Saturday, December 28, 2019

SAVAGE RADIO PLAYLISTS DECEMBER 2019: WVMO 98.7 FM-THE VOICE OF MONONA

SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #200
DECEMBER 4, 2019

1. "Sing Me Spanish Techno" performed by The New Pornographers
2. "Need Your Loving Tonight" performed by Queen
3. "Back To The Shack" performed by Weezer
4. "Armagideon Time" performed by The Clash
5. "High" performed by Slow Pulp
6. "Human For" performed by Sunflower Bean
7. "Sound Of Silver" performed by LCD Soundsystem
8. "Calhoun Square" performed by Prince
9. "Control" performed by Garbage
10."Parallel" performed by Disq
11."Miss The Misery" performed by Foo Fighters

SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #201
"FOR MY DAD...ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY TRIBUTE"
DECEMBER 11, 2019

1. "Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time)" performed by The Delfonics
2. "Tutu" performed by Miles Davis
3. "Miles Beyond" performed by Mahavishnu Orchestra
4. "Bambu Forest" performed by Jan Hammer
5. "It's All In The Game" performed by Tommy Edwards
6. "Something" performed by The Beatles
7. "Space Oddity" performed by David Bowie
8. "I Can't Tell You Why" performed by Eagles
9. "Bonzo's Montreaux" performed by Led Zeppelin
10."Everything's Coming Our Way" performed by Santana
11."It Never Entered My Mind" performed by Miles Davis

NOW PLAYING IN THE SAVAGE JUKEBOX DECEMBER 2019

"NEXTERDAY"
RIC OCASEK
Released September 27, 2005
"THE WALL"
PINK FLOYD
Released November 30, 1979
"THE WHO SELL OUT"
THE WHO
Released December 15, 1967
"TWENTYTWO IN BLUE"
SUNFLOWER BEAN
Released March 23, 2018
"MYSTERY WHITE BOY"
JEFF BUCKLEY
Released May 9, 2000
"IS THIS THE LIFE WE REALLY WANT?"
ROGER WATERS
Released June 2, 2017
"WENDY AND LISA"
WENDY AND LISA
Released August 24, 1987
"CASABLANCA"
 POST SOCIAL
Released July 30, 2016
"MAJOR CONGRATS"
POST SOCIAL
Released June 29, 2018
"KING ANIMAL"
SOUNDGARDEN
Released November 13, 2012

SYNESTHESIA'S YEAR IN MUSIC: FAVORITE ALBUMS/EPS/SINGLES OF 2019 PART 1

And here we are, right at the end of 2019, which of course means it is time for me to compile a listing of the best music I experienced throughout the year.

First things first, I have to confess that for this year, I do not have a "Number #1-Album Of The Year" choice as I really feel that I did not hear that singular release that announces itself as being heads and shoulders above the rest. That being said, I heard a tremendous amount of music that represented musical artists working at the peak of their powers, all releasing music that demanded the fullest of my attention and affection and I am so, so happy to reveal those titles here for you with this series which will extend itself into 2020 and will then further extend itself into my favorite releases from the decade of 2010-2019.

But, let's not get ahead of myself. It's time to go back to the start of 2019...

"NO GUIDELINES"/"DESERT EAGLE (IN THE SKY)" (single)
POST SOCIAL
Released December 29, 2018
-Technically a bit of a cheat but since the band released this single just on the edge of 2018 turning into 2019, I kind of like to think of this selection as being akin to The Clash's classic "London Calling" (released December 14, 1979), a double album which has often been listed as being one of the best albums of the 1980's although differing from its actual release date. Also, like The Clash, Post Social's epilogue to their raucous 4th album entitled "Major Congrats" (released June 29, 2018), extends from that album's more post punk rock leanings making for what is unquestionably their angriest release to date.

Working in collaboration with their Madison, WI musical compatriot Isaac De Broux-Sloane of Disq as their Producer (a Post Social rarity as the band typically is solitary in their recordings), the quartet of Shannon Connor (guitar, vocals), Mitch Deitz (guitar, vocals), Sam Galligan (bass guitar) and Brendan Manley (drums) are worlds away from the lush innocence of their previous albums as they are in the throes of confrontation in a confrontational world. Where Deitz's "No Guidelines" is literally one minute of impressionistic whirlwind fury fueled by a call-to-action, Connor's "Desert Eagle (In The Sky)" is a rightfully angst filled howl of paranoid filled rage at our epidemic of gun violence.

As of this point in time, Post Social is on an extended hiatus due to new life responsibilities and commitments by the lifelong friends and bandmates. But, I have been assured that the band is nowhere near finished, and new material is being composed. Until the day a new full length musical statement arrives, Post Social's double sided single is a powder keg!
"COMMUNICATION/PARALLEL" (single)
DISQ
Released January 25, 2019
-On the heels of seeing this band deliver their downright scorching performance live in my fair city, I am more anxious than ever to hear what may arrive in 2020. Yet, at the beginning of 2019, we had our first taste of new music from Disq in three years with their debut release on the Saddle Creek label and it proved to be even more seasoned and sensational than I could have hoped for.

With these two tracks, the propulsive "Communication," and the expansive, brood to explosive psychedelic finale wail that is "Parallel," Bassist Raina Bock and Singer/Multi-Instrumentalist Isaac De Broux-Slone have more than proven that they are serious young musicians who can craft stellar, superb material that is tailor made to be blasted fully from any and all open windows and demand repeated listenings as their songcraft is first rate. With a band lineup now expanded to five members,  more touring including some stops in England and with increased attention from the independent music press, the ascension of Disq and the arrival of the year 2020 feel to be of a potentially perfect match. Clearly, these two songs are the combustible spark to the musical flames to come!
"KING OF THE DUDES" (EP)
SUNFLOWER BEAN
Released January 25, 2019
-WSUM FM's DJ Nightway led me here!! I did not hear of this EP until near the end of 2019 and even so, that first listen was right on time! This trio is not one that necessarily re-invents any wheel sin rock and roll but you know, they do not have to when the songwriting, singing and performances are this top flight. I cannot place my finger upon it but the band sounds very reminiscent of the power pop of the 1970's/early 1980's that filled my adolescent heart so long ago while also existing strongly as music of this moment in time as it represents the stunning melodicism and songwriting skill of the current class of indie rock bands. More please!
"STUFFED AND READY"
CHERRY GLAZERR
Released February 1, 2019
-Filled with Zeppelin-esque riffs and the feminist punk rock swagger and bite of L7 and Hole, Cherry Glazerr returned this year with a roar of an album that again presents Singer/Songwriter/Guitarist Clementine Creevy as an inimitable force to be reckoned with and then some. Trust me, do not let Creevy's breathy vocals fool you for a minute as she unleashes a full, feral manifesto of melodically rich and beautifully loud songs that explore and detail roles and perceptions of women within the music industry and throughout everyday life with a rapaciousness that can slash your speakers ("Wasted Nun" is one of the rock standouts of 2019)...and you keep turning that volume up!
"RITUAL" (single)
ANNA WANG
Released February 10, 2019
-Madison, WI's Anna Wang has once again showcased why she is truly one of our music community's most compelling artists as her first class songwriting, innovative production and captivating, siren song vocals is consistently riveting to experience. For her one and only music release of the year, Wang unquestionably demonstrates that everything is about quality over quantity as evidenced by the 2 minutes and 44 seconds of her club banger "Ritual."

As how the members of the Madison music community have demonstrated over and again, the song is the star and for Ms. Wang, who is indeed a visually captivating performer, her devotion to the possibilities and eventual mastery of songcraft is paramount and therefore, more than obvious within her latest single. Not one second is wasted. Not one moment is superfluous. And her ability with conjuring the "hook," and within a seemingly myriad of elements (vocals, melodies, drum tracks, sound effects), ensure that her song will burrow deeply into your synapses while inspiring your bodies to leave all emotional baggage out there on the dance floor.

Please don't wait too long to make a return!
"THIS LAND"
GARY CLARK JR.
Released February 22, 2019
-Gary Clark Jr. returned this year with his most ambitious release to date and to my ears, it is just this close to being his first masterpiece. As with "Blak & Blu" (released October 22, 2012), "This Land" is an expansive, sprawling, wildly diverse album yet one with an increased, intense focus upon race and racism in 21st century America under Trump, living "paranoid and pissed off" while Black. While the blues and Clark Jr's flamethrowing guitar heroics are the bedrock, it is via the vast musical reach, the forays into R&B, hip-hop, punk rock, funk and even some Latin tinged soul that further reconfirms that this is a formidable, fully rounded artist and not just one more guitar gunslinger.
"HEAR ME OUT"
REIGNWOLF
Released March 1, 2019
-Along with Gary Clark Jr, Reignwolf, the musical brainchild of singer, song writer, multi-instrumentalist and guitarist Jordan Cook proves that the death of the guitar as a musical force of nature is news that has been greatly exaggerated. In fact, if guitar based rock is dead, then as far as I am concerned, Reignwolf made a deal with the Devil to resurrect it as "Hear Me Out," the band's debut album, is a 29 minute flow of pummeling, downright lusty molten lava that would clearly make the likes of Jack White look over his own shoulder. This album was a dynamite calling card.
"LOVE REMAINS"
TAL WILKENFELD
Released March 15, 2019
-Tal Wilkenfeld, phenom Bassist who has worked with figures none other than Jeff Beck, Herbie Hancock, Todd Rundgren, Ryan Adams and others, released her debut album as a singer/songwriter and for me, it has remained as one of the strongest albums I heard in 2019. Flowing effortlessly between Robert Plant howls, Joni Mitchell elegance and all in between and beyond, Wilkenfeld, through her voice and instrumentation, firmly established herself as a furiously forward thinking musical artist whose work demands to be full experienced in all of its crystalline, tornado whirling adventurousness.
"IT'S REAL"
EX HEX
Released March 22, 2019
-Much like Sunflower Bean, the rock trio of Mary Timony, Betsy Wright and Laura Harris, collectively known as Ex Hex, is not doing anything that necessarily re-invents the rock and roll wheel. But again and just like Sunflower Bean, when the songwriting, singing and performances are this first rate (often making me think of a harder edged Bangles), what more does one need when listening to an album that is instantly infectious and demands repeated listenings immediately?
"DIAMONDS & DYNAMITE"
DONNA GRANTIS
Released March 22, 2019
-A true surprise. My knowledge of Donna Grantis was when she was one third of 3RDEYEGIRL, one of Prince's final backing bands, an all female power trio of which Grantis served as an extraordinary guitarist (and a great counterpoint to Prince's own sky scorching heroics).

On her debut album, there is very little that would ever suggest of her time with Prince and decidedly much more of her apparent devotion to the 1970's fusion era of Miles Davis, most notably that sweet spot that exists somewhere between "Bitches Brew" (released April 1970), "Jack Johnson" (released February 24, 1971) and "On The Corner" (released October 11, 1972) "Diamonds & Dynamite" is an entirely instrumental album fueled by deep funk bass, swirling tablas, propulsive rhythms and the stunning guitar vortex of Donna Grantis who truly takes the listener upon an enveloping sonic journey that not only makes you thirsty to hear it all over again but anxious for whatever she devises in the future. 
"ON THE LINE"
JENNY LEWIS
Released March 22, 2019
-The former member of Rilo Kiley returns with her finest solo release to date as well as one of 2019's highest achievements.

On this latest chronicle of confessionals and peerless storytelling, Lewis establishes an even grander sonic palate to accentuate her lyrical gifts by embracing the BOOM of hip-hop production techniques with the ace musicianship of her collaborators which range from drummers Ringo Starr and Jim Keltner, plus Jason Falkner, Don Was, Benmont Tench, Beck (who produces a few songs here) and yes, even Ryan Adams (who plays guitar throughout and produces--and despite his troubles and controversy this year, I refuse to pretend that he doesn't exist and did not participate in the making of this album).

Despite all of the famous guest stars, the album is firmly Jenny Lewis' artistic vision as her songwriting voice is powerfully sound and filled copiously with grief, mourning, confusion, strength, resolution, revelation and a new found autonomy as a woman, artist and human being. 

Sunday, December 8, 2019

SLOW PULP with INTERLAY and DISQ LIVE AT HIGH NOON SALOON DECEMBER 6, 2019

SLOW PULP
with INTERLAY and DISQ
LIVE
HIGH NOON SALOON
DECEMBER 6, 2019

What a homecoming!!!

My how things have evolved in nearly four years. On January 21, 2016, I was so proud and excited to have been able to attend the final performance of the Madison, WI indie pop band Modern Mod at the High Noon Saloon. That evening, which also featured support from three opening bands including Trophy Dad, Surgeons In Heat and my beloved Post Social was a stellar night of local music made by the new generation of hopefuls and upstarts, all working tremendously with Modern Mod in particular delivering what the band members have expressed to me was possibly the very best they had ever performed.

Even though I arrived to the experience of Modern Mod very late in the game, I was enraptured by what I saw and heard: a collective of serious young artists working and playing in harmonious collaboration, without any sense of ego, all ensuring that the songs they wrote were the stars of the night. In doing so, they became stars themselves.

Since that night, Modern Mod has disbanded. Both Post Social and Trophy Dad are on extended hiatuses due to the nature of the life and times of being young, as some have graduated from college or have left Madison entirely to pursue new projects and opportunities. And in several cases, new bands and collectives have been formed, including Slow Pulp, which is the quartet made up of former Modern Mod lead singer Emily Massey and her union with the band formerly known as Barbara Hans, which featured Bassist Alex Julian Leeds, Drummer Teddy Matthews and Guitarist/Keyboardist/Vocalist Henry Stoehr.

Transplanting themselves from Madison, Slow Pulp now makes Chicago, IL its home base. Since their move, the band has slowly but very steadily been enhancing their songwriting, recording, performances and as a result their overall profile, culminating with their four song EP entitled "Big Day" (released May 15, 2019), which has quickly become one of my favorite releases of 2019. But don't just take my word for it. The publication Stereogum has also listed "Big Day" as one of the best EP releases of 2019 as well, yet another cherry on top in a year filled with them, from a celebrated appearance at the SXSW Festival plus consistent touring and exposure.
Now with 2019 reaching its end, the band has made what could be considered their victory lap as on the night of December 6th, Slow Pulp conducted their first headlining performance right back at home in Madison with a SOLD OUT show, alongside the local bands Interlay and also on the rise Disq in tow. Without question, for me, the evening represented a newfound peak as the bands scaled greater heights to an often jaw dropping effect.
INTERLAY:
Nathan Hahn: Bass Guitar
Alex Kaiser: Drums
Alexandria Ortgiesen-Vocals, Guitar
Indigo Smith-Oles: Guitar

The night began with the cavernous wallop of Interlay, the one band of the evening that was unfamiliar to me but I will now try my best to keep some tabs upon. I thoroughly enjoyed the sheer amount of juxtapositions I saw and heard as the band barreled their way though a collection of material that bridged gaps between shoegaze, drone, post-punk, and simmering art rock.
With the sinister banshee wails of Alexandria Ortgiesen hovering over the proceedings, her bandmates supplied an enormity of sound that washed over the audience as if caught in a relentless tide. The menacing growl of Bassist Nathan Hahn (who arrived with his own cheering section) combined with the penetrating pounds of Drummer Alex Kaiser's percussives hit you like a gut punch while Guitarist Indigo Smith-Oles' sliced through the sonic wall with glacial fretwork, supplying the sole sparks of light in the encroaching darkness.
Visually, I really found myself caught up in the whiplash physicality of both Hahn and Kaiser compared with the stoic, static stage presence of Ortgiesen and Smith-Oles and it was that very push-pull aesthetic contained within the music and the theatrics that created a palpable tension that was intensely captivating, making for a strong start to the evening.

photo by Anita Sattel
DISQ:
Raina Bock: Bass Guitar, Vocals
Shannon Conner: Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
Isaac De Broux-Slone: Vocals, Guitar
Brendan Manley: Drums
Logan Severson: Guitar, Vocals

When I first discovered the music of Disq back in 2017 upon hearing and becoming instantly enraptured with their outstanding debut album entitled "Disq 1" (released July 11, 2016), the consistent statements I heard among members of the Madison music community is that the band's two members, Bassist Raina Bock and Vocalist/Multi-instrumentalist Isaac De Broux Slone, were "prodigies" and "geniuses." I heard it over and over again as one musician after another would exude some gasp induced exclamation as to the supremacy of Disq's music prowess and through listening to their album, created and released when the twosome were still high school students at that, I remained thunderstruck at the towering level of their artistry which was undeniably and firmly schooled with classic songwriting, home studio wizardry, and musical performances that felt to be seasoned far beyond their years.

Since that album, Disq has joined forces with the Saddle Creek label and released a towering single in "Communication" b/w "Parallel" (released January 25, 2019), expanded their ranks to five members, including Madison musicians Shannon Connor (Post Social), Brendan Manley (Post Social/Dash Hounds/Squarewave) and Logan Severson (Lameena) and have also steadily increased their profile and recognition in the indie music press through their exceptionally well received performance at the SXSW Festival, and consistent touring during the year in both the US and England!!

Armed with new material, Disq charged the High Noon Saloon stage like a gang and stormed through their ferocious set as if it were street fight with the stage being their turf to protect. Frankly, and in the very best and only way to properly express it, the quintet did not arrive to mess around. They came to conquer.
Opening with an instrumental and roaring through a collection of entirely new and absolutely terrific material, including both a raucous "Communication" and pulverizing "Parallel," as well as new material from both Shannon Connor and Logan Severson, Disq far exceeded any possibly expectations that I ever could have held for them. It was a seamless, frightening performance that constantly left me in amazement as their level of confidence, energy, agility and pure, muscular force was staggering to behold.

Isaac De Broux-Slone made for the rather bemused yet stoic figure in the eye of the Disq cyclone, with only his stellar singing voice and sparkling guitar heroics providing the flash. Raina Bock joyously supplied a superlative bottom end with her elastic, melodic bass work, creating and swirling around the rhythms. To watch these two lifelong friends and bandmates blissfully within their element and, I would imagine, dreams realizing before their eyes, was so enriching to regard from my vantage point at the lip of the stage.
photo by Anita Sattel

Shannon Connor and Brendan Manley, both of whom I have seen perform many times over these last few years, surprised me with their evolution, as the typically quieter Connor was the most assured I have ever seen him on stage and to that end, Manley pummeled his drum kit harder and faster than I have previously seen. Logan Severson was a man possessed, herking, jerking and gyrating his body and guitar as if caught in the throes of a fever dream.

Through the entire set, all five members of Disq were in ferocious, feral lockstep, building in power with a glorious momentum inspiring the audience into a slam dance fury (even bashing me against the stage--something I am clearly too old for now) and leaving the stage in ashes. Complete with a blistering triple guitar attack, a thunderous rhythm section, tight four part vocal harmonies and shining star songwriting, Disq performed as if they were the evening's headliners, almost daring any other band to follow in their wake

...which Slow Pulp absolutely had to.

SLOW PULP:
Alex Julian Leeds: Bass Guitar
Teddy Matthews: Drums
Emily Massey: Vocals, Guitar
Henry Stoehr: Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals

I have to admit that I was indeed a little scared for Slow Pulp after Disq exited the High Noon Saloon stage. In fact, the members of Slow Pulp were a tad trepidacious themselves as Guitarist/Vocalist Emily Massey expressed from the stage during and both Bassist Alex Julian Leeds and Guitarist Henry Stoehr admitted to me afterwards.

But the band proved that they had nothing to worry about whatsoever as Slow Pulp solidly and soundly commanded the High Noon Saloon with a multi-layered, voluminous performance that showcased precisely why they have more than deservedly been receiving the increased attention. Who knows what the future will ultimately hold, but trust me, dear readers and listeners, you really want to keep your eyes and ears open for this wholly unique and singular band who, also like Disq, unquestionably sound like no one else other than themselves, .

While the band's overall vibe was completely different than Disq's, what Slow Pulp achieved this evening was markedly similar. The band's set was seamless! The flow and segue of the songs from one into another were glistening as they established a visual presence that darkly conjured their stage persona. Yet, to extend themselves further from both Interlay and Disq as this evening's headliners, Slow Pulp not only had to cement their identity but to also encapsulate the night, tying the musical aesthetics of all three bands together, which they accomplished with a rich, evocative beauty.
photo by Anita Sattel

Over the course of their set, during which the band performed the entirety of "Big Day" plus their previously released singles, new material and even a surprising Coldplay cover, Slow Pulp weaved an atmospheric spell, something akin to being lost in a dream. In many ways, the band's expertly conceived and executed set made me think of something akin to an elongated Pink Floyd soundscape, a series of songs that ebbed and flowed in movements of sounds, moods and emotions.
Visually, the band shrouded themselves in a hazy darkness with the stage smoke eerily filtering the colored stage lighting providing melancholic shadings to augment the introspective music. The slinky "Preoccupied" elicited sultry, meditative romance, where the aching lament of "Die Alone" provided a pulsating heartache juxtaposed with the angular art rock stylings of Stoehr's crystalline guitar solos.

Where the whisper to a howl of "High" let the emotional floodgates open in a fury (again inspiring the crowd to slam dance, bashing me into the stage back and forth), "New Media" and "Steel Birds" unfurl in gloriously textured and soothing sonic waves which somehow never sacrificed their punch and force, supplied brilliantly by the supple rhythm section of Leeds and Matthews.
Emily Massey is a frontwoman of undisputed skill and magnetism. As a singer, her warm vocals envelop blissfully while as a rhythm guitarist, she can slash like a petulant punk rocker making for a combination that has formulated into a new stage persona that is worlds away from her time as a power pop diva in Modern Mod. In fact, the completeness of her maturation and evolution as an artist has felt like a shedding of a skin, so to speak, a musical line in the sand of "before" and "after," evoking a quality that is impossibly Bowie-esque. 

Whatever it takes to house that specific artistic ability, I do not know. But for Massey, she has IT as fully presented during Slow Pulp's gorgeous, anthemic "Young World," which was performed for the first time as a piano driven ballad to rapturous effect.
 
With her Slow Pulp compatriots in Leeds, Matthews and Stoehr, we have a indie rock dream team that displays a level of comfort and warmth among each other that fully translates to the music they have conceived and perform together which then deeply ingratiates itself into the audience who were in the palms of their collective musical hands without question.
It is strange to think that the final Modern Mod occurred almost four years ago. It really doesn't feel that far away but when I think of how all of these musicians have grown, changed and continued to pursue their art, the time of Modern Mod, as previously stated, feels like a lifetime ago. As good as they were then (and they were very good), they have all only improved and advanced themselves wonderfully as they have committed themselves further and deeper, emerging even more seasoned than before and yet, just as pure, wide-eyed and open-hearted as when they all wrote their very first songs. 

That joy of creation and collaboration remains paramount as I watch them, their performances all existing without a shred of ego or preciousness or possessiveness. And despite the increased attention and rise in their respective profiles, they remain humble, grounded, gracious and kind as they continue to inspire and support each other while also taking the time to extend gratitude to those who have supported them (Massey even thanked all of their parents from the stage). Their earnestness is matched only by their artistic fearlessness, making all of these bands ones to truly root for.

This night was a special night of a homecoming indeed and what a privilege it was to be there to experience it.
all photos by Scott Collins except where indicated

Sunday, December 1, 2019

SYNESTHESIA'S SESSION NOTES DECEMBER 2019

FROM THE DJ'S STUDIO DESK: 
There is just so much that I wish to write to you about!!! So much!!

If you have been regular visitors to this blogsite, you already know that 2019 has been an especially turbulent year for me, a turbulence that has disrupted my activities here on Synesthesia more than I would like, to say the least. In fact, I think that for years, and even during the first few months of this year, I did have a fairly steady routine. But this summer happened, the details of which I'd rather not revisit, and it all derailed my momentum considerably.

So much I could have written about for myself and for you, to really give my musical year a full representation to be housed for prosperity. Seeing Reignwolf's blitzkrieg of a performance at Madison, WI's Majestic Theater at the end of May was an event I never wrote about. Nor was the surprise of my year, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see none other than PAUL McCARTNEY
at the Kohl Center deep in the heart of the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus this past June written about either.

I read Todd Rundgren's The Individualist, his innovative, enlightening memoir as well as Ben Folds' excellent memoir A Dream About Lightning Bugs and neither of which were detailed for you. I am currently reading Prince's posthumous memoir The Beautiful Ones and you know, I wish to unveil my thoughts about that one to you.

And then, the legion of albums I experienced all year long.

I mention these hefty omissions to you because we now find ourselves at the end of the year and all of the year-end lists will soon be making their arrivals. And even then, there are the Best Of The Decade lists that have already appeared and will continue to do so...which means I also need to get myself to compiling!

So, what does this all mean? My plan is to TRY and begin compiling my musical year beginning with the albums. I think if I write just a little bit each day or so, I can hopefully have something to share soon.

And with that, I should sign off if I am to get cracking on this. I'll get my music and you get yours and let's all remember to...PLAY LOUD!!!!!!!!!!