web analytics

Author: Money Mike

  • The Sunday Seven 10/26/08: Streets is Watching

    1) Dream on Dreamer by The Brand New Heavies (from Brother Sister, 1994)
    After Soul II Soul hit in 1989, there were a bunch of British groups that came out with the same soulful, jazzy vibe.The best among the rest was The Brand New Heavies, who had the benefit of the lovely N’dea Davenport as lead singer. This was probably their biggest pop hit. N’dea made an awesome solo album around 1999 or so, which you should definitely find if you’re an R&B fan, and the Heavies soldiered on for a while with Siedah Garrett (of MJ “I Just Can’t Stop Loving You” fame) before welcoming Davenport back into the fold. Also worth checking out is the album “Heavy Rhyme Experience Vol. 1”, which features the band vibing in the studio with a who’s who of early Nineties East Coast hip-hop.

    2) Pretty Fly (for a White Guy) by The Offspring

    (from Americana, 1997)
    Y’know, on one hand I find this song incredibly funny, but on the other it’s like, geez, The Offspring were kind of a one trick pony, weren’t they? Well, I shouldn’t say were, as they just took a spin at the top of Billboard’s Modern Rock charts with their latest single, but if you’ve heard one Offspring single, wouldn’t it be safe to assume you’ve heard ’em all? C’mon Dexter Holland. You have a degree in microbiology or whatever. You should be smart enough to vary your sound up a little. Then again, it still sells, so maybe he *is* the smart one.

    (more…)

  • Chart Chat 10/26/08: J. Hud, Taylor Swift, Kenny Chesney & More!!!

    No small talk this time! As usual, these charts are brought to you courtesy of the good folks at Billboard Communications.

    Billboard Top 20 Singles

      01-Whatever You Like (T.I.)
      02-Live Your Live (T.I. feat. Rihanna)
      03-So What (Pink)
      04-Womanizer (Britney Spears)
      05-Hot N Cold (Katy Perry)
      06-Disturbia (Rihanna)
      07-Let it Rock (Kevin Rudolf feat. Lil’ Wayne)
      08-Miss Independent (Ne-Yo)
      09-Fearless (Taylor Swift)
      10-Can’t Believe It (T-Pain feat. Lil’ Wayne)
      11-Better in Time (Leona Lewis)
      12-Love Lockdown (Kanye West)
      13-I’m Yours (Jason Mraz)
      14-Love Story (Taylor Swift)
      15-Paper Planes (M.I.A.)
      16-Closer (Ne-Yo)
      17-Gotta Be Somebody (Nickelback)
      18-Mrs. Officer (Lil’ Wayne feat. Bobby Valentino & Kidd Kidd)
      19-Right Now (Na Na Na)-Akon
      20-One Step at a Time (Jordin Sparks)


      Billboard Top 20 Albums

    01-Lucky Old Sun (Kenny Chesney)
    02-Paper Trail (T.I.)
    03-Gossip in the Grain (Ray Lamontagne)
    04-Death Magnetic (Metallica)
    05-Jennifer Hudson (Jennifer Hudson)
    06-Rock N Roll Jesus (Kid Rock)
    07-Perfect Symmetry (Keane)
    08-Year of the Gentleman (Ne-Yo)
    09-Little Honey (Lucinda Williams)
    10-Covers (James Taylor)
    11-Something Else (Robin Thicke)
    12-Tha Carter III (Lil’ Wayne)
    13-Little Bit of Everything (Billy Currington)
    14-The Recession (Young Jeezy)
    15-A Little Bit Longer (Jonas Brothers)
    16-Fearless (Jazmine Sullivan)
    17-Good Girl Gone Bad (Rihanna)
    18-Love on the Inside (SugarLand)
    19-Appeal to Reason (Rise Against)
    20-Spirit (Leona Lewis)

    (more…)

  • Duffy’s Rockferry: Meet The Poor Man’s Amy Winehouse

    Two years ago, no one would have ever thought that a female British soul singer with retro stylings would ever break ground in the American market, with the somewhat odd exception of Joss Stone. Two years, two million album sales and one helluva hot mess later, Amy Winehouse proved all the doubters wrong. Once Amy’s Back to Black hit, the floodgates opened and a slew of Brit female singers started making waves on these shores. There’s the jazzy flavor of Adele, the more hip-hop styled vibe of Estelle, and the young Welsh singer we know as Duffy, whose album Rockferry is the most similar to Amy’s smash breakthrough. Musically, the albums both sound like they could have been recorded in 1966, using live instrumentation and featuring girl-group harmonies and sweet melodies. You could play both albums right after Dusty in Memphis and there’ll be some kind of continuity. That, however, is where the comparison ends.

    Back to Black had a very tangible feeling of foreboding and sadness. There was a lived-in quality to Winehouse’s voice, a sense that she was living the pain of the lyrics she was singing. Duffy sounds a lot more green and chirpy. Not that it’s a bad thing. Taken for what it is, Rockferry is an admittedly decent album. However, in light of the massive rocking of my world that took place with the introduction of Amy Winehouse, Duffy sounds like a pale imitation, or as I said in an article on a friend’s blog, Duffy sounds like Amy Winehouse with the soul sucked out.

    (more…)