Showing posts with label Josh Mallory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Josh Mallory. Show all posts

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Important Announcement & Congratulations to Josh Mallory!!!


As you should know, this is the blog of 90.7 The Capstone, The Voice of the University of Alabama. We post concert and campus events here, along with content submitted by YOU, the students of the University of Alabama.

Well, congratulations Josh Mallory, because your article " My Favorite Albums of 2007" has been noticed by blogland! In December 12th's post by Largehearted Boy, Josh's post was listed this way:

Today's update to the master list of online "best of 2007" music lists includes album lists from Chromewaves, Donewaiting, and My Old Kentucky Blog, and a song list from Shake Your Fist .

The Capstone's Connections (favorite albums)

This is fantastic! Josh, you put us on the map! All of you guys can do this. Email me what you think about music, and I'll post it to the blog and credit you! Send me your specialty show playlists, album reviews, concert reviews, whatever! This blog is for YOU. ALL of you are smart enough and relevant enough for us to post.

I hope you'll participate with us and allow us to get the word out about what YOU think!

And thanks to Largehearted Boy for recognizing us!

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

This week's news from 90.7 The Capstone

Your news from 90.7 The Capstone
The Voice of the University of Alabama



I. Christmas Song Contest! YAY!
II. Station Award Winners
III. 90.7 The Capstone's Streaming Radio
IV. Need Something Else To Do On the Web? Check Out Our Blog!
V. Want Even MORE To Do On the Web? Check Out These Other Sites Affiliated With 90.7 The Capstone!
VI. Calling All Current and Potential DJs!
VII. Credits


I. Christmas Song Contest! YAY!
We have a winner for the Christmas Song Contest! Wes Day's entry, A New Song for Christmas, is the winning song and is attached to this email. Congratulations Wes!


II. Station Award Winners
Last Thursday at our end of the year extravaganza, we gave out the following awards. Congratulations to all the winners!


Best New DJ = Josh Mallory (host of the Country Show, Sundays from 6-8pm)
Best Overall DJ = Melanie Armistead (Playlist DJ and soon to be Program Director)
Best Speciality Show = Reid McCreary (Left of the Dial, Tuesdays 8-10pm) (Music Director Assistant)
Most Innovative Show = Martha Jean Schindler (Kitty MowMow's Animal Expo, Sunday 9pm)(Promotions Director)
Most Improved Staff = Steve Donaldson (Music Staff)
Distinguished Service Award = Alex Jones (Soon to be Outreach Director)
Flanagan Award for Superior Dedication = Zach Travis (Production Assistant)
Best Director = Jenny Smith (Music Director)
DJ Choice =
Jake and Yahweh Show (Brandon "Yahweh" Andrews and Jake Gordin, with Alex Cordry and Martha Jean Schindler as the Hot Phone Chicks) (M-TH 5-6pm)
Honorable mention goes to "Hot Buttered Soul" hosted by Erick Forsight (alumni DJ) M 10pm-midnite continous excellence

III. 90.7 The Capstone's Streaming Radio
Now you can listen to 90.7 FM wherever you can connect to the internet! Our online streaming radio is up and running again. Just go to http://www.thecapstone.ua.edu/, enter the site, and click on "Listen Live Online" on the top of the right side of the page. Then sit back and enjoy your favorite student-run station, live and in real time!


IV. Need Something Else To Do On the Web? Check Out Our Blog!

Now 90.7 The Capstone will keep you updated with campus and regional events, concerts, concert reviews, and more with our totally KEWL blog, at www.thecapstone.blogspot.com. Check it out for the latest info on what's going on in your world!


V. Want Even MORE To Do On the Web? Check Out These Other Sites Affiliated With 90.7 The Capstone!

Left of the Dial - Hosted by Reid McCreary
The Music Staff's Blog -Overseen by Jenny Smith, Music Director
The Lounge - Hosted by Jermaine Pope
The Jake and Steve Show - Hosted by Jake Bennet and Steve Cummings
Kitty Mowmow's Animal Expo - Hosted by Martha Jean Schindler


VI. Calling All Current and Potential DJs!
We have room for some more DJs at the station. For more info, check out this blog post or email Ben Flanagan at
wvuapd@sa.ua.edu.


VII. Credits

This Newsletter is brought to you by 90.7 The Capstone and our Promotions Staff:
Nadeem Akbar
Arthur Bosarge
Andrew Cook
Stacey Cornett
Wes Day
Heath Fogg
Wade Gardner
Adam Gowhari
Blake Hardy
Colleen Lawley
Maryella Matthews
Laine Spencer
Janie Sutcliffe
Justin Wood
James Wright

My Favorite Albums of 2007 by Josh Mallory


Picking 10 is just too hard, so here are my top 11 albums of 2007! It was a slow year for my genre of choice (country) but there was still plenty of great music to be heard. Disagree? Of course you do! Feel free to comment.

11) Herbie Hancock - "River: The Joni Letters"

Anytime you add Herbie Hancock and Joni Mitchell, I'm a happy man. Here the jazz legend reworks several of Joni's songs with guests vocalists (including Joni herself) and two of her favorite jazz standards. It is beautiful and moving, even if Leonard Cohen peforming a spoken word "The Jungle Line" is odd.

Key tracks: "Edith and the King Pin" with Tina Turner, "

10) Nicole Atkins - "Neptune City"

Not too often a debut album will make my favorites list, but Nicole certainly does with this one. She sounds like indie pop had a baby with Roy Orbison. The album always puts a smile on my face and is easily one of the most listenable albums of the year.

Key tracks: “Maybe Tonight” and “Brooklyn’s On Fire!”

9) Paul McCartney – “Memory Almost Full”

So I’m a big Beatles fan? Sue me. This album is perfect pop. McCartney is one of the great songwriters still alive, and I feel this album demonstrates why. I really don’t know what else to say. If you don’t like Paul, you’re a communist.

Key tracks: “Dance Tonight” and “See Your Sunshine”

8) Wilco – “Sky Blue Sky”

Wilco is the best band going, no doubt about it. This albums backs off from the super experimental side of “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot” and (my personal favorite Wilco album) “A Ghost Is Born”, but the songwriting is excellent and the arrangements are tight. It’s almost like Wilco just needed to prove how excellent they can sound. (For some reason, this album makes me think of whiskey. No clue why.)

Key tracks: “Either Way” and “Shake It Off”

7) Joni Mitchell – “Shine”

I reviewed this for the CW earlier this semester. It’s a reminder of what great lyrics are supposed to be. While not exactly on par with masterpieces like “Blue” “Court and Spark” or “Mingus”, “Shine” shows how lacking modern songwriting has become. The sophisticated jazz arrangements work for every song, including the reworked “Big Yellow Taxi” References to Tennessee Williams and Rudyard Kipling make this an album people over 15 can enjoy.

Key tracks: “Night of the Iguana” “This Place” and “If”

6) Gram Parsons and the Flying Burrito Brothers – “Gram Parsons Archive: Vol 1”

Recorded in 1969, these concerts (when the original FBB lineup was opening for the Grateful Dead) were finally released this year. The band was raucous and fun, if not always perfectly tight. We get a glimpse into Parson well before his solo albums as he begins to hone his sound. Any country-rock fan should purchase this set immediately.

Key tracks: “Mental Revenge” and “Hot Burrito #1”

5) Bright Eyes – “Cassadaga”

Often dismissed for his early emo posturing, Bright Eyes’ Connor Oberst is coming into his own as he moves toward a country sound. Clearly influenced by Parsons (he has worked with Emmylou Harris in the past), Oberst is getting better with every album. His singing is more confident than ever, and his lyrics are sharp. (Not to mention Gillian Welch and David Rawlings appear on this album!)

Key tracks: “Four Winds” “Classic Cars” “Hot Knives” “Soul Singer In a Session Band”

4) Jonathan Rice – “Further North”

Also coming down from the Parsons musical family tree is Rice, with his excellent album “Further North.” Truth be told, there is nothing groundbreaking here, just one solid track after the other, which is plenty hard to do. Great songwriting grounded in music clearly influenced by Parsons and Led Zeppelin lead to a top 5 album in my book.

Key tracks: “End of the Affair” “Middle of the Road” and “It’s Best to Keep It All Inside”

3) Patty Griffin – “Children Running Through”

The love of my life releases her possibly best album yet. Her powerful voice sometimes gets overshadowed by her lyrical ability. However, here she is allowed to cut loose and really perform. Still an excellent lyricist, Griffin gives us one beautiful sad track after the other. I would say this album is pretty much flawless. Much like Joni Mitchell at points in her career, Griffin is an excellent teller of other people’s stories. This is put to good use on this album in the track “Trapeze.” She also opens up more and gives us more personal songs, however, which is definitely a good thing.

Key tracks: “Stay on the Ride” “No Bad News” and “Trapeze”

2) Spoon – “Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga”

Austin is well represented (Griffin and Spoon both live there) on this list. This new album is Spoon’s best since “Girls Can Tell,” if you ask me. There isn’t one weak track on an album that I cannot stop listening to. It’s short length leaves the listener longing for more each time its played. Spoon mixes up their sound a bit adding horns.

Key tracks: “The Underdog” “Black Like Me” “You Got Yr Cherry Bomb” and “Finer Feelings”

1) The Avett Brothers – Emotionalism



If you didn’t know this was number one, you don’t know me. I’ve never found myself listening to one album over and over like this one. Right from the start it grabs you, with “Die Die Die.” Every track features tight playing, great harmonies, and never dull lyrics. The band’s sound is so unique and almost perfect on the album. I’ve never heard anyone wail on a banjo quite like this before. If you like rock, country, bluegrass… hell, if you like MUSIC, you should check this one out immediately. You’ll thank me.

Key tracks: “Shame” “Die Die Die” “Paranoia in B Flat Major” and “Will You Return?”


Honorable mention to the White Stripes "Icky Thump," Ryan Adam's "Easy Tiger," Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings' "100 Days, 100 Nights," and Josh Ritter's "Historical Conquests of Josh Ritter."

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Nickel Creek reviewed by Josh Mallory


Nickel Creek has played Birmingham many times before and seemed to be grateful for all the support as their farewell tour rolled through the Magic City. The “new grass” trio, comprised of Sarah Watkins, Chris Thile and Sean Watkins, is calling it quits, at least for now.

They kicked off the night at the Alabama Theatre with the instrumental “Ode to a Butterfly” and then performed crowd favorites. As usual, they played extremely well and their quirky stage banter delivered some laughs.

The highlights of the show were the songs that showed off their tight harmonies, such as “Reasons Why” “Somebody More like You” and “Helena.” Few acts can harmonize so tightly over and over.

Further underscoring their humor was the bands performance of “Anthony” around an old-timey microphone with Sarah Watkins playing the ukulele. The song centers around a woman bound to win over a resistant lover, and the band played it for laughs well.

The band did have a few surprises, most notable a cover of the Jackson 5’s “I Want You Back” sung by Sarah, suddenly without her fiddle. The crowd responded enthusiastically.

The band received one of the loudest applauses I’ve heard at the Alabama Theatre, which lead to a long encore.

The band performed a hilarious version of “Toxic,” complete with Chris Thile giving his interpretation of Spears’ sexy dances. They played “Eveline,” an interpretation of a James Joyce story, in response to a request saying it was the first time the song had ever been requested.

It was a bittersweet show. Nickel Creek has such a strong fan base in Birmingham, and this was a goodbye. The band was great, which only made saying goodbye harder at the end of the night.