About

For the past five years, ROCKWIRED.COM has boasted a one-of-a-kind, online musical reportage. Not only has the independently published venture gained international notoriety, but it has also given LUSH some of the best conversation of his life. “I guess that is why anyone would really want to do something like this. No one really thinks about how hard a good conversation is to come by and with ROCKWIRED I feel blessed.”Read more about Rockwired »

Advertisement

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit Featured Work

Keep in touch

RSS Feed Twitter Facebook

Subscribe via email

ROCKWiRED MAGAZiNE iNTERViEWS MEL FLANNERY TRUCKiNG CO

Facebook Twitter Digg Del.icio.us Myspace Stumbleupon Friendfeed reddit

FEBRUARY 23, 2010

KEEP ON TRUCKiNG
MEL FLANNERY OF THE MEL FLANNERY TRUCKiNG CO
TALKS TO ROCKWiRED

ABOUT THEiR CD AS iT TURNS OUT
PARTNERiNG AS A SONGWRiTER WiTH LEE PARDiNi
AND THEiR SUPPORT OF GAY RiGHTS http://www.rockwired.com/melflannerytruckingco.JPG
iNTERViEWED BY BRiAN LUSH

With the release of their third album ‘AS IT TURNS OUT’, the MEL FLANNERY TRUCKING CO go beyond what one expects from a New York based jazz trio. The band’s lead singer and namesake MEL FLANNERY is a honey-voiced chanteuse that is not about to be overshadowed by her solid backing (LEE PARDINI on keyboards, MATT ARONOFF on bass and DANNY SHER on drums). The jazz sound that the band was founded on shows folkier leanings as well as irresistible grooves – a testament to the writing partnership of FLANNERY and PARDINI. A soulful, Memphis-styled groove is established on ‘YOU KNOW WHAT TO DO’ with FLANNERY purring like she’s DUSTY SPRINGFIELD. ‘SOMETHING ABOUT YOU’ boasts a bossa nova shimmy as FLANNERY packs her bags and gets away from an old boyfriend, confident that she can do without his “smell sight and sound”. The whimsical balladry of ‘GONE’ has FLANNERY sounding eerily like ROBERTA FLACK, but the album’s stand out moment is the gay rights-themed ‘WE’RE STILL HERE’. Its BACHARACH bounce makes for a righteous protest song that doesn’t get one-upped by its good intentions. For my whole life, I’ve wanted to write a protest song. As it turns out, it is the hardest thing in the world to do – to write a decent protest song that doesn’t sound like “Wah! Wah! Wah! I want things!” I’ve always been a huge fan of JOAN BAEZ and WOODY GUTHRIE and ANI DIFRANCO. I grew up listening to that kind of stuff and never got how one can say something meaningful without being really irritating. We wrote it right before we were going out to California for our first tour. This was right after PROPOSITION 8 had happened and I was furious…Everyone should’ve been furious…I refuse to be tolerant of intolerance.” (READ MORE)

blog comments powered by Disqus