Joe Jackson — Body and Soul

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 13th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

Joe Jackson -- Body and Soul

  • Artist: Joe Jackson
  • Title: Body and Soul
  • Year: 1984
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 8
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: 1984 – Unknown origin.
  • Keeper: Yes

Uh… When I first played this yesterday I told Mary it sounded more like Billy Joe(l) Jackson than I expected. I got the stink eye put on me for that comment. Just sayin’…

That said, “Body and Soul” has one of my all-time favorite songs on it: “You Can’t Get What You Want (Till You Know What You Want).” Once that gets stuck in my head it’s there for a long time. “Cha Cha Loco” is another winner; I had forgotten about that one. Some of the other songs are just a little too “grand” or something. too fancy, too Lawrence Welk. I rated it high with an “8” because the great songs are just so great. This is not rock and roll, it’s a collection of sophisticated songs and arrangements. Am I just too unsophisticated to get it?


Billy Idol — Don’t Stop

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 11th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

Billy Idol -- Don\'t Stop

  • Artist: Billy Idol
  • Title: Don’t Stop
  • Year: 1981
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 5
  • Owner: Tracy / Mary – We both had copies.
  • Acquired: 1981 – Unknown origin.
  • Keeper: Yes

Please, do stop. Actually, this is a reasonably listenable pop record. It’s hard to think that Billy Idol was in Generation X, not that they were really all that punk, but still… “Don’t Stop” is a four song EP that includes a cover of “Mony Mony” and the hit orginal “Dancing With Myself.” This guy definitely turned into a clown, but like any decent clown he’s always good for some laughs. More about that later…


Slim Harpo — The Best of Slim Harpo – The Original King Bee

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 9th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

Slim Harpo -- The Best of Slim Harpo - The Original King Bee

  • Artist: Slim Harpo
  • Title: The Best of Slim Harpo – The Original King Bee
  • Year: 1983
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 7
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1983 – I think I mail ordered this directly from Rhino Records.
  • Keeper: Yes

I file Slim Harpo under “H” but I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that neither of those are his real names. I bought this record in one of my many blues phases; I was still in highschool during this one. The thing is Slim is not all that bluesy. Many pursists don’t like his stuff because he mixed it up with everything from rock and roll to country. That eclecticism didn’t keep him from having fans in the highest echelons in rock. Many bands from the Rolling Stones on down have recorded covers of his songs, “I’m a King Bee” and “Hipshake” in particular. The Moody Blues even named their band after one of his songs. My favorites are “Baby Scratch My Back” and “The Hippy Song.”


Game Theory — The Big Shot Chronicles

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 8th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Game Theory -- The Big Shot Chronicles

  • Artist: Game Theory
  • Title: The Big Shot Chronicles
  • Year: 1986
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 6
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: 1986 – Mary bought it when she was working at Plan 9 Records in Richmond, VA.
  • Keeper: Yes

OK, I’m logging Game Theory’s first album second since the their second album was first due to ongoing alphabetizing challenges. Never let the movers move your records. It takes years to undo their mess.

I just can’t get into this band. Lately I’ve been stuck on this Buddy Guy record from the 1960s and I’ve been playing it every day for the last couple weeks. So, I guess I’m not being fair. No buncha white kids playing arty pop can follow that. Anyhow, Mary rates “The Big Shot Chronicles” a 6.


The Faith — Subject To Change

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 7th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

The Faith -- Subject To Change

  • Artist: The Faith
  • Title: Subject To Change
  • Year: 1983
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 7
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: 1983 – Probably Olsson’s in Georgetown, DC.
  • Keeper: Yes

Did this come out after the band had broken up? I asked Mary what she would rate “Subject To Change” and she said “I’d give it a 7.” I said “7, that’s a pretty good review” and she replied “it’s a pretty good hardcore record.” I agree and enough said.

Etched in the vinyl margins:

  • THIS SIDE: PULL YOURSELF TO PIECES
  • IVOR SIDE: TOO STUPID FOR WORDS

And speaking of the vinyl, check out the sweet blue vinyl below. What color are your MP3s?

Dischord No. 11 people. My wife is so punk rock!


Echo and The Bunnymen — Crocodiles

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 6th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , | 3 Comments »

Echo and The Bunnymen -- Crocodiles

  • Artist: Echo And The Bunnymen
  • Title: Crocodiles
  • Year: 1980
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 10
  • Owner: Tracy / Mary
  • Acquired: 1980 – No idea where I got my copy but my friend Jeff Arthur turned me on to the band.
  • Keeper: Yes

1980 was a very good year for music. Echo and The Bunnymen is one of my all-time favorite bands and this was their debut. This album is full of “hits” and pretty much every other modern rock bar band in the ’80s did a cover of some song on “Crocodiles.” Usually “Do It Clean” or “Rescue.” Like “Louie Louie” or “Gloria” those songs are so good, and so simple that it’s hard to do bad versions of them.

It’s almost impossible to explain their sound, yet it sounds familiar. They’re arty and edgy, but they can rock. The lyrics are interesting and intelligent sounding, but not pretentious. I think often times singer/songwriter Ian McCulloch chooses words for how they sound instead of what they mean.

I think they’re geniuses and by most accounts so do they. More Echo and The Bunnymen records and stories to come as I continue to lap through the alphabet.


D.C. 3 — The Good Hex

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 5th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

D.C. 3 -- The Good Hex

  • Artist: D.C. 3
  • Title: The Good Hex
  • Year: 1986
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 7
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1986 – Bought it for myself when I worked at Mother’s Records in Hampton, VA.
  • Keeper: Yes

Dez Cadena is the D.C. in D.C. 3. He has been in a number of bands, but I’m guessing most people who have any idea who he is remember him as the pre-Rollins singer of Black Flag. He also played guitar on “Damaged”, which was Rollins’ debut and Black Flag’s first record to get a lot of attention.

I’m not sure how I got into D.C. 3, but I really liked this record when it came out in 1986. It’s pretty heavy rock and though there is a lot of guitar noodling it doesn’t sound too much like jam music. Some might even describe it as “classic rock”, but there is definitely something more happening here. I was surprised to read that Cadena was only 25 when they made this record.

There’s a note from Dez on the back cover that ends:

To those who ask what the difference is between the music I play now and what I used to play, I would say that there is no difference. — D.C.

My favorite song is a high speed, almost metal track that kicks off side two called “No One But Yourself To Blame.” Even the lyrics are cool.

You can never… never… blame anyone but yourself.
You can… but you’re playin’… a loooooosing game.
You’ve got no one but yourself to blame.

Or something close to that. Hard rockin’ words to live by if you ask me.

P.S. Keith, say what you will about downloaded digital music, but you can’t flip it over, there is no side two, and you can’t even take a picture of it. So what’s the point? Rock and roll is not about convenience.


The Jim Carroll Band — Catholic Boy

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 4th, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

The Jim Carroll Band -- Catholic Boy

  • Artist: The Jim Carroll Band
  • Title: Catholic Boy
  • Year: 1980
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 6
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1982 ? – Unknown origin.
  • Keeper: Yes

Something about Jim Carroll just depresses me. He paints a pretty miserable picture of the 1970s. I remember hearing “People Who Died” on the radio as a teenager and really liking it. It seemed almost punk, but smarter or something. I also really like the track “It’s Too Late”, another of the more rocking cuts. I didn’t get the record right away, but eventually picked it up. I’ve also read his book “Basketball Diaries” and I don’t remember that being too uplifting either. Am I fan? Not so much I guess, but I’ll keep “Catholic Boy” in the collection.


B-Movie — Nowhere Girl

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 3rd, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

  • Artist: B-Movie
  • Title: Nowhere Girl
  • Year: 1982
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 5
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: 1982 – Olsson’s in Georgetown, DC.
  • Keeper: Yes

This is an early-80s 12 inch single. And it is so “80s” sounding that even people born after it was released, and there really are people like that, would know when it was made. Lotsa synths and somewhat mopey vocals. Mary gives it a 5.


ABC — Beauty Stab

Author: tracysigler | Posted: February 2nd, 2006 | | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »
  • Artist: ABC
  • Title: Beauty Stab
  • Year: 1983
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 8
  • Owner: Tracy / Mary
  • Acquired: 1983 – Unknown origin.
  • Keeper: Yes

“Beauty Stab” is the second album by ABC, and it’s very different than their debut. This is a darker, more rocked out, more arty, and less funky record. It’s also much more guitar-heavy, but with horns and strings still in there. They certainly didn’t repeat themselves. The most under-rated pop band ever.