Jared Lekites and Leo London

Jared Lekites “Looking For Diamonds”
The impressive Beatlesque opener “Love That Lasts” lead by singer /guitarist Jared Lekites comes out and grabs you right away. The follow up is a folksy “Looking For A Diamond” which is made for a late night campfire, complete with handclaps and harmonica solo. Although his style is the familiar retro strums and harmonies, it’s all well written and constructed. “Electric Car Ballet” bounces along and ends with a gorgeous ascending harmonic, and you have your first “must own” track for the stereo in your new Nissan Leaf.  It gets a bit Buffalo Spingfield-ish with the moody “Unrequited Love Song” and ending track “Let Your Hair Down Once In A While.” This EP fits in your playlist like a comfortable pair of jeans. Fans of The Beatles, Hollies, Beach Boys and James Taylor will surely love it. So Jared, give us more next time! Excellent debut, what else can I say?

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Leo London “s/t”
Is Oregon native Leo London the next big power pop wunderkind?  Similar to Jason Falkner in deep multitracked delivery and melodic approach that evokes both Bryan Scary and Conor Oberst. The slam of piano keys greets you on the opener “I Don’t Know” with honest desperation and a vaudevillian melody. The shuffling rhythm of “Caroline” is just as strong, sung with casual spite about “unravelling” a relationship experience from his memory. The slower songs are also pretty good, the best of the which “Ashes and Wax” tell a strong story and a wonderful baroque harpsichord break occurs midway into the song. The philosophical “Little Girl” is like a David Mead acoustic guitar-based tune that’s rich in imagery and simplicity. “The Single” is a defiant rant that approaches manic proportions, a performance that Ziggy Stardust would approve.”Dial Tone” has the overly dramatic composition and sonic textures in parts can sometimes recall Robert Pollard’s experiments.  This is great stuff, highly original and melodic that should earn many fans.

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Goodbye To Tony Peluso

Tony Peluso, the lead guitarist with the Carpenters for 12 years has passed away June 5. He is best remembered on the 1972 power ballad “Goodbye to Love,” where he conceived and played the masterful, melodic solo and outro. This has long been my favorite Carpenters song and the solo never fails to bring back those painful teenage breakup memories. More on the songs history here.

Neil Nathan "Do Ya"

Neil Nathan’s cover of ELO’s “Do Ya,” which is featured on the Californication Season 2 Soundrack. On his upcoming album, The Distance Calls, Nathan enlisted the help of The Go’s Bobby Harlow to produce and an all-star Detroit cast of players which included Dean Fertita (The Dead Weather, QOTSA), Kenny Tudrick & Joey Mazzola (Detroit Cobras), John Krautner (The Go), and Ross Westerbur (Deadstring Brothers). The album is coming out soon (8/24/10), so get all the good links at http://www.neilnathan.com/

Quakers on Probation "Every Living Thing"

I reviewed a father and son duo earlier this year, so here is another combo: Daniel A. Craig and his son Daniel F. Craig joined by the Wrecking Crew legend Larry Knechtel in one of his final recordings. The band calls the genre they play “TwanglePop” (bit of twang and jangle I suppose) that borrows from the heyday of 60’s and 70’s country rock. The studied rhythms that open “Pay It Forward” are pleasing and Knechtel’s organ playing recall Protocol Harum. The twangy “Your Favorite Song” compares well to The Jayhawks and Wilco. But the focus changes on “I Know A Woman” and the title track, where horns and synths evoke those cheesy AOR lounge tracks that make even Robert Lamm fans cringe.  Thankfully, the album takes a brilliant turn on the descriptive “Yard Sale,” where the gentle harmonies tug at your heart. The album just gets better as it goes forward, with the strong atmospheric “Marysville” and even the drum machine sounds great on the excellent “Hollywood Walk Of Fame.” A lot of fun ends out the last track “Lament For The Aging Rocker” where a familiar guitar ditty speaks the truth here as it names names (“Do you think Def Leppard’s deaf?/When you’re way too old to fake it and you got no hair to shake, boy/Your medication starts kicking in…). The band also covers Sammy John’s “Chevy Van” quiet well. Listen to the album streaming at quakers on probation.com.

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The Power Popaholic Interview: Mark Bacino

Meet the man behind the “The Queens English”. I was lucky enough to be in contact with musician Mark Bacino this week, and we do go into detail about his last album and his experiences with computer based recording methods.  Read the interview with Mark Bacino here.

In addition, I have re-posted my Virign.com interview with Seth Swirsky in the Power Popaholic interview archive.