| | Mother Hips Kiss The Crystal Flake CD Mother Hips Discography of CDs
Mother Hips: Tim Bluhm, Greg Loiacono (guitars); Paul Hoaglin (bass guitar); John Hofer. Personnel: Tim Bluhm, Greg Loiacono (vocals, guitar); Paul Hoaglin (vocals); Charlie Gurke (baritone saxophone); Eric Oberthaler (trumpet); Scott Knippelmeier (trombone); Jackie Greene (piano); John Hofer (drums, percussion); Dan Lebowitz (bongos). Additional personnel: Jackie Greene (Hammond b-3 organ); Charlie Gurke, Scott Knippelmeier, Eric Oberthaler, Dan Lebowitz. Audio Mixers: Dylan Magierek; Justin Phelps. Photographer: Nid Koster. California pop-rock act Mother Hips returned in 2007 with the very strong KISS THE CRYSTAL FLAKE. But the hippy-dippy title is misleading; Mother Hips play straight ahead melodic rock with a debt to the radio classics of yesteryear, mixing ballads, boogie, R&B, country, soft rock, power pop, and electric guitar-driven chargers. The overall package sounds familiar, but the quality of the tunes, and the band's high-flown harmonies, keep things plenty fresh, making this outing a purely pleasurable venture into easygoing good-time territory. The Mother Hips broke a long silence with the excellent Red Tandy EP in 2006 and they maintain the excellence on 2007's Kiss the Crystal Flake. Always a band you could count on for fairly straightforward AOR-influenced rock & roll mixed with some heart-on-sleeve balladry, the Hips deliver exactly what you would expect: a solid batch of rockers and ballads recorded cleanly and crisply and performed with an energetic, light touch by the group. The songwriting chores and vocal duties are split pretty evenly between Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono, with the former providing the sweet vocals and poppy tunes, the latter grittier vocals and less structured yet still melodic songs. Their songs blend together almost as well as their soaring vocal harmonies, which give a breathtaking lift to just about every song on the album. The duo tackles just about every style of music you might've heard on an FM rock station in the '70s: hard-charging Petty-esque guitar rock ("White Hills," "No-Name Darrell"), Hall & Oates-styled blue-eyed soul balladry ("Let Somebody"), laid-back boogie rock ("Confirmation of Love," "White Headphones"), Neil Young-derived ballads (the achingly beautiful "Not So Independent"), and semi-soft rock ("TGIM," "In This Bliss"). Even a few you wouldn't have (the disco vocals Bluhm delivers on "TGIM"'s chorus, the spiky indie rock guitars of "Time Sick Son of a Grizzly Bear"). Despite their obvious debt to the past, any charges of the Mother Hips being simple revivalist are cast aside by their superb songwriting and the emotion on display. Even if they were just rip-off artists, the beauty of their vocal harmonies would make this record damn near essential for fans of good, sweet, and easy guitar rock -- from the '70s or any time at all. ~ Tim Sendra Kiss The Crystal Flake Music Mother Hips Kiss The Crystal Flake Songs Kiss The Crystal Flake Music Kiss The Crystal Flake Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Mother Hips Kiss The Crystal Flake CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Kiss The Crystal Flake CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Lunasa CD (2001)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$14.15 Debut;Prev.Import Only
Lunasa: ...
| | Jack Casady Dream Factor CD (2003)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$11.29 Personnel: Jack Casady (vocals, acoustic guitar, bass); Paul Barrere (vocals, slide guitar); Jeff Pehrson, Fee Waybill, Ivan Neville (vocals); Jorma Kaukonen (acoustic guitar); Steve Fister, Warren Haynes, Doyle Bramhall II (guitar); Jim Brunberg (mandolin, background vocals); Steffen Presley ...
| | Poco Running Horse CD (2002)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$11.25
| | Mickey Jupp Some People Can't Dance CD (2005) (Import)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$24.95
| | Billy Gibson Live At Rum Boogie Cafe CD (2007)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$18.99
| | Chris Duarte Blue Velocity CD (2007)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$13.65 Chris Duarte: Chris Duarte (guitars); Dustin Sargent (bass guitar); Damien Lewis. Personnel: Chris Duarte (vocals, guitar); Damien Lewis (drums). Audio Mixers: Mark Rennick; Jason DOttavio. Recording information: Prairie Sun Studios, Cotati, CA. Photographer: Steve Jennings. Chris Duarte's name is nearly always mentioned alongside those of the late, great guitar gods Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jimi Hendrix. ...
| | Sense Field Building CD (1996)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$12.05
| | Soul Classics: Quiet Storm: The 60'S CD (1995)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$7.59
| | Pretty Things Parachute CD (1970) (Import) Bonus Tracks; Germany
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$18.25 2002 reissue of their critically acclaimed album for Harvest crowned 'Album Of The Year' by Rolling Stone magazine in 1970 & broke the U.K. top 50. Contains all 13 of the cuts that originally appeared on it plus six bonus tracks, 'Blue Serge Blues', 'October 26', 'Cold Stone', 'Stone-Hearted Mama', 'Summer Time' & 'Circus Mind'. 19 tracks in all. Digipak.
Also available in a 3-pack with THE PRETTY THINGS and CROSS TALK. CD contains 6 bonus tracks. Liner Note Author: Mike Stax. Following the disappointing sales of their ambitious 1968 concept album S.F. SORROW, the Pretty Things lost two of their members--drummer Twink (who went on to join the Pink Fairies) and, more significantly, founder/guitarist Dick Taylor. Remarkably, though, the remaining members, now light years away from their blues-rock beginnings, pressed on in relatively undaunted fashion with PARACHUTE, another bold Beatle-esque outing. Vocalist Phil May and multi-instrumentalist Wally Allen emerged as the British band's driving force, writing eclectic tunes such as the revved-up "Miss Fay Regrets," the melancholy "Grass," and the psychedelic sing-along "She Was Tall, She Was High." Although critically lauded, the record failed to bring the Pretty Things to a wider audience, essentially sealing the ensemble's fate as a perpetually underappreciated act. While the band would record a few more albums during the 1970s in various incarnations, PARACHUTE is, in many ways, its swan song and deserves to be held in high regard along with S.F. SORROW. If S.F. Sorrow is the Pretty Things' Sgt. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour, and Yellow Submarine wrapped in one, then Parachute is their more succinct White Album and Abbey Road. It's not just a time line comparison. The Pretties made this fascinating LP in the same ...
| | Marcus Biancardini Viola De Gravata CD (2004) (Import) Brazil
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$21.69
| | Laura Michelle Kelly Storm Inside CD (2006) Import
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$19.55
| | Bacons Something Wonderful CD (2004)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$14.79
| | Hevia Al Otro Lado CD (2000)
Kiss The Crystal Flake
$10.15
|
|
|