Rod Stewart – She Makes Me Happy (2013)

Rod Stewart will release a new album Time May 7th on Capitol Records, marking his first album of new material in almost 20 years. Stewart wrote and produced 11 of the album’s 12 cuts, while the iTunes deluxe edition – which you can pre-order starting today – will include three extra songs, one of which (“Legless”) is another Stewart original. The album’s first single, “She Makes Me Happy,” will be released to radio and be available to download today as well. A second single, “Finest Woman,” will make its U.S. radio premiere on April 8th. [Source]



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Promo single provided by Capitol Music via Promosuite Interactive.

Ron Sexsmith – She Does My Heart Good (2013)

“She Does My Heart Good” was one of the first songs Ron Sexsmith wrote for his new album, Forever Endeavour, which is due February 5th on Cooking Vinyl. It’s an upbeat song with a simple arrangement built around guitar and vocals, with tinges of saxophone for sonic variety. “It’s pretty much a straight-up love song about the wonderful effect another person can have on your mental state,” Sexsmith tells Rolling Stone. Sexsmith had in mind the golden age of singer-songwriters while writing “She Does My Heart Good.” “I always loved the early Rod Stewart songs like ‘You Wear It Well’ and musically I felt like I was sort of in that territory,” Sexsmith says. “At least, that’s where I was heading.” [Source]




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Elbow – Gentle As (2005)

Chances are that B side collections like this one will soon be extinct, an alternative view of a band sacrificed to record company executives’ worship of the internet gods. In the download age, there’s little incentive for even the most traditional of modern indie bands to bother recording songs that few will hear, just for their own sake. But, previously, they could comprise the main attraction. In days when singles came as 45s, radio DJs occasionally flipped the record, turning its supposedly makeweight partner into a career-defining moment. Can you imagine a world where Hank Williams’ I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry or Rod Stewart’s Maggie May weren’t hits? Nothing on Dead in the Boot – a coy reference to their debut album Asleep in the Back, suggested by Guy Garvey’s sister – might have worked such magic for Elbow. But for them the B side is a serious business, both a way of rewarding fans with more music and an opportunity to learn more about their craft. In their earliest recording days they would wait until the producer went home before setting to work, creative juices flowing. By doing this, keyboard player Craig Potter taught himself the studio skills that would see him produce later albums. [Source]