10 UNDERRATED GUITAR SOLOS

Because everybody knows the guitar solos for "Sweet Child O' Mine" and "Freebird"...

10/9. "Love Of The Common Man" and "I Saw The Light" by Todd Rundgren

8." I Feel The Earth Move" by Carole King (Solo by Danny Kortchmar)

7. "Bad Sneakers" by Steely Dan (Solo by Walter Becker)

6. "Clap Hands" by Tom Waits (Solo: Marc Ribot)

5/4. "Prove It All Night" and "Kitty's Back" by Bruce Springsteen

3. "Too Many People" by Paul and Linda McCartney (Solo by Hugh McCracken)

2. "I Am The Cosmos" by Chris Bell

1. Speakin' Out by Neil Young (Solo by Nils Lofgren)

ESSENTIAL ROCK MUSIC OF DETROIT

 

Detroit's influence on rock music is about as high as its murder rate.  Even when you take Motown out of the equation, the Motor City is still a music city like no other.  Why, Detroit pretty much brought rock and roll to mainstream audiences with Bill Haley's "Rock Around The Clock."  Later, the city very nearly invented punk music with groups like The Stooges and MC5 (Motor City 5).  Next, let's think about the hard rock that dominated the airwaves in the 70s.  Ted Nugent, Alice Cooper, Grand Funk Railroad, Brownsville Station—they're all Motor City bands.  Oh, but there were also heartland rockers like Bob Seger in Detroit.  If you fast forward to the 90s and the early 2000s, you have popular icons—and Detroit natives—like Kid Rock and The White Stripes.  And then just this year, our hearts were captured by a formerly unknown singer/songwriter from Detroit named Rodriguez.  Indeed, the weather may be cold, but the music is red hot.  Let's listen to some of the hottest music Henry Ford's city ever made.

 Bill Haley & His Comets

 

(Iggy Pop And) The Stooges

MC5 (Motor City 5)

 Ted Nugent

Alice Cooper

Grand Funk Railroad

Brownsville Station

Bob Seger And The Silver Bullet Band

Kid Rock

The White Stripes

Rodriguez

The Heady Funk of Orgone

Orgone+First+Album.jpg

SOME CONTEXT

Since forming in 2001, the LA funk-revival ensemble known as Orgone has made quite a name for itself.  You may not have heard of them, but artists like CeeLo Green and Alicia Keys have and were so impressed that they used Orgone as a backing band on some of their best recordings.  

Over the last several years, they have added a singer—a former Macy Gray backing singer—named Nicki J. Crawford and have been a very popular act on the festival circuit, playing sets at Bonnaroo and Wakarusa fests, for example.

THE REVIEW

These guys idolize bands like The Meters and Parliament/Funkadelic, but on their 2001 self-titled debut they take the groove off of your booty and into your head.  It's very cerebral stuff, the kind of music that elicits chilling more than dancing.  This is no more evident than on "Deep Wank," which channels the mellowest of a Sublime influence.  Keeping it mellow may disappoint fans of Orgone's later, more pulsating rhythmic work, however, the slow stuff is really ambitious. Orgone is a vocal-less record, but it's incredibly focused. They keep the grooves simple and jam gently, letting the Rhodes, phasers and effects wash over the riffs.  Fans of jazz-fusion pioneers like Joe Zawinul should take note of pianist Dan Hastie's expert keys and his wonderful interplay with guitarist Sergio Rios.  Even when Orgone get loud, as they do on the last minute, brilliant crescendo of "Captain's Log,"  it never sounds like they're losing control or overplaying.  Instead, Orgone feels—paradoxically—both calculated, yet not the least bit rigid.   It showcases a group that has the chemistry of industry pros who have been playing together for years.   The result is somewhat essential "chill" music and a wonderfully understated debut album. 

Orgone