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This is a review of both of my solo LP's. Now I'm not sure exactly what these say (or why a site with a Belgian domain is written in Dutch) but I got an idea from Babelfish that this guy likes 'em both. Link.
"De uit New Haven, Connecticut, komende singer-songwriter Spike Priggen heeft vooral binnen New York een sterke reputatie opgebouwd als leverancier van doorleefde muziek, stadsmuziek met gitaren als dominante factor. Buiten New York is hij niet zo bekend en misschien is zijn muziek wel te Amerikaans. Toch is het de moeite waard om naar zijn muziek te luisteren, er doen ten eerste altijd goede muzikanten op mee. Op zijn debuut album "The Very Thing That You Treasure" is dat Scott Yoder (Tandy, Star City), Jon Graboff (Amy Rigby), Joe McGinty (Psychedelic Furs), Jane Scarpantoni (R.E.M., Nathalie Merchant) en Brian Doherty (They Might Be Giants) en verder ... levert hij gewoon kwaliteit.
We horen elementen uit alt.country en roots en voor de liefhebbers van singer-songwriters is er een hoop te genieten. Priggen's zijn debuut, voor het nadrukkelijk aan de weg timmerende label Volare Records, is er een om je vingers bij af te likken. Als je tenminste van de betere power-pop houdt, zoals de nummers: "Yesterday", de ballads "The Right Thing" en "Nothing", en "I'm In Love" dat klinkt als een mix van country met rock en pop. Spike Priggen heeft een prachtplaat afgeleverd in 2001 met dit debuut, een plaat waarin hij trouwens bewijst een uitstekend singer-songwriter te zijn.
Op zijn volgende soloplaat "Stars After Stars After Stars" tapt hij uit een ander vat, niet dat de muziek zozeer verschilt. Neen, deze plaat is volledig een coverplaat. Hetgeen we eerder verwachten van reeds gevestigde artiesten, dan van iemand als Priggen die zich nog moet bewijzen. Maar goed, met de hulp van muzikanten uit bevriende bands brengt Priggen een eigen interpretatie van o.a. "How We Were Before" (Zombies), "Nighttime" (Big Star), "I"m Eightteen" (Alice Cooper), "Big Store" (Stephen Duffy), "Plain Sailing" (Tracy Thorn), allemaal songs van diverse pluimage en waarin hij volledig slaagt. Spike Priggen zijn beide albums staan voor mooie toegankelijke liedjes, bekwame muzikanten en een hele mooie stem; meer is er soms niet nodig om de luisteraar in de zevende hemel te krijgen. In de VS wordt het nummer "Every Broken Heart" uit zijn debuut gebruikt in een populaire tv-serie, dus ik voorspel nu alvast dat we in 2006 veel gaan horen van deze bijzondere rockmuzikant." Link.
So I got a song in this movie "The Last Run", "Alright" from "The Very Thing That You Treasure". I guess it's going straight to dvd/cable. I was surprised at how pro the website looks, with a serious logo (with those 70's male/female symbols) and lots of pictures and whatnot.. It stars Fred Savage from The Wonder Years and some chicks that appear to be some sort of hot strippers. Please buy like 90 copies 'cause they have to pay me more if it grosses some astronomical sum that it's guaranteed not to.
A bunch of Realplayer files and MP3's of some songs from my 1st CD.
Every Broken Heart.rm
Alright.rm
The Right Thing.rm
Look It Up.rm
She Used To Be My Baby.mp3
I'm In Love.mp3
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An exemplary volume of power-pop anguish, May 13, 2003
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In 2001, Priggen finally ventured out front for this debut solo CD. On it he combines a wealth of pop and rock influences, including Big Star's chiming melodiousness (along with antecedents like The Beatles, Searchers, and Byrds), the quirky styles of Chris Stamey and Mitch Easter, the power-pop energy of Velvet Crush and The Greenberry Woods, and hints of the 70s guitar excess Matthew Sweet brought to bear on his post-Girlfriend albums. At times his lyrics seethe with John Lennon's anger (and wit), but most often, and most brilliantly, they hinge on the sort of forlorn melancholy that Chris Bell made so affecting.
The opener is a note-by-note textbook of the perfect pop song. The vocal is at turns angry and defiant (the song opens "I never thought that I could be this bitter / I never thought that I could hate you the way that I do"), but ultimately the bravado gives way to a sense of haggard defeat in the refrain, "every broken heart is like the first one." Cascading guitars (including a volume pedal effect that beautifully captures the sadness of pedal steel) and unusually flanged cymbals perfectly underscore the lyrical despair. The overall effect is a mesmerizing outburst of emotion - something that everyone who gets dumped should listen to for a few days without interruption.
Priggen's ferment takes a sharper turn with the howling guitars and surreal mellotron of "Alright," and the riff-heavy "Yesterday" finds Priggen stridently whinging, "Yesterday, you couldn't live without me." The album's balance of electric and acoustic, loud and soft, rockers and ballads is impressive, but it's the contemplative, downbeat numbers that really stick to the ribs. "The Right Thing" and "Outtasight" brilliantly capture the end-of-the-night (or early morning) exhaustion of an emotional downpour in both their words and music. Acoustic and resonator guitars, Searchers-like electric 12-string, wavery mellotron, and folk harmonies perfectly match the emotional tenor of the lyrics.
Priggen's work as producer captures the jangly sheen of his songs with a ragged glory that spells out his emotional distress. The odd bits of vocal echo on tracks like "The Right Thing" and "So Good to See You" are at once noticeable and atmospheric, as are the splashes of mandolin, cello, xylophone and Hammond M3. You can't quite always put your finger on why they sound right, but you realize that the songs would never be the same without them. Even the fanciful "I'm in Love" is lavished with bouncing, twanging guitars that build to a petulant climax.
This is a truly masterful work, with derivations that lead to subtle, highly-rewarding originality.
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