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Lost & Found Video: The Monkees - "As We Go Along"

The Monkees - Head The Monkees cinematic swan song Head is a love it or hate it affair. We side with the former. The same goes for its soundtrack. It's not exactly easy to get through in a single listen. However, Bob Rafelson and Jack Nicholson's trippy send-up of the Fab Faux's manufactured image makes for an interesting night on the couch.

Sandwiched in between audio clips from the film and some rather lackluster tracks, the soundtrack has a few incredible gems. Notably those co-written by Brill Building hit-makers Gerry Goffin and Carole King: "Porpoise Song" and "As We Go Along." Only a few years later, King would become a star with Tapestry in 1971 and inspire a few awesome tributes from Todd Rundgren a year later on Something/Anything?.

So if you haven't, check out the film and download the Goffin/King tracks from your favorite source. Without further ado, we present the Monkees' "As We Go Along" from Head:


Posted on 07/19/2007 | Comments(19) | Permalink

Lost & Found Video: Karen Dalton - "It Hurts Me Too"

Karen Dalton Unfortunately, there's been more chatter about Karen Dalton over the past few years than there ever was in her short lifetime. A Greenwich Village folkie by way of Oklahoma, Dalton wowed the likes of Bob Dylan in her heyday. In Dylan's autobiography, Chronicles: Volume One, he reminisces on the Café Wha? scene and Karen Dalton in particular:
My favorite singer in the place was Karen Dalton. She was a tall white blues singer and guitar player, funky, lanky and sultry. I'd actually met her before, run across her the previous summer outside of Denver in a mountain pass town in a folk club. Karen had a voice like Billie Holiday's and played the guitar like Jimmy Reed and went all the way with it. I sang with her a couple of times.
More recently, Devendra Banhart has been doing his best to turn a new generation onto Dalton (via Splendid):
I've really got no idea why Karen Dalton is unknown. She is one of the most amazing musicians in the universe. Forget about the amount of soul she's got -- she's got the most far-out, fucked up, amazing soul. She's the most soulful singer in the universe. But the technicalities...her timing and her phrasing is perfect. It's beyond perfect. You can't even try to imitate it because it's like beyond, it's brilliant.
Curiously, Dalton (or prospective record labels) didn't strike while the iron was hot and her first album, It's So Hard to Tell Who's Going to Love You the Best, didn't come out until 1969—followed in 1971 by In My Own Time. Our featured video is a live version of a song from her debut album and according to the YouTube description is from a French documentary filmed in New York in 1969.

Karen Dalton - "It Hurts Me Too":


Posted on 06/27/2007 | Comments(50) | Permalink

Lost & Found Video: Lilys - "A Nanny in Manhattan" + MP3's

Lilys In 1996 there was no Pitchfork, or the throng of MP3 blogs, or the tech-savvy arbiters of taste that we've been blessed with over a decade later. You went to the record store and either hoped there was a cool clerk to tip you off to something or you just bought everything from a label that you trusted. And there's always been word of mouth among like-minded music lovers. Sometimes you really didn't know what to expect when you were removing that shrink wrap in anticipation of the next great find. Now that I think about it, it may have been more fun that way.

One day I picked up the latest record from Lilys. Being a fan, I thought I knew what I was getting myself into. Previously, frontman Kurt Heasley was steeped in the shoegazing space-rock of the likes of My Bloody Valentine; but 1996's Better Can't Make Your Life Better was a major departure from that sound with its rough Kinks-inspired riffs. It was a wonderful surprise and still a record I listen to regularly 10 years on.

Better Can't Make Your Life Better fit right in with the Elephant 6 releases of the mid-90's, but its visibility suffered from the lack of being adorned with the E6 logo on its sleeve. It soon went out of print before being reissued in 1998 after "A Nanny In Manhattan" was featured in a European Levis commercial. The reissue didn't last long either and the album is now only available secondhand. Kurt Heasley has since morphed the Lilys sound many times over—all graced with his knack for writing a great melody.

Lilys - "A Nanny In Manhattan":


As a bonus, savor these MP3's from Better Can't Make Your Life Better.

MP3: Lilys - "Can't Make Your Life Better"
MP3: Lilys - "Shovel Into Spade Kit"

Posted on 06/21/2007 | Comments(12) | Permalink

Lost & Found Video: Flaming Lips & Richard Davies - "Already in Black"

The Flaming Lips and Richard Davies By 1995 the Flaming Lips were a year away from total transformation and Richard Davies a year away from his first proper solo album—both were fresh off of excellent releases. The Lips had released what would be their last album featuring the guitar insanity of Ronald Jones—Clouds Taste Metallic—and Davies was riding high on critical acclaim from Cardinal's one-off self-titled LP.

Following the quick disintegration of Cardinal, Davies and the Lips hooked up out of mutual admiration for a series of shows in '95. The Lips hardly seemed like the obvious choice as backing band for the baroque stylings of Cardinal—they had yet to reveal that side—but fitting for Davies' poppy, sometimes harder edged, previous project, the Moles. Formed in Sydney in the late 80's, the Moles released Untune the Sky in 1991 followed by Instinct in 1994—the latter being, more or less, a Davies solo record. Both records are sadly out of print.

This performance comes from a September 6, 1995 performance at Brownies (R.I.P.) in New York. Go here for another song from the set—"What's the New Mary Jane?"—featuring Wayne Coyne on lead vocals.

The Flaming Lips & Richard Davies - "Already in Black":


Posted on 06/14/2007 | Comments(23) | Permalink

Lost & Found Video: Kevin Ayers - "May I?"

Kevin Ayers In 1968 Kevin Ayers split from Pink Floyd rivals the Soft Machine to pursue a solo career. The result was his excellent 1969 debut, Joy of a Toy, which he followed with Shooting at the Moon in 1970. That brings us to our subject video. "May I?", Shooting at the Moon's lead-off track, epitomizes Ayers' unrivaled baritone seduction in this daydream pick-up song. This performance comes from an April 4, 1972 appearance on the Old Grey Whistle Test. Pay special attention to saxophonist Lol Coxhill who looks like he just stepped out of a bubble bath.

Kevin Ayers - "May I?":

A lesson for the guys: Next time you're looking for the right words to say to that pretty girl in the corner, follow Kevin's lead and just ask, "May I sit and stare at you for a while?" That won't freak her out at all.

Posted on 06/07/2007 | Comments(26) | Permalink
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