Dave Cope and the Sass and Ronnie D’Addario

Dave Cope and the Sass

Dave Cope and the Sass “Killer Mods From Inner Space”

The follow-up to  last year’s highly rated Julee, Dave Cope and the Sass have mastered the sound of the British Invasion, and other genres (and eras) while creatively delivering original gems. The album begins with “A Good Idea At The Time,” a sweet example of 1970s vintage rock a la The Guess Who.

“She Don’t Care About That” and “More” have a terrific glammy pop vibe, and Mod-era Who/Small Faces are mined with the excellent “In Circles.” He doesn’t always hit the target, as “Butterfly Heart” didn’t really hook me, and “Start” felt like a poor man’s Stephen Sondheim musical. But it’s okay that Dave goes outside his comfort zones, and occasionally the shift in style works out, like on the smooth easy listening pop of “Season of Love.” That said, Cope has just enough goodies on tap to make this album Highly Recommended.

Amazon | Kool Kat Musik

Ronnie D'Addario

Ronnie D’Addario “All Gathered In One Room”

Ronnie D’Addario (Papa Twig) is back and continues to charm like last year’s Egg Yolks And Artichokes. Similar in style to Paul McCartney or Gilbert O’Sullivan, Ronnie does light rock and music hall pop throughout All Gathered In One Room. “A Shot in The Dark” is a bouncy haiku set to a catchy melody and while the scenarios spun in his tunes can get excessively sentimental, D’Addario skillfully pulls it off.

Taking a different twist, the title track “All Gathered In One Room” is a Gilbert & Sullivan-styled opera number. His Beatles-lite “Come One, Come All” and “The Journey” are meticulously produced, but merely okay. Ronnie’s creative composition really comes out on the dance hall ballad of “Belle of the Ball” and the creative process turned into a baroque waltz on “Dwight Makes Right.” The Lemon Twigs contribute instrumentally, but this is a “Papa Twig” production all the way through. Check it out.

Amazon

Please lend a hand to Jesse Malin.


A spinal stroke has disabled musician Jesse Malin. A few months ago he suddenly experienced a scorching ache in his lower back while out to dinner in the East Village. The discomfort gradually spread to his hips, thighs, and heels. He was unable to move and fell to the restaurant floor. Malin experienced a spinal-cord infarction, which is quite rare. Jesse is currently paralyzed from the waist down and is experiencing a great deal, both physically and mentally. Although he has decent insurance, it won’t pay for many of his costs beyond acute treatment.

Your gift can alleviate him of the additional burdens brought on by the significant cost of his immediate and long-term care. Power Popaholic interviewed Jesse a few years ago and wants to spread the word and hopefully, fans like you will answer the call.

Give to the Jesse Malin Fund today.

Jack Lee gone – but not forgotten

Jack Lee

Jack Lee passed away last week at 71 years old. The band the Nerves, which included Lee as one of three singer-songwriters, was known to almost every rock and roll enthusiast in Los Angeles at the time, even though relatively few ever saw them perform during their brief tenure together. The trio, which was made up of Lee on guitar, Peter Case on bass, and Paul Collins on drums, began in San Francisco in 1974 before relocating to Los Angeles at the start of 1977. They were without a doubt an early part of the power-pop revival. After the Nerves split up, the latter two became more well-known, with Case going on to found the Plimsouls and Collins leading the group that went by the names of the Beat and Paul Collins’ Beat.
Blondie recorded an extremely faithful cover of the Nerves’ “Hanging on the Telephone” in 1978 that remains one of the group’s most instantly identifiable signature songs to this day. Paul Collins wrote on his Facebook page “We went to hell and back together, he shared all his incredible wealth of knowledge about music with me. I was more than proud to be by his side, through thick and thin…for me there will never be a guy quite like Jack Lee.”

June singles: The Diners, Wesley Fuller, Brad Marino, The Gypsy Moths, Pretty, Ex-Norwegian

You wouldn’t know it was summer in NYC with that Canadian smoke cloud hovering, but the music certainly says so. The Diners are a new band, the combo of Blue Broderick and fellow songwriter Mo Troper. Paste Magazine compared the new single “The Power” to Big Star and the Raspberries, so I’m all ears here. It’s been a few years since I’ve heard Melbourne-based power pop boy wonder Wesley Fuller, and he sounds even better than before, going “Back to Square One.” Brad Marino reads off his record collection, and I could listen all day. The Gypsy Moths sing about a classic Coney Island Amusement park, with cool sax blasting away. If you want more noise distortion with your rock, give Pretty a listen. It settles down into a Cramps meets Soundgarden vibe which is kinda nice. Finally, Ex-Norwegian talks about a “Real Bad Bunny,” but he’s not talking about this guy, right? I like the B-side “Send Nudes” even better!