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Dirty Streets Live Platter Takes You Back to Pounding ’70s Riffs

Don’t sleep on the Streets! Good advice in any context, but in this case it means keep Dirty Streets, the band, on your radar. Because if you need a fix of slamming old school hard rawk, they deliver it and then some on this year’s release, Rough and Tumble (Alive Naturalsound).

They’ve honed their sound for over a decade on the Memphis scene, to the point where this live album has an offhand power and precision bespeaking years on the stage. In this case, the room was the sound stage at Ditty TV, the internet broadcast studio on South Main that mixes live performances with a steady feed of music videos. It’s ostensibly Americana-oriented, but the diversity of their programming makes it clear how inclusive that genre has come to be.

Whenever a band performs on Ditty TV, they receive a video of the moment that they can use any way they see fit. This also goes for the multi-track recording, often engineered by the great Doug Easley.  That’s exactly how it went down when Dirty Streets performed there, and this album is the result.

For that very reason, it may be the least rowdy live album ever recorded. Performances at Ditty TV typically have few if any audience members — certainly, there are none to be heard on this album. Indeed, the performances are so tight that many may not realize it was recorded live. Nonetheless, that setting of a live taping for broadcast seems to have brought out in the band a focused energy and drive that rarely comes out in purely studio-based recordings. These songs were slammed out one after the other in real time, with no overdubs after the fact. And the consistency of this album is a tribute to how together this band really is.

What they deliver is a wide ranging set from their catalog, brimming over with hard rock nuggets that might have had them touring with Free or Nazareth back in the day. Justin Toland, the power trio’s singer and guitarist, has the classic voice of the soulful rocker, well suited to shouting tunefully over pounding guitar riffs. Indeed, when they try their hand at not one, but two songs by the classic writer Joe South, the rock/R&B hybrid that emerges evokes the similar aesthetic of Detroit’s Scott Morgan.

The rest of the set is a stroll through their originals, which, like the White Stripes, can feel like a tour of ’70s riffs without the cringe-worthy sexism that usually goes with the music of that era. For my money, the highlight is “Take a Walk,” where Toland breaks out the wah-wah pedal to great effect. 

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A new live release from Valerie June

Though Valerie June has moved on from Memphis, the city was and will always be the place where she cut her teeth as a performer. And her fans here are legion, often left wondering when her next ‘hometown’ show will be. While June is in the area, playing St. Louis tomorrow night and Nashville on September 12th for Americana Fest, she won’t be stopping in the Bluff City. The good news is that fans can enjoy a live performance anyway, released today via Spotify, Apple Music, and GooglePlay.

Most Los Angelenos have a soft spot in their hearts for the KCRW program, “Morning Becomes Eclectic.” Living up to its name, it’s full of musical surprises. This past June, appropriately enough, the program hosted Memphis’ own June as she ran through eight songs from her latest album, The Order of Time. Her appearance was recorded beautifully by KCRW, and as of today anyone can hear her crack band lay down choice selections from the album with fresh energy.

“To me it’s kinda similar to a trance, a meditation of sorts,” June drawls to introduce the song “If And.” And it’s in her drawl that so much of the charm lies. Somehow evoking a cross between a New Age Jessie Mae Hemphill and a long gone mountain woman from Appalachia, June’s singing is perfectly suited to the simple drones of her compositions. Her voice wouldn’t sound out of place on the classic Anthology of American Folk Music. (Perhaps that’s why Bob Dylan name checked her as one of his favorite recent artists in an interview this year).

Her singing makes ventures out of the folk genre especially unique, such as the swaying soul of “Slip Slide on By”. Once you’re in June’s world of countrified caterwauling, the precision of the pitch is irrelevant. The heartfelt delivery carries it, and it’s a welcome contrast to the acrobatic melisma that plagues so much contemporary soul.

Midway through the set, there’s an interview with June that offers a glimpse into what makes her tick. All in all, it’s a charming gift to the fans out there who may not see as much of her as they’d like. Here’s a sample of it on YouTube:

A new live release from Valerie June