Thursday, July 31, 2014

New Single from J Mascis featuring Cat Power

CoolDad Music mascot Little J Mascis admires my J Mascis Jazzmaster as I listen to J Mascis.

"Wide Awake"

Have I mentioned that I am a J Mascis superfan? No. Hmmm.... I thought, maybe, I had. Oh, well.

Anyway, he's got a new solo record, Tied to a Star, coming out on August 29th with Sub Pop. He already gave us a taste with "Every Morning." Just a few days ago, J released "Wide Awake," a duet with Cat Power, aka Chan Marshall. Lots of finger-picking and kind of a worn out, forlorn feel to it. It reminds me a lot of J's excellent debut solo effort from 2011, Several Shades of Why.

J will be touring this fall in support of the new record and stops at Bowery Ballroom in New York on Friday, October 17th. I already have tickets.



Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Video for J Mascis / Sharon Van Etten Cover of John Denver

"Prisoners"

Earlier this year we got the release of The Music Is You: A Tribute to John Denver. The album features covers of Denver's songs from the likes of My Morning Jacket, Old Crow Medicine Show, Dave Matthews, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, Lucinda Williams, Emmylou Harris, and Evan Dando.

J Mascis and Sharon Van Etten do a version of Denver's 1972 song "Prisoners." Mascis has referred to the music he's tried to make over the years with Dinosaur Jr. as "ear-bleeding country," and this version of "Prisoners" comes pretty close to hitting that mark.

Yesterday the duo released a video for the song featuring Aimee Mann and Jon Wurster over at Funny or Die.

C'mon. J Mascis. Sharon Van Etten. Cover song. You knew I was gonna post this. The only question is why did it take me a day?






Friday, July 19, 2013

New Mazzy Star Single and Cover by J Mascis

Big Week for Mazzy Star Fans

In the spring/summer of 1994, when CoolMom and I headed out west to Seattle, we were introduced to Mazzy Star's now classic "Fade Into You." From the acoustic intro, to the piano tinkling, to the twang, to Hope Sandoval's beautiful vocals (which she employed later that same year on another of my favorites, "Sometimes Always," with The Jesus and Mary Chain), "Fade Into You" is a paragon of 1990s dream pop and earned Mazzy Star a legion of fans all by itself.

This week, the band released a single from their first album in 17 years. "California" will be on the band's forthcoming Seasons of Your Day, which is due September 24th; and it reveals that Sandoval has lost none of the beautifully haunting quality of her voice.



As if that weren't enough, "Fade Into You" gets a fantastic cover from none other than J Mascis. It will be released on a special, picture-disc 7" that will accompany some new Dinosaur Jr designed shoes or something that I may just have to buy in order to get the song.

Go check out that track over at Pitchfork. So good.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

J Mascis / Dinosaur Jr. Stuff

Tally for the Year

I realized yesterday that I've bought quite a bit of J Mascis / Dinosaur Jr.-related stuff over the course of the last twelve months.

I Bet on Sky (Deluxe Bundle)
Bug Live (Purple Vinyl)
Chocomel Daze
Heavy Blanket (Purple Vinyl)
Circle Single (Edie Brickell cover on green, marbled vinyl)
The Electronic Anthology Project:  Dinosaur Jr.
Squier J Mascis Signature Jazzmaster guitar
Tickets to Dinosaur Jr. performing  You're Living All Over Me at Terminal 5 in New York City (Ended up selling those.)

And, of course

J Mascis Throbblehead

One could probably expand this to include tickets to see Sebadoh (Dinosaur Jr. bassist Lou Barlow's band), Sebadoh's Secret EP, and Sentridoh's Weed Forestin' reissue.

That's some serious fanboy action, right there.





Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Dinosaur Jr., I Bet on Sky, 2012

Gotta Get Off My A$# and Run Album Review

Sometimes, as you get older, you get restless.  You want to try new things.  If what you're doing now isn't something you love or are passionate about, the rut and the sameness of it all can become too much.  That's when people start exploring career changes and other experiences that can provide some fulfillment.

But there are a lucky few that find their niche.  They become good at what they do.  So good, in fact, that they have perfected the way they do it.  I think of Mariano Rivera throwing the same pitch, time after time, and still baffling opposing hitters.  Dinosaur Jr. have become like that.  They have their thing.  They've perfected it.  They're into a phase now where they do it over and over again.  And it's good.

I Bet on Sky is Dinosaur Jr.'s tenth studio album, the third following a decade-long break and featuring the reunited original line-up of J Mascis, Lou Barlow, and Murph.  While it may have slightly more general appeal than its predecessors, Beyond and Farm, it is still a Dinosaur Jr. record.  That means Mascis's almost mumbled, drawling vocals and ferocious guitar soloing.  That means that you can always predict the places where the music will swell to a wave of noise as a song builds to the chorus.

The themes haven't changed much either.  Loneliness is probably the overriding theme of almost all Dinosaur Jr. songs, and the collection on I Bet on Sky is no exception.  Whether or not the word "alone" comes up explicitly in any given song, as it does on single "Watch the Corners," that feeling of being an outsider looking in is usually there.  Even more upbeat-sounding tracks like "Almost Fare" and "I Know It Oh So Well" include lyrics like "Now, there she is. / What should I do? / What should I give?" or "I got home again. I watched you float away..."  You can almost imagine a young J Mascis at home, alone in his room, with his collection of 1970's classic rock, 1980's hardcore, post-punk, and country records spread out on the floor with something spinning on the turntable, volume set to 11.

I Bet on Sky, like Beyond and Farm, also includes two contributions from Lou Barlow, "Rude" and "Recognition."  These are nice to hear, especially since I've recently reacquainted myself with Barlow's songwriting through his non-Dinosaur Jr. Sentridoh and Sebadoh projects.  Both are bouncier indie pop.  They feature Barlow's much more conventionally "good" voice along with the embellishments of the big Dinosaur Jr. sound and some Mascis soloing.

I guess not everything has stayed exactly the same.  Dinosaur Jr. are sounding ever so slightly more commercial than they have in a while, kind of like they did on (the Barlow-less) classics Green Mind and Where You Been?  One or two of the songs may actually be kind of funky sounding.  Really, what we've got here, though, is a band doing what it's always done and doing it well.  It really takes a special talent to throw just one pitch and remain so dangerous.  Dinosaur Jr. definitely have it.



Wednesday, April 18, 2012

New CoolDad Music Mascot

And I Shall Call Him Little J

Got my J Mascis "Throbblehead" from the good folks at Aggronautix  today.  Couldn't be more excited.  I will place him on top of my amp and he can be my guitar spirit guide, always monitoring my progress.




Here's "Is It Done" from J's 2011, all-acoustic Several Shades of Why




Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Heavy Blanket



J Mascis Instrumental, Psych Rock, Guitar Shred Album


Veddy interesting.  Over at freakscene.net, there’s an announcement that “J and his stoner buddies” are set to release an instrumental album on May 8th under the name Heavy Blanket.  This should be hitting stores soon after I receive the J Mascis bobblehead I ordered earlier this year, so I ‘ll be primed and ready for it when it comes out.

Promo video looks not embeddable, so go here to check it out.