Tuesday, February 26, 2013

An Ear For An Era: 1955-1959

Welcome Back!

First, a little housekeeping:
-I have decided not to bother making a follow-up post about the Oscars because I kind of stopped caring exactly when they finished. Not much of what I was hoping for won, but whatever. The ones that won mostly deserved it, mostly my 2nd or 3rd choices. Cool. Except it sucks but is no surprise that Deakins got robbed yet again.

This era of music I will now be discussing can almost completely fit into two categories: Rock & Roll and Jazz. It's almost comical, really. I'm sure other stuff was being made (I also had a limited amount of country pop up, but it was mostly Johnny Cash, who in those days could fit along with the rock & roll) but that seems to be what I've acquired.

We'll start off discussing this "Rock & Roll" sensation that really hit its first stride in these years (1955-1959) and then "died" as it were.

We'll really really start off where we left off last time, and that's with Little Richard. Probably the most enjoyable music of the whole era, to me at least, was Little Richard. At once blues, rock & roll, and soul, he really rocked it. "Rip It Up" is a kind of rock & roll standard (I discovered some songs that seemed to be covered by everyone) and his version really...well...ripped it up!


I have to definitely talk about The King, so here I am talking about him. I only have his Elvis album (a travesty, I know) and a collection of #1 hits. He was great at what he did, and it's no wonder he was so popular.

Bo Diddley was obviously hugely influential. Carl Perkins I hoped I'd like more (after seeing Mystery Train and the one character's obsession with Carl Perkins being better than Elvis) but was still great. And then Jerry Lee Lewis. Cousin marryin' but boy did he ever have some great rock & roll songs. Here's one!


Buddy Holly is always a favorite. I've long associated him with a short lived promising career, as he managed to record an abundance of great songs in his little time on this earth. The That'll Be The Day LP (1956) seemed a little weak in retrospect, but the album The "Chirping" Crickets (1957) showed him evolving quickly. His self-titled album from 1958 was pretty much a masterpiece, with classics like  "Peggy Sue" and "Words of Love" (among many others) but also some of his lesser known songs like "Look At Me."

The next year, he recorded "Peggy Sue Got Married" without much comment. The lyrics are basically "you know Peggy Sue from that song? Well I think she's married now!" without singing about the pain it brings. It leaves it for the listener to fill in the gaps. It's an evolution and I'd like to have seen where he would have gone. That's of course a story for an alternate universe.

The other promising young star that died with the music in that plane crash was Ritchie Valens. I just wanted an excuse to share this track that I hadn't really noticed...he played surf rock! "Fast Freight"

Screamin' Jay Hawkins. I couldn't believe this was from 1956! Part novelty, but all funky experimental soul! Everybody knows this song, I just always assumed it was from the late 60s. That makes it even more impressive. Just listen to how nuts he goes.

OK let's move on to some other stuff. Johnny Cash got going here. As far as albums, all I had from the period was The Fabulous Johnny Cash, which doesn't really do him justice. However, the Folsom Prison Blues single popped up first, and I don't even need to post the video for that one. You know how it goes.

Sam Cooke may have been the finest early R&B singer. I only have the hits from this period so I'm not going to post a video. They're all great, they're all well known. I will say that I particularly enjoy his take on "Summertime" though. Seek it out if you happen to have not heard it.

Ray Charles got better in the late 50s. Some greatness that I don't really have much else to say about right now, as it's very late.

Let's move on to the jazz side of things. It was such a comical juxtaposition to me, because the way I've been doing this is creating playlists of each individual year and playing them as "album shuffle" meaning a full album would play, and then a random different album from that year would play. And I can definitely see why people thought rock & roll was just noise. At that point, it was so simplistic and jazz had evolved into this crazy beast so far beyond anything that rock & roll could ever be expected to achieve. It would eventually get there, but in the late 50s there was a lot of landmark jazz released to counter these kids and their guitars.

Frank Sinatra continued to do most of the same stuff he'd done previously. I didn't see a whole lot of evolution, but Come Fly With Me is still a fantastic, diverse album.

Billie Holiday put out kind of a definitive last statement of her career with Lady In Satin (1958). Accompanied by an orchestra her voice seems to sound even more broken. I read a biography once and it talked about how the conductor just didn't get her, he hated her sound because he was trying to make this beautiful sound and Lady Day was just singing all Billie Holiday style, sounding incredibly sad, dropping off the major key, etc. But it's the juxtaposition that makes this such a powerful recording. Strings and a straining voice.

I went through a lot of classic jazz. I didn't realize I had so much in my collection. But I think it was mostly just because what I have is concentrated to this period. But I definitely reached a new level of appreciation for jazz doing this project (particularly contrasting it with the simplistic "rock n roll" sounds). Vince Guaraldi isn't just the Peanuts guy, he's really an amazing pianist. I had a John Coltrane collection of recordings where he accompanies other musicians (basically a "...featuring John Coltrane" collection) and it's all so amazing and I can't really speak to it too much without sounding like an idiot.

But let me talk about Miles Davis. What he created with Kind of Blue just elevated the art to a whole new level. The sound of a trumpet shouldn't be able to bring people to tears. But he plays with so much emotion, so beautifully, that it kind of does that. I'm not going to post a video of a single song because that would mean you could just listen to that. I'm going to instead implore you to put on the album. If you don't have it, well that's just silly. Get it. And listen to it fully.

However, I'm going to close with the album that had the audacity to call itself The Shape of Jazz to Come. Ornette Coleman saw a future in the avant garde. He created sounds that would not only influence the future of jazz, but the future of all recorded music. In this song, he pioneered sounds that I have heard in some of my favorite cutting edge hardcore/math rock/what-have-you bands of today and recently. Like, in my lifetime. Pioneered in 1959. Listen to the crazy stop-start rhythms of this song and compare it to bands like Refused or Don Caballero. Astonishing.


And that was about it for the 50s. We've got the 60s coming! The shape of...everything...to come!

Where I stand at the moment: 1180 of 36363 songs deep. yikes. this may take awhile.

Other Highlights Worth Mentioning:

  • Ricky Nelson, obviously.
  • We got our first Motown! The Miracles' "Bad Girl" came up!
  • Ella Fitzgerald sang some for me.
  • So many oldie hits! "Teenager In Love," "Only Sixteen," Everly Brothers, etc etc etc
  • I didn't talk about Chuck Berry AT ALL?!?!?!? Weird. But yeah, him. I had the "Berry's On Top" album come on and it has his hits which were the highlights for me. That's the main reason I didn't bother, because everybody knows Chuck Berry.
  • The Poni-Tales "Born Too Late"
  • Johnny Otis "Willie & The Hand Jive" is totally the basis for "I Want Candy!"
  • I think Edith Piaf is finally done. 120 greatest hits is a lot of songs!
  • The Beatles officially (unofficially) started, some early demos or something from Anthology 1 came up.
  • Patsy Cline, sigh (sigh of love and/or "so great," not exasperation or anything)
In The Next Installment...
I was actually wondering that myself for a while. Knowing that rock & roll would kind of stop evolving since "the music died" I didn't know what was going to happen in the lead-up to the Beatles. I think it's going to mostly be Motown and girl pop stuff, with some more jazz as well. Looking ahead, I saw that 1964 seems like a pretty landmark year in many ways, so the next installment will be 1960-1963 and then I'll go year by year from there. So in addition to motown, girl pop, and jazz, we've got...Roy Orbison! and Etta James! Gene Pitney! Other soul (Stax!)! More Patsy Cline! Ray Charles playing country! Early Beach Boys and Beatles! It'll be good. Talk to you then!

Sunday, February 24, 2013

pre-Oscar hopes & predictions 2013

Greetings!

Now that I've seen everything except the following, I have stuff to say before the Oscars start tonight. Interesting!

Disclaimer: I did not see the following:

  • The Impossible (was not interested in a story about "oh wow, I didn't realize the tsunamis also affected wealthy vacationing Americans!")
  • The Sessions
  • All the non-Wreck-It Ralph animated features.
  • Mirror Mirror & Snow White and the Huntsman (because...why on earth would I care?)
  • The Gatekeepers (the only documentary feature that was not available in nearby theaters/netflix)
  • All the documentary shorts (if I had about one more day I would have gone to see them)
  • All the foreign films besides Amour (I wish I'd had the chance!)
  • Hitchcock
  • Chasing Ice
So I cannot say anything about those movies.


Best Picture
None of the 10 features didn't really seem like a "best picture" to me. Maybe if The Master were nominated...Anyway, my official hope is Beasts of the Southern Wild (mostly because I want to see that tiny indie film beat out all those big budget ones) with a second place hope of Amour. My official guess is Lincoln because the Academy loves stuff like that.

Lead Actor
Kind of a lock for Daniel Day-Lewis. He does deserve it. He's both my hope and prediction?

Lead Actress
I would be so happy if French New Wave icon Emmanuel Riva were to win. And her performance was pretty incredible. I equate it kind of to Ellen Barkin from Requiem For A Dream, being a dynamite performance from an older woman that will likely go unrecognized. Prediction is Jessica Chastain, who was also quite good.

Supporting Actor
De Niro because he was amazing in Silver Linings Playbook. Both.

Supporting Actress
Anne Hathaway absolutely deserves it. I'd be surprised if anyone else won. Maybe Sally Field...

Animated Feature
I didn't even see Tim Burton's movie! But it'd be neat if it won, assuming it's good?

Cinematography
Of course I'm pulling for Roger Deakins, the Susan Lucci of cinematographers. It'll probably be the Django dude or the Life of Pi dude.

Production Design
Anna Karenina was actually really cool in its style, partially like a play. Kind of like a musical that's not a musical. So I'll hope for that, expecting Life of Pi to win.

Costume Design
I don't care too much but I guess Anna Karenina again for both?

Directing
Would love to see Michael Haneke win. But Spielberg seems likely.

Documentary Feature
I was ready to pull for Searching For Sugar Man but then I saw 5 Broken Cameras. Which was just astonishing. It'd make me so happy if that one won. But prediction will probably be Sugar Man.

Editing
The pacing of Silver Linings Playbook was really cool, the editing was rhythmic. I doubt that will be recognized, as voters probably prefer the suspenseful editing of Argo. Which would be ok too.

Make-Up & Hair
Eh? Hobbit I guess?

Music Score
I don't usually pay attention to scores. And when I do find myself loving them, half the time they're just pre-existing classical compositions. Or Johnny Greenwood, who wasn't even nominated (again!). So...hope Skyfall guess Argo? ??

Original Song
Adele!

Animated Short
I really loved Head Over Heels. Kind of guessing Paperman though.

Live Action Short
They were all very good. I am hoping for Death of a Shadow but think it'll probably be Asad. Which is my second hope anyway.

Sound Editing/Mixing
What is the difference really??? Anyway, gonna "hope" for Django & Les Mis, predicting Argo for both. But it's all pretty whatever, whatever?

Visual Effects
I think Life of Pi deserves this one. If nothing else, the film looked really cool.

Writing adapted
Go Beasts! Expecting Argo.

Writing original
Go Wes Anderson! Expecting Zero Dark Thirty though.


I guess that's it. Sorry for the boring post. I'll post again afterward to let you know how happy/angry I am.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

An Ear For An Era: 1950-1954

Welcome back!

I'd like to start off by repenting for one misjudgment from last week. I said that no blues artists really stood out, but that was probably because I hadn't gone through enough of my no-year-labeled stuff. I went through a lot of that and caught up on what I'd missed and I have to say that Lead Belly really does stand out as a great blues artist from the 40s. Check him out.

I also kind of glossed over Miles Davis, just putting him in the appendix section. But there will be plenty of time to discuss him later.

Here's the early 50s now. The time period that birthed my parents and rock and roll continued to be developed. Blues got a bigger budget, Hank Williams had a radio show, and jazz exploded.

Let's start with one T-Bone Walker. There was a big CD anthology I picked up once, without knowing anything about the guy, because it looked like he was probably an awesome early rock & roll guitarist, as the cover to the collection features him doing the splits while playing the guitar behind his head. Then I was slightly disappointed to hear that he pretty much just played the blues. But now I have proper perspective. It's blues with a backing band. Horns! Some upbeat stuff that is absolutely early rock & roll! Everything about this guy tells me that he had to have been the second biggest influence on the artistic direction of Chuck Berry (the first, of course, being Marty McFly). This is a slower, more-blues-less-rock track but I keep getting it in my head. It's "Railroad Station Blues."

You know who else really ruled this blues-rock-but-not-blueshammer-style thing in the early 50s? Big Maybelle. Have you heard of her? She's the real deal. If you love a woman singing from the bottom of her being, super powerful vocals, check her stuff out. You will be glad you did. This is "Send For Me," and I don't know why that picture to accompany the song in the video is a cat. It's still the right song though, so give it a listen.

I'd be remiss if I failed to mention Muddy Waters, but I don't know that that's particularly revelatory. But obviously the "real" blues were still being played and you can't go wrong with Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, and Lead Belly.

So in the last installment, I mentioned that Hank Williams "started rock & roll" (not really but it seemed like it in some way). In 1951 he had a radio show and recently a box set of "unreleased recordings" was released so I got it. It's a lot of awesome Hank Williams songs from this radio show. Anyway, there wasn't really much upbeat stuff in this box set, just a lot of great country sadness. So listen to him.

Jazz continued to develop in the early 50s, and I had a total of THREE full albums from 1954 in my collection. They were all jazz/swing. A couple Sinatra records were there, which of course are timeless. I associate him more with the 40s than 50s but as far as my music collection is concerned he got his start in 1953. So sure. He put out the fun Swing Easy! and then also the more ballad-driven Songs for Young Lovers. I preferred that one.

You know what the other jazz album I have from 1954 is? One that is maybe my favorite album of the history of 1899-1954. Maybe. Dust Bowl Ballads was pretty great as well. But this one, it surprised me how engaging it was to me because I'm not a huge jazz guy. And I'm a bit saddened that I don't have more representation of this guy, because he may be my favorite jazz musician: Dizzy Gillespie. The way he wails, it's the first time in my "Ear For An Era" project that I felt the need to TURN IT UP. It's meant to be played loud. The punk rock of jazz or something. The album is Afro and it is beautiful. I'll post the most famous song, the intro that shows up on all sorts of different best of comps and stuff, and that is because the album builds and morphs the themes introduced in this song. The album is full of nuance, but the intro here just gets me excited for the ride because it's so loud and brassy.

I also need to talk rock & roll now. I'm actually surprised there wasn't more rock & roll yet, after it was pretty much defined in 1949 and became such a sensation. Sure, we got "Rock Around The Clock" and other such Bill Haley hits, but I don't know, I just associate the 50s with the big rock beginnings. It seemed like a slow start. I know the next session is going to have a lot more. But we did get Little Richard getting started. More blues than rock at this point, but this song is a pretty good one!

I think that'll do for this installment. I have to go to bed now. But be excited because this "rock and roll" thing is about to take off in a big way!

Other Highlights Worth Mentioning:

  • I had "Steam Heat" from The Pajama Game come up, and I was going to post the clip from the movie but apparently the movie came out in 1957. Maybe I'll throw it in there next time?
  • The Dominoes "Sixty Minute Man" - who knew that songs were that dirty that early on?
  • Edith Piaf just keeps going. "Padam Padam" is a good song.
  • Louis Prima! "Oh Marie"
  • My very first taste of Sam Cooke in the project with the brief gospel song "Jesus Gave Me Water!"
  • Sinatra's "South Of The Border" which just makes me think of The Simpsons because they used the song.
  • Billie Holiday was still going!
  • Elvis put out a few ballady songs, not really rockin yet though.
  • Ray Charles got started too, but I don't really care for this super early Ray Charles stuff.
In The Next Installment...
The late 50s! Mostly this means rock and roll really gets going, with everyone from Bo Diddley to Chuck Berry to Buddy Holly to The King (and many many more!) hitting their strides and/or dying. Also looking forward to some Ella Fitzgerald, John Coltrane, Screamin' Jay Hawkins (!!), the great Lady In Satin album from Billie Holiday, a little someone called Johnny Cash...........stuff is seriously about to 'splode. I'm almost wondering if 5 years is too big a span for this, but my plan is to do 5 year spans through 64 and then a year at a time from there. We'll see if that changes.