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Liam Gallagher & John Squire

Liam Gallagher

Alternative & Indie - Released March 1, 2024 | Warner Records

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While both Liam Gallagher and Noel Gallagher have had some pretty good moments in their hit-or-miss solo careers, neither has been able to match what they had together as brothers in Oasis: the one-upmanship competition that pushed both to be better, yes, but also the us-against-the-world sibling camaraderie. Both need a foil to play off. Liam has been winning the race recently, though. For one thing, he's found the right producer in Greg Kurstin (Adele, Foo Fighters), who pushed him to great heights with 2022's C'mon You Know. But now he's teamed up with one of his hometown heroes: John Squire, legendary guitarist for Manchester's beloved Stone Roses, the band that Liam has said made him want to get behind a microphone. And damn if it's not an absolutely delightful, inspired pairing. (And if it makes Noel jealous, bonus points—right?) He's also brought Kurstin along for the ride, which was a wise decision. The set-up works as Oasis used to: Squire writes the songs, à la Noel, and Liam is just Liam. He sounds terrific here, and unmistakable. So does Squire, who absolutely wails on the excellent, Stone Roses-esque "Just Another Rainbow" and struts his stuff for groovy "Mars to Liverpool"; it's easy to imagine Oasis having gone in that direction had they not split in 2009. But the two don't just nod at their own past bands. Irresistible "One Day At a Time," which practically casts Squire's showy guitar as a duet partner for Liam, lifts a bit of the Rolling Stones' "Paint It, Black." Muscular "I'm So Bored" cribs from the Beatles' "Paperback Writer" (which also means it feels especially Oasis-esque). And "Love You Forever," which puts a psychedelic Madchester effect on Liam's sneer, owes a big debt to Hendrix and "Purple Haze." It's also boosted by monster fills from Joey Waronker—because if you're going to bring two Mancunian legends to Los Angeles to make a record, why not get that town's best studio drummer? Waronker adds a real kick to "You're Not the Only One," which also features great boogie-woogie piano and Squire's snarling runs. Single "Raise Your Hands" is a bit paint-by-numbers, but "I'm a Wheel" is unexpected: Squire and Kurstin, on bass, letting loose on 12-bar blues while an energized Liam delivers goofy lines like "Lock all the doors/ These aren't the droids/ You're looking for." It seems weird on paper—but wow, it works. (Thanks to Squire, too, for giving him lyrics like "Thank you for your thoughts and prayers/ And fuck you too" to gleefully nail.) "Mother Nature's Song" feels the most like a real Oasis-Roses crossover: Mersey paradise meets Beatlemania. © Shelly Ridenour/Qobuz
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Zappa In New York

Frank Zappa

Rock - Released October 29, 1977 | Frank Zappa Catalog

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Zappa in New York was recorded in December 1976 at the Palladium and originally intended for release in 1977. It was held up due to arguments between Frank Zappa and his then-record label, Warner Bros. When the two-LP set finally appeared in March 1978, Warner had deleted "Punky's Whips," a song about drummer Terry Bozzio's attraction to Punky Meadows of Angel. The Zappa band, which includes bassist Patrick O'Hearn, percussionist Ruth Underwood, and keyboard player Eddie Jobson, along with a horn section including the two Brecker brothers, was one of the bandleader's most accomplished, which it had to be to play songs like "Black Page," even in the "easy" version presented here. Zappa also was at the height of his comic stagecraft, notably on songs like "Titties & Beer," which is essentially a comedy routine between Zappa and Bozzio, and "The Illinois Enema Bandit," which features TV announcer Don Pardo.© William Ruhlmann /TiVo
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The Green Knight (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Daniel Hart

Film Soundtracks - Released July 30, 2021 | Milan

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Zappa In New York

Frank Zappa

Rock - Released March 3, 1978 | Frank Zappa Catalog

Booklet
Zappa in New York was recorded in December 1976 at the Palladium and originally intended for release in 1977. It was held up due to arguments between Frank Zappa and his then-record label, Warner Bros. When the two-LP set finally appeared in March 1978, Warner had deleted "Punky's Whips," a song about drummer Terry Bozzio's attraction to Punky Meadows of Angel. The Zappa band, which includes bassist Patrick O'Hearn, percussionist Ruth Underwood, and keyboard player Eddie Jobson, along with a horn section including the two Brecker brothers, was one of the bandleader's most accomplished, which it had to be to play songs like "Black Page," even in the "easy" version presented here. Zappa also was at the height of his comic stagecraft, notably on songs like "Titties & Beer," which is essentially a comedy routine between Zappa and Bozzio, and "The Illinois Enema Bandit," which features TV announcer Don Pardo.© William Ruhlmann /TiVo
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The Complete Piano Duets

Ella Fitzgerald

Vocal Jazz - Released March 13, 2020 | Verve Reissues

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Thinking out Loud / I'm Not the Only One

Sam Tsui

Pop - Released April 16, 2015 | Sam Tsui & Casey Breves

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I'm Not the Only One

Juan María Solare

Jazz - Released October 2, 2020 | Janus Music & Sound

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I'm Not The Only One

Lilly Ann Carpenter & Brayden McKinne

Electronic - Released June 15, 2022 | The Miracle

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I'm not the only one

Лера Зверева

Pop - Released April 16, 2021 | Лера Зверева

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I'm Not the Only One

Martin Novales

Pop - Released September 23, 2019 | Martin Novales

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I'm Not The Only One

Live & Let Go

Metal - Released October 20, 2021 | Lotus Kickback Records

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Council Skies (Deluxe)

Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds

Alternative & Indie - Released June 2, 2023 | Sour Mash Records Ltd

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Live In Europe

Melody Gardot

Vocal Jazz - Released February 9, 2018 | Decca (UMO)

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In four albums, Worrisome Heart (2008), My One And Only Thrill (2009), The Absence (2012) and Currency Of Man (2015), Melody Gardot has managed to sneak in between Diana Krall and Norah Jones to also find her place in the selective club of the female singers that are “a bit jazzy but not too much”, this oneiric cast that was so popular during the 50s, and in which she soon made the singularity of her very sensual voice resonate. A voice that she ceaselessly took touring to locations all over the world, and multiple times over at that. And so, there are enough recordings in the cellar to release a live album. However, live discs are rarely a must. There is often something missing, this small impalpable thing, that only those present that night will have kept inside of them… This Live In Europe from Melody Gardot is lucky to have kept, precisely, this “small thing”… The American has probably meticulously built it (apparently, she has listened to more than 300 recordings before making her decision!) by avoiding the true-false best of. “Someday, someone told me, ‘never look back, because there’s no way you’re going back’, she says. It’s nicely said, but if you don’t look back sometimes, it’s hard to see that time is on the verge of catching up to you. We all need to quickly look back into the rear-view mirror from time to time in order to adjust our trajectory. This disc is precisely that, the rear-view mirror of a 1963 Corvette, a postcard of our touring all over Europe. We spent most of our time on the road these last few years, and we’ve taken advantage of this trip to not only get around and get some fresh air but also to try, as much as possible, to get rid of the rules and create something exciting. I’ve been dreaming for years of releasing a live album like this one.” This desire can be felt in every moment of this disc comprised of titles recorded in Paris, Vienna, Bergen, Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Barcelona, Lisbon, Zurich and London. Whether she performs her hits Baby I'm A Fool and My One And Only Thrill or covers the classic Over The Rainbow, Melody Gardot offers up a different point of view, but it’s always an open performance. To help her in her introspective trip that is constantly shifting, she is surrounded by her impeccable musicians, discreet but decisive. Drummer Charles Staab, saxophonist Irwin Hall and bass player Sami Minaie are completely in tune with her singing, like some kind of thin hand that you take and only let go of after the last note. Finally, there is this album cover which will lead to extensive press coverage… or not. © MD/Qobuz
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Over-Nite Sensation

Frank Zappa

Rock - Released September 1, 1973 | Frank Zappa Catalog

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Love it or hate it, Over-Nite Sensation was a watershed album for Frank Zappa, the point where his post-'60s aesthetic was truly established; it became his second gold album, and most of these songs became staples of his live shows for years to come. Whereas the Flo and Eddie years were dominated by rambling, off-color comedy routines, Over-Nite Sensation tightened up the song structures and tucked sexual and social humor into melodic, technically accomplished heavy guitar rock with jazzy chord changes and funky rhythms; meanwhile, Zappa's growling new post-accident voice takes over the storytelling. While the music is some of Zappa's most accessible, the apparent callousness and/or stunning sexual explicitness of "Camarillo Brillo," "Dirty Love," and especially "Dinah-Moe Humm" leave him on shaky aesthetic ground. Zappa often protested that the charges of misogyny leveled at such material missed out on the implicit satire of male stupidity, and also confirmed intellectuals' self-conscious reticence about indulging in dumb fun; however, the glee in his voice as he spins his adolescent fantasies can undermine his point. Indeed, that enjoyment, also evident in the silly wordplay, suggests that Zappa is throwing his juvenile crassness in the face of critical expectation, asserting his right to follow his muse even if it leads him into blatant stupidity (ironic or otherwise). One can read this motif into the absurd shaggy-dog story of a dental floss rancher in "Montana," the album's indisputable highlight, which features amazing, uncredited vocal backing from Tina Turner and the Ikettes. As with much of Zappa's best '70s and '80s material, Over-Nite Sensation could be perceived as ideologically problematic (if you haven't got the constitution for FZ's humor), but musically, it's terrific.© Steve Huey /TiVo
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Revolver

The Beatles

Rock - Released August 5, 1966 | UMC (Universal Music Catalogue)

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Drop everything: it's here! For once, a reissue-plus-rarities set that's worth all the time you have. Revolver, the Beatles' seventh studio album originally issued on August 5,1966, is widely celebrated as the greatest single album of the rock era. It brought psychedelic invention paired with impeccable melodies to the entire world. That first, wildly inventive release remains beyond stunning, and this is not meant to supplant it in any way. The expanded reissue of Revolver shows us the most successful band in the world at the top of their powers, in love with possibility (each song is a different template for sonic possibilities, from blue-eyed soul to avant-garde pop to beautiful melancholic dream music), and still absolutely in love with being a band. The unabashed, youthful enthusiasm for using the studio as an instrument, which would be their path forward as they no longer toured after the release of Revolver, is on special display in all of the outtakes.You likely know the original inside and out, so be prepared. The new mixes by Giles Martin and Sam Okell are truly high fidelity. As you might have read, Martin (son to George) and Okell employ a "de-mixing" technology recently developed by Emile de la Rey and others for the Peter Jackson Get Back documentary project. New details emerge, and the voice separation is spectacular. We're not saying that it's like you are hearing it for the first time, but you will discern new elements in a way that enhances and never detracts. This is so difficult to not only accomplish, but to do well. We've all fallen for reissues that don't live up to the hype. Some grand sonic experiments with reissuing can take years to realize. Perhaps they didn't need to lop off half of the sonic information on the 1990s era Robert Johnson reissues in order to present the music without the crackles and pops of the original 78s. This new de-mix (get it?) is surely a new standard. Hundreds of hours of expert care went into this release. If you haven't listened in a while, the same questions remain, such as why begin their biggest leap forward with a song as lurching and "meh" as "Taxman?" Aside from that song being merely good and not mind-blowing, the only quibble is that the release's track listing presents different outtakes and demos of the same track end to end. One does see them flower and fracture by doing this, but after the first listens, it might be repetitive. This ahead-of-its-time full-length is so close to perfect.Beatlemaniacs and newborn fans alike must consider this the new reference, the new source. As the band infamously sing on "Tomorrow Never Knows" (which has the most revelatory demos of all on this set), invoking both Eastern thought and contemporary enthusiasts of the psychedelic revolution, "Lay down all thoughts, surrender to the void; it is shining, it is shining." © Mike McGonigal/Qobuz
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Tusk

Fleetwood Mac

Rock - Released October 1, 1979 | Rhino - Warner Records

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The Journey, Pt. 1

The Kinks

Rock - Released March 24, 2023 | BMG Rights Management (UK) Ltd

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Live At Leeds

The Who

Rock - Released January 1, 1970 | Geffen

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Council Skies

Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds

Alternative & Indie - Released June 2, 2023 | Sour Mash Records Ltd

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Blu Wav

Grandaddy

Alternative & Indie - Released February 16, 2024 | Dangerbird Records

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If you're a fan of Grandaddy, you know not to hold your breath. In 2000, The Sophtware Slump—a prescient, lo-fi forecast of humanity's problems with technology—earned Jason Lytle's Modesto, California, band a well-deserved spotlight. But they split up in 2006, months before the release of Just Like the Fambly Cat, over financial frustrations. Grandaddy reunited in 2017 for Last Place, a lyrical account of Lytle's divorce, then stopped touring and recording after the death of longtime bassist Kevin Garcia. Now Grandaddy is back, but only time will tell if it's a fleeting return. Blu Wav's title is a mash-up of bluegrass and new wave, though that doesn't really capture the album's vibe. Inspired by listening to Patti Page's "Tennessee Waltz" while driving across the Nevada desert, Lytle determined to borrow the sweet sway of bluegrass waltz and cocoon it in synth and fuzzy electronics. Waltz time is prominent on the record, as is pedal steel—to poignant effect on "Long As I'm Not the One," which reaches for moments of pomp majesty, and "You're Going to Be Fine and I'm Going to Hell," an alt-country meditation that opens up to a lush ELO-esque dreamscape. Loss and loneliness, constant companions in Lytle's music, are all over the place. "Ducky, Boris and Dart" is a plush farewell. "On a Train or a Bus" is a dreamy, sad-bastard ballad about love gone away. "Jukebox App," an easy-amble waltz, finds Lytle deliriously wallowing in misery and threatening to play "all our songs" after spotting an ex with a new guy. "Silhouette of the flame that died/ Your hair lit up by that neon light/ You and some dude knocking back the shots/ While I'm out here in the parking lot," he sighs/sings, fuzzed-out synth plucking the heartstrings. Paired with steel guitar, "Watercooler" proves Lytle can craft a heart-wrenched melody with all the pop aspirations and gimlet-eyed lyrics of Fountains of Wayne. "And you cry in the bathroom stall," he sets the scene, "Cuz I won't call although I know you hurt." ("Most of my relationships have involved girls who worked in office settings," Lytle has said. "This song is about the end of one, or perhaps a few, of those relationships.) When it all gets to be too much, he returns to the honey-sweet promise of "Cabin In My Mind": "There's a safe and loving glow/ Beyond the curve where you once were." There are several lovely sketches of songs—fleeting thoughts—including spacey "Let's Put This Pinto on the Moon" and satisfying outro "Blu Wav Buh Bye," that leave you wanting more. But as Lytle sings on the beautiful, forward-looking "Nothin' To Lose," "Cut and run toward the sun/ Our work here's done." © Shelly Ridenour/Qobuz