Posts Tagged ‘Paul Steel’

The Friday Mixtape: 8/14/09

Read that headline and weep, folks. In just two more weeks, the summer of ‘09 will be finito. Yeah, I know technically summer has a few more weeks of life but, who are we kidding? Once the Muscular Dystrophy Telethon goes off the air, the season’s deader than Freddie (That’s what I said.)

We have no time for heavy sentiment. Leave that to back-to-school shopping, pool closings and those Summer credit card bills coming back to bite you on the Coppertoned ass. We have two weeks left of fun, fun, fun. Break out the beach towels and crank up the pop music.

Beagle – Well, It’s Only Pain from International Pop Overthrow, Vol. 4 (2001)

Cheap Trick – Hard To Tell from Cheap Trick (1997)

Elvis Costello and The Attractions – High Fidelity from Get Happy!! (1980)

Joe Jackson – Friday from I’m the Man (1979)

Nerk Twins – Against The Grain from International Pop Overthrow Vol. 1 (1998)

Oingo Boingo – My Life from Boi-ngo (1987)

Paul Steel – Cry Away from Moon Rock (2007)

Squeeze – Is That Love from Singles 45’s and Under (1982)

Starclock – Yo Pussycat from International Pop Overthrow, Vol. 5 (2002)

The Duckworth Lewis Method – Gentlemen And Players from Duckworth Lewis Method (2009)

The Knack – Lucinda from Get the Knack (1979)

The New Pornographers – Star Bodies from Twin Cinema (2005)

The Ravines – Dark Clouds from International Pop Overthrow Vol. 11 (3CD) (2008)

Urge Overkill – Sister Havana from Saturation (1993)

You’ll notice an inordinate amount of songs from the International Pop Overthrow collections, and for good reason. In the short time I’ve discovered this ongoing series of releases, I’ve become irrevocably hooked. You might as well, and can find these releases at the site that released them, Not Lame Recordings.

The Friday Mixtape: 5/22/09

Hat trick, mama!!

Benny Hester – It’s Over Love from Through the Window (1987)
Erik Norlander featuring Buck Dharma – Lost Highway from Music Machine (2003)
Isaac Hayes – By the Time I Get to Phoenix (Edit) from Hot Buttered Soul (1969)
John Williams – Yoda’s Theme from Star Wars: Episode V—The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
Katatonia – My Twin from The Great Cold Distance (2007)
Mark Knopfler – What It Is from Sailing to Philadelphia (2000)
Paradise Lost – Nothing Sacred from Host (1999)
Paul Steel – Hole in Your Heart from Moon Rock (2007)
The Catherine Wheel – Mad Dog from Wishville (2000)
The Damned – Smash It Up (Parts 1 and 2) from Machine Gun Etiquette (1979)
The Major Labels – Aquavia from Aquavia (2008)
Traffic – Every Night, Every Day from Far From Home (1994)
Under Midnight – Oh Boy from Void (1994)
Urge Overkill – Positive Bleeding from Saturation (1993)

CD Review: Paul Steel, “Moon Rock”

Some things just don’t go quite the way they’re planned. For instance, I was supposed to be over the moon and in love with U2’s latest album, No Line on the Horizon. While I’m not as down on it as I was when I heard the first single, “Get On Your Boots,” the thing got five perfunctory plays and has been shoved back into the rack ever since. Meanwhile, a friend slips me a USB flash drive and tells me (commands, more like) to listen to the album Moon Rock by Paul Steel. I know not of this Steel person, and the album cover seems to foreshadow something really, really cheeky. I’m not in the mood for cheeky lately, so the plan was to give the thing a run-through, give my friend the necessary thank-you’s and advise him I’m just not into albums that have Nintendo-like graphics for cover art (this means you, Architecture in Helsinki.)

Two weeks later and someone hasn’t gotten their flash drive back.

Moon Rock (2007) is the most addictive album I’ve heard in years, the picture of power-pop primacy, and it’s already a couple years old. Worse, it has not migrated officially from Steel’s native England yet, so the good folks at Not Lame Records are having a hell of a time keeping their imports in stock (you can buy it at Amazon.com as well.) It’s very much a case that as soon as like-minded listeners hear the recording, they’re prone to want to own it, only to find the process will be needlessly difficult. The equivalent of musical jonesing owes much to Steel’s mastery of the sugar-sweet hook, the fine art of subversion as the lyrics to the songs aren’t necessarily as straightforward as the sound advertises them to be, and that even though this was recorded at home by a nineteen-year-old kid it has a massive sound on it.

To better illustrate that subversive quality, the album opens with the song “In a Coma,” wherein the protagonist has found and saved the woman of his dreams but, alas, he’s powerless to do anything about it because… wait for it… he’s in a coma. This could be one seriously morbid concept, so the fact that it’s carried off with the panache of an E.L.O./Knack mash-up and doesn’t wind up sounding horrid prepares the listener for one fun and strange ride. “Rust and Dust” is a piano-driven ballad that could have been taken straight from the Ben Folds Five’s debut album, except that the protagonist in this one is seriously obsessed with a former girlfriend. You don’t pick that up when, in the chorus, Steel sings “And God knows how I miss you and the times I could have kissed you,” but when he flips that line at the very end of the tune into, “I wish I never met you — you’ll be sorry when I get you,” you will get a cold-chill moment. I guarantee that. (more…)