Tuareg neo-funk producer, multi-instrumentalist, activist, and singer/songwriter Farees has had a prolific few years, releasing his twin LPs, Border Patrol and Both Sides of the Border, in 2020. After the guitar-heavy spoken-word protest anthems of those records, Farees is continuing that prolific streak with another pair of new records, Blindsight and Galactic Africa, both set to release on June 3rd of this year. The latter sees Farees exploring Afrobeat and dance music, while the former continues the evolution of his groove-centric neo-funk and spoken word.
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Portland, ME indie-punk/alt-rock trio theWorst share new video “Monomania” at New Noise Magazine
Portland, Maine punk trio theWorst are sharing their new video, “Monomania,” and it’s premiering at New Noise. The band initially formed back in 2016 and gained a quick reputation in the Northeast for their energetic live shows and raw sound, combining qualities of ’90s alt-rock, driving indie punk, and shades of hardcore. READ MORE…
James Kahn
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James Kahn – By the Risin’ of the Sea
SoCal singer/songwriter, Emmy-nominated TV writer-producer & novelist James Kahn’s seventh album, By the Risin’ of the Sea, turns our expectations of traditional sea shanties on their heads by confronting our modern environmental struggles. The album was a finalist in the International Acoustic Music Awards, and the music video of the title song has won several film festival awards including Best Music Video at the Global Film and Music Festival, and an humanitarian award honorable mention at the Accolade Global Film Competition.
As an ER doctor, Kahn was recruited by Steven Spielberg to be a med tech advisor/writer on ET: The Extraterrestrial, leading him to write the novelizations of many great films, including Return of the Jedi, Poltergeist, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, and The Goonies. From there he segued into writing for many series including Star Trek: The Next Generation & Xena:Warrior Princess, and writing-producing Melrose Place and Star Trek: Voyager.
Kahn has entertained us for years as a writer & producer of Star Trek, bringing us stories of a utopian future, but on By the Risin’ of the Sea, he now shows us apocalyptic visions of our actual future of climate change induced rising sea levels, Covid-19, refugee crises and extinction, all with a charming delivery. These gentle songs make our impending doom feel cozy and warm as we all huddle together and let it wash over us.
“Climate change is the biggest existential crisis facing us,” says Kahn, “resulting in drought, fires, floods, species die-offs, crop failures, and of course, rising seas. Maybe we can still mitigate some of the ruin. ‘The Risin’ of the Seas’ is the core song on the album, and lays the problem out in a plaintive, melancholy shanty that comes from – and speaks to – the heart.”
Album opener and title track “The Risin’ of the Sea” is a testament to the power of the human voice in its five part harmonies and the melancholy brought by Brian Mann’s poignant accordion accompaniment. It’s followed by the foot-stomping, dance-with-death pub ballad “In the Covid Times,” where Kahn’s response to the pandemic, unemployment, police violence, social isolation, floods, drought and immigration issues is to raise a glass and hope we can all just make it through the mayhem. But there’s still this contingent of pandemic deniers, mask deniers, vaccine deniers, climate deniers, racism deniers and science deniers that he addresses in “2020: Ship of Fools,” who are all doing their best to sink the ship that we all have to live on.
Not all doom and gloom, By the Risin’ of the Seas’ more lighthearted offerings still touch on the macabre. “No More a’ Whalin’” is a gorgeous and loving anti-whaling tale in the style of traditional whaling folk songs. “We never stopped to listen to the beauty of their tune / We was so wrapped up in the romance of the sail and the harpoon.” The parody song “Bucket o’ Bones” puts a 17th century pirate to work on a modern day cruise ship, with fiddle from Gabe Witcher (Punch Brothers, Paul Simon). In the context of the album, one is reminded of the many quarantined cruise ships at the start of the pandemic. “We caught a touch of plague / but all the medicine we had was cabernet / We got no Wifi bars / we were belayed by our cell phones / The days were dark / and chilly with unknowns / But the day we started coughin’ / well I knew we’d all end up / Just a bucket o’ bones.” The tongue-in-cheek “Island of Dreams” speaks of treasure while actually referring to the five-mile trash island of plastic debris permanently floating in the Pacific Ocean.
“O the Ocean Rolls” tackles the refugee crisis. “The Vast Infinity,” played with actual bones by Sharon Turmondt, is about coming to terms with the “final come what may.” “On the Other Side” follows suit as the narrator waxes nostalgic in his twilight years with only a guitar, mugs, stomps, silverware, hoots and claps as instruments. “Cast on the Water” finds album producer David West on hammer dulcimer as Kahn sings the tale of a lost soul finding his way through the world.
Album closer “Sundown” bookends By the Risin’ of the Sea with a final five-part a cappella lament inspired by Kahn’s eco-biologist friend who said, “You know, people talk about rising temperatures globally, but it’s happening so gradually, we just keep adjusting, which lets us ignore the realities. The reality is, different species have different inflection points, so one day we’ll wake up, and – no more bees.” Kahn ends the song with a note of hope, “If we’re wise / ‘twill be fine.” Getting wise is the challenge for all of us.
The antidote to all of this may be in his four part a cappella track “Landfall,” about finding stability in a world that seems to be spinning out of control. Building on the recent revival of interest, By the Risin’ of the Sea brings sea shanties into the modern age, addressing contemporary themes with classic folk musical strains. It’s alternately moving and poignant, funny yet angry, while remaining hopeful throughout.
“We’re all looking for landfall,” says Kahn, “the place we feel whole and at home, where we can rest.”
Listen: Captain Americana playlist for 3/28/22
Listen to this week’s Captain Americana Spotify playlist featuring:
Sarah White – Different Drum
Aaron Lee Tasjan – Sunday Women
B.Knox – Little Wars
Sarah Shook & the Disarmers – Talkin’ to Myself
Jim Keaveny – Golden Carmen
Matthew Check – Okay With It
Kiely Connell – Clear My Mind
GoldenOak – Only One
William Russell Wallace – Faded Paradise (Don’t Mean a Damn Thing)
Two Cent Revival – Dose of Grace
Mimi Oz – Caroline
Walter Parks & The Unlawful Assembly – Steal Away
Ross Adams – Sally’s Amphetamines
Megan & Shane – Little Birds
Lake & Lyndale – Crooked Path
David Quinn – I Just Want to Feel Alright
Dru Cutler – I Don’t Kill Bugs Anymore
Khruangbin, Leon Bridges – Chocolate Hills
Aoife O’Donovan, Madison Cunningham – Passengers
Eric Anders and Mark O’Bitz – Sirens Go By
The Winnie Blues – Lonely Love
Zelly – The Fool
Cotton Clifton – Stay
Jay Bragg – Livin’ in the Slow Lane
Hollie Rogers – Strange
The 40 Acre Mule – Brown Eyed Handsome Man
Aaron Raitiere – Dear Darlin’
AHI – Prospect
Andrea von Kampen – Of Him I Love Both Day and Night
Anna Tivel – Illinois – Map Room Sessions
The Arcadian Wild – Everybody Wants to Rule the World
Tracy Bone, Sean Hogan – Like We Never Had to Say Goodbye
Adobe & Teardrops debuts new single from B.Knox – “Only Words” – noting that “Knox anchors his voice midst a swell of organs and horn sections, channeling country soul to the fullest.”
Canadian songwriter B. Knox may have staked his reputation as a sparse instrumentalist on his acclaimed Heartbreak & Landscape, but this time around, he’s cementing his role as a singer and band leader. On Knox’s new album, Far From Folk (out on April 8th), Knox anchors his voice amidst a swell of organs and horn sections, channeling country soul to the fullest.
Glide Magazine debuts new single from Farees – “Galactic Africa” – calling it “a thrill-seeking track that grooves with hydraulic drumming and powerhouse persuasion.”
Glide is premiering the transient “Jupiter/Galactic Africa,” a thrill-seeking track that grooves with hydraulic drumming and powerhouse persuasion that rekindles the minds of hip hop, Afrobeat, and world music in a galloping statement.