Franz Nicolay carries a torch for American Music Club

Franz Nicolay and American Music Club

Franz Nicolay and American Music Club

The Recommendation Quote from Franz Nicolay: “American Music Club is the band that most shaped my idea of the kind of record I wanted to make. In addition to what has said about them many times, I think they’re an interesting object in lesson in the elusive chemistry of particular individuals. Despite the overwhelming (legitimate) focus on singer and primary songwriter Mark Eitzel, listening to his solo records and then listening to an AMC album can be like going from black and white to Technicolor. Plenty has been said about Eitzel as a songwriter and performer – I taught myself to play guitar and sing, in part, to his songs, particularly the acoustic record “Songs Of Love Live” – but not nearly enough about the unique skills of the rest of the band: Danny Pearson’s high-lonesome vocal harmonies; particular way with a pedal-tone bass part that still manages to feel like a moving line; non-root-note lines, and habit of leaving out the downbeat, making an already-skeletal arrangement feel spookily abandoned (“What Godzilla Said To God…”, “Dallas, Airports, Bodybags”) Drummer Tim Mooney’s ride-and-brushes jazz touch and way of laying behind even the drowsiest waltz time (and AMC’s best songs are almost always in three). Bruce Kaphan’s closed-fist piano clusters and spread-voiced dissonances (which mirror Eitzel’s own unusual guitar voicings) and lushly melodic pedal steel, which give the band an widescreen texture even without the string sections of “Johnny Mathis’ Feet” and cathedral reverb of “Everclear.” And sui-generis guitar savant Vudi, switching on a moment’s notice from clean country licks to cloudy, exploding amp noise and spiralling feedback (he toured as a member of the Swans after AMC’s breakup).”

More on: American Music Club

New to American Music Club? Start here: Mercury was their first major-label record, was the first I heard, and is the one I return to. Some people will tell you that it was the “wrong time to make their arty record,” and that if they’d made a record that sounded just like California or Everclear that they’d've been a huge success. I find it hard to believe that anyone expected them to sell half a million records to begin with, and that in their misplaced expectations those people miss the fact that the band made the album of their lives: intimate, claustrophobic, anthemic, foggy, warm and heartsick.

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American Music Club Mercury
Mercury

More about our guest author, Franz Nicolay: Editor’s note: Franz Nicolay, the former multi-instrumentalist for The Hold Steady is now a solo act with one solo record behind him and a very busy 2010 ahead. First up is the release of his book of short stories, Complicated Gardening Techniques (pre-order here). Next is the release of Fight Dirty, an album that is a collaboration between Nicolay’s gypsy-punk unit, Guignol and Mischief Brew. Order that cassette (yes, I said cassette) / digital download here. And, oh yeah, Franz is on tour and is coming to a town near you. Check the tour dates.


Craig Finn carries a torch for Paul Westerberg

Craig Finn Paul Westerberg

Craig Finn and Paul Westerberg

The Quote from Craig Finn, lead singer of The Hold Steady: “October 1984 brought a change to my life, and also to Minneapolis…the Replacements released Let It Be, which still stands as my favourite ever record…While lots of rock’n'roll makes you think that your teens should be all about riding in a convertible with the top down, Paul Westerberg, the leader of the Replacements, is somehow magically able to capture the part of being teenage that is scary and embarassing.

And when I hear it, I know what we’re trying to do, too: let people know that everything is going to be OK. And when it isn’t, rock’n'roll can help.”

The Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk

New to Paul Westerberg and the Replacements? Start Here: As great as Let It Be is, RockTorch is going to defy the Mighty Finn and suggest Pleased To Meet Me as the entry point to The Replacements library. The album has a bit of everything great that is The Replacements: jazzy discomfort on Nightclub Jitters, punked-up clowning on I Don’t Know, the catchiest of catchy hooks on Alex Chilton, and, perhaps most important of all, Skyway, an acoustic gem that has a lonely tone that would echo again and again in Westerberg’s genius-yet-underrated solo work.

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