2022 lists part 2: Cascading string quartets, Papa Joe Haydn's curves, and musicology with a bullet
Lars Vogt 1970-2022
podcast: rockcritics.com interview from 2008
2022 Slams Shut, part II
CLASSICAL
Classical still outsells jazz, but the peaking sub-subset of string quartets remains inexplicable as the Emersonians step off: how many yobs seek out competing editions of Beethoven cycles, or Schubert's Quintet in C major, or follow these players live? The constants prove uncanny: Haydn still counts as the space's crowbar composer. The Quatuor Psophos Haydn disc, Opus 54, has hijacked my attention as strongly as any Haydn release since the Jerusalem Quartet's Opus Op 20, 34 and 54 (Harmonia Mundi) over ten years ago. The detail work animates Papa Joe's larger curves: shapely dynamics, directional phrasing, and keenly felt ensemble—the act of listening feels palpable. (More conductors need to play chamber music.) The group adopted its name in 2016 from Pythagoras, the philosopher who believed music brought inner calm; "Psophos" is Greek for "noise."
Quatuor Psophos, Haydn String Quartets Opus 54 (Tuor Psophos)
Lars Vogt, In memoriam (Warners Classics), Janácek: Piano Works (Ondine)
Igor Levit, Tristan (Sony)
Quatuor Van Kuijk, Mendelssohn: Complete String Quartets, Vol. 1 (Alpha)
Jubilee Quartet, Schubert: String Quartet in E-Flat Major, D. 87 & String Quartet in G Major, D. 887 (Jubilee)
Herbert Blomstedt, Gewandhausorchester, Schubert Symphonies Nos. 8 "Unfinished" & 9 "The Great" (Deutsche Grammophon)
Leif Ove Andsnes, Mahler Chamber Orchestra, Chrstiane Karg, Matthew Truscott, Joel Hunter & Frank Guthmann, Mozart Momentum—1786 (Sony)
Alisa Weilerstein, Inon Barnatan, Beethoven Cello Sonatas (PentaTone)
Pavel Haas Quartet, Pavel Nikl, Boris Giltburg, Brahms Piano Quintet in F minor, Op. 34; String Quintet in G major, Op. 111 (Supraphon)
Lisa Batiashvili, The Philadelphia Orchestra, Yannick Nézet-Séguin & Giorgi Gigashvili, Secret Love Letters (DG)
Paul Lewis, Brahms Late Piano Works, Opp. 116-119 (Harmonia Mundi)
Ádám Fisher, Danish Chamber Orchestra, Brahms Complete Symphonies (Naxos)
Peter Sheppard Skærved & Daniel-Ben Pienaar, Mozart: The Palatine Sonatas, K. 301–306 (Athene)*
*friend of a friend
CLASSICAL REISSUES
Warner Classics has launched a notable reissue campaign for Walter Gieseking, the French-born German pianist best known for his glittering Debussy. These include sets of Mozart, Grieg, Schumann, and Ravel, with a handsome catch-all. Don't overlook his winning Bach box from 2017 (DG).
POP/ROCK REISSUES/SINGLES/ETC
Just because there's a paradigm doesn't mean it's not the only one. David Bowie's Chuck Berry cover makes the perfect choice for this androgynous unicorn, and would have grounded PinUps if he ever gave a damn about context. Also, the “Changes” demo here runs atop deep undercurrents. And spinning out from an avalanche of live recordings coming out of New Jersey, pieces of Madison Square Garden's roof are still falling back to earth from Springsteen's 1979 No Nukes show. Forget that whole Gentleman of Soul lounge act.
David Bowie, "Almost Grown" from A Divine Symmetry: The Journey to "Hunky Dory" (ISO/Parlophone)
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, The Legendary 1979 No Nukes Concerts (Sony)
Lou Reed, Words & Music, May 1965 (Light in the Attic)
Ride, "Vapour Trail (Vapour Mix)," featuring Robert Smith (Eat Your Own Ears)
Patrice Rushen, Straight from the Heart (Elektra)
Plainsong, In Search of Amelia Earhart (Elektra)
Rolling Stones, Live at the El Mocambo (Polydor)
Beach Boys, Sail on Sailor [Deluxe] (Capitol Catalog MKT)
Various, Summer of Soul ( ...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised): A Questlove Jam [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack] (1969, Legacy)
The Beatles, Revolver [Super Deluxe] (Universal Music)
Sonic Youth, In/Out/In (Three Lobed)
Prince and the Revolution, Live (1985, NPG/Legacy -2CD)
Pavement, Terror Twilight: Farewell Horizontal (Matador)
Neil Young, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion 1971 (Reprise)
Creedence Clearwater Revival At the Royal Albert Hall, April 14, 1970 (Craft)
The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Los Angeles Forum - April 26, 1969 (Legacy/Experience Hendrix)
POP/ROCK COMPILATIONS
The Toytown Pop Sound compilation, implacable proof that Paul McCartney need not exist, also seeded music with more punch and verve when it sprouted "power pop."
Various, Climb Aboard My Roundabout! The British Toytown Pop Sound 1967-1974 (Grapefruit)—Proof that Paul McCartney need not exist.
Various, John Sinclair Presents Detroit Artists Workshop (Strut Records)
Various, Gotta Get A Good Thing Goin': The Music of Black Britain In The Sixties (Strawberry Records)
Various, Miles Out to Sea: The Roots of British Power Pop 1969-1975 (Grapefruit)
Various, Biff Bang Pow! Better Life: Complete Creations 1984-1991 (Cherry Red)
BOOKS
Lenny Kaye's new history shakes up the R&R paradigm as much as Dan Charnas's Dilla Time rattles Rap's. Dilla Time brought that rare fervor of accessible music theory to the mainstream, where the music thrives, and whenever a musicology title hits the bestseller list, a choir of angels gets a new tour bus. RJ Smith revives Chuck Berry's charmed persona while meticulously deconstructing his perversions. Greil Marcus updates his Real Life Rock capsules, which count for as much of his thought as any of his longer works, and his folk book skates atop hushed revelation. Like all the best criticism, these writers complicate their subjects.
Lightning Striking: Ten Transformative Moments in Rock and Roll, by Lenny Kaye (Ecco)
Chuck Berry: An American Life, by RJ Smith (Simon and Schuster)
Dilla Time: The Life and Afterlife of J Dilla, the Hip-Hop Producer Who Reinvented Rhythm, by Dan Charnas (MCD)
One-Hit Wonders: An Oblique History of Popular Music, edited by Sarah Hill (Bloomsbury Academic)
Playing With Fire: The Story of Maria Yudina, Pianist in Stalin's Russia, by Elizabeth Wilson (Yale)
Perfect Sound: A Memoir in Stereo, by Garrett Hongo (Pantheon)
Folk Music: A Bob Dylan Biography in Seven Songs, by Greil Marcus (Yale University Press)
More Real Life Rock: The Wilderness Years 2014-2021, by Greil Marcus (Yale University Press)
The Running Kind: Listening to Merle Haggard, by David Cantwell (University of Texas Press)
My Pinup: A Paean to Prince, by Hilton Als (New Directions)
This Is What It Sounds Like, by Susan Rogers and Ogi Ogas (Norton)
Run Towards the Danger, by Sarah Polley (Penguin Press), best memoir
Black Country Music: Listening for Revolutions, by Francesca T. Royster (University of Texas Press)
ROLLOVERS (from last and past years)
Woody Guthrie: An Intimate Life, by Gustavus Stadler (Beacon Press, 2020)
Someone Who Will Love You in All your Damaged Glory, by Raphael Bob-Waksberg (Knopf, 2019)
Shutdown: How Covid Shook the World's Economy, by Adam Tooze (Viking, 2021)
People Love Dead Jews, by Dara horn (W. W. Norton, 2021)
Aftermath: Life in the Fallout of the Third Reich, by Harald Jähner (Knopf, 2021)
My Body, by Emily Ratajkowski (Metropolitan Books, 2021)
No one Is Talking About This, by Patricia Lockwood (Riverhead Books, 2021)
Looking For the Good War, by Elizabeth Samet (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021)
High Conflict, by Amanda Ripley (Simon & Schuster, 2021)
New York Public Library's Top Checkouts by Borough
CRITICISM
"Revered hip-hop producers, fearing they’d been left behind, went back to the drawing board; drummers relearned their instrument; bass players and keyboardists had to rethink their phrasing and chord progressions; critics tried and are still trying to puzzle out the mysteries of the J Dilla sound..."
—Francis Gooding on Dan Charnas’s Dilla Time, London Review of Books
"The album’s title track, co-written with Olsen's partner Beau Thibodeaux, is joyous, even carefree—easily the most fun she’s had on record to date. Its bliss deepens the grief that threads the more downcast songs, rather than contradicting it...."
—Sasha Geffen on Angel Olsen, Pitchfork
"The No paranoia about being turned into a kitchen appliance here, though; it’s all about love and bodies and other squelchy stuff."
—Richard Foster on Ride, The Quietus, prompting a comeback tweet, "how does this revival swing so much harder than some others?"
Milo Miles on Jerry Lee Lewis’s Live in Hamburg, Rolling Stone (2002)
RJ Smith on Wattstax, Los Angeles Times
[Sound and Vision Production Team] On Get Back’s 1969 production crew, Sound & Vision
Raphael Bob-Waksberg on TV, Rolling Stone
Michael Wood on Nope, At the Movies in the London Review of Books
Ben Sisario on Rudy Van Gelder's studio in the New York Times
Jon Caramanica on Rap Quoting History in the New York Times
SPECIAL MENTION
Timothy Snyder's The Making of Modern Ukraine, YouTube and podcast
MISCELLANEOUS
Links to 2022 riley rock report streams, articles, newsletter, podcasts, and books
Lost & Found Video Night Vol 4, from Michaelangelo Matos
MORE AOTY
Albumoftheyear.org
Aquarium Drunkard
Coversongs.com
Furia
Genius Top Albums 2022
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@retromusicads, and #musicadvertising
@jenafriedman: #ladykiller, and "How are parents freaking out about obscene books in libraries when there’s the internet. Do they know that there’s the internet?"
@theseconddisc on Thom Bell
@mariabamfoo's torrid twitter crush
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