TAKE OASIS
Reading the Murmur entry in the 33 1/3 series.
I'd recommend it highly if you've ever had a relationship with Murmur.
I'd recommend it even highly-er if you've ever had a relationship with a vintage cassette copy of Murmur...
Sebastian was sprawled across our new king-size bed this morning, which he had clambered into at some point during the night.
The boy has been tired these last few days. The collective weight of a recent birthday, the holiday season, and a quick whirlwind trip to New York has caught up to him and bowed his little shoulders a bit.
I looked at him as I passed through the bedroom. I dodged creaky floorboards, stifled a cough, then paused to watch his eyelids flutter in the gathering daylight.
“Hi daddy.”
If anyone ever comes to measure my success, let them start right here...
THE OLD LEFT HANDER
Not sure if it was a sign of incipient madness or a bit of undigested cheese, but last night I had a very vivid dream that I was stuck in a large ditch with Joe Nuxhall. The North Korean army figured in there, too, though I don't recall how exactly.
The thing that stayed with me was Joe Nuxhall's determination that we would get out of the goddam ditch...
THIS IS SOMETHING MORE COMPLEX
I don't like to use too many of my music notes to purchase old stuff, but I plunked down $7 last night on Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart by Camper Van Beethoven.
This was one of my favorite albums of the 80's, and I'll go out on a limb and say that She Divines Water was one of the top something something songs of that decade.
Don't know how often I'll actually listen to it, but it feels somehow essential to me...
BE IT DEAD OR ALIVE
The distillation of everything that was right about The Who is in that performance of A Quick One, from 4:43 to 5:15 (yes, 5:15). I believe the lyrics are as follows:
Dang, dang, dang, dang, dang, dang, dang, dang, dang
Cello, cello, cello, cello, cello, cello
Cello, cello, cello, cello, cello, cello
Cello, cello, cello, cello, cello, cello
Cello, cello, cello, cello, cello, cello
And on top of that is the most clinking, clanking, clattering collection of caliginous junk you've ever heard.
It is the goddam choir celestial, and the essence of rock and roll in 32 seconds...
YOU ARE FORGIVEN
Ever since I heard Chris Michaels when I was half asleep a couple of weeks ago, I've been half obsessed.
So I took the next logical step last night and made a mix CD for my commute-- called it “Taco Lettuce Crunch Mix.” And of course, it led off with Chris Michaels.
The next song after was A Quick One by The Who (Rock and Roll Circus version). Because Chris Michaels is basically A Quick One writ sideways, in secret-twin language.
Like this:
“Plume bloom bloom blaby bloom
Cheep cheep beep bee-bee beep.”
Or, with a slightly more narrative bent, like this:
“But just now she’s angry came up
And said You’re so so stup’
It’s all disrup’
You’re blah blah this this that so now sh’up
You messed it up.”
And don't get me started on Tony of the Franklin Park hockey club...
Plain fucking genius.
NATIVE NEW YORKER
Many years ago, in one of our one-room apartments, I was listening to Lady Godiva's Operation. The part came up where Lou interjects a New York “sweetly” to finish John Cale's Welsh thought.
Taeko stuck her head around a corner and asked “Did you call me?”
And asked sweetly, I might add...
YOUR SCENT IS STILL HERE
In one of those only-on-cable moments, I found myself watching Nirvana play the 1992 Reading festival a few days back.
When I first heard Kurt had killed himself, I hurled my remote control. It helicoptored across the living room and smashed into the far wall, breaking the battery cover.
His suicide was inevitable and stupid and a waste. And I was as unsurprised as I was pissed.
So I clutched my remote tightly for the whole of the Reading show, and I never let it go...
RUN TO THE SEA
In one of those only-on-the-internets moments, I found myself reading about The Joshua Tree a few days back.
Fun fact: turns out that the sequence of the album was determined by Kirsty MacColl, then wife of Steve Lillywhite, and soon-to-be duet partner with Shane MacGowan on Fairytale of New York. (Bonus Pogues connection: her dad Ewan was a noted folk singer, and wrote Dirty Old Town, which the Pogues covered on their second album.)
The final running order is essentially her ranking of the songs, from favorite to least. I think she got it right, mostly-- I'd probably just flip Bullet the Blue Sky and One Tree Hill and be satisfied enough...
WHEN I PAINT MY MASTERPIECE
My favorite vision of the moment is the skeleton of midrise construction strung internally with white incandescent lights, at dusk.
This replaces my previous favorite: the first 45 seconds of condensation on a shower door illumined by a globe of vanity light, viewed from a sitting position.
If I had any talent in the visual arts, I would paint these things to be as beautiful as they are in my head...
WOLF LIKE ME
And yeah, Chronic Town came out in 1982 as well.
But I didn't get bit by the R.E.M. bug until Murmur a year later.
Murmur meant so much to me.
Most of my other teenage musical obsessions to that point felt borrowed, secondhand. The Clash, The Jam, The Beat were all going concerns when I became a fan, but they were in varying states of decay.
But then with Murmur (and things like Wild Gift and The Days of Wine and Roses) I felt like I had found something inchoate, something that was gaining its shape right before my very ears. Something that belonged to me...
WOLVES, LOWER
Another dispatch from the I-am-a-dumbass files, 1982 edition.
Back at the dawn of MTV, I caught the Hungry Like the Wolf video on the TV in Kenny's basement. Didn't have cable myself...
I was pretty excited. See, I had just recently discovered the New York Dolls, and I confused Duran Duran with the Dolls' guitarist Sylvain Sylvain. I think it took me a couple of weeks to figure out this all had nothing to do with the Dolls.
Anyhow, everybody knows that Duran Duran actually assassinated Bobby Kennedy. Or something.
On another lupine front, I was rightly excited to see my X and The Hungry Wolf on MTV that same year...
LIKE SPINNING PLATES
Sometimes I think that old Virginny is trying to speak to me through its license plates.
But all too often, I have no idea what the fuck it's trying to say.
Take today for example. Within the span of about 90 seconds, I saw the following two plates:
2OSAS
2URSUS
So what's the message, Virginia?
“sliced tongue, watch out for them bears”?
WTF VA.
A THOUSAND PAGES GIVE OR TAKE A FEW (HUNDRED)
Much ink has been shed and many pixels have been sacrificed in the service of chronicling every damn thing The Beatles ever did.
One of the more compelling books you're going to find is Revolution in the Head, Ian MacDonald's detailed analysis of each song the band recorded. It is sometimes bafflingly music-geeky (“cyclic arpeggios” and “plain E Dorian melodies” anyone?), decidedly pro-Macca/anti-Lennon, and reactionary to a fault (stating as fact the “catastrophic decline of pop” after 1966).
That being said, it is also passionate, insightful, and incredibly detailed. It is the type of book that perhaps only The Beatles deserve...
GOOD NIGHT SLEEP TIGHT
Random thoughts on the remasters I bought:
-Tell Me Why is every inch as good as Heatwave, which it apes, and White Riot, which it begat.
-Next time you care to make fun of Ringo, listen to Ticket to Ride. I don't know shit about drumming, but that right there is brilliant drumming.
-I wish she was leaving home in pursuit of something more profound than “fun.” But I suppose the lack of profundity is what seals our sympathy for the middle-class mum and dad, which is a pretty extraordinary slant for 1967.
-”I used to be cruel to my woman/I beat her and kept her apart from the things that she loved”? Not cool, The Beatles. Not cool.
-On the other hand... I was taking my mom out shopping last Sunday. She's recovering from a mild stroke and battling arthritic knees, so it takes her 4 or 5 arduous minutes to get in the car. As she worked to pull herself across the back seat, she heard Getting Better playing on the radio. “I like your music,” she said, her face brightening. And here I let Paul carry the moment, and left John out of it...
-The guitar solo in I Should Have Known Better is just the damn dinkiest thing. Sounds like someone breaks a string at the end of it.
-Yesterday endures because it is 2:06.
-Glass Onion's obnoxious solipsism is one thing, but how about Savoy Truffle: “We all know ob-la-di-bla-da...” Um, yeah, we all know it, George... from aaaalllll the way back on fucking side 1. Sheesh.
FUN IS THE ONE THING THAT MONEY CAN'T BUY
Next up on the remaster parade is Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
The album is at heart a confection.
Its weight, in the context of late 60's Romantic notions, is its weightlessness.
Right up until A Day in the Life, that is.
Don't get me wrong-- A Day in the Life earns all its due respect as a watershed moment in pop. But, really it just seems out of place here. Sgt Pepper proper would be a much tidier affair if it ended with the reprise.
And as a bonus, then we could all acknowledge She's Leaving Home as the best single song on the album without feeling guilty...
HEAD IN HAND
The next Beatles remaster I picked up was Help!
The drill here is essentially the same as with A Hard Day's Night: seven brilliant soundtrack songs, followed by, um, others (quick-- whistle You Like Me Too Much or Tell Me What You See). The line of demarcation is drawn in boldface when Ticket to Ride gives way to Act Naturally.
But in this case, “other” also includes I've Just Seen a Face and Yesterday. (Thanks, Paul.) Plus, the brilliant songs are “better” than the one's on A Hard Day's Night because they're more “mature.”
So, while A Hard Day's Night is the winner in the movie category, Help! has got it on songs...
I DON'T CARE TOO MUCH FOR MONEY
Depending on the angle of light on any given day, The Beatles can appear infinite.
But then you see the box set sitting there: 14 discs, 180 or so songs. And The Beatles seem as tiny as England.
The truth-- as always-- is somewhere in between.
I didn't gob up for the box-- too many middling early covers I'll never listen to, plus the Yellow Submarine soundtrack.
I started with A Hard Day's Night.
The first seven songs are from the movie, and are pretty much magic in a can: A Hard Day's Night, I Should Have Known Better, If I Fell, I'm Happy Just To Dance With You, And I Love Her, Tell Me Why, Can't Buy Me Love.
Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, and bang.
The back six is not quite as strong. There's a reason you probably couldn't sing I'll Be Back or When I Get Home if I dared you.
But if the whole thing doesn't tickle your spine, you might want to try breathing on a mirror...
VOULEZ-VOUS
I was looking at my usage stats the other day, and saw that someone from France had stumbled upon this page last week, my 2005 “interview” with Rudolf Schenker of Scorpions.
And I had this vision of a guy for whom perhaps English is not a first language (OK, I call him Jacques—my visions are pretty fleshed out), mistaking this for an actual interview.
In my vision, Jacques is the editor of the premier French Scorpions fanzine (it’s called “Scorpions: Les Maîtres de Rock” and it’s a 64-page, four-color, A4 affair), and he decides to appropriate my piece for an upcoming issue.
And that way, all the Scorpions fans in France and the French-speaking world can enjoy what is my favorite phrase ever in the history of this blog: “the bras bloom like tulips.”
Or as the French say, “la fleur de soutiens-gorge aiment des tulips”…
SKIP A LIFE COMPLETELY
Man, did Adventureland ever knock me for a loop.
Let me count the ways.
So, yeah-- a loop.
And I tell you, I have never liked being upside down...
CHIPS AHOY
The best material gift my family brought me from Japan was a jumbo bag of nacho cheese Doritos from Costco.
Japanese nacho cheese Doritos are the platonic ideal of Doritos.
They are smaller than American Doritos, and a single chip can be eaten reasonably in a single bite.
They are slightly thicker, and therefore have a more substantial crunch.
The flavoring is mild, as opposed to the overwhelming orange powder of their American counterparts. This allows for an appropriate balance between the cheese flavor and the corn flavor.
I ran through the whole bag in about a week and a half, and I don't typically snack too much.
Japanese nacho cheese Doritos put the lay in Frito-Lay...
GOING OFF THE RAILS
You ever have one of those days where you wanted to grab someone by the lapels and just yell in their face “Be less crazy!”?
But (A) they don't have lapels, and/or (B) it wouldn't work?
Well, yeah, that was my Monday.
But it was balanced out by Sebastian telling me after dinner that he wanted to be a dad someday so that he could have “minions.”
Nothing crazy about that...
SAVE THE WHALES
I can see myself having the same sort of relationship with Bitte Orca that I had with Ships.
That is, initial arms-length admiration mixed with annoyance, followed a year or so later by devoted obsession.
Bitte Orca even has its own second-song line that's currently annoying the fuck out of me (a la “When life's got your goat now/By his tail and by his goat throat...” from Ships): “And what hits the spot, yeah, like Gatorade?”
Stop product placement in indie rock now, bitches.
If you tolerate this, your Toys R Us kids will be next...
HUSH HUSH
We have all at one point or another made an album purchase that in the light of time and reflection fills us with shamebarassment.
But, brother/sister, you'd be hard pressed to top the moment back in 1983 when I plunked down $5.99 + tax for a cassette copy of White Feathers by Kajagoogoo...
FLO RIDA
My cell phone has a world clock feature. There’s a little animated globe, with throbbing yellow dots indicating key cities.
Asia, for example, includes dots for Tokyo, Seoul, Taipei, Manila, Beijing, Hong Kong, Jakarta, Hanoi, Singapore, Bangkok, Dhaka, Colombo, and New Delhi.
There are 9 cities listed in the Middle East, 12 in Europe.
And 1 in Africa: Cairo. That’s it. According to Verizon, Cairo is the only African city that rates.
You a racist, cell phone.
I’m Orlando bound on business. See you late next week.
As always, fight the power...