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October 2000 Parasol
Newsletter
Issue #35
There are two music fests happening at the end
of October and I'm trying to attend both. This year the CMJ Music Marathon is
October 19-22 and will feature three Parasol-related artists, all on Sunday the
22nd. Bettie Serveert is playing with Luna at Bowery Ballroom, Elk City is
showcasing at Luna Lounge, and Elizabeth Elmore revisits Brownies. In addition,
local Champaign-Urbana good persons, Absinthe Blind, are making their debut CMJ
appearance on Thursday October 19th at Don Hills at 7PM. Look for me, the very
tall guy, standing next to Parasol recording artist Mark Bacino, who is hosting
me, and paying for all of my taxi rides (is that really true, Mark?). Later in
October The Monsters of Pop festival is taking place in Nashville. From October
26-28 you'll be able to see: Howie Beck, The Bees, Pat Buchanan, Chris
Collingwood, The Features, Frisbie, Great Lakes, The Honeydogs, Neilson
Hubbard, Brad Jones, Will Kimbrough, The Lilys, Bill Lloyd, Luna, Mayflies USA,
Mazarin, The Posies, Millard Powers, Ross Rice, The Shazam, Skirt, Starclock,
Starlight Mints, John Stiratt, Matt Suggs, SWAG, and Waxwings. How is this
directly related to us? Participant Neilson Hubbard is releasing his new CD Why
Men Fail on Parasol. This wonderful pop album was originally recorded for
Counting Crows' vanity label E Pluribus Unum (through Interscope), and when
they decided to not release it (hmmm
ever heard that one before?), we
became the lucky suitors. Why Men Fail will be available via Parasol Mail Order
at the end of October, and at Neilson's live performances, prior to the
worldwide retail release in January 2001. Since the last newsletter we received
all of the songs for our first full-length Holiday compilation, and we made
contact with Erik Voeks! Erik's song "Christmas Singles" leads off
the CD and is now the title track. Elizabeth Elmore from Sarge follows with a
version of Irving Berlin's "White Christmas" and Doleful Lions close
the CD with the traditional favorite "Auld Lang Syne." In between are
a mix of originals and covers from Mark Bacino, Angie Heaton, George Usher
Group, Vitesse, White Town, Friends of Sound, Elk City, Philo, Kayla Brown
(Feaze), Toothpaste 2000, Signalmen, Shalini, and Matt Bruno. Look for more
track-by-track detail next month. Also coming in November is a 6-song EP from
Ken Stringfellow's side project Twin Princess, and the new St. Christopher
album Golden Blue.
SPOTLIGHT
Mike Levy - Fireflies CD
(PAR-CD-058) $10.00
Mike Levy has an ALL-STAR-pop-music-
pedigree. As a member of the Sneetches he recorded CDs for Creation, Bus Stop,
spinART, and others. Five years ago Mike embarked on a solo album for Bus Stop,
and after some fits, starts, and down time, we climbed on board at the
beginning of 2000 to see the album through to the finish. Six months ago we had
a line-up of comparisons in mind that must've included The Beatles, June &
the Exit Wounds, maybe Linus of Hollywood, and I really can't remember the
rest. None of us can. Fireflies has become an album that we're going to compare
future records to. Other former Sneetches members Matt Carges, Alec Palao, and
Daniel Swan contribute musically to Fireflies, which features sweet, melodic
ballads and upbeat guitar-tales, crystallizing the essence of sixties pop and
seventies soft-rock, while introducing a subtle tension that makes the song
quiver with delight. The songs are mainly piano driven, not overtly flashy like
Ben Folds or Elton John, but stylishly contained. My personal favorite is the
second song "New Day," which sounds like something off the second
Korgis album. Korgis?! And that's the point. The songs sound familiar, but in
that my-favorite-song-on-an-obscure-album sort of way. Mike chose "Away
From My Head" for inclusion on Parasol's Sweet Sixteen Volume 2, though
any from Fireflies would have represented the album well. This is destined to
become Parasol Records' best seller
at least until the next June & the
Exit Wounds CD is released.
The Beauty Shop - Yr Money Or Yr Life
CD
(MUD-CD-044) $10.00
My first taste of the Champaign-Urbana based The
Beauty Shop was the band's self-released (y'know, burned 100 at home, then
more, then more) Grief EP. The cover art was so disturbing I almost couldn't
bring myself to play the CD. While the little man on my shoulder whispered
"don't judge a book, blah blah blah" I held out for a few more days.
When the local buzz got loud enough to drown out those aggravating voices I
finally put in the CD and
well, it was quite good. And listening again it
was great. It kind of reminded me of Johnny Dowd's first album. Stark, dark
tales of death, or so they both sounded like to me. I forgot about "the
cover" and at the urging of Parasol's headmaster Geoff, went to see them
live. He was right. They were great. And, how to describe great? The singer,
and de facto bandleader, John Hoeffleur, has some kind of charisma. It's the
look in his eyes. The look of a guy who designed "the cover." John
picks up The Beauty Shop story in his own words: "The Beauty Shop is kind
of a weird band. I mean, I'm a weirdo for sure, and it's weird that a regular
guy like (drummer) Casey is in a band with me, because he's real nice and I'm
mean, and he's vegan and my diet is beef, exclusively. It's an odd match. Casey
can build Robots, I'm a wizard with cardboard. I built a few dogs to pick up
girls with and a ten-foot tall piece of toast and two bong costumes for
Halloween. And then you look at (bassist) Ariane, who's from Indiana (!), is a
girl, is Filipino, is 4'11 I think, and we're all playing country-rock music or
whatever it is. I use a beat up acoustic, Casey's got like two drums, and we're
playing kind of sedate music, and that was something really new to some people
or something. The Grief EP was recorded at a time of pretty dismal morale for
various personal reasons, but one factor was certainly the slow death of
Casey's cat, who during recording lost control of one front leg. We just
watched this poor cat kind of limply slide its front limb across the hardwood
floor." Whew! Yr Money Or Yr Life contains tracks from the Grief EP, plus
newly recorded material. The Beauty Shop has been compared to Leonard Cohen and
Uncle Tupelo, and cites Chris Whitley and the Gun Club as influences. I stand
behind the Johnny Dowd comparisons and love the ghost tales, the drinking
tales, the death tales, all of them. "Death March" can be sampled on
Parasol's Sweet Sixteen, Volume 2.
Coming Soon...
Neilson Hubbard - Why Men Fail (Parasol)
CD due in October
Friends of Sound - Rock-Ola (Hidden Agenda) CD due in October
St. Christopher - Golden Blue (Parasol) CD due in October
Various Artists - Christmas Singles: A Parasol Holiday Collection
(Parasol) CD due in November
Mezzanines - Break It Up Now! (Mud) CD due in November
Twin Princess - Complete Recordings (Hidden Agenda) due in
November
Bikeride - Summer Winners, Summer Losers (Hidden Agenda) CD due
in November
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT...
Parasol Mail Order is taking pre-orders
for Kissproof World, Jane Wiedlin's fourth full-length solo album. After a very
disappointing release of the 1995 debut from her guitar-driven punk-pop
project, froSTed, Jane was crushed. While her pursuit of the perfect pop song
and passion for the creative process never dimmed, she knew there had to be
another way to get her music into the world. The release of, Kissproof World
finds Wiedlin taking total control: from songwriting, performing and production
to promotion and distribution, which includes selling the CD in advance
exclusively online through Parasol. The album's release marks the entrance of
her Painful Discs label into the music industry scene. Visit
www.parasol.com/janewiedlin
to hear audio samples and view other Jane Wiedlin merch.
SOME PARASOL RELATED ARTIST ANSWERS SOME
QUESTIONS
Friends of
Sound's Leslie & Reed Lochamy
1. Mixing session you wish you could have
attended-
"The Magnetic Fields' 69 Love Songs. Stephin and Claudia: a winning
combination! Also, we ARE talking about 69 different songs, we might as well
get our money's worth."
2. Songs you think you probably shouldn't
like but just can't help yourself-
LESLIE: "Humiliating though it may be, I actually become emotionally moved
by the Goo Goo Doll's 'Slide'--especially when he says 'I want to wake up where
you are,' and 'what you feel is what you are and what you are is beautiful,'
plus something about getting married. (I am made of mush)--in addition to that
embarrassment, I have tried and tried not to, but I like 'Crash' by the Dave
Matthews Band. Kill me." REED: "Let me tell you, I have agonized over
whether or not to admit this but...the answer for me is any song by Tesla. O.K.
so we've really made ourselves vulnerable here, but you have to admire us for
being so honest with you."
3. Favorite record that you can't find on CD
(or CD you can't find on vinyl)-
"Julee Cruise's album Floating (we'd like it on CD)."
4. First Concert-
LESLIE: "The Go Gos." REED: "Stevie Wonder."
5. Favorite Bass Player-
"Naomi Yang from Galaxie 500, but of course it is hard to beat the simple
but beautiful bass stylings of James McNew."
In early November Hidden Agenda is releasing the
debut CD from Friends of Sound, the band comprised of Birmingham (Alabama)
based husband and wife duo Leslie & Reed Lochamy. Until then, check out
their song "Manhattan" on Parasol's Sweet Sixteen, Volume 2.
The Archive
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2000 April 2000
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