Music Videos and Blog Posts for July 4th, 2008

  • Music Review: John Mayer’s New Live Album is Not So New, Not So Desirable

    Friday, July 4th, 2008

    By Chris Moore:

    This live album by Mayer is perhaps, in terms of new music, the biggest disappointment of the year for me.  Being a John Mayer fan from the beginning, I have never quite been able to understand the degree of praise he has received for going back to the blues roots.  Yes, he is an excellent guitarist, and I am happy that more people are giving him the respect he deserves.  But he was always an energetic, talented guitarist – recall “Neon” as merely one of many examples.  I was unimpressed with the John Mayer Trio – its minimalist setup and apparent reference to the great rock trios of the seventies (Jimi Hendrix Experience comes to mind) has always seemed out of place to me when considering the depth of Mayer’s vocals and instrumental components on his studio recordings.  Then, Continuum was released, and I was truly befuddled.  It wasn’t so much that I disliked this new album – though I did and do find it lackluster at most turns – but this new album garnered such an exaggeratedly positive response.  Based on Rolling Stone magazine’s review, one might expect that this was John Mayer’s most amazing album to date and perhaps one of the most significant albums of the year.

    This brings us to current day, 2008, and the release of Where The Light Is: John Mayer Live in Los Angeles.  As I entered my local music retail store, I headed for the CD section, knowing that the live album had just been released.  I had decided the night before, when I first learned of its release, that I would not purchase it.  I made this decision, knowing full well that, once I enjoy one or two albums from any given artist, I usually end up buying all their subsequent releases.  However, I thought to myself, what if they lose my interest entirely?  In the case of John Mayer, it wasn’t so much a branching out and changing of his style that concerned me – it was and is my perception that he has regressed as a songwriter.

    When I saw the live album, I almost bought it.

    The packaging itself is solid – a live concert in three sections: an acoustic solo set, a John Mayer Trio set, and a full band set.  The acoustic set alone intrigued me; “Stop This Train” is one of my few favorites from Continuum, “Daughters” would work perfectly in this type of arrangement, and Tom Petty’s “Free Fallin’” is one of my favorite songs.

    So, I had picked it up, and looking it over, the desire to buy it was creeping in.  Then I read the second section – the Trio set.  Five of the eight songs in this portion were featured in the John Mayer Trio live album.  What could be so significantly different about these performances?  Of the final nine songs in the full band set, all but two were songs from Continuum.  The other two included “Why Georgia,” one of my favorite songs by Mayer, and a Ray Charles cover.  Why would I want to hear a live set of songs from an album that I was unimpressed with?

    Saddened and, truthfully, disappointed, I placed the CD back on the rack.  I can’t say I will never listen to Where The Light Is, but I can say with certainty that I will not purchase it myself.  And that makes me very sad, as Mayer had quickly become one of my favorite new music artists on the scene a few years ago.  For perhaps the first time in my young, CD-collecting life, I have left an artist behind.  He may be off to new work with the blues community, but I’m off to listen to his lesser-appreciated work – the charming and spirited Inside Wants Out EP, the instant hit Room For Squares, and even the follow-up effort Heavier Things.  For me, those albums had it all – solid songwriting and great guitar work.

    At most, I may return to Continuum and try to figure out what exactly it is that I have missed.

  • The Laptop Sessions: “All The Things” (Byrds Acoustic Rock Cover Song)

    Friday, July 4th, 2008

    By Jeff Copperthite:

    Happy Friday and happy 4th to everyone! I hope today finds you ready to celebrate and watch some fireworks, eat some hamburgers and hot dogs, and just relax and enjoy the long weekend. I’m happy to see that you have selected laptopsessions.com as a place to visit today, and we thank you for that.

    And no, I don’t have a cheesy patriotic song to bring you today, but I do have a cool cover song video to show you today. For the second time, I am covering a song by The Byrds called “All The Things” from their untitled album. I kid you not, that’s the name that is known by - (Untitled). It is a collection of live and studio tracks, and this is one of the studio tracks.

    I first heard this song on a WCJM radio show called “Song for the New Millenium” which was a countdown style show that this song won. It really is a good tune and I think it has a good message for the holiday today.

    Again, enjoy your holiday and come back tomorrow for another session by Jim Fusco. By the way, if you haven’t watched his original song from Wednesday, do so. It really is something else!



  • It’s A New Record for Laptop Sessions Video Views- and an Original Song, at that!

    Friday, July 4th, 2008

    By Jim Fusco:

    You read that right- clearly a new personal best for me and I’m pretty sure a new standard for the rest of the guys here, too.

    Every once in a while, I send out a YouTube video to all of my contacts on the site. I’ve decided to stick with sending out an original song from now on. The cover songs kind of promote themselves, but I’m really trying to raise awareness for my original songs, too.

    After sending out my video for “Happy Tears” less than 24 hours ago, I received an unprecedented number of views in a one-day span. And I’m talking a new record here: over 300 views on the first day! And, since it’s an original song, it makes me so happy. That means that over 300 great people decided to watch my original song video and take a chance on a song they’ve never heard before.

    And that’s what the Laptop Sessions is all about: brining light to those “written-off” songs by doing quality acoustic covers and even originals.

    Plus, I got 35 comments in the first 24 hours- a clear record for one day, and officially a new ALL TIME record, as well! That’s right- of all of my all-time videos, Chris’ all-time videos, and Jeff’s all-time videos, this song has the most comments EVER. And that record was broken in one day. And some of these songs have been online for over seven months. And this is an original song- not even a cover song!

    Okay, enough boasting for one night- thank you to all who watched “Happy Tears” yesterday and I hope to make this my #1 original song, which I’m it’s close to being already.