51st Grammy Awards
Okay, I'll admit I vote for the Grammies. Yup. Why? Besides the sometimes odd spectacle of the Grammy Awards, NARAS does some cool stuff in the music community (like the SeattleStudio Summit),MusiCaresand theProducers and Engineers Wing. So I do vote for these Grammy Awards, and in many years past it's felt like a futile game, as the few half-interesting albums, songs and artists that DO make the final cut seemed to always get overshadowed by the act with the bigger sales or "legendary" status. This year was a bit different. Seeing Robert Plant and Alison Krauss take home all 5 awards they were up for, including Album of the Year, nearly made my cry. "What, real music won?" Damn nice, and seeing a few folks I'd met over the years, like T Bone Burnett and Gavin Lurssen up there grinning at the end was damn nice. Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical went to a great album,Consolers of the Lonelyby The Raconteurs, and some cool dudes: Joe Chiccarelli, Vance Powell & Jack White III. Nice. I guess Rick Rubin won producer of the year, but man, I wish I could say I thought his recordssoundedgood these days. I think he's fucking shit up more than helping some times. But all in all, the Awards had some better stuff than I expected, and more acts won that I had voted for than ever, but sitting through country-row music hacks Sugarland, and then watching them butcher Adele's way too brief set was excruciating. And if the Jonas Brothers, Justin Timbershit and John Mayer fell off the face of the earth it would not be a bad thing for music. But what the hell do I know - I'm not a 12 year old girl who has crap music shoved in her face by the Disney Corp. If some of these audio mixers involved were stone deaf then I'd understand why half the performances sounded completely out of balance and weird. At least we got to see 2/5's of Radiohead rock out with a marching band, although that mix was the worst I heard by far. Alright, back to work...
MORE ENTRIES

April 18, 2025
Tunde Adebimpe: Thee Black Boltz
BY Geoff Stanfield
Ian Brennan interviewedTunde Adebimpe forTape Op#155, and he has just releasedThee Black Boltz, a beautifully conceived album full of interesting soni...

April 13, 2025
New Bon Iver: SABLE fABLE
BY Geoff Stanfield
Listening toSABLE, fABLE, the new release from Bon Iver, it dawned on me that he and co-producer Jim-E Stack, have created a collection of songs that ...

April 4, 2025
New Music from Dirty Projectors
BY Geoff Stanfield
We interviewed David Longstreth of the Dirty Projectors back in 2013 forTape Opissue #93. His new release,Songs of the Earth, is a return to a sound a...

March 31, 2025
New Music From Tortoise
BY Geoff Stanfield
Members of Tortoise have graced the pages ofTape Opfor years. We interviewedJohn McEntirein 2001 for issue #23, and more recently we coveredJeff Parke...

March 30, 2025
New Music From Lucy Dacus and Perfume Genius Produced By Blake Mills
BY Geoff Stanfield
We interviewed producer and guitarist Blake Mills inTape Op#115and for ourpodcastin 2019. He’s produced newly-released records for both Lucy Dacus –Fo...

March 21, 2025
Fort George Brewery and Tape Op Overdub IPA
BY Geoff Stanfield
Brian Bovinizer is the Marketing and Sales Director at Fort George Brewery in Astoria, Oregon. Being aTape Opreader, some 11 years ago he spottedTape ...

March 5, 2025
Mdou Moctar Releases Tears of Injustice
BY Geoff Stanfield
Released in 2024, Mdou Moctar'sFuneral for Justiceis a raucous, distorted guitar-driven album that, along with bands such as Tinariwen, turns the idea...

March 4, 2025
Panda Bear Releases Sinister Grift
BY Geoff Stanfield
It's always a good day when I discover that there is new music from Panda Bear. It hits all the marks for me; nods to the classics, modern concepts, s...

February 25, 2025
New Music From Rafiq Bhatia
BY Geoff Stanfield
We hadRafiq Bhatiaas a guest on ourDISCussion podcastin June of 2023. His new release, a collaboration with pianist Chris Pattishall,Each Dream, A Mel...