Details revealed for deluxe edition of Paul McCartney’s ‘Ram’

Often cited as one of Paul McCartney’s finest post-Beatles works, ‘Ram’ is released as a super deluxe edition in May.

The 1971 release – the only one in McCartney’s vast catalogue to give Linda McCartney a co-credit – is very much a fan favourite, and includes the popular ‘Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey’.

While ‘Ram’ has been released on CD on various occasions, this 2012 release is the most comprehensive to date, spanning four CDs and a DVD. It also marks the first time a mono mix of the album has ever been made available.

In addition to both stereo and mono mixes of the complete ‘Ram’, fans can expect a handful of rarities and b-sides, and the orchestral ‘Thrillington’ release in its entirity, which includes reworkings of all ‘Ram’ tracks.

As with the previous McCartney super deluxe releases, the discs will be housed in a cloth-bound 128 page book.

For those who can’t afford the monster 5 disc release, ‘Ram’ will also be available as a standard issue, newly remastered CD, while vinyl fans will be given the opportunity to own the mono mix of the album on a brand new, limited vinyl release.

New Trixter album: tracklist revealed

Best remembered for attracting a cult audience in the early 90s with their self-titled album and single ‘Give It To Me Good’, Trixter are about to release a new LP.

The band broke up in the mid-90s but reformed in 2007. ‘New Audio Machine’ is Trixter’s first studio release since 1994’s ‘Undercover’ (a collection of cover tunes) and is released on Frontiers Records on April 23rd in the UK and one day later in the US.

The album boasts writing collaborations from Glen Burtnik of Styx and various members of Skid Row.

Track listing:

01. Drag Me Down
02. Get On It
03. Dirty Love
04. Machine
05. Live For The Day
06. Ride
07. Physical Attraction
08. Tattoos & Misery
09. The Coolest Thing
10. Save Your Soul
11. Walk With A Stranger
12. Heart Of Steel (bonus acoustic track)

Crosby, Stills & Nash announce extensive tour

Legendary trio David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash have announced the dates for an extensive 52 date US tour.

The tour will run the entire summer and take in the following cities and venues:

06/07 – Philadelphia, PA – Tower Theatre
06/08 – Johnstown, PA – Cambria County War Memorial
06/10 – Cleveland, OH – Jacobs Pavilion at Nautica
06/12 – Canandaigua, NY – Marvin Sands Performing Arts Center
06/13 – Gilford, NH – Meadowbrook U.S. Cellular Pavilion
06/15 – Providence, RI – Providence Performing Arts Center
06/16 – Wallingford, CT – Oakdale Theatre
06/18 – Boston, MA – The Wang Theatre
06/20 – Westbury, NY – Theatre at Westbury
06/21 – Westbury, NY – Theatre at Westbury
06/23 – Erie, PA – Presque Isle State Park
06/24 – Bethlehem, PA – Sands Bethlehem Event Center
06/26 – Montclair, NJ – Wellmont Theatre
06/27 – Montclair, NJ – Wellmont Theatre
06/29 – Red Bank, NJ – Count Basie Theatre
06/30 – Atlantic City, NJ – BorgataEvent Center
07/02 – Baltimore, MD – Pier Six Pavilion
07/03 – Vienna, VA – Wolf Trap
07/05 – Charlottesville, VA – nTelos Wireless Pavilion
07/07 – Portsmouth, VA – nTelos Wireless Pavilion
07/08 – Durham, NC – Durham Performing Arts Center
07/11 – Tuscaloosa, AL – Tuscaloosa Amphitheatre
07/13 – Biloxi, MS – IP Casino Resort & Spa
07/14 – Alpharetta, GA – Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre at Encore Park
07/27 – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium
07/28 – Paducah, KY – Carson Center
07/30 – Cincinnati, OH – PNC Pavilion at Riverbend Music Center
07/31 – Toledo, OH – Toledo Zoo Amphitheatre
08/02 – St. Louis, MO – Fox Theater
08/03 – Chicago, IL – Ravinia Festival
08/05 – Milwaukee, WI – Riverside Theater
08/06 – Minneapolis, MN – Orpheum Theatre
08/08 – Lincoln, NE – Pinewood Bowl Amphitheater
08/09 – Kansas City, MO – Starlight Theatre
08/11 – Wichita, KS – Hartman Arena
08/12 – Oklahoma City, OK – Zoo Amphitheatre
08/14 – Dallas, TX – Verizon Theatre
08/15 – Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
08/17 – San Antonio, TX – Majestic Theatre
08/18 – Austin, TX – Austin City Limits Live
08/20 – Albuquerque, NM – Route 66 Casino
08/21 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre
08/23 – Salt Lake City, UT – Red Butte Garden
08/24 – Boise, ID – Idaho Botanic Gardens
09/04 – Phoenix, AZ – Symphony Hall
09/07 – Los Angeles, CA – Greek Theatre
09/08 – San Jose, CA – San Jose Civic Auditorium
09/14 – Woodinville, WA – Chateau Ste. Michelle
09/22 – Reno, NV – Reno Events Center
09/28 – Santa Barbara, CA – Santa Barbara Bowl
09/29 – San Diego, CA – Humphrey’s

$1 from each of the tickets sold will be donated to charity.

Their sometime musical cohort, Mr Neil Young, will release a new studio album w/Crazy Horse on June 5th.

I Like Trains: teaser trailer for upcoming third album

On 7th May, I Like Trains will release their third full-length album.  ‘The Shallows’ is “a document of their love/hate relationship with a modern world obsessed with technological advances“.

On the same date, I Like Trains will also release a single, ‘Mnemosyne’.  Both single and album releases will be issued by Leeds based label ILR.  The album will be available on CD, digital download and vinyl.

You can view a teaser trailer for the album below.

TEAM ME – To The Treetops!

Team Me provided 2011 with one of its best releases. The Norwegian indie-pop band’s self-titled EP may have displayed some obvious influences, but the overall mix of Flaming Lips, Polyphonic Spree and Arcade Fire-esque sounds resulted in a handful of really engaging songs.  The EP promised great things ahead, and while 2012’s ‘To The Treetops!’ also has its share of great songs, it is, perhaps, a little more of a mixed bag than it could have been.

This is partly down to the longer playing time allowing the band a greater luxury to stretch out.  Two of the album’s compositions – ‘Riding My Bicycle’ and ‘Favourite Ghost’ – clock in at a rather prog-rock friendly eight minutes plus.  In the case of ‘Favourite Ghost’, longer doesn’t always mean “better”, despite the more experimental slant.  Although its beginning lays down the foundations of a story, it really drags musically.  The vocals are just too breathy and the guitars too twee; the combination of both doesn’t give the listener much of interest to really latch on to.  By nearly four minutes in – despite the addition of some choir voices – not much has changed.  By four and a half minutes, just as you’re tempted to reach for the skip button, the band explodes into an instrumental flourish. Louder guitars, superbly crashy drums and some echoed wordless vocals lurking in the back all adding together to create something more substantial.  The second half wouldn’t have been able to stand alone, of course, just as the first could have dangerously sounded like filler material. After a while, these contrasting pieces – clearly glued from musical ideas created on separate occasions – sound like they belong together.  ‘Riding My Bicycle’ is much quirkier.  It’s first five minutes are a lovely example of what the band are all about – xylophones, booming drums and multi-layered vocals all present and correct – as the band powers their way through a piece of music which sounds like Wayne Coyne orchestrating Arcade Fire.  With a well-produced sound – both musically and vocally, and most definitely a product of studio environs – it would have been wise to leave it there.  The last three minutes reprise a couple of earlier musical themes while adding a few more electronic percussive bits, albeit presented in a far more ambling and disjointed fashion.  It’s almost possible to sense the band’s indecision on where (and when) to stop.  Despite this padding, the first five minutes or so provide one of a few album highlights.

The upbeat ‘Patrick Wolf & Daniel Johns’ offers another near perfect representation of the Team Me “sound”.  The pianos stab mercilessly in the intro before multi-layered vocals and a marching drum pull the listener through almost three minutes of unrepentant musical sunshine.  If you’re approaching this album after falling in love with the EP, ‘PW&DJ’ is everything you’d hoped for.  Choirs of vocals laying down the repeated refrain of “wake me up my love, wake me up right now” take just a couple of plays before lodging firmly in the memory, while the fairly cluttered arrangement manages to stay afloat without it’s combination of voices and percussion ever sounding overbearing.  Musically, it’s blend of power pop and indie rock is cool enough to make Wayne Coyne rethink the Flaming Lips’ sense of the absurd.  This is the sound of wonder: the sounds the ever-popular Lips could make if only they stopped trying to be deliberately madcap.  Slightly simpler, ‘Show Me’ offers more choirs on a track that’s so radio-friendly it borders on the ridiculous.  A mid paced riff collides with bell-like percussion and a great sense of melody.  Imagine Arcade Fire lightening their mood, channelling their poppiest side, and you’ll get a sense of what Team Me achieves on this particular number.

The intensely named ‘With My Hands Covering Both of My Eyes, I’m Too Scared To Have a Look at You Now’ is nowhere as musically anxious as its title implies.  In fact, it’s one of the album’s breeziest cuts – all tinkles, harmonising vocals and a retro synth that sounds like a bad 80s sci-fi soundtrack.  At first, there’s a sense of the musical arrangement disguising the hook, but eventually the title surfaces as part of a pop singalong which feels like it’s powered by sugar.  File next to ‘Show Me’ and ‘Weathervanes and Chemicals’ as a standalone example of Team Me at their most focused and absolute best.

While – as promised by the 2011 EP – ‘To The Treetops!’ is loaded with multi-layered, often enthusing pop nuggets, it’s not without a couple of musical mis-steps.  The four and half minute ‘Looking Through The Eyes of David Bewster’ is so heavily accented in the vocal department it makes the obvious Scandinavian pronunciation during The Wannadies’ cult classic ‘You & Me Song’ sound like cockney shouting. This, of course, is not a downfall in itself: beyond that, the music constantly threatens atmospherics and elements of an unsettling nature, but is largely inconsequential.  ‘Fool’ is musically tight, beginning with quietly played finger-picked strings accompanied by a breathy voice.  The choruses are fleshed out with some predictable choirs giving the sense of a building momentum, though it never quite takes hold.  At the point you’re expecting a huge climax, the band moves on to something else.  It’s by no means a bad track, just not quite as formed as Team Me are so obviously capable.  An obvious rhythmic similarity to the familiar ‘Weathervanes’ in the drum department (though nowhere else, especially) makes it sound a little lacking in inspiration.  This may be enough to hint, at least temporarily, Team Me could be a band with a limited selection of musical tricks: if they are in danger of ever resting on tried and tested musical themes, it’s lucky what they do can be so enjoyable.

Aside from the specifically written tunes, this album revisits a couple of Team Me’s earlier compositions.  These are, however, more than mere filler material.  A re-recorded ‘Weathervanes’ retains everything that was terrific about the original EP take but expands the percussion elements, resulting in a much fuller sound.  Similarly, ‘Dear Sister’ comes loaded with an extra few voices in the choir and a nice nod to new wave keyboard sounds during the closing moments.  Like ‘Weathervanes’ any changes are tasteful embellishments as opposed to a complete overhaul, but with the fuller sound and bigger budget, both tracks are improved.  For those already familiar with the first recordings of these numbers, their 2012 beefier counterparts show how the band have become a little more confident in their art; for other listeners, both numbers go some way to showing what the band can do at their best.  ‘Weathervanes and Chemicals’, particularly, stands alongside The Polyphonic Spree’s ‘Light & Day (Reach For The Sun) as one of choral/symphonic pop’s greatest achievements.

There are moments where the band loses a little focus or the songs are unnecessarily padded out, and in that respect, maybe ‘To The Treetops!’ is not quite the classic full-length debut some were hoping for.  Some of the musical pieces will require far more effort on behalf of the listener than the likes of ‘Dear Sister’ and ‘Weathervanes and Chemicals’ ever suggested, but stick with it all…you won’t be sorry.  Despite the not always warranted wandering moments, there’s more than enough gold standard material to be heard throughout this record to suggest Team Me are just as talented as some of their closest musical peers.

March 2012