Songs For Your Day


The Boss

In 1973, Bruce Springsteen decided that, not only was he going to release one of the most acclaimed debut albums of the era–an album which drew lyrical comparisons to Bob Dylan; which was catapulted along by Vincent Lopez’s inspired drumming and Harold Wheeler’s light-fingered, barroom-joyous piano playing–but that he would also, eight months later, release his sophomore effort, The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle.  Arguably The Boss’s best album, and by far one of the best albums in Rock n’ Roll, it continues along the same track as Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. while upping the ante with flawless incorporations of jazz, and even classical, piano.

Vini Lopez is still around, though he would leave the band in 1974, and replacing Wheeler on keys was David Sancious, who actually lived on E Street.  The highlight of the album is its three-song (of seven total) second side, where “Incident on 57th Street,” “Rosalita (Come Out Tonight),” and “New York City Serenade,” blend seamlessly to form one of the most incredible suites of music ever recorded.

“Incident” is a story song like “Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts” is a story song, but with a big difference: whereas Dylan sings like he could have come from anywhere, and indeed did all he could to cultivate that image, Springsteen’s song is colored with Jersey-tinted sunglasses.  The moment Spanish Johnny drives in from the underworld, the listener is keenly aware of a Setting, evinced equally by the lyrics as by the music.  Sancious’s piano is eternally compelling, and Lopez’s drumming seems just barely reined in from the wilds of the swamps of Jersey (to which it will be re-released as soon as we get to “Rosalita”).

After seven minutes of traveling with Spanish Johnny while he tries selling his heart to the heart girls over on Easy Street, the song closes out with Sancious playing what I, a non-music reading person, assume to be descending scales (?); we are then launched, with no chance for tie-straightening, into a manic, wide-grinned recount from Bruce to Rosie about just how much damn fun they’re gonna have if she would only come out tonight.  After all, says The Boss, “I just want to be your lover, ain’t no liar / Rosalita, you’re my stone desire.”  It’s a character driven song even more so than “Incident,” populated by the likes of Little Dynamite and Little Gun, Jack the Rabbit and Weak Knees Willie, Sloppy Sue and Big Bones Billie.  My favorite part is Bruce’s acknowledgement of Rosalita’s parents’ distaste for this young rock n’ roller she seems to love:

Now I know your mama she don’t like me ’cause I play in a rock and roll band
And I know your daddy he don’t dig me but he never did understand
Your papa lowered the boom he locked you in your room
I’m comin’ to lend a hand
I’m comin’ to liberate you, confiscate you, I want to be your man
Someday we’ll look back on this and it will all seem funny

Bruce here is on top vocal form.  He backs off a little on the vocal velocity to basically shout a whispered plea, but when the tempo kicks back in with the opening of the next verse (“Tell him this is his last chance to get his daughter in a fine romance / because the record company, Rosie, just gave me a big advance”) he just lets it loose.  I always felt like scream-rock bands could have taken notes from The Boss.  When his vocals get loud and scratchy, it’s with pure emotion; it never feels like an affectation.

Eventually, though, the reckless energy of the early night must end.  What follows is a solo walk through empty streets, “New York City Serenade,” the kind of song to which you need to devote ten minutes of every night drive you take.  It’s almost indescribable.  Both inspirational and haunting, it claims my complete attention every time I listen to it.  It is epic, a concrete example of the maxim Bruce sings early on in the song; indeed, the entire album is: “Walk tall, or, baby, don’t walk at all.”  He’s singing, he’s singing.



a scooby doo mystery
February 28, 2010, 10:23 am
Filed under: Songs for Contemplation | Tags:

Hey all -

I have a musical mystery and I thought “what better place to ask for help?” Last Friday night Kyle and I went to pick up Thai Kitchen for dinner.* On the drive Kyle set the iPod and these incredibly beautiful and sweet songs came on. The artists sounded sort of like an immature Cloud Cult, but they definitely fell into the category of music that essentially makes me shut up when it’s playing. Now here’s the puzzler.

He can’t remember when or where he put these songs on his iPod, and it’s a super old one so all I could see of the artist name is Timberidge Historic. One of the songs was “I Sailed With Magellan.” Now, I’ve looked on iTunes, Google, and Grooveshark, and have not found anything. I’m going to the local record store today to see if Travis knows anything, but does anyone know (1) who I’m talking about or (2) where else I could look?

Toodles,

Rebecca

*Thai Kitchen is this hole in the wall on the southside of town with am-a-zing food that is pretty inexpensive, and is always playing Planet Earth when I visit.



A Song That Everybody Knows

Early in the morning–sometimes late at night–I can be found singing “Acuff-Rose” by Uncle Tupelo.  Written by Jeff Tweedy, and performed by him extensively during his solo acoustic shows, it is number one on my personal list of Songs Sung Out Loud, Frequently, and Without Shame.  The original UT recording has a sweet fiddle playing along, but the song is so damn good and authentic that it truly does sound best played alone by Jeff on his guitar.  It’s the kind of song I wish I could play around campfires, at sick childrens’ bedsides, at old folks homes, for presidents, at the ends of movies, on nearly empty subway cars, on road trips, and alone when I need a little pick-me-up.

Acuff-Rose was a music publishing firm out of Nashville formed by Roy Acuff and Fred Rose in 1942.  Fred Rose had seen too many country songwriters cheated by agents and promoters with regard to copyright issues.  So Acuff-Rose was established, according to Rose, under the principle that “our company would be honest.  The writers would always be taken care of.  No one would act in a shady way.”  Acuff-Rose became the catalogue for some of country music’s greatest songwriters, including Hank Williams and Lefty Frizzell.  It was honest music promoted by an honest company, and here honored in this song by one of the most earnest musicians around today, Jeff Tweedy.

It’s a wonderful song of adoration, expressing calmly and in equal measures awe and nostalgia for a company that was the storehouse of songs “that everybody knows… children at the playground / to folks at the show / anybody anywhere who’s ever felt alone.”



our way to fall
February 6, 2010, 11:40 pm
Filed under: Rainy Day Songs, Songs for Contemplation

If you could choose one artist to sing you one song to sleep, just once, what would it be? Mine would be “Our Way to Fall,” by Yo La Tengo, because that song is falling in love to me. What a wonderful thing to hear as you’re drifting into dreams.

I remember a summer’s day
I remember walking up to you
I remember my face turned red
I remember staring at my feet
I remember before we met
I remember sitting next to you
I remember pretending I wasn’t looking
….
I remember the way you made me feel
We’ll try and try even if it lasts an hour
with all our might we’ll try and make it ours
cause we’re on our way we’re on our way to fall in love

Toodles,

Rebecca



El Noi de la Mare

I’ve had a lot of great moments in my life, but I can count the number of perfect moments on one hand.

The most perfect moment of my life was in Hawaii. [of course it was, you say].

Let me back track a bit. You need to know that I have never felt completely at home anywhere. So those rare moments where I’m in complete unity with my surroundings are the most cherished ones.

The summer of 2004 l I was fortunate to stay with one of my all-time best friends, Jake, and his parents at their home in Haiku, Hawaii. Not once did I feel transplanted there. It was home from the second I stepped foot off of the plane.

One of those mornings I woke up before everyone else and took a shower (which was outdoors, and their was rain on the breeze that ruffled the shower curtain). I dried off, poured myself some coffee, and went to their swinging front porch bench (pictured to the left). Sitting there, listening to the rain was an overwhelming peace. The deepest breath.

I was so happy I cried.

“El Noi de La Mare” off of the Vicky Cristina Barcelona soundtrack, is the only song in the world that can take me back to that place.

-Laura Celeste



Goin’ Up the Country

I possess only five mix tapes.  They were all made by the same person, because nobody else has ever made me a mix good enough to keep.  Now that I’ve been back for a little while, and am in possession of the necessary technologies, I am jonesing to reciprocate with a mix tape melangé by my very own bibliographically-oriented brain.

A good mix should, in my opinion, be concise, varied, terse, demonstrative more of what the mixer believes than what the listener expects, and compact (I’m really strict on the length of a mix; I recommend no more than fourteen tracks because after that it takes a real time investment to listen to the whole thing at once, which I usually like to do; this time investment sounds nice in theory, but is inefficient and burdensome in practice).  A mix tape, as I’m sure all you loyal readers know, is not only a snapshot of a person’s aesthetic taste, but also a guide to said person’s world view, illuminating, whether implicitly or explicitly, the mixer’s stance on issues ranging from politics to desirable careers to beliefs on the requitability/existence of true love.  It is inherently vain to make a mix, and we should not shy from that, because it is a vanity fused with pure and joyful generosity.

While whittling and arranging the current mix, I’ve encountered a problem I’m sure many mixers are familiar with: conscious but unintentional artist repetition.

Depending on what theme or motif you want to emphasize in your mix, it’s easy to find many songs from the same artist/group that satisfy that theme, for obvious reasons.  For this current mix the motif is origin/rebirth.  Thus I am finding quite a few tracks on my first draft list by two artists at the base of my music appreciation: Willie Nelson and Lucinda Williams.

Willie and I go way back.  I’ve seen him in concert five times, and when I was a child his name was among my first words.  Mom says I used to run around the house while “On the Road Again” played, shouting “Nillie Wilson” (close enough).  The man is too legendary to be properly discussed here, at least concisely, so I’ll just say this: it is un-American to dislike Willie Nelson.

And but so Lucinda.  I did some research and found out that her first album came out in 1979, but that despite critical acclaim and a small cult following, she didn’t really blow up until 1998, with the album Car Wheels on a Gravel Road.  I was thirteen when it came out, and trying very hard to avoid my musical destiny by listening to a lot of that Rap music all those kids were crazy about.  My mom had around this time turned away from the Ray Charles, Rod Stewart, and Linda Rondstadt she’d been slamming and gotten religiously back into country music (she must have been having an origin/rebirth moment as well).  Willie’s back catalog began to flood our household music collection, as well as Car Wheels.  We’d never heard or heard of Lucinda Williams, but we took that chance.  It must have been kismet.  It was the album that put me back on track.

It’s an incredible album.  Her electric guitars are dirty and loud, her vocals are gritty as the gravel road she drives down, with the occasional smooth patch.  The album rocks, sways,  and stops twirling in the middle of the night to gaze inwardly at a personal waning moon.  “I Lost It” is my favorite of the rockers.  I listen and I see Lucinda singing full throated, slightly distraught, but too goddamn stubborn to let it get her down.  “Jackson” could inspire a break-up road trip as the best medicine.  “Greenville” may be the prettiest country song of all time.  She opens picking on the acoustic, her vocals subdued, cool, like a rock under clear water.  Then the tambourine drops a small, spaced beat as another voice provides harmony.  The bass is perfect.  A shaker comes in.  Then my favorite drum sound ever, the simple clean snick of the stick against the metal rim of the snare, just as she shifts the lyrics into second gear.

The relevance to the mix thing is now that I want to put these three songs on the mix I also want to put every great song from every great album she’s made since.  “Lonely Girls” from her 2001 effort Essence.  “Are You Alright?” from 2007’s West, which kind of ups the melancholy that “Greenville” hints at.  And of course, “Real Love” from ’08’s Little Honey, a logical extension of “I Lost It,” the extension being that now, well, she’s found it.

Like the Ryan Adams that still gives me the warm feeling of tending the fire at a corn roast, Lucinda’s music is just so purely American I can’t help but to love it.  It’s where I started, and it’s what kept me grounded when I was so far away.  It’s a baseball game and a hot dog, an apple pie and The Wave.  And I hope, of course, that the recipient of this wonderfully under-construction mix will be moved by it just as I am.

-a.s



Sky Blue Sky

When Wilco released “Sky Blue Sky” it was welcomed by mixed reviews and my loving ears/arms. For me, who was mildly familiar with the band before becoming a true fan only a few years ago, it was their first album that I could enjoy from its release date forward. I think that’s why it got a special place in my heart. Don’t get me wrong, I understand why Yankee Hotel Foxtrot was groundbreaking, and the first disc of “Being There” always makes my heart go a flutter, but Sky Blue Sky is the album that makes its way through my headphones most frequently.

Someone along the way called it “Dad rock,”  A term that was brought to discussion with one of my English professors once, himself a devout Wilco fan. Initially we both acknowledged the phrase’s derogatory intent, but by the end of our analyzation were left to wonder, “What’s wrong with that?”

Personally, I could listen to “Either Way” or “Sky Blue Sky” on repeat all day. It’s alright that Tweedy and the band stepped aside from their edginess, they’re evolving as people in life, it only makes sense that their sound would evolve as well. This progression doesn’t mean that their songs are any less catchy. I frequently get the guitar solo of “Either Way” stuck in my head, and unlike a lot of songs, I’m alright with it remaining stuck there. It’s a song you can wake up to while the sun sneaks through the blinds in lazy blue and white hues. The whole album is great to write to [as I am currently] or daydream to, or sing to yourself while you make dinner, even while you drive on back country roads to the place that you call home. – Laura Celeste



Strangers

Okay, I’m deriving from my list for a special tribute. If you’ve seen “Darjeeling Ltd.” then you’ve heard “Strangers” by the Kinks. It’s hard to hear what Ray Davies is singing sometimes, with his raspy englishman growl into the microphone and all, but it’s a pretty good song even when you don’t know the words.

Most evenings you can find me diligently chopping up garlic and herbs with slightly dull knives over our warped wooden cutting board, prepping a feast. It’s the only time (outside of the shower) that I sing as loud as I can to whatever is playing through the speakers. A lot of nights it’s Chet Baker, or Ella and Louis, whatever my grandmother used to listen to in her jazz singer days. The other night I put on Norah Jones’ latest, and just let it play. After about an hour I heard a familiar piano line cue, causing me to move away from my sauteeing vegetables in the skillet.

“Where you going to? I don’t mind. I’ve killed my world and I’ve killed my time…”

The good thing about Ms. Jones is that she enunciates. So for the first time, after loving this song for so long, I could finally understand what she was singing about. Sitting on my living room carpet, leaving the broccoli and peppers to brown on top of the stove, the sentiment of the song crept towards me. This is a poignant song about life, and finding someone to go through it with, together it all becomes easier. I thought about the burns in the carpet that Michael and I have hid, from when I knocked over the hookah with a blanket. I stared at the stencil of “the Dude” above our fireplace. Drawn for Michael’s birthday, but cut out by him, since I lack the precision to cut in a straight line.

“So we will share this road we walk, And mind our mouths and beware our talk. ’Til peace we find tell you what I’ll do: all the things I own I will share with you. and if I feel tomorrow like I feel today..we’ll take what we want and give the rest away. Strangers on this road we are on, but we are not two, we are one.”

I put the song on repeat, and we listened to it as we ate our carbon-enriched meal.



The BQE

I’m a big list person, so forgive the potentially cheesy tendency to list my favorite albums this year. They will not be in any specific order, just ten equally great albums.

With that said, here it goes.

#10: Sufjan Stevens, “The BQE”

Everyone who knows me has to be aware that I am a total sucker for Sufjan, ever since Seven Swans. As a musical artist he seeks to master his craft wherever it may take him. It’s taken him to some pretty unique places: The Chinese Zodiac, The Bible, as well as the great states of Illinois and Michigan. Then his inspiration took him to a bridge, which many New Yorkers will instantly complain about. The BQE is narrow, windy, and often crowded.  ”The BQE” Sufjan’s latest musical effort weaved it’s way through me from the instant “Prelude on the Esplanade” commenced. The music tapers much like the confines of the rustic bridge it illustrates, following many a morning commuters’ speedometers, often jolting to sudden halts and then slowly creeping its way forward until the “Self-Organizing Emergent Patterns” commences! Sufjan succeeds in making every morning commute a triumphant adventure, but even more so, he reached a new level of his art. It makes me sad that so many indie fans simply because he abandoned his State-themed venture. This may not be an album that can be marketed to his normal crowd, but it is most certainly an opus that should not go unnoticed.



“Nobody Girl” (amongst others) by Ryan Adams
December 19, 2009, 12:51 pm
Filed under: Songs for Contemplation

This is a long story.

There was a time when I didn’t like Ryan Adams.  I’m not really sure why.  It was some kind of fit of self-righteousness, if even that, after my girlfriend at the time (2005) told me he was a real asshole during his live shows.  And so full of himself!  I liked “Come Pick Me Up” and “Damn, Sam” but I took my girlfriend’s word for it and quietly hid my found copy of Cold Roses behind the rest of my albums.

While I was in West Africa, I went through some musical stages that, actually, surprised me.  They were all artists that I listened to and loved, but the devotion with which I played these guys was almost unnerving.  There was my Bright Eyes stage, in the beginning (which made people in America say, “Wow, you must be depressed”).  My Radiohead/Rolling Stones stage, toward the middle (when things were rocking).  And during the last three months, following a first-time listen of “To Be Young” while drunk in a pool (in a pool!) during our Close Of Service conference, my Ryan Adams stage.  For some reason, he became my going home music.

I hadn’t brought my iPod to the conference, so when I finally got back to my village I plugged it into my shitty speakers (one didn’t work, and the cords were so sensitive I had to balance the non-working speaker on top of the cords, which sometimes had to be arranged in diverse, roller-coaster style loops to even drizzle the tinniest bit of music) and went through what I had, most of which I didn’t remember even adding.

Gold.  And then, with the Cardinals, Cold Roses and Jacksonville City Nights.  No “To Be Young,” which is on Heartbreaker.  So I started listening to Gold.  I set up my speakers on a bar stool I had placed in front of my bed, just outside the mosquito netting, and at night, finally, when the kids had stopped crying, the women had stopped arguing, the drunks had stopped pissing outside my window, I listened to music.

He became all I listened to.  It was just so wonderfully American; it was ‘organic’; it had dirt under its fingernails, beer on its breath.  That almost-country sound, the bravura of his singing (at all times; it’s not an arrogance, it’s a confidence in his words and music), and the wonderful sing-along-ness of songs like “Firecracker,” “Rescue Blues,” and, for me at least, “Nobody Girl.”

I can’t remember the first time I loved “Nobody Girl,” but I remember the first time I needed it.  At over nine.5 minutes, it’s not exactly a party song.  During week-long benders in the Atakpamé transit house, we’d listen to “To Be Young” five times a day, but I’d have to wait until two or three in the morning, after everybody else had passed out, to listen to “Nobody Girl.”  I’d sit in the dark, the guards’ dog asleep outside the door, the rusty blades of the fan creaking out their rhythm, listening to the song, my iPod hooked up through the television.  It’s the kind of song you have to love alone.

On the flight that took me off the continent, from Casablanca to New York, I was sitting next to a remarkably nervous Moroccan-American woman.  She wasn’t in the greatest emotional state.  She was going back to Boston after ten months in Morocco, where she’d gone to visit her mother and apply for a job at the U.S. Embassy.  She didn’t get the job.  She hated flying.  Back in Boston she had no job, no apartment, only a handful of friends.  She must have said six or seven times, “I will be going back to nothing!”  She’d chuckle nervously and add, “But I will find something, I suppose.”  Then she’d look out the window, counting the ripples on the surface of the Atlantic.

I retreated from the conversation a few times, when her jumpiness became too contagious.  I needed a song to calm down.  And “Nobody Girl” is the perfect song for that.  That opening acoustic strum, that organic hum in the background, the roll of drums thirty seconds in.  That first line: “Well, the night makes moves / and it shatters like broken glass / better play it cool… better let it pass.”  It’s a song I can sink into, like a bed after a long long day.  It was the song I needed, on that plane, next to her.  At the time I didn’t really think that this woman would influence my song choice, but looking back on it now it’s pretty obvious.  She with her empty Boston life, given up for a job she never got.  Where would she go now?  ”Say you follow your heart / well, honey, you’re just being lost / say you follow your gut / well how much would it cost?”  When we finally landed, we held verbal hands in the customs line, wishing each other luck with our respective futures.  She went through first, and as she left, she turned back to say goodbye, waving with her whole arm.  As I was called up by the customs agent, I realized we never told each other our names.  ”They don’t know you anyway / they don’t know you and they don’t watch you walk away.”