
- Kay Hanley
'Molly (16 Candles Down The Drain)' - Sponge & Kay Hanley
Hanley works as a voiceover artist and a professional songwriter. She also writes musical scores and has contributed songs and music to popular cartoons and kids tv shows. As a solo artist, she's released the albums 'Cherry Marmalade' (2002) and 'Weaponize' (2008), as well as the extended EP, 'The Babydoll' (2008).
"Michelle Lewis and Kay Hanley, two songwriters who double as the executive directors of advocacy group Songwriters of North America, describe their roles as “first responders to a fire,” their organizational missive as “building an army for when the big fights erupt,” and their career trajectory as de facto union leaders as “falling ass-backwards into a vacuum.” In their previous lives, Hanley led the alt-rock band Letters to Cleo and Lewis released solo albums while working with artists like Cher and Kelly Osbourne. But the two singer-songwriters banded together a few years ago to sue the U.S. Department of Justice over a controversial new licensing rule affecting songwriters’ earnings — and they’ve not slowed their political charge since then, turning a grassroots group of friends into a major force pressing for fair pay for songwriters within industry-roiling issues such as the recently passed Music Modernization Act and Congress’s ongoing tussle over music copyright law.. Though they never planned for SONA to be a formal group (“We started out just calling ourselves the ‘shower-uppers,’ and now we have an official title and a board,” Lewis says, amazed), they now have a membership of hundreds of tunesmiths and are planning summits, training sessions, and a national expansion outside of their home base of Los Angeles."
- Amy X. Wang, Rolling Stone
'Veda Very Shining' - Letters To Cleo (used in 'Cheerio School')
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6 Albums
'Awake' - Letters To Cleo
'Aurora Gory Alice' (1993) - Letters To Cleo
"Spirited and warm pop songs populate the full-length debut of Letters to Cleo. Like fellow Bostonian Juliana Hatfield, Letters pull off simple, cute pop hooks with a powerful rock band approach. On Aurora Gory Alice, however, restraint is the name of the game, and it comes off as a somewhat flawed but ultimately endearing record. Crooner Kay Hanley dexterously adapts her versatile vocals to fit the band's varying dynamics. Letters' debut single, "I See," is reprised for the album, but its big sales draw ended up being the speedy chorus of "Here and Now," a hit off the Melrose Place soundtrack a year after Aurora's release. Other notable tunes include the curious "From Under the Dust" and acoustic closer "Step Back."
- Troy Carpenter, AllMusic
"It's a shame that Letters to Cleo's proper debut often gets retrospectively cast as a vehicle for "Here & Now;" the band's blistering yet at the same time fettering MTV hit. From the majestically milquetoast anthem Big Star (which pays fitting tribute to LTC's pop-rock forebears) to the quirky and delightfully idiosyncratic "Mellie's Comin' Over," Aurora offers listeners a power pop tour de force through the lens of a Dorchester, Massachusetts garage rock outfit who had not yet been distracted and disjointed by the homogenizing 90's rock conglomerate. Other highlights include a stellar version of the band's pre-Melrose Place standard "I See," the monolithic "Rim Shak" (as heavy as the band would ever get) and "Get Back" a coquettishly minimalistic closer that would serve as a touchstone for indie poppers such as the Lumineers 15 years later. Cleo would never again sound so innocent and accomplished at once. If you have to own one of their records, this is the one; negative pop-culture connotations notwithstanding."
- Mark Ustach, 'Aurora Gory Alice'
'From Under The Dust' - Letters To Cleo
'Wholesale Meats And Fish' (1995) - Letters To Cleo
"Wholesale Meats and Fish by Letters to Cleo is everything debut Aurora Gory Alice did right with some added panache. On their 1995 release the Boston band dismiss dodgy second album claims by grinding the haphazard atmosphere out of their music to make a wholly commercial record that nevertheless retains its 1990s Grrrl group essence. Essentially, listening to Wholesale Meats and Fish is as much fun as you can possibly have while thinking about really sh*t things like breaking up with your boyfriend and breaking kitchen utensils on overcooked food. The album means serious business from the start, with “Demon Rock” splitting hairs and throwing the book at a relationship gone sour. The theme of resentment and female independence echoes throughout Wholesale Meats and Fish, hounding the bad out of addiction on “Fast Way” before leaping into “Jennifer”, a sisterly call for comradeship and emotional strength. Letters to Cleo may have been branded a light hearted version of their riot Grrrl cousins, but Wholesale... packs enough of a punch to warm the heart and encourage some upper body flailing. Despite what you might expect my personal highlight takes a rare break from slapped face feminist values. With a keyboard loop that rocks the petticoat off your local funfair, “Acid Jed” spins and wallops into “Pizza Cutter” and “St Peter” like... well, someone on drugs at a funfair. At this point on the album you might become aware that the lyrics are often nonsensical, but that doesn’t really hinder Wholesale Meats and Fish – instead it adds a sort of batty charm. Who else could get away with a verse that consists entirely of facts about Nepal (“He’s Got an Answer”) or accusing “St Peter” of being a liar? The record isn’t something you should turn to if you’re in need of a ballad, but bless their socks, Letters to Cleo still provide a little something for all those who have been led into unknown territory. “Laudanum” draws the closest comparison to Aurora Gory Alice’s “From Under the Dust”, though fans of the song may be put off by the only other ballad, the delightfully titled “I Could Sleep (The Wuss Song)”. Throughout their career Letters to Cleo consistently called the shots and on reflection none of the albums deserve second place. Having said that, Wholesale Meats and Fish is perhaps their only perfect album, so it can narrowly – very narrowly, mind – be classified as Letters to Cleo’s Best Ever Album Ever (Please Don’t Reform and Ruin It)."
- Tiffany Daniels, Drunken Werewolf
'St. Peter' - Letters To Cleo
'Go!' (1997) - Letters To Cleo
"Letters to Cleo are back with their third album, GO! After having a hit on MTV, taking some time off to relax, and hearing constant break-up rumors being spread throughout their hometown, they got into the studio and wrote their best album to date. Eleven heart felt pop songs tear up your speakers, as the emotion and real-life anguish of everyday life is dealt with on Kay Hanley's (Letters to Cleo's lead singer/songwriter) own terms. "I Got Time" kicks off the CD. First you hear a soft guitar climbing its way through the song, with whispering vocals backing it up. "That's the prettiest picture that I have ever seen/so I stole it for myself/so you could see just what I mean/and this alluvial fan it represents my life/I've got the strength to move," softly sings Kay Hanley, before the band jumps in and the energy runs wild. The vocals are the key to the song, leading it through life, love, and hopefulness. Kay's vocals are strong and beautiful. The guitar also makes a strong presence, jumping between different pop hooks that have you deeper and deeper in their palms each time. The drums add intensity in parts, while other parts they follow the guitars quick leads, and help pull off amazingly refreshing pop hooks. "Because of You" starts off with a quick slab of the bass, then the rest of the band jumps right in and takes you from the beginning. The bass makes its presence ever present in this song, and it obtains a stronghold on the music and helps carry you into a deeper state of emotion with its thick, muscular form and big, bold playing style. Chunky and slippery, you don't lose a beat when the bass is the leader. Once again though, Kay's vocals are the main focus of the song. She lives, she loves, she loses, and she wins just like every other person on earth. Her vocals are personal, but they also can be pulled into your own heart and related to your own situations. Everything she's felt, you also feel through her lyrics. A very talented vocalist, as well as a talented lyricist, she pulls off everything sweetly and classy. "Veda Very Shining" starts out with loud drums, a whirling guitar, and pounding bass lines. Then it quickly drops into a pop hook that drags you right into the center of the chaos. The hooks are plentiful, the music is innocent and sweet, yet powerful and crunchy at the same time. Very versatile, if your in a happy mood the song can stand for hope, but if your in a depressed state of mind the song can remind you of more depression. One of the best songs on the album, it has the strength to draw you in and keep your mind very attentive throughout. "Sparklegirl" is another album standout full of hooks that will never let go. From the first line Kay sings, your drawn in by the tremendous energy the song has. The chorus packs even more power, emotion, and heart felt emotions that will send you to the canvas. These guys know how to make beautifully composed pop songs, and they can carry them through with precision. "Disappear" starts off soft, and gives you the impression its going to be a very sad song about lost love, but then it picks up when the drums bang, singling the tempo change. The song quickly picks up from there and dives right into powerful pop beats. Then the song changes into a softer state of mind when it hits the chorus, before quickly picking back up again when the next verse hits. Unlike other bands, Letters to Cleo starts the disc with power, and ends it with even more. The energy level stays constant throughout the disc, and you feel every word that comes out of Kay Hanley's mouth. Letters to Cleo deliver picture perfect pop songs with lyrics that are generic in a way that they can appeal to everyone, but they still keep the very personal edge in which Kay wrote them. Versatile and beautiful, Kay takes you through a course of real-life tales, while the rest of Letters to Cleo bang out the melodies and hooks the keep your ears listening. A definite A! These guys, if anything ever goes right, should once again be chart toppers in the coming months!"
- Alex Steininger, In Music We Trust
'I Got Time' - Letters To Cleo
'Sister' (1998) - Letters To Cleo
"So, Letters To Cleo look to have become inactive, but fans can still rejoice in the release of Sister, which collects up odd songs from their career so far. It joins In A Doghouse from Throwing Muses as this year's essential collection for fans of walloping alterna-rock."
- Cameron Randall, 'Alternative Music Press'
“I hated being criticized for what I did. Maybe it was because I was this Irish-Catholic girl from Dorchester. I hated people saying, ‘What, are you too big for your britches? You think you’re some big lead singer in a big (expletive) rock band?’ I bought into what people said about me and had too much ego wrapped up in my career. When I got out to Los Angeles, I found out there was a lot of love out in the universe for my band. I could punch myself for not realizing that our band was good and that it had meaning for people.”
- Kay Hanley, The Boston Herald
'Green Eggs' - Letters To Cleo
'Cherry Marmalade' (2002) - Kay Hanley
"This album is amazing. Not only is the music that of the Letters to Cleo flavor, but what Kay Hanley does both lyrically and vocally is absolutely outstanding. In my opinion this woman is one of the most talented and innovative female vocalist of our time. I highly recommend this album to anyone who has good understanding of musical structure and lyrical application. It is much like a symphonic rock composition."
- L. Cordasco, 'Cherry Filler'
'Trans-Neptunian Object #1' - Kay Hanley
'Baby Doll' - Kay Hanley
'Weaponize' (2008) - Kay Hanley
"Our dating name is Phanley, in case you were wondering."
- Kay Hanley (on Liz Phair - pictured above), Twitter
'Eighteen-years and seven-plus studio albums later, Kay Hanley maintains her grasp on gleeful arrogance while surrendering to her trademark youthful voice. The former Letters To Cleo front woman has held her own in the solo world without compromising her dedicated fan base. ***Weaponize***, Hanley’s second full-length solo album, is full of pop-rock sing-along gems and is possibly closest in sound to her long-gone Cleo days.'
- Ocean View Press
"Soundtrack work pays great…better than solo work unfortunately. That’s the sad reality of it. I’ll do a solo album out of love, because it’s my passion, but the bottom line is, we have a family to support and film soundtracks make you the most money."
- Kay Hanley, Ocean View Press
Letters To Cleo perform at the Paradise in Boston on November 19, 2016
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French Extraction In New England
"When you think of French spoken in America, Lousiana might be the only state that comes to mind (perhaps Missouri). Interestingly, Francophones have a pretty long history in the Northeast — specifically in Maine. “There was a huge immigration of French Canadians and Acadians that came down to Maine between 1840 and 1930 to work in the mills in towns like Lewiston, Orono, Van Buren, Biddeford, and French Island,” explains Jessamine Irwin, a French professor at NYU who teaches a course on French in Maine. But since then, the number of people who speak French at home in Maine has dwindled generation after generation. In 1970, about 141,500 Maine residents, or 14% of the population, reported French as their mother tongue, according to U.S. Census figures compiled by the University of Maine. In the 2012-2016 Census, only 38,695 French speakers were reported in Maine, making up only 3% of the population. Before the population started to falter, the French language was sustained by the Catholic church. “When immigrants came, they were primarily Catholic. The motto of the churches in Maine at the time was ‘qui perd sa langue perd sa foi’ — if you lose your language, you lose your faith.” French was spoken everywhere at this time. “Mass was given in French, parochial schools were run by nuns and taught in French. Hospitals, insurances companies, and other institutions were all conducted in French,” Irwin explains. The effort to speak French in public institutions was important so that “people could really live their lives in this tight-knit community without losing key aspects of their culture that are embedded in the language.” First St. Peter’s Church, Lewiston, 1900. However, the church stopped holding such a powerful place in the community, causing the French language to lose its importance. The church’s loss of influence is considered one of the main reasons for the language’s decline, as well as the Great Depression and the aftermath of World War II."
- Jessica Fillak, 'In Maine, French Culture Experiences A Revival'
'Co-Pilot' - Letters To Cleo
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Virginia Slim : Singer-Songwriter Aimee Mann's Early Days In Boston
Aimee Mann was born on September 8, 1960 in Richmond, Virginia. She grew up in Bon Air in Chesterfield County. She attended Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts in the late 1970s, making the state her creative base. She formed the punk band the Young Snakes with guitarist Doug Vargas and drummer Dave 'Bass' Brown (Negative FX). The band released one EP, 'Bark Along With The Young Snakes' (1982), before disbanding.
Aimee Mann
'You Could Make A Killing' - Aimee Mann & Juliana Hatfield
'Til Tuesday were formed in Boston in 1982. Mann played bass, with Robert Holmes (Ultra Blue) on guitar, Joey Pesce on keyboards and Michael Hausman (The Dark) on drums. They recorded three albums in the 1980s, with keyboardist Michael Montes, guitarist Clayton Scoble and multi-instrumentalist Jon Brion contributing to the development of the band's sound. Brion would go on to compose music for filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson who's invited collaboration from Mann, Fiona Apple and Joanna Newsom over the years.
"The yowly maelstroms of Throwing Muses. The sweet-and-sour harmonies of The Breeders. The fever-dream pop of Belly. The biting jangle of Juliana Hatfield. They all broke out of Boston and helped define what came to be known as “alternative rock.” Do you see a common denominator there?
“It was definitely a magical period,” says Kay Hanley. “That five minutes in rock ’n’ roll radio history where they played women.” Hanley’s giddy power-pop outfit Letters to Cleo made the jump from the Rat and T.T. the Bear’s to MTV’s Buzz Bin in the ’90s. Female musicians got a boost from the new wave era of the late ’70s and early ’80s, which rebuilt ideas of “rock” from the ground up. “It really did open a door for ‘Hey, anything goes,’ ” says Aimee Mann, who was in a “kind of punk-art” trio The Young Snakes before going on to front the more pop-minded ’Til Tuesday. “You could get out of the box that women were put in a little bit more.” The boisterous club scene in Boston, Mann says, also helped bands that wanted to go their own way. “People went out to see live music all the time, and there were a million fans,” she recalls. “I can’t believe this city could take it when I look back on it.” Hanley remembers seeing female musicians in the ’80s who were matter-of-factly doing their own thing, and wowing crowds while they were at it. “I never actually met them, but I knew from afar Kim Deal from the Pixies,” she says, “and I knew that Kristin and Tanya of Throwing Muses” were stepsisters. And then there was Jackie Starr of Bim Skala Bim — “she was the original American Gwen Stefani.” Mann also credits what she calls the “super supportive” environment fostered by the city’s music press and radio stations. “There weren’t really as many of us as you would think,” Hanley adds. “But for some reason we started to break through the noise. Because of WFNX and WBCN and the really healthy college music scene, our band started to get traction on the airwaves. And so female-led bands started to become the headliners. . . . To have local radio — not just college radio, but the big-market stations — supporting this scene was just so incredible.”
- Maura Johnston, The Boston Globe
Juliana Hatfield, Aimee Mann & Kay Hanley
'Til Tuesday
'Voices Carry' (1985) 'Welcome Home' (1986) 'Everything's Different Now' (1988)
'Til Tuesday perform live at the Axis in Boston in March, 1984
'Til Tuesday faded out of existence due to poor record sales, leaving Mann to go solo. She's released 9 solo albums to date and collaborated on numerous artistic projects. In 2011, Mann was invited to the White House by President Barack Obama for a celebration of American poetry.
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Post by petrolino on Dec 13, 2019 23:44:59 GMT
Mary Timony : Liberty Parade
'Completed in 1851, the Charles Street Jail was a collaboration between architect Gridley James Fox Bryant, widely considered Boston’s most accomplished architect of the time, and Rev. Louis Dwight, a prominent Yale-educated penologist whose travels shaped his interest in and advocacy for prison reform. Thought to be one of the best examples of the “Boston Granite Style” of the mid-19th century, the building “resonated with a strength and dignity appropriate for the era and for Bostonians’ sensibilities,” said historians. In 1973, after 120 years of housing some of Boston’s most notorious criminals, prisoners revolted because of poor living conditions and the jail was declared unfit and in violation of the inmates’ constitutional rights. On Memorial Day weekend 1990, the last prisoners were moved to the new Suffolk County Jail. In 1991, Massachusetts General Hospital acquired the obsolete property and sought proposals for its reuse, requiring that significant elements of the building be preserved. In 2001, Carpenter & Company was designated the developer of the project, and entered into a lease agreement with MGH for the land and the jail itself. Bryant had initially drafted a dramatic cupola, designed to bring further light and air into the rotunda. Unfortunately, it was a focal point that, at the time of the building’s construction, was reduced in size to save money. In 1949, it was removed altogether. In one of many restoration decisions, the cupola was painstakingly rebuilt based on Bryant’s original design. The transformation of the site into a hotel is the work of a team of designers and architects collaborating with historians and conservationists from the Massachusetts Historical Commission, the Boston Landmarks Commission, the National Park Service and the Boston Redevelopment Authority to ensure that the end result is a careful balance between preservation and dynamic new use. Drawn to the building’s dramatic spatial qualities, the team tapped Bryant’s original architectural drawings to ensure adherence to his creative vision for the cruciform-shaped building. Owing much of its character to the powerful Romanesque and Renaissance forms used in its design, the building consists of an octagonal central building featuring four circular wood “ocular” windows and four radiating wings, each with large three-story arched windows highlighted by articulated wedge-shaped, stone “voussoirs” characteristic of French design. At the time, the windows were thought to yield light “four times as great as that in any prison yet constructed.” Apart from this addition, the jail’s granite exterior and expansive, light-filled interiors remain largely unchanged. Soaring 90 feet, the jail’s central atrium was beautifully preserved and forms the core of the hotel. It features the building’s trademark windows and historic catwalks. The preserved jail cells within the hotel restaurant and wrought-iron work on the windows are just two examples of preservation. The jail’s former exercise yard is now a private, beautifully landscaped courtyard that is destined to take its place among the beloved “hidden gardens” of the Beacon Hill neighborhood.'
- Liberty Hotel History
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Mary Timony
Mary Timony was born on October 17, 1970 in Washington, D.C., the capital of the United States of America. She was raised in the neighborhoods of Glover Park and Wesley Heights and attended the Duke Ellington School of the Arts in Georgetown. A musical prodigy, Timony studied guitar and viola while playing in local jazz bands. She became a founding member of the band Autoclave who released multiple singles, playing alongside guitarist Nikki Chapman, bassist Christina Billotte and drummer Melissa Berkoff.
'It's a backwards attraction, To your forward eyes, But you're so far-sighted that you can't place trust, In what or who you recognize, We sped the Plymouth 'cross the banks of the Mississippi River, Mary Timony was smaller than a superball, Chitter-chatter all these secrets started giving me the shivers, Plain and simply broken down near Olympia, I think your bruise was understated, Cause you can't feel this anymore, It's getting bluer and you can't keep faking, That you can't feel this anymore ...'
- 'Your Bruise' (Death Cab For Cutie)
'Superball' - Helium
Timony relocated to Massachusetts and enrolled in an English literature course at Boston University. She auditioned to play bass guitar in the Juliana Hatfield Three before the recruitment of Dean Fisher. Around this time, Timony stepped up to front local band Helium (previously known as Chupa) when original guitarist Mary Lou Lord opted out to pursue a solo career. Juliana Hatfield's brother, Jason Hatfield, also played in an early incarnation of the band, as did Dumptruck members Shawn King Devlin and Brian Dunton. The line-up stabilised when Ash Bowie (Polvo) permanently filled the bass position, stripping Helium down to a power trio with Timony on guitar and keyboards, and Shawn King Devlin on drums. Mitch Easter (Let's Active) and Chris Stamey (the dB's) made occasional musical contributions during recording sessions. Helium are one of several bands featured in the road movie 'Half-Cocked' (1994).
"On May 19, Matador Records will reissue Helium’s two full-length albums, The Dirt Of Luck and The Magic City, alongside a new compilation of B-sides and demos titled Ends With And. This is more than just the now-standard repackaging of ’90s nostalgia, more than just a boon to fans who have seen these records languish, long out of print and fetching exorbitant prices. It’s something of a corrective — a chance to revisit and recontextualize a band that emerged during those years when Matador was synonymous with indie rock, when the press fawned over its label mates Liz Phair and every music geek worshipped Pavement, yet could never slot the group comfortably alongside them either. It’s a long-overdue reappraisal of one of the most inventive, transportive bands of its era, one that defiantly resisted easy definitions. Helium’s leader, Mary Timony, was a classically trained guitarist who actively suppressed her training to camouflage herself within a scene that equated amateurism with effortless cool — though her tendencies toward fluid, virtuosic riffing and zeal for baroque composition couldn’t stay dormant for long. Likewise, while Timony shared Phair’s smirking form of empowered, sexual frankness, and her personal politics were decidedly feminist, her lyrics were too blurred by impressionistic imagery, ironic detachment, and novelistic fantasy to be lumped in with riot grrrl (not that critics didn’t try). Helium was a band that wasn’t slack enough for the slackers, not angry enough for the activists, in other words. It was a meticulously musical group that reveled in mystery, at a time when neither of those things were exactly cool. “I definitely never felt like I fit in, no matter how hard I tried,” Timony says today. “I didn’t fit in with the punk thing, I didn’t really fit in with the indie rock thing… Sort of because I was a girl, but also because I was a music school person.” Although Timony has since amassed an impressive, decades-deep discography that spans several solo records, as well as albums with Ex Hex and Wild Flag (the latter alongside Carrie Brownstein, Janet Weiss, and Rebecca Cole), her earliest forays into the D.C. punk scene came at a time when female rock musicians, particularly in the underground, were still regarded as novelties. “It definitely doesn’t feel like that long ago, but things were a different world,” she says. “It’s like you were a female auto mechanic or a female truck driver. It felt like you were a weirdo, or it felt like a statement — like, ‘I’m going to f*cking do this.’ You felt like you were breaking the rules a little bit more.” For Timony, that world coalesced around the Dischord scene, where she would form the short-lived yet fondly remembered Autoclave with Christina Billotte and release a single, self-titled album before almost immediately disbanding. “I feel like it broke up too soon,” Timony says. “But in D.C. at that time, everybody would just form a band and break up, like, six months later. It was pretty normal.” The fact that Timony was attending college over in Boston certainly didn’t help: “My semester at [Boston University] started on Monday and Autoclave had a show on Sunday, so it was like, ‘Uh, guys, I’m just going to take the train and be late for college,’” she says. “And my mom’s like, ‘Hell no! We’re driving you up to BU on Saturday, and there’s no way you’re going to play Sunday. Forget about that!’ So they dropped me off, then I got on an Amtrak and came back on Sunday morning and played the show.” Eventually, that distance put a strain on Autoclave, and the band came to its natural end, though Timony would soon connect with Boston musicians Brian Dunton and Shawn Devlin to form the nascent Helium. In Boston, Timony would also find a burgeoning indie-rock scene she felt a little more closely attuned to — even if it would still require some searching for her identity within it. “I was going through a phase where I was trying to just find a voice,” she says. “I was trying to get away from the classical guitar that I studied and approaching the guitar in this simple but destructive way. I was basically trying to unlearn things.” The result was a sound marked by an ethereal dissonance reminiscent of Sonic Youth and British shoegaze, elevated by Timony’s alternately laconic and airily beautiful coo."
- Sean O'Neal, The A.V. Club
"Helium had just recorded The Dirt of Luck and we were just doing our thing. I think we were kind of spacey, to be honest. We spent a lot of time recording The Dirt of Luck, and I like how it came out, but in terms of touring, I was a dumb kid who was just like, "Touring's really hard! I don't want to do it that much." In retrospect, we really should have done it more. But we were lazy. [laughs] There were a lot of bands in Boston at that time; I think we shared our practice space with Juliana Hatfield and Letters to Cleo. [Helium bassist] Ash [Bowie] was also in Polvo, and their album Celebrate the New Dark Age came out the same year as The Dirt of Luck. That record is a masterpiece of ‘90s guitar music. I loved it. Ash is one of the best guitar players there is, and not a lot of people really know it because he doesn't play out a lot. I learned a lot from Ash and tried to emulate his style in my own music."
- Mary Timony, Pitchfork
Helium
'The Dirt of Luck' (1995) 'The Magic City' (1997)
'Pat's Trick' _ Helium
'Honeycomb' - Helium
Timony's released two albums as a solo artist. She's also been a member of rock supergroups The Spells and Wild Flag. She currently plays in the the band Ex Hex with bassist Betsy Wright and drummer Laura Harris. Timony's prominent use of alternate guitar tunings throughout her career has led critics to dub her "the only show in town".
“In the early and mid 1990s, every musician I knew was obsessed with Helium. The *Pirate Prude EP *and “Pat's Trick” played on repeat at nearly every gathering I attended. And we didn't just listen to these records—we discussed them, the worlds they opened, novelistic and strange. Who was this Mary Shelley or Angela Carter with a guitar? Fur and feathers, fairies and fangs. In Olympia, Washington, many of us were writing songs that were the equivalent of bloodletting: This is the sound a wound makes, this is the screech of a scar. But Mary Timony was always more kaleidoscope than microscope, creating magical worlds replete with weaponry or sorcery. In her songs, sadness and alienation were not embodied, they were subterranean, they were alien, transferred and transformed. A heart's tale and female narratives minus a distinctly human form. In this way, the music was freeing, achingly familiar yet otherworldly. Oh, and the guitar playing: Timony, that woozy wizard.”
- Carrie Brownstein, Pitchfork
“One of my life's great honors has been to play in a band (Wild Flag) with guitar god Mary Timony. Magical and mysterious, Mary's talent and beauty are unrivaled. From the moment I saw Helium's captivating video for “Pat's Trick” on MTV's ‘120 Minutes,’ I was hooked. Who was that girl, stunningly cool, leading the band, wielding her fuzzed-out guitar with utter confidence? And her voice—spirited and fragile within the same breath. Sleater-Kinney toured Europe with Helium in 1997, and I watched every single Helium soundcheck and show. I was enthralled with Mary's guitar virtuosity. Her nightly transformation from a sweet, kind, gentle girl to the larger-than-life performer just never got old. It still amazes me to this day.”
- Janet Weiss, Pitchfork
Locked In Stereo
Mary Timony, Carrie Brownstein, Janet Weiss & Rebecca Cole (Wild Flag)
Helium join Sleater Kinney for a Space Jam
The quintessential classical icon of the doll rock scene, Timony was hand-picked to front fictional rock band Coochie Pop in Dolly Hall and Alex Sichel's independent film 'All Over Me' (1997) which celebrates baby doll and riot girl culture. Her Coochie Pop bandmates included guitarist Leisha Haley (the Murmurs).
"I actually met Mary Timony at a show, and I had a friend who she taught, and I was in the market for a new guitar teacher. I didn’t really start getting to know her music until after we started working together, but she’s obviously awesome."
- Lindsey Jordan, Paste
Mary Timony, Laura Harris & Betsy Wright (Ex Hex)
'Waterfall' - Ex Hex
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Interview Excerpt : 'I’m Just A Freak!: In Conversation With Mary Timony And Laena Geronimo' (published in 2019, Talkhouse)
LG - In the ‘90s, there was a lot more money in the music industry and I feel like labels were willing to take chances with weirder, more experimental, less guaranteed-money-maker, pop-hit type stuff. Do you feel that way?
MT - I think what happened was, when Nirvana got really big, there was this whole wave of major labels trying to find the new Nirvana. So there were a few years where they were taking risks on bands. There was still the whole indie label thing where you just made a record for, like, $500 — that happened more too. I think what’s happening now is, there’s so many bands, so many labels, so many ways to do it, and it’s easy to get a record out. But I know what you’re saying — it didn’t feel like that, but maybe you’re right.
LG - I can’t imagine being in a band where they’re like, “OK, you’re going to be in a studio for a month, just write a record.” That would be so cool!
MT - We’d have budgets that weren’t huge or anything, but somehow I would just finagle a way to do it on the cheap. One of our records did have kind of a big budget, and we definitely spent it all. We were not saving. We definitely didn’t get smart about, “Well, this is the only money we’re ever going to make. Why don’t we save half of it?” Instead I was just like, “Let’s spend it all and hang out in the studio and make food!”
LG - I guess there’s always an up and a downside to everything. Like now, it’s so easy to record your own record, and you can put it on the internet and anyone in the world can access it, which has never happened before. But then on the downside, there’s such a saturation of stuff out there that it’s really hard sometimes to break through that.
MT - Definitely, it’s wild. I don’t know what to make of it. I don’t know how to navigate it all now.
LG - I don’t think anyone does. I think everyone’s just kind of, like, got a machete and they’re hacking their own weird way through the jungle.
MT - Maybe it’s just me living in DC, but I feel like every band feels like its own little entity now. Whereas in the ‘90s, it felt like, “This is my town! We’re from DC and this is what we’re doing here!” Things are less localized now. I really feel like before the internet, there was this local scene, and you lived in a town and were part of this thing — especially being from DC with the whole Dischord thing, it really felt like that here. In a way, I feel like musicianship has gone up. Like, people are typically a little bit better musicians now. I don’t know if that’s just me making that up, but I feel like in the ‘90s, there were a lot of really bad bands.
LG - [Laughs.] Totally, the internet really has changed music so much. I kind of envy those days of like, “I’m part of the scene, and we make zines, and call each other on the phone!” [Laughs.] But at the same time, it’s amazing that you can reach people all over the world now.
MT - It’s incredible. It really is.
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Freestyling
Helium perform at the College of New Jersey in Trenton, New Jersey on March 2, 1998
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Post by petrolino on Jul 7, 2020 23:05:42 GMT
Letters To The Studio
Letters To Cleo are no strangers to regrouping and performing live, but they rarely record and release new material. With just their second officially released recording in the last 10 years, the band followed up their comeback EP 'Back To Nebraska' (2016) last year with a festive offering, the EP 'OK Christmas' (2019). With Christmas over and a global pandemic now raging since January, the single's kindly been offered up in its entirety through the video-sharing online platform Youtube.
Thanks everybody - I hope a new Cleo album comes our way in the not-too-distant future. Stay safe, and keep on keepin' on ...
'Father Christmas'
'Miss You This Christmas'
'If I Get Home On Christmas Day'
'X'mas Time (Sure Don't Feel Like)'
'Disappear {Alternate Cut}'
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Post by petrolino on Dec 28, 2021 3:15:46 GMT
Short Film
'Undiscovered Planet' (2019 - David Doobinin) [American Laundromat Records]
Cast : Juliana Hatfield, Ayla Huguenot, Maia Devoy, Ananda Liveright
Songs : "Touch You Again" (Juliana Hatfield) / "Everything's For Sale" (Juliana Hatfield) / "Wipe It Up" (Juliana Hatfield/John Strohm) / "Instrumental" (Juliana Hatfield) / "Lost Ship" (Juliana Hatfield) / "I Don't Know What To Do With My Hands" (Juliana Hatfield/Matthew Caws)
Juliana Hatfield performs 'Christmas Cactus' in 2019 in New Haven, Connecticut
Merry Christmas!!
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Post by DrKrippen on Dec 28, 2021 17:51:10 GMT
I have a couple of Blake Babies discs. Juliana is awesome.
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Post by DrKrippen on Dec 28, 2021 18:00:51 GMT
Last thing I got from her was from an outfit called the I Don't Cares. It consisted of Juliana and Paul Westerberg, whom she dated for a while I guess.
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Post by DrKrippen on Dec 28, 2021 18:12:59 GMT
An indie rock Johnny and June: Paul Westerberg and Juliana Hatfield team up for vulnerable, truth-telling "Wild Stab" As the I Don't Cares, Westerberg and Hatfield have winning collaborative chemistry By CARYN ROSE PUBLISHED JANUARY 27, 2016 11:58PM (EST) Paul Westerberg opens his latest collaboration with Juliana Hatfield with a track called “Back,” on which the chorus states, “I’m back if you’ll have me.” On the surface, the song could be about reconciliation, not the run-through-the-meadow-while-birds-flit-around you reconciliation, but the more realistic, adult kind—“I’m back if you’ll have me now/if you’ll have me just as I am,” Westerberg sings at the last chorus. But through another lens, “Back” could also be taken as a statement of return by an artist whose presence in rock 'n' roll has been inconsistent at best over the last decade or so. The truth is that it’s most likely about both aspects, in equal measure. “Wild Stab” is the name of the record from Paul Westerberg and Juliana Hatfield, under the nom de plume the I Don’t Cares. It’s 16 songs that clock in just under an hour, and it is an almost uniformly delightful experience. Some songs are good; some songs are great; and there are only a few that probably should have been left as outtakes. There are hooks and riffs and clever turns of phrase; there are bold declarations, and much quieter ones. There is so much to like on the record, and it’s tremendously accessible and listenable. When artists brand their latest grouping as “the I Don’t Cares” it’s both a Boy Howdy and a fuck you; obviously, by releasing art into the world, artists obviously care or they would just record for themselves at home. Once you know that Paul Westerberg is attached to this particular concern, the attitude of the monicker starts to make more sense in some fashion. What does the artistic outfit not care about? Is it success? Is it critical opinion? Is it a sign of giving up, or a more zen-like release of resistance? In a conversation last week with Peter Wolf on Vanyaland, Westerberg makes the case that it’s probably (and unsurprisingly) all of the above. There are some tremendously vulnerable moments, such as “Kissing Break,” a beautiful acoustic duet, or “Born for Me,” which Westerberg already tried on his 1999 release "Suicaine Gratifaction." It’s moments like those, as well as Westerberg’s Phil Lynott tribute “Need the Guys,” that, combined, set a more Johnny-and-June tone for the album than Westerberg’s usual loner-in-a-basement vibe. It sounds like a love story, and once they both open that door musically, it’s hard to not remember that Hatfield dedicated a chapter of her 2008 memoir to Westerberg. In an interview with Peter Wolf on Vanyaland, Paul confesses to the romance, and that he’d originally written “Born for Me” for Hatfield back in the day, and that “Need the Guys” was also for her. There’s also an image inside the CD of the two holding hands that mirrors the two guitars on the front cover. All of that, charming as it might be, is exponentially less important than Hatfield’s role as a collaborator and facilitator. (Westerberg notes in the Vanyaland interview that she was essentially playing the role of an executive producer.) In addition to her instrumental and vocal contributions (and her voice is a lovely companion to Westerberg’s), Hatfield acts as a sounding board for Westerberg, providing a trusted second ear to help winnow through what sounds like a mountain of lost songs in his basement. “She brought a lot of this to life that otherwise would have sat in the basement and rotted,” Westerberg tells Wolf. While modern technology is freeing to an artist, allowing them to work at their own speed without the costs or restrictions of a recording studio, it’s also easy to get caught up in a feedback loop, both positive and negative or just neutral, in Westerberg’s case; he confesses to Wolf in the Vanyaland interview that “You don’t know your good stuff after a while,” or even what’s on some of the tapes. “Wild Stab” is a very warm-sounding record--the production is deliberately rough, and the guitars and vocals have great tone. But in the background, accompanying every track, is a drum machine. If you’ve listened to any of Westerberg’s recent one-off releases over the past decade, you’re used to it; it made sense that was the case with the dozen or so numbers that he knocked out at his home studio in his basement. But on this record, it does every single song a terrible disservice, despite Westerberg’s insistence in the Vanyaland interview that the drum machine is a deliberate choice: “It’s not putting the drums in such an important role that it takes over the song, it’s about the words and voices of the two singers.” The problem is that the tinny, mechanical quality of the drums does become overpowering on more than a few of the tracks, and detracts from the otherwise essential, bare-bones production that enhances the rest of the composition. The record is also sequenced well, and deliberately (which Westerberg also confirms in the conversation with Wolf) but the most artful sequence is in the final run, beginning with track 12, “King of America.” This is the section of the record where “Wild Stab” shifts from enjoyable to essential. Westerberg has never been overtly political, outside of the oblique and likely unintentional messages in songs like “Fuck School” or “Customer,” but this all changes with “King of America.” The message is wrapped in robust, rippling instrumentation, but the lyrics are bitter and direct: “I clean your floors, scrubbed your toilets Man I swept under your feet Worked in your stores Every boy gets one chance, you’re laughing at me Now it’s my turn to bleed Shout it out: King of America” It’s one of the most profound, astonishing lyrics he’s released, and even more so when you remember that he was working as a janitor when he discovered the Stinson brothers and Chris Mars rehearsing in the basement of the Stinson house. The stark narration of the verses belies the singability of the choruses in an almost “Born in the USA”-like fashion, and makes one wonder what else in this vein is lost on a tape somewhere. “All the little people can go to hell” is the key line from the track that follows, “Little People.” And then the next track, “Whole Lotta Nothin’” signs and seals the sentiment of this three-pack. “I’m an icon/everyone hit delete/I’d really like some/whole lotta nothin’ like me. ” It’s this three-pack of brilliant compositions where listeners will find themselves fervently wishing for a larger production, for a real drummer, for a little more separation, for the best possible presentation. Westerberg insists in the Vanyaland interview that his guideline for the production was that he was looking for the goosebump moment, and the songs still do deliver because they’re good songs--but they could absolutely sound just a little better without losing the roughness and immediacy of the production. “Done Done Done” should have been cut, cut, cut, but it’s there as insulation, to stop people from getting to the end of the record, because it’s on the 16th track where Westerberg takes a deep breath and digs deep to tell listeners what the record is all about: “Hands Together.” It’s a vivid, intense, daydream of a lyric as abstract as it is heart-rending, backed by a shimmering melody. He even manages to get in one or two of those great Westerbergian turns of phrase, “Dinner with a cup of coffee that likes to be called a mug” or “The newspaper gets older every minute.” It’s stream-of-consciousness with a purpose, it’s giving away his secrets, telling his truths, it’s breathtaking and uncomfortable and he knows it. This is another track that Westerberg tells Wolf would have been lost, except for Hatfield’s skill in digging through the reject pile and pulling it out. Westerberg tried writing more songs for the last version of the Replacements, but it didn’t gel. There hasn’t been a proper solo record from him since 2004’s "Folker," or even much music at all since he released a series of one-offs and digital EPs in 2008 and 2009. It feels like what’s been missing is that second ear, a trusted collaborator who can help guide Westerberg through the maze he created for himself, and get his music out of the basement and into the world. Let’s hope that “Wild Stab” is not the last time that Hatfield (or anyone else) gets to dig around in Westerberg’s basement vault of lost gems and almost-songs. www.salon.com/2016/01/27/an_indie_rock_johnny_and_june_paul_westerberg_and_juliana_hatfield_team_up_for_vulnerable_truth_telling_wild_stab/
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Post by petrolino on Dec 28, 2021 23:43:46 GMT
Those three songs by the I Don't Cares are awesome, thanks. I've seen fans online (like on Juliana Hatfield's Twitter feed) asking for a second collaboration. Also, asking if they ever toured the album, or played a series of live dates. If not, that might have caused it to fly under the radar, as those songs are terrific.
I don't know of Juliana Hatfield and Paul Westerberg being a couple, at least I've not read anything to suggest this, but I know they wanted to work with each other for musical reasons. She used to get asked by music fans if she was related to James Hetfield of Metallica.
The Replacements were definitely a major influence on Hatfield starting out. She mentions this in an interview I've quoted below, which she gave at Guitar.com ...
"Despite her wide-ranging musical talents, guitar is the instrument with which Hatfield is most readily identified and the one to which she most frequently turns. But it wasn’t always so. “Piano was my first instrument,” she tells us. “I took piano lessons for a long time, I accompanied the high school choir on piano, and then I applied to the Berklee College of Music as a piano student because I thought that was the only way they would accept me. And I got in. “But once I got into a band at Berklee, I completely lost interest in piano and kind of abandoned it. I never play an acoustic piano anymore, I got really burned out on it. “When I met the other Blake Babies, that was when I bought my first electric guitar and started to play it.” The guitar in question was a Gibson Challenger. This little-known model was produced for just two years between 1983 to ’85 in the tail end of Gibson’s Norlin era, primarily to use up crates of parts left unused from the disastrous Marauder project. Suffice to say, it’s not particularly well though of as a design, but Hatfield will fight its corner. “If I had never seen that Gibson Challenger hanging on the wall in the guitar store, I never would have bought it. And then, who knows, maybe I would never have become a musician? “I don’t know, maybe the world would be better off without my music in it, but I remember seeing that guitar on the wall and it was $100 or something. And it looked like the guitar that Paul Westerberg of the Replacements had played on Saturday Night Live, which had been a mind-blowing experience for me. “I don’t think it was the same guitar, he was probably playing a Les Paul or something, but the Challenger had that shape to it. And I remember I was so excited when I acquired the guitar, I was floating on a cloud. So, you know, I never would have had that feeling if the Challenger hadn’t existed.” But was it any good? “I loved it, but then I didn’t know anything about electric guitar. I don’t know if I even plugged it in at the guitar store, I just had to have that guitar because it was affordable and it looked cool, and then I figured out sounds later. I feel like you can make anything sound okay if you have the right amps and pedals, you can just layer pedals on top of it. But the feel of the neck does have to be good and work with your fingers, that’s a really important part of it.” Hatfield would later team up with Westerberg in The I Don’t Cares, of course, did she ever share the fact that his appearance on SNL had been so formative? “I don’t know if I ever told him that story,” she says. “I probably did, and he probably just chuckled. But he knows how much of a fan I was when I was younger, my teenage head would’ve exploded if I’d known that someday I would be in Paul’s basement making music with him. It was my teenage dream, basically, and it was happening.”
- Paul Robson, Guitar.com
One thing that unifies the five artists I've posted on this thread about - Juliana Hatfield, Mary Lou Lord, Kay Hanley, Aimee Mann & Mary Timony - is that they are all accomplished musicians and songwriters. Another is that they were all based in Massachusetts at the height of their early recording careers.
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Post by petrolino on Jul 16, 2022 19:36:41 GMT
Documentary
'25 Years In 24 Minutes' (2014 - Lauren Tabak) [Merge Records]
'Founded by Superchunk's Mac McCaughan and Laura Ballance in 1989, North Carolina's Merge Records quickly grew to become one of America's essential indie labels. From supporting their fertile local indie rock scene to launching international stars, for 25 years Merge has carved out uncompromising success by staying true to its independent roots. Google Play is proud to celebrate 25 years of Merge Records with this exclusive documentary and series of covers of Merge classics by Merge acts including Superchunk, the Mountain Goats, Telekinesis and more.'
Made with the assistance of Laura Ballance (Superchunk), Mikal Cronin (The Moonhearts), Claudia Gonson (The Magnetic Fields), Julian Koster (Neutral Milk Hotel), Steve Marion (Delicate Steve), Mac McCaughan (Superchunk), Stephen Merritt (The Magnetic Fields), Bob Mould (Husker Du), Andy Stack (Wye Oak), Mary Timony (Helium), Jenn Wasner (Wye Oak), Jim Wilbur (Superchunk) & Jon Wurster (Superchunk).
Support your local bands!!
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Post by DrKrippen on Jul 16, 2022 20:40:34 GMT
Made with the assistance of Laura Ballance (Superchunk), Mikal Cronin (The Moonhearts), Claudia Gonson (The Magnetic Fields), Julian Koster (Neutral Milk Hotel), Steve Marion (Delicate Steve), Mac McCaughan (Superchunk), Stephen Merritt (The Magnetic Fields), Bob Mould (Husker Du), Andy Stack (Wye Oak), Mary Timony (Helium), Jenn Wasner (Wye Oak), Jim Wilbur (Superchunk) & Jon Wurster (Superchunk).
Hard to believe how much I've been surrounded by Merge Records and never really noticed it. Superchunk played a lot around Southern California and I really, really wanted to see them. They even played a tiny, tiny club, about the size of a large living room, near the art colony I was living close to. I have no idea how I missed that show. My loss. I have heard the Neutral Milk Hotel album they speak of in that doc, I bought the Magnetic Fields 69 Love Songs in a heartbeat, the three discs didn't scare me off at all. Husker Du/Bob Mould surrounded me at all times. The Mountain Goats were always around the college town not far away and was on the college radio station all the time. I know of Mary Timony and I just picked up a Steve Marion album on which he is called Delicate Steve. Never put them all together as part of the Merge Records phenomenon. Thanks for the documentary, was enlightening
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Post by petrolino on Jul 16, 2022 20:43:05 GMT
Made with the assistance of Laura Ballance (Superchunk), Mikal Cronin (The Moonhearts), Claudia Gonson (The Magnetic Fields), Julian Koster (Neutral Milk Hotel), Steve Marion (Delicate Steve), Mac McCaughan (Superchunk), Stephen Merritt (The Magnetic Fields), Bob Mould (Husker Du), Andy Stack (Wye Oak), Mary Timony (Helium), Jenn Wasner (Wye Oak), Jim Wilbur (Superchunk) & Jon Wurster (Superchunk).
Hard to believe how much I've been surrounded by Merge Records and never really noticed it. Superchunk played a lot around Southern California and I really, really wanted to see them. They even played a tiny, tiny club, about the size of a large living room, near the art colony I was living close to. I have no idea how I missed that show. My loss. I have heard the Neutral Milk Hotel they speak of in that doc, I bought the Magnetic Fields 69 Love Songs in a heartbeat, the three discs didn't scare me off at all. Husker Du/Bob Mould surrounded me at all times. The Mountain Goats were always around the college town not far away and was on the college radio station all the time. I know of Mary Timony and I just picked up a Steve Marion album on which he is called Delicate Steve. Never put them all together as part of the Merge Records phenomenon. Thanks for the documentary, was enlightening
Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed it. Superchunk's latest album 'Wild Loneliness' (2022) is a fun ride. Lots of guest musicians appear on it.
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Post by DrKrippen on Jul 16, 2022 20:46:28 GMT
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Post by petrolino on Nov 27, 2022 1:40:42 GMT
Nice, thanks.
Do you like Tracy Bonham? I've been listening this weekend to her album 'Modern Burdens' (2017) in which she revisits songs she recorded for her debut album 'The Burdens Of Being Upright' (1996). It's about as good a revisit as I think I've heard from any rock 'n' roll artist, helped by Bonham's skills as a multi-instrumentalist. She's joined by some talented contemporaries from the Boston rock scene including Kay Hanley who stepped up to help Bonham record a new version of 'Every Breath' and Tanya Donelly (Throwing Muses, The Breeders, Belly) who performed on an extraordinary new take on 'Sharks Can't Sleep'.
'Every Breath' - Tracy Bonham & Kay Hanley
With regard to Bonham's work more generally, I can't recommend her album 'Masts Of Manhatta' (2010) enough.
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Post by petrolino on Jan 21, 2023 22:15:33 GMT
Juliana Hatfield and John Strohm have been remembering record producer Gary Smith online. Smith passed away this week. May he rest in peace.
"We lost someone today who had a big impact on my life, and on the lives of many people I know. Gary Smith was a musician, artist, record producer, manager, studio owner, raconteur, and true appreciator of beauty in all forms. If anyone ever really ”discovered” a band, Gary discovered Blake Babies. We were struggling when we met Gary. We’d made an album, but had no idea what to do with it. Months after getting 1,000 LPs delivered to our apartment, we still had about 900 copies and no clue what to do with them. It was a struggle. Gary came to our show one night at The Rat, strode right up to us when we came offstage and said, ”I love your band. I own a studio. Would you like to make a record?” Storybook stuff. We went to Fort Apache that night, and it instantly became our favorite place on earth. A place he made with a few buddies with an idea and whatever cash they could scrape up. They built a young musician’s paradise. He gave us copies of things he’d worked on, Throwing Muses and Pixies demos. We knew of these bands but…holy shit. Were we in this league? (No but it was an intoxicating thought) Gary wasn’t much older than us (a little less than a decade), but we were kids and he was a grown-up. That’s how it seemed, anyway. He had us over for dinner pretty often to his nice, grown-up apartment, fed us well while we worked on songs. And we worked hard! He told us we were great and we started to believe him a little bit. Then we heard the tracks he made at The Fort with Paul Kolderie and we really started to believe it. Those guys made us sound like a great band, so we had to step up and figure out how to actually be a great band. Honestly, if Gary hadn’t turned up in our lives when he did, we would probably have been a one-album band and who knows if we’d have made our lives about music and creativity like we have. He opened that door for us, and that is truly awesome."
- John Strohm, Facebook (as reported at Brooklyn Vegan)
Gary Smith & Juliana Hatfield
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