Wednesday, April 29, 2020

SAVAGE RADIO PLAYLISTS APRIL 2020 WVMO 98.7 FM-THE VOICE OF MONONA

SAVAGE RADIO
THE SAVAGE ARCHIVES SERIES APRIL 15, 2020
EPISODE #55 ORIGINALLY AIRED NOVEMBER 30, 2016
1. "Crashing By Design" performed by Pete Townshend
2. "I Of The Mourning" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
3. "Ellis Bell" performed by The Cold And Lovely
4. "Joe The Lion" performed by David Bowie
5. "Flashbulb Eyes" performed by Arcade Fire
6. "Are You Satisfied?" performed by Reignwolf
7. "Disappointed" performed by Field Music
8. "Disappointed" performed by Ivy
9. "Restless Heart Syndrome" performed by Green Day
10."Moonbeam Levels" performed by Prince
11. "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" ("Love" version) performed by The Beatles

SAVAGE RADIO
THE SAVAGE ARCHIVES SERIES
APRIL 22, 2020
ORIGINALLY BROADCAST APRIL 19, 2017
EPISODE #73: "A TRIBUTE TO PRINCE"

1. "Thunder" performed by Prince and the New Power Generation
2. "The Belle Of St Mark" performed by Shelia E.
3. "He's So Dull" performed by Vanity 6
4. "The Walk" performed by The Time
5. "Six And 1/2" performed by Madhouse
6. "Nothing Compares 2 U" performed by The Family
7. "Love Sign" performed by Nona Gaye and O+>
8. "Dream Factory" performed by Prince
9. "I'm Yours" performed by Prince

SAVAGE RADIO
"SAVAGE RADIO AT HOME"
APRIL 29, 2020

1. "Elemental" performed by Tears For Fears
2. "Too Many People" performed by Paul & Linda McCartney
3. "Anxious" performed by General Public
4. "Leisure" performed by XTC
5. "Time Waits For No One" performed by The Rolling Stones
6. "Pinwheels" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
7. "Drum In" performed by Disq
8. "A Letter From The Shelter" performed by Planet P. Project
9. "Can't Stop Running' performed by Todd Rundgren

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

NOW PLAYING IN THE SAVAGE JUKEBOX APRIL 2020

"UTOPIA PARKWAY"
FOUNTAINS OF WAYNE 

Released April 6, 1999
"WELCOME INTERSTATE MANAGERS"
FOUNTAINS OF WAYNE
Released June 10, 2003
"TRAFFIC AND WEATHER"
FOUNTAINS OF WAYNE
Released April 3, 2007
"YOU NEVER LET GO" (single)
KAINALU & MUNYA
Composed by Kainalu & Munya
Produced by Trent Prall

Released March 20, 2020
-From the near beginning of our sheltering-in-home period in Wisconsin, it was a a gift more than ever to receive the latest release from our very own singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist/producer Trent Prall a.k.a. Kainalu, and this time, we have his first collaborative effort and it is a slow, seductive winner.

"You Never Let Go," finds Kainalu generously offering the spotlight to French-Canadian singer/songwriter/musician Josie Boivin, who records and performs under the alias of Munya, who co-writes and sings lead vocals on this track, which stars Kainalu's always intoxicating blend of airy synthetics laid over grounded, hip-swaying rhythms. In fact, this very dichotomy serves this new selection extremely well, as it illustrates the emotional/psychological dichotomy of what happens to us all during heartbreak.

"You never learn, you never let go
You stare at candid pictures on your phone 
You're filled with words, they'll never know, 'cause 
You never learn, you never let go" 

Munya's melodic, breathy vocals capture the ears instantly and carry you through sadly familiar emotional head/heart spaces gently, as if soothing you towards an elusive inner peace which has yet to arrive due to being unable to release oneself from what has already been lost. And even further, if we continue to cling to the past, we refuse to allow ourselves any sense of a future, whatever it may deliver.

"It's time for you to let yourself grow," Munya sings and with this enveloping union, here's hoping that this one song grows into more musical collaborations.
"THE MAIN THING"
REAL ESTATE
Released February 28, 2020
NEW 2020 MUSIC: Never will I ever for get that day when I was standing in the check out line inside of Madison's Strictly Discs, waiting to make one purchase when I heard Real Estate's "Days" (released October 18, 2011) playing over the store speakers. I was so swept away that I immediately added the album to my purchase and then, ended up playing that album more frequently than the one I had been in the store to initially purchase.

Over the course of their two subsequent albums, my interest had begun to wane in the band. Not that the albums they were making were necessarily bad. They were albums, despite their continued good points, that really sounded like the act of treading water. Works that meandered prettily but still demonstrated no sense of movement. I wasn't ready to give up on the band but still...

With their fifth album, "The Main Thing," Real Estate sounds almost as if they have become a new band. Yes, the band's signature dream world bed of guitars remain intact and also yes, there have been some line-up changes but overall, the band sounds more enlivened, and therefore readier to embrace new sounds and sonic shifts, which has not only delivered that much needed sense of movement but an overall growth and purpose.

Warm synths, dry '70's drums, delicate guitar solos, lush vocals, a wider melodic palate combined with tighter songwriting has made their trademark pastoral sound extend itself beautifully into pop song ear candy ("Paper Cup"), succulent art rock ("The Main Thing") and into even near Pink Floyd-ian territory ("Also A But") making the album the perfect musical security blanket during this most anxious time.

The main thing (ha ha) is this for me...Real Estate's "The Main Thing" is their best album since "Days" as it re-confirms the best of their past while forging ahead towards a captivating future.

Thursday, April 9, 2020

21ST CENTURY BREAKDOWN: DISQ "COLLECTOR"

"COLLECTOR"
DISQ

DISQ:
Raina Bock: Bass Guitar,  Vocals
Shannon Connor; Guitars, Keyboards, Vocals
Isaac de Broux-Slone: Guitars, Vocals
Brendan Manley: Drums
Logan Severson: Guitars, Vocals

All music and lyrics by Disq

Produced by Ron Schnapf, Isaac de Broux-Slone and Disq
Released March 6, 2020

I will never forget the very first time that I ever heard the music of Madison, WI's very own Disq.

Heading to their Bandcamp page and listening to their debut release entitled "Disq 1" (released  July 11, 2016), I was instantly thunderstruck by the rich, textured, dynamic, psychedelic and astoundingly melodic musical wonderland that revealed itself during one incredible song after another and thus rewarded me with endless repeat listenings. It was an album that, to my ears, easily could battle toe-to-toe with any long established musical artists that I loved and the fact, that it was indeed created while they were high school students was staggering--considerably less to do with their respective ages but to the fact that their undeniably superior songwriting, production and instrumental abilities were so distinctly seasoned and therefore, professional.

The then duo of songwriter/bassist Raina Bock and songwriter/singer/multi-instrumentalist Isaac de Broux-Slone more than proved that they were already a musical force to be reckoned with and ever since, I have been left wondering and waiting to see where they could potentially head next.

In the time since "Disq 1," the band has signed to the Saddle Creek label, released an excellent double A sided single in "Communication b/w Parallel," (released January 25, 2019) and they have also now officially expanded its lineup from two to five members, now including friends and Madison, WI music veterans guitarist/keyboardist/singer Shannon Connor (of Post Social), drummer Brendan Manley (of Post Social, Dash Hounds and Squarewave) and guitarist/singer Logan Severson (of Lameena). And now, four years later, my wait is over and has been exquisitely rewarded with the arrival of the band's new album entitled "Collector."

Working as both an evolution and as a re-birth, Disq's "Collector" is a work that far exceeded any hopes that I could have ever held for it. The album not only delivers the goods in regards to its musical force and punch but due to the breadth of its emotional reach, which was unexpected in regards to the power the entire listening experience was received by me.

Simply stated, I was floored and even subjected to tears on that very first listen as well as raised goosebumps for every subsequent listen thereafter. It is a remarkable, beautiful, mature and thoughtful work while also joyfully performed with a restless yet controlled youthful abandon that comes with the exuberance of bashing around on instruments with your best friends. And what's more, Disq has weaved a thematically multi-layered album that is simultaneously person, universal and most crucially, decidedly more prescient than even the band could have ever anticipated.

"Collector" opens with a powerhouse in "Daily Routine," a song that feels as if it is an extension from the band's "All I Do Is Nothing" from "Disq 1." Yet, where that song felt like an anthem for teenage lethargy, "Daily Routine" is comparatively more urgent.

"This is my daily routine/Spend my hours on computer screen," begins de Broux-Slone over a wall of sound supplied by his bandmates. As the triple guitar attack by Connor, Severson and de Broux-Slone flies high and Bock and Manley's propulsive rhythm section booms, culminating in an enormous finish that revolves in growing speed and intensity before blowing itself apart in ashes, the lyrics convey a debilitating inertia. For the song's narrator, it is a life where he thought this existence "looked better inside a dream," wonders "what it's like to be feeling clean" and concludes with a self-described "cry for help" as he explains, "I'm in prison but I think this place was built by me." 

"Daily Routine," an outstanding, roaring beginning to the album, succeeds triumphantly by accomplishing a feat very much akin to The Beatles "Help!"  The song is an uncompromising rave-up, tailor made to being blasted from every open window possible and purely destined to whipping up live audiences into frenzies. It is also a melodic feast, unfolding over what feels to a a three part mini-suite. And the juxtaposition is first rate as the wild energy works in brilliant contrast to the lyrics, making what once may have felt like a certain victory has now succumbed into a certain emotional paralysis.

The ironically entitled "Konichiwa Internet" plunges deeper in the darker, and self-made, corners of life in social media where we all reside, "you in a cage, me in a cage."  The societal paradox of feeling increasingly isolated and alienated in the medium designed to bring us together is superbly reflected in the music's loping, swaying pace which is twice spun on its head with a waltzing time signature twist fully evoking the magnetic push/pull nature that simultaneously attracts and repels us regarding the conflicts in our real and on-line lives.

With the opening admission of, "It gets much worse at times/When I feel like I'm fine/My eyes start going bright, I'm too restless to unwind," Shannon Connor steps up to the plate with the urgent, anxiety ridden "I'm Really Trying." Connor's first song for Disq, and on which he handles lead vocals, is a tightly wound punk rock scorcher. Filled with complex, intertwining guitars in triplicate (and not feeling too out of place from his work with Post Social), Connor leads Disq through a world of inner conflict where uncertainty, disquiet, and overall unease ping-pongs around the brain until it collapses, bringing the agitated and hook filled intensity of the album's first three songs to a close.

Allowing us to catch our collective breaths, the lovely "D19" relaxes the pace with its deceptively softer folk pop driven by terrific couplets that formulate a story that works on three different levels: an ode to a vintage microphone, a metaphor for a failed relationship or even a delicate warning of the emotional dangers when falling too deeply into nostalgia, as what was can really never be exactly the same again.

The first half of "Collector" concludes with the absolutely gorgeous "Loneliness," a power pop ballad that already sounds like a classic. Over lightly strummed acoustic guitars and the subtle sounds of backwards drums and cymbals, de Broux-Slone warmly intones, "I feel dead/Laying in my bead/Filling up with dread/Getting in my head/But somehow I stay." Confusion and angst leads to ennui and immobilization and as the band arrives in full bringing a veritable wave of melody, harmony vocals, a pitch-perfect outro of a guitar solo and an ear worm chorus that will stick as firmly as the strongest glue, Disq has emerged with a song that blissfully captures those moments when it inexplicably feels so very good to feel so very bad.

Side Two opens with "Fun Song 4," a sprightly post-rock instrumental that elicits waves and layers of hypnotic guitar patterns and rhythms merged with a bouncy pogo stick groove that dares you not to smile broadly as it lives up to its title and is reminiscent of a mid album Todd Rundgren instrumental confection.

The storm clouds return with the Weezer-esque guitar army of "Gentle," marking Logan Severson's entry to the band and on which he takes lead vocals. Propelled by the classic '90s styled loud-quiet-loud dynamics, Severson unfurls a semi-autobiographical tale depicting illness and a perpetual state of being unbalanced. "I think that my body gave a warning to me/When the blood wouldn't rush to my head," he sings. "But I've got a way to feel good/Stuck in the back of my mind/I've got a way to feel good/To burn out bright." Trying to hold oneself together even when it seems one's own body is working against them is the quandary that has no definitive answer yet Disq conveys the emotion with a combined force and grace.

After all of the mental noise, sometimes all you need is to find a copy of "The Beatles" a.k.a. "The White Album" (released November 22, 1968) to settle the spirit. As a counterpoint to "D19," we enter the acoustic Lennon-esque dream world of "Trash," as Isaac de Broux-Slone, with double tracked vocals and finger-picking that recalls The Beatles' "Julia," Disq takes a travel into the past for comfort, for understanding of the present, and for a sense of peace in desperate need but difficult to remember and retain.
       .
And then, the noise returns...

"I Wanna Die" is the album's epic, a monolithic howl. With Raina Bock and Brendan Manley's insistent, creeping rhythm section setting the brooding, boiling tension, de Broux-Slone finds himself at a crucial crossroads where the psychological inertia of "Daily Routine" becomes too much to bear or comprehend.

"When I wake up, I want to go back to sleep 
I can't decide if I'm a person or sheep
I just can't break my routine and I don't know if I want to
I can't confide in any one of my friends
Because I know it will lead into my end
I can't believe in anything that I think
and I wonder why...
...I wanna die"

With a riff that woud scare Black Sabbath and a firebomb of a guitar solo that would make Billy Corgan's jaw drop, Disq's "I Wanna Die" is their "Helter Skelter," a primal scream of a song that (again) demands to be played as loudly as possible and will pulverize you in a live setting.

As the stream of acoustic guitars emerge from the ashes a la The Rolling Stones' "Wild Horses," Disq concludes the album with the shattering "Drum In," a defining, definitive closing statement that brilliantly weaves in all of the album's themes and emotions into a melodic waterfall of a song. It made me cry for it pierced my heart so instantly and thoroughly.

It is a song that feels like an inner monologue or the very words one wishes they could say if they just had either the right person to say them or or the strength to voice them out loud. Isaac de Broux-Slone rich, warm vocals feel as if they are being lifted by the music of the full band, giving it just enough heft to speak. "I don't know how this all became," he recalls. "But every day I just feel so strange/Emptiness can fade away/ Emptiness still has its pain/Looking back on my worst days/I'd be shaking, wonder what is wrong/Now I wonder what's the first day/But now it's hopeless/I can't stop gagging." 

As the song continues to flow, reaching its crescendo during which the world goes dark and de Broux-Slone intones that "I haven't eaten anything" and "I can't believe in everything," Disq gave me the feeling of soul sickness, a tender, empathetic plea into the void where one can only be saved by the warmth of one's friends and the music they can create together.

For an album that is designed to serve as a continuation and rebirth for the band, Disq's "Collector" is a stellar, top flight accomplishment. Working harmoniously with Producer Rob Schnapf (Elliot Smith, Beck, Guided By Voices, The Anniversary and more...), Disq emerges as a band so fully formed, multi-varied and utterly complete as "Collector" is seamlessly sequenced and unfolds with perfection. The band has clearly made the most of their shot with album making as not one moment is wasted and nothing is superfluous as every song is tightly constructed and performed to serve the song itself as best as possible.

Original members Isaac de Broux-Slone and Raina Bock only re-confirm the rightfulness of their union while newer members Shannon Connor, Brendan Manley and Logan Severson fit into, and therefore expand, the already established aesthetic like the proverbial glove. You hear the work of a team, collaboration in full effect, all egos checked at the door and that is if there were any around to discard in the first place. You feel the camaraderie and the genuine affection between all five members, which makes the songs and, the combined lyrical voices, stand even stronger.   

While the album cover and inner photo shots clearly evokes The Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds" (released May 16, 1966), and there are the aforementioned musical nods to The Beatles and Black Sabbath plus quite a number of musical references that are wide and varied enough to spark attention to different generational demographics (what may be Saves The Day to one may be Paul Westerberg or Big Star to another), Disq has artfully not created a spot-the-reference album.

In fact, and despite whatever touchstones we may hear and detect, the band firmly sounds like no one else other than themselves, which is indeed a staple of the Madison music community. But with the considerably wider reach that "Collector" has already attracted and received, listeners will be able to experience this considerable feat for themselves for potentially the very first time...and it is remarkable indeed.

Yet in addition to everything else that I have mentioned, what makes "Collector" excel is indeed the emotional reach of the album, which does indeed feel like it has miraculously touched the pinpoint of what it means to grow up in our 21st century American society, a world which has grown exceedingly unstable and vitriolic, more enraged and less empathetic.

The act of growing up contains its own set of growing pains that are recognizable to any generation as we are all attempting ways to experience self-discovery in a judgmental, obstacle filled world that discourages self-expression, individuality and even integrity itself. Yet, to grow up now, with the vortex of social media, more societal noise, the increasing absence of nuance and even truth...let's just say I am happy to not be 20 years old in 2020 and that I grew up when I did.

Disq's "Collector" is the sound of five young adults attempting to navigate a harsher, more anxiety driven world than ones in our relatively recent pasts but all of them carrying varying loads within heavy backpacks of individual anxieties, mental illnesses and depression and other ailments that are invisible to the eye but as real as a visible open wound. Their nerve endings are exposed and by showing theirs, we recognize ours while also feeling unquestionable empathy.

The fact that the album has arrived in the world for all to hear just as a global pandemic unleashed itself, this new reality has made the album more than prevalent, as the narratives displayed through the album, especially the ones concerning an individualistic spiritual ache, are now societal, adding a greater weight to its impact.

And yet, the overall experience is not distressing even with such internally difficult material. In fact, the experience of Disq's "Collector" is very much like the scenario presented in the band's own music video for "Loneliness," in which we find a shivering Isaac de Broux-Slone, alone in a snowstorm, ventures by snowmobile to a gig with his bandmates, who perform to a disinterested and hostile older crowd, only to have the lights turned off on them. Disq soldiers on, eventually winning over the crowd and the band exits victorious, all sharing the same snowmobile, riding into the cold, winter night in smiles.

That is what Disq's "Collector" felt like to me. Five friends banded together in friendship and music,  huddled together and holding each other tightly in a severely uncertain world. For in a cold world growing colder, where would we be without our friends to be there to hold us upright when life feels too overwhelming and unforgivably dark? May this album help us light the way. 

Disq's "Collector" is far and away one of the best albums of 2020.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

WORDS FOR ADAM

ADAM SCHLESINGER
OCTOBER 31, 1967-APRIL 1, 2020

This hits too close to the bone.

Early on Monday, March 31st, the news hit the internet that Adam Schlesinger, singer, multi-instrumentalist, producer and most importantly, world class songwriter, had been placed into a medically induced coma after suffering from complications due to the COVID-19. Needless to say that I was s hocked to read the news, as I am so certain many of you were also. While that story certainly signaled that his time was not long (in fact, more than imminent), but maybe...hopefully...

Yet, a mere two days later, the inevitable sadly arrived. Adam Schlesinger passed away at the age of just 52. He was only one year older than myself.

Certainly, the sheer painfulness of this news is, of course, due to its swiftness and overall suddenness of being revealed to the public. From our end, there was no preparation (and frankly, who knows of how much preparation Schlesinger himself had with his own illness and hospitalization) and so, the news of his passing felt even more immediate, sending us reeling. Secondly, and unavoidably, there is the intense presence of Coronavirus and what it has already wrought. From the aforementioned social distancing and remaining at home, which keeps us all away from each other, as well as the complete lack of any sense of normalcy, with only the horrorshow of the news and the unknown staring us in our collective faces, we are all upended, making the apparent suddenness of Schlesinger's death that much more paramount.

And then, the most important and the obvious, Adam Schlesinger made a profound impact upon my life through his artistry, helping to shape and inspire me with a stunning arsenal of songs and albums that are now cherished and treasured pieces of the very music that has enriched my life.
Tom Hanks' "That Thing You Do!" (1996)

If one did not already know or was not fully aware, the full legacy of Adam Schlesinger encompasses a wider arena than just rock and roll. Yes, he was the man who wrote the irresistible theme song to Writer/Director/Actor Tom Hanks' "That Thing You Do!" (1996), a song that rightfully was nominated for both the 1996 Golden Globes and Academy Awards for Best Original Song. What I did not realize was how much of a musical force he had become both on the stage and television, most notably his roles with composing music for the Tony and Emmy Awards, a Stephen Colbert Christmas special and his Emmy Award winning work as songwriter and Executive Music Producer for "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend."

All of the work and acclaim that the has rightfully received in this area feels more than fitting based upon the musical and lyrical depths he mined through his songwriting as his body of work is filled with exquisite, funny, poignant, heartfelt and undeniably humane short stories, character studies and emotional portraits any of which could be films or episodes of television shows all by themselves.

And you can find them all upon his albums.
FOUNTAINS OF WAYNE

My introduction, and therefore, my subsequent love for the music Adam Schlesinger arrived and remains firmly within the bands in which he made music. With the now defunct but forever exemplary Fountains Of Wayne, the band he shared with co-songwriter/singer/guitarist Chris Collingwood, guitarist Jody Porter and drummer Brian Young, Adam Schlesinger first grabbed my attention...although it did take a little time.
Admittedly, the band's single "Radiation Vibe" (released 1996) slipped past me. I knew the song and heard it often on the radio but it was one that never really made a strong impression upon me for whatever reason, and so because of that, I didn't really keep them upon my personal radar.

Everything changed for me with the band's second album.

"Utopia Parkway" (released April 6, 1999), the band's first masterpiece, as far as I am concerned, was given to me by a dear friend and neighbor who somehow ended up with two copies, and feeling that it would be somewhere up my alley, relinquished herself of one of those said copies. A glorious power pop song cycle/concept album centered mostly around the teenagers and citizens of the Queens borough in New York felt to me to essentially be the John Hughes film that he never made.

From the restless kids who desire to escape ("Utopia Parkway"), lovestruck boys desperate to impress ("Red Dragon Tattoo," "Denise") or have failed to do so ("Hat And Feet"), and tales of adolescent ennui ("The Valley Of Malls"), romance ("Troubled Times"), rites of passage (the startling "Prom Theme"), ways to pass the time ("Laser Show") and hopes for the future ("It Must Be Summer") plus even more vignettes enraptured me upon the very first listen.

Schlesinger and his bandmates created a work that clearly evoked the storytelling and lyricism of The Kinks, the power pop of the 1970's a la Big Star, The Raspberries, Badfinger and early Cheap Trick, the AOR hard rock swagger and 1980's college rock eclecticism while fitting more than comfortably into the alternative rock of the late 1990's, therefore making a work that is absolutely, resplendently timeless.

Schlesinger demonstrated an especially high level of songwriting craft that allowed Fountains of Wayne to bash it out (the track "Go Hippie" outdoes Oasis as their own game) as much as they could break your heart with a clear-eyed, deeply felt bittersweet wistfulness that can suddenly produce a lump in the throat and leaving us all unsure as to how quickly it has happened, as evidenced by the album closer "The Senator's Daughter," which sounds like the melancholy of a setting sun, or in the case of this album, could be the sound of fading youth itself.

"Utopia Parkway" remains one of those albums that feels undeniably perfect for Spring time when the growing warmth of the temperatures and the re-awakening of the Earth is juxtaposed with the endings contained in every school year cycles with all manner of conclusions and farewells. So specific yet universal inits reach and scope, Adam Schlesinger's mastery of melody and wit, angst and comedy, roar and grace captivated me and with only one album, I was in the palm of his hand.

And to think, he and Fountains Of Wayne would only go on to raise their own bar even higher.
Yes, it is the album that contains the massive "Stacy's Mom," the outstanding hybrid that is part ode to teenage lust and part tribute to The Cars, but Fountains Of Wayne's third album "Welcome Interstate Managers" (released June 10, 2003) is so much more than that song.

While teenagers still run around the edge of the album, the band expanded its reach to include a collective of emotionally and financially struggling young adults and even further into the lives of people in desperate middle aged crises all attempting to make sense of their lives. While the band rocks at possibly their heaviest ("Mexican Wine," Supercollider," "Bought For A Song," "Little Red Lights"), there is a greater existential ache at work in otherwise energetic songs like "Bright Future In Sales," "No Better Place" and "Hey Julie," and when the band allows itself to fall directly into the pain, we end up with absolute songwriting diamonds like the wondrous "Hackensack" and the sadly swaying "Hailey's Waitress."

And even then, there is even more as the band diverges a bit from any sense of conceptual narrative and expands it musical scope into the glittering folk of "Valley Winter Song," the country bar-stool lament of "Hung Up On You," the lazy day lounge of teenage and adult hedonism in "Fire Island," the bouncy good vibes of "Peace And Love" and in two of their finest songs period, we have the transcendent "All Kinds Of Time," during which we experience a sense of time travel in the mind of a teenage football star in the climactic moments of the big game. and album closer "Yours And Mine," a pure grace note of a complete love story all told in a hair over one minute.

It is an album where every moment works, the copious jokes land firmly, the stories beg to be re-heard instantly and every single multi-layered melody sticks like glue to your brain and heart. If "Utopia Parkway" was the masterpiece then "Welcome Interstate Managers" was even better. It was the band's defining statement and Adam Schlesinger's efforts made up a master class of songwriting meant to be studied.
While Fountains Of Wayne's final two albums "Traffic And Weather" (released April 3, 2007) and "Sky Full Of Holes" (released July 20, 2011) didn't scale the highest heights of their predecessors, they did continue to cement the band's, and therefore Adam Schlesinger's, unquestionable skills with songcraft as the storytelling and musical elasticity set them far apart from their contemporaries.

It was during the period of these albums that I had discovered Schlesinger's extracurricular musical activities in two more bands that completely captured my attention once I heard them. 
 IVY
Ivy, a trio that found Adam Schlesinger joining forces with Andy Chase and vocalist Dominque Durand, allowed him to flex different songwriting muscles, creating songs and albums that veered directly into the very type literate Europop that I had already adored with Prefab Sprout, The Go-Betweens and Everything But The Girl but also evoking that nostalgic sense of the not quite reachable and dreamlike foreign romantic elsewhere.
 TINTED WINDOWS

Adam Schlesinger surprised and wowed me again with the formation of Tinted Windows, a supergroup made up of frequent collaborator songwriter/guitarist James Iha (The Smashing Pumpkins, A Perfect Circle), former Cheap Trick drummer Bun E. Carlos and lead singer Taylor Hanson (Hanson). It was a band created from unlikely parts but congealed beautifully with an album, the eponymously titled "Tinted Windows" (released April 21, 2009) that certainly did not re-invent the wheel but just got down to the basics of excellent vocals, loud guitars, banging drums, strong melodics and first and foremost, crisp, clear power pop songwriting resulting in an album that grew in strength the longer it played.
And even then, it was Adam Schlesinger who helped to resurrect The Monkess as a recording act, as he shepherded two terrific albums, "Good Times!" (released May 27, 20116) and "Christmas Party" (released October 12, 2018). I am only able to imagine how these projects turned out as well as they did because not only were Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, Peter Tork (before his passing) and the late Davy Jones reunited in great voice and instrumentation throughout, the albums each featured songwriting work from XTC'S Andy Partridge, Weezer's Rivers Cuomo, Death Cab For Cutie's Ben Gibbard, Noel Gallagher, Paul Weller, Neil Diamond and others, including Schlesinger himself.

But some how, it feels as if these projects turned out as well as they did because of Adam Schlesinger's involvement.
It wasn't as if he had to build his musical body of work in this fashion for being a songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist of his skill and caliber, he could've easily created a series of one-man-band albums for years. And yet he didn't. For it feels as if collaboration was the key to Adam Schlesinger. It feels as if collaboration was where he thrived and enjoyed himself the most. Of course, I am speculating as I haven't read very many interviews with him over the years but just looking at his musical history, Schlesinger was a figure who was always working with others and through that joined sense of creation, his musical light shined brightest.

I am typically draw towards members of a band who are possibly seen as the "quieter" members. In the case of Adam Schlesinger, he certainly was not a musician who ever called attention to himself. He never was the front-person. He never sang lead vocals. In quite a number of the band photo shoots that I have seen, rarely is he ever placed right up front, often being seen in the back, behind his bandmates.

With Adam Schlesinger, the star was the song itself and through all of the bands, the albums, the variety of projects the songs he wrote and co-wrote were, and will forever remain, directly in the spotlight. But even so, I feel that we need to shine that light upon Adam Schlesinger, now more than ever, so that we all are able to understand that there was a real and immensely talented individual who was genuinely and generously inspired and who honed his craft to create and share a lifetime's worth of superb songs worthy of discovering and treasuring for the remainder of our own lives.

I am fearing that during this unprecedented period in our shared history, we will be experiencing many terrible stories announcing the deaths of the artists we love and have performed their parts in helping to shape who we are while expressing themselves. Adam Schlesinger's death has impacted me profoundly due to the surprising nature of its announcement as well as the extreme relative closeness in his age to my own. But, mostly it is this...

It always hurts when an artist one loves and with whom a connection was made dies. And yes, this one was a painful one indeed and maybe because Adam Schlesinger was an artist who certainly was not remotely finished, who obviously had so much more to say and express and whose body of work always felt so spry, so youthful, so energetic, so filled to the point of overflowing with melody and zestful exuberance. It is music that sounds eternally young, something that would never age and wither but continuously explode with vitality and vibrancy.

It is music that will forever lift me and make me feel so thankful to be alive to hear it.

Thank you, Adam. Thank you.
ADAM SCHLESINGER
REST IN POWER

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

SYNESTHESIA'S SESSION NOTES APRIL 2020

FROM THE DJ'S STUDIO DESK:
Sort of...

I am writing to you from my home base, practicing proper amounts of social distancing at this unprecedented time, a time that has sadly but rightfully ceased my travels to the WVMO studio for my weekly Savage Radio programs. I felt the time would probably arrive, but hoped against it, or at least, hoped that it wold arrive later than it actually did. 

As of this writing, it has been two weeks straight since I have been in the studio creating new programs and yes, it is quite heartbreaking. But let's be real. My radio show is an extremely small thing to let go of for the greater good of doing my part to remain at home as much as possible in order to help keep society that much safer. In the interim, I have been working with the higher ups at WVMO to hand pick previously recorded shows to run in the time slot and I am also beginning to investigate just how one can record from home--just like quite a number of the WVMO show hosts tend to do anyway. 

But yes..this is a strange, extremely stressful time for your typically  happy, humble DJ, who is now filled with all of the anxieties that I can imagine you are undertaking yourselves. 

This means that the music we love is more important than it has ever been, as it is a connective, healing tissue that binds us all together--especially in times of crisis...even a global pandemic of which the future is painfully unknown. We may not be able to go to concerts but the sheer amount of footage that I have been seeing on-line from local musicians, long established musicians to regular everyday people at home all uploading videos of themselves performing in their personal space and then sharing to the world has been just beautiful to behold, as sometimes music will reach us and help us in places and ways that words fail. 

As for Synesthesia, I have a lot of content swimming inside of my brain just waiting to get out and find all of you, from new album reviews to continuing to explore the music I loved from 2019. That is more than enough to keep me busy for some time. With Savage Radio, I will keep you updated either here or on the show's Facebook page as I continue to hope to return to the studio seat sooner rather than later. 

Stay strong, dear listeners. Stay strong, for I am here for you and I would think that you are here for me. As I say at the end of every broadcast, take care of yourselves, take care of each other...

...Keep listening to music and always...PLAY LOUD!!!!!!!!!!!!