Music Tuesday Newsday: New Releases from Paul Simon, Alison Krauss, Meat Puppets, Thursday, The Apache Relay, and Foo Fighters

April 12, 2011 - 1:55 pm

Foo Fighters - Wasting LIght

Damn, too many this week… Paul Simon returns to the grandiosity of Graceland 25 years laterthe other big drop would be Foo Fighters and their Wasting Light…Meat Puppets are still going strong after 30 or so years with Lollipop… Alison Krauss recoups after her successful pairing with Plant and flies solo again in Paper Airplane…and Thursday returns with No Devolucion, whatever that means.

The Apache Relay – American Nomad

Elbow - Build A Rocket Boys! [CD release]

Joan As Police Woman - The Deep Field [CD release]

letlive. - Fake History

Holy Ghost! Holy Ghost! – self titled

k.d. Lang - k.d. Lang And The Siss Boom Bang: Sing It Loud

Rebirth Brass Band - Rebirth Of New Orleans

Alison Krauss & Union Station - Paper Airplane

Bell X1 - Bloodless Coup

Jessie J - Who You Are

TV On The Radio - Nine Types Of Light

Agnes Obel - Philharmonics

Emilie Simon - The Big Machine

He Is We - My Forever

Vivian Girls - Share The Joy

Thursday - No Devolucion

Foo Fighters - Wasting Light

Atmosphere - The Family Sign

Wild Palm - Until Spring

Crystal Stilts - In Love With Oblivion

The Feelies - Here Before

Paul Simon - So Beautiful Or So What

Meat Puppets - Lollipop

Low - C’mon

Sonny And The Sunsets - Hit After Hit

Contributors The Best of 2010… according to Jeff Nau

December 24, 2010 - 11:23 am

Devin Townsend

The best of the new (Porcupine Tree, Devin Townsend), a bit of the old (Killing Joke, Faith No More)…2010 was more than anything a return to form for artists of yore. Here’s the top 10 groundbreaking artists of the past year (or so)… as seen by ChinaShop Contributor Jeff Nau.

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Music Hugh Masekela: His Trumpet Sounds Like Hope

July 15, 2010 - 1:48 pm

Hugh Masekela

Hugh Masekela is a 40-year veteran trumpet player, considered among the most elite of jazz players over the course of the past 40 years. If you’ve never heard of him — and I count myself amongst you — you’re in for something pretty amazing, especially if you’re an aficionado of the genre. While guys like Bill Chase and Maynard Ferguson were (deservedly) getting most of the credit for helping bring big band and jazz music to the masses, Masekela was toiling away in practice rooms in a bantustan, one of the self-governing city states South African blacks had been forced into as a result of segregation during Apartheid. His music is a reflection of both that racial oppression, and his main weapon in fighting it for nearly 50 years : albums like Hope are full of that very emotion; “Grazing in the Grass” and “Languta” are both light of heart and manage to blend a certain New York/big city flavor with the sounds of Masekela’s own culture and home country. It’s likely what inspired Paul Simon to hire him for his masterpiece Graceland. Even tracks like the self-explanatory “Mandela (Bring Him Back Home!)” are void of any of the more somber tones employed by his peers Charlie Parker or Miles Davis to capture their respective darker moods, in favor of providing his audiences with something to dance to and celebrate. You listen to Masekela, and you’re getting not only the best the genre has to offer, but that very emotion in the music. On Red Bull Music Academy Radio now.