Filed under: Inspirational Anthems,Songs for Contemplation,Sunny Dispositions | Tags: Stevie Wonder, Joe Walsh, John Ruskin, Unto this Last, Songs in the Key of Life, But Seriously Folks
It’s bad enough that rap music has chosen to evolve from a minority’s angry shout for equality and recognition into an amoral celebration of substance-less materialism, but now we’ve got a sing-along, genre-less (because it tries to be pop and hip hop and maybe even fucking calypso, who knows) top ten radio hit by a guy named either Travie McCoy or Travis McCoy (the internet knows not) that triumphs a hyperbolic avarice until now relatively unknown. The song, in case you haven’t figured it out yet, is called “I Wanna Be a Billionaire.” It is unoriginal, shallow, ridiculous, and available for listen every six to ten minutes on the What’s-Hot-Now! radio stations that plague our country.
It is true that we are raising a nation of wimps; that the pursuit of wealth with a minimum of exertion has become the norm. That the sweat of one’s brow has decreased in value while the depth of one’s pockets has become the standard measure of stature and worth. Aside from the very noble profession of engineering, the top college majors of 2010 were those whose sole raison d’être are the making of money: namely, Business. As Rebecca Mead so eloquently put it in her New Yorker article “Learning by Degrees”:
“… one needn’t necessarily be a liberal-arts graduate to regard as distinctly and speciously utilitarian the idea that higher education is, above all, a route to economic advancement. Unaddressed in that calculus is any question of what else an education might be for: to nurture critical thought; to expose individuals to the signal accomplishments of humankind; to develop in them an ability not just to listen actively but to respond intelligently.”
When economic advancement is the sole motive behind a person’s life decisions (go to college, become a shitty musician, etc.) the quality of an individual’s actions decreases. We get businessmen who throw their clients under the bus in the name of profits; people in the music business (can they really be called musicians? half these people don’t even know an instrument beyond the beat machine and AutoTune) distill away any sense of musical identity so that they may appeal to the lowest common denominator and get their songs on the radio. They glorify sex and violence and money as ends in and of themselves, and not means toward something higher.
What bothers me the most is not the presence of this kind of music; there has always been terrible, shallow music. But the extreme popularity of it today is soul-crushing.
John Ruskin, the revered British art and social critic, wrote a series of essays on political economy which, when compiled, were entitled Unto this Last. The essays, written in 1860, deplore the prevailing economic mindset of the time, which calculated human beings as only another variable in the calculus of the means of production. What Ruskin argued was that by forgetting the human element–love, compassion, need, appreciation for beauty, honesty, integrity–our economics were doomed to create an unfeeling population whose chief interest was in obtaining their neighbor’s purse and not promoting their well-being. He foresaw a world in which altruism was extinct and man’s pleasure came from wealth alone. Yet there was hope left in his predictions. As has been the belief of my family for generations, our salvation lay in honest and dedicated work. In the fourth and final essay, “Ad Valorem” he writes:
“What is chiefly needed…is to show the quantity of pleasure that may be obtained by a consistent, well-administered competence, modest, confessed, and laborious. We need examples of people who, leaving Heaven to decide whether they are to rise in the world, decide for themselves that they will be happy in it, and have resolved to seek–not greater wealth, but simpler pleasure; not higher fortune, but deeper felicity; making the first of possessions, self-possession; and honouring themselves in the harmless pride and calm pursuits of peace.”
One of the musical champions of simpler pleasure, one who has pursued peace throughout his career, is Stevie Wonder. I thought of him immediately when I was unfortunate enough to hear “I Wanna Be a Billionaire” yet again on the radio at work. Especially on his 1976 masterpiece Songs in the Key of Life, Stevie celebrates the joy and worth of family and love; the “harmless pride” of one’s heritage; the pursuit of peace through acknowledgement of the obstacles toward it; and the simpler pleasures that make life joyous.
To prove that a massively popular song can still be filled with such ideals, look no further than “I Wish.” It’s a rollicking song, and Stevie glorifies his youth, despite the poverty, and the brief and harmless departures the young sometimes take from their parents’ wishes.
I feel that I must clarify my point of view: wealth is not necessarily an evil; only the worship of it, and the glorification of the base activities wealth, at its simplest, allows. One of the great songs about money is Joe Walsh’s “Life’s Been Good,” from his 1978 album But Seriously, Folks. The song is sarcastic and insightful, with Walsh listing all the things his money has bought him, and how truly worthless they are. The one important thing, and the one thing that will last when all his money has come and gone, is his appreciation that “Life’s been good to me so far.” It is the rock star version of one of my grandmother’s favorite sayings: every day, count your blessings; you will see that you want for very little, and need even less.
Masochism isn’t the word, but I love getting emotional watching the human interest stories on ESPN. The small town that battles funding issues and somehow wills its high school to a state championship, the blind boy that gets to take a few snaps on senior night out in Oklahoma. I wouldn’t say the floodgates open, but my eyes will get watery.
And I hadn’t really thought about it until after watching the ESPYs this year. The first award that really got me concerned a football coach who pulled his town together after a tornado came through and ravaged everything. I was sold after the first act. Thing is, last year, that same coach was shot and killed by a former player. I guess, then, the ESPY was given to this coach’s legacy. I don’t know. Later on in the show, NBA coach George Karl was given the Jimmy V Award. Not to make light of cancer and death, but the award is a weird event. It’s effectively saying, “hey, as the recipient this year, I’ve got cancer and you can probably expect me to die in a few years.” Yet again, however, I found myself being swooped up in the highlight reel and leaving my critical eye far far away. It’s like McDonald’s food, you know? There is some truth there (there are a few grams of protein, etc), but it is designed to make you cry (taste good).
Oh man, this all to say that I’m getting stoked on ballads right now. I remember when “Maps” by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs came out, and er’body was bummed because it was not punk rawk. It was straight-to-mixtape-cheesy or something. It was Weezer going “green album.” Well, I’m here arguing for the ballad now. And I should probably start by talking about “Patience” by Guns ‘n’ Roses, but for the sake of going over the top, it has to be “November Rain.” It’s perfect. It is unnecessarily long. It is accompanied by a mini-”film” which seemed to saturate the mid nineties. It has a string section. Bad boy deluxe, Axl Rose puts himself behind the piano. Slash plays a solo in front of an abandoned church. Etc, etc. I’m limiting my thoughts and observations of this song to surface qualities, things anyone can make because that is what’s best about the ballad. I’m sure some real work could be had in talking about this, but a good ballad is perfectly accessible. Anyone can project his or her relationship struggles, life struggles onto it.
And now, some Hoosier pride (though maybe Boilermaker is more appropriate considering Axl and Izzy hail from up north):
Filed under: Inspirational Anthems,Night Drive Tunes,Rainy Day Songs,Songs for Contemplation,Songs of Triumph | Tags: Jimmy Cliff, Reggae, The Harder They Come, Many Rivers to Cross
At some point during, I believe, the funeral scene in High Fidelity, John Cusack addresses the camera to list the songs he hopes will be played at his funeral. He requests “Angel” by Aretha Franklin, “You’re the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me” by Gladys Knight, and “Many Rivers to Cross” by Jimmy Cliff.
I’ve known of the existence and relative cultural significance of the soundtrack to the movie The Harder They Come, and of the three tracks by the film’s star, Jimmy Cliff, since probably that first Greatest All Time issue that Rolling Stone put out in November 2003 (the album is ranked 119 in the greatest 500 of all time). Yet I’d never listened to the album until just last week, when I spotted it in the soundtrack section of my local library’s CD collection. I had recently heard Willie Nelson’s version of the title track off his album Countryman and loved it, so I was anxious to hear how Jimmy Cliff performed it.
I must admit that, like probably most of us out there, my only exposure to reggae has been Bob Marley. He’s good, though I wouldn’t say he’s as good as all the stoners and black people think he is. Either way, listening to him never convinced me that I had to explore reggae music more. It just wasn’t my thing.
What surprised me about Jimmy Cliff, when I got in my car and put in the disc, was his voice. He has a very smooth and clean voice, the kind of pipes that wouldn’t be out of place on a polished Motown record. And once I’d gotten through the title track, which was good and reggae and pleasant, I remembered the quote from High Fidelity and flipped to “Many Rivers to Cross.”
More gospel than reggae, the song is incredibly beautiful. It is an anthem of self-reliance, self-awareness, and acceptance of the difficult roads which we walk from the beginning of this life to the next.
I’ve been playing it constantly; with each listen I appreciate something new. It’s not a layered kind of song with intricate lyrics or remarkable musical moments, but it is deeply sincere, and Cliff sings with complete conviction.
The use of the organ anchors the song in melancholy, while the lyrics pull the song just above the surface of sadness. While Cliff sings of being lost and lonely, with no idea of where to go next, he has kept his pride and thus his will to survive. The harmonized support of his back up singers is like the support of those who have seen the narrator’s many struggles and few triumphs but continue to sing his praises. The drumming is spare but deep, and emphasizes the narrator’s ability to rise up and continue on.
It’s the kind of song that would be a wonderful crutch during a personal crisis, yet it needs no crisis to convey its message. Play it in the sunshiney day, with the windows down and the wind in your hair, or play it at night, lying in bed afraid and awake. It will move you no matter what.
Filed under: Inspirational Anthems,Sunny Dispositions,sing like no one is listening | Tags: birthday, birthday!Can't Help but Smiling, Devendra Banhart, What Will Be will Be
Tomorrow is my birthday: a score + four. It’s pretty invigorating.
Half my life ago I was agonizing on the fact that teenager-dom still seemed so distant. Life was a constant popsicle enduced brain-freeze of emotion that summer. The future felt so far away. My sister and I spent hours in the library that summer. I did not yet feel justified in reading “adult” books, in fact I felt guilty checking out books from the “young-adult” section as it was. The librarian’s skeptically furrowed brow plagued me whenever I stood, tip-toed, on the other side of the counter and slid her my library card across the counter. It felt burnt in my forehead “twelve- not quite a teen.”
It was the awkward chubby year, which didn’t help much either. I would thumb through Mom’s Vanity Fair’s and day dream about being a well-collected woman someday, married to JTT and walking down the red-carpet. It was hard to imagine what I would make of myself in those days, but it seemed to be something that was always on my mind.
Now, being there, most of the time I still feel like a little girl playing with her mom’s makeup when I get ready in the morning. But instead of romping around in her high-heels pretending to be a superstar, I’m going to work in my own. Going to look at houses. Planning my wedding. It’s so much more fun, building a real life instead of a pretend one. Especially when the future doesn’t seem so out of reach.
It’s just like Devendra Banhart said, “Mama ain’t it wild when you can’t help but smiling? What fun to not know why, we’re lost in the one thing, truly worth getting lost in? It’s so nice to think that you’re alone, and to look up and see you’re home.”
-Laura Celeste
Filed under: Inspirational Anthems | Tags: Canterbury Effect, Southern Indiana Yacht Club
Tomorrow night I’m heading to Bloomington to see my friends in Canterbury Effect play their last show.
I’ve mentioned them before on here, if you remember, and this marks kind of a huge end of an era for me. We all grew up together in Brazil, IN, building a community there that is pretty much unparallelled in my life to date. I learned most of what I know about a fret board from Dustin and Alan.
One summer, Alan and I had the idea to build a model boat, and we did, and it was cheap and simple, and we didn’t care. We had built it, we had built it. It was like most everything else most of us had in our lives.
A few months later, Canterbury rolled out a new song at a show I was at, and by the end, I was a shaking fit.
We spent the last few months building this model of the most beautiful schooner I’ve ever seen. We both dreamed of gliding across the ocean the warning on the box said that it won’t be. So we set it to sail in the bathtub, manufactured it some waves. You can pretend that you’re the captain, and I’ll be your cast-iron first mate. We’ll sink it to see if it floats, it’s the only way we’ll ever know.
Tomorrow will be the first time I’ve seen Alan in years, and probably the last time I’ll see Alan in years, and all those years float.
Filed under: Inspirational Anthems,Songs to listen to with the windows down,Sunny Dispositions,sing like no one is listening | Tags: Arnold Palmer Tea, bottle-rockets, Louisiana, Summer, Summer songs, sun-burns, sun-tans, The Walkmen
Summer is in the upswing in Atlanta. You can see the humidity, it bends the leaves forward as if they were nodding off to sleep. I love watching the condensation drip off of my glass. I do not love my electric bill.
I do love making summer vacation mixes. What I have come up with this year is probably the strongest mix I’ve come up with since leaving the harbor of Muncie, IN. It will fill you with summer’s heat and refresh you like a glass of hand-squeezed lemonade. It’s my Arnold Palmer Tea Mix:
It was important this mix start with “Louisiana” by the Walkmen. The piano line really gets to me. It sways between D-maj and A-maj, slurred and sometimes stumbling, beckoning to a a mosquito-bitten and sandy teenage summer. When we were teenagers, naive and ambitious, we moved as herd of Impalas would, bounding about the terrain. We would play volleyball at the local park all day, then take our sunburnt cheeks and arms to the bowling alley. Some nights we had bottle-rocket battles in church parking lots, the sparks chasing us like ankle-biting dogs. Other nights we took to the playgrounds, after our little brothers, sisters, and cousins were asleep. We would chase each other until the local police arrived to send us home. We took off with our summer songs blaring through the open windows of our cars. We broke every curfew because we had to.
-Laura Celeste
Filed under: Dance like no one is watching,Inspirational Anthems,Night Drive Tunes,Rainy Day Songs,Songs for Contemplation,Songs of Triumph,Songs to listen to with the windows down,Songs to start your day,Sunny Dispositions,Time to Party Tunes,sing like no one is listening,songs that make you feel cool in uncool moments | Tags: mixtape
These songs are taken from albums that have been in pretty heavy rotation on my iPod and turntable over the last couple months. It’s been a highly uninspiring and unmotivated time and music always helps in the midst of that. Summer’s almost here so grab a beer, put the screens on instead of the storm windows, and turn this up to right where the neighbors can slightly hear it.
- New Young Pony Club – Chaos
- Bombay Bicycle Club – Magnet
- Dum Dum Girls – Yours Alone
- Bad Veins – Falling Tide
- The Walkmen – The Rat
- Doves – Sky Starts Falling
- Band Of Horses – Islands On The Coast
- The Black keys – Sinister Kid
- Phantogram – Futuristic Casket
- Metric – Stadium
- Open Hand – Cool
- Matt & Kim – Lessons Learned
- Lars & The Hands Of Light – Three to the Floor
- Broken Social Scene – Chase Scene
- Gorillaz – On Melancholy Hill
- Stars – Ageless Beauty
Filed under: Inspirational Anthems
I read an entertaining post somewhere wherein a white dude was trying to talk about rap but didn’t want to really talk about rap because he said white dudes only talk about rap to prove they aren’t racist. That being said, I saw Three 6 Mafia this past weekend. They performed at the Congress, which is a mere five-minute walk from my place. Most of their music is straight bangers, so it only made sense to see them. I had never been to a rap show before, let alone a rap show in a big city where actual gang members live. As much as I can enjoy Project Pat or any offshoot of the Wu-Tang, I am a honky from Indiana. I was, obviously, a little out of my element. We arrived late because rap shows are notorious for not starting on time. There was a boy getting hassled by a security guard near the entrance – “I’ll put my boot up yo’ white ass if you try to get back in!” Another man was being escorted out with the guard pouring out a bottle of Svedka Vodka. My companion for the night, Schlemmer, had to check his hat when we got in. Everything has the potential for gang affiliation. The security guard just inside searched me harder than I had ever been searched. Had I been somewhere else, I might’ve felt violated. For some reason, here, I felt excited. This was new, raw. I saw potential for danger, but at the same time it felt controlled, like things could only escalate so far. The show was pretty gnarly. Guards patrolled the floor with the heads down, smoky eyes cutting paths in front of them, yanking punks to a room where what happens we could only imagine. I’m not going to comment on the actual performance, I’m not qualified. I can say it was awkward at first when I found myself getting swooped up in the theatrics and singing along “I’ll knock the black off yo’ ass! I’ll knock the black off yo’ ass!” amidst a crowd of, well, mostly black people. It didn’t matter, though. Everyone got down. At the end, there wasn’t a big epiphany where we embraced a group of black dudes and we all walked out of the Congress arms over shoulders. And aside from the girl that was either eyeing me in a good way or in a ‘look at that honky’ way, we weren’t really even acknowledged. The point is, Three 6 slays.
Filed under: Dance like no one is watching,Inspirational Anthems,Songs of Triumph,Songs to listen to with the windows down,sing like no one is listening | Tags: Radical Face, Welcome Home
1. I’m ecstatic Radical Face finally has a music video for this song and also that it absolutely fits.
2. Find some uber nice headphones, or a stereo to listen to this. Loudly.
Graduation is getting closer and closer, and while I’m doing my best to keep it together, not knowing what is going to happen is extremely unsettling. Every time my family (or I) moved we at least knew where we were going, and where we were going to live. But now, I’m not sure where KP and I will be, when we’ll be there, or what we’ll be doing.
But what is solid is the feeling of home that I know is coming eventually – complete assurance that this is where you’re supposed to be. I’ve only really had that twice (in Paris and visiting North Carolina), but every time over the past two years when I’ve listened to “Welcome Home,” that same joy is just all over the place, pressing against the walls, bursting from the car.
Sheets are swaying from an old clothesline
Like a row of capture ghosts over old dead grass
Was never much but we made the most
Welcome home.
Toodles,
Rebecca
I went through a Pandora phase last year, around the same time everyone else was going through their Pandora phases. Then, everyone seemed to collectively forget about it, even those with Pandora apps on their iPhones.
But recently, having grown tired of my recently slimmed down selection of music on my work computer (IT departments don’t like employees to have 30+ gigs of music on their work computers–who’d have thought?), I’ve turned again to Pandora. (IT will just have to deal with the increased streaming bandwidth.)
I’ve honed my personal station pretty well, and what I’m finding is a renewed appreciation for some of my classic tastes–songs and bands I’d forgotten I liked:
- Alkaline Trio
- Fugazi
- Samiam
- Avail
- Small Brown Bike
- &c
I’ll admit, this station is pretty rock & roll. Occasionally some Sufjan pops up, Sigur Ros lilts across the headphones, Rocky Votolato belts one out, Pedro the Lion doubts himself, but mostly, it keeps my air drum tendencies bursting forth. It’s something good for here at work, something worth rediscovering for the rediscovery it brings.



