NDIM 10/01/2021
Los Lobos Native Sons, Donald Fagen live, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss
Los Lobos Are America's Band
Listen/Buy Native Sons at Bandcamp
Los Lobos are an underappreciated American treasure. The band's ability to play a variety of music authentically and enthusiastically is stronger than just about any current band I can think of. They've been around for over forty years with the same personnel, and they have a slew of records, both studio and live, to show for it. They can be the best mariachi band you've ever heard one minute, and the next they are playing Neil Young's 'Cinnamon Girl' for an encore.
Yet they are often overlooked in discussions of great American bands from the rock and roll era. They have written plenty of great songs of their own, songs that have been covered by other artists, but they have a long tradition of playing cover versions in their shows that no doubt stems from their early experience as a wedding band.
There are a few reasons for doing cover albums. One is to demonstrate the ability of a band to mimic the style of another group that they admire. Another is to pay tribute to the music that came before and laid the path for others to follow. This second reason is the one that applies most directly to Los Lobos' latest recording Native Sons. It's a tribute to the music of L.A., where the members of Los Lobos were born and played lots of gigs both in their East L.A. neighborhood and in punk clubs on Sunset Strip, playing alongside bands like X and The Blasters who shared their multifaceted approach to rock music.
In his 1997 induction of Buffalo Springfield to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Tom Petty pointed to the group's artistic diversity: "They were fringe and paisley; they were the city, and they were the canyons..." In terms of complementary opposites he could be talking about Los Lobos, a group that came out of East L.A.'s Chicano culture and fueled their versions of traditional Mexican music and Latino garage rock with the energy and enthusiasm of the city's white punk scene.
Native Sons reminds me in many ways of The Band's Moondog Matinee, another album that was meant to pay tribute to musical forbears and influences. It's one of the finest cover albums in rock music because it is a personal project that is heartfelt and not a cash grab or merely a collection of songs that the artist liked. The Band recorded an album of songs that they loved and enjoyed playing, but the programming of the record was done very carefully, so that it resembled a club set that a band like The Hawks or The Band might play in a roadhouse or juke joint. Moondog Matinee is NOT, as is sometimes suggested, a set of actual tunes that The Band played in their previous incarnation as The Hawks, but it is put together tightly as a club set would be.
Los Lobos, like The Hawks/Band, are very much a walking jukebox of a band, able to play everything from rockabilly and punk to mariachi music and show tunes. The fact that they settled on recording songs by L.A. bands from different eras gives the album the same kind of authentic focus and deep feeling that is present on Moondog Matinee. In addition, Los Lobos are capable of sounding very much like themselves even when they are covering other artists' songs, which is also something that you could say about The Band.
Los Lobos opens with Thee Midniters' "Love Special Delivery" using Steve Berlin's sax to mimic the earlier band's pioneering use of horns in a manner that became popular with the rise of groups like Ides of March and Blood, Sweat & Tears. But Los Lobos is cleaner in the drums and bass department, giving the track an extra edge.
They cover two songs by Buffalo Springfield, running them together. "Bluebird" is true to its psychedelic roots, but David Hidalgo's vocal is less clipped, its rounded tones emphasizing the beauty of the melody. The second half is a guitar meltdown that really captures the same kind of interplay as Rich Furay, Stephen Stills, and Neil Young on electric and acoustic guitars. They reference the original track's finale with a gentle instrumental segment that introduces "For What It's Worth." Though it's a song that seems to apply to every generation's struggles, it was originally written in reference to the infamous riots on Sunset Strip, further cementing its place in the history of L.A. rock.
Other tracks of note are the amazing "Los Chucos Suaves", originally recorded by Lalo Guerrero, a bandleader known as the father of Chicano music. Guerrero merged the hipster jive of swing and R&B music with Spanish language lyrics, creating a whole new sound. Later in his career he was inspired to write several corridos about Cesar Chavez and the plight of Mexican migrant workers in America. Here the band leans on its wedding band roots, playing up a storm that is at once respectful of Guerrero's original even while it surpasses its sheer energy. On the other hand, they give Jackson Browne's gorgeous "Jamaica Say You Will" a more relaxed feel by trading the original's acoustic piano for a Fender Rhodes and making it a more guitar-centric track.
“Everybody picked a favorite song, or a song from a favorite band,” bassist Conrad Lozano told the L.A. Times. Turns out Lozano is the Beach Boys fan who voted for the inclusion of "Sail On Sailor", a song from the California band's 1973 Holland album. It's a great version of a song that captures its weariness even while providing a brighter beat and some nice guitar ornamentation.
Maybe the best thing I can say about Native Sons is that the lone original, the album's title track, sounds just as much like a classic tune as anything else on the record. That's a sign of the personal nature of this project for Los Lobos, and it's why Native Sons will be in heavy rotation for me as we head towards the year's end.
Live Steely Dan & Donald Fagen
I'm a big Steely fan, and for me seeing Donald Fagen and the group live is a pleasurable experience, but let's face it, Walter is gone and the arrangements have become a bit too smoothed over. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy, like many aging Boomers, to spend a pleasant evening hearing my favorite Dan songs (like many Danheads (?) I can't really name a song I don't like), but I don't recommend their new live record to anyone who's not already a hardcore fan. Just get yourself a 2CD compilation or spring for the Citizen box set, which includes their complete oeuvre prior to their reconvening for Two Against Nature, and call it a day. I wonder if Fagen might invest in a group of communities with a catchy name like Danville or maybe The Royal Scam, kinda like what Margaritaville offers to Parrotheads. I'd be game. We could sit around listening to live Steely Dan shows all day and trading Dogecoin.
However, when it comes to Fagen's solo catalog, I'm definitely into the idea of a live performance. Most of these haven't been performed much live, and in the case of The Nightfly, the sound of the record is so of a piece with Steely Dan's catalog that I've always considered it kind of a Steely Dan record in all but name. You wouldn't say that as readily about Kamakiriad, the second solo record, nor Morph the Cat. Maybe 2012's Sunken Condos (a forgotten record that is a real treat), but The Nightfly is the one that sounds most like Aja and Gaucho. In any event, the new live record The Nightfly: Live succeeds largely because of the energy that Fagen himself puts into recreating these charts. While the band is great and can play these songs with their hands tied behind their backs, it's the fact that Donald Fagen sounds completely engaged and refreshed by these songs that really puts the project over.
In the live format Fagen and the band are able to dig in on tracks like 'Ruby Baby', 'Maxine', and 'Greenflower Street' that were maybe not as prominent on the studio version, though all are solid songs in various styles. The title track has a sound as smooth as the radio format where Fagen's fictional late night DJ works, while the samba underpinnings of 'The Goodbye Look' sets up a fine marimba interlude, leading to the swinging finale of 'Walk Between the Raindrops," complete with B-3-style organ.
Meanwhile, I'll be perusing the prospectus on Danville, or whatever they decide to call it. Don't take any wooden nickels. Or Dogecoin.
**Here's an interview with Fagen published recently by Tablet Magazine. It's not bad, largely because anytime you give Donald Fagen a chance to talk about favorite subjects (jazz, hifi, science fiction, Nabokov) you're bound to come away with a few interesting ideas.
**Dan Woeller the Food Etymologist has a pretty cool blog where he writes about all kinds of foods and how they came to be the way they are and the space they occupy in various cultures. I especially enjoyed his piece on the George Harrison song "Savoy Truffle" from The Beatles White album.
Rahsaan Roland Kirk: Three Early Records
Rahsaan Roland Kirk was like the ultimate street musician—wearing perhaps a battered top hat or a more rugged stocking cap with dark wrap-around shades, a string of horns, some of his own creation, around his neck—yet, when he played, there was no question that he was a masterful and brilliant musician. He played tenor sax and flute about as well as anyone ever has; he knew the history of black music, from New Orleans to the Mississippi Delta up through gospel, blues, rock & roll, soul, you name it, and could play them all –well—on three instruments at once; he had musical sophistication but never lost sight of his role as a performer and entertainer. Read More
Lagniappe
Today I'm leaving you with the official audio release of the Robert Plant and Alison Kraus single “Can’t Let Go” from their forthcoming album Raise the Roof, due November 19th, 2021. This is the follow-up to their Grammy winning Raising Sand, released in 2007. It's so great to hear these voices together again.