Posts Tagged ‘Toad the Wet Sprocket’

CD Review: Works Progress Administration, “WPA”

Works Progress Administration - WPAThe new Works Progress Administration album is the sort of musical collaboration that should be encouraged. The core of WPA consists of Glen Phillips (Toad the Wet Sprocket), Sean Watkins (Nickel Creek), and Luke Bulla (Ricky Skaggs, Jerry Douglas Band, Lyle Lovett). They are joined on the album by Benmont Tench (Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers), Sara Watkins (Sean’s sister, and also a member of Nickel Creek), Greg Leisz (Joni Mitchell, Bill Frisell), and Pete Thomas and Davey Faragher (Elvis Costello and the Imposters). The musicians are part of a music scene that is centered around the Los Angeles club Largo. They put this project together totally on their own, sans managers or record labels.

WPA offers up classic Southern California country rock, and as is always the case with this genre, the album rises and falls with the quality of the songwriting. The good news is that Glen Phillips has contributed several terrific songs, including the wondrous opener “Always Have My Love.” He also takes a page out of Don Henley’s playbook with the heartbreak ballad “End This Now.” Less successful are Luke Bulla’s songwriting contributions. It’s not that songs like “Remember Well” are bad, and in fact “Cry for You” (written with Phillips) is pretty damn good. It’s just that they don’t seem to have much of a point, other then to make you cry in your beer. Sean Watkins’ songs fall somewhere in the middle. They are well-intentioned, mostly upbeat, but fairly standard efforts, save for “Not Sure,” a strong modern country song. Benmont Tench contributes the beautiful closing song “The Price,” which he wrote over 20 years ago, and Sara Watkins does a lovely job singing it. On the other hand, the cover of Ray Davies “I Go to Sleep” on which she sings is completely pointless given the great cover of the song that Chrissie Hynde did with the Pretenders way back when. (more…)

Chartburn: 6/6/08

Chartburn Logo


Mainstream Rock: Kiss, “Psycho Circus” (1998)

Robert: In my best Paul Stanley impression, minus the made-in-Brooklyn falsetto: “Ya know something, people, we have been given a gift. More specifically, you have been given a gift — the gift of this attached MP3!”

Classic Kiss is back! Ace and Peter are back! The makeup and costumes are back! … Unfortunately, the melodies aren’t, at least not on this song. I like a lot of Kiss’s tracks from the ’70s, and 1982’s “I Love It Loud” is great, but “Psycho Circus” is forgettable. Didn’t the Psycho Circus album bomb? And is it still Kiss’s most recent studio album? Gee, I hope Paul and Gene have found a way to make money aside from album sales. Good luck, fellas. You can do it. I just know you can.

Jeff: I want to rock and roll all night — and party every day. I do not, however, want to hear this song ever again.

Beau: The line between Kiss and Spinal Tap, never designed to be a full-scale wall in the first place, has never seemed so blurry.

Darren: Crikey, somebody got a sweet deal on a green-screen room. Also, just taking a swing in the dark, did Desmond Child cowrite this? If not, he was certainly there in spirit. Paul Stanley and Child in the same room, each taking their stab at the lyrics, could actually create a cheese-flavored cliche vortex the likes of which Chester Cheetah has never seen.

Ken: I’m not a Kiss fan. They made a total of one song that I really like (”Tears Are Falling”). That said, I have to say … no, I don’t like this, either. The video has flashes of humor, though.

Will: “Psycho Circus” was the title track to the band’s reunion album — trumpeted as the first featuring all four original members in two decades — and it was everything you possibly could’ve hoped for. It sounded like old-school KISS, offering a catchy chorus and plenty of rock goodness, and it was the perfect concert opener, with Paul bidding you “welcome to the show.” And, hey, I saw the band on their reunion tour, and it fucking rocked. (Paul’s best patter for the evening: “Hey, everybody, it’s Wednesday night … but let’s pretend it’s Friday night! All right!”)

(more…)