Tag Archives: Alexander

July’s Music Mindblower

Beach Blanket Boom Box

Remember when you loaded your sweet boom-box up with 8 D batteries and lugged it down to the beach so that you could listen to your favorite jams while getting your Hawaiian Tropic SPF 4 tanning oil covered body just one more shade darker?  Ah, those were the days.  With Summer now in full swing, I can’t help but look back on those beach days when all you needed was a towel and some tunes.  In honor of those lazy days in the sand, sun, and surf, I have put together a few playlists with some of my old and new favorites.  Enjoy and share some of your favorites, too!

Bypass Backspin (songs of my youth)

Summertime: DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince

Scenario: A Tribe Called Quest

Hip-hop Junkies: Nice and Smooth

Saturday: De La Soul

Rebirth of Slick (Cool like Dat): Digable Planets

Passin’ me by: Pharcyde

Vivrant Thing: Q-Tip

Here Come the Lords: Lords of the Underground

Born to Roll: Master Ace

Posse on Broadway: Sir-Mix-A-Lot

Get it Together: Beastie Boys

Country Grammar: Nelly

Around the Way Girl: LL Cool J

Party Up: DMX

Deja Vu: Lord Tariq & Peter Gunz

Everyday People: Arrested Development

Misterdobalina: Del Tha Funky Homosapien

Breathe: Fabulous

Where the Road Ends (songs of my no-so-youth)

Awake my Body: Alexander

Windows are Rolled Down: Amos Lee

Daydreaming: Middle Brother

Sydney (I’ll Come Running): Brett Dennen

Once and Future Carpenter: The Avett Brothers

Old Before Your Time: Ray Lamontagne

Cornbread and Butterbeans: Carolina Chocolate Drops

Rebel Side of Heaven: Langhorne Slim

Getting Over Your Love: Holy Ghost Tent Revival

Raise a Rukus: Old Crow Medicine Show

Time Spent in Los Angeles: Dawes

Little Silver Ring: The Samples (an oldie but a goodie)

Lost in my Mind: The Head and the Heart

My Baby Don’t Lie: Nicole Atkins

Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa: Vampire Weekend

Marlene: Lightspeed Champion

Breath of Love: David Mayfield Parade

At the Beach: The Avett Brothers

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Debut Album Review: Alexander

Alexander The Great

Amidst a busy touring schedule last year, singer/songwriter Alex Ebert (frontman for bands, Ima Robot and Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros) took a break from his baker’s dozen feel-good-hippie-music-act to create an eloquent and eery solo album fittingly entitled, Alexander.  Ebert’s solo sound is thankfully a departure from the pop-punk-emo tunes of Ima Robot.  Instead, the ten tracks on Alexander fall more in line musically with the stylish makings of ESMZ.  Ebert’s musical influences appear obvious to any listener with even a shallow understanding of music history, and lucky for us he picked some of the best from decades past.  Timeless tones of Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, The Beatles (later years), Bob Marley, and even Johnny Cash meander their way through these tracks, all the while feeling fresh and new thanks to Ebert.  Rarely do I listen to an album in a first sitting and enjoy it in its entirety, but such is the case with Alexander.

Most tracks are carefully laced with echos of ghostly background vocals that somehow find a way to complement an upbeat snap-clap cadence of each song’s message.  At moments, especially during the first track, Let’s Win!, it felt as if Ebert was the Pied Piper and I trustingly filed in behind other listeners to join his traveling circus.  I suppose that is one of the best ways to set an album’s tone and get the listener on-board.  Contrary to what listeners may initially assume, Ebert didn’t recruit his 12 ESMZ band members to play the instruments on this debut solo album.  Rather, he retreated to his bedroom between shows to play each and every instrument (including all vocals) himself.  The seamless melding of vocals with an arsenal of instrumentation is easy on the ears and light on the soul, perhaps leaving the listener a bit closer to enlightenment.  I suppose that is Ebert’s Pied Piper mentality again…lulling his audience into a peaceful trance.  Hey, in an ever more stressful world, it works for me.  Like other musicians who have taken on the enormous feat of creating a canon of songs entirely on their own (a certain Timothy Seth Avett as “Darling” comes to mind…), Ebert can now reflect on his first solo project with pride.  Do yourself a favor, take a listen and get enlightened.

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