Tuesday, September 30, 2008

A SUMMER SONG


Listen to A SUMMER SONG by Chad & Jeremy.
Well, I admit the title of this one doesn't seem to qualify it as an autumn song! However, the narrator is singing it to his girl at the end of summer. And of course: autumn leaves must fall.

This song will always hold a place in my heart because of its appearance on the soundtrack for the movie Rushmore. The songs in that movie really go above and beyond the call of duty. (Given the music I have selected twice now, it appears I truly am stuck back in 1999! Well, at least it was a good year....)

Photo: Easternmost point of the U.S., West Quoddy, ME

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Monday, September 29, 2008

DIAMOND DAY


Listen to DIAMOND DAY by Vashti Bunyan.

Well, this is Laura again and I'm back for a whole week. To honor the first full week of fall and the first few days of October, I'd like to post some autumnal songs.

The first one is by British folk or psychedelic-folk or hippie-folk or whatever you want to call her singer-songwriter Vashti Bunyan. Vashti has a very cool story. She released some singles and made an album back in 1970 but never found an audience and retired from the music industry soon after. She lived a quiet life in the UK raising her kids for 30 years. Apparently her kids had no idea that she had once been a singer.

However.....meanwhile, and without her realizing it, her album was branded a "lost classic" by folk fans and she has since experienced a renaissance.

Another cool fact is that she is supposedly a descendant of John Bunyan, the author of Pilgrim's Progress.

So enjoy-- and I hope everyone has a diamond day today.

Photo: Harvest.

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Friday, September 26, 2008

MOONLIGHT IN VERMONT


Listen to MOONLIGHT IN VERMONT by Johnny Smith with Stan Getz.

John back again. When the leaves are green, it’s summer to me. Whereas in Texas, that’s an easy mnemonic, in NYC cognitive dissonance sets in around October and I’m wondering why my one suit (badly pressed and worn) isn’t enough. The answer is that I’ve missed the change of the seasons once again. And so, even though the leaves are still green, I’m making a push to turn my mind to Autumn, and 1952’s “Moonlight In Vermont” is today’s effort. It simply sounds like Fall, with Johnny Smith’s calm, spare guitar and Stan Getz’s tiptoe saxophone blending in resonant harmony, like some lost cut from the Sun Sessions, minus an echoing Elvis. Swoony and romantic - just the thing for cool nights and cloudy days.

This being a blog post, I’d be remiss not to point out that some have called the Moonlight In Vermont album “the greatest forgotten jazz album of its time”. Or that Johnny Smith penned the Ventures’ hit “Walk Don’t Run” (the Ventures heard a Chet Atkins cover and sped it up) and used the money to leave NYC to open a music store in Colorado. Or that Smith got Getz a job alongside him with the NBC Orchestra, which Getz took to fund his heroin habit. Just fyi.

It’s Friday, it’s Fall, it’s jazz. Enjoy!


Photo: leaves.

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

NIGHT LIFE


Listen to NIGHT LIFE by Willie Nelson.

On the "Night Life" album, Ray Price does one of those spoken word lead-ins to the first track, about how they recorded the album, how the fans have been great on tour, and how they're looking forward to getting to a town near you soon. He also mentions (though not by name) the writer of this great new single that people have really connected with. The song was Night Life, and the writer was Willie Nelson. Just as it was a big break for Price, it was a huge break for Nelson, who went on to write a ton of hits and have his own legendary recording career.

I picked up a super-cheap compilation in Toronto a few years ago that had this recording of Willie doing Night Life himself. I've never been able to pin down exactly when this version was done, or what it was for, but it's fantastic. The cheap transfer to CD really adds a AM-radio-at-two-in-the-morning feel to it.

Photo: Estes Park rodeo (4).

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Wednesday, September 24, 2008

ARE YOU SURE


Listen to ARE YOU SURE by Ray Price.

Back when I was looking for Ray Price's Just A Closer Walk With Thee, I came across this album "Night Life" in Hollywood and I made Amy listen to it about five times while we drove around L.A.

Whoever wrote the liner notes compared it to Sam Cooke's "Night Beat," and that's very fair. It's a stylistic triumph. I kinda always thought of Ray Price as a little too smooth and countrypolitan for my tastes, but this album is very, very tough. The title track, of course, was his first big hit, but the rest of the songs are equally well done, and all of them stay close to the same concept.

I wavered on which song to pick--Are You Sure isn't a song about drinking, per se--but it's too interesting not to share. The narrator, a barfly, has gotten involved with a young woman, who has been pulled into his orbit of lonely, alcoholic, broken down types. He paternalistically fears that he has brought her into a world where she doesn't belong. Alternatively, he worries that she belongs all too well. There is tenderness, and disgust underneath.

Photo: Estes Park rodeo (3).

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Tuesday, September 23, 2008

JUST ONE MORE


Listen to JUST ONE MORE by George Jones.

Probably country music's greatest singer (and what a title that is to have, even if it is contested), George Jones could sing the phonebook and I'd download it. With 84-zillion albums, he probably has at some point.

For whatever reason, Just One More is just about my favorite George Jones song.

On the page (screen?), a line like "One drink / just one more /and then another" doesn't sound particularly superlative, but to me George makes it sound like the cleverest and saddest thing I've ever heard.

Photo: Estes Park rodeo (2).

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Monday, September 22, 2008

I HAD TO GET DRUNK LAST NIGHT


Listen to I HAD TO GET DRUNK LAST NIGHT by Gary Stewart.

How about another week of depressing songs? Yippee!

The country music drinking song is a time-honored tradition, and one that is usually approached with a certain ironic stance. Like yuppies attending a rodeo is more "fun" than fun, drinking songs aren't quite meant to be taken at face value. Take for example, these Gary Stewart song titles:

Drinkin' Thing
I Had To Get Drunk Last Night
Broken Hearted People (Take Me to a Barroom)
Drinking Again
She Actin' Single (I'm Drinkin' Doubles)

Pretty "depressing," right? Like, LOL. The song titles practically invite you to laugh along with the narrator while he hams up his buffoonish escapades.

The deeper irony here is that Gary Stewart really was a drunken wreck. Have a listen to I Had To Get Drunk Last Night. The intensity of his vocal performance might remind you of somebody like Will Farrell, who whatever you might say about him always gives total commitment to his characters, but is safe to laugh with because you know he's really kidding.

The fascination for me (and for many music fans) is that you don't necessarily know with Stewart, whether he was winking or whether he really did have to get drunk last night, and he's completely destroyed & disappointed by his life the next day. That makes a song like this so much more interesting or even disturbing.

Photo: Estes Park rodeo (1).

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Friday, September 19, 2008

PLEASE TELL MY BROTHER


Listen to PLEASE TELL MY BROTHER by Golden Smog.

Ok, Laura here. I am honored to be invited to be a guest blogger! So, all of this Elliott Smith sure is depressing. Don't get me wrong, I like it. But it is really taking me back to 1999 and all of the similar music that was being played by me and around me every waking hour (literally!). It especially reminds me of Wilco's underrated, in my opinion, Summerteeth, one of the two albums I had in my car that fall when I was commuting 45 minutes to work. So Summerteeth reminds me of Jeff Tweedy's little side project Golden Smog - which I believe is what rock dorks call a "Supergroup". So, here is a very sweet little song by Tweedy circa 1999: pensive, but not as morbidly depressing as Elliott Smith. I think the lyrics are especially enjoyable.

Photo: Hill country.

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Thursday, September 18, 2008

Thanks! Give money! Thanks!

Our sincere gratitude to those of you who have given to our Bike MS fundraising efforts. It's for a mighty good cause.

Still, we have two more riders (here) and (here) who need a few more bucks to reach their fundraising goal by tomorrow. If you're at all inclined to help out, now is the time to do so.

Thanks again!

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FIGURE 8


Listen to FIGURE 8 by Elliott Smith.

The down-to-earth, anything but corporate Smith seems out of place on a label like Dreamworks. His musical talents dictate otherwise though. Recording a portion of Figure 8 at the famed Abbey Road Studios (where the Beatles recorded), Smith tries to act the part of a critically acclaimed musician who believes his own hype. But, he quickly admits that he's just a guy who has seen his wildest dreams come true.

"I didn't really care that I was recording at Abbey Road Studios," Smith says with ease. "No... It was kind of a kick recording there. Just walking in the place was amazing. But when I was recording I was thinking of the songs and not that the Beatles were there. I never really thought about it all that much. There really wasn't any evidence that they were ever there."

He thinks about it for a few seconds and then casually offers, "I made up a song on the same piano [The Beatles] used on "Penny Lane". It was fun. It was a big deal to me, but I like to play it down."

Photo: All is forgiven (8).

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Wednesday, September 17, 2008

ABUSED (DEMO VERSION) and ABUSED (INSTRUMENTAL)


Listen to ABUSED (DEMO VERSION) by Elliott Smith.
Listen to ABUSED (INSTRUMENTAL) by Elliott Smith.

Interview one.

I've always thought your lyrics were, not necessarily cryptic, but enigmatic. You build your own pictures out of the fragments... There are more direct, more emotionally clear moments on [Figure 8] than on any of its predecessors... Are you aware of that? I'm thinking of songs like 'Everything Reminds Me Of You'.

Yeah, there's a few songs that are pretty direct. If the whole record was like that it would really get on my nerves, and if the whole record was really impressionistic, fragmentary, dream-like songs that wouldn't be so great either. I like to have as many different songs as possible, and as many different emotions in the same song as possible. I don't really try to do anything, but maybe that is my goal.

Interview two.

Figure 8 seems to pull away from the direct autobiographical approach Smith has taken in the past. Where Either/Or [his last indie release] was deeply personal, Figure 8 seems universal in subject matter and written specifically for a wider audience. Curious if this was a way to dodge the press' bullets, I ask Smith if he went into writing this album to finally shake the assumption that all his songs are autobiographical?

"I probably did," Smith says with disappointment, as if this was crossing his mind for the first time. "I could feel myself doing it and didn't want to. I don't want to do anything because of the media, but I couldn't help it. You have to change to keep from getting boring. I don't know, I probably did it."

Still struggling with this idea, he thinks about it and offers more. "I might have, I'm not really sure. I hope not. Some of it was bound to sound like that for me to make a change. And that is one way to go. But I hope it wasn't a reactionary record on how people perceived me. It probably was though to a certain extent."

He thinks about the question a bit more carefully and then gives another reason why the record came out the way it did. "Some of it is also the more I make up songs, the less I care if it has that much to do with me. I'm more interested in my imagination and what I can come up with regardless if it's autobiographical or not."

Photo: All is forgiven (7).

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Tuesday, September 16, 2008

COMING UP ROSES


Listen to COMING UP ROSES by Elliott Smith.

Y3: I have to ask you about your tattoo of Ferdinand.

ES: Oh yeah, a children's story.

Y3: I grew up on that story. The bull who was too gentle and content to attain fame in the bullfighting ring like his friends, and chose instead to while his days away in a field, smelling the flowers. It's a great dichotomy, this powerful beast who doesn't want to use his power.

ES: Yeah. I'd like to say I got the tattoo because of the story. I do like the story, and that's one reason. But my initial plan was just to get a tattoo of a bull, and I like Ferdinand better than I like the Schlitz Malt Liquor.

Y3: It's almost analogous of you and your life. I noticed it on your arm and went, "Oh my god, that's Ferdinand." That is just the most perfect tattoo. It's the first tattoo I ever saw in my lifetime that I would get.

ES: I haven't ever regretted it. It seems to make more sense with my life over time. Somebody came up to me two months ago at a restaurant and said she had something to show me. She pulled up her sleeve and she had the same tattoo. I don't think she got it because I had it, I think she just had it for a long time. I got mine in Portland, like eight years ago.

Y3: Do you have any other tattoos?

ES: I have a tattoo of Texas inside the KC And The Sunshine Band sun on my other arm. That one's older.

Photo: All is forgiven (6).

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Monday, September 15, 2008

GO BY


Listen to GO BY by Elliott Smith.

SM: Why is that?

E: I just wasn't in as bright of a mood when I was making it up. The first one was more about people, that was the angle of it. The second one wasn't hanging out with people as much. Sometimes people are like, "oh, the second one is all about drugs and stuff," and it's not about drugs. It's a different angle or topical way about talking about things. Like dependency and mixed feelings about your attraction or your attachment. It's good for you on the one hand, and on the other hand it's not really what you need. I just thought I'd answer that question in advance in case you asked.

SM: Actually, that wasn't on the list.

E: Well, I just get that a lot. 'All these songs are about drugs.' Well, not really. No.

SM: We didn't have it in our minds, so that's okay. Actually, the question was going to be is your life as bleak as your songs seem to suggest?

E: I don't think that they're that bleak really. I mean they have their moments. Those songs didn't come from nowhere so if it seems bleak, then I guess the answer is 'yes' but they're not bleak to me.

Photo: All is forgiven (5).

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Sunday, September 14, 2008

Contribute to Bike MS!

Good morning! I've been doing a little site maintenance today. The first thing you might notice is I have added is a donation button on the right. Long time readers will know that Amy has been raising funds for the MS Society for many years now, but this is only the second year that she is participating in the Bike MS, taking place on Sunday, October 5, 2008.

This year, Amy has trickedrecruited eight other riders to go sixty miles, which is a pretty impressive feat in itself. Now all of us have to raise at least $100 by September 19. To help with that, I added the donation button, which will redirect you to one of the riders on the team. Any donations to the cause are much appreciated!

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Friday, September 12, 2008

THEY REMINISCE OVER YOU (T.R.O.Y)


Listen to THEY REMINISCE OVER YOU (T.R.O.Y.) by Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth.

John back again. It's been a wonderfully busy week for me, so nothing mind blowing to say, but just thought I'd share a tune that popped into my head this morning after reviewing Bill's Elliott Smith postings. Par for my course, this track isn't from this decade, but 1992 is getting warmer!

Photo: catbird.

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