Emerging in the midst of the grunge craze of the late eighties, Spin Doctors had a meteoric rise thanks to a debut album brimming with alternative sounds, funk, rock, and pop. Their laid-back and fun songs led them to earn half a dozen platinum records with their first album, "Pocket Full of Kryptonite", an ironic title that directly references the Superman comics. Founded in New York in 1988, their first and most successful lineup consisted of vocalist Chris Barron, guitarist Eric Schenkman, bassist Mark White, and drummer Aaron Comes. It wasn't until 1990 that they recorded "Pocket Full of Kryptonite" under Epic Records, which was released in the middle of the following year. Composed of a carefree repertoire of songs ranging from pop-rock sounds like "Two Princes" or "Little Miss Can't Be Wrong", to captivating funk-rock tracks like "Come Off My Line" or "What Time Is It?", passing through the tour de force rock "Shinbone Alley/Hard to Exist", the rhythmic "Jimmy Olsen's Blues" or the jazzy "Forty or Fifty."
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
Thursday, May 22, 2025
Miles Davis Quintet-Miles Smiles (1966)
A few years before Miles Davis began exploring the more avant-garde sounds of jazz, fusing it with rock, electronica, and funk, he released another of his legendary albums focused on melodic and somewhat futuristic bebop, anticipating by almost a decade what would later be called jazz fusion. Surrounded by one of his legendary quintets—comprising Wayne Shorter (saxophone), Anthony Williams (drums), Ron Carter (bass), and Herbie Hancock (piano)—Miles Davis favored a jazz style with a clear emphasis on the extended solos of some of his bandmates. The musicians' remarkable flexibility led to fabulous rhythms driven by the flawless rhythm section of Carter and Wayne and the tight exchange of solos between Davis's trumpet and Shorter's saxophone. Hancock's vibrant piano notes, the brilliant percussion, the driving rhythm of the wind instruments, and the inspired notes present in every groove of the record reflect a jazz album at its finest and a true masterpiece of the genre.
Thursday, May 15, 2025
Neil Young-Harvest (1972)
Neil Young's most acclaimed and successful album is also one of his most uneven works, musically speaking. Released in early 1972, "Harvest" is the fourth album by the Canadian singer-songwriter, guitarist, producer, and musician. In addition to collaborations with his former bandmates David Crosby, Stephen Stills, and Graham Nash, other musicians who contributed to its creation include Linda Ronstadt, James Taylor, the London Symphony Orchestra, Jack Nitzsche, and Kenny Buttrey. Positioning a blend of acoustic and rock, Neil Young delivered a work dominated by the album's standout track, the immense and emotive "Heart of Gold", which somewhat overshadows other highly meritorious tracks such as the country-rock anthems "Are You Ready for the Country" and "Alabama", the intricate "Old Man" and the melancholic "The Needle and the Damage Done". However, it is the predictable and out-of-place “A Man Needs A Maid” and the orchestrated “There’s A Word” that somehow leave a bittersweet taste to an album that would reap an irrefutable commercial success with nearly ten million copies sold worldwide.
Thursday, May 8, 2025
Nazareth-2XS (1982)
In 1982, at the height of the AOR craze, the Scottish band Nazareth released their best work of the 1980s, an album that perfectly blended melodic rock with their signature hard rock sound. By this point, Nazareth had already experimented with this FM-oriented style with the brilliant albums "Close Enough For Rock 'n' Roll" (1976), "Expect No Mercy" (1977), and "Malice In Wonderland" (1980), records that were well-received by their fans and achieved significant success on the American and European charts. With “2XS,” the band’s thirteenth album, they returned to that formula, reflecting the charismatic rock that has always characterized them in tracks like “Take The Rap” and “Black To The Trenches,” alternating with more experimental and eclectic songs like “Mexico” and “Gatecrash,” while their more melodic side is present in the catchy “Love Leads To Madness,” “Games,” “Dream On,” and “Lonely In The Night”. Although it didn’t achieve the same commercial success as its predecessors, two of its singles, “Love Leads To Madness” and “Dream On”, climbed high on the Billboard charts in the UK and other countries around the world.
Friday, May 2, 2025
The Traveling Wilburys-Traveling Wilburys Vol.1 (1988)
A bizarre series of coincidences led five of the greatest rock artists in the world to come together and join forces to found the band The Traveling Wilburys and release several albums between the late 1980s and early 1990s. It all began when George Harrison (The Beatles) and Jeff Lynne (Electric Light Orchestra) finished composing and producing a song for the former Beatle's eleventh album, "Cloud Nine". Lynne also happened to be working at the same recording studios in Malibu, California, owned by Bob Dylan, producing Roy Orbison's album "Mystery Girl," so both ended up getting involved in Harrison's songwriting. Shortly after, Tom Petty and Bob Dylan also joined the project and collaborated on the recording. This amazing gathering of "friends" resulted in enough material to complete an independent album, which would be titled "Vol. 1" and released under the name The Traveling Wilburys. Released in October 1988, this debut album, comprised of ten high-quality tracks, was a fusion of the band members' styles, including country, folk, and rock, featuring the addictive songs "Handle With Care," "Dirty World," "Tweeter and the Monkey Man," and "End of the Line". Its reception was tremendously successful, selling over two million copies in the first few months after its release. However, The Traveling Wilburys' career was short-lived. Two months after the release of this first album, in December 1988, Roy Orbison died of a heart attack at the age of 52. Two years later, the four remaining musicians released a new and ultimately final album, "Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3," which they dedicated to Roy Orbison. Finally, after years of speculation about a reunion, The Traveling Wilburys would end up disappearing in 2001, with the death of George Harrison from lung cancer.
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