Jack
Logan & Bob Kimbell - Little Private
Angel
Artist:
Jack Logan & Bob Kimbell
Title: Little Private Angel
Catalog#: Parasol-CD-040
Price: $7.50 
|
Tracks
on this CD: |
| Four
Men In a Car |
| Frozen
Rope |
| Nerves
Of Steel |
| Little
Private Angel |
| Fire
On the Boat |
| Just
One Kiss |
| Look
To the Future |
| Rained
Like Hell |
| 220
Volts |
| All
About Money |
| Not
the Only One |
| Marchin'
With the Saints |
| Dialing
Your Number |
| Frozen
In the Snow |
|
|

Old
buddies Jack Logan and Bob Kimbell have finally united for
a full-on full-length collaboration.
Jack received widespread critical accolades for his two Medium
Cool/Restless CDs, "Bulk" and "Mood Elevator".
You may recognize the following quotes: "
the most
substantial rock n roll of this decade
" from Billboards Timothy
White, "
boozy, sloppy, and beautiful
" from Rolling
Stones David Fricke, and "Logans rockabilly-blues/lounge-pop
hybrid bustles with melodic invention...from letter-perfect
60s style country to indelicate distorted rock
" written
in Request.
Bob has released three full-length
CDs as leader of the Parasol band Weird Summer, hailed by
internationally diverse publications Magnet, Bucketfull
of Brains, Puncture, and Pop Culture Press. Magnet said, "What
a voice
that is the first and lasting impression left
by Bob Kimbell
" Puncture compared Bobs
songs to Alex Chiltons, and Pop Culture Press,
called Weird Summers output "
nearly perfect
melodic, romantic, melancholy pop".
Their
voices beautifully blend on these fourteen tracks. Highlights
include "Frozen
Rope", a haunting track about hitting a line drive in
baseball (hows that for everyday charm?), and "Rained
Like Hell", a song that originally appeared on Weird
Summers third CD, In Search Of.
Jack
on his collaboration with Bob.
I got to know Bob Kimbell sometime
in the early eighties in Champaign, Illinois. While I can't
remember our first meeting, I do remember the first time
I saw him. It was at some punk-rock-pop new-wave show someone
was putting on in some armory-like building at the University
of Illinois. Bob and a woman walked in wearing huge, army-green
trench coats. Anyway, we were both playing in new-wave-punk-rock-pop
groups at that time and since the audience for this genre
was composed almost entirely of other bands of this genre,
our paths inevitably crossed.
I
could be wrong, but I believe our first attempt to write
songs produced the song "Little
Private Angel". We continued to write together sporadically
over the next ten or fifteen years.
This January, we finally decided
to get together and make a record. We assembled some old
recordings, but recorded the majority of it in the Georgia
homes of Kelly Keneipp and myself. The result was a record
where we had a lot of fun and did whatever the hell we wanted.
I can't wait to do it again.
MTV News Online
June 16, 1998
Jack Logan & Bob Kimbell's Primitive Cool
After
parting ways with his label following two critically-acclaimed
releases, Jack Logan has
returned to the simpler pleasures with a stripped-down new
album, "Little Private Angel," with an old friend
and accomplice, Bob Kimbell.
"Angel," which
arrives in stores on June 30, charts Logan and Kimbell's
friendship
back to its inception in the early '80s, when the two were
struggling musicians of the Urbana, Illinois, music scene
-- Logan with his first band, the Anglers, Kimbell with his
long-time group, Weird Summer.
"I can't remember exactly
when we met," Logan said, "but once we got together,
we very much had a mutual appreciation thing going on, even
though our approaches were different." "I had this
little four-track," Kimbell added, "and we got
together and did some writing at that time, and we have just
continued to do that over the course of the last 15 years."
Even
though the two eventually headed in separate directions,
Logan and Kimbell managed
to stay in contact while working in their own groups, and
continued to meet every so often to collaborate on material.
Kimbell even co-wrote a song, "Tex," on Logan's
double-album debut, 1994's "Bulk." "It seems
like we always get together once a year somehow," Logan
said, "and when we do, we always try to put something
down on tape. Over the years we've got quite a little catalog
of songs built up."
After
Logan split with Restless Records, Kimbell suggested that
the two revisit some of their
past songs, and the duo subsequently spent a week earlier
this year cutting most of the basic tracks for "Angel" in
Logan's kitchen in Winder, Georgia. Aside from creating the
cover for "Angels," Logan, who holds an art degree
from Illinois State, also recently illustrated the "Not
Dogs ... Too Simple (A Tale of Two Kitties)" album,
which features the Reverend Horton Heat, Drivin n' Cryin's
Kevin Kinney, the B-52's Cindy Wilson and Moe Tucker narrating
a children's tale for adults.
Kimbell
and Logan will kick off a tour in support of "Little Private Angel" in
July.
Creative Loafing-Atlanta
July 1998
When It All Comes Down
Jack Logan -- closer to home
BY DAVID PEISNER
It's a hot Sunday afternoon in
Winder and the main street is mostly deserted. The bank clock
on the corner alternately displays the time, 3:58 p.m., and
the temperature, a scorching 98 degrees. In front of the
Winder-Barrow YMCA, a couple tries to figure out how to fit
an empty baby's stroller into the already-packed trunk of
their car. Across the street from them, a teenager scrapes
something off the sidewalk. By most accounts, nothing much
is happening in this small Georgia town on this unseasonably
hot June day. Jack Logan, though, could probably write a
few dozen songs about it.
Since even before the release
of his first album back in 1994, a 42-song behemoth of a
debut, appropriately titled Bulk, he's been writing about
exactly these sorts of everyday things with a keen eye for
the bizarre underbelly of the everyday. In snapshots of seemingly
normal life, Logan manages to hint at the neuroses, frustrations
and unfulfilled dreams that lie just beneath the surface.
He zooms in on the cracks in the hard exterior of the everyday
and discovers the meat of life hiding there.
Just off the main drag is Logan's
unassuming white house. Inside, trying to stay out of the
blistering heat, slurping on ice-pops and working out songs
for their upcoming tour are Logan and Bob Kimbell, an old
friend with whom Logan collaborated on their low-key new
album, Little Private Angel. Just sittin' around passing
away a lazy Sunday, they couldn't look more normal -- Logan
in a faded Dashboard Saviors T-shirt and jean shorts, Kimbell
in a yellow T-shirt and corduroy shorts.
But
the record they've made together is anything but normal.
It might not sound too startling
at first to hear Logan croon, "When I get to the checkout
section, with beans and a loaf of bread/ reach down in my
pockets/ reach back up and scratch my head," on Little
Private Angel's folksy title track, but swish those lines
around your brain a bit, dwell on them for a few minutes
and see what sort of truths start nosing their way to the
surface.
"I just like telling little
stories," Logan says. "I slow everything down.
Like "Dialing Your Number" (from Little Private
Angel). Nothing happens. A guy walks down to the phone and
pushes the buttons and that's the end of the story. I don't
know why I do that. Maybe if I make the songs last longer
something will happen eventually. I guess it comes from '60s
and '70s films that really annoyed you, where you go through
all this shit and then you come to the end and it just stops
arbitrarily. I still like to do that because it makes it
more effective as a metaphor. "Dialing Your Number," it's
not just about some guy in a phone booth. "Once you
get over your adolescence you realize that life doesn't have
this nice resolution," he continues. "You work
for a certain thing, you get it, you lose it horribly, and
it just keeps going on and on."
"The credits never roll," Kimbell
adds, laughing. "You just have to stop somewhere," Logan
says, finishing off his ice pop, "and move on." They
could easily be talking about Logan's recent experience with
Restless Records, the label that put out his last two albums
and put the third in the can. Or about his struggles to balance
his infamous day-job in Doraville with his musical career.
Little
Private Angel comes at a crossroads in Logan's life. Though
his first two releases
were met with widespread enthusiasm, Logan still kept his
job at Doraville Electric Motor Service, repairing swimming
pool motors. For for one reason or another, it had become
part of Logan's well-defined persona. Every interview and
review seemed to mention it. ("Every other musician
in the world has a job -- some stupid job," Logan laughs "For
some reason, I just fit that 'everyman' thing.") But
Logan's burgeoning music career demanded a steady time commitment,
and about six months ago the time came to make a choice.
The shop moved from its original location to a Buckhead locale,
and Logan decided he didn't want to move with it. "I
didn't want to do that for the rest of my life. I'd rather
flounder around trying this. I wanted to try it for real
and not treat it as a hobby."
The timing was not great. His
relations with Restless were about to take a turn due South.
Despite the consistent critical acclaim that Logan's first
two releases got -- articles in Rolling Stone and the New
York Times which mentioned him in the same breath as William
Faulkner and Flannery O'Connor -- it became clear, as he
was hard at work on the follow-up to 1996's Mood Elevator,
that Logan was sitting on Restless' back burner.
"You
just kind of got the vibe after a while that they just didn't
want to put it out.
They were busy with other things and trying to stall me.
I could've waited it out and tried to modify the record to
please them, but at that point I didn't know what they wanted
and I wasn't really that interested.
"They got bought out by Regency
Pictures and it just became a place that would never have
put out Bulk or even, probably Mood Elevator," Logan
says. "It was obvious [there was] a whole different
direction they wanted to go. Their whole deal is they're
trying to become the next Interscope or whatever. I think
the head of Restless ...wanted to be a player. More power
to him but Lord knows, I don't think we're gonna make it
with the 14-year-olds of America."
Logan would finish the album for
Restless but when he realized they didn't want to put it
out, he asked for and got his walking papers. Unfortunately,
the label still owns the rights to the finished album, though
Logan can buy the album from them if he finds someone interested
in putting it out (he's talked to one label about it already).
Perhaps
it was inevitable -- a middle-aged mechanic can only expect
to see eye-to-eye with
the music industry machine for so long. Though Logan says, "It
made me learn things I didn't want to learn," his experience
is an old story for many musicians, and has a familiar twist.
Fate steps in and seems to move you backwards. In the process,
things often change for the better.
Logan and Kimbell had met back
in the early '80s, while both were living in Champagne, IL,
chasing dreams of rock stardom. After meeting at a benefit
concert, the two traded tapes and soon found themselves writing
and recording together -- just stuff they were knocking off,
with little ambition to do anything other than pass the time.
In 1988, Kimbell showed up in Winder, where Logan had moved
to work in the much-ballyhooed motor shop. Though Kimbell
stayed only a year, he estimates that they wrote well over
100 songs. And they stayed in touch.
After the dissolution of Logan's
contract with Restless, Kimbell found his way back down to
Georgia. There, in Logan's kitchen, they began laying down
the songs that would become Little Private Angel.
Despite
the music industry bullshit, all the Rolling Stone reviews,
all the days working at the
motor shop, all the days looking out onto the quiet streets
of Winder -- Logan's strange little songs were still there
waiting, those weird, quirky nuggets that seem to say so
much without saying much at all. What's most striking about
the record (especially to those familiar with the loose Replacements/Stones
vibe of Logan's debut, Bulk, and its follow-up, Mood Elevator),
are its simple pop arrangements. The raucous fury of classic
Logan material like "Cartoons," "Unscathed," and "When
It All Comes Down," is gone, replaced by sweet melodies,
clean guitar lines and smooth harmonies.
Logan credits Kimbell with softening
him up a bit.
"Bob's
influence on it is really apparent. His influences are slightly
different than
mine..."
"I'm more of a pop-oriented
guy," Kimbell offers. "In a nutshell, Logan's Stones
and I'm Beatles. That's where we come from. I bring the sweet,
dreamy, wide-eyed pop stuff. I'm a sucker -- I believe all
that stuff ..."
Little
Private Angel, adds Kimball, is something he and Logan had
always thought about doing. "We've
always written together and recorded stuff on boombox, four-track
and eight-track. All of a sudden the time seemed right."
And
when it was finished, someone was still interested. Little
Private Angel comes out on Parasol,
a small, Illinois-based independent label whose highest profile
releases to date include the first solo album from Ken Stringfellow
of the Posies, and the CD single of "Your Woman" by
the English band White Town, (which was eventually picked
up by EMI and briefly turned into a hit). It's a label with
considerably less international clout than Restless. Regardless,
Logan and Kimbell are optimistic about the album's prospects.
"Initially our goal was just
to record a good record," Kimbell says. "At this
point we're hoping that some of the people who liked Jack's
stuff before and gave it a lot of notice will fall in line.
And since we're putting it out on Parasol, a smaller label,
and we don't have the huge debts you incur on a bigger label,
we have a chance to make a little money at it."
They finish off their ice-pops.
The couple and the teenager on the main street are long gone.
It's still 98 degrees in Winder, Ga., and Logan's probably
got another song in his head.
Boston Phoenix
July 16-23
With
his love of beer, his knack for crafting impeccable pop hooks,
and his working-class
cred, Jack Logan could be GBV frontman Robert Pollard's Southern
doppelgänger. Like Pollard, Logan's written more songs
than he'll ever possibly record (well over 1000), and most
of those that have seen the light of day are short, witty,
and unforgettably catchy. But his tunes are grounded in a
melancholy realism inspired by his day job as a swimming-pool-motor
repairman.
For
the past 15 years, Logan has been making music with singer/songwriter
Bob Kimbell; it's
taken them until now to release their first collaborative
CD, Little Private Angel. Kimbell's high, nasal wail sounds
like a cross between Neil Young and Alex Chilton; Logan's
voice is rawer and huskier, like Paul Westerberg with a drawl.
When they sing together they create fluttering harmonies
as their voices search for the right notes. Their songs about
fixing cars, baseball, rain, and infidelity evoke classic
tunesmiths like Hank Williams, Buddy Holly, and the Beatles.
But Logan and Kimbell are at their best when they're sincerely
goofy -- when "Little Private Angel" morphs into "Leader
of the Pack," or when they turn the Ali-Foreman fight
into a poignant metaphor for friendship in "Nerves of
Steel."
-- Joshua Westlund
hicago Reader
July 17-23
Jack Logan had recorded some 600
songs with his drinking buddies in a suburban Atlanta garage
before R.EastM.'s Peter Buck recommended him to the Minneapolis
label Medium Cool, which released nearly 80 of his tunes
on a pair of albums in 1994 and 1996. Logan and his songwriting
partner Kelly Keneipp added pop hooks, country twang, and
bluesy immediacy to rough-hewn rock of surprising emotional
depth, but by the second album, Mood Elevator (the slower,
less satisfying of the two), what kept me interested was
mostly Logan's unself-conscious honesty. On his new album,
Little Private Angel (Parasol), he gets a musical shot in
the arm from Champaign jangle-pop icon Bob Kimbell, longtime
leader of Weird Summer. Kimbell wrote all the tunes here,
and while his own material is so light it sometimes threatens
to dissolve like cotton candy, here it's given proper heft
by Logan's mournful lyrics and somber croon. Likewise Logan
on his own can get awfully lugubrious, but Kimbell's breathy,
Alex Chilton-like backing vocals let a little light in. Logan
usually plays with Keneipp in their band Liquor Cabinet,
but for this show he'll be backed only by Kimbell on guitar
and bass and Kevin Lane on guitar. Saturday, 10:30 PM, Schubas,
3159 North Southport; 773-525-2508.
--PETER MARGASAK
WASHINGTON POST
Friday, July 24, 1998; Page N13
JACK
LOGAN AND BOB KIMBELL "Little
Private Angel" Parasol
VARIOUS ARTISTS "Not Dogs . . . Too Simple (A Tale of Two Kitties)" Casino
Music
By Geoffrey Himes
When Jack Logan gets off work
at Doraville Electric Motor Service in Doraville, Ga., the
39-year-old repairman doesn't go bowling or watch television;
instead he gets together with his friends to write and record
rock 'n' roll songs. And when old buddies visit from out
of town, they revisit old times at these jam/demo sessions.
Logan's been doing this for 20 years, and he has two solo
albums and more than a thousand songs to show for it. Even
if the songs weren't that good, it would be an inspiring
tale of rock as a folk art, but the songs are good -- maybe
not as good as Steve Earle or Paul Westerberg but better
than 90 percent of what you hear on MTV on any given day.
Now
Logan has joined his old pal Bob Kimbell for the duo album, "Little Private Angel." They
met in the early '80s when Logan was in the Anglers and Kimbell
in Weird Summer, both new-wave bands in Champaign, Ill. They've
gotten together for songwriting sessions at least once a
year ever since, and "Little Private Angel" collects
14 of their best tunes onto a single disc. The tracks have
the casual, lo-fi sound of home-made demos, and the arrangements
range from alt-country to garage-punk. But Kimbell's melodies
are consistently catchy and Logan's lyrics conjure up tantalizing
pictures of sandlot baseball games, burning boats and electric-motor
repair without explaining too much. And the two harmonize
as if they were a reunion of the Jayhawks' Mark Olson and
Gary Louris.
Another
side of Logan is revealed in "Not Dogs . . . Too Simple (A Tale of Two Kitties)," a
children's audio book with a 32-page, whimsically illustrated
storybook by Logan. Narrated by Ali Cat (former Blockhead
Ian Dury), it's the story of sheltered indoor cat Luis (Velvet
Underground drummer Moe Tucker) and streetwise outdoor cat
Shenanigans (Kevn Kinney), who pull a Prince/Pauper routine
and find the meow mix is not always crunchier on the other
side. The songs, with words by Mark Harper, are performed
with a mostly Atlantan alt-rock cast that includes Cindy
Wilson, Murray Attaway and Jim Heath (Rev. Horton Heat).
Sly and funny, it's aimed at the 10-year-old in all of us,
though it may actually help to be 10.
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