Tuesday, December 24, 2013

2013 in Music: An Outsider's Opinion

Is that title ok? Is it pretentious? I'd like to think not. I'm not saying I was above it all, I was just outside of it all. Doing this thing I've been doing on this blog I was much less invested in the music of this year than I have in years past. It will be funny when I finally reach 2013 in that other project, because the memory will be that I was focusing on older music at the time.

Not that I can consider myself a huge outsider. While I was less invested than usual, I still got a lot of music and tried to listen to it when it made sense to. In between years and whatnot. There was a lot of music I was looking forward to this year, and I couldn't just leave it alone. I just only have a few listens through of each of the albums I took seriously. And have less than the last few.

But yeah, anticipation. That has to be the theme of this year. Highly anticipated releases in some ways or others. Strange that many favorites were surprises.

I'm going to take a cue from last year and not try to rank anything. I'm just going to write about whatever I feel like sharing an opinion about. And the top top releases, I'll put stars in front of them showing my enthusiasm. But there were some overrated things I also want to write about. And other things I'm sure. Enjoy!

In Alphabetical Order Because I Am Serious About Not Ranking Things:

  • ***Arcade Fire starts with an A! Early hype was "Arcade Fire is recording with James Murphy!!" Then there was the whole shrouded in mystery thing. And then a TV blitz. And it was just too much. Funny thing about this record. I love it in spite of all of that. I need to hear it more but I quite enjoy it. And I've complained in the past about them showing too much ambition, trying to make big statements and such (particularly on Neon Bible) when they were so young, and I so appreciated The Suburbs because they were taking a step back in that department. But here, they shot for the stars. And the results are fantastic. It takes a couple listens (honestly I didn't really like any of the songs the first time I heard any of them on their various TV appearances), but now songs like "Joan of Arc" and "Here Comes The Night Time" have pulled me in, and I discover more joy in this each time I put it on.
  • ***Crooks On Tape just snuck up on me with their debut album Fingerprint. I've been a John Schmersal fan for a while now. After I discovered Brainiac in my early college years I was obsessed with his very own blend of delightful weirdness and undeniable catchiness. Enon became one of my "top 3" bands for the longest time past that, and they kind of mysteriously stopped doing things, and I tried to watch for any new Schmersal projects but didn't hear about anything. Until a week before this album dropped. It is almost everything I love about Enon! A wide variety, a respectable amount of experimentation and weirdness, and the catchiness. Oh, the catchiness. I have a new band to try to get my friends to love as much as I do!
  • **David Bowie managed to make a giant comeback without much hype about it. I need to give it even more time than I did, but I do quite like all of the material from the original album, bonus tracks, and bonus EP. That James Murphy remix for "Love is Lost" on the bonus EP is epic and I don't take that word lightly. But it's everything you would want from a combination of Bowie and Murphy.
  • *Deltron 3030 put out Event 2. Now there's a release with a buildup. The first album came out in 2000 and I first started hearing about the sequel being worked on in 2006. That means the time it was hyped for for me personally (I know the artists didn't spend all this time building it up, I just got very excited when I heard about it and kept trying to find more information) was longer than the time between the original release and the start of the hype. As the release date approached and I didn't hear much from Koala or Automator and I got less and less interested in Del's solo material, I started dreading this. I worried it would suck, my expectations dropped considerably, but I still knew I had to get it. And I was just relieved that it was good! I guess the critics didn't care enough about it when it came time to make year end lists, but damnit if Automator didn't create some more catchy beats here! And the David Cross/Amber Tamblyn skits are mildly entertaining even after quite a few listens. And all the guests bring it and Del brings it and nothing will ever meet that original Deltron album but this is a very worthy successor.
  • *Elvis Costello working with The Roots? Do You Want More??! Get Happy! This one was an odd one, this Wise Up Ghost. Again, highly anticipated for me, as Elvis Costello is my #1 all time #1. And The Roots are The Roots! And for as restless as the chameleon Mr Costello is musically, it felt like he was treading water on the last couple albums. So ?uestlove was just the one to shake things up. Things never live up to expectations but still, this is a good shake up of some old Costello lyrics and new context and yet another dynamite ballad from the master, "Tripwire."
  • ***Janelle Monae is The Electric Lady. She got considerably more popular this year, didn't she? That "alternative reality pop music" I spoke of a couple years ago may be coming to fruition. I don't know if this album quite measures up to The Archandroid in consistency, but its bangers are as hot as the bangers of its predecessor. It's just so damned front loaded. Hook 'em with the hook, hold 'em with the heartbreak and love ballads. She makes it work but I just preferred the ballads of old a little more. Might be the lack of commitment on my part though.
  • Ok, everybody putting Yeezus on the top of their list makes me feel like this year was subpar or something. I was so excited for this after seeing him on Saturday Night Live, because it was (one of?) the biggest stars in pop music doing something abrasive and angry and anti-commercial and using his talent for good. But then I got the album and it just fell short for me. And the more I listened to it the more I wanted to just listen to Saul Willams' Trent Reznor produced album from a few years ago. Something with an actual message and not just bitching. Something with anger instead of hate. Something with the passion I thought I heard when I first heard those first couple songs.
  • ****My Bloody Valentine killed it with their first album in forever (making it highly anticipated) and its surprise release (undercutting any building anticipation that would have formed). This cuts to my soul, man! Like Radiohead. And it beats "chillwave" at its own game by bringing a rock-oriented version of that atmosphere (that mbv had been integral in creating in the first place all those years ago). I don't know how to write about this but this might be #1 if I were keeping track.
  • ***Not only do The National grow on me when I listen to an album over and over, but they grow on me with every album they release. The odd time signatures on this one, the chorus about being the television version of someone with a broken heart, I keep liking every album of theirs a bit more than its predecessor. Not sure if that's just me...
  • ***And Okkervil River continues to be underrated forever as they just up and put out another masterpiece this year and nobody seems to remember it come year-end time. I mean, it's fine, I appreciate that I can see them at places like The Marquis instead of having to pay for The Fillmore.
  • Another highly anticipated one was Talib Kweli's Prisoner of Conscious. When I first heard about it it seemed like it was going to be a very personal album for him, a grand statement that would push him to a new level. There were even a couple albums that came out before that, so I figured he was saving something for PoC. But then it just came out without fanfare and something about it just isn't what I hoped for.
  • **Weird, this Yo La Tengo album doesn't have any songs over 10 minutes! Not even over 7 minutes! What we get is the usual YLT catchiness and diversity and they even sneak some of that feel-goodness that only they ever really accomplish for me, usually over the course of an epic long track. In this case it's over some short pop songs, but it still works.

I have less to say about these but still something:

  • !!! THR!!!ER They have some good beats here, and this album served as the soundtrack to many runs this year very effectively. Highly energetic, singing about sweating, other catchiness. Pitchfork complained about the lack of huge builds and drops a la "Intensified" from their first album, and sure, those would have pushed this over the top, but this album shows a maturity and songwriting craft that was very conspicuously absent from their older material.
  • Aceyalone's Leanin' On Slick was kind of a sequel to The Lonely Ones, one of my favorite random hip hop experiments. But this one felt like it should have come before The Lonely Ones, because it was less of a stretch from his "normal" material.
  • Bilal. I wanted to love A Love Surreal but instead I merely like it. There's plenty to like on this record and he continues to be quite underrated.
  • I like the idea of the Daft Punk album and it took me longer than it should have to get over "Get Lucky."
  • Danny Brown...yeah I got it because it was cheap and I think I like it but I didn't have time to listen to it enough to form a strong opinion of it. Maybe it will be spoken of highly when the ol' EfaE catches up to 2013...
  • Death Grips put out another free album in case people forgot about a true bombastic/abrasive/angry hip hop artist in the wake of Yeezus...
  • The Ex & Brass Unbound. Enormous Door. What else can The Ex do these days? Bring in a brass band! It's a killer combination.
  • How about that Justin Timberlake? Fun guy.
  • Man or Astro-Man made a triumphant return as well this year! Defcon 5...4...3...2...1 is that same old band that's been consistently awesome with every release.
  • Hey everyone! Neko Case is still amazing! Bonus points for the cover of the "other" Nico!
  • of Montreal in a song format must leave less of an impression on me than their wild and crazy concepts, but I still like that they did what they did with this one.
  • I dug that Phosphorescent one, it reminded me of what I like about Fleet Foxes.
  • The Pixies have to have their name on something from this century, and something without Kim. I kind of dig that "Indie Cindy" song but for the most part this new EP sounds just like a Frank Black solo album. But what else are they supposed to sound like at this point? 
  • Run The Jewels. El-P and Killer Mike just having a good time. Yes please.
  • I feel like She & Him have reached a new level of confidence and swagger with Volume 3. I like it.
I admit I missed the boat on...
  • Savages. That was on my list all year and I never did get it. I know, it was the best.
  • Vampire Weekend. I'm ok with Pitchfork calling it album of the year if only because I'm sick of seeing Kanye top every list. I used to have something against them but I think I'd actually like their new material now.
  • Where CHVRCHES as great as people have been saying?
  • Disclosure?
  • Who are all these young whippersnappers?
I'll be back in a bit with something older than me.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

An Ear For An Era: 1981

Put in some grand statement here later. 1981 is the year my brother comes from. And more punk and other stuff that was decidedly not punk. Is that good enough? I think so...

In high school I was obsessed with Minor Threat. I even did the straight edge thing when it didn't matter (i.e. when I wasn't 21 yet). I judged people that drank underage. So when I was getting into punk rock and discovered Minor Threat they became my favorite hardcore band. They had two EPs in 1981, both very solid. There was a self titled one and In My Eyes. This coming up early on in the rotation was very energizing and brought me right back there. In My Eyes has two of their classic songs "In My Eyes" and "Out of Step (With the World)" but the self titled debut is front-to-back hardcore brilliance. I admit that it's weird for me to separate these out because I know it as the "Complete Discography" album and I always listened to the full thing, but the tracks that ran through as I listened to just the first release they ever had were full throttle, 8 songs in 9 minutes, and it all begins here:

Minor Threat "Filler"

So that was the DC scene. Let's go to the west coast. I finally got to catch up with Black Flag, who I know went back to punk's beginnings, but the earliest material I had available was Damaged. I hate that I keep saying classic but that's what this is (Kill yr idols!). More music to throw yourself around the room to. This video is one I saw back in those high school days on a show called Punk TV that aired late at night. It's so dated but it's so enjoyable...

Black Flag "TV Party"

The Cramps' second album already kind of had them slowing down. Psychedelic Jungle just kind of went by. There was stuff on the album I quite enjoyed but it was more in a slow, brooding way as opposed to the unhinged nature of their early stuff. Kind of like when The Stooges went slow. But someone else took over in most evil sounding group in punk. Or post punk or whatever. I'm talking about Nick Cave's early group The Birthday Party. Prayers on Fire shows the darkest side of Cave, before he developed his cool. Here is a song where he sounds like Zorak, the music sounds vaguely jazzy, but entirely straight from Hell. Maybe this was my favorite album of 1981?

The Birthday Party "Nick The Stripper"

Because I have no better place to put this, AC/DC! Is this my first actual metal I've covered here? Yes besides a couple mentions of Judas Priest and Ozzy. For Those About To Rock We Salute You is the only AC/DC album I own, so I'll just talk about what I like about them. The drums. The beat. It sounds classic. Like it's from another era in another dimension. It doesn't seem like typical metal drumming to me. The guitars are metal, the drums are some sort of alternate classic rock. The vocals bring them together.

And now new wave because why not. Depeche Mode's Speak & Spell is so much poppier than the Depeche Mode I typically associate with the name (and I like to call them The 'Peche). Did you know Violator came out way in 1989? We won't get to that for a bit. But this is when they were one of those new wave bands cashing in more on dance beats than darkness. I can't resist the catchiness of the popular "Just Can't Get Enough" and this one:

Depeche Mode "Boys Say Go!"

The poppy new wave group of choice for me for 1981 is definitely Soft Cell. In the early aughts when I was all into electroclash and dancing and such, Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret was my go-to record for dance mixes and getting excited to go out and requests. Sure, the "Tainted Love" cover is popular enough to call them a one hit wonder, but there's so much great sleaze to this album, it's enticing and sexy and danceable in all the best ways. I've long wanted to create a mashup of Franz Ferdinand's "The Dark of the Matinee" and this song for a sexy jaunt in the cinema:

Soft Cell "Seedy Films"

How about hip hop? If the day comes that I have a child, and that child one day goes to school, I might have to play the Connecticut hip hop novelty gem for them "Get Up And Go To School" by Pookey Blow from that Third Unheard compilation I mentioned last time. Unfortunately that song is not on youtube. But Afrika Bambaataa & The Jazzy 5 kept reminding me of Jurassic 5 (I'm guessing Jurassic 5 was aimed partially at reminding people of The Jazzy 5) with this song. Fine, we'll do an actual great song!

Afrika Bambaataa & The Jazzy 5 "Jazzy Sensation"

I don't have a lot of ska from 1981, but I have one of my favorite 2-Tone era songs, which was released only as a single. It's been in some movies (Shaun of the Dead used it quite well) and can put me in certain movie moods, but it's still such a great stand-alone song that I have to share.

The Specials "Ghost Town"

And now we have to talk about Elvis Costello. He put out two albums in 1981. First was Trust, a favorite of many but one of my less favored in his overall library. Something about the cover with the sunglasses, the beats used, it seems like he's just trying to be cool in 1981. It feels more dated than the rest of his material. It still has some great songs and I feel like I need to give it more spins to fully appreciate it. I always love the ballads. Particularly "Different Finger." But there was another album: "WARNING: this album contains country & western music and may cause offence to narrow minded listeners." Almost Blue was his country covers album. And kind of like My Aim Is True, I kind of preferred the bonus disc. This bonus disc had 27 tracks. Apparently he recorded a lot of country covers (ok some of these are live performances, some are countrified versions of songs he would later release in a different style, and some tracks appear multiple times in different versions). One of my favorite Costello songs is "Stranger In The House," an original country tune that has appeared on several bonus discs of his tracks from earlier in his career and never on a proper LP. But what I tend to like about cover albums and/or genre-concept albums like this is what it opens up in future released by the artist. This is the predecessor for my favorite Elvis Costello album King of America (coming in 1986!), and it also paves the way quite heavily to his next album of original material Imperial Bedroom (which is another favorite). I think I just like him doing ballads, and covering all these sad country songs sparked the same piece of the songwriter that had originally written "Stranger In The House" in the mid 70s. So...good ballads coming up thanks to Almost Blue (which is also the name of one of my favorite ballads by him, coming up on Imperial Bedroom).

Elvis Costello "A Good Year For The Roses"

Some other great country was coming out. I'm not sure what the deal was with country around this time. But the outlaws were chuggin' away makin' great tunes. George Jones had "If Drinkin' Don't Kill Me (Her Memory Will)" and Emmylou had this heartbreaking (big surprise!) "Colors of Your Heart," which does not seem to be on youtube.

Also to Say...

  • Bob & Doug McKenzie's album The Great White North was from this year. I just have a couple tracks from it. But those dudes're funny.
  • The first stuff I have from Daniel Johnston from the Welcome to My World compilation popped up. "Living Life" is a great track but I know even better is on its way.
  • Yep, cheesy pop was a very big thing. This year brings us "Endless Love" by Diana Ross & Lionel Richie, such Hall & Oates gems as "You Make My Dreams Come True" and "I Can't Go For That (No Can Do)," Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'," Phil Collins' great "In The Air Tonight," 
  • Just the year after Lennon passed, George Harrison released "All Those Years Ago." Ah, memories...soon I will reach a time in this of where I had memories.
  • One of my favorite 80s pop/new wave/whatever songs is "Don't You Want Me" by The Human League. Good show.
  • Joan Jett & The Blackhearts' I Love Rock & Roll means we are close to Weird Al's infiltration of this blog. I for one welcome it. Also this album is quite enjoyable.
  • The great Freddie Mercury-David Bowie duet "Under Pressure" by Queen was released as a single. I might talk about it more when I get to the album next year, but for now...remember how great this song is???
  • The Ramones kept doing what they'd been doing. I don't have the album Pleasant Dreams but I have the track "The KKK Took My Baby Away," a classic despite coming out all the way in the 80s.
  • "Super Freak."
  • "Start Me Up."
  • Rush! Classic year for Rush. "Tom Sawyer" and "Limelight." If I felt like looking up what album this was from I'm sure it's one I'd enjoy quite a bit.
Next Time...
More great Afrikaa Bambaataa! More great punk (Bad Brains are introduced! So are The Descendents The Best Pop Punk Band Of All Time! And Flipper and The Misfits and The Vandals and More great Clash for maybe the last time with Combat Rock! )! Some more ska (Bad Manners! Madness has their biggest hit!), 80s goodness from Billy Idol, Bruce Springsteen (Nebraska, his best album??), another early favorite Elvis Costello Album, MAIDEN, Art from Laurie Anderson and a certain young band calling itself Sonic Youth, a belated farewell to Lou Reed (thanks to his classic The Blue Mask), and holy crap indie rock is a thing because The Violent Femmes are now a thing with an album.

And pop classics 1999 and...Thriller. 

The last year before I existed.


But before all that I'm going to take a break here for December. I'm going to attempt to make sense of 2013 and come up with a list of what was good and stuff so December 2013 is dedicated to 2013. I'll make a post about that but AEFAE will see you in 2014 for 1982 if that makes sense. 1982 looks enticing though.

Monday, November 18, 2013

An Ear For An Era: 1980

Hey it's the decade that made me! And lots of people. And lots of odd choices.

1980 specifically though, had some hardcore punk rock, some innovative uses of different genres by punk rock outsiders (including much ska from the UK), more super fun party rap, and some cheesy stuff by lots of people.

So let's go in that order.

The Cramps' first actual album Songs The Lord Taught Us is such a great introduction to not giving a damn. Sloppy, ugly, and yet fun and original and pure energy. Zombie Dance, I'm Cramped, Sunglasses After Dark, I Was A Teenage Werewolf, it's all just like lightning. Lightning that zapped a corpse, reanimating it. And continued to zap it, making it dance. Zapping at its feet. You know?

Dead Kennedys on the other hand did give a damn. They gave a lot of a damn. Their actual debut album Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables is one of the most fiercely political, satirical, pissed off albums I own. In high school a guy that was oh so punk rock had a Dead Kennedys jacket he wore all the time and that was around the time I got into punk rock. This was an intimidating introduction to the real stuff. Singing about killing children? Ok that one is obviously satirical, playing on parents' fears of these punk rock fiends, but lynching the landlord and chemical warfare? There is some real anger in here and a lot of information about where said anger comes from.

Dead Kennedys "When Ya Get Drafted"

Other great punk bands had songs that I only have one song from. One of my favorites is Stiff Little Fingers' "Tin Solders," a song later covered by the Mighty Mighty Bosstones. This era is going to prove to be hugely influential on mid 90s punk, of course. I also got excited to get my first song by The Ex, a super amazing Dutch punk band that has been evolving since then and still blows my mind with every passing release. They were pretty standard punk rock back in 1980, but were already showing their restlessness with the limitations that they would soon destroy.

The Ex "The Sky Is Blue Again"

Now time to kind of detour into post punk. Joy Division was really starting to get interesting and then Ian Curtis died. This is going to be a theme here. Great bands that showed endless promise get cut short by a tragedy. The only album of theirs I have (other than the singles collection) is Closer. The world may associate the band with the oft-covered "Love Will Tear Us Apart" (not of this album but of this year) but something about the driving beat of this song really gets me going, the emptiness created by the echo, it's everything the good side of the 80s comes from. Rest in peace Mr. Curtis.

Joy Division "Twenty Four Hours"

Am I going to post a video for everything? Not sure yet. Either that or I just mention my favorite or most noteworthy track off each album I talk about here.

How about The Clash?? Sandinista! is quite the undertaking. It just keeps going! And it goes dub on several occasions! Part of me agrees with some of the critics of that time saying it would have made for a great single-disc album. But no, they had to go triple! Of course my favorite tracks are the more classically Clash sounding ones (the ska punk of London Calling, the few straightforward punk rock tracks). I applaud their ambition, and the ambition of anyone who sits down and listens to this whole thing front to back. Check out "Washington Bullets" for a great political song in the vein of London Calling or "Police on My Back" for the most early Clash sounding song. Oh whatever, I'm going to post that one. It was quite invigorating when it came up because I'd gotten exhausted (it's right at the halfway point in the experience) and it's a shot of energy and catchiness and not dub.

The Clash "Police On My Back"

Not quite as ambitious but still ambitious was Elvis Costello & The Attractions' Get Happy!! 20 tracks that were all jammed to fit on one single record! Lots of songs under 2 minutes but he didn't go in the direction of punk rock (that would have been quite interesting). It was more influenced by the 60s and soul and the simplicity of Buddy Holly and yet lots of diversity. "Motel Matches" is the most ballady song and probably my favorite. "New Amsterdam" introduces one of my favorite styles of Elvis Costello song (a certain type of folky one he would revisit on King of America). "Human Touch" is ska.

Speaking of Elvis Costello and ska, did you know he produced the The Specials' self-titled debut? Did you know I had it labeled as 1980 but it seemed to have come out in 1980? Damnit!  This is the big one  when it comes to the two tone era. It epitomizes the unity and the black and white checkers and has tons of classic tracks. But I missed my chance to talk about it (that's how this works, right?). I only have one song from the 1980 follow-up More Specials, but I like it a lot. It's a cover of an old song but I always want to play it at parties.

The Specials "Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)"

What other ska was there, you ask? Well, one of my favorite ska records is The English Beat's I Just Can't Stop It. It's very 80s. It's a mix of different styles of ska and covers lots of other influences like rock & roll and soul. It's almost as much a new wave record as it is a ska record. Covers of songs like "Tears of a Clown" and "Can't Get Used to Losing You" bring in the soul in a way that makes it so intimate and then "Ranking Full Stop" is a full on party song.

I saw The English Beat live in concert once as an 80s throwback lineup with A Flock of Seagulls and Devo. This is about Devo, not A Flock of Seagulls. I think I overlook Freedom of Choice because of the overplayed curse that is "Whip It." Aside from that song it's a really great album, one of their best even. And anything for a chance to post another Devo music video!

Devo "Freedom of Choice"

Now let's change to hip hop a bit. Just for a quick paragraph. After this blog series' introduction to the genre last time with "Rapper's Delight" we already have a bit of an explosion. I've long had Kurtis Blow's "The Breaks" as a representative old hip hop song in my collection. It used to bore me because of how long and repetitive it was. But in context with this other stuff it's more enjoyable. Afrika Bambaataa Nation funk it up very awesomely on "Zulu Nation Throwdown," and I'll probably have more on Afrika Bambaataa soon. But surprisingly (?) my favorite 1980 hip hop came from a collection called The Third Unheard: Connecticut Hip Hop 1979-1983. They were apparently partying pretty hard in Connecticut and making their own hip hop innovations. Rappermatical 5 had a great jam called "Party People," The Outlaw Four had a pretty silly song called "Million Dollar Legs," and someone named Mr. Magic had this super awesome party time song. Listening to it I can kind of picture the role of the MC...he's not the star here, he's letting the DJ do his thing for this mostly instrumental track, and peppering it with some rhymes.

Mr. Magic "Potential 1980"

Now to the kinda cheesy part of things. Not that hip hop wasn't cheesy. But for a while there I was listening to all this stuff wondering if 1980 was the cheesiest year for music. One Queen album wasn't particularly cheesy but I don't know where else to put it. The Game is one of their better albums with classics like "Another One Bites The Dust," "Crazy Little Thing Called Love," and the title track. But they also had another album from 1980: The Flash Gordon soundtrack! It includes lots of little snippets of dialog from the movie and it seems to be such a splendidly campy affair. And the electric guitar playing the wedding march is just so inspired and cheesy I hope someone I know someday walks down the aisle to that song. At least a grocery aisle. I hope they play that song at the grocery store.

But for real, 1980 was full of cheesy cheese by people like Diana Ross ("I'm Coming Out"), Leon Huff (Here to Create Music is a super 80s sounding soul album...it's pretty good but pretty cheesy too), Hall & Oates (enough said), Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway (I really miss late 60s Roberta Flack), and surprisingly enough John Lennon. Now, don't misunderstand me. I'm just comparing 1980 John Lennon to early 70s John Lennon. Or even the Beatle. My opinion may be skewed because this is the last I have before he died, but this cheesiness comes more from him being happy with his life, at peace, or that's what I like to imagine. He was killed way before his time was up, but the songs I have of his from 1980 all kind of show him at peace. A love song for his kid, for crying out loud. But he really spells it out in this song and I think it's the perfect last word from him (except some posthumous stuff came out in 1984 and then those "new" Beatles songs in the 90s).

"I just had to let it go..."

John Lennon "Watching The Wheels"

Etc stuff:
  • Bowie was still being awesome. Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) is a good harder rockin' side of the chameleon.
  • Emmylou Harris' Roses in the Snow shows that she was still in her prime, and includes a nice cover of Simon & Garfunkel and a song with Johnny Cash.
  • Judas Priest made their way into the rotation with "Breaking The Law." I don't have to tell you how awesome it was when that came up.
  • I may have been sorely missing Black Sabbath as I went through the 70s but this is the 80s so now we've got solo Ozzy and the jam "Crazy Train." That's almost as good, right?
  • What I like about The Romantics' "What I Like About You" is how well it captures the 60s in the 80s. I used to think it was an old Kinks song!
  • Even Rush was getting into the ska thing as there was a brief ska section in "The Spirit of Radio." Talk about undercover s.k.a.!
  • Only one Tom Waits song off Heartattack And Vine. But "Jersey Girl" is a very lovely song.
  • Apparently a highly influential year on Skankin' Pickle as well. Their final album (not out until the 90s, don't worry) was half cover songs and many of them were from this year: Bad Manners' "Special Brew," Devo's "Gates of Steel," Oingo Boingo's "Violent Love." Those would all have been good choices of songs to play.
  • I forgot to put Talking Heads in here! Remain In Light is the album with their signature song (as far as I'm concerned) "Once in a Lifetime." 
On The Next Installment Time Following This...
Reagan means rock & roll got better...thanks Reagan! For what it's worth! Angry music rules 1981 (AC/DC, The Birthday Party, Black Flag, The Cramps, Minor Threat, ), and more hip hop (Afrika Bambaataa continues, "Cuzz Band" and others from that Connecticut compilation keep it going in CT), New Wave is obviously just getting warmed up (Depeche Mode, Soft Cell, The Human League), Elvis Costello goes country, and cool indie outsider Daniel Johnston gets started.

But before I get to that it'll be a while. I just procured the complete (Freddy Mercury era) Queen discography and I have some backlog to listen through (i.e. pretty much everything they recorded in the 70s). So you might not hear from me in a while. Cheers! And thanks Andrew!

Saturday, November 2, 2013

An Ear For An Era: 1979

That is going to do it for the 70s. That wasn't so bad, now was it?

Punk went postal, funk got poppier, pop got funkier, and I'm pretty sure a dance party with all 1979 music would be amazing.

Oh yeah, and something else has emerged. Something...else.

But we'll get to that in a minute. Let's talk about punk rock. I didn't realize how quickly things escalated here. I was aware that post punk was pretty much on the heels of the pop punk established by Ramones, but I didn't realize that hardcore punk was also champing at the bit at the same time. But here it was, the Dead Kennedys' early recordings. West Coast punk rock is here to burn everything up. To make The Ramones and Buzzcocks sound quaint. "California Uber Alles" was a single in 1979 and I also have some early live performances from the Give Me Convenience or Give Me Death compilation.  Here, a template is established that defines much of my high school music attention span and countless punk rock bands of the next 30 or so years.

The Dead Kennedys "Short Songs" (live)

The Cramps were also getting dirty and doing the horror-surf-punk thing so much better than The Misfits in my opinion. They epitomized this era of punk to me, just not caring about sounding polished, just banging their instruments together to create such energy...their cover of kindred spirits The Trashmen really stood out for me from their 1979 debut EP Gravest Hits.

The Cramps "Surfin' Bird"

So that was one side of punk rock that is really going to expand greatly as we get into the 80s. The other side was pushed forward by The Clash. Expansion, incorporation of ska, and oh yeah, the Most Important Album Of All Time. Right? London Calling was their masterpiece and I don't even know what to say here. I'm gonna blow it. It's all 3-5 star songs (I think the highest average rating for any album in my collection despite sprawling over 19 tracks). The ska part of this managed to make it more revolutionary than anything else, incorporating the Jamaican history of music and revolution into the revolutionary nature of punk in the late 70s, it just changed everything. This is what would be imitated for decades, get popular in the 90s in time for me to discover the ska punk genre at the peak time in my life (high school, feeling like an outcast) to show me what it means to rebel, to have something that drives that state of mind. When I finally discovered this album in particular it was a revelation. Everything else became irrelevant. Music follows an evolutionary path but this is such a high point that nothing has managed to effectively evolve from it (but I am looking forward to dissecting its kin on this very blog regardless). The energy, the words, the world it opened up, I know I've used this word a lot in this paragraph but it's what it is in the truest sense of the word (musically at least): Revolution.

The Clash "Revolution Rock"

Another band that did something very similar to The Clash but in its own unique was was Gang of Four. Their debut album Entertainment! establishes some other rhythmic identities that would be similarly imitated decades later. The main difference is the sparse arrangements. The funky rhythms though! There's actual skill and musicianship on the part of the drummer and bassist that was not particularly valued in punk rock at the time and it's pretty refreshing to have the energy, highly politicized lyrics and revolutionary spirit presented in such a groove.

Post-punk-but-soon-to-be-new-wave band The Cure made their debut with Boys Don't Cry in 1979 as well. It fits well with Gang of Four in that it's highly rhythmic (but much poppier) and has spare arrangements, particularly when contrasted with what the band would become in the 80s. Of course the title track was/is a giant hit among new wave fans, but the rest is pure post punk deconstruction.

David Bowie was back in 1979 to finish his "Berlin Trilogy" with Brian Eno with The Lodger. This album was very dark and very appropriate to listen to around Halloween time. I keep waiting for when Bowie becomes "difficult" but I'm not sure it's going to happen. Here he's dark but it's still easy to listen to.

David Bowie "Repetition"

Another artist with a fruitful relationship with Brian Eno was of course Talking Heads. Fear Of Music was their 1979 release. I have this one on vinyl and it's got a super cool texture on the sleeve. I missed out on More Songs About Buildings And Food (for which I apologize, I'm not sure how I neglected to pick it up every time I've been to record stores) so this is a giant leap from their debut. It's no longer just white people funk, it's got lots of different textures and rhythms and experiments. It retains the high level of energy and rhythm and benefits a lot from Eno's influence.

One more quick new wave hit! This is one that dominated my personal charts in the early aughts, mostly because they played it at all the cool dance clubs as a throwback smash. And I have memories of crazy nights centered on this particular jam.

B-52s "Rock Lobster"

I'm pretty sure that's the extent of the B-52s that will EVER appear on this blog. So I hope you enjoyed it.

Hey you know how I talked about The Clash and ska and such? I finally have some official Two Tone era ska! Just a couple songs from Madness. "My Girl" is a favorite mostly because Mike Park has a cover of it that I quite enjoy. I sang it in karaoke once on my birthday. And then this one, it's honest-to-goodness ska!

Madness "(They Call It) Madness"

Lots more ska coming your way soon!

Now let's talk about Elvis Costello & The Attractions, shall we? I'm pretty sure I'll have something to say about him in most years as we get through the 80s, into the 90s, etc. Armed Forces was his best album at the time of release. I know lots of fans consider it his best overall, but I have some others I prefer later down the line. But it establishes The Attractions as more than just a rockin' band to back up Elvis' great lyrics and singing. They are a force here, incorporating more intimately with Mr. Costello as a functional unit. And his writing hits a high point, showing a fearlessness, his vocals have that sneer that I always associate with him. Listen to this song, the "she'll be the one" part toward the end is one of my favorite sections of any Elvis Costello song, an early climax on the album, putting it on a high that carries through the album before exploding onto the closing track "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace Love & Understanding." You know that song is amazing but here's the song I tried to tell you to listen to in the last sentence but got off track. Here:

Elvis Costello & The Attractions "Big Boys"

Okay now's a good time as any to transition over to pop music. Now I'm not sure how it happened but I started warming up more and more to disco as this went on. I think a lot of it is due to the fact that I minimized how much is in my collection so I can't get sick of it. But some of these artists really stepped it up artistically as the decade wore on, and I also like this track because Feist did a cover of it and I really love her version. But here's the original:

Bee Gees "Love You Inside Out"

Okay now that's out of the way. Let's move on to the king of pop, who really asserted himself in 1979 with Off The Wall. Considered by many critics and snobs to be Michael Jackson's best album, I think I have to agree. Incorporating elements of disco and funk, along with some ballads, into a new signature sound that can be described simply as pop, this album is pure fire, front to back. The pop of the 80s, the one existing outside the world of new wave, is in full force from the opening track "Don't Stop 'Till You Get Enough." Of course that is the most well known song on that album and for a good reason. But there is absolutely no filler in this fire, it's a hot burning flame that is completely solid. My metaphors are starting to get confused. But Quincy & Michael struck gold...flaming gold...with this one. Of course all these fire metaphors mean I have to share this song.

Michael Jackson "Burn This Disco Out"

Of course where there's a king, there is also a Prince! The other king of pop in the same exact era! His  self-titled album was apparently his second one so it ain't no debut. But it's our debut here so that counts for something. Lots of similar sounds to Off The Wall but more diverse. I do like when he whips out the guitar for some rock & roll incorporated soul-funk-pop like on the song "Bambi." But I also think his best is yet to come at this point. Did you know that when you wikipedia "Prince" it returns some stupid entry about royalty? I say we petition wikipedia to make him the default entry for the word prince!

According to wikipedia, Prince opened for Rick James on tour around this time. Rick James was super awesome in 1979 pushing the funk train forward with songs like this.

Rick James "High On Your Love Suite: One Mo Hit (Of Your Love)"

You know what genre Rick James really influenced and continues to influence to this day? It was funny, it actually came up early in the shuffle but I had to end this entry on it. That's right, The Sugarhill Gang had a certain song that exploded in popularity and taught the masses about a brand new genre of music. Yeah, you know what I'm talking about. I didn't realize how dirty this song was considering how relatively clean hip hop seemed to be in its early days. But yeah. Game changer. That means the framework for everything I have coming up for the rest of this journey has now been established. It's all just a matter of evolution from here.

The Sugarhill Gang, "Rapper's Delight"

Other blah blah worth something

  • Sun Ra's Strange Celestial Road was interesting, a good moody driving record.
  • I wasn't sure where to put Pink Floyd's The Wall so it's delegated to here. Sorry. I know it's epic and deserves many paragraphs.
  • Delta 5's "Mind Your Own Business" was yet another post punk funky gem.
  • Just a couple years after changing the world, the only Ramones track I have from 1979 is "Rock 'N' Roll High School," a nice novelty song to go with the novelty movie they were in.
  • I didn't realize I was missing a crucial Devo album from my digital collection! "Secret Agent Man" is the only evidence I have that Duty Now For The Future exists. Big omission there.
  • In high school I picked up the album I Am by Earth Wind & Fire because we played a couple of their songs in marching band (my marching band was better than your marching band). We played "In The Stone" from this album and it was super fun. The album itself reminds me of Off The Wall but without the benefit of Michael Jackson. "Boogie Wonderland" would go well on that theoretical 1979 dance party though.
  • Joy Division was quickly evolving from raw punk rock to smoothed out post punk dance suites like "Transmission."
Next Time...
Like, totally, you know? Whatever! The 80s means new wave and hardcore punk and early hip hop and stuff. 1980 specifically means Afrika Bambaataa & Kurtis Blow, Bad Manners, English Beat, and The Specials, Exclamation marked albums like Sandinista! and Get Happy!!, more Cramps, more Dead Kennedys, Devo, Talking Heads, Joy Division, and the end of John Lennon. And more!!

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

An Ear For An Era: 1978

You're going to have to bear with me. I usually try to write these as quickly as I can after I finish listening to something, so I remember the thoughts I had, what I'd wanted to write, etc. But in this case I was trying to get done before a vacation, successfully finished listening to 1978 the night before, but had to pack and such and could not find time during the vacation to write it out. You know, I was busy exploring castles and cliffs, visiting whiskey distilleries and seeing the beauty of the world in general. Ireland is beautiful. I hope I can remember enough to make this a good write-up for you.

1978 was the year my older sister came from. It also featured music. A continuation of 1977 really, with expanding landscapes of punk and new wave and crappy rock and disco as well. I would also like to mention that to this point I have been including videos that are usually fan-created photo montages or whatever to the songs. Music videos were a thing now though, and the majority of the videos I've posted in this entry are actual music videos. So enjoy those!

We'll start with the fairly corporate. I didn't like Queen's (singles) output of 1977 but 1978 had three of my favorite songs of theirs. "Don't Stop Me Now" used to get me pumped up (I'd listen to it before going out when in college. Vinyl.) and then was used in Shaun of the Dead to great effect so now it makes me visualize that scene. "Bicycle Race" is my historical favorite Queen song. "Fat Bottomed Girls" is the companion piece to that.

I think this is the end of the line (for this project) for the Rolling Stones.  Some Girls was a decent album, I quite like "Beast of Burden" and "Lies." But I always just kind of think of this album as the one with "Miss You," their attempt at disco.

So while corporate rock dinosaurs were resorting to cheap ploys at relevance like disco songs, the exciting, envelope-pushing new bands like Blondie were innovating with their use of disparate genres like disco. But before I get to that, they had TWO albums out this year. Plastic Letters kind of makes me think of how much fun it would have been to see them in these days at CBGB. Deborah Harry bringing tons of attitude, the band going all over the place with jazz tunes and punk rock. And then Parallel Lines just took it further. The classic pop stylings, robotic rhythms, and yes, disco, that the band is best known for.  And a Buddy Holly cover! I like this album a lot. Here is of one of my favorite styles Blondie did, the sunny pop song.
Blondie "Picture This"

And of course I have to move on to the other big CBGB band, The Ramones. Road to Ruin is kind of their last "classic" album. After this I have a lesser album from 1983 and some various singles (and a live show from '95). They continued their blitz with fast hard songs, including the hit "I Wanna Be Sedated" but some of the songs remind me of that Blondie track above. A little bit slower, while keeping the trademark catchiness they so owned. Here is probably the most blatant version of that. I wonder if the punks were as pissed about this as they were about "Heart of Glass."

Ramones "Needles and Pins"

You know what punk band wasn't slowing down: Buzzcocks! I have Operators Manual, a collection of early singles, and the bulk of it is from 1978. Of all the 1978 examples I have, I feel like the Buzzcocks were the most like the coming-up-generation-of-punk, the focus on playing short fast songs. But the way they did it was still catchy like the Ramones. I get songs like "Noise Annoys," "What Do I Get," "Ever Fallen In Love," and "Fast Cars" stuck in my head all the time.

And The Greatest Punk Band Scratch That The Greatest Band The Clash had an album too, the somewhat unsung Give 'Em Enough Rope. It gets overlooked for not being their debut or their greatest album (London Calling) or their most experimental (Sandinista!) or their most popular (Combat Rock). But I kind of like that about this one. It's got the same energy level as their debut, is still primarily focused on punk over experiments, but it has just enough of that special edge to be interesting. It's the album that sounds like The Clash but has not been overplayed (by me at least).

OK how about new wave though? Devo made their debut with Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! Now this is punk. Completely outside the realm of what rock and roll should be expected to do, yet it's rocking. More of those robot rhythms. Completely deconstructing a rock & roll classic ("(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"), turning everything into machines including the act of prayer. The idea of this band was de-evolution. In that mindset this is the band at its most evolved. And it has to be their best album (we'll see if I take that back next time they come up here!). I've heard people talk about "nerd rock," and crediting Buddy Holly with starting that. I don't think that's accurate. Buddy Holly was super cool, he just wore glasses. Devo gave the nerds something they could understand. In a way that I think had been overlooked by the rock & roll machine up until now. The middle track is the most quintessential Devo song, the most rhythmic, and the one that includes the album title. Please note that the version below is not the one from the album (it's much slower) but this video is so amazing I have to share it. Devo was also streets ahead in regards to music videos.
Devo "Jocko Homo"

You know who else was nerdy? They Might Be Giants. Of course, they weren't around quite yet but The Residents probably were an influence on them...
The Residents "Constantinople"

Elvis Costello is still my favorite artist. Not too nerdy despite the glasses. This year he put out This Year's Model, which showed a shift towards more fast-and-loose rock and roll. The Attractions probably had a lot to do with that. But classics like "Pump It Up" and "Radio Radio" kind of define this early era of his career and they are just full of energy and spit. I also have the live album Live At The El Mocambo, which was a recent release BUT it's a performance from 1978 so I include it here. I mention that because it demonstrates the power of Elvis Costello & The Attractions as a force of nature, rolling through tracks with reckless abandon. I'm not sure if this live video is specifically The El Mocambo but it has the same energy.
Elvis Costello & The Attractions "Lipstick Vogue" (Live)

I feel a little bad for Nick Lowe. Sure, he's great and has continued his music career to this day so he has to be doing just fine, but I always just think of him as the lesser version of Elvis Costello. He produced a bunch of his records, he wrote "Peace Love & Understanding," and he put out new wavy records not too different from those of Elvis Costello's. They just don't hit the same highs for me. Jesus of Cool comes the closest though. He went a somewhat more pop route (the American title for this record was Pure Pop For Now People, which I think is an appropriate title), while undercutting everything with a cynical edge.

I don't know where else to talk about Tom Waits. Blue Valentine is yet another step toward his more experimental side, but it could still be considered part of the early period of his career. Dominated by the same coolness, jazz, and his distinctive vocals that continue to work toward what we now know. "Christmas Card From A Hooker in Minneapolis" is odd in that I have it on my Christmas music playlist but the song really has nothing to do with Christmas. Just a sad tale. I have one song from his 1980 album Heartattack and Vine and then my next Tom Waits album is Swordfishtrombones so...this is going to be the most "normal" he'll be. Next time I write about him it'll be absolutely gushing though.

Is that good enough? I think so.

Other stuff to say something about:
  • I like "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty because of The Simpsons.
  • Rick James, dude! I dig the song "You And I."
  • I have but one early track by The Mekons, who are still going strong. This was when they were still straightforward punk..."Never Been In A Riot"
  • Journey served as a fascinating way to see the terribleness that was going on in the mainstream at this time. Why do I keep it on my hard drive though?
  • Willie Nelson put his trademark style on standards with the quite enjoyable Stardust.
  • Marvin Gaye started emo? Maybe not, but Here My Dear is definitely a precursor to the oversharing overpresent in that genre. Unsurprisingly my favorite parts of the album are the less personal parts, such as "A Funky Space Reincarnation," which is a cool take on Mothership-style funk.
  • The Cars' self-titled album to me felt like the start of the 80s. I associate them so closely with the 80s that it was weird hearing them come up, even though I also associate Devo with the 80s. The beginning of the (long drawn out) end for new wave?
  • Warren Zevon's Excitable Boy is a good enjoyable album.
On The Next Installment...
The end of the 70s as we know it! I will have made it! What treasures do the rest of the 70s hold for me? How about London Calling?? Yeah. What else could I possibly need? Maybe The Cure?? The Cramps? Dead Kennedys (already!?)? Armed Forces is one of those consensus-favorite Elvis Costello albums so I'll have words about that one. Gang of Four! Michael Jackson's Off The Wall!?! And Pink Floyd's The Wall?? Weird I didn't know those were the same year! And Prince! And Talking Heads' Fear of Music. Lots of giant albums to look forward to here. Mostly London Calling though.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

An Ear For An Era: 1977

Now that's a turning point. For 1967 I got excited that that "element" would now be present, that I'd have something from the fringe/art/punk/whatever to look forward to with each year I'd listen to. Now in 1977 it is officially the focus. Those '7 years, huh? They seem to be significant. Like, if each decade were a story the '7 would be the climax leading to the denouement of the last couple years. Maybe each decade has a movement in music that reaches its creative prowess at 7 before it becomes commercialized and a bastardized "pop" version of itself (particularly in the early years of the next decade). Just think about '67, and then 1970. Now 1977. The start of new wave before it became lame. Does this make any sense?

I just don't want to screw this entry up. Punk rock turned my life around when I was in high school, it got me started on this journey, it gave me the necessary mindset of rebellion and fighting back and questioning everything, and it "began" here. I know I've been talking about a bunch of different bands in this blog that show the beginning of punk. I know there was already a Ramones album in 1976. But those were the spark and the fuse. This is the ignition. Everything else is going to the "also worth mentioning" section in this post.

Of course, the stuff I include as part of the punk movement will include new wave, post-punk, and whatever other associated styles I feel like including. Such as David Bowie.

Two Bowie albums in one year? You bet! And he's part of this. He worked with Iggy Pop, after all. He's an enigma really. Or just complicated. The first album in his "Berlin trilogy" with Brian Eno was Low, whose first half was full of short, fast songs. Just listen to this. It fits perfectly into 1977.

David Bowie "What In The World"

The second side of the album is a little more of what I would have expected from a Bowie/Eno collaboration with longer, slower, more instrumental songs. The next album in the Berlin Trilogy was "Heroes," one of the few times it is correct to put the name of an album in quotation marks. I think more artists should do that when an album shares its name with one of the songs. Or does he mean the other use of quotation marks, implying the "heroes" that we can be are not real heroes? "Heroes" is a great album though, everyone knows that song is one of his best. The rest of the album is quite great as well. It has a similar layout to Low in that the more song-oriented songs were at the front half with some experimental/instrumental/more-Eno-influenced tracks on the back end. "Sense of Doubt" is a very creepy track that would do well in a suspense movie.

So I feel like I am using the word "punk" way too much here but I don't know how else to go through this. But I'd just like to apologize for that. The godfather of punk Iggy Pop should have been right at home in 1977, because what his band had created was now exploding, but while The Stooges could have had a big payday (I'm sure they did when they finally did reunite recently) if they'd stuck together or got back together for this and played CBGB, instead he went solo, working with David Bowie, and exploring new territory. I think the only way the term "post punk" is valid is because it was what Iggy Pop did post punk. Because besides that, it really came up at the same exact time as punk. 1977 was the landmark year for both genres. But ok, Iggy Pop put out two solo albums in 1977. The Idiot was what I theoretically should like more because it's darker and more artsy. And I do quite like it. But I actually prefer Lust For Life, despite some misgivings about the title track. It's a fun song, it's good to dance to, but it's been played on too many commercials and is too repetitive and long for me to enjoy. But once you're past that song it's post-punk brilliance. His vocals have the same urgency as they did in the Stooges but the bed they ride on is all over the map, from ballads to rhythmic exercises.

Iggy Pop "Some Weird Sin"

And there was Elvis Costello's debut! My Aim Is True! And what a wonderful debut. Not much related to punk in sound, but in attitude and everywhere that matters it is pure and true. "Alison" remains one of my favorite songs of all time. Who can't relate to that one? But what I really love are the bonus tracks that came with the Rhino reissue. A bunch of old demos. I don't know of any other versions of some of these songs, such an early display of absolute brilliance from one of rock's best songwriters. Just him and a guitar. And poetry. Here is one of my favorites but before I "play it for you," let me also mention that when Elvis Costello was on Colbert a while back he was having voice issues and Colbert said he'd sing a song with him. Elvis challenged him with this song, such a rare deep cut, and Colbert knew all the words and nailed it. I didn't know there would be a way for me to like Colbert more, but then he pulled that off.

Elvis Costello "Cheap Reward"

Just remember you'll only be the boss so long as you pay my wage...

Another highly prolific artist is David Byrne and of course he got his start in a little band called the Talking Heads. Their debut, aptly titled Talking Heads: 77 is a very impressive debut. They are already so well established in their sound of African rhythms, funk, and yet something still very caucasian. I think I'll have more on them as we get into their catalog with Eno, but the first album already had the brilliant hit song (still persisting today) "Psycho Killer." But the song that closes the album is one of my favorites, as it keeps some of the funk rhythm but incorporates more of the CBGB rock influence and energy, perhaps as a preview of what the band would go on to accomplish.

Talking Heads "Pulled Up"

Does anyone else think Television singer Tom Verlaine sounds a lot like Gordon Gano? What? There are other amazing things about their debut album Marquee Moon? Such as EVERYTHING ABOUT IT? The sense of rhythm, the technical prowess of the entire band, it really is a direct influence of what would one day become math rock. The way the guitars interweave into an odd combination of driving the rhythm and disrupting it with noise, it also reminds me a lot of Joey Santiago's work in the Pixies. Here is a song that emphasizes that as well as the Gordon Gano-ness of the vocals (yes I do realize that Gano sounds like Verlaine and not the other way around).

Television "Friction"

When I picked up the Joy Division collection Substance 1977-1980 it was because I was a fan of their post-punk-ish/new-wave-ish songs like "Love Will Tear Us Apart" and "Transmission." Stuff that was good to dance to. Because at the time I was big on stuff I could dance to. Don't judge. So even though I had my fully developed love of punk rock, I somehow wrote off and did not appreciate the early tracks included in the collection when they were really pretty much just a punk band. Listening again in the context of this project, I was shocked that I had given all these 1977 tracks two star ratings in itunes. Just kind of goes to show you that 1) context is huge and 2) itunes ratings are dangerous because they last until you hear the song again and change your mind, and a low rating may prevent you from hearing the song again for quite some time. So let me say that while this is rhythmic (so therefore post-punk?) it is raw as hell, punk as hell, and I gave this track a revised four star rating.

Joy Division "No Love Lost"

That's a good transition into the "real punk rock" as opposed to all the post-punk stuff. The Buzzcocks showed up briefly here with their single "Orgasm Addict." Maybe the fastest song yet encountered here. Or maybe it was Johnny Thunders' "Get Off The Phone."

And immediately after that came The Sex Pistols' Nevermind The Bollocks, Here's The Sex Pistols. I got this in high school, of course, and loved it for a while, but in the years since have come to regard it as overrated. Hugely important record, one of the most important ones leading up to another certain other record with "Nevermind" in its title (ahem), but not that great within the context of all this other stuff I've been talking about. Johnny Rotten was willing to sing in a, uh, rotten way, and they were revolutionary in the way they went out of their way to offend people, cashing in on the anger and frustrations of the lower class at the time (and they certainly lived the lifestyle as well, I'm not going to doubt that stories of their final American tour are any less shocking and mindblowing as they are made out to be). There was just better British punk rock at the time.

Yep, The Clash. The Only Band That Matters. One thing that annoys me is American versions of British albums. Particularly with this project. I was ready to talk about their self-titled album's "(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais" but that song didn't actually come out until 1978. I was all excited that ska-punk was as old as punk itself! But instead it's just nearly as old. Stupid American version of the album, being put out after their second album! Still, "London's Burning" could be considered a ska-punk song so still valid. Once I saw some punk band at a tiny bar and they covered "White Riot." Something was wrong with everyone else and they didn't seem to know the song. But I went crazy over it and got the mic in my face a few times for that one. Great memory. It's hard to believe this isn't the greatest Clash album, because it's one of the greatest albums and probably the best of all these 1977 albums I'm talking about. Not that I've heard the original British version...

And I'll close it out with the same band I closed it out with last time: The Ramones! Two 1977 albums. Leave Home is the first, and I'm a little less familiar with that one. I just got it actually. It all kind of blurs together. They were very true to their sound, to say the least.

Ramones "Pinhead"

Gabba Gabba 
We accept you 
We accept you 
One of us! 

They certainly were inclusive as well. A trait of punk rock that persisted and helped me feel accepted by something at last when I discovered it in high school. And then of course Rocket To Russia, the monster of a punk rock classic that includes so many anthems, goes over so easy, ends so fast, that you gotta just turn it up while it lasts. "Cretin Hop." "Rockaway Beach." "I Don't Care." "Sheena Is A Punk Rocker." "Teenage Lobotomy." To name a few.

ONE TWO THREE FOUR!
(you fill in the rest.)

Other Highlights Worth Mentioning Because Apparently Other Stuff Came Out Too:

  • Dennis Wilson's only (official) solo album Pacific Ocean Blue was quite nice, a very different beast that I can't even try to associate with the punk movement. I think it kind of sounds like Bon Iver. Gorgeous.
  • In contrast to most R&B of this time, Curtis Mayfield was still quite great on the album Short Eyes. 
  • Kraftwerk! I can't say too much about Kraftwerk but Trans Europe Express is pretty great and is officially the first electronic album I've encountered here.
  • My only actual Bob Marley album is Exodus. I can see that it is very good but the association with annoying people is too strong for me to want to listen to much.
  • I have most of Billy Joel's The Stranger. Kind of a guilty pleasure but not as bad as his 80s work.
  • The Bee Gees in full effect! "Stayin' Alive," one of the biggest hits in all of disco, both exemplifies everything that was wrong with popular music at the time and is one of the greatest dance songs of all time. I can hate disco and still love one of the biggest disco hits, right?
  • I got a collection of Hall & Oates songs because it was cheap for a lot of songs. And then I realized I kind of hated most of them. But I still can enjoy "Rich Girl."
  • There was a VERY brief overlap of the two Elvises! My last Elvis Presley song (except a 2002 remix) was "Way Down." Rest in Peace, king!
  • And Queen...well I have some more from them coming up. But all I had for 1977 are their two biggest hits and two of my least favorite Queen songs. Of course, those are "We Will Rock You" and "We Are The Champions."
  • Speaking of Queen, The Queens Of Noise had THREE albums in 1977! I'm talking about The Runaways. It got a little tired to me after a while. They are best in smaller doses I think. But their level of rebellion, while a bit quaint next to the punk rock superheroes, was enjoyable and I can see it stirring the kids up.
On The Next Installment...
Punk/post-punk/etc: Blondie, lots more Buzzcocks, more The Clash, more Elvis Costello, Nick Lowe debuts (solo-ly), more Ramones, The 80s arrive early (The Cars! Devo!), a lost Dennis Wilson album, Marvin Gaye returns with an uncomfortably personal album, more of my favorite Queen songs, my last Rolling Stones album, Tom Waits is still great, Warren Zevon, and Willie Nelson does a standards album. Cool!

Saturday, September 14, 2013

An Ear For An Era: 1976

Well that one just breezed by. Also I just noticed this is my 176th post on this blog. So ever since my last non-AEFAE post they have all matched like that, 175th was 1975, etc...

So 1976. It's punk or who cares, right? Kind of. Obviously there was other worthwhile stuff so I'll talk about that first.

How about the other 'unk? Funk? The first full album to come up was Mothership Connection by Parliament. One very problematic song aside ("Handcuffs," a pretty creepy song about wanting to handcuff one's woman so she doesn't leave), it is a funk party that just keeps going. Get on the Mothership, baby, and let's groove all night.

The other big soul/funk/whatever album I had from 1976 was the masterwork, the apex of the entire discography of Stevie Wonder, Songs in the Key of Life. This is something else entirely from everything else I've had to say about Stevie Wonder thus far (even though it seems I didn't really have much to say before this). It's free, it's less cheesy, it's catchy, it looks at the past, present, and future of black music. The jazz influences on here are great, particularly in the fact that he brought in Herbie Hancock for a song. It's got some disco, some funk, some soul. It has a very famously sampled beat in "Pastime Paradise" which also makes me think of 90s hip hop. I also used this as a way to get excited about my between-AEFAE-listens catchup on new music because I got the new Janelle Monae album and I feel like they share a lineage. There's love songs, there's political songs, and there is this great instrumental.

Stevie Wonder "Contusion"

Where there is funk there is disco. Well maybe not the same exact place. But funk's brother, the overachiever (commercially) of the two children of soul, the polished one that got good grades and etc, established itself alongside the punk kid named funk. Jr Walker seemed to take another turn to the disco side of things with the singles from 1976 ("You Ain't No Ordinary Woman," "I'm So Glad") and the Bee Gees were officially in full disco mode with "You Should Be Dancing." None of these songs caused much derision to me, but I know what was lurking on the charts.

David Bowie was still pretty poppy on Station to Station despite long track times (only one under 5 minutes!). Sources say that this was a transitional album from his disco/soul stuff to his more experimental phase (Berlin trilogy with Brian Eno). So it's gonna be the last "easy" one here.

I wonder if Small Change isn't Tom Waits' greatest album from this early period. Kind of his Rubber Soul, if you will. Meaning it's the one that showed the first real hints at the greatness lying ahead. All his early stuff had shades of it, but this is the album with "The Piano Has Been Drinking." And "Tom Thaubert's Blues." And "I Wish I Was In New Orleans." That last one is the reason I sought this album out. I saw a live performance of that song and it made me miss New Orleans, so I knew I wanted that song. It took me a while to track down the album at a decent price...and now it turns out to be one of his best. Still jazzy, impossibly cool, but showing flaws and maybe a little less calculated.

Tom Waits "The Piano Has Been Drinking"

The Runaways can probably be considered at least a little bit punk. Pop punk. Power pop. Something. Rock & roll. You know. Hard rock? Of 1976. They did cover a Velvet Underground song and the Blondie bassist played on this album (thanks wikipedia!) so they have their creds. I like their fire, I think of them as somewhat a rocked out/updated version of the Shangri-Las. I think mostly because the final track "Dead End Justice" is a story song with talkin' that reminds me of some of the Shangri-Las' cautionary tales. There's something more modern, more liberated (ironic I know since it's about them being in prison) about it though.

Was the first Modern Lovers album considered punk? It's at least in that school of Velvet Underground inspired, rough-and-rumbly, energized rock music. Wikipedia tells me it was actually recorded back in the early 70s but just not released until 1976. How about that. I feel like everyone should already know all these songs. Should I post one? It's one of those albums that has so many great songs that serious music people already know. So maybe I'll leave at that?

Blondie officially let me know that the CBGB scene was in full operational mode at this time. Which makes me very happy. There is something about Blondie. They were part of this scene, one of the first bands in it, and they fit in quite well...but they also played pop music. Anger about them doing a disco song seems silly because while the Velvet Underground influence is apparent and there are some moments of real punk rock (absolutely check out "Kung Fu Girls") they really were a pop band.

Blondie "In The Sun"

Patti Smith's second album Radio Ethiopia did seem to push toward a more punk rock sound, at least in some cases. Particularly the first track "Ask The Angels." But I feel like it looks forward more toward The Clash than any other punk act. It's that diverse in genre exploration while keeping the punk attitude.

So of course this is all to build up to the self-titled debut album by a band called The Ramones. The officially credited "first punk band," I am reasonably confident in saying they are the first band that the word "punk" was used to describe and while they didn't create the sound they created an identity around the sound that I don't believe I heard in this project before them. 2 minute songs, power chords, simple lyrics and simple songs. Played fast. The revolution starts here. Draw the line in the concrete. With a jackhammer. I can't really describe what I felt when it came on in my car. "HEY! HO! LET'S GO!" Turned up the volume, yelled along, and it was just a rush of excitement. We are past the boring 70s rock, time for something with real energy.

Ramones "Beat On The Brat"

Other stuff worth a word or two:

  • (My) Tom Petty debut! "Breakdown."
  • I may have been missing the full album, but the the hits that Queen released in 1976 were very awesome. Particularly "Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy" and "Somebody To Love."
  • Nilsson's ...That's The Way It Is is (currently) the last work I have of his in my collection. He will be missed. Greatly. Appropriate that the first song on the album is called "That Is All" in addition to the album ending with a reprise of that. It's not his finest work and I'm sorely lacking in his latter era stuff but I could stand to spend a lot more time with his latter discography.
  • It's for the suits man! Rumours by Fleetwood Mac. It came up after The Ramones had already refreshed me, so I was mostly bored/disinterested. They have some catchy songs (particularly album opener "Second Hand News") but even though this is a mammoth of a popular album and probably pretty critically acclaimed, the only reason I own this album is because I feel like I'm "supposed to." But in the context of this, it just reinforced that I'm a punk rock kid.
On The Next Installment...
It's hard to think that anything besides punk rock would be important in 1977. It's the year of punk! So Plastic Letters, Buzzcocks, The Clash, My Aim Is True (Elvis Costello may be my favorite artist of all time), TWO Iggy Pop solo albums, Joy Division, Rocket To Russia, Sex Pistols, Talking Heads, and Television. Whew!! But besides that, it was also the year of Saturday Night Fever, Billy Joel's The Stranger, Exodus, the first two chapters of Bowie's Berlin Trilogy, Dennis Wilson, and Kraftwerk.