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How much can one fan of OKOM (Our Kind Of Music) accomplish in just a couple of years? Plenty, if it's Rockzilla, aka photographer Michael Johnson. From 2003 to 2005, rockzilla.net was a chronicle of the alt.country scene from a uniquely Texan perspective. But all good things must end, and Rockzilla has retired from the online 'zine scene.

This mirror site was copied from the rockzilla.net site with the express permission of Rockzilla hisself. If you don't believe me, go to the KHYI-Fans email list and ask him! Buddy will back me up, too.



 

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 Quick Notes! is compiled by the Rockzillaworld staff.

Previous Quick Notes!

Highest Number are the newest

QN4   QN3   QN2     QN1
 
   
   
   
 

Vince Hatfield, Take It Easy on Yourself. Blue Moon

Releasing cover versions of songs can be a bit of a tightrope walk. Thousands of bad bar bands make a buck or two on weekends in pathetic attempts at recreating hit songs note for note. Some who have plenty of respectable original material are just doing "what the gig calls for," keeping the audience well within their comfort zone. The music is just for background for drunken attempts at dancing and feeble pick-up lines anyway. Further up the food chain you've got the case of an indie-rocker who convinced a respected Americana label into releasing a CD full of covers in the same mopey, woe-is-me style without regard for whether that put a new twist on the songs or just muddied the meaning. In the end it left most people wondering why they'd bothered. On the other end of the spectrum you're got Johnny Cash's masterpiece box set Unearthed that illuminated the meaning or suggested alternate interpretations of tunes that the definitive version had been recorded years ago, or so everyone thought.

While Hatfield didn't write any of the songs it's not fair characterizing Take It Easy on Yourself as a disc of covers. Roughly half the songs haven't been recorded before, at least not in versions many would have heard. However the covers illustrate what you can expect from the remainder of the disc. From the countrified-soft-rock cover of Paul Davis' hit "I Go Crazy" and the Mac Davis penned cover of Bobby Goldsboro's sap-fest hit "Watching Scotty Grow" (recast here as "Watching Our Kids Grow") Hatfield shows a definite preference for a middle-of-the-road, seventies, pop-country sound. If you can't imagine something like this ever appealing to you then you're probably right. But if your tastes include country artists like Don Williams (who's also recorded the title track) then you'll find Take It Easy on Yourself more than worthwhile. Hatfields's voice is ideally suited to the material and, along with co-producer Charlie McCoy (I'll pass on the obvious feud joke here) assembled a team of crack musicians that include Johnny Gimble and Blue Rodeo's Kim Deschamps. www.vincehatfield.com--AK


 
 

Stanley Smith, In the Land of Dreams. Spanks-a-lot Records

All right. This is gonna be short and sweet.

You need this record. Period.

It serves a dual purpose. Not only is it beautiful to kick off your shoes and let this disc put you in the most comfortable of places, but this disc also serves a more utilitarian purpose: lend this to anyone, and if they return it without expressing passion for how good it is, you can feel safe to assume that person has no soul. Be cordial, be polite and don't upset 'em, 'cause you now know with certainty that this is a heartless person, and who knows what they're capable of.

I want to express that these are not at all the feelings of Mr. Smith. He is a wonderful person who would not look with favor at such condemning statements. The above synopsis is a barometer that I came up with on my own. But I'm sticking to it and that's all I have to say. www.stanleysmithmusic.com --DD


 
 

Eleven Hundred Springs featuring Kim Pendleton, Broken Dreams. Last Beat Records

While there is never any doubt that this 5-song EP is an 1100 Springs album the addition of guest vocalist Kim Pendleton (from Last Beat labelmate Vibrolux) takes the band in a direction they couldn't go on their own. The Springs originals with Pendleton either harmonizing or dueting with regular vocalist Matt Hillyer give these four love songs the perfect tone, a blend of hopeful anticipation, bittersweet longing, with a slight undercurrent of fear that in spite of everything it isn't going to work out. From the opener, "Depend on You," through the last of these, the all-we-need-is-each-other weeper, "We Don't Need to Belong," Hillyer and Pendleton elevate solid songwriting to the next level with the conviction of their vocals. The title track ("Dreams are made for the broken-hearted fools to fall into / I just want one broken dream to come true") has become my new theme.

Finishing Broken Dreams with a cover of the John Prine classic, "Illegal Smile," not only works but also in some warped way makes sense.

www.elevenhundredsprings.com or www.lastbeatrecords.com --AK


 
 

Thomas Michael Riley, Cow Pasture Pool

Not an artist you've heard of unless he plays your favorite watering hole now and again, but Thomas Michael Riley's holding the double threat status in a big way these days. Writing for Gary P. Nunn, garnering kudos for his storytelling from no less a light than Tom T. Hall. And on top of that lyrical skill, wielding a warm baritone that's as comfortable as a broke-in Spalding mitt from your high school glory days. The title cut here's as apt a tome on redneck golf as you're ever going to hear, while tracks like "Postcards From Heaven" nail down a sensibility that evokes campfires and simple truths. Whole record's worth it for "First Things First" alone. www.thomasmichaelriley.com--DP


 
 

The Mickeys, Finding Our Way. River Beat Music

It's a concept ready-made for the Nashville star-making machinery. At least if the vagaries of genetics and reproduction can be called a "concept." Take two talented, attractive, identical twins and cut an album. If Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen can make the cover of The Rolling Stone without any apparent musical talent (notwithstanding that tape my daughter used to own) then this concept should be an easy success.

But, as the disc title says, the Mickeys are finding their way. Rather than calling on the star-makers in their current hometown of Nashville, twins Amy and Julie Mickey co-produced Finding Our Way (with John Albani), released it on their own label, and secured national distribution. The obvious advantage to this approach is nobody at the label would tell them they couldn't write their own material (writing credit on half the cuts include at least one twin). "Smoke and Mirrors" (the initial single that has charted on Americana and folk charts both here and in Europe) as well as "My Train" are good cuts. But the Mickeys really shine on tracks that give them a chance to showcase their talent for sibling harmony, most notably "Old Kentucky Wind."
www.themickeys.net --AK


 
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
     

 
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