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Jun 12, 2024, 10:25:27 PM6/12/24
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I saw Potty Mouth support Chvrches in New York a few years ago and someone I was with said they looked like a band I could have been in when I was a teenager. I took that to be a compliment since this group of women were a cool mix of styles who in another lifetime would be the next big thing. They were in fact signed to a major label but things went wrong, proving how tough things are for bands like this in the mainstream. They are a gutsy all girl rock band made up of members Abby Weems (vocals/guitar), Ally Einbinder (bass), and Victoria Mandanas (drums) with decidedly 90s influences.

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This album is released on their own Get Better Records (run by bassist Ally Einbinder and her partner Alex Licktenhour). Independence gives them freedom to do whatever the hell they want, without worrying about trends or expectations. This album just blasts out of the gates with Do It Again introducing their pulsating sound. The simplicity of the lyrics on the surface hides an uncertain undertow. Influences like Garbage and Bikini Kill inform the music but Potty Mouth sound fresh.

The more ragged garage rock of Dog Song is a nice contrast with some of the glossier sounds heard elsewhere on the record. They finish with a snarl and a scream on Bottom Feeder, and the mix of venom and vulnerability in these songs makes them easy to fall in love with.

The algorithm reportedly analyzes about 15,000 unsigned tracks from open platforms like Spotify, SoundCloud, YouTube and TikTok and evaluates them based on things like listener engagement on social media and the quality of the music itself. The songs are then given a score, narrowing down the selection enough that the humans working at Snafu can parse through them quickly.

This latest round boasts several prominent investors from the music industry, including ABBA member Agnetha Fltskog, Spotify advisor John Bonten, Soundboks founder Jesper Theil Thomsen and Headstart.io founder Nicholas Shekerdemian.

This Oscars has been an exercise in uncertainty, from tumult on the board, to the introduction and withdrawal of a Most Popular Film trophy, to Kevin Hart being hired as host without any kind of vetting that would have unearthed his past homophobic social media rantings, so that that snafu could have been addressed early on, before it became a social media volcano. That has put Oscars in its current host-less position.

New Orleans rockers The Radiators partied with a group of fans at the Atlantis Resort complex in the Bahamas. The "Aztec Vacation" theme party was arranged by graphic artist Kingsley Stoken, whose colorful poster designs are the calling card of his Radiators appreciation society, S.N.A.F.U., which uses a yellow submarine sticker as its logo. The band played (opening one set with the party's anthem, "Snafu You," custom-written by keyboardist Ed Volker) in a gazebo close to the Atlantis casino on Paradise Island in the resort's labyrinthine garden complex. Volker also referenced the event by playing an old Radiators favorite, "Little Paradise." The fans got a special treat when the Rads started off the final set of the last night by switching around the instruments -- Volker and bassist Reggie Scanlan played guitars, guitarists Camile Baudoin and Dave Malone played keyboards and bass -- to play a raucous garage rock rendition of "Gloria." "We played 'Out On the Rolling Sea'," said Volker "and one of the guys who works here came up to me and said, 'That song you all did, that's "Out on the Rolling Sea" right?' I said, 'Yeah, that's a Joseph Spence song.' He said, 'I was telling one of the women who work here that's Bahamian history you're listening to.' The sweetest gospel music came out of this island. It's amazing to be here but I don't think I'm in any of the realms that Joseph Spence, Freddy McQueen or the Pindar family were in when they were making all of that wonderful music. "I don't have to go eat the food and go to the church ... the music itself is the church. The song is the food, that's the stream wherein I find my nourishment. It's what sustains me. It's good to help nourish and sustain what nourishes and sustains you because maybe then it will sustain other people too," Volker said.AdvertisementAdvertisement

Warren Haynes of Gov't Mule and the Allman Brothers has finalized the list for his annual Christmas benefit show. The guitarist's 14th annual Christmas Jam, Dec. 21 in Asheville, N.C., will feature performances by Gov't Mule, John Hiatt & the Goners, moe., Robert Randolph & the Family Band, and Bob Weir. Proceeds will benefit Habitat for Humanity. Haynes also will be joined by special guests, including Edwin McCain, Kevin Kinney, former Black Crowes guitarist Audley Freed, DJ Logic, Rob Barraco, Jerry Joseph, John Molo, Dave Schools, and more. Gov't Mule recently released "The Deep End Volume 2" (ATO), the second CD of a two-part tribute to former Mule bassist Allen Woody, who died of a heart attack in 2000. It features a who's who of the world's greatest bassists. Phish bassist Mike Gordon, one contributor to "The Deep End," also directed a documentary, "Rising Low," about the recording of the two albums.

This year's Soul Train Christmas StarFest will be a montage of the best of past StarFest performances and new holiday greetings from a variety of celebrities. The Soul Train Christmas StarFest will air in syndication via Tribune Entertainment during the window of Saturday thru Sunday, Dec. 22. Arsenio Hall hosts the star studded celebration. Performances include Babyface doing "The Little Drummer Boy," Kenny Loggins singing "Angels In The Snow," Luther Vandross and Chaka Khan performing "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas," Mary J. Blige doing "Someday At Christmas" and Patti LaBelle with "Born In A Manger." Special personal holiday greetings from celebrities will include cameos from Aretha Franklin, Shaquille O'Neil, the Cast of Boomtown, Beyonce Knowles, the Cast of The George Lopez Show, Kobe Bryant, and Shemar Moore.Advertisement

Tipitina's, the venerable New Orleans nightclub, has announced a special New Year's Eve bash with Robert Randolph and the Family Band plus John Mooney and Bluesiana. Pedal steel guitar whiz Randolph exploded on the modern music scene in 2000 playing his first club dates in New York City after being discovered at the first Sacred Steel Convention in Florida that year. Sacred Steel is a church music tradition that began in the '30s, with the pedal steel being introduced during the '70s. Randolph started playing the pedal steel as a teenager at The House of God Church in Orange, N.J., outside of Newark. After opening for the North Mississippi Allstars at the Bowery Ballroom in New York City, Randolph became a favorite performer of musicians and music fans. A unique relationship was forged with John Medeski (of Medeski, Martin and Wood), prompting the groundbreaking album "The Word" (Ropeadope), a collaboration with keyboardist Medeski, Luther and Cody Dickinson, and bassist Chris Chew of the Allstars. Randolph's group, The Family Band, is comprised of cousins Danyell Morgan and Marcus Randolph (bass and drums), and John Ginty on Hammond B3 organ.

The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival said Wednesday its schedule for the 2003 event will include an extra day. The world-famous music festival, held annually at the New Orleans Fairgrounds, will kick off Thursday, April 24, 2003. Long speculated by Jazzfest fans, the extension gives the festival two four-day weekends to stage the event; previously Jazzfest began the last Friday in April. The dates for the 2003 music festival are April 24-May 4, with music performances, local crafts and food vendors at the Fairgrounds each Thursday-Sunday during that period.

Premier jam band Widespread Panic will release "Live From The Backyard in Austin, TX," Feb. 4, 2003, on Sanctuary Records/Widespread Records. In preparation for this new DVD, DirecTV "FREEVIEW" will air a version of "Live From The Backyard in Austin, TX" on digital cable nationally every weekend during the month of January, beginning on New Year's Day. This double-disc concert was recorded July 20, 2002, during a three-day run at The Backyard in Austin, Texas. Disc One is more than two hours of Widespread Panic performing live and offers tunes such as "Blue Indian," "Old Joe," "Little Lily" and "Imitation Leather Shoes." As a special bonus, Disc Two features a 90-minute smorgasbord of band interviews and behind-the-scenes footage. Panic headlined two of the three nights of the Bonnaroo Music Festival, which featured acts such as Gov't Mule, Trey Anastasio, North Mississippi Allstars, Dirty Dozen Brass Band and Ween. The Bonnaroo live CD, "Bonnaroo Music Festival 2002," with Widespread Panic performing "Tall Boy" with Dottie Peoples, immediately went gold. Advertisement

The New York Post reports Justin Timberlake is using the new video to "Cry Me a River" to get back at ex-girlfriend Britney Spears. The Post reports Timberlake wants vengeance because he believes Spears cheated on him with her choreographer, Wade Robson. "The whole video is about a guy who is cheated on by his girlfriend," the Post quotes a source as saying. "The girl is a Britney look-alike. Justin gets back at Britney by taping himself with another woman in her bedroom and leaving it for her." The Post reports the video, due out Friday, is being withheld by Timberlake's company, Jive Records, because the label wants him to change it.

England's Channel 4 TV is doing an investigative story for its "The Real" series on the life of Heather Mills, who married Paul McCartney earlier this year. "We are looking to speak to a wide range of people from across her whole life," said a Channel 4 spokesperson in an interview with London's Media Guardian. "We have approached Heather but she said no. It will be a compelling look at her life, going back further than when she first met Sir Paul and tracing how she ended up where she is today."Advertisement

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