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30 Years Later, Still Don’t Understand It

December 8, 2010 Leave a comment

April 5, 1994, September 13, 1996 and June 25, 2009 are all days forever etched in my mind. Men who created music that greatly influenced my life died on those days (Kurt Cobain, 2Pac and Michael Jackson, respectively). I remember where I was when I heard the news about each death and the unique way each death affected me. Similarly, I have a very emotional experience every August 16 when clips of Elvis Presley’s funeral are shown on TV and when I  listen to Don McLean’s “American Pie.” As a music fan, the death of certain artists continue to move me, long after they are gone. I reflect on these musicians and the way their lives and music influenced history and touched me personally and lament over the fact they were all taken away too soon.

December 8 reminds me a lot of March 31. On both days, talented musical artists, whose music touched millions, were tragically killed. Yet I have no real connection either one. Selena never made it big outside the Tejano community, so understandably I never connected with her music.  John Lennon; however, fronted what many consider the world’s greatest rock band ever, and by every measurable means, their music should sit directly in the center of my wheel house. After all, there seems to be a rule in the music community that if you like rock music, you must love The Beatles. Well, I’m a huge fan of rock and the best that I can say for The Beatles is that they had a few catchy songs.

For years, I’ve tried to understand this disconnect and explored several possible theories.

It has nothing to do with the British Invasion. I love many of the bands from this movement, including The Animals, The Zombies and The Hollies.

It has nothing to do with their radical politics. I am a huge fan of bands I vehemently disagree with politically.

It has little to do with my upbringing. Though not a huge fan, my Mother did listen to The Beatles on occasion. Neither of my parents EVER listened to Zeppelin , the Dead, or Hendrix, yet I became a huge fan of all of them.

I know plenty of people who do not like The Beatles, but they are not fans of music like me. Of all the passionate music fans I have met, I am the only who doesn’t seem fascinated with the music The Beatles created. I consider myself very passionate about music, and can say without hesitation, there is not a single Beatles song that has made me say, “I must have this on my iPod.”

So on this December 8, while millions of fans discuss the impact John Lennon had on their lives, I join them in holding a good thought for a man taken before his time, but I’m left searching to find some way his music ever touched me.

Death of Mainstream Music

December 3, 2010 2 comments

It will surprise no one that Cameron Crowe’s Singles is one of my all-time favorite movies. Along with Reality Bites and Slackers, Singles captures the true essence of what it meant to come of age in the 90′s, set amid the backdrop of Seattle’s burgeoning music scene. Indeed, members of Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Alice in Chains and other Seattle bands make cameos throughout the film, adding some unique local flavor.

One of the more memorable (and ironic) scenes features members of Pearl Jam discussing the state of contemporary music with their on-screen lead singer, Cliff Poncier (Matt Dillon).

Man, where are the anthems of our youth? What happened to music that meant something? The Who at the Kingdome or Kiss at the Coliseum. Where is the “Misty Mountain Hop”? Where is the “Iron Man” of today?” They go on to describe the mainstream music of the day as “bottles of bleach…beer and lifestyle music.”

Crowe, no dummy when it comes to rock music, no doubt sensed something big brewing in the Seattle music scene and intended for this scene to a bit ironic. For the first time in over a decade, American mainstream music was resurgent and would remain that way for the next two years.  The only other period in the history of rock that compares is possibly 1968 through 1972.  Consider the following list of albums released from 1990 to 1994.



Release Date

Album

Band

4/21/1990

Ritual de lo Habitual Janes Addiction
7/19/1990

Apple

Mother Love Bone
8/21/1990

Facelift

Alice in Chains
3/8/1991

Out of Time

R.E.M.
5/28/1991

Gish

Smashing Pumpkins
8/27/1991

Ten

Pearl Jam
8/27/1991

Fear

Toad the Wet Sprocket
9/24/1991

Nevermind

Nirvana
9/24/1991

Blood Sugar Sex Magik

Red Hot Chili Peppers
10/8/1991

Badmotorfinger

Soundgarden
12/31/1991 Mental Jewelry Live

2/25/1992

Little Earthquakes Tori Amos

6/1/1992

40oz. To Freedom Sublime
9/22/1992

Blind Melon

Blind Melon

9/22/1992

Mother Love Bone Mother Love Bone

9/29/1992

Dirt Alice in Chains
9/29/1992

Core

Stone Temple Pilots
10/7/1992 Automatic for the People R.E.M.
2/22/1993

Pablo Honey

Radiohead
6/22/1993

Exile in Guyville

Liz Phair
7/27/1993

Siamese Dream

Smashing Pumpkins
8/24/1993

Kerosene Hat

Cracker
9/13/1993

In Utero

Nirvana
9/14/1993

August and Everything After

Counting Crows
10/19/1993

Vs.

Pearl Jam
1/31/1994

Under the Pink

Tori Amos
2/1/1994

Dookie

Green Day
3/8/1994

Superunknown

Soundgarden
4/26/1994

Throwing Copper

Live
5/10/1994

Blue Album

Weezer
6/7/1994

Purple

Stone Temple Pilots
9/26/1994

Monster

R.E.M.
12/6/1994

Vitalogy

Pearl Jam
12/6/1994

Sixteen Stone

Bush

It would be nearly impossible to find that many great mainstream albums released in the entire time since 1994. It’s almost as if the synergistic effects of Kurt Cobain’s death and the rise of the Internet combined to kill mainstream rock for good. Turn on any mainstream, modern rock radio station today and you will hear it least two or three songs from these albums every hour, likely more. Last week, as my wife and I traveled to East Texas for Thanksgiving, we listened to terrestrial radio for the first time in recent memory. It sounded much like it did when we were in high school, track after track off these landmark albums, with very few contemporary songs.

I’ve remained out of the mainstream for over a decade, but from the outside looking in, modern mainstream rock resembles the mainstream rock of the late 80′s–trite and tricked up, more concerned with appearances than emotion, pure philistine trash. In this age of iPods and iTunes, most true music fans rarely listen to the radio. Instead, the radio has been reduced to entertaining background noise for the apathetic as they travel in their car. Further, the explosion of digital music has blurred the line between independent and mainstream.

Is the death of mainstream rock really relevant? Damn right it is, mainstream music continues to define generations and this generation is being killed by the sounds of Lady Gaga, Fall Out Boy and the Black Eyed Peas.

Boomers had Woodstock; we had Lollaplooza. Boomers know every word, to every track on Exile on Mainstreet and Electric Ladyland; I can recite the lyrics to every track on Ten and Nevermind. Both Boomer and X’ers could listen to the radio in peace, knowing that great music would not be interrupted by some rubbish from Creed, Daughtry or Nickleback.

Mainstream music is just one more area that the Millenials have failed society as a whole.

Happy Birthday to My iPod

September 22, 2010 1 comment

Last Thursday, I turned 32. Today my iPod turns 3.

To mark this momentous occasion, I felt it fitting to take an inventory of its contents and an analysis of my listening habits.

Currently, I have 6,910 music tracks on my iPod. If you speak computer, that comes out to 29.34 GB and 19.6 days worth of listening pleasure for the rest of us.

You can tell a lot about a person by looking at their iPod and I feel that my Top 25 Most Played list reflects my diverse taste in music:

1.) “Wichita Lineman”  Glen Campbell

2.) “Woodstock”  Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

3.) “Jack Straw”   Grateful Dead

4.)  “I Know You Rider”  Grateful Dead

5.)”Sliver”   Nirvana

6.) “We’re Only Gonna Die”  Bad Religion

7.) “Everlong”  Foo Fighters

8.) “Degenerated”  Reagan Youth

9.) “Judy and the Dream of Horses”  Belle & Sebastian

10.) “Pick Up Sticks”  The Dave Brubeck Quartet

11.) “In the Waiting Line”  Zero 7

12.) “How to Disappear Completely”  Radiohead

13.) “Take Five” The Dave Brubeck Quartet

14.) “Knowledge”  Operation Ivy

15.) “In My Hour of Darkness”  Gram Parsons

16.) “Oh Me”  Nirvana

17.) “Lucky”  Radiohead

18.) “Here is No Why”  Smashing Pumpkins

19.) “Lodi”  Creedence Clearwater Revival

20.) “Farther Along”  The Flying Burrito Brothers

21.) “One Man Army”  Our Lady Peace

22.) “Middleman”  Bright Eyes

23.) “A Winters Tale”  A.F.I.

24.) “The Crowd”  Operation Ivy

25.) “She” Gram Parsons

The bands/artists represented the most on my iPod:

1.) Bad Religion – 144 songs

2.) The Smiths/Morrissey – 127 songs

3.) The Cure – 88 songs

4.) Nirvana – 81 songs

5.) Pearl Jam – 78 songs

6.) Beck – 75 songs

7.) Ben Folds/Five – 71 songs

8 .) (tie) Bright Eyes & Modest Mouse – 54 songs

9.) Belle & Sebastian – 42 songs

10.) Bob Dylan – 37 songs

Just because I have a lot of music from one particular artist, doesn’t necessarily make them my favorite act. I decided to launch a more in-depth study of my listening habits and looked at the average number of listens per song, per artist. To avoid “one-hit wonders”, an artist had to have a minimum of 15 songs on my iPod to qualify for this list.

1. Gram Parsons/The Flying Burrito Brothers – 36 listens per song (1,312 plays/36 total songs)

2.) Elton John – 33 listens per song (758 plays/23 songs)

3.) Pearl Jam – 28 listens per song  (2,166 plays/78 songs)

4.) Bruce Springsteen – 28 listens per song (829 plays/30 songs)

5.) A.F.I. – 27 listens per song (516 plays/19 songs)

6.) Dave Matthews Band – 24 listens per song (459 plays/19 songs)

7.) Counting Crows – 23 listens per song (631 plays/27 songs)

8.) David Bowie – 23 listens per song (528 plays/23 songs)

9.) Mother Love Bone – 23 listens per song (386 plays/17 songs)

10.) Belle & Sebastian – 21 listens per song (862 plays/42 songs)

There’s another 37 gigs worth of video that I didn’t even mention. Maybe on another post one day, but for now, I think its time to pull the curtains on this episode of “This Is Your Life.”

In all, it’s been a great 3 years for my iPod. She’s kept me entertained, pushed me doing work-outs, kept me calm at work and even served as the DJ for our wedding reception in April. Even though I have since purchased an iPhone, it will never take the place of my iPod. More than just another electronic device, she has become a special friend and on this special day, I’d like to take a minute and wish her a “Happy Birthday!”

Oxford American

April 3, 2010 Leave a comment

As someone who prides himself on being different from the bloggers on the East and West coasts, I apologize for not making this recommendation sooner. I’ve been reading Oxford American for a few years now, after my mother turned me onto the magazine for its emphasis on Southern writing. But Oxford American is much more than a collection of essays on small towns, trailer parks and Truman Capote wannabes. It is a medium for Southerners and non-Southerners alike to share their unique cultural insights of this most colorful of American regions. In fact, I’ve found this best writing to come from the annual Southern foods edition. The magazine also features yearly specials on Southern films & music (much more than just Elvis, Lynryrd Skynyrd, and the Allman Brothers). Whether or not you’re from the South, I highly recommend this magazine. If nothing else it serves as definite change from the stagnant views you find in the generic East Coast publications.

Help Me Understand The Beatles

January 16, 2010 5 comments

Five years ago, I was questioning my friend about their fascination with the Grateful Dead. Up until that point, my opinion of the Dead had been greatly influenced by the most commercially successful of the Dead’s music–”Casey Jones”, “Truckin’”, “Touch of Gray”, “Uncle John’s Band”, etc. I never found any of these songs to be particularly great, but would listen to them if I happened to hear them on the radio. Indeed, my opinion of the Grateful Dead was one of total ambivalence.

My friend introduced me to some of the band’s “deeper cuts”–songs like “Jack Straw”, “Franklin’s Tower” and “I Know You Rider”. These tracks intrigued me and I began to dig deeper into the bands catalog, delving into the deep collection of live tracks, discovering versions of “Eyes of the World”, “China Cat Sunflower” and “Scarlet Begonias” that would forever change the look of my iPod playlists.

Similarly, I struggled for years to understand why people felt U2 was so great. To me, the band came off as noting short of generic. I asked several U2 fans to suggest some deep cuts to help me gain an appreciation for the band.  While I still think the band is over-hyped, I developed a much better appreciation of the band after discovering tracks like “I Will Follow”, “Twilight”, “Is That All?” and “Drowning Man.”

I think it’s now time for a similar project for a band that many consider to be the “best of all time”–the Beatles. I admit that my exposure to The Beatles is relatively limited, basically just the “hits” and The White Album. It’s The White Album that especially perplexes me.  Yes, it marks the first time The Beatles drifted away from pop and experimented with real rock n roll, but it falls way short of the greatness of other albums released the same year. In addition to The White Album, 1968 saw the release of the Rolling Stones’ Beggar Banquet, Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland, Simon & Garfunkel’s Bookends and perhaps the most innovative album of the decade, The Byrds’ Sweetheart of the Rodeo. All of these albums would have a much greater impact on the evolution of rock than The White Album.

What is it about The Beatles that I am missing?

In my opinion, The Beatles did two things well. One, they created radio friendly pop tunes, much like Nickelback or Fall Out Boy of the modern era, when compared to other British invasion bands like The Animals or The Zombies fall short on the artistic meter. Secondly, they produced some interesting whimsical tunes consistent with the work product of one hit wonder bands. Indeed, the two Beatles songs I like the most are “Honey Pie” and “Martha My Dear.”

So with that I put out this plea to all of The Beatles fans out there. Help me understand this band. Suggest some of the band’s work that I should check out that will change my perception.  Please provide the track and album name in the comments field.

Top 10 Albums of the Decade

December 13, 2009 1 comment

In a few weeks, we say goodbye to the aughts. It seems only fitting that we provide you, our readers, with our own “best of” lists. What better way to kick it off than with our “Best Albums of the Decade.”

For me, it’s been a decade of great discovery musically–one where I’ve opened myself to new artists and genres–and moved past some of my previous biases. The 1990′s were marked by great albums with huge commercial success. It seems like everyone had a copy of Ten, Nevermind and OK Computer. Times have changed and the manner in which we consume our music has evolved. Gone are the days where terrestrial radio dictates what we listen to and no longer do we go to our local music store to purchase our favorite CD’s.

Instead, we turn to the Internet–to download, share, listen and get recommendations. This has paved the way for artists who lack traditional commercial appeal to find their way into the home of every American.  Most of the albums on this list, never dominated the charts, but each one packed an emotional punch from beginning to end and provided the listener endless pleasure.

With that said, this selection process was not without a system. My iPod contains all 10 albums. I have carefully analyzed my listening stats for each album, averaging the ranking of all the songs on an album, using the iPod 5 star ranking system. In the event of a tie, I moved to the average number of listens per song for an album.

1.)    Lifted or The Story is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground

Bright Eyes

Saddle Creek Records, 2002

Seattle played a major role in defining the music of the 1990’s and while no one city has dominated the music world like Seattle in the aughts, the closest thing we had was the Midwest scene in towns like Lawrence, Kansas, Omaha, Nebraska, and Columbia, Missouri.

Seattle’s Sub Pop Records introduced the world to Nirvana, arguably Seattle’s most influential band. Omaha’s Saddlecreek Records, introduced the world to Bright Eyes, arguably the most influential band in the Midwestern sound and possibly the defining sound of the 2000’s. Nirvana already had a loyal following prior to the release of Nevermind, but it was that album’s release that earned them mainstream success. Similarly, Lifted earned Bright Eyes, already a favorite among the indie crowd, a mainstream following.

No album of the decade captures the post-9/11 angst many Americans my age felt. Indeed, Lifted marked Conor Oberst’s first overt attempt to fuse his music with politics and his own unique brand of existential dread, as evidenced by the opening lines of the albums’ first song, “The Big Picture” (The picture is far too big to look at kid/ Your eyes won’t open wide enough and you are constantly surrounded by that swirling stream of what is and what was./Well, we’ve all made our predictions but the trust still isn’t out/So if you want to see the future, go stare into a cloud.).

These themes continue throughout the album, hitting emotional crescendos in songs like “Waste of Paint” and “Don’t Know When But a Day Is Gonna Come” and my personal favorite song of the decade, “Let’s Not Shit Ourselves (To Love and To Be Loved)”.

I first discovered Bright Eyes in 2001, at the end of a dark chapter in my life. A friend gave me a copy of Fevers and Mirrors and I listened to it religiously. I bought Lifted the day it was released and I credit it for keeping me sane through the majority of the Bush years.  I knew at that point the album was special, but it wasn’t until I began this project to compile the best albums of the decade that I realized just how special it was and remains.

2.)  The Moon & Antarctica

Modest Mouse

Epic Records, 2000


Modest Mouse achieved their greatest commercial success starting in 2004 with their release of Good New for People Who Love Bad News. However, this Seattle act has been rocking since 1993.  The Moon & Antarctica represents their most complete album with hardly any blemishes. Compared to their albums, The Moon is much more instrumental driven, featuring numerous memorable guitar riffs, some of which have permeated our popular culture. Nissan used the opening to “Gravity Rides Everything” in an ad campaign a few years back. With that said, Modest Mouse manages to avoid being superfluous with their music, never allowing their instruments to overshadow the deeper meaning of their songs. Indeed, their unique sound provides an ethereal backdrop for delivering a chilling, often heart wrenching message.

Though not a concept album by definition, the songs blend perfectly together. I divide the album into three parts and an epilogue. The first part begins with Track #1, “3rd Planet” and culminates with “Perfect Disguise.” Part Two  begins with “Tiny Cities Made of Ashes” and climaxes with “The Stars Are Projectors,” the most powerful song on the album. The third part begins “Wild Packs of Family Dogs” and ends with “Lives.” While “Life Like Weeds” and “What People Are Made Of” combine to form the perfect postscript.

3.)  Picaresque

The Decemberists

Kill Rock Stars, 2005

I was a little surprised at how well Picaresque scored when I started going through the numbers on my iPod. I knew the album would make my Top 10 list, but I didn’t remember how great this album is until I actually started going through it again. While the Top 2 spots are held down by albums full of melancholy, Picaresque is much more lively and fun. The Decemberists don’t shy away from dark subject matter, but beginning with the high-energy “The Infanta” on track 1 you get a totally different vibe. What sticks out most about the album, and can be found in most of The Decmberists work, is the tight narratives that hold the songs together. Frontman Colin Meloy is a master of the use of imagery within a song, the likes of which we have not seen since Paul Simon. As you listen to the songs, Meloy paints a vivid picture, so the experience becomes as much visual as audible. Some even remind us of some of the great writers of the English language. The first time I heard “The Mariner’s Revenge Song,” I could not help but think of Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” While the plots aren’t the same, the structure that both Coleridge and Meloy employed are similar.

If you want a small sample of this album’s greatness, I recommend “Eli, the Barrow Boy.” It is a perfect example of the imagery and narrative I discussed above and my personal favorite from the album.

4.)   Kid A

Radiohead

EMI, 2000

One album sure to be on every “best of the decade” list is Radiohead’s Kid A. Since it’s release, Radiohead fans and music fans alike have debated over the meaning of the album. The commonly held belief is that it is a concept album about the world’s first human clone, “Kid A.” Musically and stylistically, the album represented a break from the Radiohead of the 1990′s and defined the Radiohead sound of the aughts. The songs feature electronic sounds and vocal distortions, rarely used in the group’s first three CD’s, but that have been more common in their more recent work. I love Radiohead, but would never have the audacity to claim to be an expert on the band. I know they have a very loyal fan base and out of respect to that fan base I will refrain from commenting too much on the album. I don’t need to!  The album speaks for itself. I will say that “How to Disappear Completely” is my favorite Radiohead song and “Optimistic” is not too far behind.

5.)  Backspacer

Pearl Jam

Monkeywrench, 2009

This choice will not surprise many of who know me and understand my love of Pearl Jam. Simply put, the best  Pearl Jam album since No Code and the best album released by anyone in 2009. I doubt Backspacer will win over many new fans to the band, but Pearl Jam has a well established fan base and those fans, including myself, can see the growth this band has experienced over the years. Perhaps it’s the new President or maybe it’s being free of a major label and allowed to express their artistic freedom, but Eddie Vedder and the entire band seem almost happy for the first time in their career. Indeed, on the album’s firs track, “Gonna See My Friend”, a song about addiction, Vedder expresses a common theme for the album, “I’m gonna shake this thing/I wanna shake this pain before I retire.” For the past twenty years, Pearl Jam has rocked against the establishment with a youthful exuberance and proud ideology. While they remain true to those principles, it seems like they’ve learned, through experience, that in spite of the problems the world presents, there are many places to find a respite and some inner peace.

One of those places seems to be their own music. No longer trying to please a record executive, the band can make music they want to hear. Backspacer is much more up tempo and high energy than the band’s previous releases. It’s almost as if they’ve had all this energy stored, throughout the years, and finally have an outlet to express it.

Vedder also looks to love as a means to some inner peace. In “Amongst the Waves,” a song that traces the path of a relationship, Vedder writes, “if not for love I would be drowning/I’ve seen it work both ways, I’m up/Riding high among the waves/I can feel like I have a soul that has been saved.” On “Just Breathe”, we see Vedder adopt the acoustic style he favored for his recent solo work to carve out an old fashioned love song. They return to the sea analogy and more hints of love in the anthem, “Force of Nature”–the best song on the album.

6.)  Tennessee

Lucero

Madjack Records, 2002

“Alt-country” experienced a boom in popularity during the decade. From some of the early pioneers of the genre like Ryan Adams and the Old 97′s, to the new blood of bands like My Morning Jacket and Drive-By Truckers, the music permeated the landscape and found it’s way into other genres as well. One band in the genre that is often overlooked is Lucero. I first saw Lucero play a show around the time they released Tennessee. At the time, I was worried that I wouldn’t be able to find decent entertainment during a weekend trip to Little Rock and just happened to walk into a Lucero show. I had never heard of the band and did not know what to expect, but to this day I rank it as one of the best shows I have ever been to.  The band played festivals all over the country in support of Tennessee and earned a loyal following.  One of the best reviews I read regarding Tennessee upon its release compared Ben Nichols’ vocals to a “country” Kurt Cobain. Indeed, there is a grittiness to his voice and it is that distinctive voice that draws the listener into the lyrics. Once drawn in, the band takes the listener or a journey into dance halls, honky tonks and little roadside dives all across the United States. This is especially true with tracks like “Slow Dancing”, “Nights Like These” and “Here at the Starlite.” Since the release of Tennessee, Lucero has experienced some mainstream success, but still doesn’t get the respect of My Morning Jacket or Drive-By Truckers. Take it from me, they have done more for the country rock genre than anyone since Gram Parsons.

7.)  The Blueprint

Jay-Z

Roc-A-Fella/Island Def Jam, 2001

As a teen in the early 90′s, I became a huge fan of the rap and hip-hop of the time. I still count Dr. Dre’s The Chronic as one of the top 5 albums of any genre and I loved everything 2Pac put out, but when 2Pac died the genre seemed to fade as well. Instead of remaining true to telling stories of the streets, rap and hip-hop evolved into a philistine, pseudo-art form. It reminded me of the evolution of rock. In the 60′s and 70′s, rock was defined by truly talented artists writing great songs of political and social importance. In the 80′s, hair bands started hijacking the genre and rock went from fighting “the man” to one big party, full of booze, Aqua Net and strippers. When rap and hip-hop laid down their guns and picked up the bling, the music took a serious hit. Sure, it was easier for a suburban audience to consume, and thus more profitable, but it just wasn’t the same as the great music I experienced in middle school and high school.

For years, I refused to listen to any “new” rap or hip-hop, including some of Jay-Z’s earlier stuff, but when I first heard The Blueprint I heard an edge that had been missing from the genre for far too long.  Without a doubt, this is the best rap/hip-hop album released since the death of 2Pac. At the beginning of “The Ruler’s Back,” Jay-Z announces “what you about to witness is just my thoughts.” When I heard those words, I knew real hip-hop was back.

8,)  Dear Catastrophe Waitress

Belle & Sebastian

Rough Trade, 2003

If I had to use one word to describe this album it would be “fun.” At the end of the day, sometimes music needs to be fun. In Dear Catastrophe Waitress, Belle & Sebastian reaches back into the annals of music and channels the spirit of so many of the great “British invasion” bands. Catchy tunes and whimsical lyrics abound on this album, including the title track.

As a fan of classic rock, I simply love the Thin Lizzy inspired “I’m a Cuckoo.” The baseball fan in me laughs at the tongue and cheek humor found in “Piaza, New York Catcher.” No matter what life may throw my way, I can listen to this album and know that at the end I will be in  a much better mood. It may not be as great or artistic as some of their recordings from the 90′s and, yes, it was released at a point when their music was becoming far more commercial, but when you stack it up against the rest of the music of the decade, this one definitely lands in the Top 10.

9.)  Cassadaga

Bright Eyes

Saddle Creek, 2007

The second Bright Eyes album to make our list is a much more polished version than the first and finds Conor Oberst refining many of the styles he experimented with on Lifted, most notably the alt-country genre. Indeed, if you listen closely you can hear the influence of The Byrds’ Sweethearts of the Rodeo stage and Gram Parsons.

The pedal steel plays in the background, mixing beautifully with Oberst’s Dylan-like delivery of lyrics on “If the Brakeman Turns My Way”.  On “Four Winds”, Oberst puts an alt-country twist on William Butler Yeats’ “Second Coming”.  Perhaps the most moving of all the songs on the album is the haunting “Middleman,” a collection of beautifully played strings mixed  with the distant howling of a woodwind section creates a symphony of sorrow best enjoyed alone.In “I Must Belong Somewhere”, Oberst points a mirror directly at America, causing each of us to pause and question our society and culture–the sign of a true artist.

10.)  Fever to Tell

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Interscope Geffen, 2003

I never got the chance to visit CBGBs. When I listen to Fever to Tell, I like to imagine that this is what it sounded like back in its prime. Lead singer Karen O is our generation’s Patti Smith and the music’s raw energy makes you want to jump out of your seat and move along with the beat. The album is best known for the single “Maps”, which received heavy radio play, but relatively speaking it’s a “weak” song when compared to the rest of the album. The one-two combination of “Rich” and “Date With the Night” gets the album off to a fast start, which continues up until “Maps” when the album takes a decidedly slower turn, not that it’s a bad turn. In fact, the closing trio of “Maps”, “Y Control” and “Modern Romance” caps the album off nicely.

Honorable Mentions

Lost Souls – Doves

Bleed American – Jimmy Eat World

You Are the Quarry – Morrissey

Fold Your Hands Child, You Walk Like a PeasantBelle & Sebastian

Living in AmericaThe Sounds

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Top 5 Podcasts

November 14, 2009 Leave a comment

Since getting my first iPod as a gift some four years ago, I’ve downloaded countless gigs of all forms of media. One of my favorite things to download is podcasts. Over the last few years, I’ve tried out hundreds of different podcasts, but have now narrowed it down to 15 or 20 that I listen to on a regular basis. I thought I would share with you my top 5 podcasts:

1.) Slate Culture Gabfest – This is a must listen if you want to stay current on all things related to culture. The shows regular panel consists of Dana Stevens, Julia Turner and Stephen Metcalf, though they are frequently joined by other members of the Slate.Com staff. The content leans towards the “high brow” and much of it involves material published in Northeast publications (i.e. New York Times, The New Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, etc.), but it provides an inside look at what intellectual elitists all over the nation are talking about.  The most recent episode included a review of the controversial new Lee Daniels’ movie Precious, a review of the Ian McEwan novel Black Dogs to coincide with the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall and Jim Windolf’s recent Vanity Fair article on “cuteness.”

2.)  Slate Political Gabfest – Functions in pretty much the same fashion as the Culture Gabfest–three person panel discusses three issues–only involving politics instead of cultural issues. The normal panel consists of John Dickerson, Emily Bazelon and Slate managing editor, David Plotz. Be warned, the panel leans Left–far Left, but it’s entertaining and informative all the same.

3.) Anything You Ever Wanted to Know – This show is produced by KERA, Dallas’ local public radio station. The show airs each Friday afternoon, but I always listen to it via podcast. The show provides an open forum for listeners to submit questions, either on the phone or through e-mail, to be answered by other members of the listening audience and is moderated by Jeff Whittington. Over the past three years, I’ve learned some fascinating things from the show.

4.) The Writer’s Almanac Podcast – Hosted by Garrison Keillor, the show serves as a “this day in literary history” for lovers of words.  Normally, Keillor lists off several key events for each day and then will focus heavily on one birthday or event before reading a selected “poem of the day.” More than anything else, the show has introduced me to some great new poetry.

5.) NPR Playback – While the other podcasts I listed are released on a weekly or daily basies, the NPR Playback podcast is released on a monthly basis and features audio clips from the archives from 20 years prior. For example, the November podcast features audio from NPR segments from November 1984. I love being transported back to the 80′s and this podcast does just that.

The Cosmic Cafe

July 24, 2009 Leave a comment

I’m thinking about music today, specifically live music. Wherever I have lived, I’ve always been drawn to the local music scene. I’ve never been able to get into the Dallas scene, at least not since living here. In college, I spent many weekends traveling to various music venues in Deep Ellum, catching great local bands.

However, Dallas has changed and even the bands I followed as a college student seem to have sold out or disbanded all together.  There are days I long for the East Texas music scene. While they may lack the number of venues and bands as Dallas, when you dig deep, when you step into the underground, true treasures await.

Nestled deep within the majestic pine forests of East Texas, down a one-lane black-top county road, sits a lonely cabin. To be certain, these forests contain many cabins, but none as magical as the one in question here. I remember the first time a musician friend invited me to the cabin to hear “some cosmic American music.” At the time, punk dominated my playlists and I had very limited exposure to “cosmic American music,” but my friend promised fun, so I decided to tag-along.

We drove out a lonely Farm to Market road, past the county jail, turning onto a dark county road that created a snaking black vein through the lush pine thicket.  The further we drove, the road narrowed, giving way to the brush and over-growth.  Tree roots protruded out from the road and all was pitch black. Finally, we pulled onto a dirt drive and I caught my first glimpse of the Cosmic Cafe.

There was a clearing directly in front of the cabin and I noticed a make-shift pen, which on closer inspection contained two full grown Clydesdales.  We walk towards the cabin, which was actually two conjoined cabins: a spherical cabin of the geometric variety and a traditional wood cabin you would find on any lake or on any deer lease.  We entered through a door in the spherical shaped building and I was greeted with the smell of patchouli and cannabis.

Once inside the cabin, I noticd a large chandalier, which resembled an old wagon wheel, suspended from the ceiling. On top of the the chandalier were several mason jars, each one containing a dimly lit bulb. Hanging from the mason jars were assorted pieces of women’s lingerie, in ever shape, size and color imaginable.

To our right, was the main stage, where three men and lady, all in their 50′s and all dressed in vintage Western wear, gathered together.  To our left, a wide open space, wihch led into the other cabin. Tucked against the wall were two couches straight out of the 1970′s. A wall, with twin doors, had been constructed in between the two cabins and a few feet in front of the door way sat the sound board. Pops, a tall, lanky gentleman with long gray hair and a thick gray beard sat the helm.  A small group of ten or twelve people huddled around Pops. I knew a few of them from other local scenes, so I stopped to exchange pleasantries, before heading into the second cabin.

It appeared that this section served as the cantina, with two large folding tables, containing various wines and spirts, pressed against the wall on the left. Underneath the two tables, there were two coolers full of beer–Miller Lite, Shiner Bock, and Lone Star.  Two breakfast table sat in the middle of the room and each table featured an intense game of dominoes.  We grabbed a Shiner and were headed towards a door at the back of the cabin when we heard the first chord followed by a booming voice:

“Good evening! Welcome to the Cosmic Cafe.”

The band launched into a rendition of Gram Parson’s “In My Hour of Darkness,” and we decided to head back towards the stage. The lights were even more dim and another ten people had showed up. The stage was so dark, we couldn’t even see the drummer’s face. The lady sat at keyboard on the right side of the stage. On lead and vocals, appeared to be the oldest member of the outfit. He chained smoked throughout the entire set, holding a lit cigarette in between his ring finer and pinky on his right hand as he strummed the strings–true talent. Though not the best vocalist in the world, he did a terrific job not butchering Parson’s work.  The bassist was huge, at least 6’8, and had jet black hair and a jet black beard. This gave way to a cover of Grateful Dead’s “Franklin’s Tower,” which rolled into “Desperado,” into “Ripple.” The set ran about 45 mintues. Somewhere along the way, the band launched into CCR’s “Lodi.” It was the only time the female sang lead vocals and the only truly awkward moment of the set. They ended with an electric version of “Woodstock” (CSN&Y style), thanked the audience and invited “Pablo” to the stage.

Pablo, who doesn’t resemble a Pablo, took the stage with two other younger guys.  The three launched into an acoustic set that really engaged those present. By night’s end, Pops and I were the only two in the crowd not to take the state at some point.

When the music ended, my friend and I made our way the back door to a deck for a cigarette. We walked to the side railing and once again caught a glimpse of the pen with the Clydesdales.  What a weird place for Clydesdales. All of a sudden, I heard a deep booming voice.

“You want one of those horses?”

I wasn’t sure how to answer the question, so I simply stared at the man. It was the bassist from the first band–the giant. He told me he had recently “won” the Clydesdales in game a poker on a “whiskey night,” and had since sworn off whiskey. It turns out he owned the Cosmic Cafe and the land it set on, also a prize in a poker game.

Over the next few months, I made a few more visits to the Cosmic Cafe and found it be one hell of a venue. Normally, I was the only non-musician present. It truly was a locale for musicians to jam with other musicians. There were no set lists to speak of, no cover charge, no merchandise, just a bunch of people who loved good music getting together and jamming. Some nights the music leaned more towards rock, some night it leaned country, some nights indie and yes, there was always “cosmic American music” to be heard.

—————-
Now playing: Grateful Dead – Eyes of the World
via FoxyTunes

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