We said from the beginning that, beyond the occasional yet to be planned theme weeks, that we'd just let it flow and see where we ended up. I haven't picked up a theme so far, which is a great theme.
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, This Time It's for Real
John Fulbright, Moving
Bill Evans, Young and Foolish
This week's selection is not what it started out to be, which usually means that it is a better choice than the original. It's like when I'm riding up the hill at Champlain on my to an 8:00 a.m. class and I have a mad inspiration that I throw together in fifteen minutes, and it ends up being much more successful than the class I planned for two weeks. Initially I began to write an homage to the brilliant Bill Evans composition Peace Piece, which is essentially an improvisation on his extraordinary album Everybody Digs Bill Evans. The album, which also features Sam Jones on bass and Philly Joe Jones on drums is essential. I'll revisit Peace Piece later in the year, but at this moment I'm consumed by Young and Foolish. I just think it's achingly beautiful and it makes me cry every time I hear it. It's hard to imagine having anything else to add, other than maybe at this moment in my life I need beauty even more than peace.
Ray Wylie Hubbard, Mother Blues
Ray Wylie Hubbard is a swampy styled blues guitarist from Texas who wrote "Up Against The Wall Redneck Mother" for Jerry Jeff Walker decades ago, a fun, but insubstantial hit which doesn't come close to capturing his style or his wry, witty observations, but still pays his bills. Those interested could better scratch the surface of his substantial body of work checking out songs like "Loose", "Rabbit", "Snake Farm" and "Screw You, We're From Texas". My personal favorite is "Mother Blues" an autobiographical tune which is a bit more restrained than his typical song, but every bit as brilliant.
While "Mother Blues" is thoroughly entertaining in its twists, turns and surprises, what makes it so unique to my ears is how in its final moment it clearly and without any irony celebrates a theme that is rare in popular music, especially in blues: his gratitude for the wonders of his life.
When I keep my gratitude higher then my expectations
Well, I have very good days.
Prince, Raspberry Beret
Bear Hands, 2 A.M.
Bruce Springsteen, The River
Dave Wallace
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, This Time It's for Real
The
first three Southside Johnny albums are under-appreciated classics. While
the third album, Hearts of Stone, is the best of the bunch, this
title track from his second album is my favorite song. From the kick-ass
opening, the song barrels along, powered by the Jukes horns. The whole thing
threatens to spiral out of control at the end, but manages to hold together
until the fade-out. Kudos to Steve Van Zandt for writing, producing,
playing guitar, and singing back-up. These albums set the template for
his classic first album, Men Without Women.
Miranda Tavares
John Fulbright, Moving
Like any good yuppie, I first heard this song on NPR.
Fullbright was doing an interview, and he gave a short synopsis of the song
prior to NPR playing it. He said (and I'm paraphrasing here) that no matter
where our lives take us, no matter what war is going on, no matter whether we
sleep in a bed or a doorway, the earth is moving around the sun at 66,000 miles
per hour. Here's the chorus:
Don’t worry about gasoline
We’re moving
Don’t worry about the tv screen
We’re moving
Don’t worry about the bombs that fall
We’re moving
Don’t worry about nothing at all
We’re moving
Don’t worry about the tv screen
We’re moving
Don’t worry about the bombs that fall
We’re moving
Don’t worry about nothing at all
People are different, and I know some get terrified at the
idea of our own insignificance, but I have always found this song incredibly
soothing. When I'm worried about whether I'm making the right decisions,
or stressed about the potential impact of other people's wrong decisions, I
listen to this to remind myself that none of it matters. We are all on the same
spherical boat traveling the same 66,000 mile an hour journey, and nothing
anyone does is going to change that. You make your way the best you can for
your own sake, but in reality, on a cosmic level, there are no wrong decisions.
In fact, there aren't any decisions at all. And on that note:
There’s times the lines get hard to see
And there’s days the haze takes over me
But in the end you’re gonna grit your teeth
And keep moving
And there’s days the haze takes over me
But in the end you’re gonna grit your teeth
And keep moving
Gary Scudder
Bill Evans, Young and Foolish
This week's selection is not what it started out to be, which usually means that it is a better choice than the original. It's like when I'm riding up the hill at Champlain on my to an 8:00 a.m. class and I have a mad inspiration that I throw together in fifteen minutes, and it ends up being much more successful than the class I planned for two weeks. Initially I began to write an homage to the brilliant Bill Evans composition Peace Piece, which is essentially an improvisation on his extraordinary album Everybody Digs Bill Evans. The album, which also features Sam Jones on bass and Philly Joe Jones on drums is essential. I'll revisit Peace Piece later in the year, but at this moment I'm consumed by Young and Foolish. I just think it's achingly beautiful and it makes me cry every time I hear it. It's hard to imagine having anything else to add, other than maybe at this moment in my life I need beauty even more than peace.
Gary Beatrice
Ray Wylie Hubbard, Mother Blues
Ray Wylie Hubbard is a swampy styled blues guitarist from Texas who wrote "Up Against The Wall Redneck Mother" for Jerry Jeff Walker decades ago, a fun, but insubstantial hit which doesn't come close to capturing his style or his wry, witty observations, but still pays his bills. Those interested could better scratch the surface of his substantial body of work checking out songs like "Loose", "Rabbit", "Snake Farm" and "Screw You, We're From Texas". My personal favorite is "Mother Blues" an autobiographical tune which is a bit more restrained than his typical song, but every bit as brilliant.
While "Mother Blues" is thoroughly entertaining in its twists, turns and surprises, what makes it so unique to my ears is how in its final moment it clearly and without any irony celebrates a theme that is rare in popular music, especially in blues: his gratitude for the wonders of his life.
When I keep my gratitude higher then my expectations
Well, I have very good days.
Mike Kelly
Prince, Raspberry Beret
I know you’re thinking that the last thing the world
needs is another thinkpiece about what Prince’s music meant but I’d like to
highlight the time he wrote a top-10 single about having sex in a barn.
To summarize Raspberry Beret: Slack-ass narrator
thinks back on a time when he worked a shitty job with a racist boss and a hot
girl came in the store. The brazen girl in the weird hat initiates a
suggestive conversation so the narrator does the obvious thing which is take
her on a motorcycle riding date. When things get heated they decide to pull
over and screw with a series of farm animals watching them as the rain pours
down. Those were the days, says Prince.
What distinguishes this song from other instances of
teenage boy fantasy come to life in a song (I’m thinking of you, Warren G https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMZmzEpmiuA)
is the idea that Prince was actually capable of pulling off the narrator’s
actions and pull them off in a way that gave a certain spirituality to the
quickie.
“Something about the clouds and her mixed” and “Thunder
drowns out what the lightning sees/and you feel like a movie star” give a
particular urgency and eloquence to what normally devolves into boring tall
tales about youthful virility.
A couple of days after Prince died, this meme http://weheartit.com/entry/group/96422827 came
out and after I saw it, I knew that I’d eventually write about this song for
the blog. This amazingly glorious spring day seemed like the right
time.
Dave Mills
Keeping
it light this week, I've chosen a track from the newest Bear Hands album.
It's a good example of the kind of post-punk indie rock coming out of
Brooklyn these days, for better or for worse. This particular track captures my
feeling after perusing last week's offerings in the discography. After
scrolling through a playlist consisting primarily of tracks by bands that
no longer exist and singers who have passed, the pre-chorus from 2AM came
to mind:
All
your friends are sober
Yeah, we're getting older
Going out's a drag now
All my spots have closed
And we can fantasize
Without much of a mess
And making love is fine
But all I want is to forget
How old I am.
Yeah, we're getting older
Going out's a drag now
All my spots have closed
And we can fantasize
Without much of a mess
And making love is fine
But all I want is to forget
How old I am.
That
these lyrics are sung by a 27-year-old is quite depressing; the
sentiment applies even moreso to those of us a few years (or
more) ahead of him. In last week's discography, with the exception of Nate
Bell's excellent contribution and Dave Kelley's timely Clash cut, the rest of
us spent the week looking backwards. Perhaps a project like this
naturally elicits such reflection, and perhaps such reflections
naturally slow us down. Mike Kelly and I, who, without collusion or
collaboration, each contributed a Nirvana track, couldn't even
manage unfiltered Cobain, opting instead for the gentle buffers of
alt-country and post-bop jazz. Yeah, we're getting older. So enjoy Bear
Hands' homage to our collective dotage. I should also note that the music
video looks like it was shot on scene at one of Scudder's Philosophaster
parties at Bleak House, or on the second floor of Aiken Hall on a Fridayafternoon.
And lastly, I should note that, contrary to the song's claim that
"nothing good happens past 2am," Kountry Kart Deli in
Burlington stays open until 3am.
Dave Kelley
Bruce Springsteen, The River
Now those memories come back to haunt me
they haunt me like a curse
is a dream a lie if it don't come true
or is it something worse
that sends me........
Recently Dave and I saw Bruce play the entirety of The River in sequence. It was a very powerful and emotional experience. A record that had a huge impact on me in my twenties had a very different kind of impact on the 53 year old version of myself.
This song was based on the real experiences of his sister and her husband. Not only does the lyric capture a life in a simple and beautiful way, but it deeply resonates on issues of loss and regret. The music is beautiful and features great work on the bass and of course Roy Bittman and his usual stellar piano awesomeness. In classic Bruce fashion, the singer may be sad and haunted, but the mother fucker is still going down to that river.
In the darkness of the concert venue, I am not ashamed to admit I had tears in my eyes during much of this song.
they haunt me like a curse
is a dream a lie if it don't come true
or is it something worse
that sends me........
Recently Dave and I saw Bruce play the entirety of The River in sequence. It was a very powerful and emotional experience. A record that had a huge impact on me in my twenties had a very different kind of impact on the 53 year old version of myself.
This song was based on the real experiences of his sister and her husband. Not only does the lyric capture a life in a simple and beautiful way, but it deeply resonates on issues of loss and regret. The music is beautiful and features great work on the bass and of course Roy Bittman and his usual stellar piano awesomeness. In classic Bruce fashion, the singer may be sad and haunted, but the mother fucker is still going down to that river.
In the darkness of the concert venue, I am not ashamed to admit I had tears in my eyes during much of this song.
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