Posts Tagged 'Grace Potter and the Nocturnals'

She’s Got the Medicine that Everybody Wants: Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, the band’s self-titled release jumps off a cliff with its opening track, Paris (Ooh La La), a remake of the hidden track If I Was from Paris from their prior album, This Is Somewhere. At least, that’s what it feels like – a rush of adrenalin followed by fun beat that gets one moving to the song. With their fourth album, the Nocturnals have undergone some changes. Last year, the band lost its original bassist, Bryan Dondero over some creative differences, which in turn allowed the band to bring bass player Catherine Popper, as well as rhythm guitarist Benny Yurco.

With the new lineup comes a new sound for the Nocturnals. While this isn’t something that’s really unexpected (Original Soul and Nothing But The Water differed a bit, while This Is Somewhere also pulled away from their sound for a more mainstream classic rock sound and feel), it’s by far the bigger departure for the group, sound wise. The guitar work is far bolder throughout the album, the lyrics more evocative and overall, this effort feels far more personal and intimate; Goodbye Kiss hits the listener right to the core, much like Apologies did in her last album. Most of the songs on the album really work well with the lyrics, coming out of the speakers with a nice, easy flow, songs like Oasis, Medicine and One Short Night.

Moreover, where her last album felt like a classic rock homage, this one veers into a new direction, inserting funk and soul into the album once again. Hot Summer Night exemplifies this sound excellently, as does That Phone, Oasis and Goodnight Kiss, which gives the album and band a bit of new flavor, which has been seen in some of their reworking of their older songs in recent concerts. There are some anomalies here though: Tiny Light feels free and light, with a real ’70s feel, while Things I Never Needed feels a bit like a country ballad. Paris (Ooh La La) is in a class of its own, but then again, it’s always been.

Like her last album, there is a good mix between the tone and feel of the album between songs – Paris starts off with a rush of energy, followed by Oasis and Medicine, but songs like Tiny Light and Colors draw the lights down for a closer, slower and more personal feel. This variety and range of sound is a trademark of the Nocturnals, especially at their concerts: They can jump, very easily from slow to fast, bringing out a wall of sound and rhythm. Grace Potter and the Nocturnals is a further effort towards this image, and it does so wonderfully.

The strongest part of the album, and the band’s music in general, has long been with their lead singer, the wonderful Grace Potter. Surrounded by the new sounds, musicians and songs, her voice is the one thing that really carries the band along, along with her fantastic lyrics. This album contains a number of gems from the group, which both highlight her songwriting and vocal talents: Oasis, Medicine, Tiny Light, Only Love, One Short Night, That Phone and Hot Summer Night, all fantastic songs that fit well within the growing catalog of songs that the band has been producing steadily over the past couple of years. While the sound feels different, Potter is the connecting point between albums, and while I focus on her voice and lyrics, a lot of the differences fall away between her old and newer songs.

What Grace Potter and the Nocturnals does for the band, however, is give them an incredible amount of face time with a sound that fits very well with the mainstream rock and roll scene, but there’s just enough color and texture to the songs that they produce to push them over the top of quality. Where her last album was the breakthrough into the popular markets, this album feels like they’ve regained some of their footing and are beginning to push back with their own sound, which makes this album extra special. While I really loved This Is Somewhere and still constantly listen to it, it felt like there was something missing at points – looking back, it felt as though the band was reaching for something, and found a good compromise. Listening to this album though, it feels much like the color has flooded back into the room, and the sound’s been turned up as high as it’ll go. The Nocturnals have found what they’ve been looking for.

At the end of the day, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals is simply a stunning album from a stunning band. Not content to recycle their prior successes, the band has once again reinvented themselves to attain a better, brighter and richer sound throughout their new album, with songs that are truly inspiring, interesting and most importantly, fun to listen to. It’s clear that they’re on the upwards path, but this new lineup shows that the group is maturing, and they’re bringing out a whole new sound that will really make heads turn.

Oasis – Grace Potter & The Nocturnals

HypeBuyLookFollow

Cover and Original: Nothing But The Water


It’s raining out here today, so this song seems somewhat appropriate, given the title. As regular readers probably know, I’m a huge fan of Grace Potter and the Nocturnals. She’s a native Vermonter, the best group to come out of VT since Phish, and is just an amazing presence on stage.

Her last album, This Is Somewhere, was fantastic, but she’s also got two other albums, independently released, which are also just as good. One of her concert favorites, Nothing But The Water, parts 1 and 2, are concert favorites, and typically include a great drum solo. When searching through Archive.org, I found that this one group,
Chinese Fingertrap, has performed the song before as well.

This is one of the covers that I’m not a big fan of. Where Grace’s song is full of energy, this one just doesn’t. Their female vocalist sounds similar to Grace, but she doesn’t come close. Listen to this live track of Grace in New York last month, you’ll see the difference.

Nothing But The Water 2 (Grace Potter & The Nocturnals) - Chinese Fingertrap
Nothing But The Water 2 (Live) - Grace Potter & The Nocturnals

HypeBuy

Mix


I’m hopeful. I don’t want to get ahead of myself, but for the first time in a while, hopeful.

Comfort - Carbon Leaf
Hold You In My Arms - Ray LaMontagne
Stop the Bus - Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
Dreaming - Sara Wheeler
Song for You - Alexi Murdoch
Walk With You - Dispatch
Got To Get You Into My Life - The Beatles

Catch the trade winds in your sails

The image “http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2116/1587771988_41910c967a_o.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” – Mark Twain

I’m on a short trip out to a conference in Utah this week and the weekend – I really can’t wait to get back on a plane again, see somewhere new. Here’s some songs that I’ve been listening to recently:

Come Fly With Me – Frank Sinatra
Falling or Flying – Grace Potter & the Nocturnals
Freeway – Removed by Request - Aimee Mann
International Airport – Carbon Leaf
It’s My Turn To Fly – The Urge
Leaving on a Jet Plane
- John Denver

Minutes to Memories (John Mellenkamp)
- Carbon Leaf

Out of Town - Zero 7
See The World
- Gomez

Venture Highway
- America

Where Are You Going?
- Dave Matthew’s Band

HypeBuy

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals are coming back to Vermont! The Higher Ground just announced another fall concert on the Waterfront (review for the first one here). Last year’s concert was an amazing, amazing one, and if you live within a couple hundred miles of Vermont, this is a show that’ll likely be well worth attending. The concert turned me to Josh Ritter and was a first date for a short relationship, so I look back on it with some good memories.

Give the first concert a listen here.

Pretty Good
– Grace Potter & Josh Ritter

HypeBuyLook

Grace Potter’s Protest Songs

Harp Magazine has just posted up a wonderful interview with Grace Potter, where she picks her top 5 protest songs:


Neil Young “Ohio”

If you listen to the second verse, it’s just “naaaaa, na-na, naaaa, na, naaaa.” It’s ‘cause he said everything he needed to say in the first damn verse. That’s pretty powerful. Not only that, but the song is amazing. I love the instrumentation. One of my biggest pet peeves is when a protest song stomps on its own point by making the music not as good as the lyrics.

Billie Holiday “Strange Fruit”

It was written by a Jewish man, actually, who handed her a poem in a club one night. It’s about a lynching, but what’s so incredible about it is it shares a perspective about not only what African-Americans were going through, but also what Jewish people were [enduring due to the Holocaust]. That’s one of the eeriest songs I’ve ever heard. Every time she sang it, she would not be able to hold her shit together.

Marvin Gaye “What’s Going On”

Once again, like “Ohio,” it’s just—bang. It’s not about the lyrics, but you [understand] them later… It kinda seeps into your subconscious and I really dig that.

The Rolling Stones “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”

It’s not necessarily a protest song but it’s got one little lyric in it that I absolutely love that kinda puts this visual in my head. “I went down to the demonstration.” There’s panic in that lyric. “We gonna vent our frustration/if we don’t, we’ll blow a 50-amp fuse.” I thought that was an interesting whiplash back at protest songs, basically saying protesters can be just as bratty as the worst Republican, money-grubbing asshole.

Rage Against the Machine “Killing in the Name”

It just goes for the throat. There’s no shame, there’s no self-awareness. It’s just, boom.

And Grace’s own, wonderful protest song:

Ah Mary – Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

HypeBuyLook

Cover and Original


Working on getting back on track with my regular features – I haven’t had time to compare anyone or do an evolution, but they will be coming back sometime soon. In the meantime, I’ll continue with Cover and Original.
This week’s a rediscovered song, Right Place, Wrong Time, originally by Dr. John. The two covered versions are by a band called Vietnam and one of my favorites, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals.
Vietnam’s version is an interesting take on the song that seems to drawl, while Grace Potter imitates the song a bit more, with her own flavor to it.

Right Place, Wrong Time (Dr. John) – Vietnam
Right Place, Wrong Time (Dr. John) – Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
Right Place, Wrong Time
– Dr. John

HypeBuy

Grace Potter & The Nocturnals : Toads Place 02-22-08

On Friday night, I drove down to New Haven, CT, to see Grace Potter & The Nocturnals for the 3rd time.
As always, it was a fantastic night. Their opening group, the Phonographs (I think) didn’t do much for me, but once Grace hit the stage, they did a wonderful job. Great sound, as always, a couple new songs, a couple old ones and a bunch that I really liked.
Honestly, there’s not a whole lot that I can say about Grace’s live acts anymore, other than that they completely and utterly rocked.

Set List

Joey
Meantime
Ah Mary
Ain’t No Time
Treat Me right
Stop the Bus
Sweet Emotion (Aerosmith)
Big White Gate
Mastermind
Sinking Man
Watching You
Nothing But the Water 1 >
Nothing But the Water 2 >
4-Way Drum
Nothing But the Water 2
Sweet Hands
Sugar (New)
Down by the River (Neil Young)
Encore:
Piss on your hand

Grace Potter: The Live Collection


I’m a huge fan of Grace Potter, and today is Grace Potter day, with the concert review coming later today, and the following item that I’m about to post up.
This lady and her group is on fire. They’ve come up kicking and screaming, quite literally, on stage and man, it’s a sight to see. They’re one of the best new bands out there today, and hopefully, they’re going up and up, because they’re off to a great start.
This Is Somewhere, their latest album, was absolutely fantastic. However, they’ve since put out an incredible amount of music on their own through concerts, both covers of other songs, and some originals.



Disc 1: Grace Potter Live! The Originals

Over their past couple tours, the Nocturnals have unveiled an entire album’s worth of songs, ranging from fast to slow, some stuff that I hope will make it onto an album sometime in the near future. Here’s the best of the new songs:

1- I’ve Been Watching You
2- Sugar
3- You Gotta Move
4- Every Mile
5- Delta
6- Sinking Man
7- Arizona
8- Margery
9- Skinny Woman
10- Can’t See Through


Disc 2: Grace Potter Live! The Covers

This girl and her band loves their influences and covers. The Beatles, Neil Young, Steve Miller, Jimi Hendrix, and a whole lot more are represented here in this fantastic lineup of cover songs.

1- Come Together (The Beatles)
2- Cortez The Killer (Neil Young)
3- Farmer John (Don & Dewey)
4- Jet Airliner (Steve Miller Band)
5- Who Knows? (Jimi Hendrix)
6- Live With Me (Rolling Stones)
7- Sneakin’ Sally Through The Alley (Allen Toussaint)
8- No Expectations (Rolling Stones)
9- Getting In Tune (The Who)
10- Pain In My Heart (Otis Redding)
11- Ohio (Neil Young)

HypeBuyLook

Grace Potter: Live at the Waterfront


Christmas just came early. Earlier this summer, I went to see Grace Potter and the Nocturnals when they came up for a concert at the Burlington Waterfront. It was an absolutely amazing, amazing concert, probably the best one that I’ve ever been to. I have some bittersweet memories of it now, because it was when I went on my first date with a now ex, but that doesn’t bother me that much now.

Someone just posted the concert on Archive.org.

This is one concert that would have absolutely blown the roof off of any building that they could have played in. They played with so much energy and, dare I say, grace. I know I talk about Grace a lot here, but give this show a listen, and this is why I think she’s one of the best new musicians out there now. Plus? It’s got a very long-sought after cover/duet with Josh Ritter. Here’s my original concert review. If you listen to one concert this year, listen to this one.

Next Page »


Disclaimer

The music featured on this blog are for promotional purposes only, and will only be online for a limited time. If you like them, buy the album, and support the artist. Then tell people about them. If you would like to see any particular piece of music removed from the site for legal reasons, please e-mail the address in the submissions section, and it will be done. For Submissions, please see the submissions and contact tabs for what we require.

 

May 2012
M T W T F S S
« Oct    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 3 other followers


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.