Posts Tagged ‘peter grumbine’

Buy this now: Brother Sal “Blood and Dust”

// Friday, November 6th, 2009 by Peter Grumbine

I was on cnn.com again this week, doing my best not to cuss when I was talking about Carrie Underwood and preaching the Gospel of Brother Sal. At this point I’m a little shocked that people are still surprised to hear that all this pop-country bullshit is soullessly assembled by a committee of businessmen that flip through a catalog and pick and choose pre-fabricated, dumbed-down, re-purposed renditions of both last month’s hit record and the “grief” section on a Hallmark card rack. Then they combine some little piece of ass with the best Pro-Tools mason in Nashville and a group of day players trying to earn enough scratch to pay alimony with their guitar, regardless of the quality of the product (which is, admittedly, still a large accomplishment).

The result is just more and more soulless, sterile shit, produced by the machine. I’ll try not to go off on yet another rant about this, but if you still don’t get what’s wrong with the mass-produced, cookie cutter, fetid terd squeezed out of big box stores and mini-malls that is Country Radio/ CMT/VH1, message me with your phone number, and I’ll call you and explain it personally. I’ll do this shit one American at a time if I have to.

They may have killed John Henry, but I can still stab the motherfucker who built that God damn machine.

Brother Sal is the opposite of everything I just described. Every one of the songs on Blood and Dust was written for a reason and sung and played with passion. Brian Wright produced the album masterfully and his buddies from the Waco Tragedies and their extended family play with a purpose on these songs (and every time they take the stage).

Sal calls his music “Whorehouse Gospel,” which may be the most accurate label I’ve ever heard for any music in a long time. The anchors on cnn.com asked me what “Whorehouse Gospel” meant, and I pointed out that, in fact, Jesus himself preached whorehouse Gospel. Neither of them would touch that with a ten foot cross, but we all know that Mary Magdalene had a job that didn’t involve an office. And most everyone knows Jesus didn’t hang out with the most savory characters. That was the point: he surrounded himself with the common man, the down and out, the scoundrels, which is why Christianity spread so well: we’re all scoundrels on some level.

Rock n Roll came from the Church. The early stuff rooted in Gospel is the epitome of making a joyous noise. Some brave pioneers took the sound of redemption, the sound of letting your worries and problems go, the sound of letting that little light of yours shine, out of the uncomfortable wooden chairs and judgment of Sunday morning and brought it to the people every night.  And that’s where Brother Sal fits in. There is salvation in his songs.

Brother Sal writes about personal stories and feelings in such an honest and sincere way that even if you haven’t been through what he’s been through or lived his life, you can still relate to the earnest emotions pouring out of your speakers.

I can’t emphasize enough what a brilliant job Brian Wright did producing and arranging this album, and the band plays like all of America and Russia’s nuclear weapons are in midflight across the Pacific Ocean, there’s a meteor hurdling towards Earth, UFO’s are hovering over all our major cities, and the swine flu just crossed with Ebola and is running rampant in pig-monkey hybrids attacking children and sharing dirty needles. Every guitar, piano, organ, horn, bass, drum, mandolin, fiddle, and hand clap rings like there are only five minutes until Armageddon, and they came up with something better to do than fucking. It’s Rock n Roll in its truest form.

Now go get you some.

Peter’s top 3 videos that can’t play on this page

// Thursday, November 5th, 2009 by Peter Grumbine

My disdain for the major labels is well documented. The mass-produced, cookie cutter, bullshit “music” that major labels spoonfeed the masses sucks, and so do their new media business practices. Now that these two factors have lined up, it’s only a matter of time before the majors go the way of the dinosaur and Chrysler. This makes me very happy. Come, share my joy and passing anger, with my top three videos that can not be embedded.

1. Blur, “Country House

I’m pretty sure Damon would be delighted for music bloggers to be able to embed this video and feature the song 14 fucking years after its release. And hell, that might even help the label move some units to a new, younger audience.

2. Ryan Adams, “Answering Bell”

Any song with a banjo in it is meant to be shared.

3. Weezer, “El Scorcho

So now what the fuck am I supposed to post on half-Japanese girls’ facebook pages?

Britney’s back, again and again and again and Jesus Christ, again!?!

// Tuesday, October 27th, 2009 by Peter Grumbine

Making fun of Britney Spears is easy. It’s speaking sincerely about her that’s difficult. We all know she can’t sing, and we’re all pretty confident that she is legitimately bat shit crazy. Furthermore, it’s pretty obvious that she’s merely a pawn in the hands of producers and executives.

I’d like to ignore her and not constantly be reminded how fucked up her life is and, even more, I’d like to not be constantly reminded how fucked up our country is because we keep buying this generic, over-produced, tripe merely because Britney had a sweet rack when she was 17.

However, when a mother of two sings a shitty song about threesomes and it goes straight to the top of the charts, you can’t just pretend the situation does not exist.

Oh, and astonishingly, I think this is the first video I’ve ever made that I didn’t cuss in. Weird.

(You can also watch at Current.com here.)

Embedded with Mos Def Credits

// Wednesday, October 14th, 2009 by Shana Naomi Krochmal

We couldn’t make Embedded without a huge team of people each doing their part. A huge thank you to everyone who helped bring this special one-hour premiere to air.

Producers
Mark Rinehart
Alex Simmons

Editor
Andrew McAllister

Writer
Peter Grumbine

Narrator
Emily Foster

Designers
Michael Beynart
Arian Tibbs

Supervising Editor
Barry Penland

Production Coordinator
Lauren Mendoza

Finish Editors
Mike Horn
Carla Garcia

Audio Mixers
Mark Behm
Matthew Patterson Curry

Music Supervisors
Travis Kirschbaum
Manoj Gopinath

Online Producer, Music
Shana Naomi Krochmal

Director of Music Licensing
Charles Raggio

Music Licensing Coordinator
Jen Pray

Vice President, Design
Micah Hahn

Executive Producer, Current Music
Mark Rinehart

Vice President, Current Music
Davis Powers

President, Programming
David Neuman

Special Thank You To:

Naheem Kassan, Boss Media
Carleen Donovan, Press Here Publicity
Downtown Music Publishing
EMI Music Publishing
Universal Music Publishing
Shelly Bay Music, LLC
Warner/Chappell Music Publishing
Headbangers Publishing / Because Editions
Billboard Live Japan

Online Designer
Jason Knight

Current Music Interns
Liz VanDurme
Courtney Shepard
Amy Williams
Jon Jacobs
JD Bray
Reiana Essex-Simmons
James Risolo
Josh Middleton
Chanelle Johnson
Shannan Yallof

All songs performed by Mos Def
Courtesy of Downtown Records

“Twilight Speedball”
Written by Dante Smith and Chad Hugo

“Auditorium” (featuring Slick Rick The Ruler)
Written by Dante Smith, Otis Jackson, Jr. and Richard Walters

“Revelations”
Written by Dante Smith, Otis Jackson, Jr. and Michael Drake

“No Hay Nada Mas”
Written by Dante Smith and Jean Daval

“Undeniable Pt. 1”
Written by Dante Smith, Rich Harrison, Barrett Strong and Norman Whitfield

“Life in Marvelous Times”
Written by Dante Smith and Gilles Bousquet

“Priority”
Written by Dante Smith, Jean Daval, Bobby Hebb and Sandy Brown

“Workers Comp”
Written by Dante Smith, Gilles Bousquet and Marvin Gaye

“The Embassy”
Written by Dante Smith, Gilles Bousquet and Ihsan al Munzer

“The Boogie Man Song”
Written by Dante Smith and Raphael Saadiq

“Quiet Dog Bite Hard”
Written by Dante Smith and Jean Daval

“Supermagic”
Written by Dante Smith and Michael Jackson

“Pretty Dancer”
Written by Dante Smith and Otis Jackson, Jr.

“Casa Bey”
Written by Dante Smith and Eduardo Lobo

Except:

“Travellin’ Man”
Written by Honda Katsuhiro and Dante Smith
Performed by DJ Honda feat. Mos Def
Courtesy of DJ Honda Recordings
By arrangement with Sony BMG Music Entertainment

Meet the team: Writer Peter Grumbine

// Friday, October 2nd, 2009 by Shana Naomi Krochmal

We’re going behind the scenes of Current Music Presents: Embedded with writer Peter Grumbine. When he’s not ranting about award shows or displaying his awesomely impressive knowledge of music history, he’s working on scripts for the voiceovers that help hold each show together. If he’s doing his job right, you shouldn’t even notice he’s around. So goes the life of a writer.

Watch this now: “Alocatel” Mexican Institute of Sound

// Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009 by Peter Grumbine

I had the distinct honor and privilege of debuting Mexican Institute of Sound’s new video for “Alocatel” this morning on cnn.com.

In case you don’t know, Mexican Institute of Sound is Camilo Lara, who is also the president of EMI Mexico. Why yes, that is strange and unusual. Here’s how it happened: at the end of the year, Camilo used to make mixed tapes for his friends using the music of his favorite albums from the year. Soon his remixes started getting passed around to other people, and eventually his friends were like “hey, um, yeah, you should, um, do this professionally, and um, yeah, I think you have the connections to make it happen.”

And so it was. [Read a little more about MIS here, where guest blogger Josh Heller of Current Comedy talks about rebajadas.]

Originally MIS had more of an electronic sound, but the latest album “Soy Sauce” defies categorization, and most all of it is live instruments. There are dance songs. There are rock songs. There’s rap, and there’s even a Mariachi tribute to Bittersweet Symphony by the Verve, which is fucking amazing.

See? I told you that was cool. The range of music on this album even goes beyond the polarity of “Alocatel” and “Sinfonia Agridulce.” “White Stripes” is probably the most down and dirty song about a chick with coke snot running down her nose while she dances that I’ve ever heard. And it’s not that the lyrics are that dirty, but the beats are. They are straight up raunchy.

If you’re one of those people that knows and loves music, but find yourself wondering where all the badass, groundbreaking, new stuff is, it’s on Soy Sauce. If you are bored with everything you have and everything you hear, or if you love everything you have and just need that one more album to round out the perfect collection, this is it. Get it here.

You ought to know: Justin Townes Earle

// Monday, September 21st, 2009 by Peter Grumbine

Is Justin Townes Earle country? Well the word “country” doesn’t mean a fucking thing anymore. Country music has been bastardized by the same money grubbin’ corporations that are responsible for 99% of every new TV show and movie being either a sequel, a remake, or a rip-off, and they’ve done the same thing to country music over the past few decades.

The most important word in the expression “show business” is “business,” and just like the business you work in, the bosses are generally unimaginative, money-driven morons who suck at their jobs and only got there because they married someone’s daughter or accidentally walked in on someone important doing something really weird late at night at a frat party during college.

Think of Justin more like indie-billy with a Southern punk rock mentality. In case you don’t know, he’s Steve Earle’s son and named after Steve’s buddy Townes Van Zandt. And in case you don’t also know, that’s a big fucking deal. However, when Justin was younger, his dad threw him out of his band for livin’ too hard, which is kind of like getting thrown out of the Jimi Hendrix experience for having too bad-ass of an Afro, but whatever, life moves on.

Anyway, Justin got his shit together some time back, and he is making amazing music as his own man now. He tours with his pal Cory Younts, who plays banjo, mandolin, fiddle, harmonica, and pretty much every other instrument in the back of the van. In addition to being a complete bad ass who would probably stab you with a rusty spoon if you did him wrong, he’s also featured in GQ’s Style issue this month. He also just won Emerging Artist of the Year at the 2009 Americana Awards last week. Plus he’s nominated for Americana Artist of the Year and Video of the Year at the Nashville Music Awards.

I first saw Justin when he was the middle act on a show at Spaceland. The place was packed, all for him, even though he wasn’t headlining. When he played “Mama’s Eyes” the place shut the hell up unlike any music venue I’ve ever heard in Los Angeles. Everyone in this damn town thinks they are performers not audience members, but for those three minutes they shut up and listened.

This fall, Justin’s playing some shows with Dan Auerbach and also with the Pogues, which is honestly still blowing my mind, even though I heard about it months ago. If you are within 1,000 miles of the shows, you should be there. You can grab Justin’s albums here and here or stream an amazing live from Austin show here.

You ought to know: Braden Land

// Thursday, September 17th, 2009 by Peter Grumbine

I’ve recently been digging into a big batch of some really talented underground musicians from Nashville. Trust me, I hate the bullshit fake country pop music that’s cranked out of that town faster and dirtier than a pair of generic Wal-Mart jeans from a Laotian sweat shop more than anyone, but the underground stuff coming out of Nashville is amazing.

Braden Land is one of my favorites. If you need an overly simplified description, think of him as Conor Oberst but with some serious scrot. And in case you don’t know, it takes a lot to turn out performance this good in front of a dead crowd full of worthless scouts, yes-men, and hangers-on at an industry showcase.

You’ll hear more about Braden and the other artists that are part of the Playground Sound from me over the next few months. You can get Braden’s latest album here or here.

Get this now: Os Mutantes “Haih or Amortecedor”

// Tuesday, September 15th, 2009 by Peter Grumbine

This is Os Mutantes first album in 35 years. If you don’t know Mutantes, it would be easy to say something like they’re the Brazilian Beatles or the Brazilian version of the guys from Buena Vista Social Club, but they’re not; they’re Os Mutantes.

The Mutantes were a big part of the Tropicalia movement in Brazil during the ’60s. Imagine what you know about the psychedelic ’60s in America and the UK, and then combine that with Carnival, and you can basically suss up the sound of that movement. Put simply, it’s fucking wild.

Around 1964, there was a military coup in Brazil, and yes, that did suck. The starched uni’s were cracking down on the kids, art, and social activism. Legendary Brazilian musicians Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil were playing with Mutantes at the time, and they were arrested and forced into exile on some trumped up charges off communism. (Back in the ’60s anyone who didn’t agree with the far right were branded “communists” much like people are branded “socialists” or “Nazis” now. All bullshit).

But the point is, Mutantes’ music was so radically different and powerful that the government got involved. If that’s not an endorsement of something really special and creative going on, I don’t know what is.

For the past few decades, Os Mutantes have been gone. In the ’90s Kurt Cobain begged them to reunite so they could open for Nirvana. What an ass. Nirvana should have been loading Mutantes’ gear and stocking their green room.

The music on this album will blow your mind. Listen to it on a real stereo with some real speakers, not ear buds or plastic computer speakers. The instrumentation, harmonies, and pure passion will knock you over.

Get it here. Now. Now, I said! Now!

Buy this now: “Poetry of the Deed” by Frank Turner

// Friday, September 11th, 2009 by Peter Grumbine

Me and Frank

So, about the coolest thing ever happened this week while I was doing my new releases segment on CNN.com. Instead of just playing a few seconds off Frank Turner’s new album “Poetry of the Deed,” Frank came into my office, and played a whole damn song live! Yeah, no shit. It was awesome. Just click through above and you’ll see it all go down.

Also, after the CNN segment, Frank played another three songs in my office. Hell yeah! It was awesome. Surreal, really, or surreally, I guess. I’m going to edit those up and post them on current.com once we iron out some paper work.

And if you need to know more about Frank Turner, watch this other clip I did about him on CNN.com and read this other blog post. Or if you want to be moved by the power of music, watch this clip below that was shot at a house party/show in Philadelphia. Frank will play at your home too after a show, if you email him and are cool about it. Oh, and a few beers and a place to crash probably wouldn’t hurt either. Pretty cool for a guy who’s album just debuted at number 13 on the British charts.

I hate to sound like a capitalist whore, but apparently now you can get “Poetry of the Deed” plus Frank’s previous album “Love, Ire & Song” (which is also amazing) and a t-shirt with Chris Bourke’s art on it, all for $20. (If this feels like a whorish product plug to you, feel free to buy each album and a t-shirt separately from another location for more money. Whatever, it’s your life). Chris Bourke did the cover art for the album. He comes from a tattoo background (not in that horrible Ed Hardy way) and does lino prints now. They’re badass. Check it out.

Also, I feel like I should mention that Frank is a really genuine guy who can speak or sing intelligently to just about any subject you throw at him.