Alejandro Escovedo + Bruce Springsteen:
Always a Friend

Alejandro Escovedo recently signed a deal with Bruce Springsteen’s management company, but that doesn’t make a cameo by Escovedo at a sold-out show in Houston by the Boss on Monday any less exhilarating.

The pair teamed up for Always a Friend, a song from Escovedo’s forthcoming Real Animal record, due out June 24 on Back Porch Records.

Escovedo is also on the just-released Austin City Limits Festival lineup.

Interview with Blueprint

I had a chance at last year’s Paid Dues Festival to chat with Blueprint, a solo emcee from Columbus, Ohio, and the man who teams with RJD2 to form Soul Position. (So I’m posting it only eight months later!)

Blueprint’s last solo record, 1988, was released on Rhymesayers in 2005. He says he’ll be shopping around his next release, titled Adventures in Counter Culture (at least that was the name of it in August). In the meantime, he’s offering a free mix called The Best of Blueprint, a collection of singles he’s put out through the years solo and with Soul Position.

  • Blueprint | Lo-Fi Funk

[ZIP]: Blueprint | The Best of Blueprint

Q: Any guests on the new record?
A: “None. Zero. I’m going for self, man.”

Q: What about production?
A: “I’m doing everything. Every single note. There’s no samples on it, so I wrote the whole album musically. Then I’m going back and adding live musicians to replay the melodies. I sample them out, chop them up and put ’em back in and make it sound more hip-hop. There’s no samples. It’s all original music. It’s got way stronger songwriting than what I’ve usually done. That’s my goal. To be the best songwriter.”

Q: Are you going to work with RJ again?
A: “The way we do albums is Soul Position, RJ solo, Blueprint solo. So it’s my turn. So as soon as I get mine out the way we’ll come back. … By time I finish my record, I’ll start writing the next Soul Position.”

Q: RJ took a lot of heat for his new record (The Third Hand). What are your thoughts?
A: “I think RJ is an amazing artist because he’s got balls a lot of artists don’t have. A lot of artists are afraid. They put out the same record every time. I think that’s what’s wrong with underground hip-hop and music in general. All of us, all of us – I’m not picking on anybody – are content with making an underground rap record. And that’s good enough. At some point we need to understand that underground records only appeal to underground rap fans.

“I feel like RJ was one of the first dudes in the genre who was like, you know what, obviously, my catalog shows that I know more than that. And he did something that was so far outside the box, that some people who were looking for an underground rap record might not fuck with it. But I think what he gained, the perception or being viewed as an artist, is worth more than doing another cliché rap record, or underground instrumental record in his case.

“Nobody wants to do another Endtroducing. Endtroducing’s been done. He could never go back to it. He could never do it. Shadow can’t. RJ can’t. … Underground hip-hop, it’s on the backs of the artists who want to push it forward. There’s always someone who does a record that sounds just like the last record.

“Why are we not making music that encompasses our influences as opposed to rejecting it … for the sake of underground hip-hop, which is like, ‘Keep it grimy, keep it real.’ Man, fuck that.”

Q: It’s like a safe zone.
A: “Right, it’s fucking safe. I see it now and I’m not gonna be safe anymore. My next record is going to be unsafe. It’s gonna be really out there. Not because I want to be different but because I am an eclectic person. It’s about time me and all of our peers embrace our eclecticism – is that a word? – we embrace that shit and say … instead of feeling ashamed to like Talking Heads … why are we not making music that encompasses our influences as opposed to rejecting it … for the sake of underground hip-hop, which is like, ‘Keep it grimy, keep it real.’ Man, fuck that. Write a great song. And everything else will take care of itself.”

Q: Would you like to collaborate with some of these guys (on Paid Dues tour)?
A: “The Legends. Grouch, he’s one of my favorites. Hearing the Legends every night I got a bigger appreciation for their catalog and how they rhyme and how dope they are.”

Q: Indie hip-hop always seems to be on the fringe of some of those major festivals. How cool is it to have your own traveling tour, just hip-hop?
A: “It’s cool, but you have pluses and minuses. … The good thing about a hip-hop group at Lollapalooza is there’s Arcade Fire and Panic at the Disco fans who are open-minded. They may not know underground hip-hop is Blueprint or Brother Ali. But if they hear us in that setting they get it.

“The difference with this, the negative, there’ s not people who like another genre. Let’s get all the Legends, all Rhymesayers fans in one building. We reinforce what we already have. We’re not gaining new ground. I think it’s a plus, but that’s the biggest negative.

“My last two tours have not been with hip-hop groups. I toured with Islands. I met new fans by just touring with them.”

Q: Do you listen to a lot of indie rock?
A: “I’d say the last indie-rock record I bought and liked was Peter Bjorn and John. It’s a much better album than I thought it would be. I thought it would just be the single. But the album sounds almost better than single. It’s got a lot more edge to it.”

Spoon: Cherry Bomb (demo)

It’s pretty cool that Spoon is giving away a bonus mp3 download every month (via), but I don’t think it’s nearly as cool as the fact that the band also is offering a pdf download of a T-shirt iron-on logo.

Seriously, I can’t tell you how many times I don’t buy band T-shirts because they are printed on shirts by a certain company whose idea of XL is totally skewed by the waify proportions of hipster kids. So, thank you, Spoon, for giving me the freedom to select a shirt of my choosing on which I can display this logo. Smart guy, that Britt Daniel.

About that song … yeah, You Got Yr. Cherry Bomb was my favorite off Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga, so it’s neat to hear it in its many incarnations. Though I agree with Pitchfork that Spoon calling this version “country” is a bit of a misnomer.

This is also the second demo version of Cherry Bomb to pop up. The other came on the bonus Get Nice! EP and was a little closer to the finished product than this one.

  • Spoon | Cherry Bomb (demo)

p.s. Download that iron-on pdf right here.

DON’T FORGET to check out my Muxtape, an unsequenced mix of songs from 2008 I’ve been enjoying thus far. I hope to update it weekly, so why don’t you put that in your RSS reader?

The Rosebuds: Night of the Furies remixed (free)

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Merge Records is offering a free download of Sweet Beats, Troubled Sleep, a remix album of the Rosebuds’ Night of the Furies.

Gotta love the Get Up Get Out remix by Justin Vernon of Bon Iver. Everything that guy touches is turning to gold, it seems. I appreciate that “remix” in this context doesn’t necessarily mean some tweaked-out, electro-beat transformation. In fact, it’s quite the opposite. Vernon takes a dance-happy track and reworks it into a moodier piece with his vocals added to the mix.

Download the remix record here.

Tracklisting:
1. I Better Run – Fire Hazard remix.
2. Get Up Get Out – Justin Vernon of Bon Iver remix.
3. Silence by the Lakeside – Portastatic remix.
4. Silja Line – Radical9 vs. Lovesky remix.
5. My Punishment for Fighting – Wes Phillips remix.
6. Cemetery Lawns – El Venado (El Venado in Space remix).
7. When the Lights Went Dim – JYU remix.
8. Hold on to the Coat – Luke Warm remix.
9. Night of the Furies – Jimmy the B remix.
10. I Better RunV2 – Roger O’Donnell remix.

  • The Rosebuds | Get Up Get Out (Justin Vernon remix)

Traindead: Rail

When I posted about Traindead last month, the Phoenix threesome was in the recording/producing/mixing process of a new EP. They posted demos on MySpace but then took them down until final versions were finished – and it appears it was worth our wait.

The band just posted a polished track, Rail, for everyone to enjoy. Mmmmm, reverb. The EP itself is off to the presses. Looking forward to its arrival.

ELSEWHERE: Yeah, I caved and finally made a Muxtape. It’s a scattered (and totally unsequenced) mix of songs I’ve been enjoying in 2008. Listen to it here.

Incoming: Sea Wolf, May 17 (Tucson)

My punishment for choosing to see Born Ruffians/Cadence Weapon on March 17 in Phoenix over Nada Surf/Sea Wolf in Tempe is this: driving two hours to Tucson on May 17 to see Sea Wolf. Could be worse: Alex Brown Church and Co. could not come to Arizona at all on this first headlining tour for the band.

The show, which kicks off the tour, takes place at Plush, one of my favorite venues in the state, and tickets are scant $7 (buy here). That’s the good news. The bad news is that’s the same night as Cave Singers at Modified. Sigh. Reports from the Sea Wolf show in Tempe were high with praise, so that’s going to be a tough call.

Here’s the video for the fantastic song You’re A Wolf, from the 2007 record Leaves in the River, which, on a drive to Flagstaff, my mom proclaimed is “cool.”:

Mt. Wilson Repeater (Jim Putnam of Radar Bros.)

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I’ve enjoyed Auditorium, the new record from the Radar Bros., so much, I’m just now hip to the news that frontman Jim Putnam is putting out a solo project on April 15 under the name Mt. Wilson Repeater.

From what I’ve read, Putnam played every instrument on the self-titled record, due out on Eastern Fiction.

Having streamed it a couple times at Eastern Fiction, the record is mostly instrumental with a little more leg room for experimentation than what you might find on a Radar Bros. record. (Read a quick Q&A at Paper Thin Walls, where Putnam discusses the creative process for the project.)

Though I’m not one for all-instrumental records (or even almost-all-instrumental records), there’s something positively hypnotizing about the way Putnam lulls you in. As a big fan of the Radar Bros., I’m probably biased in that assessment. A friend once offered his opinion of Radar Bros. to me as being “good, but kind of same-y.” Mt. Wilson Repeater definitely has strains of the Radar Bros. sound, but Putnam, who recorded the project himself, allows for some more unorthodox styling – surprising guitar tones and rhythm (Out Country Way) or the subtle inclusion of horns (Tether in the Haze … gorgeous).

  • Mt. Wilson Repeater | All Night Every Day