Robert Palmer’s Lost Oeuvre Part I: Sneakin’ Sally Through The Alley (1974)
To many people, Robert Palmer represents the power of MTV when music videos were in their heyday, a man whose sartorial talents were the great substance behind numbers like “Simply Irresistable” and “Addicted To Love”. Both numbers are products of their time and suffer greatly as a result, propelled by the videos of attractive women peddling instruments as sex machines and little else. But that was before I discovered Robert Palmer, the same Robert Palmer whose fame was a product of the badly aged MTV generation, had a much more compelling career before ever making it big.
One of the most amazing facts of stumbling upon his 1974 release Sneakin’ Sally Through The Alley is the fact that this little known expat managed to lock down both The Meters and members of Little Feat, along with session greats like Cornell Dupree and Bernard Purdie to back him through an extraordinarily funky trip down NOLA inspired, hot-laced grooves. Palmer oozes charisma, and he makes clear right away that he is an excellent interpreter of other’s songs, feeling comfortable handling everything from Little Feat drug odes to Allen Toussaint R&B, mixing in his own songs with nary a change of pace.
Talkin’ Turkey: A Mixtape
Just in time for everybody to tuck in to the most lazy and food filled day of the year. As always the tracks are all free downloads, but support these wonderful artists if you can.
Man Who Lives Forever (Rollo & Grady Session)- Lord Huron
Lord Huron has been a band that is constantly defying my expectations, they’re due out for a well deserved full length album this coming year and if Man Who Lives Forever is any indication of where their sound is going, look for them to be all over the indie airwaves next year.
Man Who Lives Forever- Lord Huron
Song to Sing When I’m Lonely- John Frusciante
Possibly the greatest talent to emerge from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, John Frusciante has shown that he’s no one trick pony and a masterful songwriter in his own right, Song To Sing When I’m Lonely is one of my favorites, starting with a melody right out of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
Song To Sing When I’m Lonely- John Frusciante
Fletcher- Blitzen Trapper
Blitzen Trapper have the new Americana sound locked down on their most recent full length, American Goldwing. Think of it as Wilco with a little more drawl and optimism. Not many bands these days can write a narrative as compelling as this Portland group.
Coeur D’Alene- The Head and The Heart
Critics of The Head and the Heart stated that their debut album was filled with derivative sounds of Americana, on “Coeur D’Alene” all they can note is a perfectly crafted pop song.
Coeur D’Alene- The Head and The Heart
I Stopped Missing You Today- Stone Darlings
Stone Darling is an all-girl group that single-handedly defies the label.
I Stopped Missing You Today- Stone Darling
More Than Muscle- Luke Temple
Quite possibly my favorite song of 2011 with its off-kilter rhythms and technicolor arrangements, Temple lures you in with the first few notes and by the time his charming lilt comes into the fore there’s no letting go.
Handwriting- White Denim
White Denim is one of those bands that can make prodigious skill seem par for the course for their songwriting, “Handwriting” being an intriguing guitar run through that makes you wonder how they’re playing what they’re playing and can still mold it into a conventional song form. The pedal steel puts a nice touch.
Freeze Out- Snorri Helgason
If not the best thing to come out of Iceland, by far he is the most underrated. Sure his name might never be commonplace in pop music but he is as well deserving as any singer-songwriter out there right now.
The Only Way- Gotye
Gotye shows the creative intensity that we used to expect out of Beck, but this Australian troubadour proves his equal and more through his clever approach at arrangements and his chameleon vocals.
Livin’ In The Jungle- Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears seem intent on bringing R&B back to what it once was, the hard propulsive blues that brought the Black Keys into prominence with Brothers only with more of a funky kick and a wicked horn section.
Livin’ in the Jungle – Black Joe Lewis & the Honeybears
I’ll Walk Away- James Hunter
James Hunter wowed Van Morrison with his debut Believe What I Say even getting the man himself to duet on a couple tracks with him, if Sam Cooke had managed to live to old age this croon might be what we were in for.
Million Dollar Bill- Dawes
When it hits me that she’s gone/ I think i’ll run for president/ Get my face put on the million dollar bill/ So when these rich men that she wants/ Show her ways they can’t take care of her/ I’ll have found a way to be there with her still
Within the opening of “Million Dollar Bill” Taylor Goldsmith managed to portray the sadness, jealousy, and ultimately love that’s still present when your lover has left you. Proof why he’s one of the greatest songwriters of his generation.
I Found You- Alabama Shakes
Otis Redding reincarnated in girl form, no other description should be necessary.
Soulless- Fake Problems
Who said people couldn’t write upbeat rock songs anymore.
Big Man- Boy & Bear
It wouldn’t be the farthest stretch to compare this band with Mumford & Sons, but that would greatly undermine the talent present in this group, the lyrics and vocals alone on this song should guarantee them recognition for album of the year (and yes, the rest of the album is fine too).
Big Man- Boy & Bear
From The Start- Tiger Waves
For the acoustic guitars and the rolling drum fills that propel this song along and the endearing harmonies that go along with it. Who couldn’t like a band called Tiger Waves? And you call yourselves American.
The Understanding- Jones Street Station
No matter how many incarnations there was and will always be of tight harmonies and acoustic fingerpicking, it will always sound good, and Jones Street Station isn’t about to change that. But they certainly liven the arrangement up to great success.
The Understanding- Jones Street Station
Mighty- Lord Huron
The yearning for discovery and the search for happiness and the unknown all bottled up into one song, but it’s more than a song, it’s a whole world.
Baby Says Go On Say It, Dye The World: A Mixtape
It’s been quite a while since I last put something up on this here blog but now that school is over and summer is here, well lets just say there won’t be weeks in between posts anymore (I hope). In celebration of being done and having free time once again, here is a good old mixtape chock full of music you might not have heard, and if you have you should listen again. As always, all the music here is free to download with the hopes that you go out and support these artists. The full mix after the jump.
Campfire Goes Electric: Campfire Songs Vol. 2, A Mixtape
I had so much fun making the last Campfire Songs Mixtape that I decided to make another one. Both retro and modern with that warm familial feeling that makes a campfire so fun to be around. As always, the mixtape is free but feel free to support all the artists by buying their albums. To download a song just right-click the song link after the description, hope you enjoy. The full mixtape after the jump.
Song(s) of the Day: Daydreaming, Me Me Me, Middle Brother, Middle Brother
Me Me Me
Middle Brother
Its a rare day indeed when one finds the collective “supergroup” a ubiquitous term in music. Sure there was Cream, and Led Zeppelin, both groups who’s collective work seemed to surpass their prior musical experiences. Then too, there was the Traveling Wilburys whose mission seemed to just have fun with music and not worry about the superpowers that made up the group. Toeing the line between these two groups is the newly formed Middle Brother, whose members include John J McCauley III (the main singer and songwriter) of Deer Tick with his trademark rasp, Taylor Goldsmith (also the main singer and songwriter) of Dawes and Matt Vasquez (who is again the main singer songwriter) of Delta Spirit. Their debut album release is pure roots rock with some Nashville and alt country thrown in to boot. All three are capable emotional singers in their own right, and each member brings a new feeling to the song that they sing. Much like the Traveling Wilburys they aren’t trying to take the world by storm here, just a bunch of friends making good music, with talents equal to any supergroup out there. So just sit back, relax, and enjoy some music that brings you back to a simpler time in rock music. The downloads after the jump.
Song of the Day (With a Bonus Track): Wintersong, Blake Mills
“Early in the year feeling/ fade away/ something has clearly gone today/ dont know what i can do but i know /i know/ i know/ its the worst thing to put you in a song/ as the words come i know that it was wrong/ early in the evening but i know/ i know/ i know”
“Wintersong” is one of those hushed and wistful tunes that makes one reminisce about times gone by. Blake Mills showcases his talent as an artist here, anchoring the song with some great acoustic production and strong vocals and just when you think you’ve got the whole song figured out he brings it into Fleetwood Mac Rumours territory with some great back and forth with an unknown female vocalist. A perfect heartwarming song for those cold spring nights. The free download after the jump, plus a great live bonus track.
Song of the Day: Do I Ever Cross Your Mind, Justin Townes Earle and Dawn Landes
This little acoustic ditty has been making its way across the United States after popping up as a free download from Paste Magazine. It’s a cover of a Dolly Parton song but don’t let that scare you away, its perhaps the sweetest duet to ever grace country music since Johnny Cash and June Carter came along. You can find some live performances of it on youtube as well, as Justin Townes Earle and Dawn Landes have been touring together recently. Make no doubts about it, JTE seems a worthy heir apparent to the good old “Man in Black” having not only the youthful baritone of Cash’s early years, but the character struggles as well (both have faced problems with addiction) and for all we know, this little partnership could turn into the Johnny Cash and June Carter romance of our time. Just give this song a listen, it’s sure to stick in your head for quite a while.
Getting To Know Billy Brooks
It’s very uncommon to find someone who actually knows Billy Brooks, ask people around, even musical people and they’ll probably respond with “Who?” This is nothing new in music, there have been countless talented musicians littered along the path to fame. Yet his impact on music should not be put to waste.
Billy Brooks had mostly gained notoriety as a sideman among fellow musicians, having played for the likes of Ray Charles and Tina Turner and also pioneering his own patented double barreled trumpet giving him a wide range of sounds that he could produce from the horn.
His album, Windows of the Mind would come out in 1974, boasting a jazz-funk groove that many before and after had tried in failed. The genre had seemed doomed to fail, jazz purists would cast off the funk influence as too simple, and those who liked funk didn’t like the jazz fusion involvement. Somehow Billy Brooks manages to meld the best of both worlds.
Take “C.P. Time” a slow burning jazz burner for the purists out there with some great horn and lead guitar work along with Brook’s fantastic trumpet improv.
There’s also “The Speech Maker” who’s soaring horn lines and moving rhythm beg for it to be cast in a soundtrack for an old school caper, or a Bond film.
Then there is the rollicking funk of Rockin’ Julius, with its pounding bass and foot-tapping rhythm.
Then of course, there is “40 Days” a song which was by far Billy Brooks lasting influence, a perfect jazz-funk meld that would later be sampled to perfection in A Tribe Called Quest’s Luck of Lucien, it’s a shame that ATCQ only brought attention to the song’s great groove, because the solos on here are sublime. I also made a remaster of this track to give it a more live sound, it’s up to you whether you dig the gritty 7o’s production or one that gives the horns some air to breath:
Original:
Remaster:
Overall, Billy Brooks proves to be a great arranger and this is a must have album for anybody who likes jazz or funk. All the downloadable tracks above, plus some bonus ones, including a fantastic remix of “40 Days” are all here after the jump.
Song of the Day: He’s Got You, Elvis Costello
It was a surprising move for Elvis Costello fans when he came out with this entirely country and western album in 1981, though it was packed along with the typically cynical Costello quip that stated “”WARNING: This album contains country & western music and may cause offence to narrow minded listeners.”. Yet Costello is no rube when it comes to interpreting other peoples music (Just look at “What’s So Funny About Peace Love and Understanding”) and he performs these country standards with quite able hands. This cut, originally left off the LP, was a Hank Cochran written, Patsy Cline performed “She’s Got You”, a beautifully delivered lyric about loss. The arrangement here is worked to perfection with some sparkling piano flourishes and Costello’s isolated lyric pushed front and center, with some heartbreaking slide guitar holding the background. Just a great performance. The downloadable song after the jump.
Song of the Day: Too Far Gone, Four Mints
Culled from the same compilation as the wonderful “You and Me” featured a few days back, this vinyl crackling, bass thumping, vocal jumping Four Tops styled groove is a wonderful upbeat arrangement about, what else, losing a lady but delivered so earnestly that there’s no time to sit around and mope, enjoy this lost vinyl classic.
If you’re interested, the collection is entitled Eccentric Soul, there are many volumes, this song is found on the first.
The downloadable song after the jump.
Song of the Day: You and Me, Penny and the Quarters

I don’t think I’ve seen a more affecting and raw film in the past year than what I found in Blue Valentine a romantic drama that does not shy from exposing a relationship at both its most earnest and its most raw. While the soundtrack as a whole is amazing, with great work from indie bands Grizzly Bear as well as the fantastic “In Ear Park” from Department of Eagles, interwoven with the emotional film.
Yet of all things on the fantastic soundtrack, (including a very sweet bare bones ukelele song by Gosling himself) the song that stands out is this beautiful soul number. Gosling’s character introduces it in the film as their song, and its beautifully worked into the plot to symbolize what’s changed. It’s a retro number that’s perfectly used to illustrate its timeless beauty, and how the meanings of words can be changed just by feeling. The song after the jump.
Song of the Day: You’re Already Gone, The Dig
A Brooklyn based band by way of California and Canada actually got its name from a local colloquialism while in college in Boston, The Big Dig, which was a an ill planned vast piece of construction that lasted for the better part of 10 years. Fortunately The Dig dropped the Big and they’ve put out a very solid yet underrated second album, Electric Toys. ”You’re Already Gone” finds itself in best of The Strokes territory, hijacking their urbanite punk derived rhythms into something enjoyable, comforting in its familiarity and yet exciting in its unique take.
While the lead singer possesses a Casablancas like vocal, The Dig breaches into darker songwriting territory with other songs such as “Two Sisters In Love”, which is probably the most enjoyable piece of incest-murder you’ll ever hear in a song. Download both songs after the jump.
Abbey Road: Reviewed
It’s an amazing thing, looking back at the entire Beatles career and realizing, damn they were good, but why couldn’t they ever have written a lyric worthy of Bob Dylan’s “Tangled Up In Blue” or Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” or even for that matter a songwriting epic worthy of “Born to Run”. Yet as a Beatles fan I’ve come to realize that The Beatles true talent, was that of creating entirely cohesive albums, rather than individual stand-out songs, much like that of the individual members themselves, whose separate careers, although good were nothing on a level with their whole output as a group.
You can file this away in the well thats just obvious department, but Abbey Road is a great album and not only their ultimate be all end all album as a group, but also one that succinctly summarizes what made them great on the first place. It is also an album that remains timeless upon each listen, there is not one discernable part of the record that makes you think “Oh wow well you can tell this is from 1969″. The tracks are pristine, benefitting from the band finally having overall access to a brand new studio, with 8 tracks to play with, rather than the usual 4-track limitations. (In that regard, Sgt. Peppers should be regarded as a spectacular achievement). Long having since been known as a vocal group, the harmonies on the album are precise and beautifully done, finally showing their vocals talents in all their glory. Abbey Road is more than just a collection of songs, but one of gorgeous melodies as well; from the swamp-rock rhythms of “Come Together” to the rock-and-roll bombast of “The End”. Typical of most of their works, Abbey Road never drags and features many different styles from old-time music hall “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” to summer of love acoustic numbers “Here Comes The Sun” even foreshadowing musical styles to come in songs like “Sun King” and “You Never Give Me Your Money” and containing as Frank Sinatra would often say; the greatest love song of all time, in “Something”. If you’ve somehow managed to avoid listening to the album ever, congratulations you’re probably due for some reward, but to be sure there is no ultimate album out there that would be as lasting, and as perfect as Abbey Road.
Heartache, Heartbreak
1. One Rainy Wish- Jimi Hendrix
2. Back To Where I Started- Derek Trucks Band
Back Where I Started- Derek Trucks Band
3. Promises- Eric Clapton
4. Caught by the River- Doves
5. Every Night- Paul McCartney
6. So You’re Leaving- Al Green
7. Jealous Guy- Donny Hathaway
8. I’ve Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now)- Otis Redding
I’ve Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now)- Otis Redding
9. Love In Vain- The Rolling Stones
Love In Vain- The Rolling Stones
10. Have You Ever Loved A Woman- Derek and the Dominoes
Have You Ever Loved A Woman (Live)- Derek And the Dominoes
11. How Can You Mend A Broken Heart- Al Green
How Can You Mend a Broken Heart- Al Green
12. Baby, Baby, Baby- Aretha Franklin
Baby, Baby, Baby- Aretha Franklin
13. I Want You- Bruce Springsteen
14. Burning of the Midnight Lamp- Jimi Hendrix
Burning of the Midnight Lamp- Jimi Hendrix
15. Layla- Derek and the Dominoes
16. This Love of Mine- Frank Sinatra
This Love Of Mine- Frank Sinatra
17. Breakin Up- G. Love
18. Oh Darling- The Beatles
19. In The Wee Small Hours of the Morning- Frank Sinatra
Campfire Songs
Hello folks, welcome back to a brand new year of Art of the Mixtape. To help kick it off I bring you a nice bucolic little mixture of some great songs.
1. Greatest Show On Earth- The Felice Brothers
On their eponymous debut, The Felice Brothers very much earned their label of following in the tradition of Bob Dylan and The Band. Perhaps what is most impressive is their narrative ability, delivering slices of Americana in a world weary mood. However, “Greatest Show On Earth” stands out with its jaunty New Orleans infused melody. Come for the story, stay for the music.
Greatest Show On Earth- The Felice Brothers
2. Fables- The Dodos
The Dodos burst onto the San Francisco music scene with a unique drumming centric sound, but don’t let that scare you, they’re very much a rootsy rock band with a percussive twist. Many of their other songs showcase a more daring aesthetic but “Fables” is a very endearing acoustic standout with a nice vocal to boot.
3. Jackhammer- The Spinto Band
This song has a bag full of production tricks around every corner, and it’s done very well. I love songs that continue to surprise their listener.
Jackhammer (Slim Version)- The Spinto Band
4. Oslo Campfire- Port O’Brien
You’ll be hooked from the very beginning of this number by the unfortunately little known Port O’Brien, very much a cousin to The Shins output circa “New Slang”, the guitar/vocal/drum hook is amazing.
5. Snake- Frightened Rabbit
A nice little lilting acoustic number.
6. Stepping Stones- G. Love and Special Sauce
A delightful little modern blues number with a very catchy chorus
Stepping Stones- G. Love and Special Sauce
7. Ruminant Band- Fruit Bats
Hearing this song, you’d be very surprised to learn that it was not recorded in the 70′s, but in a good way.
8. I’ll Be Back- The Beatles
One of the oft-overlooked numbers from a tremendous album, A Hard Day’s Night
9. The Cave- Mumford & Sons
A very energetic number from an up-and-coming folksy band out of England.
10. Hiroshima- Blake Mills
Blake Mills came out with a very under-promoted debut and his number “Hiroshima” is delightful ear candy that grows from the likes of worthy predecessors such like the homegrown material of Paul McCartney’s McCartney and Ram, absolutely beautiful melody, before a slide guitar solo comes out of nowhere sounding like Duane Allman coming from the dead.
11. Mightiest of Guns- A.A. Bondy
One of those perfect songs.
12. Steel On Steel- J. Tillman
A very charming and upbeat number, with a great horn melody and diverse instrumentation.
13. I Summon You- Spoon
Spoon has been hard pressed to beat the overall feeling of this song and for good reason, it’s a straight up classic.
14. All Day Day Light- The Morning Benders
Great production, arrangement, vocal, on “All Day Day Light” The Morning Benders do everything right.
All Day Day Light- The Morning Benders
15. Timshel- Mumford & Sons
Detractors would say that they took this directly out of the book of previous acts like Fleet Foxes, they would be right, but they do it so well that its hardly an insult, their harmonies are gorgeous.
16. Let The Distance Keep Us Together- Spoon/ Bright Eyes
Spoon can create a great melody out of anything, but when they write great lyrics to go with it, there’s hardly a modern band that can compete with them.
Let the Distance Keep Us Together- Spoon/Bright Eyes
17. Change of Time- Josh Ritter
Perhaps no man is better qualified to write a finger-picked acoustic piece of Americana than one who went to Oberlin and graduated with a self made major in “American History through Narrative Folk Music”
18. Frankie’s Gun- The Felice Brothers
If you had any doubts about the following in the footsteps of Bob Dylan and The Band label, well here’s your proof.
Frankie’s Gun!- The Felice Brothers
19. Ain’t No Tellin’- Mississippi John Hurt
This beautiful little ending number is reaching your ears all the way back from 1928.
Song of the Day: Rogers Park, Justin Townes Earle
Tucked in at the end of Justin Townes Earle’s Harlem River Blues, one of the best albums of 2010 is a rousing heart-wrenching ballad “Rogers Park”. While most of the songs on the album have a celebratory jaunt in the music to contrast the lyrical mood, “Rogers Park” is a restrained mood, with an absolutely beautiful piano melody motif, and some of the best lyrics Justin Townes Earle has ever written in his career. It’s a somber pick-up from Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run tramp, starting off with the echoing words “This town’s dead tonight. I’ve got no place to be.”. An absolute profound recording with some beautiful slide guitar work.
A Winter’s Funk: A Playlist
This week im featuring a funky danceable playlist that incorporates both old and new and hopes to keep those holiday spirits alive through the cold weather. To the older folks out there this mix is more geared towards the younger types, but theres plenty of classics thrown in that you’ve undoubtedly enjoyed for many years. So without further ado, the mix after the jump.
Song of the Day: “Thin Blue Flame”, Josh Ritter
I became a thin blue flame
Polished on a mountain range
And over hills and fields I flew
Wrapped up in a royal blue
I flew over Royal City last night
A bullfighter on the horns of a new moon’s light
Caesar’s ghost I saw the war-time tides
The prince of Denmark’s father still and quiet
And the whole world was looking to get drowned
Trees were a fist shaking themselves at the clouds
I looked over curtains and it was then that I knew
Only a full house gonna make it through
Few songs will ever come close to Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” a brilliant ode to the problems within religion. Josh Ritter’s “Thin Blue Flame” becomes all that and more, the hushed tone in front of a live audience, the simple rhythm guitar, and the words. At times elegant and at times blunt, the prose is poetic not with a sense of cynicism, but reverence. Not many people could dot their lyrical stanzas with as many purposeful Shakespeare references as Ritter does here, as if to tell us underneath it all the world is our stage, and we the only players. The song is a long one at around 10 minutes but its a sermon that doesn’t patronize or drag, its got a ghostly power to it, and it is well worth your time.
Song of the Day: “Wake Up Your Saints”, The National
The National are usually more for reserved fare, their arrangements wide, the tone hushed, punctuated by articulate bursts of energy in their melodies. The mood is usually kept in perfect syncopation by Berninger’s baritone musings, his lyrics styling a postmodern bent while channeling a Jack Kerouac muse. However “Wake Up Your Saints” finds The National in a completely different mode. The melody is bursting with a hopeful enthusiasm from the outset, with a bright piano punctuated by a fat baritone sax sound, and a upbeat back-beat. Even Berninger is on the up and up, staying at the higher end of his register for the entirety. This song is a wonderful addition to the National catalog, a sound that i had been quick to write them off of ever attempting.
Song of the Day: I Need A Dollar, Aloe Blacc (With a Bonus Track!)
This dapper, Mos Def lookalike is a little known commodity over here in the US, but he’s gotten big over in England. Blessed with a vocal delivery that is equal parts Bill Withers and Ray Lamontange, he is an outstanding talent and his band is as soulful and funky to match. Check out his hit I Need A Dollar on the flipside, along with some nice bonuses. As always, just right click the songs to download, but this is an artist that you should definitely support
Song of the Day: I Got, Young The Giant
Today’s Song of the Day features an up-and-coming band out of California (what else is new) called Young The Giant. Drawing inspiration from a Brothers Grimm fairy-tale for their band name, the group (consisting of members from 20-22 in age) rented a house in Newport Beach to inspire the music on their upcoming album. “I Got” is magnetic ear candy, not dissimilar to the music Phoenix produced on albums like It’s Never Been Like That. Enjoy this song and look into the band, it’s well worth it. Download it after the jump.
Song of the Day: “Girl From The North Country”, off of Nashville Skyline, Bob Dylan
Today’s song comes from the little known Bob Dylan album Nashville Skyline where Bob took a more country route in his songwriting. Here he goes back to one of his first songs from The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan and turns it into a much more forlorn affair, with “The Man In Black” himself joining in. Bob also uses his natural voice here, much better suited for this bucolic number. Download it here after the jump.
Song of the Day: “Knock On Wood”, Eddie Floyd
Eddie Floyd’s “Knock On Wood” is a timeless Stax classic. Don’t let the new movie Easy A tell you otherwise (its the featured number near the end of the movie) everything about “Knock On Wood” is in a groove, the rhythm guitar is warm and pounding, the vocal performance is electric and those horns are as pumping as ever. If you want to download it, stay tuned after the jump.
Song of the Day: “Hey Hey What Can I Do”, Led Zeppelin IV, Led Zeppelin
Head on over to Art of the Song for a very special version of the Led Zeppelin classic “Hey Hey What Can I Do”. Come back here after if you love (or even notice) the difference and download the song after the jump.



















