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“The Yankee Flipper” – The Baseball Project
(Words/music: Scott McCaughey, available on The Baseball Project, Vol. 1: Frozen Ropes and Dying Quails, Yep Roc 2008)

I’m the first to admit that I take baseball for granted.  I don’t watch as many games as some of my friends, yet I’m always sad when there isn’t a game to watch.  I guess at this point in my life it’s one of those things that makes me happy just knowing that it’s there.  If I don’t always watch a game (and this year, watching Mets games wasn’t always a relaxing decision), I still like seeing Baseball Tonight or catching scores on the radio.  Even if I’m not actively watching games every night, I feel better knowing that somewhere a baseball game is going on.

So when I heard that Scott McCaughey, Steve Wynn, and Peter Buck (among others) collaborated on an album of baseball themed songs, I immediately wanted to hear it.  These songs lace together the type of power pop Wynn and McCaughey usually create with stories pulled from baseball lore.  In particular, “The Yankee Flipper” immediately stuck out because I remember watching Jack McDowell pitch for the White Sox and Yankees in the 1990s.  It turns out that the night before McDowell’s infamous incident where he flipped off Yankee fans, he was out drinking with McCaughey, R.E.M.’s Mike Mills, and Dennis Diken from the Smithereens.  McCaughey claims that the story is true, and given McDowell’s own musical pursuits it’s entirely believable.  It’s also one of the few instances on The Baseball Project, an album culled from recalled moments of fandom, where the fans in question had an influence on the game itself.  Sure, it was ultimately McDowell’s lousy performance (and short fuse) that led to his back page infamy, but it’s also an instance where some diehard fans felt partly responsible.  I’m sure that the rock boys felt bad that their friend experienced the backlash (just imagine what that would have been like in the YouTube era!), yet McCaughey feels responsible without ever feeling remorse.  After all, it makes him a part of one of our era’s more colorful footnotes.

So tonight, as the Yankees appear on the verge of putting baseball to bed for the winter, consider this a salute (not necessarily the same salute as Black Jack, unless you’re a Philly / Boston fan) to baseball and a reminder that spring training can’t come soon enough.

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

TAGGED UNDER: the baseball project | scott mccaughey | steve wynn | peter buck | r.e.m. | the smithereens | yep roc | 2008 | 2000s | baseball |
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“Dirty Water” – The Standells
(Words/music: Ed Cobb, available on Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era 1965 – 1968, Sire Records 1972)

Before I discovered music, I consumed sports voraciously.  During middle school – those awkward years in the lonely gap between the childhood friends I grew apart from and the teenage friends I was yet to meet – I watched a lot of SportsCenter replays.  I used every opportunity in school to study sports.  I remember carrying an oversized NBA history book in my backpack in sixth grade and writing my eighth grade research paper on the baseball strike.  Even though I lost track of sports for a while in high school (yes, around the same time I started obsessing over music – my in-school reading changed from the 1980s San Francisco 49ers to Sonic Youth’s Confusion is Next biography), I eventually came back around in a more moderate way.  I still have a few moments where music and sports cross paths – I remember going to my first game at Yankee Stadium in high school with my Dad and being excited because I could listen to K-ROCK on my walkman on the bus and in the stands.  Even now that the baseball season’s started back up, I’ll find that during commercials of Mets games on TV, I’ll mute the sound and open up iTunes for a couple songs.

While the Mets have a few solid musical connections (Yo La Tengo, Belle and Sebastian’s song about Mike Piazza, and even Piazza’s affinity for metal), the Boston Red Sox have music woven into the Fenway Park experience.  First, there’s Neil Diamond’s “Sweet Caroline” that leads the Sox fans to sing out the “bah bah bah” part in unison (a tradition that the Mets woefully tried to steal).  There’s also the Dropkick Murphys’ “Tessie,” referencing a song that fans of the Boston Americans (later the Red Sox) sang while rooting for their team in 1903.   The Dropkick Murphys wrote the new “Tessie” in 2004 – the same year the Sox made their improbable playoff comeback.

The most interesting of the Fenway music selection, at least to me, is the garage rock classic “Dirty Water,” a song by the Standells.  I don’t know the history of the Standells’ song being played at Red Sox games (let me know in the comments if you do), but I’d like to think someone upstairs at Fenway spins the Nuggets box set of “lost” 60s rock gems.  Aside from it’s obvious lyrical content (“Boston, you’re my home” probably earned this song its place in the Red Sox’s postgame playlist), “Dirty Water” plays as an archetype for the garage rock genre.  The song contains two key elements – the slow moving riff that snakes its way into our brains, and vocalist Dick Dodd’s charismatic performance.  Sure, he’s a little over-the-top, but with such a simple foundation, Dodd has the space to steal the spotlight.  This is the part that many of garage rock’s revivalists missed – most can replicate the straightforward riffs and the aesthetic feel, but too many mistook the idiosyncratic vocals by Dodd and others to mean that they don’t need to sing.  Even if Dodd goes a bit too far (and if the song topped three minutes, I’m not sure I’d let it continue), he deserves credit for charming his way into Boston’s hearts (even though the band was from Los Angeles). As a song for a specific moment (I’m going up to Fenway for a game tonight), “Dirty Water” serves its purpose and lets the crowd revel in the team’s victory.

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

TAGGED UNDER: the standells | 1966 | 1960s | track analysis | boston red sox | baseball | compilation |
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“Sugarcube” – Yo La Tengo
(Words/music: Yo La Tengo, available on I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One, Matador 1997)

Maybe because I’ve always liked baseball, I’ve frequently thought of mixes (first tapes, then CDs, now playlists) as similar to baseball lineups (or, at least each side of a tape / half of a CD as a lineup).  I like to start with a solid “leadoff” track or two – ones that either feel right as an opening or keep the tempo moving along.  Then, the next few songs are the “power” songs – these are the ones that drive home the theme, command the listener’s attention, or are the ones I think the recipient will like the most.  Then, it’s time to wind down the side and “set up” the next side – these are maybe old favorites that deserve another listen or something I’m taking a chance on including.  It’s not a set formula, and it’s not how I make every mix, but I’ve found myself (even in the dead of winter) working in this mode to help put some structure into my mixes (and to help make the necessary cuts when I have 12 minutes of music and 3 minutes of space).

“Sugarcube” frequently finds its way into the middle of my mixtape batting orders.  Appropriately, Yo La Tengo (whose members earn bonus points for being Mets fans) took their name from an anecdote about communication miscues in the New York Mets’ outfield (and do yourself a favor and watch that video - it’s priceless and features the great Ed Kranepool).  It gains its muscle from the relentless fuzz that runs through the entire song.  However, it’s far more than an experiment in noise, as this tonal cloud bursts at the seams with melody.  The bass first lays claim to a melody (well, a counter-melody with the lead guitar), giving way to Ira Kaplan’s understated vocals.  Throughout the whole song, guitars squeal and bend but always retain their melodic grounding.  In many ways, this comes pretty darn close to “perfect” for me – it’s not afraid to be noisy and rough around the edges, but at the same time it’s intensely melodic and supremely catchy.  It’s the kind of song you could hear once and hum for days without realizing it.

I imagine “Sugarcube” as a gap hitting third baseman.  It prefers to spread its power out throughout the entire song, rather than swinging for the fences.  Instead, it’s this consistency that makes it a valuable asset to the lineup.  It might not make the big play with a big hook or inspired turn of phrase, but it’s consistent greatness makes it a perpetual musical MVP (as far as my mixes go).  It also earns extra credit for a hilarious video featuring Mr. Show’s Bob Odenkirk and David Cross, among others.

More on Yo La Tengo: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: yo la tengo | 1997 | 1990s | Matador | ed kranepool | mr. show | bob odenkirk | david cross | new york mets | baseball |
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