Bob Dylan will release Tell Tale Signs: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 8 in October. The lead single is an outtake from the Time Out of Mind sessions, “Dreamin’ of You.” You can get a free MP3 at Dylan’s site.
There is something calmingly reassuring about the start of a new baseball season: hope abounds as fans imagine that their team can navigate an exhausting 162-game schedule and postseason to emerge as champs. (I know this because I did it as a boy growing up in Cleveland where the Indians rarely finished above .500. What was I thinking? What am I thinking now?) Whether you’re a diehard or just an occasional fan, take a moment to predict who the real winners will be. You’ve got until April 30. Tigers fans: don’t lose hope. It’s only April!
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I know, I know. Gnarls Barkley has a hot new single, and we’re always excited about what’s new, new, new! I don’t know about you, though, but I’ll never forget the first time I heard “Crazy.” So I was particularly gratified to hear it in this new way:
This otherworldly instrument — in case you’ve never seen or heard one before — is a theremin. It was one of the first electric instruments to be invented (1919), and the very first to be played with no actual physical contact. The way that it would someday imitate Cee-lo’s voice so perfectly was probably not intended by its inventor, Leon Theremin, but I’m glad nonethless.
–Melanie Shrawder
The sophomore effort from Eric Lindell, Low on Cash, Rich in Love finds the bluesy roots rocker with the easy, soulful voice in top form. Julia Clarke will guide you through samplings from the organ-rich single “Lay Back Down” to the rollicking take on Gil-Scott Heron’s “Lady Day and John Coltrane” in this Songlines podcast.
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Hungry for some crawfish and sunshine? Eric is playing the second annual Clearwater Sea-Blues Festival later this month. They’ve got a pretty incredible lineup, with Coco Montoya, Bettye LaVette, Derek Trucks Band, Sue Foley, and Chris Thomas King all scheduled to play during the course of one weekend.
Mando is touring the Southeast right now. Check whether he’s playing a venue near you.
We can’t get enough of “Don’t You Evah” by Spoon, and apparently, neither can this little guy:

The year is nearly over and that means it’s time for the new the Shining Heads Poll! If you’ve done it before you know the drill. If you’re a first timer, well, let’s just say we promise not to ask for your Top 10 album list. But we will inquire about music, politics, sex, sports, movies, books and the amazing individuals who make up the wonderful word of Adult Rock. Some questions are serious but most are intended to be fun. All of your answers will remain private.
We want to thank all the folks who submitted ideas this year, especially: Bruce Warren, Dan Reed, Mark Abuzzahab, Darrell Anderson, Jamie Canfield, Jenni Sperandeo, Dave Sloan, Spider Glenn, Drew Murray, Matt Ittigson, Sam Scholl and Ira Gordon.
When you have ten minutes or so, take the Poll. Results will be posted in the New Year.
–Sean, Melanie and Julia
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On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan
Though McEwan calls this work a novel, not a short story, it is a brief work, with a plot that’s both focused and sublime. McEwan has long been and remains one of the most descriptive writers in the language and can take simple events and draw them in such perfect detail that they do more than ring true: instead, we feel like they might be our own. This tale deals with a man and woman who meet in the uptight England of the early ’60s (before the Beatles, Carnaby Street and sexual revolution had transformed the culture into something we recognize today). Their wooing is stilted and uncomfortable and most of the action takes place on their climactic wedding night. It is both hilarious and tragic. I loved it.
–Sean Coakley
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Benjamin Franklin: An American Life by Walter Isaacson
This is a terrific biography of one of the first true American Renaissance men. Franklin was a prolific writer, a successful printer, a renowned scientist, an effective satirist and humorist, and his work in foreign service before we actually had a Foreign Service helped pave the way for this new nation’s success.
If most of what you know about Franklin comes from tepidly-written schoolbooks, you probably don’t have a grasp on the scope of his accomplishments. This biography brings him to life. He was so far ahead of his time that, if he were to be dropped by a time machine into New York City this weekend, I’m confident he’d be comfortable within an hour. His relaxed views on religion (he believed in a benevolent God who rewarded good deeds and hard work as opposed to the more prevalent Puritan view that featured holy omnipotence and its predetermined menu of pain and suffering) seems remarkably brave given the fire and brimstone of his time. He was a pragmatist, constantly organizing and designing: clubs, associations, libraries, lightening rods, fireplaces, etc. all to the betterment of a growing middle class. Isaacson tells this story chronologically, complete with all Franklin’s strengths and shortcomings. Like so many men who achieve greatness, he was sadly estranged from his son, William, who supported the British during the revolution. His doting wife, Deborah, remained behind in Philadelphia while her husband was overseas, initially to win French favor in helping to defeat the British in the War of Independence and remaining afterward to negotiate the peace (with the much younger John Adams and Thomas Jefferson); he was away for 16 of the final 17 years of her life.
Isaacson points out in closing that Franklin’s reputation has been reevaluated by every generation to suit their own needs and biases. His stock has again risen in this time of political and religious unrest and global climate change. His story brings into relief our desperation as we search for leaders who have but a portion of his worldliness, intelligence and talent. Anyone who loves American history will enjoy reading about one of our country’s greatest men.
–Sean Coakley

