Welcome to the meandering musical insights of Aaron Joy (me!), formerly known as the Roman Midnight Music Blog. Here you'll find nearly 750 reviews of CDs & DVDs of rock & metal in all its variations, mainstream & indie, good & bad, U.S. & foreign. A new review every Monday.

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Showing posts with label screaming trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label screaming trees. Show all posts

April 10, 2023

Mad Season ~ Above (album review) ... Poetic grunge supergroup with Screaming Trees, Alice In Chains, Pearl Jam, Howlin Wolf members!

Style: grunge, rock, blues-rock
Label: Columbia
Year: 1995
Home: Seattle, Washington

Members: Layne Staley ~ vocals/rhythm guitar
Mike McCready ~ guitars
John Baker Saunders ~ bass
Barrett Martin ~ drums/double bass/cello/marimba/vibraphone



Everybody knows the grunge supergroup Temple Of The Dog, though technically it was recorded before Pearl Jam made it big, but the one album by the equally potent grunge supergroup Mad Season - made after all involved had become big - has seemed to have slipped off the radar. It featured guitarist Mike McCready of Pearl Jam, frontman Layne Staley of Alice In Chains, drummer Barrett Martin of the Screaming Trees, & bassist John Baker Saunders who had played with Howlin' Wolf's guitarist Hubert Sumlin. For many, the inclusion of Layne is enough to warrant interest. The band was formed when Saunders & McCready met in rehab in 1994. Mad Season released this one album, before inevitable drug issues got in the way ... which makes a long sad story very short. After Layne's death they transformed into Disinformation with Screaming Trees frontman Mark Lanegan, who co-wrote a song here & sang on some songs that would appear as bonus tracks on re-issues of this album. Saunders death in 1999 brought the band to a close, before Disinformation could record a formal debut, though the remaining members have had some informal reunions on stage. I should mention that the bands these members were involved with, even Saunders, can all count me as a fan, so I'm totally biased going into this. Kurt killed himself when I was a junior in high school living over an hour north of Seattle. I had a lot of friends traumatized by this, so grunge was my childhood. I was too young to go to the bars, but the music was & remains an intrinsic part of my life. Mud Honey even played at my alma mater, Western Washington University - home of the Death Cab For Cutie & the Posies, who might have been in a class of mine - for the freshman orientation, while Bikini Kill & Sleater Kinney I saw in a converted lounge before the later went truly national. I still love the music as much as ever, & believe grunge was the last great music movement, & maybe the last hurrah before home studios, pro-tools & the internet. So, my bias aside, what does a whose who of grunge sound like? The answer is: it both hints at all the bands involved, but also completely & shockingly different. I do need to post a warning to curious listeners. You may love Alice In Chains or Screaming Trees or Pearl Jam, but this might not be your thing. 'Shockingly different' was a deliberately chosen phrase. On the other hand, you might not care for grunge at all, but find this album fascinating & addicting. Mad Season is thus an enigma. Where their peers Temple Of The Dog had a lot in common with the grunge sound, this really doesn't feel like grunge but instead has hints of grunge. It absolutely is not what I would expect from all involved. That's neither a bad nor good thing, but really depends on what you are looking for musically. I shall detail further. You can hear the melodic guitars & interesting rhythms that weaved through the Screaming Trees & Pearl Jam, but you won't mistake this for either band. Layne's voice is undeniably distinct, & these are mostly his lyrics, but he's not trying to imitate Alice In Chains. This album features a stripped back sound that none of those bands has ever had, or maybe just for a passing moment in a song or for one gimmicky song on an album. Mad Season ropes you in softly, & with rope made of tissue paper, versus pounding you on the head out the door. There is no mad rush like an Alice In Chains album has. The whole album is dreamy, floating & simplistic in its composition. Actually, the instruments almost have too much breathing room, as it often sounds improvised or like a jam with no real direction. The best comparison would be a Doors concert where the group is improvising through a contemplative Jim Morrison moment. That might be the best description of opener "Wake Up" where Layne pours out his meandering poetry, which sounds like poetry & not a typical song, over guitars that slowly roll out almost like an improvisation that is trying to take things extra slow. When things go up a notch for the guitar break its still pretty low key, like a drug trip that might be comparable to a bluesy Jimi Hendrix solo. There's very little polish here. The whole experience is raw & an emotional parade. It feels like an honest & real album, a real rarity. Its demons on display, not the next chart topping hit in the making. It sounds so different than the highly technical Alice In Chains you have to wonder if the inner Layne was stifled lyrically in that band, which says a lot given how dark some of those lyrics were. This is helped by the one thing that gets criticized: this album meanders. Songs don't feel like here's the verse, then the chorus, then the refrain. It has more in common with the Doors "The End" & "The Unknown Soldier," where the chorus is more a familiar point to regroup to than the big sing-a-long moment, yet without the big climaxes that Jim's songs had. Yet, there's so much  nakedness here lyrically that at times the meandering quality is a triviality. On the other hand, the 55 minutes can feel a bit long depending on one's mood when listening. It ends on an instrumental that personally dragged too much for my tastes. Rule of thumb: come to this not looking to rock, but instead to sit in a dark room in the rain with a glass of wine & maybe something to smoke. Its been said that Layne was reading The Prophet by Kahlil Gabran while writing & recording this, & felt like he was a on a spiritual mission. Having read the book, it absolutely feels that way.

January 13, 2011

Singles Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (comp) (album review) ... The soundtrack to end all soundtracks!

Style: grunge, hard rock
Label: Epic
Year: 1992
Home: Seattle, Minneapolis, Chicago


Includes following bands: Alice In Chains
Pearl Jam
Chris Cornell
Soundgarden
The Lovemongers
Mother Love Bone
Mudhoney
Jimi Hendrix Experience
Screaming Trees
Paul Westerberg
Smashing Pumpkins

Grunge is one of the more mysterious musical movements, united by geography not sound. At least when one talks L.A. everyone thinks big hair & glam, while San Francisco brings up images of 60's flower power, New Jersey is synonymous with Springsteen, with New York conjuring up ... well, that's always been questionable outside of the Velvet Underground. When grunge first came to national attention it was via the breakthrough overnight success of Nirvana & Pearl Jam that sound nothing alike let alone other bands in the area. Let alone the Seattle music scene was doing quite well before grunge with the label actually being a mis-representation of the diversity of bands playing there, even the bands labeled as grunge. If anything is grunge it might be Mudhoney & the Screaming Trees with Mother Love Bone being the glam side, if one is limited to nationally known bands. But, what it is or is not put Seattle on the map forever. So, to then make a movie about life in the city, even though it's just another city but with a little more rain & some mountains & lots of coffee, is a bit of an odd thing. Okay, so many residents are known for being laid back poets & artists, but that's not enough to make a movie out of. Though, when it comes to music soundtracks based around a mysterious musical genre that for all intensive purposes was around before it became known & died when Nirvana did, this is one of the best rock/metal soundtracks one could ask for. Actually, if it wasn't for the soundtrack the weakness of the movie would be much more apparent. It's much like Eddie & The Cruisers in this respect. Further, this is probably one of the few compilations where every song is outstanding with no weak links. It has a stellar line-up & thus no excuses: Alice In Chains, Pearl Jam, Chris Chornell solo & with Soungarden, The Lovemongers featuring Ann & Nancy Wilson of Heart, Mother Love Bone, Mudhoney, Jimi Hendrix, Screaming Trees, Paul Westerberg of the Replacements & the Smashing Pumpkins, though the last two are from Minneapolis & Chicago respectively but work incredibly well in the mix let alone ending the album perfectly with the distorted "Drown" by the Pumpkins. With both well known songs & some more obscure ones this very well could be a photograph of 90's Seattle. All it's missing is Nirvana ... surprisingly ... and some lesser known bands. Though, except for Hendrix and Mother Love Bone all the bands were making music at the time Singles was released in theaters with a few bands actually finding a big career boost afterwards. The highlights are many, which is why the album is one of the best selling of soundtracks of the 90's, let alone helped solidify the grunge movement. Highlights include Chris Cornell's haunting acoustic ballad "Seasons" which shows what a great singer he is, the Lovemonger's acoustic take on Led Zeppelin's "Battle Of Evermore" that couldn't even be eclipsed by the future Page/Plant reunion, the under-rated Hendrix gem "May This Be Love" from Are You Experienced, along with songs that would become hits for Mother Love Bone ("Crown Of Thorns"), Pearl Jam ("Breathe", "State Of Love & Trust"), Screaming Trees ("Nearly Lost You") & Alice In Chains ("Would?"). Paul Westerberg's material ("Dyslexic Heart," "Waiting For Somebody") is probably the lightest stuff on the album, being his first solo material & still sounding very Replacements-esque, but it also lends a comic balance to the heavy handedness of Soundgarden ("Birth Ritual") & raw distortions of underdogs Mudhoney ("Overblown"). This is one of those rare compilations where the range of styles paints a complete picture not a broken one of mis-matched music. This will get repeated listens where not a single track will want to be missed.