A holiday sample-pack

Albums to pick up for all your friends and family
By SAM PFEIFLE  |  December 12, 2007
insidebeat_DGross_PirateLov

I always give local music at the holidays. For years, I’d buy a dozen or so copies of the latest Greetings From Area Code 207 disc, but Charlie Gaylord has let me down the past two Christmases. No matter. I’ve just had to be more attuned to potential gift receivers.

So far, I’ve purchased about three copies of Light at the End, since Rustic Overtones are kind of one-size-fits-all. Then I bought the Cambiata and Are You a Fox? EPs for my sister’s black-clothes-wearing-sophisticate husband. He likes to rock out, but wants to think he’s being smart while he’s doing it. For my sister, a closet underground hip-hop devotee, I bought Sontiago’s Steel Yourself and the latest album from sole, who hasn’t lived here in more than a decade, but we can still claim as our own.

When my list of the top 20 best discs of 2007 comes out next week, you’ll have plenty of suggestions for late present buying, but I thought I’d take this week to point out some discs that have been released this past year and might have niche appeal, but I haven’t had a chance to review before now:

For your older sister, who moved to Alaska : Arborea, Wayfaring Summer
Actually released in 2006, this disc has undeservedly flown under the local radar. Reminiscent of husband-and-wife team Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, Shanti and Buck Curran produce ethereal and ancient string-band music that’ll tear your heart out. Shanti’s vocals on “Wake up, Little Sparrow” stab me right in the gut.

For your younger brother, who just joined the debate team : Randy Browning,Radical Rags
Sounding quite a bit like that other songwriting Randy, Newman, Browning knows how to put together a boppy singalong as well as a melodramatic folk ballad, and even covers Newman’s “Political Science” from 1968, a tow-minute-long stinging indictment of American hubris. Any disc that can equate the persecution of a modern-day gay teenager and Galileo is worth a listen.

For Grandma Sue, the Christmas sentimentalist: Dave Rowe Trio, A Holiday Concert
Sure, you could buy that new Christmas in Maine album Con Fullam has put together, but a more consistent effort can be had from Dave Rowe and friends. It’s a great mix of originals and traditionals, including a parody of “Old Time Religion” that’s pretty funny. Also, Denny Breau’s take on “Linus and Lucy” is wicked.

For your old man, the blues fan : Lex & Joe, Chicken Gumbo
Lex Romane and Joe Riillo are joined by a score of friends here on their newest full-length, a mix of classic blues tracks like “Deep Elem Blues” and original takes, all of them southern fried with gritty horns and warm guitar. Riillo’s clarinet on “Stealin,’” which the duo attribute to Taj Mahal, though it was first recorded by the Memphis Jug Band in 1928, is worth your tenner.

For your Ma, the philanthropist : John Muthyala, Katrina
Well, honestly, philanthropy is probably the only reason you’d buy this disc. A new-agey soft-pop curiosity from a well-meaning guy who hasn’t played music seriously since the 1970s, this CD single may not stay in your CD player long, but the sentiment should stick with you for a while. All proceeds from the sale of the disc fund continuing Katrina clean-up by Project Katrina, a effort run by the Trinity Lutheran Church in Westbrook. Plus, the guy quotes Spivak.

1  |  2  |   next >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Hip-Hop and Rap, Music,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY SAM PFEIFLE
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   IS THERE A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WHAT YOU LIKE AND WHAT IS GOOD?  |  October 17, 2012
    Charlie Gaylord is one of Maine's proprietors of what is good.
  •   GOING DOWN A ROAD FEELING BAD WITH SAMUEL JAMES  |  October 17, 2012
    Turns out those rumors about Big Black Ben were true: Not only has he "been with white women," but he's even fathered a child by the wife of the local police chief, who's now the prison warden intent on hanging Ben high now that he has him in his clutches after all this time.
  •   JUST A BUNCH OF ROGUES, OUTLAWS & DRUNKS  |  October 10, 2012
    It takes true commitment to translate to the studio the kind of pub shout-along anthems in which the Pubcrawlers specialize.
  •   NICK ‘DANGER’ CURRAN, 35  |  October 10, 2012
    There was a little pocket of time in the late '90s and early 2000s when the Free Street Taverna was a place where the Piners and King Memphis and the Coming Grass and Diesel Doug and the Long Haul Truckers could play in the window and it all felt just a little bit like Nashville every once in a while. Better than that, actually.
  •   A CONVERSATION WITH CHRIS PANDOLFI  |  October 10, 2012
    Because its musicians play with fiddles and banjos and stand-up basses, there is an idea out there that bluegrass is as old as dirt.

 See all articles by: SAM PFEIFLE