2011

B List: 10 Great Covers by Brock Butler

Longtime readers of Hidden Track are probably aware of my infatuation with Brock Butler’s solo acoustic shows. Not only does he offer stripped down versions of Perpetual Groove songs at his somewhat rare unplugged performances, but he also fills the setlists with covers by a wide range of both contemporary and classic artists. For today’s B List I’m going to point you in the direction of 10 sweet YouTubes that feature Butler covering the likes of Paul Simon, MGMT, LCD Soundsystem and Lionel Richie. Be sure to tap the Brock Butler collection on the Live Music Archive for downloadable and streamable recordings of dozens of his solo shows.


1. Kids (MGMT) – May 13, 2011


Butler deconstructs MGMT’s breakthrough single, using looping effects to layer percussive sounds and rhythmic strumming.

READ ON for nine more great covers performed by Brock Butler…

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HT Interview: Freekbass Keeps It Honest

“You got that Freekbass thing going!” Many years ago during one of their first encounters, Bootsy Collins said this to a young bass player then known by the name of Chris Sherman. Sherman and Collins we’re working together in a Cincinnati studio when the bassist plugged in and started playing through an assortment of Bootsy’s effects. The engineer picked up on it, followed by everyone around the studio beginning to call Sherman by his new handle. Before long, even his mom started calling him Freekbass. “That’s when I knew I was in trouble,” Freekbass remembers. “It was one of those crazy names that stuck, and seemed to fit with my unconventional style of playing.”


Now, the name is all but written in stone as Freekbass has been turning heads for years with his unconventional approach, winning awards for his bass playing and being a musician’s musician so-to-speak. Over the past two months in particular, things have truly taken off. Freekbass just played to huge receptive crowds at both Electric Forest and Camp Bisco, and recently released an absolute monster of an album (free to download) called Concentrate.

We caught up with Freekbass via telephone on his way home from Camp Bisco to discuss the new album, his approach to synthesizing his love of both funk bass and DJ culture, his upcoming instructional bass video and his fanaticism for Reds baseball.

Hidden Track: To get started, if you could give a bit of background on how your sound came to be? It’s definitely different than anything I’ve really ever heard. How did the combination of your musical studies and playing bass merge with the electronic elements?

Freekbass: It’s funny, because as much as I play live and am known as a live type musician, I actually started out as a studio rat. I was living and hanging around in studios. There is a popular drum machine sequencer called the MPC2000 and at the same time I was developing my bass skills, I was also learning how to use that machine as well.

I’ve always been immersed in DJ/Hip Hop culture and funk  is a big influence of mine. As you know, growing up in Cincinnati, there has always been a strong funk culture there. The only difference was that my friends who were doing DJ stuff were using turntables, whereas I always had a bass in my hands.

Also, I’ve always been drawn to really bass-heavy, sonic-oriented music and groove-oriented music as well. As far as this record which was just released, I wanted to try to take all those things I just mentioned and bridge the gaps on one record. READ ON for more of Ryan’s chat with Freekbass…

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Bloggy Goodness: Bowery’s Brotherly Love

Bowery Presents has easily cemented themselves as the premiere concert promoter in the New York City area, booking shows in their fully-owned and operated venues as well as places like

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Grooms: Prom

The Brooklyn three piece Grooms sophomore release, Prom, is an entanglement of twists, off kilter timings and hot pop injections.

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Is Twitter a Waste of Time For Artists?

A recent article on Digital Music News examined the correlation between artists’ popularity on Twitter and their album sales. The author created the chart seen below which paired Nielsen Soundscan stats of album sales with BigChampagne artist rankings. The conclusion the author comes to, that “[artists] outside of mainstream pop that are breaking through, constant Twittering frankly seems like a waste of time,” but is it?

[Image Created by Digital Music News]


The chart doesn’t acknowledge several important factors that would make Twitter relevant to both mainstream pop artists and those that are “breaking through.” The chart and the author fail to take into account whether or not an artist released an album recently. The third ranked artist on Twitter (who did not make the chart) may not have sold many albums this year if he or she didn’t release an album recently. Artists with albums released in the past two years are more likely to have higher sales than those who do not, regardless of Twitter ranking.

Nor does the chart show what the Twitter rank was for an artist like Adele prior to releasing her album. She has the top selling album but is also just breaking into the mainstream. It would be interesting to note what her Twitter rank was before releasing “21” this year and what it will be at year’s end. Just as having many followers could drive up sales for the Gagas and Biebers of the industry, having a quality album may drive up an artist’s followers and ultimately their Twitter ranking. READ ON for more of Andy’s take on the connection between album sales and Twitter rankings…

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Intermezzo: Return of Creem to Print

Back in the ’70s Creem Magazine was at the forefront of the rock music criticism renaissance with esteemed writers Lester Bangs, Dave Marsh, Greil Marcus and Cameron Crowe among its

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