I’ve always had a thing (or should that a be a thang?) for twangy guitars.
And no-one does twangy guitar better than Duane Eddy.When I was a kid, my dad often used to play Duane’s records in the??house, so I grew up with his unique baritone sound.??
However, I didn’t know that back in 1965, Duane made a whole album of
instrumental Bob Dylan songs.The amusingly entitled, ahem, Duane Does Dylan, which I recently
stumbled across on iTunes, is a real rock and roll curio, from its
cool cover – Duane sat in a lounge cradling his guitar alongside two ‘dolly
birds’ – to its quirky takes on Dylan tunes – the blistering version
of House of the Rising Sun is awesome – all big, bad boss man guitar
and wailing blues harmonica.Confusingly, there’s also a great cover of Barry McGuire’s Eve of
Destruction (one of my favourite songs of all time) included, although
it wasn’t ever recorded by Dylan. However, it was penned by songwriter
PF Sloan, who wrote Dylan-like material.Anyway, it’s twang-tastic, all the same.
http://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/duane-does-dylan/id56217996 And while we’re on the subject of twangy sounds, here’s Jack
Nitzsche’s sublime The Lonely Surfer – an epic, cinematic track from
1963 that features plenty of cool baritone guitar.
Author: sayitwithgarageflowers
Delicious, deep-fried summer soul
In the absence of Duffy or Winehouse, how about some alternative
scorching summer soul – retro style.The Mynabirds are fronted by Oregon-based singer/songwriter Laura
Burhenn and do a neat line in Motown-meets-country-meets-rock-and-roll, with a healthy dollop of Stax horns thrown in for good measure.There are also nods to Dusty Springfield and Bobbie Gentry, too.
If you like the sound of that, then you can download the rather tasty
Let The Record Go for free here:if (FlashDetect.installed) { $(‘flash_embed-hHicDCazes’).show(); $(‘quicktime_embed-hHicDCazes’).hide(); } else { $(‘quicktime_embed-hHicDCazes’).show(); $(‘flash_embed-hHicDCazes’).hide(); }
Apparently Laura wanted to make a record that sounded “like Neil Young
doing Motown”. The album, What We Lose In The Fire, We Gain In The
Flood, has a damn good go.I’m digging this delicious, deep-fried soul sound.
http://www.myspace.com/themynabirds



