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“Wouldn’t It Be Nice” – The Beach Boys
(Words/music: Tony Asher, Mike Love, and Brian Wilson, available on Pet Sounds, Capitol 1966)

Right now, when I think of Pet Sounds I’m drawn in to the tone of the bass guitar.  All over this album, the bass resonates in such a full-bodied way that it’s impossible to ignore.  Maybe it’s from spending the better part of my life listening to songs with over-compressed or underplayed bass lines, but these songs gain a sense of depth from having such a rich lower end of the sound spectrum.  If nothing else, this is a bass sound worthy of these meticulously arranged compositions.

Of course, “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” isn’t great because of its bass sound.  It gets some of its bounce from the bass, but as a whole it radiates with relentless sweetness.  Brian Wilson crafts his own Spector-ian wall of sound by stacking melodic bricks on top of the opening drum beat.  Ultimately, it’s the lyrics that make this bright sounding pop sound feel sincere.  It’s a simple statement of desire to be with a loved one and looking forward to the day when it becomes a possibility rather than a pipe dream.  Sure, it’s not as simple as the song suggests, but it’s a refreshing look at the simplicity of love.  When the world starts to seem more complex, it’s these beacons of love that bring us back to the place where out world feels as cheery and hopeful as this song.

Songs like “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” also remind me of Jenny.  Today’s her birthday, and dedicating such a beautiful song to her is the least I can do to thank her for making me understand songs like this one.  Happy birthday, dude!

More on The Beach Boys: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: the beach boys | brian wilson | 1965 | 1960s | capitol records | shout out |
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Tristan was kind of enough to ask me to write a guest post for his excellent “Top 35 or so Songs of the ’80s” list he’s finishing up.  I’m very flattered and immediately obliged, as Tristan runs one of the best music tumblrs out there.  If you aren’t already following / reading him, do yourself a favor and check it out.

In it, I wrote about the idea of what I’m calling “guide bands” - bands that serve as gateways into other bands/genres - centered around a song from R.E.M.’s Murmur.  I hope you like it!

TAGGED UNDER: elsewhere on the 'net | shout out |
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“Dancing in the Dark” – Drew O’Doherty and Ted Leo
(Words/music: Bruce Springsteen, originally available from Bradley’s Almanac, performed August 6, 2006)

Today is Ted Leo’s birthday, and my present is to repost a song I originally found on Bradley’s Almanac a few years ago.  Head over there to read Brad’s account of the circumstances behind the show – specifically how “Dancing in the Dark” served as a “handoff” between O’Doherty’s opening set and Leo’s main set.  Bradley’s Almanac is a must read, and I got to briefly meet Brad at XX Merge this summer and can confirm first hand that he’s as nice and cool as his blog suggests.  Do yourself a favor and go subscribe to it.

Ted Leo also has the misfortune of sharing his birthday with the terrorist attacks in the United States eight years ago.  In many ways, this “Dancing in the Dark” performance shares a lot of the qualities of the moments we looked for (and continue to need) in the weeks and months following.  Earlier today, as they have for the past few years, McSweeney’s posted John Hodgman’s introduction from a literary reading a few weeks after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.  In it, Hodgman (a friend of Leo’s, appropriately) shared his struggle to find the role of storytelling in an increasingly absurd world, ultimately suggesting that in a time of crisis, stories help us feel like we aren’t alone.  For me, concerts provide the same comforting communal effort, and few create and utilize the temporary community that a live performance assembles the way Ted Leo uses it.  His sets frequently mix his own stories (through his songs) with songs that he loves.  “Dancing in the Dark,” a song about the desperate, unending quest for inspiration, frequently appears in these sets, often inspiring the audience to join in (at least for the “can’t start a fire” lines).  I’ve written about the way Leo’s shows provide this spark for me, and I can’t help but feel like most of the crowd leaves the same way.  Even if these moments can’t fix what’s broken inside us, they help to remind us that we’re all fractured in some ways and can help each other put the pieces back together.  While 9/11 is a day to consider the ways we’ve started to heal, it’s also a day worth celebrating those who have helped us with that healing, even if it’s just by singing songs.

Happy birthday, Ted.  Thanks for everything.

More on Drew O’Doherty: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

More on Ted Leo: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: drew o'doherty | ted leo | 2006 | 2000s | cover song | john hodgman | shout out |
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“Worst Comes to Worst” – Dilated Peoples
(Words/music: Dilated Peoples, William Bell, and Booker T. Jones, available on Expansion Team, Capitol Records 2001)

We’re quick to ask songwriters where their inspiration comes from, whether we’re looking at lyrics or wondering about melodies.  However, I’m incredibly fascinated with the way that DJs and hip hop producers create a track, particularly when it’s based around a sample.  While a songwriter might talk about influences, DJs hunt through crates of their idols (and others, too), looking for the perfect element to turn into a beat.  Take “Worst Comes to Worst” for example – The Alchemist builds this beat around William Bell’s “I Forgot to Be Your Lover,” a wistful, Curtis Mayfield-like soul ballad co-written by Booker T. Jones.  It’s a gorgeous ballad with an awesome guitar introduction, but it’s also been the basis for samples for Brand Nubian, Ludacris, and a handful of others in addition to Dilated Peoples.  Specifically on “Worst Comes to Worst,” Alchemist and DJ Babu turn Bell’s ballad into a light-hearted bounce.  The Alchemist pushes the tempo and adds in some more distinct drums, and Babu cuts back and forth on his turntables, whipping the original’s slower pace into something lively.  Evidence and Rakaa (with a spoken verse from Gang Starr’s Guru) run with the beat, trading off verses that sing the praises of their friends and family in addition to their love of hip hop.  It’s hard for me to listen to “I Forgot to Be Your Lover” without thinking of “Worst Comes to Worst,” but I’m not sure I see a direct line between the two.  I’m very curious what The Alchemist heard in that somber original that inspired such a spirited beat.

I also think back to my friend Scott, a DJ and emcee himself, who first introduced this song (and a lot of other slightly esoteric hip hop) through the radio show he did in the timeslot after mine.  He’s had his hand in a couple different projects where he’s proven himself as a crafty lyricist.  Most recently, Scott co-founded an educational hip hop project called Smart Songs, selling their first collection of songs through Highlights Magazine.  While this might sound horrible on paper, Scott and his collaborators manage to make the tracks feel like authentic hip hop rather than the type of offensively awful “hip hop” usually dubbed “educational.”  Even if they rhyme about the United States presidents, they’re also giving kids (their audience, after all) a taste of hip hop that’s more than the Nickelodeon show version.

More on Dilated Peoples: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: dilated peoples | gang starr | the alchemist | hip hop | 2001 | 2000s | capitol records | track analysis | Shout Out | smart songs |
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“Another Day” – Jamie Lidell
(Words/music: Jamie Lidell and Dominic Salole, available on Jim, Warp 2008)

Jamie Lidell’s “Another Day” is a love song without the word “love” in it.  In fact, it doesn’t have any overtly romantic gestures – at least not ones that would make him end up on the “soft news” part of a local broadcast.  Instead, Lidell revels in the day-to-day moments of his relationship – the happy silences, the small discoveries, and the general peacefulness of the day-to-day.  It’s easy to be in love during those moments of pure bliss, and every relationship needs these to survive.  However, true love turns what some might call “ordinary” or “boring” days into extraordinary days.  Lidell’s narrator shares this revelation, describing how he changed from demanding these exciting moments to appreciating the quiet whispers together.  I know plenty of people who struggle with these moments and as a result create moments or ecstasy or enragement as habit.  Instead, Lidell’s protagonist takes each day for what it is – another day to learn a little more about the person he loves.

About a year ago, my girlfriend Jenny introduced me to Jamie Lidell, and one of our first outings together was to see him at the Paradise in Boston.  She raved about his hybrid of blue-eyed soul and electronic manipulations, so I took her word for it and went with her.  Lidell didn’t disappoint, doing everything from leading his band through funky arrangements to manipulating and looping his voice for over five minutes while somehow making it sound interesting.  By the time he came out from the encore with a TV on his head, I was sold.  This is only one of many things Jenny’s brought into my life over the last year.  I’ll always associate Lidell’s music with her because of this show, with “Another Day” being particularly special.  A year ago today, Jenny and I went on our first “date” (retroactively declared a “date” at least) where we drove around northern Connecticut talking about the radio, sat at a diner way too long, and talked in her car until well after two in the morning.  Every day since then, I’ve fallen a little more in love with her each day, in part because she continues to amaze me with everything she does professionally, creatively, and personally.  I share this because it’s exactly what I think of when I hear “Another Day” – even if we have a quiet day together walking around, making dinner, and talking, there’s no place else in the entire world I’d rather be and nothing else I’d rather be doing.  We’ve had our blissful moments, but in reality she makes all of them blissful for me.  I tell her that she’s my hero because I want to be more like her, and in a way this blog is one way that I’ve tried to be more creative and reflective.  It’s only appropriate that I should use it to thank her, because without her constant encouragement (and her understanding when I duck away for an hour to type a post when visiting her) there’s no way this blog would have lasted more than a week.

More on Jamie Lidell: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: jamie lidell | 2008 | 2000s | personal reflection | Warp records | Shout Out | love song |
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“Here’s Where the Story Ends” – The Sundays
(Words/music: David Gavurin and Harriet Wheeler, available on Reading, Writing and Arithmetic, Rough Trade 1990)

Earlier tonight, Tristan from A Post Punk Tumblr invented the #allmusicsays Twitter game, posting part of an Allmusic artist biography, inviting others to guess what band the Allmusic scribe tries to describe.  It’s a fun idea that I hope catches on  - I’ll post one on the Some Songs Considered Twitter page a little later.  Tristan chose a description of the Cranberries that, when I second guessed what I thought was the “obvious” choice, led me to inadvertently introduce him to the Sundays.  I rediscovered the song a few years ago when I had XM Radio and spent a lot of time in my car for my job.  I had heard “Here’s Where the Story Ends” occasionally on the radio but never really thought twice about it when I was a teenager.  This time around, the song led me to Reading, Writing and Arithmetic, an album worth checking out if you like this song.

“Here’s Where the Story Ends” is a gorgeous pop song about having perspective.  Harriet Wheeler, who kind of sounds like a less dynamic version of Bjork (for better or worse, depending on your stance on Bjork and her idiosyncrasies), sweetly sings about a relationship that recently ran its course.  She alternates between feeling crushed about the end of the story and looking back at it fondly, alternately feeling guilty about saying she loved her ex for his library and wryly smiling about all the great books she discovered.  In the course of four minutes, she’s horrified by anything reminding her of her “terrible year” and simultaneously fascinated by anything (many of which overlap) reminding her of this “colorful year.”  These are the kind of things that rarely make sense unless you’ve recently experienced a breakup yourself, as the heart and the mind often pull in two different directions.  Pop music has its share of these conflicted breakup songs, but rarely has anyone made it sound as charming.  The bright acoustic guitars and Wheeler’s cheery melody make the song sound much happier than it should appear, providing the aural equivalent to putting up a front so people will stop asking you to rehash the story.

More on The Sundays: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: the sundays | 1990 | 1990s | track analysis | xm radio | rough trade | break up songs | the cranberries | bjork | shout out | Shout Out |
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From Fluxblog:

Fluxblog still needs your help! To reiterate what I wrote in this post, I am currently in very bad shape financially, and I’m asking for your support in order to keep this site going. If Fluxblog means anything to you, now is the time to step up and show your support. Ryan Catbird and John Cei Douglast-shirt designs are still on sale for a limited time — I plan on cutting off orders within the next two weeks, so if you’ve been putting it off, you’ve got until then, or you’re just going to miss out. If you’re not interested in t-shirts but want to help, you can donate whatever you like here. Every dollar is appreciated! (If you do this, though, you may want to email me your address, as you might get a little something in return anyway.) Thank you!

Folks, I realize that times are tough for many of us, but if you have $20 to spare for a t-shirt (and I like the Sonic Youth “Washing Machine” style T & await the arrival of the one I ordered), this is a good cause.  Fluxblog is the reason why we have MP3 blogs, and personally what I do with Some Songs Considered never could have happened without (among many others) the kind of writing he’s done there and at Pop Songs ‘07 - ‘08.

Simply put - the world of music discussion and criticism is a better place with Matthew Perpetua in it.  Please consider giving him a hand, even it it just means going over to Fluxblog and clicking on his advertisements.

TAGGED UNDER: Shout Out |
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“Mint Car [Radio Mix]” – The Cure
(Words/music: Perry Bamonte, Jason Cooper, Simon Gallup, Roger O’Donnell, Robert Smith, available on Galore: Singles 1987 – 1997, Fiction/Elektra 1997)

A few months ago, my friend Dave sent me a frantic instant message late at night.  He was making a mix and needed a second opinion.  “‘Just Like Heaven’ or ‘Mint Car’” he asked, and I was forced to admit that I didn’t know “Mint Car” off the top of my head.  I owned the song as part of the Galore singles collection that I listened to incessantly in high school, but since my CD collection went digital, I mainly listened to the earlier Cure singles as parts of other playlists.  I know the first two thirds of Galore extremely well but had forgotten the end of it.  As a result of Dave’s question, I rediscovered both “Mint Car” and “Strange Attraction” from the Wild Mood Swings album, so I think I benefited more from the conversation than he did!

Regardless, I immediately understood Dave’s quandary – “Mint Car” and “Just Like Heaven” are both on the shimmery pop side of the Cure’s catalog.  Both songs feature Robert Smith as an unabashed romantic (as opposed to a sinister storyteller) and are within a second of each others’ running time.  Still, “Mint Car” plays like the younger sibling, flaunting its melody more directly and bounding along at a slightly bubblier pace.  If one strength in “Just Like Heaven” is its relatively laid back tempo, “Mint Car” comes busting out of the gate enthusiastically.  The protagonist sounds like someone experiencing a new love and all of the wonderful sensations and giddy excitement, while “Just Like Heaven” comes off slightly more familiar yet equally enamored.  Ultimately, “Mint Car” won out because it was less known; Dave’s friend (probably) knew “Just Like Heaven,” and “Mint Car” might help lead this person slightly deeper into the catalog.  The decision made perfect sense to me.

“Mint Car” works for today for two reasons.  First, in the Northeast US, today feels the way that spring should – bright and warm  - and evokes the same kind of emotions as “Mint Car.”  Additionally, Dave is celebrating his birthday this weekend and while I can’t join him, I’m dedicating this post to him in celebration.  I met Dave in college and in addition to being my RA one year, Dave recruited me to write record reviews for the school newspaper.  Dave was an excellent editor and a gifted media critic himself, and I was thrilled when he started up his NineDaves blog last year.  Dave writes about a variety of topics near and dear to his heart – whether it’s keeping an eye on Broadway, putting his favorite TV shows through his crosshairs, or keeping tabs on happenings in Brooklyn, Dave writes with the kind of natural wit and charm that I envy.  As a birthday present to Dave, give his blog a visit.

More on The Cure: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: the cure | 1997 | 1990s | track comparison | Shout Out | fiction records | Elektra Records |
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“Napoleon Says” – Phoenix
(Words/music: Phoenix, available on It’s Never Been Like That, Astralwerks 2006)

When a band like Phoenix does its job well, it’s easy to dismiss them.  Their songs are slick, immaculately produced, and insanely catchy; in a parallel universe, a handful of Phoenix songs would be overplayed radio jams.  At points, they’re a little too slick for some people, making it difficult to latch on to the songs.  At first, it makes great background music (I’ve been listening to Alphabetical while grading papers recently), but like many great pop songs these tracks leave their mark.  I find that random melodies (in particular, the hook to “(You Can’t Blame it on) Anybody” keeps popping up) run through my brain throughout the day.  This is the deceptiveness of most of Phoenix’s songs – they seem simple and easy to dismiss, but something in your subconscious mind will draw you back in to their records.

Then there’s the exceptions – the songs that forego the subtle route and attack head on.  The songs on Phoenix’s third album It’s Never Been Like That, beginning with “Napoleon Says,” strike in a more immediate fashion.  The guitar chimes like a siren signaling arrival and demanding attention.  Just as soon as it ropes its listeners, the song shifts and the siren becomes a stuttering funk riff, and just as quickly the feel shifts slightly again.  These abrupt changes sound like deliberate attempts to shake up their style, but “Napoleon Says” retains the same attention to detail as its smoother predecessors.  In particular, the bass drum and bass guitar lock in with each other immediately, making these simultaneous notes punch harder.  This focus on precision makes the song feel quick rather than chaotic, showing in about three minutes that Phoenix is a band in total control and ready to take their listeners wherever they want to bring them.  With songs as good as “Napoleon Says,” we’re willing to follow their lead as well.

I’d be remiss if I didn’t note that every time I hear “Napoleon Says,” I think of The Basketball Jones podcast, an excellent NBA podcast put out (almost) every weekday by three wonderful Canadian gentlemen.  Like Phoenix, Skeets, Melas, and JD do a number of things well on their show – they can break down recent performances like pros, discuss trades and rumors while still remaining realistic, and be downright hilarious.  It’s also immaculately produced and incredibly professional (and, at times, better than the shows the professionals put on).  They also use my favorite part of “Napoleon Says” in their opening.  I highly recommend checking them out if you’re into basketball or even if you’ve lost track of the NBA, as their show rekindled my interest in the Association. (Also, Tumblr folks - their webpage is a Tumblr, so you can follow them on your dashboard)

More on Phoenix: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: phoenix | 2006 | 2000s | Astralwerks | track analysis | Shout Out | the basketball jones |
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“Feel to Believe” – Beth Orton
(Words/music: Beth Orton, appears on Central Reservation, Arista Records 1999)

Today’s post goes out in tribute to Freaky Trigger’s 10th Anniversary.  I offer the shout out at the beginning of the post for two reasons.  First, I hold FT’s Tom Ewing in high regard and consider him one of my favorite writers and critics today.  His Poptimist columns for Pitchfork are among my favorite pieces of criticism and always make me look back at my own taste as a consumer of culture.  Also, I’d be remiss if I didn’t thank Tom for linking to me, as I’m sure there’s a considerable amount of you who would not be reading me otherwise.  (Also, I hope Tom isn’t bothered by having a Beth Orton song “dedicated” to him!)  Additionally, as part of FT’s retrospective, Tom linked to his first entry – a “mission statement” of sorts that certainly dovetails with my own philosophy as a critic and still applies a decade later.  This is fortuitous because I’ve been planning on using tomorrow’s Some Songs Considered post to write about my philosophy of music (at least in how it applies to this blog).  Reading Tom’s first post and then thinking of a song that served as important to my taste in 1999 (I was 16 in ’99, for the record) gives me the opportunity to give a bit of a preview to tomorrow’s post.

Today, I consider my taste fairly broad; I’m not as versed in the “poptimist” label as I should be, but I imagine that I would have more in common with them than not.  The first two axioms in his “Triggerism” post – “there’s a stunning amount of worthwhile music out there” and “music isn’t confined by time or genre” – are statements I couldn’t have put better myself.  Even looking at the (somewhat odd) collection of songs so far this past month and realizing that this is only scratching the surface of my music collection reinforces my broad tastes.  I find that in different eras and different musical movements, there are worthwhile songs and worthless songs, and that the best songs transcend genre, era, and circumstances. 

Still, I haven’t always felt this way.

When I first got into music (relatively late, for I didn’t listen to music until the summer before my freshman year of high school), I was a strict rockist – it could be the angry alternative rock of the late 90s or the crushing classic rock of the 70s, but if it wasn’t played with guitars, I wanted no part of it.  This meant marginalizing a lot of wonderful music that I’m still catching up on.  To a degree, I think this is a natural evolution of taste – once we find something that speaks to us (whether it really resonates with us or we just want it to because it’s what we have access to – that’s an entirely separate debate) we take it and run with it.  Throw in the uncertainty of teenage years and many of us look for anything we can identify with (or, alternately, define ourselves by) while everything else is in flux.  For me, it took until sometime in college (and going through the punk rock rabbit hole) before I could start to embrace things outside of my “expertise.”

That’s not to say there weren’t a few cracks into my rock and roll armor.  Somehow, in 1999, Beth Orton’s Central Reservation album found me.  It was probably hearing the kind of guitar driven single “Stolen Car” on 120 Minutes that led me to the album, but the rest of her songs run the gamut from jazzy ballads to naked confessional folk to hazy, spaced-out electronic pieces.  It certainly was not like the Foo Fighters (one of my favorite bands at the time), but I loved it.  I used to listen to this album on repeat all the time when I wanted to hear something different (because one man can only listen to Nirvana’s MTV Unplugged so many times).  Could I resolve it with the other louder records?  Well, maybe with something like R.E.M., but at least R.E.M. had their “rock” moments (I also, quite accidentally and only in retrospect, found that this album brought me much more interaction with girls.  Unfortunately, I was too awkward and clueless to capitalize on that).  Still, it became part of my taste; Central Reservation proudly sat in my CD wallet with my Led Zeppelin and Rancid CDs, and I proudly defended it when my fellow rockist friends asked me why I owned something so “wussy” (an issue I ran into when I wrote music reviews for my high school paper and included a couple of less popular “pop” albums that I thought the high school audience at large would enjoy in 2001).

So, what exactly was it about this album that spoke to me.  Well, thinking back, I know I was drawn in by Beth Orton’s unique voice, and the whole thing didn’t quite sound like any singer-songwriter I knew at the time (again, I was fairly sheltered – the internet was in its infancy and most of my knowledge of anything that wasn’t on the radio came from reading magazines and books).  Above all, I’d like to think that it was the power of these well-written, well-performed songs that transcended genre.  Today, “Feel to Believe” stands out to me as one of the less ordained songs.  There are no late ‘90s electronic flourishes or strings or jazz brushes on snare drums to adorn the song – just Orton and her guitar.  It’s the kind of simplicity that seems like the kind of thing I could pull off only to realize that it takes a tremendous amount of talent to sound that effortless.  Listening to it again today, I’m taken by a moment about halfway through the song when Orton’s voice distorts slightly during the phrase, “each have got their own limit.”  Like on the last Kanye West album, it’s distortion as a signifier of emotional expression; however, while Kanye turned to technology to achieve these moments of distorted catharsis, Orton’s is a product of (what appears to be) technological limits as the microphone can’t contain the full weight of her voice.  It’s a fitting moment on Central Reservation, an album that uses a lot of late ‘90s technological aid well, that the most emotionally powerful moment comes as a result of a technological hiccup.

So tonight I’m raising my coffee to Freaky Trigger, wishing it another decade of success while wishing that I knew about it ten years ago when I needed to realize that there’s a lot more to music than three chords and some distortion.

More on Beth Orton: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: beth orton | 1999 | 1990s | arista records | alternative rock | track analysis | Shout Out | personal reflection |
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“Cuyahoga (Live in Mansfield, MA – 13 June 2008)” – R.E.M.
(Words/music: Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, Michael Stipe, originally appears on Lifes Rich Pageant, IRS 1986)

When I saw R.E.M. this past June, Michael Stipe offered this song to Barack Obama.  The choice is interesting because aside from the opening lines (as his dedication suggests), it doesn’t seem like an obvious choice; if I were to have guessed which song they dedicated, I would have probably guessed one of the more recent Bush-fueled political rants (like the ho-hum “Final Straw”) or one of the more overtly political songs (like “These Days” from the same album).  The ban even played “I Believe” (key line: “and change is what I believe in”) in South America the night of his election.  Sure, the song references the polluted Cuyahoga river - a cause that the environmentally friendly candidate would emphasize with, buy it still seemed like an odd choice (one I didn’t complain about that night, however, as it’s one of my favorites).

Thinking about it months later, I’m immediately drawn back to the lines that Stipe highlighted in his introduction – “Let’s put our heads together / and start a new country up.”  It captures the sentiment of Obama’s “change” mantra as well as his message of unity.  After watching the sea of humanity in Washington, D.C. this morning, it seems that his message of unity, hope, and yes, “change,” enticed millions of Americans.  Appropriately, Obama’s inaugural address hit on the theme of working together – it’s not Obama or his party creating the “new country,” but everyone in America.  It’s a refreshing change of message for someone like me, who has heard nothing but partisan dogma for almost a quarter century of life.

So as I thought about this earlier today, it seemed more and more appropriate.  After all, many of R.E.M.’s songs blurred the lines between the personal and the political, as the Obama administration at least begins by stressing the individual’s role in government.  “Cuyahoga” isn’t just about the death of a river, but about the narrator’s personal memories attached with the river.  The song’s filled with “we” and “our,” to the point that the Cuyahoga is less a call to recycle more but a symbol of a proud and highly personal past that’s been corrupted (as the river now “runs read over it”).  Even more importantly, the song focuses on gathering friends and moving towards reclaiming their pride rather than lamenting the death of their icon.  It’s an appropriate song to dedicate to a man who wants to promote community, even at the national level.

_______

PS – Even though R.E.M. is one of my favorite bands (and, if pressed, probably the most important band to me), this will probably be the only post on one of their songs (I might pick one more at some point, but that would be it), in part because of Matthew Perpetua’s wonderful Popsongs 07-08 project, where he writes about these songs with eloquence and insight that I could only dream of possessing.  I’d be remiss if I didn’t say that this site (along with the other excellent work he does on the web and in print) is a major inspiration for what I want to do over the next eleven and a half months.  Here’s a relevant quote from Matthew’s entry on “Cuyahoga” from July ’07:

“Cuyahoga” may be a lament, but it’s also one of the most optimistic politically themed songs in the R.E.M. songbook. Even better, its optimism is not cheap and facile. The lyrics make a point of acknowledging the fact that we need to collaborate and work hard for change, because without that effort and emphasis on community, we stand to lose so much.

More on R.E.M.: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: r.e.m. | 1986 | I.R.S. | alternative rock | historical relevance | barack obama | shout out |
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“Silence Kit” - Pavement
(Words/music: Stephen Malkmus, appears on Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain, Matador 1994)

I try my best to stay away from “this equals that” kind of criticism in part because more often than not it’s imposing something onto the song from the outside.  Sure, there’s times where songs or albums or songwriters have obvious touchstones (and you know this because every single review will mention it), but I rarely found a “this sounds like that plus that” kind of synopsis helpful.

That being said, I’m about to break my own rule when I say that “Silence Kit” and Bruce Springsteen’s “Thunder Road” have some less than obvious points of relation.  Both Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain and Born to Run found their creators reaching a wider audience (Springsteen soon became “The Boss,” Pavement and Matador Records rode the mid-90s alterna-boom to a gold album and a distribution deal with Capitol Records) and both albums start with songs about leaving town.  However, while “Thunder Road” is a large and cinematic (or, to its detractors, “overblown) song about cars as a source for personal redemption and the opportunity to “make something” of yourself, “Silence Kit” exchanges optimism for anti-climax.

Springsteen once called “Thunder Road” his “invitation” to his listeners, and “Silence Kit” unfolds similarly.  The slow groove at the twenty second mark, Malkmus’ high notes right before the minute mark (it almost sounds like he’s saying “hiiiiiii”, but let’s not get carried away), and even the way Malkmus seems to give advice to the “silent kid” (the song became “Silence Kit” on the Crooked Rain sleeve due to an ink blot on the artwork) all seem like an invitation to leave town.  However, while “Thunder Road” pulls out of town, “Silence Kit” stalls at the city line where they merely talk about leaving rather than jumping town.

The vehicle, in this case, seems to be music as the last verse talks about grabbing drum sticks to pull “myself into the spotlight, ecstasy feels so warm inside.”  However, just as the attempt to leave stalls at the edge of town, this rush fades after the show, leaving the narrator alone with his two hands.  It shares the same sense of urgency and yearning for “more” (whatever that it), yet “Silence Kit” ends more realistically; all of our problems can’t be solved by driving away into the sunset, no matter how much we’d like to just jump in and run.  Instead, Pavement explore life’s contradictions, absurdities, and quirks over the rest of Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain, with “Silence Kit” as the invitation to follow the band along.

PS - this post is a hat tip to my friend Devine, who recently started a new blog this is the city line that culls its name from this song.  He writes about sports, music, and other topics of interest with the same humor, self-deprication, and razor-sharp wit that makes me love Pavement, so it’s worth checking out, sports fans.

More on Pavement: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: 1990s | 1994 | Matador | apocrypha | indie rock | pavement | shout out | track comparison | bruce springsteen |
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