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13

Article: Extended Analysis

Talk Thelonious: NRBQ + Terry Adams plays Terry Adams Arrangements of Thelonious Monk Songs

Read "Talk Thelonious: NRBQ + Terry Adams plays Terry Adams Arrangements of Thelonious Monk Songs" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


Musician and AAJ contributor Skip Heller calls the New Rhythm and Blues Quartet (NRBQ), “the greatest band of all time." A listen to the band's catalog reveals a depth and breadth of material that betrays an omnivorous appreciation of all American Music, all with a wicked and acute sense-of-humor, something so much music lacks. Never a ...

6

Article: Album Review

The Hollywood Blues Destroyers: Singles Drinking Doubles

Read "Singles Drinking Doubles" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


Avoid the intended seduction of the sexy and dangerous collective called The Hollywood Blues Destroyers for the Oz behind the curtain with his merry band of friends is one Fred Steven “Skip" Heller. AllMusic's Jana Pendragon calls Heller, “America's most confusing country singer." Whatever Heller might be, he is a defender of American Music...all of it. ...

Album

Songs With Memories: Skip Heller and Friends Play Floyd Tillman

Label: Weatherbird
Released: 2013
Track listing: Rhythm In The Air; This Cold War With You; I Gotta Have My Baby Back; Let’s Make Memories Tonight; I love You So Much It Hurts; I’ve Got The Craziest Feeling; Daisy Mae; Floyd’s Song; Slippin’ Around; Westphalia Waltz.

4

Article: Album Review

Skip Heller: Songs With Memories: Skip Heller and Friends Play Floyd Tillman

Read "Songs With Memories: Skip Heller and Friends Play Floyd Tillman" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


It would be oh so tempting to say the music impresario Skip Heller has found his niche with Songs With Memories: Skip Heller and Friends Play Floyd Tillman but with his next recording, more likely than not, he would prove that statement ludicrous. Heller's 2012 Fakebook II: That's Entertainment (Weatherbird) was a sequel to his 2004 ...

8

Article: Hardly Strictly Jazz

Back To... SOUL

Read "Back To... SOUL" reviewed by Skip Heller


While everyone else seems to have been attending jazz festivals, I've been flying under the radar with film and TV music jobs, so I haven't had the time to write about the summer's recorded music treasures, and it has been bountiful for record/CD fans. Not least of all because some really careful and wise music fans ...

6

Article: Hardly Strictly Jazz

Pryor Experiences

Read "Pryor Experiences" reviewed by Skip Heller


If it seems like everything is being anthologized into a box set these days, that's because it is. While on a trip to Amoeba Music (the enormous record store from where I live about a block), I took stock of all kinds of box sets. There was even one of the Mitch Miller Sing Along With ...

5

Article: Extended Analysis

Greek Rhapsody: Instrumental Music From Greece 1905-1956

Read "Greek Rhapsody: Instrumental Music From Greece 1905-1956" reviewed by Skip Heller


A couple years back, Tompkins Square issued an unforgettable box set called To What Strange Place: The Music of the Ottoman-American Diaspora, 1916-1929, which collected a type of Eastern music that had gone unanthologized, largely because it came from places long since gone from the world map, played on instruments to which most Westerners have never ...

2

Article: Extended Analysis

Grateful Dead: Dick's Picks 24

Read "Grateful Dead: Dick's Picks 24" reviewed by Skip Heller


The plethora of available live Grateful Dead material might be a completist's delight, but it can make for a nightmare for the consumer who just wants a few really good discs. This was a truly multifaceted band, with every facet documented to the point of exhaustion (or even tedium, depending who you ask). At their rootsy ...

3

Article: Album Review

Chet Atkins and Les Paul: Guitar Monsters

Read "Guitar Monsters" reviewed by Skip Heller


The seventies were bountiful years for guitar fans. Looking now at Guitar Player magazines of the period, it's almost dizzying to see how many veteran guitarists were doing some of their most interesting and liberated work. Bop stalwarts, blues greats (often obscure), and notable country pickers were all well-represented on vinyl throughout the decade, on a ...

4

Article: Extended Analysis

The Pogues: The Very Best Of The Pogues

Read "The Pogues: The Very Best Of The Pogues" reviewed by Skip Heller


The hybrid of punk rock and world music is by now expected, and the Pogues are by now the known avatar. But in 1984, when the band's debut album, Red Roses For Me (Stiff), was released, it made no impression. It didn't sell, and it wasn't written about much. Their blend of Celtic folk and English ...


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