Nelson Bragg and Ward White

Nelson Bragg

Nelson Bragg “Gratitude Blues”

Nelson Bragg conceived his final solo LP during COVID quarantine in Burbank, CA. Being Brian Wilson‘s percussionist/vocalist for 14 years, Bragg is a perfectionist when it comes to introspective melodic pop. Starting with “Lose Yourself” it’s a terrific song that describes the need to look inward, “and play my Beach Boys songs” sounding brooding, but upbeat, and vaguely like Lindsey Buckingham. The jangling “Glorious Days” is like a sunny warm memory fleshed out, and the Beatlesque “Whitechapel Girl” is a bouncy gem with a sugary sweet chorus.

The epic Elton John/Bernie Taupin ballad “I Want Love” is richly surrounded by harmonies, and Peter Holsapple helps define “The Cool Kids,” a lovely folk song that’s dressed up in lots of thick orchestration. It’s a hallmark of Bragg that all those Brian Wilson sonic touches leak through in his own work. “Seriously Girl” opens with a Chicago-styled intro with blaring horns and then builds into a much mellower psych-pop gem. The wordless hymn of “The Dover Twins” is a pastiche of styles and the California pop of “Dreams Made Us Free” sounds like an interview of Bragg about his tenure with the band set to music. Many of the songs here are a winsome look back on his career, and nothing is held back. Not a single dud in the bunch. This kind of craftsmanship and quality of music is a rarity, we can only hope that Bragg doesn’t really stop making these types of retro-love songs. Highly recommended and added to my list of top ten albums for 2021.

Steel Derrick Music

Ward White

Ward White “The Tender Age”

Ward White is back with a new set of songs that reward the attentive listener. His gentle Bowie-like croon is perfectly suited for a song like “Dirty Clouds” which adds elements of jazz and rock together. The next song is more atmospheric than melodic, “Easy Meat” about dark impulses, and then the solid “Let’s Don’t Die At The Spotlight” is an amusing scenario of LA traffic with some soaring vocal lines. White to me often is the musical equivalent to filmmaker David Lynch, where the sweet, sleek surfaces often reveal darkness underneath, and the title track “The Tender Age” is an excellent example.

Other tracks aren’t as compelling, with some exceptions. “Gail, Where’s Your Shoes” is a standout with its warbling guitar break, and “Wasn’t It Here” shows some much-needed guitar energy. Overall a solid effort that takes a few repeats to find a space in your brain. Check it out.

Amazon

Nick Frater and Scott Gagner

Nick Frater

Nick Frater “Earworms”

Nick Frater is a 60s/70s sophisticated-pop connoisseur from Croydon, UK. Earworms are exactly what power popaholics look for in a song, and Nick does a great job by letting his work just burrow into your brain. Lots of period influences are combined to make something new, yet familiar. Staring with “It’s All Rumours” with help from Roger Joseph Manning Jr. (Jellyfsh) it flows sweetly into the ELO-styled chorus. Then the wicked lead opens “Buggin’ Out,” another standout that will have you singing “doo-wops” till the end.

The “hits” keep coming with the mid-tempo “With Heavy Heart,” and shifting key changes of “Lucky Strike” which again mines Queen for its guitar flourishes. The smooth gloss of “Star Crossed” is almost like Jeff Lynne joined Seals & Crofts. And the ender “How To Survive Somebody” evokes both Elton John and The Carpenters. Each song is like a handcrafted love note to that era, and it makes for irresistible replays. Highly Recommended and another candidate for the top ten albums of 2021. Don’t miss it!

Amazon

Scott Gagner

Scott Gagner “BloodMoon”

A lot of introspective music came out of the great pandemic this year. But none so personal and deeply emotional as Scott Gagner’s BloodMoon. With the help of  Ken Stringfellow (Posies), the soaring “Rise” is an early high point, about a family moving from a natural disaster. The ghostly “Twice In A Lifetime” follows these thoughts half-spoken and half-sung in a trance-like state. The album centerpiece is “I Don’t Get Out Much Anymore” a soulful heart-breaking ballad.

Scott seems to channel his inner Lee Hazlewood for sublime “My Shadow” but after that, it gets very spacey with “On The Moon” and “Orion.” It seems to be more like a calming ASMR vibe, with meditations on the past. Even when the tempo speeds up on “Year At A Glance” and “1977” it feels like a sleepy reminiscence of events. While I did enjoy the first third of the album, it took more effort to appreciate the rest. The complex arrangements are a plus, but the brooding atmosphere will not appeal to everybody.

Amazon

Mo Troper and The Amplifier Heads

Mo Troper

Mo Troper “Dilettante”

After a daunting Beatles cover album, Mo Troper is back to his bedroom DIY fuzzy melodies and Dilettant is more hit than miss over the course of 28 short snippets. The influences are too numerous to mention but the opener “Total Euphoria” sets up a single hook before its gone, and then the driving guitar of “The Expendables Ride Again,” a rant about how ephemeral the music is, and the reaction “What’s the name of your new band? The one with you and my old friends?”

There are thematic gems sprinkled throughout, with others being simple song sketches. “The Perfect Song” is the goal here, one that “gets stuck in my head all day long.” Some artistic anger on “All My Friends are Venmo,” and plenty of highlights that compare well with GBV; “My Master’s Voice,” “Armpit,” “Better Than Nothing” and “Blake and Lanny.” Like a bag of Halloween candy, you may not eat everything but it sure is sweet.

Amazon

Amplifier Heads

The Amplifier Heads “Saturnaliens”

Boston rocker Sal Baglio (The Stompers) skillfully continues his journey with his band The Amplifier Heads as they cruise through their third album on Bar Rum Records. Described as “a  graphic novel for the ears and head” I just start by giving kudos to the cover design. These UFOs would kick Boston’s ass.

The fine opener “Ghost Star Rider” mines that Western motif in the instrumental, and then the raw garage rock of “Rocket Boys” delivers the first salvo. Loving those riffs on “Earth Girls on the Loose,” and “All Fueled Up,” it almost goes full rockabilly with a hint of punk attitude. “GlamOrama,” “Candi Starr,” and “Bast Shit Crazy” are very Sweet-esque tributes, and the band doesn’t ease up on the gas. All lots of fun, but it can be a bit exhausting by the end of the album. Still more hits than misses here, and definitely highly recommended.

Amazon

Loveland Duren and The Embryos

Real Sickies

Loveland Duren “Any Such Thing”

The collaboration between Memphis musicians Vicki Loveland and Van Duren has proven fruitful over the years, as they both are consummate professionals that play off each other beautifully. This new album is no exception, the opener “Tumbledown Hearts” is an A-list single that would win over the pop and country charts if given a chance. “Any Such Thing” is Loveland’s anti-fascist screed laced with strong rock instrumentation and blaring horns. This is soulful pop music for grown-ups.

While the styles are pop and country, the songs feel timeless when they click. “Funny Way of Showing It” has Loveland’s emotions on her sleeve when it comes to domestic abuse accompanied by orchestral strings. And Van Duren’s just as emotional on ‘Where are we going?” when it comes to a relationship in trouble. When the two collaborate, it’s pure magic; “Bridges I Had To Burn” is another winner that speaks to experience. Van Duren also manages a very timely statement on political discord with a strong melody on “Everyone is Out of Tune.” Not everything here is as memorable, but this 3rd LP by the duo is a good mix of songs that deserves to be heard.

Amazon

Loveland Duren · Tumbledown Hearts
The Embryos

The Embryos “National Absurdatory”

Chicago band, The Embryos are back three years after their debut Open The Kimono, and their maturity is evident, “Morning Birds” is a sophisticated pop tune, but they shift their sound on the instrumental “The Funky Embryo” akin to Graham Central Station and “Rattlesnakes”  is a great synthesis influence from The Doors and The Byrds. It’s likely the best tune here, but they inject some power-pop-blues-rock with the great “Spend Tonight,” and it’s another high point.

The next several songs seem to channel The Stones, from “Catching Fire,” to the sleepy “You Can Be A Mystery.” The energy from earlier has mellowed quite a bit. The cryptic “Cosmic Wheel” and “Rolling Wheels” are both sweet stoner tunes with layered harmonies, psychedelic touches, and catchy bass lines. Overall a very good LP that grows on you with each repeat. Highly Recommended.

Amazon | Kool Kat Musik

Andy Bopp and Styx

andy bopp

Andy Bopp “AB”

Andy Bopp is a power-pop legend and guitarist from Baltimore Maryland. From Bastards of Melody to Myracle Brah, for over 25 years Bopp has carried the melodic rock flag and never waivered. On AB, he delivers a great variety of rock and power pop styles, as he falls neatly into a musical space somewhere between Robert Pollard (Guided By Voices) and Chris Stamey (the Db’s.)

Starting with “Ashes” it’s a definitive cry for immortality and “not letting go” unless he knows he’s been heard, with layered percussive rhythms over his guitar riffs. The echoing jangle of “I Am A Jetfighter” is another anthemic tune that rings true. Most of these tunes are accessible, short, and immediate; boiled down to a pure hook that begs to be repeated, like the 2-minute “Arlo and Joan.” It’s tough to keep calling out favorites because everything here works, like the fantastic “Abbie Karey,” which sounds like a lost Pete Ham (Badfinger) mid-tempo ballad. The second half rocks harder, “Bending All The Jets,” “EM543” and “Blood 66” are quick garage jams that soften you up for more methodical GBV-styled rockers like “Bicycle Parts” and “Think About You.” Overall not a weak track in the bunch and makes my top ten LP list for 2021. Highly Recommended!

Bandcamp only

Styx

Styx “Crash of The Crown”

Let’s get this out of the way first, I know Styx is not power-pop, but they are a band that has earnestly been moving to update their prog art-rock sound for the past five years without losing their uniqueness. The Tommy Shaw/JY-fronted Styx is still dedicated to that sound but has managed to change things since 2017’s The Mission. Very few legacy rock bands have managed to do this successfully — but Styx has cracked that code. While old-time fans of Styx may balk at this effort, it adds several new musical influences to keep things fresh.

Starting with “The Fight of Our Lives” it establishes the classic Styx prog sound, with soaring guitar and harmonies all in under 2 minutes. “A Monster” continues the momentum, and “Reveries” has Lawrence Gowan’s vocal carry things, along with a wicked guitar break. The title track is where we shift into a new sound, as all three vocalists contribute here, and I hear echoes of Queen(!) mixed in. “Long Live The King” is another gem with this new sound. “Our Wonderful Lives” moves us slowly back into Styx land reminding me of “Sing For The Day” mixed with “Penny Lane.” Tommy Shaw and company do enough to establish their virtuosity, but the hooks are missing on some of these songs (“Sound The Alarm” and “Coming Out The Otherside.”) That said, this is a good direction for the band to go in, and fans will find plenty to enjoy here. Check it out.

Amazon