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  • The Best You’ve Never Heard: Hesitate by The Mysteries Of Life

    In the mid-’90’s, in the wake of the major labels’ post-Nirvana feeding frenzy, you couldn’t throw a Doc Marten in the U.S. without hitting a member of a former indie rock band.  New bands seemed to crop up out of nowhere every 10 seconds, often rising from ashes of other little-known bands.  Major label debuts by groups you’d never heard of hit the shelves like huge flocks of nose-diving, kamikaze geese every week.  It really was enough to make your head spin, but y’know what?  It was a golden age.  The economy was strong, the labels had dough to spend, everybody still bought CDs/records/tapes.  The end was near, but we didn’t know that at the time.  So it’s only inevitable that some things got left in the dust.

    The year was 1996.  Kurt Cobain was dead, and most people were too busy doing The Macarena (or sitting around wishing that some stranger would come along and ‘un-break’ their collective hearts) to notice Keep A Secret, the RCA debut by Bloomington, Indiana’s The Mysteries Of Life.  Featuring members of Antenna and indie legends The Blake Babies, TMOL fused elements of folk, country and classical music with simple underground rock, creating a sound completely unlike the bombastic, rack-mounted-effects-heavy, post-grunge sludge passing for rock at the time (and looked damn sexy doing it, I might add).  The ultimate example of this band’s lovely sound is my Best You Never Heard pick, Keep A Secret‘s stunning opener, “Hesitate.”

    Click here to play “Hesitate” by The Mysteries Of Life

    Jake Smith’s gorgeous guitar pattern hovers over Freda Love’s Mo Tucker-style mallet drumming and Tina Barbieri’s bass through the intro.  Smith regales us with the tale of life flashing before his eyes, while Geraldine Haas’ cello chimes in after the refrain, lifting the song up to a new height before Smith’s beautiful solo ratchets it up even further.  (For you guitar geeks out there, Jake’s got some serious tone happening here…obviously a Gretsch hollow-body through a Fender tweed, or something.  Whatever it is, it’s sweet enough to lick off a biscuit.)  As the hooks overlap, the song builds up to a grand crescendo before grinding to a halt.  When Smith finally confesses that he’s missed all his chances, that he “Took too long to say/Nothing,” the arrangement abruptly pares itself down to just guitar, cello and shaker.  And there we stand, alone.  Everybody’s gone.

    Now, at this point, it would be so great to be able to say, “Goddamn those lame-ass bastards at RCA!” or something similar, in regards to the fact that this amazing track wasn’t a hit, but it’s really no use to lay blame.  A track such as this was an anomaly in the very monochromatic world of 1996.  There’s absolutely no way that, outside of maybe college radio (a light that grows ever dimmer as time passes), a band as musically colorful as The Mysteries Of Life, or a song as delicate and meticulously arranged as “Hesitate” could’ve gotten noticed, let alone given a chance to become a smash in the Pop-Mart that was the mid-’90’s.  But that’s why this is one of the best songs you never heard.

    (A married couple, Smith and Love continue to mystify with the ever-lineup-changing TMOL, and Love, along with fellow former-Blake Baby Julianna Hatfield, also plays in the brilliant Some Girls.)

    More On “The Best You’ve Never Heard” week
    The Best You’ve Never Heard – Introduction
    The Best You’ve Never Heard: Wheel by John Mayer
    The Best You’ve Never Heard: Must Have Been Crazy by Chicago

  • In Memoriam: Miriam Makeba (1932-2008)

    Befittingly, Miriam Zenzi Makeba—Grammy Award-winning songstress from South Africa, the “Empress of African Song,” Mama Afrika herself—died as she lived: on stage, and for a noble cause. After concluding a performance at a concert near Caserta, Italy—interestingly enough, supporting a writer opposing the oldest crime organization in the country—she collapsed and succumbed to a heart attack. She was 76 years of age.

    Makeba needs the rest, for her entire life was characterized by struggle—by being in a three-decade exile from her homeland South Africa for speaking out against apartheid; by watching her record deals and tours cancelled as the consequence for marrying radical civil rights leader Stokely Carmichael; by being in prison with her herbalist mother…while still in utero. And Makeba singing became her conduit of struggle. Blessed with a calming, assuring tone that exuded confidence and doggedness, she found her calling in singing, right from the moment she was a child at a training institute in Pretoria, South Africa. From there, she would only soar higher: performing to exclusively black audiences with The Manhattan Brothers in the 1950s; formed her own group, The Sylarks; starred in the anti-apartheid Come Back, Africain 1959; and, of course, her collaborations with Harry Belafonte in the United States, forever linking the struggles of people of African descent everywhere.

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  • The New Music Files 11/11/08: David Archuleta, T-Pain and More!!!

    Sorry I missed y’all last week. Voting (and the subsequent 7 hours of watching CNN while fluctuating between cnn.com and yahoo.com) took up the entire of my Tuesday. However, Obama’s been elected (YAY!) and I can now devote my attention towards letting you know what’s in stores-’cause today’s kind of a doozy.

    David Archuleta David Archuleta: The only other instance of a 2nd place Idol finisher coming out before the champion that I can remember was Clay coming out (ooh, play on words) before Ruben…and you all know how that one went. I mentioned a couple of weeks ago how I’d finally been sucked into the gooey goodness of first single Crush, but that’s where I draw the line. However, your teenage niece or cousin is probably on line at the record store already to grab this one.

    T-Pain Thr33 Rings: I think I’ve made my disdain for T-Pain pretty clear. The man can’t sing, can barely rap, and brings coonery to an all-time new level. If, with that knowledge, you still want to buy his record, be my guest.

    Taylor Swift Fearless: Carrie who? Taylor Swift is country music’s current it girl, with tons of pop appeal (hey, she dated a Jonas!). This widely anticipated second album has already spawned the huge hit Love Story and will be one of the biggest successes of the fourth quarter.

    Seal Soul: Seal is starting to put out albums with the same frequency that he makes babies!! Coming just a year after his last release, Seal’s new album features covers of classic soul tunes. The first single is a version of Sam Cooke’s A Change is Gonna Come, which has me kind of worried, but Prayer for the Dying and Love’s Divine can make up for a million ill-advised covers.

    Musiq Soulchild On My Radio: Last year’s #1 Luvandmusiq did nothing for me. Why? Because it sounded like Musiq’s last three albums. For album #5, the R&B singer tried to switch it up with the T-Pain-esque single Radio, but after that met with a resounding thud at radio, he regrouped and came back with the safest bet possible-a Mary J. Blige duet. I own each of Musiq’s first four albums, but this might be the record where the Musiq officially stops for me.

    Elsewhere: Did you know that Tracy Chapman was still around? Me neither. The folky wonder celebrates the 20th anniversary of her still-classic debut with a new album tomorrow. The 29th installment of the Now That’s What I Call Music series also hits stores, as does the first album of R&B material from Deborah Cox (did you know that she was still around?) in six years. Offensive-rap outfit Jedi Mind Tricks have a new one hitting stores today, and there are also a couple of interesting curiosities: an Enya Christmas album, an album from Kevin Costner (I’m assuming this is The Bodyguard star and there aren’t two Kevin Costners floating around, and a new Vanilla Ice album-this one featuring him tackling some of the greatest hip-hop hits of all time. I might get this just to see what a complete and total trainwreck it is.

    On the greatest hits tip, alterna-rap faves Jurassic 5 re-release their first, independently distributed record with a bonus DVD, while several of New Order‘s classic albums get the deluxe double-disc treatment. On the anniversary tip, there is a 30th anniversary edition of Cheap Trick’s Live at the Budokan, while we’re also getting a 2-disc Smiths anthology. Christina Aguilera’s Target & iTunes-exclusive greatest hits disc gets released today, as do hits packages from Enrique Iglesias (!) and Hilary Duff (!!…and didn’t she just come out with a greatest hits album like two years ago?)

    Get your full list of new releases here.

    Happy shopping!!