2026 January 21 • Wednesday

Look on the back of bassist Chuck Rainey's first solo record, The Chuck Rainey Coalition, and the first thing you'll notice is the line "If you've seen 'Midnight Cowboy,' you've heard Chuck Rainey".

From there it goes on to name a lot of other people you've heard Chuck Rainey playing with: Harry Belafonte, Laura Nyro, Janis Joplin, Quincy Jones, Lena Horne, The Four Seasons, Shirley Scott, The O'Jays, etc.

They could have mentioned Aretha Franklin, too, and probably literally hundreds more.

This first record of his great.

You can see the great people he's working with listed on the front cover there.

The mood throughout is pretty funky and groovy but at various speeds and intensities.

The first song "Eloise (First Love)" is a bit loungey and features the piano and strings. Rainey's bass is also prominent and playing some interesting lines in addition to holding down the low end. The rhythmic feel builds as it goes along.

Rainey starts "How Long Will It Last" with a determined, driving bass attack on one note. When the band comes in it starts swinging in a lighthearted mood and should make you start tapping your toes.

"Genuine John (Colors)" is a slow blues with an amazing feel and subtle percussion and guitar work. This is followed by a smooth, mid-tempo, grooving number called "The Rain Song" in which there's some cool baritone guitar as well as another guitar part that recalls Simon & Garfunkel's "Mrs. Robinson". The bass line at times has a "Day Tripper" shape to it.

A sharper and tighter sound comes next in "Got It Together", which is really a feature for overdriven guitar and has a slight blaxploitation soundtrack flavor.

The next track, "The Lone Stranger", is a bit like a slowed down Curtis Mayfield groove and also a feature for electric guitar. The bass and drums on this one are especially good.

I didn't think I needed to hear another "Harlem Nocturne" but "Harlem Nocturne/Zenzile" takes this much played tune to some new pieces, starting with the guitar intro, on which the guitarist is using some kind of watery wah effect. The string arrangements are nice and when the meter switches the rhythm section starts walking and there's excellent trumpet playing. The "Zenzile" part continues in this vein with some exciting bass embellishments and you can also hear someone exclaim, "Sock it to Me".

"It's Gonna Rain" is another blend of soul, blues and funk with some beautifully nasty electric guitar playing and more impressive but always tasteful bass work from Rainey.

All too soon you're hearing the last track and it's the "Theme from Peter Gunn". This is another one that I didn't think anyone had anything new to say about it but Rainey takes it faster and lighter, fluttering forward with it and bringing a nimble funk feel to it. I'm guessing that all bass players secretly or not so secretly want to play this bass line.

And then there's an unexpected break where they play something that sounds like "The Breeze and I"!


2026 January 19 • Monday

Midnight Cowboy is famous both for John Barry's main title music and the Nilsson song "Everybody's Talkin'". Both are really great. It's going to be the 892nd Soundtrack of the Week.

Quartet Records has put this out on 2 CDs, the first disc being the album release and the second the original film score. The first track on the album is the aforementioned Nilsson song. You must know it. Everyone knows it. It's a great song.

Then John Barry brings us "Joe Buck Rides Again", not the famous theme but a gentle and sweet piece of Americana featuring the harmonica. Speaking of harmonica, which is a huge part of the score in general and the famous theme in particular, the score and album have different harmonica players.

Jazz great Toots Thielemans played the harmonica parts for the score but Tommy Reilly handled the instrument for the album recording.

The third album track is a stereotypical "hippy" flower people sort of song by The Groop. It's called "A Famous Myth" and has nice vocal harmonies.

John Barry doesn't always get the credit he deserves for being a master of mood. "Fun City" is a masterpiece of atmosphere with astonishingly dark and heavy bass playing, magically understated drumming, deft and charming piano solos and classic Barry writing for strings.

Then there are a couple of really good songs. Lesley Miller's "He Quit Me" is a deep, slowish, soul-funk-blues with powerful vocals. "Jungle Gym at the Zoo" by Elephant's Memory is a pounding bit of acidy rock with great lyrics about being an animal.

And it's at this point that solo harmonica introduces the main title theme, one of Barry's best and most famous. In addition to its plaintive and sensitive qualities, the arrangement is fantastic, with a subtle guitar part adding an almost subliminal rhythmic undercurrent that connects it to the Nilsson song, a killer rhythm section and again strings with Barry's signature sound.

Elephant's Memory returns with "Old Man Willow", a very different sort of song with organ and watery, swirling guitar, solo female vocalist, psych-baroque arrangement, waltz time… It's really good, especially the chorus.

John Barry's "Florida Fantasy" starts out with gently tapping drums and then cheerful woodwinds, harpsichord and a woozy sort of electronic keyboard join in. When the whole combo gets together it breaks into a sunny, tropical groove.

"Tears and Joys" by The Groop is another very late-'60s commercial hippy/psych song. It's good but not as impressive as the Elephant's Memory songs.

John Barry's more haunting and pensive side comes out in "Science Fiction", which also foreshadows some of his Bond music for You Only Live Twice and Moonraker. It's beautiful.

Then what? "Everybody's Talkin'" again, several alternate takes, a single version of the main theme.

The film score on disc 2 has multiple versions of the Nilsson song as well as some amazing additional Barry cues.

The harmonica finds itself in a ghostly dreamscape in "Daydreams and Nightmares" and "Realization" is Barry's amazing take on acid psych rock. I wonder how many people would guess the composer in a blindfold test.

The main theme is given a heavier, extra-guitar interpretation in "Midday and Midnight Cowboy" whereas "You're the Only One, Joe" might be the most avantgarde thing Barry ever did, sounding like some kind of electronic industrial band doing something for a David Lynch movie.

Old timey guitar and piano are used as source music and are a bit like The Grateful Dead's "A Box of Rain". It's a very short piece by Toxey French called "Sunshine and Coconut Milk".

"Orange Juice on Ice" is another bit of source music, a chipper song that sounds like a commercial for Florida orange juice.

The main theme gets another more intense work out in "Night Life" and a very similar one in "The Cemetery".

But then Elephant's Memory is back with the nearly nine-minute long "The Gates of Hell", an epic extension of their two songs from the album, lots of jamming.


2026 January 16 • Friday

Hammond organ works just as well in rock as it does in jazz and it plays nicely with fuzz guitar in this not so well known self-titled record from 1968, Ivory.

Vocalisthenics Christine Christman sounds a bit like Grace Slick and the record is certainly in the Jefferson Airplane neighborhood, not much of a surprise since it was produced by Airplane's producer, Al Schmitt.

The opening track, "Silver Rains", is a proud psych-rock anthem while the next song, "Free and Easy", keeps the fuzz guitar but directs the band to a slightly jazzier feel.

Acoustic guitar and piano bring more of a sunshine hippy mood to "Losin' Hold", which has nice vocal harmonies and love-song lyrics.

This sentimental mood is sustained in "Laugh", which has more intense drumming but still a light and crystalline sound before we get back to the heavy, fuzzed out psych of "A Thought".

"I, of the Garden" re-introduces the jazzy feel and merges it with some trippy lyrics and changes in tone that should help your ears stay alert.

The remaining tracks—"All in My Mind", "A Light", "Last Laugh" and "Grey November"—are all really good but sound pretty similar to what's come before.


2026 January 14 • Wednesday

You'll often hear some kind of Hammond organ music coming out of the speakers at Gutbrain Headquarters. It's always exciting to add a new organ record to the collection and Lou Bennett's Amen is an excellent one.

Not only is this a great organ jazz album, with Bennett on Hammond, but it also features a great guitarist, Jimmy Gourley, who was new to me.

The fantastic Kenny Clarke is on drums and Jean-Marie Ingrand on bass.

The combo starts things off with a swinging take on Horace Silver's "Sister Sadie" and continues with a lighthearted and grooving interpretation of Miles Davis's "So What".

The tempo picks up a bit for Junior Mance's "Jubilation" and then gets speedier for Bennett's own "Brother Daniel", which has a hint of menace in its speedy lines and bluesy changes.

"Green Dolphin Street" starts out like church music and retains a serious mood throughout while the title track is by Donald Byrd and is a rocking sort of gospel-tinged number.

The CD has several bonus tracks, including stalwarts such as "Stella by Starlight", "Cheek to Cheek", "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You" and "Night and Day" as well as an alternate take of "Brother Daniel" and a haunting piano piece, "Reverie".


2026 January 12 • Monday

Maurice Jarre's theme from the movie Jacob's Ladder has found its way into the live performances and most recent recording of my band Elite Travelers. So let's make that score the 891st Soundtrack of the Week.

The main theme is a melancholy and atmospheric piano feature in 6/4 that has a hypnotic quality. Jarre went for sadness instead of horror in his approach and the movie itself is a gloomy sort of nightmare, suffused with sorrow.

This release contains the album presentation as well as the original film soundtrack. "High Fever" has wooden flute and pizzicato strings combining with percussion and sustained chords that shold please Angelo Badalamenti fans. It's a long piece that builds nicely.

"Descent to Inferno" starts with some sounds of terror and dread, with pulsating bass part, ominous low drones and metallic clanging before returning to the lush atmosphere of the previous track.

The main theme is then reprised in the lovely "Sarah", and then extended with impressive tenderness and lyricism, alternating with some more dread-inducing sonorities.

A lot more of this ominous atmosphere starts off "The Ladder", which does also include some lighter, more uplifting writing, braided together with dark, cloudy tones. This might not be one of Jarre's more dramatic score but it's absolutely one of his most beautiful and haunting.

The album release concludes with Al Jolson singing "Sonny Boy".

The film score has mostly the same music but presented in separate, shorter cues instead of miniature suites, and with more repetition. All of it is great to listen to.


2026 January 09 • Friday

Stockholm is one of the best record-store cities I've ever been to. And if I had to select a favorite shop, as much as I love Pet Sounds and Djungel & Jazz, my pick would have to be Record Mania.

Since we don't make it over to Stockholm that often, I decided not to hold myself back at Record Mania and to buy just about any record that had guitarist Rune Gustafsson on it.

(There was actually one such record that I decided not to buy because, well, it looked like it was probably not very good. The owner of the shop gave it to me for free.)

This turned out to be one of those trips where I bought so many records that the bag I was carrying in them fell apart. Luckily we made it almost the whole way before that happened.

But months and months later I'm still working my way through these albums. And some of them are shockingly good. Right now the most exciting one is In Pleno, by jazz pianist Jan Johansson.

This is a record that can hold its own against any number of classic US jazz records from the '50s or '60s. Johansson might remind you of Bill Evans on one tune or Horace Silver on another or Hank Jones or whoever. You can't really pin him down because he has his own voice.

The material ranges from West Coast-style jazz to some more avantgarde and interesting tracks, as well as an exciting take on the traditional "Joshua Fit de Battle of Jericho".

The band is also more than impeccable but brilliant. The musicianship and ensemble feel are extraordinary. Rune Gustaffson is on here, of course, drwaing favorable comparisons to Jim Hall and Kenny Burrell. The other contributors are Georg Riedel on bass, Egil Johansen on drums and Rupert Clemendore on percussion.

I hadn't been caring much about jazz recently but In Pleno reignited that particular flame for me. I left the record on the turntable and just kept listening to it.


2026 January 07 • Wednesday

Julianna Riolino's All Blue was an instant favorite of mine when it came out a few years ago and listening to it dozens of time didn't diminish my enjoyment of it at all.

So it's exciting to have her follow-up record now. Echo in the Dust is another exciting, meticulously crafted, sometimes rocking, sometimes dreamy album.

My favortie song from All Blue ended up being "Hark" but it's too early to say what the favorite track from Echo in the Dust is going to be.

Likely candidates include "On a Bluebird's Wing", which would be great to listen to while driving or, if you're me, biking.

"Like a Rembrandt", with its powerful and assured vocals and distorted guitar riff that recalls Link Wray's cover of "Please Please Me", is a perfect opener that eases the listener back into Riolino's musical world.

1950s rock and pop traits are cleverly reassembled for "Seed", which also surprises with a shift in both meter and intensity without abandoning that previous era.

Art rock that's like a considerably more domesticated Tropical Fuck Storm gets a nod in "I Wonder" while "Let Me Dream" might be the best of the slower and more hypnotic songs.

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Of course you should just buy it and draw your own conclusions!


2026 January 05 • Monday

Let's start 2026 with Charles Bronson and Lee Marvin. The 890th Soundtrack of the Week is Jerrold Immel's music for their movie Death Hunt.

Angie Dickinson and Carl Weathers are in it too. I bet it's pretty good!

The score is solid. "Main Title/Dog Fight" starts off with some swirling strings that would suit a horror movie, soon balanced by a heroic theme for brass and martial snare drum.

Pastoral Americana comes next in "Man's Best Friend/The Cabin", which features harmonica and flute.

The main title music is reprised and some other suspense/horror moods added for "Millen's Posse/Shoot Low", with the horror feel continued in "Thawing Out/Dynamite/He's Gone".

The first half of "Would It Make Any Difference/In Pursuit" returns to the harmonica-led Americana territory before veering off again into tense action/terror music.

A pensive sound that also suggests the wide-open spaces of the western is the main ingredient of "Millen and Johnson Spot Each Other" and then it's back to unsettling, sharp, dangerous sonorities for "Hazel and Alvin Fight/Running with the Caribou".

More aggravated, often dissonant sustained tones, jagged staccato phrases and ominour low swells keep everything on edge for "Aerial Pursuit" and then things settle down a bit for the tense but lower key "Another Hard Choice/Across the Ice Peaks" and "One Last Chance/Now You're in Charge".

The "End Credits from Death Hunt" reprise the hopeful Americana theme, and then there are four pieces of source music, three of them fiddle and piano music with the fourth, a rendition of "My Darling Clementine" played on accordion or similar instrument.

Fans of John Williams and Jerry Goldsmith are likely to enjoy this one.


2026 January 02 • Friday

One of the most exciting record labels around right now is Riding Easy. My favorite releases from them tend to be these rescues of long lost, sometimes never before released recordings of heavy psych/prog/rock music from the early 1970s though they also release recordings by current bands.

For an example of something brought back from the distant past, check out thie Granicus LP!

It starts strong with the aggressive "You're in America" and "Bad Talk", both loud, fast and hard-hitting songs in a Black Sabbath/Led Zeppelin.

Then strings come in for a mellow instrumental called "Twilight"—think the intro to "Collage" by James Gang—followed by a monstrous 11-minute song called "Prayer", which is also very pretty mellow several minutes before the fuzz box gets stomped and the drums come crashing in.

They were originally from Cleveland but moved to New York, where they recorded this album and the song "Cleveland, Ohio" has a repeated line "I'm getting out of Cleveland, Ohio".

"Nightmare" starts as a trippy, spacey, laidback number before picking up speed, followed by the headbanging, Zeppy "When You're Movin'".

The last song, "Paradise", is another long one, at a little over seven minutes, and is an intense, mostly up-tempo rocker that has trace elements of Hendrix as well as the stirrings of hard core and metal.

Seriously, this record is great. Check it out!