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Live a Little is the sixth recording by The Pernice Brothers,
and it marks as much a return to form as it does a departure
from what came before it.
For one thing, there's the reunion of Joe Pernice and producer
Michael Deming, who worked on the recordings of Joe's previous
band, the Scud Mountain Boys, as well as the very first Pernice
Brothers record, Overcome By Happiness. This one has strings
and horns, which have not been part of a Pernice album since
OBH. But, and this is a mighty exception, it's much more of
a rock record than that was, representing the running of big
fat analog tape while sweaty guys played on well-crafted instruments
through amplifiers and pounded on sweet, old, drum kits. Oh,
and it marks a return to New England, having been recorded
in Connecticut, which one of the band members used to disparage
as nothing more than the state in his way when he wanted to
travel from Massachusetts to New York. He's now grown to pay
it the respect it deserves as a rock mecca, hiding in plain
sight.
Lyrically, it's another masterpiece, and if distinctions must
be drawn, perhaps this one's a bit more literary, where last
year's Discover a Lovelier You was somewhat more cinematic.
"PCH One" probably could have been a Scud Mountain
Boys song, and "Grudge F*** (2006) was a Scud Mountain
Boys song (without the 2006), but instead of the gentle, almost
lazy, plaintive plodding of the original recording, the Pernice
Brothers version out-Badfingers Badfinger and that's good.
You can feel its pain. It also has the trademark Pernice geography
obsession. There are eleven very excellently crafted and executed
new songs in all, plus the aforementioned "Grudge,"
which is indeed a stunner.
Joe Pernice began his recording career in the mid-90's with
the Scuds, in Northampton, Massachusetts. In addition to his
Pernice output (Overcome By Happiness,
The World Won't End,Yours Mine and Ours, Discover a Lovelier
You plus the live album/DVD Nobody's Watching/Nobody's Listening)
and his three Scuds records, he has also recorded under the
name Chappaquiddick Skyline and released a solo album called
Big Tobacco. He has two books out: Two Blind Pigeons is a
collection of poetry and Meat is Murder is a critically-acclaimed
novella published as part of the 33 1/3 series by Continuum
Books. He is an accomplished television star, having made
a 45-second appearance as a troubadour-wannabe in a 2006 episode
of The Gilmore Girls. Ashmont Records is a small indie label
co-owned by Joe and his long-time manager Joyce Linehan, based
in Dorchester, Massachusetts, which is known (artistically)
for being the birthplace of Norm Crosby, Ray Bolger, Donna
Summer, the Wahlberg Brothers and Joe Pernice's grandmother.
It also boasts the world's largest piece of copyrighted public
art, the controversial painting (informally called the "Ho
Chi Min Memorial Gas Tank) by Sr. Corita Kent on a giant gas
tank. I'm not making that up.
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