Site search
Other places at which I post
Twitter: my personal feed
My mobile photos on Flickr

My Distractions

Entries by Logan Molen (279)

Sunday
Mar142010

Great, great record store

Great, great record store

Good record stores seem to be making a comeback, but one that’s never gone away is the Jazz Record Mart in Chicago.

I’ve visited JRM several times, including Sunday, not so much for the jazz stuff but a deep selection of R&B, soul, blues and gospel music and books. I’ve written previously about my love of Southern soul and Jazz Record Mart is a great place to hunt down hard-to-find CDs or LPs if you’re a fan of soul, R&B, blues or early 20th century roots music.

"The Hi Records Story" features artists like Al Green, O.V. Wright and Ann PeeblesI still haven’t run across an out-of-print collection of great 1960s' songs recorded at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Ala., but did find "The Hi Records Story," a collection documenting a terrific label that operated in the shadow of Stax in the thriving Memphis scene in the 1960s and early ‘70s. I’ve previously discovered terrific gospel, R&B, rockabilly and blues discs.

Jazzmart is an eclectic place, with treasures buried all over the place. They still proudly proclaim to be the "world's largest jazz and blues record store." It’s organized in a disorganized way, and you’ll find yourself finding stuff to buy all the way up to the checkout counter. I just hope the store -- an anachronism in these digital times -- survives until the next time I return.

Thursday
Mar042010

Lotus lives on

March 2010 issue of MotorsportThe March issue of Motorsport magazine arrived in the mail today, and, whoa, it contains a 21-page special package on Lotus that includes an in-depth look at the famed Lotus 79 that inspired me to become a rapid open-wheel fan.

The elegant black-and-gold John Player Special remains a thing of beauty 30 years after it earned a spot in racing annals as one of the first cars to truly exploit ground effects and complex aerodynamics.

Formula 1 fans know that a Malaysian company is reviving the Lotus name this F-1 and IndyCar this season, so there's a resurgence in the brand that once was one of the most famous in racing before hitting hard times in the late 1980s and vaporizing in the mid-1990s. Even the separate but related Lotus automaker -- once a threat to Ferrari and Lamborghini among road-car fiends -- is a shadow of its former self.

Mario Andretti drove the Lotus 79 to his only Formula 1 world title, in 1978.

Even though there's no connection to the original team founded by Colin Chapman, I'll be rooting for Lotus this season, and hoping they'll do justice to a name made famous by Jim Clark, Stirling Moss, Graham Hill, Emerson Fittipaldi, Mario Andretti and Ayrton Senna, among many others.

 

Saturday
Feb272010

I like The Decemberists -- when they're doing someone else's songs

I’m not much of a Decemberist fan. They’re good, and I find their music enjoyable enough. But nothing I've bought or heard keeps me coming back for more.

You Ain't No Picasso has dozens of great cover songs from The Decemberists and Colin MeloyBut I do like the sense of adventure from the band and leader Colin Meloy, which shines in a collection of more than 50 Mp3s of live cover songs captured on a site called You Ain’t No Picasso. ((())

There’s a core group of songs from three performers: Morrissey/Smiths, Shirley Collins and Sam Cooke (?!?!). But there also are nuggets from Big Star (“Ballad of El Goodo”), Robyn Hitchcock, Soft Boys, Bad Company, Scud Mountain Boys, Brian Eno, Echo and the Bunnymen, Velvet Underground, Squeeze, ELO, Cheap Trick, Heart and The Outfield. Plus many more.

Song are OK, some good, some are great, some are muddy, some are crisp. But when you’re constantly pushing the edges, it’s all good in my book.