LONESOME SHACK in The SEATTLE WEEKLY

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The SEATTLE WEEKLY
Lonesome Shack Lives the Blues With ‘More Primitive’
By Dusty Henry

Bar bands around the world are pounding out bouncy riffs peppered with Southern drawl every day, and most will go unnoticed. Often the genre becomes a self-parody: overzealous guitarists playing the dirtiest and grimiest blues they’re capable of (cue Jon Spencer and Dan Auerbach). But a great blues record embraces the genre’s subtleties. The blues are fickle. They are not triumphant. They do not provide a “feel-good” sound. That’s what makes Lonesome Shack’s fourth full-length, More Primitive, so compelling. Vocalist/guitarist Ben Todd’s playing style is dexterous and his vocals hushed—especially on tracks like “Medicine,” where he sneers, “I went to hell against my will.” The hazy, humid atmosphere created throughout by drummer Kristian Garrard and bassist Luke Bergman contributes to the album’s overall exasperated, desperate tone, and embraces the sluggish, back-road quality that permeates the catalog of legend Robert Johnson. By the time we hear album closer “Evil,” the band sounds as if they’ve lost the will to keep going—as if they’re being forced to play somewhere in Louisiana in mid-July in the blazing noonday sun. Bergman’s bass plods along slowly and Todd’s guitar drifts in and out. Such a tone is not only appropriate but essential to their success: it’s that pain and wallowing that makes them truly live the blues.

Stream RADIO MOSCOW “Magical Dirt” on CLASSIC ROCK

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EXCLUSIVE: stream the new album from Radio Moscow

Magical Dirt doesn’t drop until June 17, but the band have given Classic Rock an exclusive preview.

Most recently in the UK for April’s Desert Fest, Radio Moscow — made up of guitarist Parker Griggs, Anthony Meier (bass) and drummer Paul Marrone — have produced a record that’s a thunderous mix of driving blues-rock, wah-wah wonkiness, and skull-busting, headphone-shattering psychedelia.

Why Magical Dirt? “I came up with the title cause when I lived in the rancho up north in California”, says Griggs. “There was an old compost troft in the garden area. I poured old pre-used pot soils on top of it and a few weeks later hundreds of panaeolus subbalteatus magic mushrooms grew up out of it! I couldn’t believe it. They lasted me all summer and gave many crazy trips.”

Buy This Record TODAY: Lonesome Shack – AMERICAN STANDARD TIME

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Breakdown blues.

Lonesome Shack have that rare power you need in a blues band—they start playing, and the whole room follows them. Yeah, people get up and dance. But there’s another kind of connection. This has been happening since I started following them in 2009, when they were a two-piece with Ben Todd playing guitar and singing and Kristian Garrard playing makeshift stripped down drum sets.

Their first three LPs, Bound to Die to Slidin Boa and City Man, their 2012 Knick Knack Records release recorded at their old home venue, Café Racer, have all attempted to capture the way they mesmerize a room—City Man is the closest to capturing it, including the credited bottle drop.

The new Lonesome Shack release, More Primitive, is an entirely different affair. Not just a step toward accessibility—but an enormous artistic step. Lonesome Shack were a great blues band, but now they are at the level of genre transforming. The reasons for this are threefold. First, the recording is textured and smooth—you get the live feel, but there aren’t hiccups. These are great takes. The mics are placed well. Reverb is used well. (This is a trademark of Alive Naturalsound Records, I’ve noticed, ever since I first started following them with their excellent T Model Ford releases The Ladies Man and Taledragger that completely resurrected T Model as a blues force—resurrected is an understatement, the recordings brought out qualities that had been completely overlooked in his more famous earlier recordings.)

Second, the musicians of Lonesome Shack have come into their own. Particularly, the rhythm section on More Primitive could give a Master’s class on the less-is-more technique. It used to be, Lonesome Shack would have a tiny kit on stage, but Kristian might do some fancy rolls for a song, etc, (not to belittle his playing, it was good—but there were typically moments where he drew attention to his prowess). Now, the instruments sound grown up, the musicians, like the butler in Remains of the Day, have disappeared. When you hear “Old Dream”, you’ll understand this complement. Perfection in drumming and bass-playing. A funky, understated blues number that establishes a new template for blues, I feel “Old Dream” is where this album launches into the back of the brain. From that moment, there aren’t two minutes where there isn’t another pleasant surprise.

READ THE ENTIRE REVIEW ON THE AMERICAN STANDARD TIME SITE

SPIN premieres LONESOME SHACK new single “Medicine”

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WRITTEN BY
David Menconi

This bluesy trio calls Seattle home, but you’d swear that Lonesome Shack hail from the deepest Mississippi Delta based on this teaser from their forthcoming album More Primitive. “Medicine” ambles along at the tempo of a stroll, or a heartbeat, with the rhythm battened down tight by Kristian Garrard’s steady rolling drums and Luke Bergman’s insistent baseline. But that’s the only easygoing thing about it; frontman Ben Todd howls at the monkey on his back and tries to stab it with jagged edges of guitar. Going cold turkey never sounded so good.

LINK TO SPIN MAGAZINE HERE

HOLLIS BROWN “Gets Loaded” on AMERICAN SONGWRITER

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Hear Hollis Brown Cover The Velvet Underground’s “Loaded”

The Band: Hollis Brown
The Album: Hollis Brown Gets Loaded, a song-for-song recreation of The Velvet Underground’s 1970 classic, Loaded. The album (vinyl only, and limited to 500 copies) drops April 19, in support of Record Store Day.
Fun Fact: To support Gets Loaded, Hollis Brown are heading out on tour with ’60s garage rock legends The Zombies.
Songwriter Says: “Record Store Day is an opportunity for artists to do something different, to give real music fans another side, something fun, something they might not normally get to experience,” notes frontman Mike Montali. “We decided to shack up for two days in a house in the country, and play the songs off of one of our favorite albums. Being a native of Queens, New York City, we want to keep the lineage of great New York bands going. This record is our tribute to the best band to ever come out of New York, and certainly one of the best songwriters to ever live.”

SOURCE: AMERICAN SONGWRITER

BLACKGROOVES review of JOHN THE CONQUEROR “The Good Life”

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The signature growling guitars and low lonesome drawl of John The Conqueror are back in full force with their second album, The Good Life. The Mississippi to Philly transplant Pierre Moore and his three-piece blues-rock outfit stomp out eleven tales of the rambling lifestyle—drinkin’, sinning, lovin’ and general bluesy behavior. Moore and his band are, in truth, somewhat of an anomaly. In the contemporary blues scene, a young black artist playing the blues is unfortunately a noteworthy development. In recent years, the black community has largely ignored the contemporary blues scene, and it’s truly great to see artists like Moore and his blues-rock contemporary Gary Clark Jr. taking traditional forms of North Mississippi blues and pushing it forward into more modern iterations.

Building on the strong impression left by their self-titled debut, John The Conqueror provides a steady stream of heartfelt tunes that don’t hesitate to rock hard. It’s music made for beer-soaked floors packed with sweating crowds and middle-of-nowhere dives that have that couch in the corner with gross stains on it. The album is rowdy enough to move a crowded barroom, but at times introspective enough to provide an intriguing listen alone by your speakers. Riff driven song structures and juke joint drums both serve as a vehicle for Moore’s fuzzed-out, soulful vocals. This recipe is no aberration for the barbeque soaked sounds of Alive Records, a label home to many big names in the outsider blues community, including Left Lane Cruiser, Lee Bains and Buffalo Killers. (Alive is also the home of The Black Keys debut album, The Big Come Up.)

Sonically, the album does get a bit stagnant; there is no discernable change in guitar tone, drum sound, vocal processing or overall tone color in the entire album. And while consistency can breed an instantly recognizable brand, when it comes to the simplistic structures of heavy blues, a little variance can go a long way to refreshing a listener’s palette. For this reason, the album’s highlights come when Moore and his crew throw a couple curveballs. On “John Doe,” a minor key and spacious slow burn give Moore the space to drive his emotions home with his signature grit. By opening up the arrangement, when the staccato organ enters with crashing guitars, it hits that much harder and the effect is fresh again. The moody “Daddy’s Little Girl” employs a similar technique, but its magic lies in the sincerity of Moore’s painful howl. Here he drops the cocksure bravado and reminds us that this is an album rooted in the depths of the blues. The guitar is nastier, and the vocal performance in the final minute makes the whole album worth it. This is a glimpse of humanity and remorse that makes the blues so compelling, despite its humble nature. It’s a brief glimpse of what happens when the life of the party goes home to an empty bed, alone with his thoughts, fears and regrets. As John The Conqueror move forward, that balance of swagger to vulnerability is a flash of songwriting maturation that will only grow stronger with future albums.

Releases like The Good Life elicit the headache-inducing argument of what qualifies as a “blues album.” Where does the blues end and rock and roll begin? The purists wring hands and clutch 78s clinging to traditional styles and closely guarding the genre. The progressive types see a slow gradient where boundaries are blurred and electric shredders sit shoulder to shoulder with country pickers. But perhaps it’s an exercise in futility to apply labels to artists like Moore. Black Country? Blues? Deep Blues? Rock ‘n’ Roll? “The Good Life” is American music done with passion and care, drawing plenty from the past and gleaning just as much from the present. Whatever you call it, just make sure you have the windows down and stereo cranked. Deep fried and defiant, John The Conqueror demands you turn up and listen loud.

Reviewed by Aaron Frazer

SOURCE: BLACK GROOVES