Music Reissues Weekly: Playing for the Man at the Door - Field Recordings from the Collection of Mack McCormick

PLAYING FOR THE MAN AT THE DOOR Field Recordings from the Collection of Mack McCormick

Important box set tapping US folklorist’s previously unexplored archive

Between the late 1950s and around 1971, Robert “Mack” McCormick (1930–2015) travelled through his base-state Texas, Alabama, Mississippi, west Louisiana and parts of Arkansas and Oklahoma looking for musicians to record. It wasn’t a random process: he covered 700 counties using a grid system, so nothing would be missed. As well as tapes, he made lists, filled notebooks and took photos. He kept everything.

Album: Bob Dylan - Shadow Kingdom

The Song and Dance Man's lockdown-era live stream resurfaces

Dylan’s Shadow Kingdom first crossed our paths in July 2021, his first streaming event, and coming little more than a year after the garden of unearthly delights that was Rough and Rowdy Ways. To enter this kingdom, you were given a key code for $25, and allowed fifty minutes, 13 songs, and the chance to revisit over the following 48 hours.

Album: Rickie Lee Jones - Pieces of Treasure

★★★★ RICKIE LEE JONES - PIECES OF TREASURE The standards in sultry new ways of being

Singing the standards into sultry new ways of being

Reuniting with Russ Titelman, the producer of her eponymous 1979 debut and its follow-up 1981’s Pirates, Rickie Lee Jones approaches the great American songbook as if she was reuniting with an old flame, the thrill of it smouldering and concentrating itself in 10 elegant, soulful jazz-blues performances. 

Album: The Zombies - Different Game

Rock as comforting as an old pair of slippers, in the best possible way

There’s something charmingly unassuming and humble about The Zombies. Nowadays their 1968 second album Odyssey and Oracle regularly figures in all time greatest albums lists, but it was a flop at the time and its reputation grew through a gradually snowballing cult status, and the band split soon after its release.

Music Reissues Weekly: Duffy Power - Innovations, Live at the BBC

DUFFY POWER - INNOVATIONS, LIVE AT THE BBC Additions to great blues-jazz stylist's catalogue

Essential additions to the great British blues-jazz stylist's catalogue

Sometime in early October 1963 John Lennon and Paul McCartney encountered The Rolling Stones and offered them one of their songs; one which became the London blues aficionado’s second single. “I Wanna be Your Man” was duly recorded on 7 October 1963 and released on 1 November. Thanks to The Beatles, the Stones charted for the first time. A Liverpool-London, north-south divide had been breached.

Album: Van Morrison - Moving on Skiffle

★★★★ VAN MORRISON - MOVING ON SKIFFLE Van's enriching tribute to songs that raised him

Van goes back to the beginning with an enriching tribute to the songs that raised him

This double album takes Van Morrison back to one of his early muses – Skiffle and its repertoire, that precursor to the rock'n'roll years that took hold of Britain in the 1950s, having percolated across the USA through the first half of the century, combining folk, blues, country, bluegrass and jazz into one steaming head of home-brewed folk, hopped up on washboards, jugs, washtub bass and the like.

Album: Larkin Poe - Blood Harmony

Sisters keep doing it for themselves: Megan and Rebecca Lovell are on song

The Larkin Poe story goes back to 2010, when they released four beautiful and distinctive seasons-related EPs, displaying the Lovell sisters Rebecca and Megan’s rich, absorbing vocal harmonies, slippery slide guitar work and a winning with with crunchy blues-rock riffs. They’ve released five albums since then, and Blood Harmony is, for the Georgia-born siblings, a musical homecoming to the sultry humidity of the American South of their musical and familial roots.

Savala Nolan: Don't Let It Get You Down review - finding voice in the liminal

★★★★★ SAVALA NOLAN: DON'T LET IT GET YOU DOWN Finding voice in the liminal

Essays on the spaces between black and white, rich and poor, thin and fat

Liminal: a word that conjures thresholds and between states. Caught between three languages – the adjective is a borrowing from the Latin that enters English by way of German – liminal also has three distinct definitions.

Album: Ben Harper - Bloodline Maintenance

★★★ BEN HARPER - BLOODLINE MAINTENANCE Bluesy singer-songwriter star bares soulful side

Bluesy singer-songwriter star bares his soulful side with likeable results

Throughout the 1990s and the first decade of this century, Ben Harper achieved global stardom, although the UK was a territory where he never achieved lift-off. By contrast, in the US, Australia and much of Europe, he’s regarded as a heavyweight (he’s won three Grammys!).

Album: Jack White - Entering Heaven Alive

★★★ JACK WHITE - ENTERING HEAVEN ALIVE Playful, varied, relaxed and enjoyable new one from the former White Stripe

Playful, varied, relaxed and enjoyable new one from the former White Stripe

Jack White’s last couple of albums, Boarding House Reach from 2018 and Fear of the Dawn from April this year, were both driven by experimentalism, dipping into electronics, hip hop, noise and more. They were both, to differing degrees, admirable in intent, coming from an artist perceived as zealously retro, but they were also only partially successful.