Groove Music Life Video

One Musician’s Opinion on AKB48 as an Instrument-Wielding Pop-Rock Band…

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AKB48′s self-played performance of their forthcoming single “Give Me Five” under the assumed name/side project Baby Blossom is getting a lot of attention in the J-Pop blogosphere. Despite the raw playing and the questionable sound reinforcement (the result of either no proper soundcheck the day of the performance, or the soundman not taking into consideration how different the room was going to sound with an audience full of people as compared to when the only people in the building were AKB48 and their road crew), they still made quite an impression on me. As someone that has been playing a variety of instruments his whole life, I definitely want to critique and give some serious suggestions to the girls because there’s a lot of room for improvement.

For those that don’t know, I’m a trained musician. I play several different instruments (guitar is my main one, and I presently own five that are all named after J-Pop singers) and there’s a bunch more that I’ve tried but could never get a good enough handle on (trying to teach myself alto sax at age 19 resulted in way too many references to Horatio Hornblower and goat calling from my otherwise supportive parental units) and I’ve played in several different bands for over a decade after my graduation for high school – in fact, it ended up being my main income during the waning years of Reagan America when the only other place that was offering steady employment was the Armed Forces (who had already turned me off when they were relentlessly trying to recruit myself and my other classmates during my junior and senior years of high school and then for months afterward). It’s this musical background that has been a blessing to my activities as a writer and blogger, especially since, as essential brother Ray Mescallado said once, I “aspire to quality music writing” (one of the best compliments I’ve ever gotten on my work – thanks again, man.)

Anyway, having watched and listened to the live performance of the song, here’s my notes:

The four girls playing horns were basically the weakest link in the chain. With only a few months of experience on their instruments, they sounded not much different than the brass players in your average junior high or high school marching band. That having been said, brass and woodwind instruments are not the easiest instruments to learn. I attempted to learn trumpet in 6th grade, as well as my aforementioned attempt to try alto sax almost a decade later, and only realized one thing – I didn’t have the lung power to get away with playing a horn properly.

The keyboardists and percussionists involved were a bit inaudible, but I blame the soundman for that, and in all fairness, I won’t critique them.

Yuki Kashwagi did a very impressive job behind the drum kit – I don’t think she even missed a beat. If she found herself in a working rock band after graduating AKB48, I wouldn’t be surprised.

Minami Takahashi did fine playing lead guitar, but her silence for the last few bars of the second chorus before the solo was typical of the beginner. There was a couple of obvious missed notes, but the only thing that grated on me with her playing was her rather bizarre and uncomfortable/unnatural-looking left hand fretting technique. Continued woodshedding and a bit of study with some good guitar instructional videos would help tremendously – they certainly did when I picked the guitar back up after a couple of years of hardly touching it!

Yuko Oshima fluctuated a couple of times on bass but she held her own very well, while Atsuko Maeda showed a lot of confidence playing rhythm guitar.

It’s being openly hoped by AKB48 fans that the AKB48 members involved will continue with this Baby Blossom side project in live performance and maybe even in the studio, and I share those hopes. Quite frankly, it would suck if they stopped playing after pulling off what they did the other night!

BEST ALBUMS OF 2011: #1: FOO FIGHTERS “Wasting Light”

FOO FIGHTERS
Wasting Light

(Roswell/RCA)
Available on CD, LP, iTunes, AmazonMP3, eMusic, and Spotify

While I’ve been inconsistent in my buying of Dave Grohl’s efforts since his first Foo Fighters album dropped in 1995, to be honest, listening to this album made me regret it immensely to the point where I turned around and filled in the considerable holes in my collection. And Pat Smear’s back in the band while Bob Mould and Krist Novaselic join in on the fun? Yes, please.

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GROOVE MUSIC LIFE VIDEO: Happy Holidays From The Groove Music Life!

We’ll start with, appropriately for this blog, Morning Musume’s legendary 60′s Christmas Medley:

…Followed by something to match the other focus of this blog from punk legends The Dickies. Trans-Siberian what?

A Tom Waits-ian take on “We Three Kings”, courtesy of Mojo Nixon, and done up for YouTube by this author, WPIX Yule Log style:

And speaking of Tom Waits, what would the holidays be without a Christmas card from a hooker in Minneapolis?

Here’s a skewed, ahead-of-its-time view of a commercialized Christmas from legendary pianist/satirist Tom Lehrer:

Here’s another number I’ve shared before, but with a different performance (the original SNL performance keeps getting kicked off of YouTube):

And as long as I’m digging in the crates, let’s hear from Yossi, Gocchin and Yasuda-chan:

Since we’re in the middle of Hanukkah this year, we’d be remiss to not play this little number:

…and finally, in the further interest of equal time, one for the Scrooges out there:

Happy Holidays, everyone!

Happy Halloween!

This is a bit of classic music-related TV that I’d totally forgotten about until friend and fellow musician Dom Cassise posted a link to this clip on his Facebook this evening.

Back in the early 70′s there was a program originating in Canada called The Hilarious House of Frightenstein, produced by the same production company that would later create SCTV. (The Wikipedia link embedded in the title will give a pretty good summary of what the show was like). The segment I always liked on this show, at a point when I was already a young music lover, was the Wolfman’s radio station segment. Pretty much every Wolfman segment was like this one: Sly And The Family Stone’s “I Want To Take You Higher” would introduce the segment, the Wolfman (played by the late Billy Van) would do his DJ rap, take a phone call, slap a 45 onto the turntable (randomly dropping the needle anywhere on the record), grab his bat-shaped prop electric guitar, and dance in front of a blue screen along with some of the other characters. Most certainly, this program segment was another early musical influence on me way back when (and I was out to absorb pretty much anything I could get at that young age, believe me).

There have been home video editions of this program but many of them lack the Wolfman’s segments thanks to master licensing issues. Thankfully, some folks did archive reruns of the program and upload the Wolfman segments to the web, preserving for eternity otherwise lost classic TV footage like this.

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Happy Birthday!

…to Miyabi Natsuyaki of Berryz Koubou and Buono!, who turns 19 today (and who’s shirt on the “Yuki Yuki Monkey Dance” single inspired this blog’s name)…

…to Elvis Costello, who turns 57…

…and a special Happy 60th Birthday to the Metal God, Rob Halford of Judas Priest, seen here with the Metal Son of God, aka The Man Who Should Be Idol (that’s right, I’m still not letting that one go, folks…):

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Yes, Indeed.

More videos of this type here.

Les Paul Would Still Be Proud…

In honor of Les Paul’s 96th Birthday, some of my favorite players of his signature axe:

Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols:

Robert Fripp:

Two for one here… Ace Frehley and Slash!

Neil Young:

Jimmy Page:

Zakk Wylde, here playing with the man who should be Idol:

The Stooges’s Straight James Williamson, here doing a warmup gig with the band Careless Hearts before rejoining Iggy and company:

Randy Rhoads:

And while I’m not one to be posting my own guitar wanking on here, today I can make an exception and share something I did this morning on my own Les Paul, nicknamed after my favorite MoMusu:
Les Paul Birthday Riffin’ by thegroovemusiclife

And to finish off, a now-classic beer ad (not a beer I would ever drink, though) featuring Les himself.