It is hard to believe, but this week marks our last Theme Week of the second year of our Discography music discussion. The esteemed Phil Seiler gave us these directions:
So that's my proposal. Do with it what ye may."
Now, it's the very definition of click bait (and, as I proposed to MK the other night at the Gillian Welch show, we have a click bait president for a click bait age) and, as several of you have pointed out, many of the choices are odd. That said, I can appreciate it as a teacher; we often choose flawed texts solely to inspire conversation.
There are some great choices, and consequently it is declared a Week of Excellence.
Who is missing? Three artists come to
mind, Sarah McLachlan, Shawn Colvin, and Dar Williams. I’ll go with Shawn just
because I love this song, Polaroids from her second album Fat
City. She describes the song as a travelogue and it seems autobiographical.
She’s joined on the album by a ridiculous cast of musicians: David Lindley, The
Subdudes, Richard Thompson, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Bela Fleck, Bill Payne, and
a lot more. I’d certainly put it ahead of The Spice Girls.
Appreciate
the whole album as an album because it is a complete piece of art.
"Independent Thief" is my favorite song off of "Back to Me" which is easily my favorite Kathleen Edwards release. The fact that she has also served G coffee only adds to it!
Neko Case, Margaret vs. Pauline
Well, let me start off with the obvious comment: Dave Kelley is a complete and total bastard. He completely stole Kathleen Edwards out from underneath me (if only). To me she's the singer who was most jobbed on this list. Any of her first three albums are better than 90% of the artists/albums championed on the list. Of course, we can take this all with a tremendous grain of salt since, just as I am Vermont's Leading Montreal Alouettes Fan, I am also America's Leading Kathleen Edwards Fan. I was tempted to go with a different Edwards song and album, but I stuck to the original directive (because, as my friends can attest, no one follows the rules more assiduously than I do). Actually, I'm quite happy to choose a Neko Case song (I was also considering Nicole Atkins, but I've written on several of her songs recently so I took a different direction). I really like Fox Confessor Brings the Flood and Blacklisted (as I've opined in the past, both of them are like living in a David Lynch alternative universe). In the end I went with Margaret vs. Pauline from Fox Confessor Brings the Flood. It's one of the great quiet songs about privilege and the general unfairness of life. As Case sings, in her atmospheric way:
Two girls ride the blue line
Two girls walk down the same street
One left her sweater sittin' on the train
The other lost three fingers at the cannery.
"So here is the link to the article that was kicking around last summer:
I wish the list existed as one page rather than 15 pages of 10 each but welcome to the monetized future where even with public resources we cannot have nice things.
In any case, the challenge of this theme week is to find a song from the album that did not make this list that is a tragedy of epic proportions. As but one example, (And I really should re-verify this list to confirm) but my recollection is not a single album by Suzanne Vega made this list which considering how pivotal she was to the neo-folk movement, is disappointing.
Now, it's the very definition of click bait (and, as I proposed to MK the other night at the Gillian Welch show, we have a click bait president for a click bait age) and, as several of you have pointed out, many of the choices are odd. That said, I can appreciate it as a teacher; we often choose flawed texts solely to inspire conversation.
There are some great choices, and consequently it is declared a Week of Excellence.
Dave Wallace
Tift Merritt - Shadow in the Way
Interesting theme for this week, and
the list of Best 150 Albums by Female Artists is incredibly
comprehensive. With that said, I did find a notable omission. I've
previously expressed my love for the Tambourine album by Tift
Merritt, which is not on the list. Merritt has made some good albums, but
this is easily my favorite by her. An irresistible mix of country,
blue-eyed soul, and pop, every song is great, her singing is superb, and her
back-up band is firing on all cylinders. For today's blog, I've selected
album closer, Shadow in the Way.
Kevin Andrews
Imagine my surprise seeing The Roches
on the first page of the list. I bought this record when I was 18 and have
loved it ever since. Then I noticed it’s placement at #150. This, in the words
of the excellent Sanford Zale, is a travesty. Another questionable call is The
Spice Girls at #64. I won’t go into it but I’ll just say my daughter was six
when this album came out and I heard it more than a few times and even saw
their movie. Yes, they made a movie, their tour bus driver was played by
Meatloaf. I may be biased against it.
Lists like this tend to say more
about the selectors than the selections. The list isn’t for the most
influential or the most popular, it’s the greatest. Of course, this is
subjective. You can disagree with the order but most deserve to be somewhere on
the list. Several I was pleasantly surprised to see include Patty Griffin,
Alison Krauss, k. d. lang, X, Rosanne Cash, Cassandra Wilson (#65, which I’d
highly recommend), Rickie Lee Jones, Gillian Welch, and Kate Bush. I guess I
shouldn’t be surprised, it’s an NPR list after all.
Alice Neiley
This, my friends, was a difficult theme week. The reason for
the difficulty is two-fold. One: the linked list Phil included in his theme
description was quite impressive and comprehensive, surprisingly so, as
articles like that are usually missing more than a few deserving artists. I was
particularly impressed with numbers 1 and 2 on the list -- Joni
Mitchell's Blue and Lauryn Hill's Miseducation of
Lauryn Hill. Yes. Yes. And yes. Two: my main issues with what the
article was missing are about artists who are already on the list who have more
than one ALBUM that should be there. The list did an excellent job with Joni
Mitchell and Nina Simone, for example, by including more than one of their
albums.
However,
I would say the list did Patty Griffin a great disservice by only including one
of her albums, namely at the expense of Impossible Dream which
includes the haunting "Rowing Song" (and I'm alone/all of the way/all
of the way/alone and alive) and the ever-accurate and beautifully poetic
"Useless Desires" (and the sky turns to fire/against the telephone
wire).
But,
surprise surprise, my discography song this week is not Patty Griffin. I
figured I'd choose an artist not on the list who absolutely should be: Audra
McDonald. I've written about her before here and there, but she's one of the
most brilliant Broadway singers in existence. She was trained classically at
Julliard, but ultimately decided theater was more her game, and thank goodness.
She would have been lovely at arias, of course, but she's even more
breathtaking in Ragtime and Parade and a host of other musicals (including a
show dedicated exclusively to Billie Holiday). However, it's her second solo
album, How Glory Goes, that should be included on this list.
Either near or perhaps (gasp) before anything by Barbara Streisand.
There
are so, so many tunes on this album worthy of a discography post
("Bill", "How Glory Goes", "When Did I Fall In
Love".....), but since the directions ask for just ONE (seriously, Phil?
;)), I suppose I can abide by that. This is the first track on the album,
"Anyplace I Hang My Hat is Home", lyrically about a wanderer, a
strong woman who can make her bed anywhere she lands, led by a strong, rich
voice that will airlift you into another world.
Phil Seiler
When
I was a teen, one of my main weekend activities was riding around with a couple
of other guys listening to music, sipping some beverages, and looking for a
place to throw a frisbee around. We had all the conversations you do when you
are young, stupid, and still figuring things out. Mostly you lamented why you
never had dates which, with the benefit of hindsight, is now fairly obvious.
Most of those conversations are lost to time and memory. But one still remains
to me. I was discussing some musician or band I was recently into who happened
to be female. And our driver for the evening stated "I don't like female
singers." At the time it seemed like a simple preference like "I
don't like horror movies" or "I can't eat peas". However it
stuck in my mind like a thin sliver and eventually I came to conclude that it
was a really indefensible position born of sexism and nothing else. One would
miss out on so many fantastic pieces of art if they held to this position. What
a travesty.
So
that was the genesis of this week's theme and the NPR list of 150 albums just
gave us a convenient launching off point. Lists are ultimately fruitless as
tastes are subjective and there will always be omissions. I don't have any
major complaints about the included 150 albums (Okay, maybe the T. Swift.).
They are good and worthy. But so many amazing artists are missing. No Neko
Case? Jill Scott? Wye Oak? Suzanne Vega? Elizabeth and The Catapult? Aimee
Mann? L7? KT Tunstall? And on and on and on...
For
my choices, I will return to an artist I have already featured once on this
blog and who is in my mind a vastly underrated pop genius. Kirtsy MacColl's
Tropical Brainstorm album was to be her last before she was tragically killed
in a swimming / boating accident. She had already made a name for herself as
the other half of the Pogues duet "A Fairy Tale of New York" and
having listened to various covers I can safely say nobody can hold a candle to
her version nor would anybody else be such a perfect match for Shane's voice.
She also recorded a fair number of super catchy pop tunes that really should
have been hits. "Free World", "Titantic Days",
"There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis". But
Tropical Brainstorm was something new. Steeped in the sounds and styles of
South America, Kirsty finds a new, exciting backing for her voice and talents.
I already featured "Us Amazonians" from this album a while back but
the whole album just sparkles with joy, rhythm, and sex. This is the album of a
mature woman, unapologetic in her appetites. Just writing that makes me realize
how few examples of this we have! Is there any album similar in theme and from
a mature perspective on that list of 150?
I
will pick just one song, the wonderfully sultry "Autumngirlsoup". I am too clumsy to write
about this song and would probably just spoil it so just enjoy it for exactly
what it is.
Dammit.
I can't do just one. Enjoy "In These Shoes" too. This was almost
a hit. What an eff-ed up world we have that it wasn't in the top ten. Those
horns.
Dave Kelley
Kathleen Edwards, Independent Thief
Gary Scudder
Neko Case, Margaret vs. Pauline
Well, let me start off with the obvious comment: Dave Kelley is a complete and total bastard. He completely stole Kathleen Edwards out from underneath me (if only). To me she's the singer who was most jobbed on this list. Any of her first three albums are better than 90% of the artists/albums championed on the list. Of course, we can take this all with a tremendous grain of salt since, just as I am Vermont's Leading Montreal Alouettes Fan, I am also America's Leading Kathleen Edwards Fan. I was tempted to go with a different Edwards song and album, but I stuck to the original directive (because, as my friends can attest, no one follows the rules more assiduously than I do). Actually, I'm quite happy to choose a Neko Case song (I was also considering Nicole Atkins, but I've written on several of her songs recently so I took a different direction). I really like Fox Confessor Brings the Flood and Blacklisted (as I've opined in the past, both of them are like living in a David Lynch alternative universe). In the end I went with Margaret vs. Pauline from Fox Confessor Brings the Flood. It's one of the great quiet songs about privilege and the general unfairness of life. As Case sings, in her atmospheric way:
Two girls ride the blue line
Two girls walk down the same street
One left her sweater sittin' on the train
The other lost three fingers at the cannery.
No comments:
Post a Comment