Soul Serenade: The Tams, “Be Young, Be Foolish, Be Happy”

It’s almost vacation time so I’m going to try to keep it short this week. A couple of weeks ago I recommended SiriusXM’s Carolina Shag channel. I hope you’ve been listening. Sadly, I’m told that the channel is temporary and will end on July 5. There are a group of people trying to change that, and if you love the station as much as I do you might want to sign the petition that calls for the station to be made permanent.

One group in constant rotation on Carolina Shag are the Tams. The Tams are beach music royalty who can still draw a crowd at the venues on the shores of the Carolinas. I wrote about their big hit “What Kind of Fool (Do You Think I Am)” back in 2013, and you can read that column here.

To briefly recap their story, the Tams got together in Atlanta and named themselves after the tam o’shanter caps that they wore on stage. The signed with Arlen Records and had a hit for the label with the Joe South song “Untie Me.” By 1964, they were recording for ABC-Paramount where they had that hit with “What Kind of Fool.” The single, written by Ray Whitley and recorded at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, reached the top of the Cashbox R&B chart and was a Top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100.

The Tams

The Tams’ follow-up single, “Hey Girl Don’t Bother Me,” was a moderate success, but it was their 1968 single, “Be Young, Be Foolish, Be Happy,” that became a beach music classic. The song had originally been recorded the previous year by the Sensational Epics and released on Warner Bros. Records. The Tams’ version reached #26 on the R&B chart, and #61 on the Billboard Hot 100, but sometimes a record has a life beyond its original chart life. That’s what happened to “Be Young, Be Foolish, Be Happy” as it became one of the most popular songs in the annals of Carolina beach music as well and a very popular song on the UK’s Northern Soul scene.

The Tams didn’t have another hit until 1987 when they paid tribute to the music scene that had kept them alive with a record called “There Ain’t Nothin’ Like Shaggin’,” named for the dance that is done wherever beach music is played. Unfortunately ‘shagging’ means something else entirely in the UK, and the record was banned by the BBC.

These days there are two groups of Tams out on the road. One is lead by original group member R.L. Smith, and the other by Charles Pope, the brother of Tams co-founder Joe Pope.

ALBUM REVIEW: WRECK LOOSE, “OK, Wreck Loose”

From the first, forceful moment of their debut full-length album, OK, Wreck Loose, Pittsburgh-bred Wreck Loose announce themselves as heirs to the tradition of loud, thoughtful pop rock that dominated AM radio in the 1970’s. Their sound combines a bright piano and analog guitar with lyrics that are both quirky yet introspective, for a sound that remains modern yet consistently steeped in pop music tradition, which is no easy feat.

On OK, Wreck Loose, the band marries big rhythms to off-beat lyrics that are paradoxically epic and vulnerable. Songwriter Max Somerville tells small-scale stories of tragedy and redemption, followed by mountain-high tales that still seem intimate. The album kicks off with “Long Time Listener, First Time Caller,” telling its tale of personal demons and music’s redemptive power – and if you listen closely, you get flashes of The Band and Little Feat. “Carwash” recounts an experience with everyday existentialism and shows off the band’s ability to slow things down, while songs like “Hard Drugs” and “The Day Before The Day Of The Dead” both showcase the band’s talent for unconventional titles and mix strong melodies and hooks with explorations of genre and space.  It also shows a wry, yet subtle sense of humor.  The Harry Nilsson-esque “I Do Right” is one of the most joyful sounds of piano and guitar I’ve heard in years and the subtle groove makes it more danceable than most tracks meant for the floor; “Country Mouse”, with its clever title hinting at the song’s flavor is, indeed, a rolling honkytonk-styled track that lets you relax and kick back with melodic pleasure and the very ’70’s opening to “Heart’s Been Broken” belies the wild rollercoaster nature of this intensely rockin’ piece.

At the end of the day, Wreck Loose grooves nice and strong.  Which makes this an uplifting album, considering the vast lyrical landscape they paint.  So okay – Wreck Loose and have a good time doing so.

RECOMMENDED

OK, Wreck Loose is currently available

http://www.wrecklooseband.com/

POPDOSE PREMIERE: Travis Marsh, ‘Don’t Call Me’

In the tradition of great singer-songwriters through the ages, Camarillo, California-native Travis Marsh sees his role as something a little more substantial than someone who merely shapes ideas into songs. “I’ve always viewed songwriters as the therapists for the public,” he says. “I think a great songwriter is someone that has mastered the art of tapping into our deepest inner emotions and memories. They can bring you back to moments in your life and then they become a part of you.”

It’s with that mentality that he introduces his newest video for “Don’t Call Me,” a track that evokes those SoCal vibes without the urban decay of city life. (Indeed, although Camarillo is often lumped into the greater LA area, Marsh is quick to make the distinction between the two places; his native city is more agricultural and “there really isn’t much to do besides lock yourself in a room and play music all day,” he says.)

If you notice a twinge of country-rock in Marsh’s sound, you’d be right; he draws on influences like the Eagles, Jackson Browne, and the Avett Brothers, but invokes a bit of Joni Mitchell’s depth. He also recalls Bob Dylans’ social consciousness in his aim to “bring awareness to some of the social injustices we face today from LA to the Windy City.”

Check out the video for Travis Marsh’s “Don’t Call Me” — making its Popdose premiere!

 

NYC’s theShift Brings West Coast Vibes Back Home

Although theShift is a based in New York City (the three members met while attending Berklee in Boston), their sound is decidedly West Coast. Branding their music “cosmic rock and roll,” they conjure classic Seventies vibes while displaying obvious influence from bands like Led Zeppelin through to Ryan Adams and as diverse as John Coltrane.

TheShift’s musical amalgamation is in full force on their debut EP 7th Direction. Even its name is a reference to that hippy-dippy California consciousness. While the first six directions in Native American lore are east, south, west, and north, plus sky and earth, “the seventh direction is the direction within,” lead singer John Shannon told Charged.fm. “Though this direction is labeled going ‘within,’ it is just the same connecting with the cosmos that are on the outside. Therefore, it’s the direction of connecting with all things in an ethereal sense.”

Perfectly illustrating these sensibilities is the group’s video for “Consecrate.” Filmed in the Mojave Desert — a mystical place if there ever was one — it features striking visuals of the vast wasteland, along with a mysterious dancer, alluding to the universe’s great unknown.

To see theShift in action yourself, check out the “Consecrated” video below, and, as a bonus, their video for “Dreams,” both from 7th Direction.

Radio City With Jon Grayson & Rob Ross: Episode Eighteen

Radio City with Jon Grayson and Rob Ross: Eighteen!  And I don’t know what I want…

Actually, we do – you want more Radio City and Jon and Rob are happy to supply you with your weekly fix.  This week’s show, the guys say farewell to Anita Pallenberg and Stephen Furst; an assessment of the band Cowbell and the praises of Michigan’s The Hangabouts; Bob Cashill’s look at Broadway’s Tony Awards season; D.W. Dunphy’s very warm and informative conversation with the glorious Matthew Sweet and the joy of connecting with the person you’re interviewing; horror movies when they were kids; Rob’s take on the movie “Get Out” and the “In Our Heads” segment.  Listen in as the two have a good time talking and trading ideas – join them and see what you can take away from it…

Radio City With Jon Grayson & Rob Ross:  Episode Eighteen


The podcast will be on the site as well as for subscription via iTunes and other podcast aggregators. Subscribe and let people know about Radio City, as well as Popdose’s other great podcasts David Medsker’s Dizzy Heights and In:Sound with Michael Parr and Zack Stiegler.

Confessions of a Comics Shop Junkie, Vol. 2 No. 1

Hello there, I’m back! Much has happened since 2012, the last time I inflicted my opinions on all things comics-ish on you, gentle readers. I’d bet that there aren’t even that many of you left who remember my old column! I won’t go into my reasons for my absence because they’re boring and you don’t care, really… suffice it to say that I have the itch again (even though, to be honest, my comics consumption has really slowed down in the last few years- I still do keep up with what’s current though) and I will be back here once a month to let you know what I thought about what I read, and hopefully steer you towards the good stuff when possible.

BUG! The Adventures of Forager #’s 1, 2
Lee Allred, script, Michael Allred, script/art, Laura Allred, colors
DC/Young Animal, ongoing, $3.99

Jack Kirby left such a great legacy and so many imaginative, memorable characters, that it’s no surprise that DC (they have all those IP’s to exploit, you know- thanks, Jack) and so many creators (who quite rightly want to pay tribute to the man that inspired so many) want to continue to play in that sandbox. The latest is none other than Mike Allred, once of Madman fame and who has gone on to play in numerous sandboxes of both companies (I recall that he has a recent well-received stint on Silver Surfer to his credit, among others, I haven’t read it) with varying degrees of success. The twist here is that it’s truly an Allred family affair this time; brother Lee is co-credited on script and spouse Laura does her usual great job on colors. All in service of DC’s newish “Young Animal” imprint, designed to provide the same kind of vibe that Vertigo provided, but apparently in a super-hero friendly fashion, since many of the titles launched under that imprint (Doom Patrol, Shade the Changing Girl, Cave Carson Has a Cybernetic Eye) feature repurposed DC characters of varying pedigrees.

Bug! gives us a fairly minor character in that vast tapestry that was Kirby’s Fourth World books (New Gods, Forever People, Mister Miracle and Jimmy Olsen), a young fellow named “Forager” who was part of the New Genesis (the presumed “good guys”, certainly preferable to Darkseid’s Apokolips) faceless worker caste, who were treated, truth be told, rather badly by the ruling caste that Highfather, Orion, Lightray, etc. represented. Certainly Kirby intended to provide a little social commentary in this fashion, but alas New Gods got cancelled only two issues after Forager was introduced in #9. If you’re not familiar with Kirby’s Fourth World, the Wikipedia entry here explains it as well as anything. It’s a long and gnarly history, believe me.

40 years later, the pop-culture savvy Mike Allred of course would gravitate to a character like Forager, who really hasn’t been used enough to accumulate a lot of continuity barnacles. Allred’s art has always reminded me of Kirby as well (inked by Chic Stone, my fave Kirby inker), so it’s usually always worth a look when he takes on one of the King’s concepts. The Bug is drawn as one of Allred’s usual long-haired young rebel types, bearing a little resemblance to what I remember Paul Pope looking like once upon a time… storywise, he and brother Mike have concocted an odd sort of surreal framework here; he awakes from death (something which is alluded to in a flashback, I must have missed that comic) to encounter at first a weird ghost girl who has a talking teddy bear and a fascination with dominoes. Things get even stranger when this is revealed to be the dream domain of the 3rd iteration of the Sandman (who was thoroughly deconstructed in Neil Gaiman’s Sandman, but I’m sure that’s all been retconned since then and it was original Vertigo anyway, so they may just say it doesn’t count), done of course by Kirby in the 70s, who is tasked with protecting the real world against menaces from the Dream Dimension. A bad guy named “General Electric”, that’s right, gets involved, seeking to steal an metal with magical properties from the Sandman, and comes into conflict with our Bug as well. #2 finds this conflict resulting in Bug going back in time to WWII and encountering the second Sandman, the Simon/Kirby yellow/purple supersuited action hero and his sidekick Sandy, the original Blue Beetle, and the WWII era Losers, battling Yetis and General E again in Tibet.

As you can probably tell by now, this is all very inside baseball and is crammed full of references to all kinds of comics history gone by, both arcane and common. It reminds me a lot of Mike’s signature work Madman, which also features a resurrected young wannabe rebel protagonist who is seeking answers about the who, what, where, and why of his life and encounters all kinds of weirdness as he quests. There’s no shortage of quirk; to name one example, General E has a battalion of robot soldiers with electrical plugs on their heads for no real discernible reason except to reinforce the GE pun and perhaps make a sort of anti-big business joke. Bug! is fast paced, and Mike’s art is as solid as always; his style isn’t flashy or as quirky (given what goes on in the script) as you’d expect, but his visuals are always clear and well-thought-out. The dialogue doesn’t work as well; for every clever pun or reference there are two that kinda just lay there flat. I’m not exactly sure what kind of audience this hopes to attract; younger readers might be receptive to the tone but find all the constant in-jokes and callbacks confusing; and I’d imagine the aging fanboys who once loved Kirby’s originals will just be confused or unimpressed.  I hope the Allreds can take what seems to be a “monthly guest star(s)” format title in some sort of direction that can transcend all that. We’ll see.

America #’s 1-3
Script: Gabby Rivera; Art: Joe Quinones, Joe Rivera, various collaborators.
Marvel Comics, ongoing series, $3.99

The “America” in question this time out isn’t Captain, or even the country, but America Chavez, a character who’s been around quite a while already in many recent-ish Marvel series, most notably the Young Avengers of Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie’s run. She’s a queer Latina Wonder Woman-ish type; super strong and super smart, and more cynically, she’s keeping the “Miss America” character Marvel has had since the 40s’ license in perpetuity. I’ll give Marvel all the credit in the world for its diversification initiative; there’s a certain element that hates seeing an African-American Spider-Man or a female Thor, but I think in year 2017, what with everything that’s been done to all these characters in the last 50 years, it’s a misguided complaint at best. Anyway, I digress.

Now that the character has her own series, it finds her breaking away from the super-teams and allies from previous stories (although, yes, there are many callbacks to all of them) and breaking up with her current girlfriend,  then enrolling in college, which leads to a rather gnarly-plotted time-traveling multi-dimensional story arc that, to be honest, left me confused more often as not. Artwise, it’s capably drawn by Joe Quinones with a number of guest pencillers (including Ming Doyle) contributing and a host of inkers, most prominently Joe Rivera- you’d think this would lead to visual chaos but surprisingly the style is quite consistent- solid but the collective doesn’t really have a distinctive style between them, surprising because I’ve seen much better from all of the separate components. Perhaps they’re trying to emulate the static stylings of longtime Young Avengers (and current Wicked + the Divine) artist McKelvie, who has done the character a lot, I don’t know. This is not a knock, necessarily; they tell the story well enough but it’s just hard to get excited by it.

I have liked America a lot when she’s appeared in other titles; she’s a confident, no-nonsense problem-solver type who plays well with others.  So far, in her own book, though, the scripting suffers just a bit from an unusual problem-  it’s written in the same (here’s this word again, and I’m sorry for the repetition) quirky, jokey, self-aware, metatextual style that starts out as fun but soon wears itself out; it reads much like other Marvel titles of this type such as The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl and Patsy Walker AKA Hellcat!, lighthearted and fun, yet the fun seems to take over and leaves the reader with nothing really to invest themselves in. If I know that Squirrel Girl will overcome these difficulties to win every single time with no character development whatsoever, it becomes a rather routine read, which is why I quite buying SG after a healthy 18 or so issue period. The quirk just overwhelmed everything else. America is not quite at this stage yet, but the tone is similar. It’s also similar in a lot of ways to Charles Soule’s excellent take on She-Hulk a couple of years ago; it had its share of jokiness but also kept things down to earth in its character interaction which balances things out. Perhaps it’s just a matter of me not being the target audience, which I’d imagine skews younger than yr humble scribe.  If I like a character enough, I’ll stick with it through a lot, and that’s gonna keep me reading America for a while longer… your mileage, as they say, may vary.

Motor Crush TPB
Story: Babs Tarr, Brenden Fletcher, Cameron Stewart
Art: Babs Tarr, Cameron Stewart
Image Comics, $9.99

Tarr/Fletcher/Stewart were the creative team behind one of DC’s umpteen attempts to do Batgirl; they provided a fresh, fun take that didn’t last nearly as long as it should before the constantly rebooting publisher decided yet another direction was in order. Don’t know all the whys and wherefores of that decision, but the team quickly launched Motor Crush not long after, and it has many of the charms of their work with Babs Gordon’s alter-ego. In fact, as I recall, their Batgirl run at one point featured a duo of not-so-nice young ladies who went around on motorcycles and created havoc before Batgirl shut them down; can’t help but think those characters were the inspiration for all this, or perhaps Tarr and Stewart just like manga-esque motorbike action, who knows.

Another inspiration, I dare say, is Speed Racer– and that is basically what we have here, except it’s genderswitched and Speed in this case is addicted since birth to “Crush”, which (if I understand it) not only stimulates and imparts extraordinary abilities to people- it’s such potent speed that it even affects time itself, or at least perception of it, enabling the user to do Flash-type stunts- but also it’s intended to act like a super-fuel for the motorbikes that are all-important to seemingly everyone in this future society the creators have dreamed up. Our heroine is Domino Swift, known as “Cricket” to the other racers; she races by day for her Dad, who, like Pops Racer, is a race mechanic of renown, and by night in Running Man- style illegal-yet-televised races in which the prize is a stock of Crush, which our girl needs to survive. There’s a lot of mystery in her past; she’s adopted, you see, was addicted to the stuff from birth (as I stated previously), and of course there are all kinds of enigmatic allusions about who she really is and where she came from, and Pops doesn’t want her to know. Aggravating all this is a Racer X type who, by the end of this collection, has already talked to Domino and has given her the purest Crush she’s ever had, telling her that she is more than she seems. This will, of course, all be revealed eventually, I have no doubt. It’s harsh and not entirely accurate to call this an “idiot plot“, but I can’t help but think that a lot of the drama these characters have going on could be avoided by just letting them talk to each other, and tell each other plainly what’s going on. Ah, but then we wouldn’t have a multi-issue story arc, would we?

I do like the artwork this team creates; of course, it’s very manga/anime-beholden, as it seems 8.5 out of every 10 young artists are, but it adapts that style in an exciting fashion. Tarr and Stewart (a very good artist in his own right, not especially manga-influenced) work well together. I’m sure at some point since Batgirl I was made aware of how their collaboration works; the one perhaps does layouts and the latter finishes, but don’t quote me on that. Regardless, they do turn out a very bracing type of illustration work- fast paced and expressive, and with appealing character design. Sometimes it can get a little sketchy and crude, usually when the action ramps up so I have to assume that’s a creative decision, but overall it works very well with the subject matter.

Some may find Motor Crush a bit derivative- honestly, I haven’t read much, if anything, about critic or reader reactions to the series. That said, it’s always been my belief that derivative isn’t necessarily a bad thing if the people who are doing the borrowing have the skills to make something good out of it, and after the five issues I’ve read, I believe that this applies to Fletcher/Stewart/Tarr and company. I think you should check it out for yourself.

OK, that will do for this month-  thanks for reading, and look for my second Nobody’s Favorite Record Review next month.

5 Artists That Inspired California’s American High and Their ’60s-Pop-Meets-Punk Sound

As someone whose top five bands include both the Beatles and Green Day, I have a special spot in my heart for musicians who also recognize the bizarre, yet obvious, link between ’60s rock/pop and latter-day punk.

American High, a rock band out of Sacramento, California, embraces those influences in their music, perfectly blending the two disparate sounds and celebrating the lineage from one to the other. For anyone who’s a fan of either, their new album, Bones in the Attic, Flowers in the Basement, is a must-hear, but for anyone who’s a fan of both, it’s a revelation.

Because of this unique pedigree, we asked American High to tell us more about their influences. “We’re four guys who love rock and roll and love songs and songwriting,” they say. “We pay respect to brilliant artists that have gone before. But in our own way. Our songs are influenced by whatever bubbles up from the subconscious. We give equal weight to all ideas/hooks/harmonies, regardless of which decade they harken to.”

Check out these five artists that left a lasting impression on American High!

1. Elliott Smith

For us, songwriting is very organic.  It’s something you feel first and craft later.  So, we don’t have a very methodical approach, like Elliott Smith talks about in this vid.  We can’t remember if our philosophy of songwriting was born after seeing this or if this vid made such an impact because it so closely mirrored our own.  To us, his is the only name that should be mentioned in the same breath as Lennon and McCartney.

We love Elliott Smith for his fascinating, no-rules approach to songwriting, his self-deprecation (which adds a sense of vulnerability and realism) his genius for producing catchy songs in spite of the generally dark subject matter (similar to the Smiths in that way), his penchant for creating songs with dual or multiple meanings, and many other reasons too long to list.

2. The Beatles

For me, I believe I was 11 or 12 when I first listened to a band that wasn’t the Beatles.  They’ve always just been a part of my life.  Different records at different times, but for me, the songs just never get old.  I know that I’m not unique in this, but as I studied songs and songwriting growing up, I learned more from the Beatles than anyone.

It’s not possible to list everything I love about them here, but I have no doubt that their influence can be heard throughout our record.

We picked this video because it illustrates another important aspect of our musical philosophy.  Great rock and roll remains great forever. Sixty years old? Thirty years old? Sixty days old? It doesn’t matter.

What makes great rock and roll great? Lots of things, but to us, one often-forgotten, difficult-to-define aspect is illustrated here. It begins about 02:35 in (watch P. McCartney dismiss the Swedish-speaking host via universal sign language), sandwiched between some great songs.  It was rock and roll to rebel against the powers that be then…

3. Green Day

…and it was rock and roll then, too.  Here’s Green Day doing basically the same thing 30 years later (screw the host, LET’S ROCK!!!).  Time can’t erode the things that make rock and roll so powerful! So, we give equal weight to all ideas, hooks, harmonies, sounds, and schemes regardless of which decade they harken to. Blending various ideas, for us, is one of the ways we hope to make music that feels (and is) unique.

Green Day came to us later in our musical development.  We were stuck on ’80s punk (the Descendants, X, the Dickies, the Ramones, the Clash, Sex Pistols, the Dead Kennedys, many more). Nirvana was a favorite of ours for a long time, and Green Day seemed like a music-industry trick to replace them (three members, the guitar player sings, punk). Boy, were we wrong.

We started with Dookie and got hooked on each record in order. We have never gotten over that punchy, pop-punk sound, and Green Day remains, in our opinion, one of the greatest rock and roll bands of all time.

4. Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young

We believe in swinging for the fences when it comes to making music. If you are going to make songs, we believe you should always try to make great songs. Now, the problem with trying to be great is that you rarely achieve your goal. Swinging for the fences, to us, means not only trying to make the songs as catchy and unique as possible but infusing them with multiple meanings and deeper themes.

Our philosophy can be found in most of the songs on Bones in the Attic, Flowers in the Basement. Freedom, the costs of sending a massive military out into the world to force everyone to obey through violence and fear, the suffering by normal fellow citizens that results and the idea that we are all born with identical rights regardless of religion, race, sexuality, gender place of birth or residence. That these rights belong to each of us and cannot be revoked by mere mortals, no matter how much violence the use or how much of the electorate they have in their corner. That maybe the answer is to scrap the current power structure and start over.

CSNY were masters in this regard. In this song, “Ohio,” they make social commentary on the killings of unarmed Kent State University student protestors by armed military personnel. The group also includes a call to arms.  This is rock and roll at its best to us. Groovy and catchy as heck, and an attempt to wake up the populace to crimes committed by their government.

5.  Nirvana

Here’s Nirvana’s first performance on TV. This time British; we’re pretty sure this is live, and we’re pretty sure the powers that be didn’t like the way Cobain introduces the song. But look at the crowd. This is the power of great rock and roll. These kids nearly rip the place down. And Cobain, Novoselic, and Grohl are so into the music that they don’t care that the song isn’t quite right and mistakes are made.

Our goal is making great rock and roll songs, mistakes and all. Whether we achieve that isn’t up to us. It’s about the feel of the songs, the groove. We hope our love of rock and roll shines through musically, socially and philosophically. We want to make songs that are unique, diversified and that pay homage to the geniuses that have gone before. If all art is derivative, we want to derive ours from as many sources as possible spanning as many genres and decades as inspire us, throw all of that into the creative hopper, add that creative force that Elliott Smith talks about, and in the end, hope something memorable is born. We hope you all dig the songs and that this finds you all safe during these troubled times.

You Should Be Proud of this Achievement: Female Film Directors and Their Next Superhero Movie

At a time when five out of every four films contain superheroes, this year’s Wonder Woman feels fresh and amazing. After more than a decade of the Marvel Universe, the superhero sub-genre seemed to go about as far as it can go. Director Patty Jenkins has shown us what is missing from almost every comic book movie – passion for the characters.

When Iron Man was released in 2008, no one expected it to kick start an entire universe of films. Tony Stark was a character known only to comic fans as Marvel’s answer to Batman . Yet the filmmakers cared about making a good movie and audiences responded. Studios, being staffed by the most insightful people on the planet, assumed that what we needed was more explosions and executive meddling and less of that passion. Look how Marvel treated Edgar Wright and his attempts to make Ant-Man.

And then Jenkins makes a movie about characters who inspired her when she was younger. She had the same passion and energy Jon Favreau had about Iron Man.

The fact she was given such a huge budget to make it at all is a miracle. Female directors have had a hard time in Hollywood. A guy directs a car commercial and he’s handed a tent-pole project at Disney. A woman directs Oscar winning films, but still struggles to get major films greenlit. Jenkin’s feature film debut was Monster, the movie that won Charlize Theron an Oscar. She followed up this huge artistic success by directing an episode of Arrested Development and two episodes of Entourage. Now these overlooked directors may have found a new way to finally win that fight for recognition.

So, now that Wonder Woman has proven a success, let’s take a look at the future. What acclaimed female directors should make what female superhero film?

Batgirl (Kathryn Bigelow) – So far, Barbara Gordon’s sole film outing was the disastrous Batman & Robin. Instead of being the troubled genius daughter of the one good cop in Gotham, she was turned into a valley girl who became Batgirl because she could guess a simple password.

Fans of the Batman comics know that Barbara is Bruce Wayne’s most valuable ally and doesn’t even need a costume. After the Joker paralyzed her, she reinvented herself as Oracle. This way, she could use her computer genius to basically turn code into magic. Listening to her dialogue is like listening to a tech thriller. But stories focusing on Barbara also have feminist themes that have never been fully explored. Even though she’s the smartest person in the room, she struggles with Bruce Wayne’s ego and the number of times

It reminds of Jessica Chastain’s character in Zero Dark Thirty, which is why Kathryn Bigelow would be the perfect director for a Batgirl film. She could capture Gordon’s sense of being stuck in a world that she can’t control, even though she knows the solution to fix everything. And Bigelow has long had an obsession with surveillance and technology being unable to beat human intuition. The aforementioned Zero Dark Thirty was about how a massive use of force couldn’t beat intuition. And Strange Days took surveillance to a nightmarish alternate reality where people could experience each other’s lives with headsets. Imagine Barbara fighting the Mad Hatter as he gets Gotham addicted to similar technology.  And, as Near Dark demonstrated, Bigelow can effectively directed an action scene.

Bigelow has already created Barbara Gordon like characters in her recent films.  It’s time for her to tackle the real thing.

Zatanna (Julie Taymor) – I know that Julie Taymor’s last attempt at tackling the superhero genre practically ended with a body count. Spider-man: Turn Off the Dark is the sort of work that people speak of in hushed tones around the campfire to scare the newbies in show business.

But Taymor is also one of the few female directors who has been allowed to develop her own visual style. Her adaptation of Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus is one of the most underrated films ever made. Across the Universe was probably the only jukebox musical that worked with its psychedelic visuals and characters that weren’t just representative of the pretentious nostalgia baby boomers have for the 1960s but represented youth across all time.

Taymor’s visual style makes her the ideal candidate for any number of superhero films. But which superhero film is the most appropriate? I would say it’s Justice League member Zatanna. She’s probably the most obscure character on this list, but that’s not stopping studios anymore. She’s a stage magician who is also an actual wizard. So all the tricks she’s doing onstage are really happening.

The story would probably be very similar to Doctor Strange, as a talented stage performer discovers that she may be able to perform her tricks for real. Also, in the hands of Julie Taymor, a Zatanna film would be among the most visually stunning superhero movies ever made.

She-Hulk (Lisa Cholodenko) – Of all the characters on this list, She Hulk is the character I struggled with the most.

It would be very difficult for a film to nail the tone of She Hulk. Unlike her cousin Bruce Banner, She Hulk is not a tragic figure fighting demons that live inside her. On the contrary, she prefers her hulk form to her waifish Jennifer Walters persona. She Hulk is basically two very different female identities rolled into one. That still creates tension as Jennifer realizes that people only care about her for the amazon sex symbol that resides inside of her rather than for her own skills as an attorney. That’s more difficult to capture than Bruce Banner’s anger problems.

She was also Deadpool before there was a Deadpool. She Hulk was one of the first mainstream comic book characters that realized her actions were at the whim of whatever staff writer Marvel assigned to her comic. She would taunt her readers for taking her adventures seriously and at the Marvel staff for their ridiculous story choices.

It’s very difficult to find a director who can match both tones, but I think Lisa Cholodenko is the ideal choice for the material. Cholodenko has defined her career with quirky indie comedies about women who are struggling with their identity and their past. The Kids are All Right, a movie about a lesbian couple whose family life is interrupted by the arrival of the sperm donor they used to have children, shows a talent for light comedy that a She Hulk movie would need.

But it also demonstrated an interest in the different personas women struggle with. The couple in The Kids are All Right actually represents both sides of She Hulk. Annette Bening is a nerdy intellectual while Julianne Moore is a fun loving extrovert. All Cholodenko would have to do is combine them into one character. The one thing I’m not sure about is the action, but then She Hulk doesn’t need to be an action packed extravaganza. It needs to be a story about a character that feels conflicted but knows that conflict is silly. Cholodenko’s work shows she is up for the challenge.

Death (Sofia Coppola) – Death has long been the breakout character of Neil Gaiman’s Sandman comic book series. The battle to get the comics to the screen has been a long and painful one that is still ongoing.

It seems premature to talk about a Death movie, but it would be a good way to introduce a movie audience to the world of the Endless. Death is a more accessible character because she’s not based on an abstract concept. Everyone has been visited by her and wishes they could ask her a question while they’re still alive. And Gaiman changed our concept of her. She was a character who loved life and loved meeting people at their final moments. Her task wasn’t a burden, but a gift that she wanted to share.

There aren’t many directors who could do well with the material. They would try to add some unnecessary gothic imagery or magic. But one person who could make a good Death movie is Sofia Coppola.

I’m not Coppola’s biggest fan, but her subtle style is perfect for the material. The High Cost of Living is a very subtle work that doesn’t have a lot of comic book action. It’s about a quirky woman trying to understand a culture she’ll never be able to. Coppola made that film once and won an Oscar for it. She’s also one of the few filmmakers that could, perhaps, get the project off the ground.

Supergirl (Lexi Alexander)- Of all the characters on this list, Supergirl is the most well represented in popular culture. She’s had her own solo movie, has made numerous appearances in the various DC cartoons, and now has a show on the CW. Lexi Alexander has directed a few episodes of the TV show.

So why does Supergirl need a new movie at all?

It’s partly because the character still feels like a B-list character despite her association with the sainted Superman. DC had no issues killing her in the ‘80s, and then brought her back in the ‘90s just so she could be Lex Luthor’s boyfriend.  And, in recent times, DC decided that Supergirl was more interesting as a villain and then decided to kill her again.

DC has constantly used Supergirl as an extension of Superman. She’s forever a side character while Clark Kent gets all the credit. Now that Wonder Woman has proven itself a success, DC finally has a chance to fix this lapse. She doesn’t just have to be identical to her cousin, especially when the world expects different things from her. How does this make her feel? Does she want to follow in the truth, justice, and American way path? Considering that DC is determined to build the same universe Marvel has for its characters, Supergirl is a welcome addition.

So why should Lexi Alexander direct a full length Supergirl film? Because her career is very similar to Supergirl’s character arc. Alexander directed one comic book film (Punisher: War Zone) that now enjoys a strong cult following. But it was released to critical anger and remains the lowest grossing Marvel film ever made. This despite the fact that it’s a lot more fun than Age of Ultron and Alexander made a great action film that Michael Bay could only dream of.

So despite her skill, Lexi Alexander is regulated to the sidelines while her less interesting peers are given iconic status. She’s the natural fit for Supergirl.

ALBUM REVIEW: Jeff Tweedy’s “Together at Last”

Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy has released an acoustic mini-masterpiece, an understated tour-de-force that quietly creeps up on you and never lets go. Tweedy’s new release Together at Last, recorded at the band’s Chicago studio The Loft, is a collection of previously released compositions, pared down for guitar and vocal.

The song selection has a few Wilco favorites along with a couple of “odds and sods,” from side projects Loose Fur and Golden Smog. Tweedy’s approach avoids those explosions of sound that are a Wilco trademark, in favor of simple, uncluttered, acoustic arrangements. It’s as if this album was purposely under-engineered.

The album opens with “Via Chicago,” Wilco’s murky masterpiece which features Tweedy on harmonica doing his best Neil Young. The song, originally recorded on the end of the century favorite Summerteeth, sets the trend for much of the release, with Tweedy singing just above a whisper.

“Laminated Cat,” better known as “Not for the Season,” is divine, with a flawless guitar solo that brings out the song’s essence. The lyric “Candy left over from Halloween/The unified theory of everything” remains a wonderful morsel of cereal box philosophy.

There’s nothing too fancy about “Muzzle of Bees,” originally recorded on A Ghost is Born and perhaps this writer’s favorite Wilco song. “In a Future Age” is similar, stripped down to basics, slowed just enough to stand out from the original recording. There’s overwhelming power in the simplicity of both songs.

The mellow mood lingers on 2002’s “Ashes of the American Flag,” notable for its irony. Tweedy enunciates like Dylan (“Diet Coca Cola”), as he fingerpicks his guitar singing “I wonder why we listen to poets/When nobody gives a fuck.”

“I am Trying to Break Your Heart” is another highlight, with its intimate lyrics and carefully strummed notes. The song is a regular at Wilco shows where the band is known to tear it up and then reconstruct it. Not quite the style of this recording – although Tweedy probably couldn’t help but add a little guitar overdub. It serves as a reminder that Wilco/Tweedy can be equally strong electric or acoustic.

There’s a degree of playfulness throughout the album, with its varied arrangements, key changes and fluid melodic structure. “Hummingbird,” a classic from A Ghost is Born, is a good example. It’s performed close to the original, but still sounds fresh. The tune is also a songwriting clinic:

“His goal in life was to be an echo/Riding alone, town after town, toll after toll/A fixed bayonet through the great southwest to forget her.”

The album is raw, naked and beautiful – Would it be too bold to say that, in a sense, Tweedy is making love to these familiar songs? There’s even beauty in “the space between,” those moments of silence where nothing is said or strummed. Indeed, even the sound of silence on this album makes an impression.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED – ESSENTIAL FOR WILCO FANS

Album Review: Plasticsoul, “Therapy”

Lately, I’ve been struggling with the genre subclassification “power pop.” I never used to have this problem. In fact, for the longest time, I’ve been a defender of the terminology. I mean, how detrimental could it be?

In the grand scheme of things, not at all, but when you start inquiring what the term evokes to other critics and some listeners, the responses are worrisome: happy, horny, and frivolous. Most artists won’t mind the first term, and are sanguine to the second term. It is what it is. But that third term…frivolous? Work on a batch of songs for a year (at least) and then reckon with the frivoloty of your efforts. You’ll change your mind.

So in my mind, it might be time to step away from the term and reclassify this music what it is and has always been — rock. Attitude? Guitars? Maybe an agenda? Yes, yes, and we’ll see.

This brings us to Plasticsoul and their new album Therapy. It’s been some time since we’ve heard from the group (see 2005’s Pictures from the Long Ago and 2009’s Peacock Swagger), but time has not diminished the snarl behind the smile. Plasticsoul still has the wherewithal to kick you in the butt.

The group is led by Steven Wilson, and I suppose I have to provide a qualification at this point. This is not the Steven Wilson that led the band Porcupine Tree and co-created Blackfield, and yet both Wilsons synthesize the sounds of the ’60s and ’70s in modern ways. For Plasticsoul, the combination of the singer/songwriter ethos with the heavier sides of Big Star and The Byrds find Wilson in similar company with Michael Penn and Matthew Sweet, just to name two other artists who have needed to assert their seriousness against their own ornate melodicism.

And Plasticsoul is serious, even when they’re being playful as on the track “The Girl of Many Tribes” which mixes up sitar and tabla with mariachi horns and a samba beat. Similar exotic touches set the gorgeous “Babylon” alight. The beautiful but harrowing “My Heavy Soul” opens the record like a confessional, with Wilson wearily reckoning “It’s been three weeks since the relapse and all I’ve got is my heavy soul” to an acoustic guitar, restrained cello, and a low choir of vocal harmonies. “All Died Pretty” sneers to big, jangly guitars, handclaps, and lyrical malevolence. 

None of this should dissuade anyone who is thinking “arty-farty” because, at the core, this remains a rock record to reassert my original statement. “In Her Raincoat” is flat-out gorgeous with a pitch-perfect guitar solo at the bridge. If you’ve been starving for something reminicent of The Knack during the Zoom era, this song will set you up just right. “Monkey On A Stick” is a punk song, whether anyone dares to classify it as such or not and is a kerosene-torching showcase for Wilson,  bassist Marc Bernal, guitarist Daniel Conrad, and especially drummer Steve Markowicz who summarily beats the hell out of his kit.

Plasticsoul has survived on the fringes for a while, so you can be forgiven for not having heard of them until now. But do yourself a favor and don’t deprive yourself of Therapy, which will surely end up as one of the best rock records of 2017.

Plasticsoul’s Therapy is available at Bandcamp.com.