Sep 3 2010

Blackberry Smoke “Little Piece of Dixie” Review

Blackberry Smoke is a band I first heard back at the Machine Shop playing the Redneck Rodeo shows that Whitey Morgan and Dixie Hustler would always be the openers on. They put on a great set and it’s always a good test of a band to hear them live without knowing any of their songs. If they can pull you in when you don’t know the lyrics, then you know you are listening to a great live band. So I hadn’t stumbled on any of their cds until just recently when I saw one of their songs on a “Promo Only Country” cd, so I looked for their newest release and copped it off itunes that morning. What I heard did not disappoint, from the opening single “Good One Comin’ On” to the last track “Freedom Song” I was intrigued enough that I listened to it again immediately after the first run through. The song that stuck the most was “Bottom of this” a great song about wanting to hear about his wife’s problems and help “get to the bottom of that after I get to the bottom of this”. “Like I am”, “Restless” and “Prayer for the little Man” are some other standout tracks. This is the album Bob Ritchie wishes he could make, as they say it’s “Too rock for country and too country for rock” This dilema has them in a spot where radio play is minimal and they have to build their following through word of mouth and their live shows. But something tells me anyone who sees BBS live comes away a fan. This is my favorite album of the last year, if you like Kid Rock, Skynyrd, Kracker, Dirty Americans and the like, you’ll love Black Berry Smoke.

Blackberry Smoke Website

Blackberry Smoke Facebook


Sep 3 2010

Rehab “Welcome Home” Review


So when I first heard the new single a month ago, I loved “Welcome Home” and was excited about the new Rehab album, then it came out and holy shit did it suck the first listen.  The backlash on their facebook page was legendary. One even told the band to

“Spit out kid rock’s cum and go make a new album”

I can’t make this kind of shit up, my personal outlook immediately was that the band had spent too much time touring with Uncle Kracker and some of the slow popish music that Kracker uses to pay his mortgage was wearing off on them.  Now I couldn’t be too pissed with Kracker, without him performing “Bartender” back at the Machine Shop in Flint back in like 2001 or 2002, I never would have heard of Rehab and would have missed out on a bunchy of great music.  Fast forward to this past Saturday morning, having listened to the album 2 or 3 times all the way through, I thought I had given it ample time to either grow on me or go away.  I’ve got a personal theory with music that if I listen to an album or song and the first time I think it’s great, I’ll listen to it for 2 weeks and then never listen again.  On the other hand when I hear and album and am just blah about it, when the time comes that I finally do give it a proper listen, I tend to really like the album.  So with that back to Saturday morning, I wake up and all that is going through my head is Danny Boone signing

“All I ever Wanted”

Now I hadn’t listened to “Welcome Home” in at least a week, so it was weird to me that I couldn’t get the chorus to the opening track out of my head, so my Saturday  morning was for house cleaning so I grab the iPod and throw on the album thinking  it’ll clear my head and I can move on with something else after giving “#1″ a listen.  What transpired for the next 45 minutes was me hearing the album for what it really is, gone was the feeling of how slow, bland  and boring the songs were, they had new life and the album I was listening too sounded nothing like my first impressions.  So here’s a track by track breakdown of the new album.

1.  #1:  Love this song, great narrative about an artist hitting New York and wanting to be #1 and “bring home a million bucks” back to Georgia.  Not sure if this is a somewhat true story or just well written version of how it might have been, but great way to start the album.

2.  Oh My:  This song rocks, has a lot of the old Rehab attitude and sound to it, without being the same ole same.

3.  Lightening Bolts:  I can relate to Danny on this one, as we get older these are things we think of.  The song is basically a message to his parents if he “goes before them both” and that he’ll visit them in lightening bolts.  Has some of the old rap vibes in the second verse and shows Danny’s versatility.

4. Decisions:  My favorite song the first time thru, another song that shows a grown man perspective on the world.

5.  Welcome Home:  I prefer the single version without the strings at the beginning, but still a great song and the best song of 2010 in my opinion.

6.  Ole Friends:  Just a good ole drinking with old friend song.

7.  Some People:  Great song that tells the world how most middle class people feel about those in big houses with all the money.

8.  Everybody Everywhere:  This one really gives a new feel to Rehab, with a chorus that probably makes most old school fans want to break the cd in half if they could, but it fits the vibe of the album perfectly.

9.  Talk About:  Great road song.

10.  Ride Out Chick:  The closest they got to the old Rehab sound, but just an ok song to me, doesn;t fit the rest of the vibe and lyrical content.

11.  I won’t Back Down (bonus track):  Really nice sound, almost seems like they went into the studio and were messing around and liked what came out.

So in the end, It’s a solid album that needs a few listens before you really get it.  Some of the younger Rehab fans won’t ever get the albums content and will continue to hate on it online, but the band is releasing a Fixtape that is said to feature more rapping and old school Rehab, so they can grab that and be satisfied and hopefully the rest of the world gets to hear this album and see how good it really is.

Final Verdict:  8/10  If it had featured a few more songs and had the unreleased song “Burt Reynolds” on it, it would have gotten a 9 or 10, but a solid album from Danny Boone and company and hopefully I get a chance to see these guys live soon.


Feb 22 2010

7daybinge

New supergroup with an awesome ep just released only $3.99 at bestbuy


Nov 20 2009

Where are they now?

So I just finished watching the movie about the band “Anvil” and it made me start to wonder where some artists who had their day in the sun are now?  Some of the first people I thought of were R&B types, like Ginuwine, Shai, Blackstreet! just to name a few.  And there are always Craig Mack to wonder about.  Country seems to be creating this more now than anywhere else, maybe it’s because I don’t pay attention to Rap and R&B as much as when I was younger, but it seems country has a new artist every day.  Guys like Justin Moore, Chris Young, and pretty much anyone who competes on a CMT show.  Makes me wonder where the acts who used to have those radio spots went, and how long will we still hear those names on the radio?  Country keeps the studs around as long as they want to, acts like Brad Paisley, Tim McGraw, George Strait and the likes.

But in the end there’s only so much time on the radio for songs and the more new ones they add and the more they play Taylor Swift and Rascal Flatts, the less time there is for those classic artists we’ve heard for years.  We’re in a weird era right now where the new artists are the ones making good solid records, Justin Moore’s album is 5 times as good as Toby Keith’s latest, Zac Brown’s album has more creativity than a million Rascal Flatts.  In the past it’s always been the “Top Artists” who got all the best songs from the songwriters, but it really seems lately people are digging artists who write their own songs more than ever.  This is a great trend for me as I’ve long preferred an artist who is writing his own songs and pouring some of themselves  into the songs.  I’m a fan of Tim McGraw but it’s very evident on his most recent album which songs he recorded but he likes them or helped write them and which songs the label said need to be on the album for singles.  That being said minus the first single, “Southern Voice” might be his best album to date.

In the end I wonder if artists like Zac Brown and Jamey Johnson are able to keep the same creativity that got them to the top of the charts, or if the labels will dumb them down like they do everyone else?


Nov 2 2009

Mac Lethal Leaks

My man Mac Lethal (lethalville.net) has been leaking tracks from his new mixtape “Blood int he Water” via Twitter and Facebook for the last week. So far he’s dropped 6 new joints for free, so I thought I’d give you a post with all 6 joints on it for your listening pleasure.

Punk Bitch Clown Freestyle

Kinda Like a Big Wheel Freestyle

Chub in the Water

Delicate Touch

October on the Beach freestyle

2 Bottles Clacking

Mac had this to say about the last song
Here you guys go! Here is free song #6. I really like this. I wrote the lyrics and made the beat while giving out Twix bars to trick-or-treaters for Halloween. It’s definitely a chilly, Fall song. Enjoy it. I hope it helps soothes any pain or stress. “Two Bottles Clacking” produced, written, recorded, and mixed by Mac Lethal


Oct 22 2009

Hush Videos

Hush – Rise Again

Hush – Open Book


Oct 22 2009

FREE Hush

media-card_blackberry_pictures_hush-the-open-book-cover-300x300Free Hush!!!

Just about 3 years ago one of the good guys on the scene seemed to have had the world by the balls. Hush was releasing his album “Bulletproof” on Geffen Records, having his music exposed to the world on National Television, and being given the kind of shine anyone in the biz would love from media outlets nationwide. I remember picking up Maxim Magazine and “Bulletproof” being recognized as Album of the Month. I did not know Hush personally, but as a fan of the Detroit Music Scene, I was proud.

Fast Forward a few Months

I was walking out of a local show when someone handed me a T Shirt. I tucked the T shirt and continued to my car. I got situated in the ride, looked at the T shirt and it said Free Hush! I did not know what was going on, but in support I wore that shirt quite a bit. I have always believed that this scene needs to be united, and to me, wearing that shirt showed some support to a guy that has always supported Detroit.

Fast Forward a few years (Present)

Hush is now free. Free from a contract with Geffen, Free to do what he wants to do, the way he wants to do it. I recently sat down with Hush and just kicked it. This wasn’t some “lets sit down and do an interview shit, I hit Hush up and said Whats up? We got to chatting a bit and I asked him if we could just bullshit a little bit about everything. He shot me over a copy of the new CD “The Open Book” which I immediately threw it in the CD player, and I gotta tell ya, I WAS BLOWN AWAY. It changed my whole perspective on things, it inspired me to write. That takes a lot for me these days, I really worry about the state of Hip Hop. The Production on the record is pretty fuckin dope. Hush is on some personal mission on this album. When we got together, my whole focus kinda changed, it was no longer about getting to the bottom of the Geffen situation, it was more about the new material, and not surprisingly Hush seems to have the same focus. He seems 100% focused, he seems 100% dedicated, he seems 100% passionate. I did not intend to write this, I was also inspired. I asked him the following questions…

Continue reading


Oct 22 2009

Time to kill the inactivity

So I’ve always envisioned Radiowontplayme to be a great opportunity to showcase the bands that I love who don’t get attention from mainstream media, and hoped with that I’d be able to ad some advertising and make enough coin to pay for the site along the way, or maybe even come out ahead.  So I’ve always tried to go the professional route with the posts and reviews, but starting today I’m going to alter that a bit.  I’ve found there to not be enough stuff that I want to share with the world, thus leading to periods of inactivity and a terrible blog as a result.  Starting today this blog will change a little and feature some things other than music (little pop culture, movies, tv etc.) and also be more of a “hey here’s something I like” type vibe.  I’ve got some friends who blog from time to time, but they never seem to blog frequently enough to help with the blog’s life, so I’m not gonna expect anything out of them anymore.

So here’s a video from back in ‘94 that most people didn’t catch wind of, I think the Curt Cobain line rubbed some people the wrong way and held this record back.

House of Pain – Legend


Sep 14 2009

Uncle Kracker “Happy Hour” Review

Uncle Kracker’s first cd in almost 5 years hits stores tomorrow (09/15), and all reports have had the record turned in a couple years ago, rehashed, turned in again and now finally seeing the light of day.  It looks like rumored tracks with Leo Sayer (Happy Hour) and Boyz 2 Men (The One That Got Away)  didn’t make the cut on the retail version I’m reviewing.  I have however heard a 5 song sampler that found it’s way to me last year, that featured Happy Hour, The One That Got Away, Vegas Baby (Should have been in the Hangover) and my favorite track “That’s What’s Happenin” with the great line “I make pop hits, cuz pop checks are bigger”  Gotta love honesty in music artists.  So here’s a track by track review of the retail CD available in stores tomorrow.  The Amazon download version features 3 bonus cuts “Celebrate”, “Josephine” and “Let me Love You”

Overall:  8/10  Very refreshing to hear an artist make an album about being happy and loving their life, too many of today’s artist can only write good songs after they are dumped or something bad happens in their life.  The majority of us don’t need music to make things seem worse, music should enlighten us and make our days brighter and more fun.  Kracker does a great job capturing a fun, feel good vibe on virtually every track on the album.

1.  Smile:  The first single from Happy Hour is one of the few traditional ballads included, and makes for a good first single.

2.  Another Love Song:  Very clever song which disguises itself as a tongue in cheek question about whether the world needs another love song, and in turn really is another love song.  Great song.

3.  My Girlfriend:  If this were a country album, this would be the “Novelty Track” but in pop circles, it could very well be one of the next singles from the album.  Starts out as a song about a broken hearted man, and when we hear “the person she’s meeting isn’t a he” we then get the very poppy upbeat chorus of “My girlfriend’s got a girlfriend now”  and then the typical male response of  “It was cool for a minute, now it’s bringing me down”  Very good song, reminds me of Lit, Blink 182 late 90’s type music.

4.  Living the Dream:  This track takes the chorus from the Tawny Kitean…I mean Whitesnack song “Her I go Again” and gives it an Uncle Kracker touch, making it a song that you can’t help but sing along too.

5.  Corner Bar:  This track amazes me at it’s ability to fit the “happy, fun” vibe of the album.  A song about “Detroit/Michigan’s woes” that still manages to have an “I’m still ok” vibe to it.  “You can take my house, take my car, but you can’t take my seat at the corner bar”

6.  Me Again:  This song is pretty much a country ballad, featuring country singer Jesse Lee dueting with Kracker wishing that the next time an ex falls in love it’s with “me again”

7.   Good To Be Me:  The song that describes the vibe of the album, no real good reason that he feels it, but it’s just good to be Uncle Kracker

8.  I Hate California:  This song is another novelty type pop song, about a girl who leaves and goes to California causing UK to hate Cali.  This song  features some punchlines like “I wish she’s meet Phil Specter and he asks her to come home” Pretty harsh, but funny.  And the line “She’s selling scientology with John, Tommy and Katie, man I bet she’s really got it made”

9.   Hot Mess:  The only song on the album that falls flat, I really like the music that backs it, but the lyrics and chorus seem forced to try to add an element of “Hip-Hop” to the album.

10- Hey Hey Hey:  UK’s second song with the same naming strategy, one of his first singles was “Yeah, Yeah, Yeah” back in 2001.  It’s another great sing along that “the sun is shining on my face and everything will be ok”

11- I’m Not Leaving:  The only track from the 2008 sampler to make the final cut, it’s another good love song in the mold of “Memphis Soul Song” “Rescue” and “Writing It Down”  The kind of song Kracker can release and the AC crowd will eat up and gain him a few hundred k more sales.

12- Main Street:  Originally featured on side 2 of Bob Seger’s classic “Night Moves” UK covers it the way Seger should be covered, without trying to alter the formula much and just singing a great song.  It’s nice to hear a true cover these days, ever since Limp Bizkit’s “Faith” cover, it seems everyone wants to make a song “theirs” rather than just cover a great song and let it stand on it’s own.

In the end, I love the album and haven’t stopped listening to it all weekend, I really wish “Vegas Baby” and “That’s What’s Happening” made the album, but maybe Atlantic has a different strategy for them (Hangover 2?).  After 72 and Sunny and the last time I saw Kracker live, I had almost written him off as being an artist whose music I was into.  I’ve always dug UK as a person and love the realism you feel when he interviews, just started disliking the Ballad filled music he was creating.  With this release Kracker has gotten a fan back and I hope to hear many more album coming from “The Clem” with a fun and happy vibe to them that people can listen to and feel good about their day.


Sep 14 2009

Kid Rock – Times Like These Live

Kid Rock debut this new song at his Detroit shows this summer, just noticed this pretty good live video of it on youtube. Check it out, let me know what you think. Later today I’ll have a review of Uncle Kracker’s new CD “Happy Hour” which hits stores tomorrow.