Search Results for: "graded on a curve"

Graded on a Curve: Funkadelic,
Free Your Mind… and Your Ass Will Follow

Remembering Bernie Worrell, born on this day in 1944. —Ed. Funkadelic—and Parliament as well, naturally—were America’s go-to bands for psychedelic funk at the dawn of the Seventies; their acid-fried, groove-based jams came complete with fries, shake, and a generous helping of raunchy high humor, and you would practically have to be a member of the […]

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Graded on a Curve: The Allman Brothers Band, Brothers and Sisters

Remembering Dickey Betts. —Ed. When it comes to your bad karma and shitty luck, The Allman Brothers Band is a tough act to follow. And no, I’m not just talking about the tragedy that was Allman and Woman. I’m talking about the motorcycle accidents that claimed the lives of Duane Allman and Berry Oakley; rampant […]

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Graded on a Curve: Happy Mondays, Greatest Hits

Celebrating Bez on his 60th birthday. —Ed. A crash course for the ravers—back in the late 1980s, Happy Mondays became the veritable house band for Madchester’s e-fueled rave scene, which transformed an entire generation of Joe Bloggs-clad English kids into pinwheel-eyed, whizz-happy 24-hour party people stepping on and up, up, up to a dizzying sound […]

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Graded on a Curve:
Mejor de Los Nuggetz: ‘60s Garage and Psych

Those hankering for an international strain of stripped-down ’60s rock blare should investigate Mejor de Los Nuggetz: ‘60s Garage and Psych. It serves up mucho Spanish language R&R action and arrives on opaque red vinyl just in time for Record Store Day courtesy of Liberation Hall. The bands (and one gal singer) hailed from various […]

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Graded on a Curve:
Bill Evans Trio, Everybody Digs Bill Evans

It would be very presumptuous for any musical artist to title an album “everybody digs,” followed by their name. In the case of Bill Evans, it’s nearly a fact, especially if you are a fan of the best jazz pianists of all time. This 1959 album was his second as a leader and perhaps his […]

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Graded on a Curve: Ernest Tubb & His Texas Troubadours, The World Broadcast Recordings 1944–1945

Singer, guitarist, and songwriter Ernest Tubb was a groundbreaker and an enduring star in the country music field, charting hits across four decades. Collecting early sessions with his backing band the Texas Troubadours, ORG Music’s Record Store Day 2024 release The World Broadcast Recordings 1944–1945 offers a vivid portrait of Tubb’s emerging talent, its 14 […]

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Graded on a Curve: Herbie Mann, Push Push & Herb Alpert, Blow Your Own Horn

Remembering Herbie Mann, born on this day in 1930. —Ed. Good morning class. I stand before you today to discuss a very important but relatively unexamined musical sub-genre. I’m talking, of course, about shirtless jazz. The “Shirtless Jazz Age” began at the dawn of the 1970s and came to an end in the mid-1980s, and […]

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Graded on a Curve: Richard, Cam & Bert, Somewhere in the Stars

Somewhere in the Stars by Richard, Cam & Bert brings a healthy serving of late ’60s Greenwich Village folkie flavor to Record Store Day’s spring 2024 festivities, which take place this April 20. Consisting of Bert Lee, Campbell Bruce, and Richard Tucker, vocalists, guitarists, and songwriters all, the set is also positioned at a stylistic […]

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Graded on a Curve: Radiohead,
Kid A

Celebrating Ed O’Brien, born on this day in 1968. —Ed. Not long after Radiohead released 2000’s Kid A, my friend Patrick and I gave it a scathing review without having actually listened to it, on the basis that its only appeal was to depressives better served by listening to the Archies. We also surmised that […]

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Graded on a Curve: Steppenwolf, Steppenwolf

Celebrating John Kay on his 80th birthday. —Ed. Steppenwolf’s most excellent eponymous 1968 LP is one helluva debut. If it were a waif, I would take it in, buy it lots of cool video games, and send it to Yale. Hopefully it would provide for me in my old age. Even your pet goldfish knows […]

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Graded on a Curve:
MC5,
Back in the USA

So once upon the time there was this band of kick-out-the-jams, honest-to-god revolutionaries (or so they claimed—they seemed far more interested in becoming big rock stars than actually bringing down the fascist American state) who came out of Detroit and played this raucous brand of “high-energy” rock and roll. And while they never sold many […]

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Graded on a Curve: Herbie Hancock,
Maiden Voyage

Celebrating Herbie Hancock in advance of his 84th birthday tomorrow. —Ed. The short description of Herbie Hancock’s gorgeous 1965 LP Maiden Voyage, is that it’s the ’63-’64 Miles Davis Quintet with Freddie Hubbard subbing on trumpet. But as nicely as that reads, it’s actually much more. Hancock’s fifth and best record as leader, to this […]

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Graded on a Curve: Sunburned Hand
of the Man, Nimbus

Voluminous of discography with an unflagging underground spirit, Sunburned Hand of the Man has returned with Nimbus, releasing April 12 on vinyl (black or “big blue”), compact disc, and digital with cover art by Tony Oursler through Three Lobed Recordings. It’s a wide-ranging set packed tight but flowing loose with psychedelic groove jams, post-Beat poetic […]

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Graded on a Curve:
VA, Les Cousins: The Soundtrack of Soho’s Legendary Folk &
Blues Club

“Let me take you by the hand/And lead you through the streets of London/I’ll show you something to make you change your mind” —“Streets of London” by Ralph McTell The folk revival that began in the late ’50s and lasted almost into the early ’70s, is often most associated with New York’s Greenwich Village and […]

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Graded on a Curve: Advancing on a Wild Pitch, Disasters, Vol. 2
& Acceleration Due to Gravity, Jonesville

The bassist, composer, and bandleader Moppa Elliott is best known for his playing in the wildly inventive ensemble Mostly Other People Do the Killing, but his creativity is manifest in various other groups, including the quintet Advancing on a Wild Pitch and the nonet Acceleration Due to Gravity. Both have new LPs out now via […]

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