Since September 2010, this blog has recorded the journey of this music junkie as I attempt to listen to all the music in my CD collection. CDs revisited in their entirety from start to finish - no skipping tracks, no shuffle. Compact Discs only - no vinyl, no tapes, no files.

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Anthony "Big A" Sherrod - Torchbearer of the Clarksdale Sound (2025)


During my recent trip down the Mississippi Blues Trail, I walked up to the counter at Cat Head Delta Blues & Folk Art in downtown Clarksdale and asked the proprietor "What's the hot local CD these days?" and he directed me to this recent release from Big A Sherrod, a Clarksdale native shaped by the Delta Blues Museum’s after-school program. Albeit brief (28 minutes), it is certainly a highly enjoyable album with a fusion of blues, soul, R&B, and funk. Modern Delta blues recorded straight to tape in the very place they were born.

More on Sherrod here. Fun fact: Big A was born on my 18th birthday.

Tracks: 5 raw originals, cut in just two hours in a Clarksdale storefront. They're all good, but the centerpiece is track 4, My Life, a bluesy, soulful, autobiographical track.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: see above

Monday, November 10, 2025

General Public - Hand To Mouth (1986)

album cover

Picked this one out of a used bin after seeing Dave Wakeling in concert. (My only complaint about that fantastic live show was the fact he didn't play anything from the Special Beat Service album.) I either completely missed this release back in 1986 or I was still upset at The English Beat for breaking up and took out my hurt feelings by ignoring General Public. All that said, this isn't a bad album, it's just not very memorable. The songwriting is okay, but it seems the band was trying to update their sound for 1986 and it's just a bit too slick. For the most part, the ska-lite tendencies of the past give way to synthpop tendencies: synthesizers, drum machines, and sterile studio sheen straight out of the A&R department. All filler, no killer.

Sidenote: There's no barcode to be found on the CD packaging. I guess maybe there was a barcode on the longbox?

Press of the time:
  • Rolling Stone: "pop that's thought provoking but never pedantic."
  • Smash Hits (6 out of 10): "rather tawdry and unoriginal"
  • CashBox: "a spicy little provocative stew"
  • Billboard: "Fans of band will find plenty to cheer about" [sic]
  • The Virgin Encyclopedia of Eighties Music (1997): ★★★


Album chart peaks:
  • US Billboard 200: #83
  • CashBox: #66

Tracks: Four singles were released and none charted in the US or the UK: Come Again, Faults And All, Too Much Or Nothing, and In Conversations. Of those four, the best are Come Again and Too Much Or Nothing, while my least favorite is In Coversation (I would have released Never All There instead of In Conversation but I wasn't consulted). It's fun to hear Saxa make a guest appearance on a couple of tunes including Forward As One, making that track the most Beat-ish on the album.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None

Previously revisited for the blog:
Rub It Better (1995)
All The Rage (1984)


Monday, November 3, 2025

Charles Lloyd & Billy Higgins - Which Way Is East (2004)


Back in January 2001, saxophonist Charles Lloyd and drummer Billy Higgins decided they’d had enough of studios, producers, and anything resembling structure. So they retreated to Lloyd’s house in Montecito, surrounded by ocean breezes and too many flutes, and hit the record button.

The result is this double CD release on the ECM label that sounds like two lifelong friends sitting in a room full of uncommon instruments* and saying, “Hey, what happens if we both play this thing at once?” It’s jazz, sure, but only in the sense that Olive Garden is Italian food. However, it’s two legendary jazzers having a conversation I can only attempt to understand. But it sure sounds deep.

This guy claims the recording is "the sound of ancestors spreading wings, spinning flesh from sunlight," while another critic writes: "Recorded in a living room shortly before Higgins' death, two old friends converse, contemplate, fart around." Since I don't understand what the heck is going on here, I find myself leaning toward the latter opinion. It just might be a masterpiece, but it's not my bag, man. If you're into free jazz and world music, give it shot.

*New-to-me instruments on this recording, according to the credits: tárogató, Tibetan oboe, guimbri, Syrian 'one string,' Senegalese, Guinean and Indian hand drums, and something called Juno's wood box.

More album reviews here.

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: Did not chart

Tracks: 30 tracks comprising 8 "suites" across two discs. Total time is just over 2½ hours, which is a lot to take in, much less comprehend. It turns oddly Brazilian at the end, though, so that's nice.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None.

Sunday, November 2, 2025

Donald Fagen's The Nightfly Live (2021)


Credits are provided, but liner notes are non-existent. From what I can piece together, these tracks were recorded in 2019 at tour stops at the Beacon Theatre in New York City (Oct. 19) and the Orpheum Theatre in Boston (Oct. 26).
For decades, I've had Fagen's 1982 Nightfly release on my proverbial "desert island" list of albums; my thoughts on that particular masterpiece are available at a previous CDP post. When I read that a live recording was going to be released, I wasn't particularly interested. The original is great as is - why mess up a good thing, right? So I avoided it until I saw this disc in the used bin (still sealed) with a $2 sticker on it. For that price, why not give it a shot? So let's break open the shrink wrap and give this a listen.

...

Music? Fantastic. Performances? Solid. Necessary? No. The CD is enjoyable and you can tell the audience got their money's worth, but it's mostly rote recreations so I think I'll stick with the '82 original.

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: Did not chart

Tracks: The only cut that veers from the familiar '82 recording is Maxine, in which the background vocalists completely take over singing duties. I guess Donnie's voice needed a break and at his age (71 at the time of recording), I can hardly blame him. My favorite track from the album has always been New Frontier and they pick up the tempo ever so slightly here and I like the urgency and intensity that slight, simple change brings to the tune. And I appreciate the absence of any between song patter.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None

Previously revisited for the blog:
Sunken Condos (2012)
Morph the Cat (2006)
Kamakiriad (1993)
New Frontier CD Video (1988)
The Nightfly (1982)


See also:
The New York Rock And Soul Revue - Live At The Beacon (1991)

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Mamma Mia! - Original Broadway Cast Recording (1999)


I bought this Broadway cast album for my wife as we prepared for a trip to New York City with our sons. My oldest son graduated from high school in 2012 and for a graduation gift, asked for a trip to see a baseball game at Yankee Stadium. You don't have to ask me twice to visit NYC, so plans were made. We went to the Yankee-White Sox game on Sunday, July 1, 2012. We got there early for the 66th annual Old-Timers’ Day celebrations/game, then watched the Yankees win 4-2.
But I couldn't possibly go to New York without seeing a show on Broadway and I figured my sons would tolerate a show if they were already familiar with the music, so this jukebox musical based on songs by ABBA fit the bill quite nicely. The show was enjoyable and we had a great time. This CD was originally purchased for my wife to spin in her car as she drove around the piney woods of East Texas for her job. It makes for a nice souvenir, but I never listen to it, preferring to spin the originals on Gold.

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: #169

Tracks:

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: see above

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Various Artists - The Alligator Records 20th Anniversary Collection (1991)


If you've been playing along at home, you know I've listened to plenty of blues compilations of late. Nothing against the other discs - I've liked all of them and learned plenty along the way - but, simply put, this is the most enjoyable blues compilation I've come across this year. I'm not the only one who likes it: it sold exceptionally well for a blues release and spawned many a catalog sale (more on that here). Recommended. Or check out any of Alligator's many anniversary compilations.

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: #187

Tracks:

Disc One


SongArtist
Year
1Give Me Back My WigHound Dog Taylor & The HouseRockers1971
2No Cuttin' LooseJames Cotton1984
3Black Cat BoneAlbert Collins & Johnny Copeland1985
4Big ChiefProfessor Longhair1980
5That's Why I'm CryingKoko Taylor1975
6Double Eyed WhammyTinsley Ellis1988
7I'm FreeLucky Peterson1990
8These Blues Is Killing MeA.C. Reed with Stevie Ray Vaughan1987
9RainLittle Charlie & The Nightcats1991
10Look But Don't TouchKenny Neal1991
11Fannie MaeElvin Bishop1991
12Serves Me Right To SufferJimmy Johnson1978
13Leavin'The Siegel-Schwall Band1988
14Born In LouisianaClarence "Gatemouth" Brown1989
15Leaving Your TownCharlie Musselwhite1990
16Drowning On Dry LandRoy Buchanan1986
17If I Hadn't Been HighDetroit Junior1980
18Trouble In MindBig Walter Horton1972


Disc Two


SongArtist
Year
1BrickAlbert Collins1980
2Pussycat MoanKatie Webster1989
3You Don't Exist Any MoreLil' Ed & The Blues Imperials1986
4Second Hand ManCarey Bell & Junior Wells1990
5I've Got Dreams To RememberDelbert McClinton1989
6Going Down To Big Mary'sThe Paladins1988
7300 Pounds Of Heavenly JoyBig Twist & The Mellow Fellows1983
8Going Back HomeSon Seals1976
9Strike Like LightningLonnie Mack1985
10The Middle Aged Blues BoogieSaffire - The Uppity Blues Women1990
11Eyeballin'Lonnie Brooks1981
12Full Moon On Main StreetThe Kinsey Report1987
13Crow JaneSonny Terry1984
14I'm The Zydeco ManClifton Chenier1982
15Don't Know What Love IsFenton Robinson1974
16Blues After HoursPinetop Perkins1978
17Boot HillJohnny Winter1984


Personal Memory Associated with this CD: In the days before the Internet, we filled out a card requesting a catalog via snail mail:

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Take 6 - Live (2000)


Note: this CD released using HDCD encoding. Recorded live at the Blue Note in Tokyo, Japan, October 4-6, 1999.

Not much to say about this one. If you like Take 6 (I do), you'll like this live recording (I do). And if you wonder if they can bring the close a cappella harmony vocals in a live setting, the answer is yes.

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: Did not chart

Tracks: My top picks today are If We Ever Needed The Lord Before (We Sure Do Need Him Now), How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You, and Mary.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None. I once had tickets to see the group and something came up so I gave the tickets to a friend. That was most likely in 2017.

Previously revisited for the blog:
The Standard (2008)Join the Band (1994)
Beautiful World (2002)He Is Christmas (1991)
Greatest Hits (1999)So Much 2 Say (1990)
Brothers (1996)Take 6 (1988)