Brian Ray “Very Happy Song”

Christmas is over. Time for leftovers and a look back at 2011.I try not to get political on this blog, but when a power pop favorite like Brian Ray writes a song for the ninety-nine percent of us, then I am proud to post this. For another equally great anthem for the OWS crowd, you can’t beat Our Lady Peace’s “Fight the Good Fight” for inspiration.

———-

A new project is being developed for a band called The Stars Explode. The reason I was interested is that the band is lead by Doug Edmunds, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and founding member of critically acclaimed 90s power pop outfit, Gladhands. The band is currently finishing work on its sophomore effort, having started the recording process with renown producer/engineer, Mitch Easter at his home base studio, The Fidelitorium. The new record is scheduled for a January 2012 release, with regional touring to follow. Go to our Help A Musician Page to find out more.

The Jigsaw Seen and Baby Woodrose

The Jigsaw Scene “Winterland”
Building on the success of their critically acclaimed 2010 LP Bananas Foster, The Jigsaw Seen return with this meticulously produced winter-themed song cycle. It opens with the pounding drums and fuzzy bass of “What About Christmas?” although it sounds great, it’s not really a holiday song (other than the title). The groove beat on “Snow Angels Of Pigtown”  showcases a clean riff and smooth vocal by Dennis Davidson. A more traditional jangle pop track  is “Candy Cane” in the best REM tradition.

Winterland straddles the line where you aren’t sure if this is a holiday album or not, even though the lyrics indicate it is. “Circle of Steel” is a madrigal styled folk tune with stately strumming and fingerpicking. But the tone gets pretty bland on “First Day of the New Year”  and the latter half of the album gets a bit syrupy, but at least we’re not hearing the millionth version of “Jingle Bell Rock.” A good holiday album for those who are tired of holiday albums.

Amazon | Facebook

 

Baby Woodrose “Love Comes Down”
Baby Woodrose is a band from Copenhagen, Denmark with an accurate retro garage sound. Originally Love Comes Down was released in 2006, but this album is now re-released for re-discovery.The pysche pop stylings of “What Ya Gonna Do?” retain an impressive 70’s hard rock vibe. Sounding a lot like KISS jamming with Lenny Kravitz on “Found My Way Out” it sports some nice fuzz riffs with the chorus.

Other tracks are just as cool, “Kitty Galore” and “All Over Now” are garage pop classics. Unlike other acid pop bands, there are no ten-minute naval gazing experiments here. Each track is a tight composition, and some gems are “Chemical Buzz” and the organ led “Christine.” The heaviest rocker here “Born To Lose” channels the spirit of Jimi Hendrix and The Animals. Fans of bands like The Beat Rats and The Ugly Beats will love this too. Jump in the time machine and fire up the Baby Woodrose.

Happy Holidays from Power Popaholic!

[imagemap map=”imgmap_css_container_imgmap20111213224458″ direct=1 id=”imgmap20111213224458″ img=”http://www.powerpopaholic.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/presents.jpg?1323834316446″] [area shape=rect alt=”Joe Giddings” title=”Joe Giddings” url=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuETiPTl0NY”]6,3,108,105[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”Mimi Betinis” title=”Mimi Betinis” url=”http://youtu.be/WGaWqKI0OaU”]112,2,203,105[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”ULYSSES” title=”ULYSSES” url=”http://youtu.be/GlhMKeX9ybU”]209,3,298,106[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”Grip Weeds” title=”Grip Weeds” url=”http://youtu.be/1PaOuk5iHbo”]301,3,390,106[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”The Kik” title=”The Kik” url=”http://youtu.be/rVhK0DJI__Y”]5,114,103,205[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”The Mailbooz” title=”The Mailbooz” url=”http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/themalibooz/from/powerpopaholic”]111,115,202,205[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”Cirrone” title=”Cirrone” url=”http://cirrone.bandcamp.com/track/christmas-sun”]208,115,297,205[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”Penguin Party” title=”Penguin Party” url=”http://penguinparty.bandcamp.com/track/its-only-christmas-itll-soon-be-over-2011-remaster”]301,116,391,205[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”Lannie Flowers” title=”Lannie Flowers” url=”http://soundcloud.com/lannieflowers/01-christmas-without-you”]7,211,103,296[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”Lisa Mychols” title=”Lisa Mychols” url=”http://youtu.be/_qYRerXSy0Y”]114,212,202,294[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”Mike Viola” title=”Mike Viola” url=”http://youtu.be/z_uKRV_ICeA”]212,214,298,294[/area] [area shape=rect alt=”The Candle Thieves” title=”The Candle Thieves” url=”http://soundcloud.com/thecandlethieves/when-santa-claus-comes-to-town”]306,214,395,293[/area] [/imagemap]

It’s time for holiday presents! Some videos, some free downloads, all related to this festive time of year. I left lots of goodies for my loyal readers – just click on a gift box to see each “present.” Happy Holidays to all the Power Popaholics out there!

Power Pop for the Holidays: The Gripweeds and The Deadbeat Poets

The Gripweeds “Under The Influence Of Christmas”
This reliable New Jersey power pop band could have made a great album about Festivus if it wanted to. The originals here like “Christmas Dream” and “Santa Make Me Good” are excellent songs, full of loud riffs and bluesy harmonica. Included is a cover of The Pretenders “2000 Miles,” a great tune not always played out during the holiday. There are wonderful flute, harmonies and jangling guitars on traditional songs like “Hark The Herald Angels Sing” and a very mod “Welcome Christmas” that Pete Townshend would approve of. An impressive album that should linger long after January on your playlist.

Amazon | Itunes

The Deadbeat Poets “A Deadbeat Christmas”
The subtle and unassuming guitar of “Christmas Eve” leads us into “Christmastime in Painesville,” an original full of great guitar work amongst the pity party lyric where even Charlie Brown’s Christmas Special can’t cheer you up. The sacrilegious “Drunk At Midnight Mass” is the highlight of this disk, with impressive drumming and churning guitar rhythm. It plays a bit like a Meatloaf meets Jethro Tull here – and it’s pretty compelling. If you say humbug to traditional cheery Xmas tunes, you’ll prefer this take on the holiday.
CD Baby | Amazon